Hide browse bar Your current position in the text is marked in blue. Click anywhere in the line to jump to another position:
commline:
lines 0-10lines 11-15lines 16-20lines 21-21lines 22-31lines 32-34lines 35-37lines 38-41lines 42-45lines 46-50lines 51-56lines 57-57lines 58-59lines 60-63lines 64-65lines 66-67lines 68-68lines 69-70lines 71-73lines 74-74lines 75-75lines 76-76lines 77-78lines 79-80lines 81-82lines 83-85lines 86-87lines 88-91lines 92-93lines 94-98lines 99-99lines 100-101lines 102-105lines 106-108lines 109-114lines 115-116lines 117-117lines 118-118lines 119-119lines 120-125lines 126-129lines 130-132lines 133-134lines 135-136lines 137-138lines 139-140lines 141-146lines 147-150lines 151-153lines 154-161lines 162-163lines 164-169lines 170-174lines 175-177lines 178-182lines 183-183lines 184-185lines 186-188lines 189-193lines 194-196lines 197-198lines 199-205lines 206-209lines 210-214lines 215-217lines 218-220lines 221-227lines 228-233lines 234-234lines 235-239lines 240-241lines 242-242lines 243-245lines 246-246lines 247-248lines 249-253lines 254-256lines 257-257lines 258-259lines 260-261lines 262-263lines 264-270lines 271-272lines 273-273lines 274-278lines 279-281lines 282ff.
This text is part of:
The Article of my oath A majority of editors have followed Theobald in placing a dash after ‘oath;’ implying an unfinished sentence. Would not an interrogation point be better? Anthony is repeating Cæsar's own words, and asking, I think, an explanation.—Ed.