This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous line from the play, "Pollic Cocag 4." It's a line that's used in the play's opening scene, and it's one of the most famous lines in all of Shakespeare's plays. The epigraph is from a play called "The Taming of the Shrew," which was written by the same author who wrote the famous play "Julius Caesar" . In other words, the epigraph from this play is a reference to a famous incident that took place in the Trojan War . The scene opens with a group of soldiers marching through the streets of a town in the south of France. They're carrying a banner that says, "We're here to help Julius Caesar." The soldiers are carrying a bunch of gold coins, which they're supposed to be using to pay for the troops they've just sent to fight in the war against the French. Julius Caesar's army has just arrived in France, and the soldiers are trying to figure out how to
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous line from the play, "Pollic Cocag 4." It's a line that's used in the play's opening scene, and it's one of the most famous lines in all of Shakespeare's plays. The epigraph is from a play called "The Taming of the Shrew," which was written by the same author who wrote the famous play "Julius Caesar" . In other words, the epigraph from this play is a reference to a famous incident that took place in the Trojan War . The scene opens with a group of soldiers marching through the streets of a town in the south of France. They're carrying a banner that says, "We're here to help Julius Caesar." The soldiers are carrying a bunch of gold coins, which they're supposed to be using to pay for the troops they've just sent to fight in the war against the French. Julius Caesar's army has just arrived in France, and the soldiers are trying to figure out how to