Brutus and Portia's marriage appears to be based on mutual respect and love. Portia is not afraid to stand up to Brutus and demand that he treat her as a "woman well reputed." She desires to share his secrets and his worries, and she is even willing to wound herself to show her bravery. When she slashes her thigh, she is showing that she will not reveal Brutus' secrets even under pain of torture. Brutus sees how determined Portia is to prove that she is "stronger than her sex," and he rewards this sentiment with loving respect. Portia's argument with Brutus can be contrasted with Caesar's argument with Calpurnia. Caesar is far more authoritarian, and seems not to care that he is humiliating Calpurnia and causing her a great deal anguish in refusing to heed her advice regarding his meeting with the Senate.
Reel
All the assassins were supposed to have stabbed Caesar once. In fact it is said that there was only one wound that was fatal.All the assassins were supposed to have stabbed Caesar once. In fact it is said that there was only one wound that was fatal.All the assassins were supposed to have stabbed Caesar once. In fact it is said that there was only one wound that was fatal.All the assassins were supposed to have stabbed Caesar once. In fact it is said that there was only one wound that was fatal.All the assassins were supposed to have stabbed Caesar once. In fact it is said that there was only one wound that was fatal.All the assassins were supposed to have stabbed Caesar once. In fact it is said that there was only one wound that was fatal.All the assassins were supposed to have stabbed Caesar once. In fact it is said that there was only one wound that was fatal.All the assassins were supposed to have stabbed Caesar once. In fact it is said that there was only one wound that was fatal.All the assassins were supposed to have stabbed Caesar once. In fact it is said that there was only one wound that was fatal.
He jests at scars that never felt a wound.
No. He lunges at Creon, misses, and stabs himself to be dead with Antigone.
she stabbed her self in the led
Portia stabs herself because she wants to show Brutus her strength and that she can handle difficulties. She is a woman and she can be as strong as him. "She has but a man's mind but a woman's might."
Portia feared that Brutus would not take her into his confidence because she might betray his secrets under torture. In order to test herself on this, she inflicted a sever thigh wound on herself to see if she could stand the pain. Finding that she could, she told Brutus what she had done and insisted that because of that, he should take her into his confidence. He then told her of the plan to kill Julius Caesar.
The main thing that Portia does is stab herself in the thigh. She does this to proove to Brutus that she can bear pain for him. She also blabs on about how much she knows her place but she wanted to know anyway. She gets herself so worked up that in the end she says she feels like Brutus' private prosititute rather than his wife.
Brutus and Portia's marriage appears to be based on mutual respect and love. Portia is not afraid to stand up to Brutus and demand that he treat her as a "woman well reputed." She desires to share his secrets and his worries, and she is even willing to wound herself to show her bravery. When she slashes her thigh, she is showing that she will not reveal Brutus' secrets even under pain of torture. Brutus sees how determined Portia is to prove that she is "stronger than her sex," and he rewards this sentiment with loving respect. Portia's argument with Brutus can be contrasted with Caesar's argument with Calpurnia. Caesar is far more authoritarian, and seems not to care that he is humiliating Calpurnia and causing her a great deal anguish in refusing to heed her advice regarding his meeting with the Senate.
Portia feared that Brutus would not take her into his confidence because she might betray his secrets under torture. In order to test herself on this, she inflicted a sever thigh wound on herself to see if she could stand the pain. Finding that she could, she told Brutus what she had done and insisted that because of that, he should take her into his confidence. He then told her of the plan to kill Julius Caesar.
It may be when they stuck a spear in his side, after he died on the cross, to prove he was dead.
There are many ways,1. Ordeal by combat: The accused has to fight to prove his innocent2. Ordeal by fire: Taking a red hot iron in your hand, and bandage the wound. 3 days later, if the wound was kinda healed, it is said to be innocent3. Ordeal by water: The accused (usually witches) is tied onto a pole and thrown in the river. If they drown, they are innocent.
Assuming a standard rifle round caused the wound and was fired from a typical ranges, also assuming that the wounded man had no other injuries and was already in fair health, received adequate medical treatment, and that the wound did not become infected, (sorry I know that's a lot of things) the wound say from a month to two months, if the wound became infected it could prove fatal or take years to recover from.
if the patient has a companion, the companion may help him/her to get to the hospital. if it is a big wound, he/she can just get herself/himself to the hospital and just 'tiis' its pain
verb - wound as in "I wound the thread around the spool." noun - wound as in "His wound needs dressing."
Wound. As in you wound something around (coiled), or you received a wound (an injury.)