I'm assuming that you mean the Ten Commandments, and "their reaction," meaning when the stone tablets were brought down from Mount Sinai.
Explanation:
The Israelites viewed God very differently at various times in history, usually depending on their behavior at the time. At this particular moment in history, they are afraid of God and "tremble with fear." These commandments have been given to their leader, and they see the discrepancy between their actions and their given statutes, therefore making them view God as more of a feared spirit or deity than the gracious God of a few chapters ago.
Read the whole story in Exodus.
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The metaphor in this sentence likens the exchange of ideas (and specifically the arrival of new, radical ideas) as a battle.
The "radical thought" coming from the northeast is defended, not by believers or by thinkers, but by "shots" from newspapers and is "reinforced by regiments." This metaphor makes the arrival of new ideas a dangerous, violent -- possibly even bloody -- situation.
Answer:
When Caesar says "He is a dreamer, let us leave him" (1.2.26), he is referring to the soothsayer. Furthermore, the soothsayers tells him "beware the ides of March", and Caesar brushes it off and basically calls the soothsayer insane. So, he is basically saying "He is insane, let's leave".
Explanation:
Kronos was the father of all the gods, but Zeus, Poseidon and Hades were the first of his children.