There is a large amount of differences between the play interpretation of Julius Caesar and what really happened. For instance, Brutus in the play was extremely different than real life Brutus. In the play, he was best friends with Caesar-well, until he killed him. However, in real life, Brutus hated Caesar. He was never supportive of Caesar, and truthfully never loved him.(Musaj and Prezi Inc.) In Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare, he uses Brutus’s strong love of Rome, his honor, and his willing to do anything for the good of Rome to show that Brutus is the tragic hero.…
Upon reading Shakespeare’s play and tragedy, Julius Ceasar, the question comes up. Who is the tragic hero of the story? As with many Tragedies, there is always a single Tragic Hero who works through the play, and eventually succumbs to a flaw in his character, that is the end of him. So, with the question, and the many characters in the play present in your mind, which is the tragic hero?; The noble, and honorable Brutus, or the self-centered, and sneaky Cassius?…
A tragic hero can be defined as a noble, high-class individual which takes his own life in return of the greater good of a society or empire. Marcus Brutus displays characteristic traits which fit the common theme of tragic heroes, which display signs of noble birth, the suffering of a catastrophe, as well as the presence of a tragic flaw within the individual’s personality. Marcus Brutus is the tragic hero of The Tragedy of Julius Caesar, written by William…
This quote explains why he is a tragic here, it tells the reader that he had Rome in his best interest, because in this quote Brutus is trying to explain why he killed Caesar; and that he is trying to calm people down because they were angry at Brutus for killing Caesar because the citizens of Rome never wanted Caesar to die, of course this was unknown to Brutus as he was lied to by Cassies. ( Shakespeare Caesar.)…
Furthermore there is more to say that brutus embodied good. Why because the decision he had to make was a tough one. He dearly loved caesar and caesar loved him, Even after killing caesar and washing his hands with his blood. Brutus still felt responsible after his death and to the public. He feared that his friend would be crowned king which would go against the ideals of the roman republic. Brutus defends his actions’’ If there be any in this assembly, And dear friend of caesar's, to him i say that brutus love to caesar was no less than his. If then that friend demand why brutus rose against caesar, this is my answer: not that i loved caesar less, but that i loved.’’ (3.2 19-24) This shows it was hard for brutus to kill caesar.…
Any choice that involves choosing either a friend or the greater good is a tricky one, to say the least. Making the best of it and taking the nobler path is what Brutus does in this situation, opting to sacrifice Caesar in return for the prolonged survival of the Roman Republic. While his ingenuousness is the reason behind his downfall, Brutus’ inner turmoil and his respectability…
If then that friend demand why Brutus rose against Caesar, this is my answer:Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved…
In the play Julius Ceasar by William Shakespeare, Marcus Brutus is the tragic hero. Brutus is a tragic hero because he has Tragic Flaws. Brutus’s first tragic flaw is that he is naive; he is not a shrewd judge of people. As Caius Cassuis states, “Well, Brutus, thou art noble. Yet I see/thy honorable mental may be wrought /…There for it is meet / That noble minds keep ever with their likes / For who so firm that cannot be seduced?” (1.2.319-323). This shows how naïve Brutus is because he does not see that Cassuis is trying to manipulate him. Brutus’s second tragic flaw is that he has rigid ethics; he thinks he is unmovable. Brutus states himself that “[he is] armed so strong in honesty,…
Many people saw Brutus as a great man, who did what was right for all. His first love was to Rome. During his speech at Caesar's funeral, he said “Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved Rome more” (3.2.21-22). This shows how he was willing to do everything he could for Rome, even if it means taking his own life which he also states in his speech. He explains why Caesar was assassinated; because he was too ambitious. Brutus tells the horrified onlookers that "Ambition's debt is paid", indicating…
By definition, a tragic hero must, of course, have heroic qualities. So what qualities does Brutus have that would make him any more applicable to the title than any other character in the play? There are a few of these. For one, Brutus was a genuinely nice person. He did not wish to harm anyone, and really only wanted to general good for all people. Secondly, as stated in Act 2, scene 1, lines 10-12, "It must be by his death; and for my part, I know no personal cause to spurn at him, But for the general...." He killed Caesar, not out of envy or greed, but for the benefit of the Roman people. Thirdly, he wished not to die at the hands of his enemies; he wished to die in a way that was considered honorable at the time, at prove that he was loyal to his ideals by having himself killed by one of his friends. Brutus states this in Act 5, scene 5, lines 27-32: "Our enemies have beaten us to the pit. It is more worthy to leap in ourselves, That tarry till they push us. Good Volumnius, That know'st that we two went to school together. Even for that our love of old, I prithee, Hold though my sword-hilts whilst I…
Brutus was only a friend a good friend in the beginning of the story. Brutus only pretended to be he's friend because he wanted to find out everything about Caesar's knowledge as becoming emperor of Rome. Brutus would put words in Caesar's mouth. Brutus was lying to Rome and he's people. Throughout the whole scene Brutus treated Caesar like if Caesar had every back stabbed Brutus. After Caesar's death, Brutus had no emotional feelings until the ghost of Caesar appeared. Convincing himself that he was the best for Rome.…
Marcus Brutus defines as a tragic hero in the play, The Tradegy of Julius Caesar, by William Shakespeare. Brutus faces a major conflict between his inegrity with Caesar and intergity with the country of Rome. Throughout the play, Brutus allows himself to maintain honorable to Caesar eventhough he has joined the conspirators to assasinate Caesar for the good of Rome.…
The tragic hero archetype has been played with for as long as literature has been created, but no one had quite a spin on it like William Shakespeare. Shakespeare’s tragic heroes were specifically designed to elicit pity and fear from the audience and to really feel their downfall. In Julius Caesar, the protagonist Brutus is a well-made example. But the character of which the play is named after is often not considered as one. Although the character of Julius Caesar does not follow all the requirements of the traditional Shakespearean tragic hero such as Brutus, the titular character still should be considered one.…
There is much debate as to who plays the part of the tragic hero in Julius Caesar, but through analysis and literal evidence, it can be proved that Marcus Brutus plays the tragic hero. The definition of a tragic hero, as by Dictionary.com, is “a literary character who makes an error of judgment or has a fatal flaw that, combined with fate and external forces, brings on a tragedy.” As given by examples in the play, Marcus Brutus possesses all of these traits.…
In Opinion to Brutus being a patriot or a betrayer, I believe that he was a betrayer due to the fact that he trusted a man that he had barely even knew. Instead of trusting the man who knew him the longest he had believed in the fake evidence that was given to him. Also, in that case he wanted the honor rather than the humanity being a crucial reason on why he had turned on his best friend.…