One of the reasons that Brutus is a tragic hero, is that he is very hesitant about killing Caesar. He has to think hard about what will be the best for Rome. He is the only conspirator who actually kills Caesar because he thinks it will help Roman citizens, not because he is envious of Caesar. For example in Scene 2 Act 1 Brutus tells Lucius, "Between the acting of a dreadful thing and the first motion, all the interim is like a phantasma, or a hideous dream..." He is saying that talking about doing such a dreadful thing is like some horrible dream that seems almost unreal. Brutus is the only conspirator who honestly wants what's good for Rome.…
As a tragic hero Brutus possesses a flaw of naivety. Brutus is too trusting in others, such as the conspirators. The conspirators believed that Caesar was too ambitious and that they should kill him for the good of Rome, themselves and for their own personal benefit. Brutus trusted that they were conspiring to kill him for the sake of Rome. (Quote). He was also naïve by letting Antony speak at Caesar’s funeral. Brutus believed that Antony would praise Caesar at his funeral and follow the rules that he was given. Brutus trusted him and by letting him speak Antony turned all the Romans against him. Antony sparked a civil war by convincing the Romans that the conspirators that they did wrong. Since Antony turned all the Romans against him, he…
Finally in end Brutus died thinking that his part in the assassination of Caesar was worth something, he also died thinking that people in Rome did not like Caesar but in reality they really did. Brutus was a tragic hero because he was willing to give it all for his country and in the end even gave his life and his best friends life thinking that it was for the better of Rome. Brutus sacrifice is even more tragic because in history, the Roman leaders after Caesar were nowhere as good as he was and after him Rome’s glory days were…
Marcus Brutus’ plight is ultimately a decision to save a republic that involves sacrificing its soon-to-be dictatorial leader, with the conspiracy taking into consideration the pros and the cons of such an act. Often times the better choice is the more difficult one, especially when it involves the murder of a man beloved by all. As such, Brutus is the tragic hero of the play Julius Caesar. His tragic flaw is his easily trusting nature, and his conflicting emotions and nobleness make him one of the most renowned tragic heroes of all time.…
Brutus’s rigid idealism is both his greatest virtue and his most deadly flaw. In the world of the play, where self-serving ambition seems to dominate all other motivations, Brutus lives up to Antony’s elegiac description of him as “the noblest of Romans.” However, his commitment to principle repeatedly leads him to make mistakes that cost him much: wanting to curtail violence, he ignores Cassius’s suggestion that the conspirators kill Antony as well as Caesar. In another moment of rampant idealism, he again ignores Cassius’s advice and allows Antony to speak a funeral oration over Caesar’s body. As a result, Brutus forfeits the authority of having the last word on the murder and thus allows Antony to incite the shocked Roman crowd to riot against Brutus and the other conspirators. This is similar to when Regina George incites the entire school into chaos using the “burn book.” Brutus later endangers his good relationship with Cassius by self-righteously condemning what he sees as…
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,…
is in a sense the dominating figure in the story, but Brutus is the hero” (Paolucci, “The tragic hero”). Shakespeare meant for Brutus to be the hero of the story. He is a tragic hero by Aristotle's definition. He was good because of his care for the city of Rome. His tragic flaw which led to the death of his best friend; he was too trusting toward people. His tragic realization was at the end of the play, which was when he had to flee the city and go into war leading to the death of him and the conspirators. The audience also felt the emotions such as pity and fear for Brutus, which is another one of Aristotle's rules. Pity because Brutus only followed along with the plan of killing Caesar because Cassius tricked him. Fear because what if a close friend turned on one of the people in the audience, such as Brutus…
I believe Brutus is a cowardice, weak, and loving man who wants only the best for Rome. Brutus loves Rome so much that he believes the only way to keep the Empire alive and stable is that he must kill Caesar. Brutus is intellectual but only makes decisions that benefit him, making him seem greedy. When Brutus speaks to the crowd of Caesar’s death in act three scene two he states “Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I love Rome more. Had you rather Caesar were living and all die slaves, than that Caesar were dead, to live all free men ?”…
Brutus is an honorable man in this play but when Cassius, one of the main characters, and villain from the play, points out to Brutus why he doesn’t like Caesar, Brutus starts analyzing it. Then his first internal argument in the play starts to form. "Men at some times are masters of their fates. / The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars / But in ourselves, that we are underlying. / Brutus and Caesar- what should be in that "Caesar"? / Why should that name be sounded more than yours?” Brutus starts to over think things and complicates himself even more than it already was.…
Brutus was a devious man, even though what he thought he was doing was right. Brutus told his fellow conspirators to kill Caesar "boldly, but not angerly."(3.1.256-257) Brutus was one of Caesars right hand men, and yet Brutus kills his own friend. When Antony asks to speak at Caesars funeral, Cassius says no, but Brutus tell him that Antony will speak, but only what Brutus tells him to say. Brutus also embraces the fact that he just killed his friend, and also tells the senators who had just witnessed it to not be afraid, but to stay because ambition has paid its debt.…
Was a tragic hero ever named in the novel Julius Caesar by Shakespeare? A tragic hero was never named in the novel, most likely due to the fact that there were many candidates to the tragic hero role. Could it be Brutus, Cassius, or Julius Caesar himself? A tragic hero is a great or virtuous character in a dramatic tragedy that is destined for downfall, suffering, or defeat. The tragic hero also must have a hamartia, which is a fatal flaw. Who would become the tragic hero, who would make that tragic flaw, and who would take the tragic fall?…
The Ides of March mean much more than March 15th, it was also the day Julius Caesar, the Roman general and leader was killed. Although this day is not a holiday, we should take time to think of things Caesar didn't on this fateful day. In "Julius Caesar," by William Shakespeare, Caesar that morning solidified his place as a tragic hero because of his tremendous fatal flaw. Aristotle once defined the tragic hero as a person of noble or influential birth, who has a moral personality. The tragic hero also must have one hamartia, which is a fatal flaw. This fatal flaw is the cause of the person's downfall. This also means that it is a noble person, and it is one part of their personality that brings them down. Julius Caesar is a tragic hero because he was a champion of the people, but it was his hubris that led to his death. Caesar was a great leader and well-loved by Romans, but his arrogance made the people who were close to him mad and jealous of him. It was Caesars excessive pride that led directly to his death. We see evidence throughout the play through the dialogue and events that this is true.…
Some of the key ideas that William Shakespeare conveyed to us through his play “Julius Caesar” are leadership, loyalty and the power of oratory. I think that these are the most important themes in the play because they have the most impact on the outcome at the end.…
Unlike the other conspirators, Brutus is in fact a dear friend of Caesar’s but kills his beloved friend not for he is, but what he could become as a King. It is for this reason that when Brutus dies by suicide in Act V, Mark Antony describes his bitter enemy by saying “This was the noblest Roman of them all”. Mark Antony recognizes with these words that Brutus acted from a scene of civic duty, not malice, nor agreed nor envy.…
Julius Caesar is mostly known for his great leadership in Rome´s Empire, he accomplished everything he purposed and he did whatever it took to make it happen. He had all it took to be such a leader; women were in love with him, men wanted to be part of his army and children wanted to be like him when they grow up. For Caesar all it took was courage and selfishness to get to where he was.…