______________________________________________________________________________ 1.“A common slave--you’d know him well by sight-- Held up his left hand‚ which did flame and burn Like twenty torches join’d‚ and yet his hand Not sensible of fire remain’d unscorch’d.” Interpretation/foreshadow: For a slave to hold up a his burning had that somehow remained immune to the fire‚ to me represents an angry rebellion. Caesar is very “hot headed” and arrogant so a slave would naturally be angry at
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For some people‚ there is a call to rise. An ambition—a competition—is planted in them‚ and they dream of influence. These are the people who become rulers‚ who lead the way of nations‚ who bend circumstance under their will. Julius Caesar certainly is an example: his presumption towards bravery holds the nation beneath his grip. He fears no bad omens‚ and even signs of death do not scare him. He tells his wife just hours before his assassination: “Cowards die many times before their deaths; The
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changing their minds quickly‚ and had an important role in the play. The common people support their leaders throughout the play‚ and in return the rulers would gain their trust and more power to rule in making decisions for them or against them. In Julius Caesar‚ the common people are easily manipulated by their leaders‚ but their rulers need the support of the plebeians‚ because they could overthrow their leaders. Murellus and Flavius were citizens but were conspirators who wanted to get rid of Caesar
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The Tragedy of Brutus After the murder of Julius Caesar‚ Brutus sets out to explain why the conspirators plotted against Caesar. He is there to shift the crowd to support the death of their beloved leader and to show them the good things that will result of Caesar’s demise. Brutus knows that the crowd is not on the side of the conspirators‚ so he knows he has to be cautious of how he gets their support. Brutus is worried about his public duty and is prepared to act for the common good of Rome.
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The Feast of Lupercal Caesarian Significance In Shakespeare’s play‚ Julius Caesar‚ the Feast of Lupercal presents itself early in the play. This feast was significant in the two following ways: it represented the beliefs of the people of the power of Lupercal‚ and in the play it shows Antony’s devotion to Caesar. Although the root of the word Lupercal can be drawn from the Latin lupus‚ which means wolf‚ the feast is a celebration of fertility. In the mythology of the times‚ Lupercus
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Often in plays‚ the turning point is significant. The turning point usually occurs after the climax and begins the denouement. In William Shakespeare’s play‚ Julius Caesar‚ the funeral orations delivered by Marc Antony and Brutus is the turning point. Marc Antony delivers the more effective funeral oration because he plays with the commoners’ emotions and uses repetition to illustrate sarcasm which wins the crowd over. Funeral orations commonly focus on emotions. Marc Antony’s funeral
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In the happenings of Julius Casers assassination I am writing an article of a firsthand account who saw it happen. It was one of the assassinators Marcus Brutus. I interviewed him and asked him many questions on how the whole thing came about and why he turned on Caeser in the first place. Here is what he said. I started off and ask him‚ “what was the real reason the senate turned on Caeser”. Brutus answered “the senate saw that he was rising higher and higher to power and they saw that Caeser
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In the play of “Julius Caesar”‚ after Brutus speech about killing Caesar is for the good of Rome‚ Mark Antony began his speech‚ despite to all of the people who disagreed to his speech or the truth‚ he still wanted to revenge to those who murdered his beloved friend Caesar. Instead of using ethos or logos‚ Antony uses pathos to gain the crowd flavor and it’s extremely effective. Antony manages the people of Rome to almost cry for Caesar death and wanted to revenge for Caesar. In Mark Antony speech
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been closely tied‚ as both involve the removal of a leader outside of elections. (Baker 14)” This statement is proven to be true in the case of Julius Caesar‚ whose long list of wrongdoings eventually lead to his assassination on the Ides of March. Caesar was killed by a group of some 60-odd Roman Senators who stabbed him to death. The assassination of Julius Caesar was just due to the fact that he was a vengeful tyrant that became much too powerful after
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referred to as hubris in Ancient Greek literature and is perhaps the worst of tragic flaws to posses as seen in William Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar. While the conspirators claim that it was Caesar’s ambition that lead to his undoing‚ it is Caesar’s arrogance that ultimately leads to his demise‚ betrayal by those closest to him. When the Tragedy of Julius Caesar begins‚ Julius Caesar is undoubtably the most powerful man in Rome. In the very first scene of the play‚ the Roman people are taking a holiday
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