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Brutus Character Analysis

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When does a good thing become too much, and how? In William Shakespeare’s play The Tragedy of Julius Caesar, Marcus Brutus was a Roman nobleman and politician turned against Julius Caesar, the incumbent dictator of Rome. Coerced into joining a plot to kill Caesar by letters appearing to be from dissatisfied commoners, he soon took charge of the conspiracy. He advocated that the group do only what was necessary to save Rome from Caesar and no more. Brutus rejected a proposal to kill Caesar’s right hand man Marc Antony in fear of pursuing too bloody a course. He truly believed in Caesar’s corruption and in his conspirators’ virtue. In William Shakespeare's The Tragedy of Julius Caesar, Brutus is the tragic character because his enduring trust makes him blind to the true, and often threatening, nature of those around him.
Throughout the play, it is clear that Brutus truly believes in the egalitarian nature of the assassination plot. He also clearly trusts his friends. Among his last words were an affirmation of the trust he had in his co-conspirators: “My heart doth joy that yet in all my life / I found no man but he was true to me.” (5.5.34-35). He is happy that everyone he met was true and honest with him - this is completely untrue, especially with regards to Cassius. Although there is little about Cassius’ true motives in the later acts of the play, Act 1 Scene 2 ends with his resolution to manipulate Brutus with falsified letters from the Roman people. Brutus trusts these

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