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The Consequences Of Faults In Shakespeare's Julius Caesar

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One may claim that mistakes are caused by faults in the stars, but this is untrue. Faults are caused by the choices and actions taken by an individual, and only those decisions can be blamed for unavoidable blunders and tragedies. This idea is analyzed in William Shakespeare’s eminent play, Julius Caesar. Readers interpret the decisions taken by close friends among rivals to extract power from a person who could have been an extremely dangerous leader. In this play, Julius Caesar was an authority figure venerated by others, but was murdered by enemies as well as dear ones because of the tyranny that could have led from his power. The slaying of Caesar, which was meant to prevent chaos before it ensued, led to immense destruction, in which a singular man lasted as the tragic hero - Marcus Brutus. Brutus made a choice to kill Caesar in order to save the people of Rome, who he loved dearly, from corruption and abuse of power. Marcus Brutus was the tragic hero in the drama “Julius Caesar” because of the honorable attempts made at protecting Rome. However, his errors in judgment from his choices caused him to experience affliction and inevitably led to his downfall.
A tragic hero is defined as a character who performs a grave mistake, possibly due to a flaw in judgment, and causes their inexorable death. Perhaps the strongest attribute that makes Brutus the tragic hero is displayed during the conflict he faced in deciding who his loyalty should lie in, his country or his friend. After determining that Rome could be in danger of oppression, Brutus realized that the only means to save his country was to murder Caesar. Brutus’s nobility comes from the fact that he was not looking for power in place of Caesar. He simply removed the chance of Rome being harmed by Caesar’s domination with good intentions. After Caesar was murdered, the commoners of Rome requested Brutus to be crowned king instead, and Brutus humbly denied. The tragedy in this decision follows soon after Brutus departs from the scene. Mark Antony was able to convince the commoners that Caesar’s death was not justified, and turned the crowd into an angry mob, which led to the demise of Brutus and the others. One of Brutus’s fatal flaw was his humbleness,

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