brutus is a traitor essay

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    The tragic heroes Creon and Brutus are lessons against being too prideful to listen to others and conversely, being too gullible. In the tragedies Antigone and Julius Caesar, by Sophocles and Shakespeare, the characters Creon and Brutus are similar tragic heroes. Both have noble statutes, and are driven to make their nations prosperous, but their fatal flaws, Creon’s pride and Brutus’s overt idealism and trustingness, cause their downfall. Furthermore, before their downfall, both realize their

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    suicide. Brutus’s choice to side with Cassius followed with the murder of Julius Caesar. Cassius manipulated Brutus into joining him by sending Brutus letters acknowledging how Rome would be better without Caesar. Brutus’s strong sense of honor made it easier for the conspirators to influence him to join them. Brutus and Cassius had completely distinct motives for killing Caesar. Brutus thought that expelling Caesar from his position would improve Rome and believed that Caesar’s ambition would lead

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    Shakespeare's Julius Caesar

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    In the play Julius Caesar by Shakespeare, Brutus and Antony both display their sides of Caesar in hopes of getting the Plebeians to support them. Mark Antony, a friend of Caesars, effectively persuades the crowd that the conspirators are traitors rather than heroes while technically keeping his promise to avoid saying anything negative about them. Antony convinced the mob that Caesar cared for the common people by manipulating the definition of the words “honorable” and “ambitious,” and using props

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    A Comparison of Speeches by Brutus and Antony in William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar This historic play which was written by William Shakespeare in the 16 century as a play is in fact based on older history dating back to time before Christ. When the roman empire was the most powerful in the world and a man named Julius Caesar was the roman statesman and general who ruled it. William Shakespeare however changes the historic accounts to some point in order for the

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    Brutus was convinced that Caesar was bound to do bad things in the future. After Caesar’s death, his dear friend Antony, and his so-called “friend,” Brutus gave two entirely different speeches at his funeral. Antony played no part in the murder and made sure the people knew. He had no problem pointing fingers and calling names, and it just so happened that sweet little Brutus was one of them. In Antony’s speech, he used pathos to toy with people's emotions. He said Brutus was Caesar’s

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    “The noble Brutus Hath told you Caesar was ambitious. If it were so, it was a grievous fault, And grievously hath Caesar answered it.” - William Shakespeare. Brutus was once a noble honest man. Everyone loved him until one day he decided to join the conspiracy group. The group had a plan to kill Caesar, but had one problem. The city of Rome would look down on the conspiracy group if they did not have someone they favored in the group. That is when they had asked Brutus to join. And so he did, but

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    Julius Caesar Rhetoric

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    language designed to persuade and impress the audience using figurative speech and other techniques. In act 3 of “Julius Caesar” by William Shakespeare, both Antony and Brutus made powerful speeches at Caesar’s funeral to persuade and inform the people about their point of view on Caesar’s death. After the fall of Caesar, Brutus convinces the people by saying how Caesar should be killed due to his ambition and for the future of Rome and its people. However, although Antony repeats how all the conspirators

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    character of Mark Antony manages to sway an entire defensive crowd of Romans into rage against Brutus and his fellow conspirators; driving them to munity in a seemingly effortless way with his words. However, Mark Antony employs more than just his speech to manipulate the crowd to his side, using multiple types of communication through his gestures, language, and props to drive the crowd away from Brutus. First and foremost, Antony uses language as a way of moving the crowd to his favor and likeness

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    to Caesar are the few who wind up alive at the end of the play, and in The Odyssey, those who remained loyal to Odysseus were rewarded by Odysseus, and those who weren’t were killed. In Julius Caesar, Cassius lead a group of conspirators, including Brutus, Caesar’s loyal

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    The stories of Jesus, Julius, and their betrayers are very similar in terms of their origins, revolutionary protagonists, and the fates of those involved. Jesus and Julius both grew up in rather poor families. Although it’s hard to believe, Caesar’s family wasn’t technically rich. They were members of the Roman aristocracy, but they inherited this title from their wealthier ancestors (Biography.Com Editors). Both of these characters started a revolution in their cultures; Jesus transformed the

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