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Cassius compares himself to Aeneas, the great and powerful founder of Rome and Caesar to a weak and helpless elderly man, suggesting he thinks he is superior to their leader. Cassius is angry and indignant that the weak Caesar has now grown so powerful whilst Cassius is worth nothing to him.
- Language Analysis in Julius Caesar
Caesar only has 5% of the lines in Julius Caesar but his...
- Relationships
Caesar is a general and the most powerful man in Rome. He...
- Who's Who
Romeo and Juliet; The Taming of The Shrew; The Tempest;...
- Language Analysis in Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar. The conspirators charge Caesar with ambition, and his behavior substantiates this judgment: he does vie for absolute power over Rome, reveling in the homage he receives from others and in his conception of himself as a figure who will live on forever in men’s minds.
The central characters include Caesar himself, Brutus, Cassius, and Mark Antony, each representing different facets of political ideology and personal conviction. The play’s famous lines, such as “Beware the Ides of March” and Mark Antony’s funeral oration (“Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears...”), have become iconic in ...
- Brutus. A supporter of the republic who believes strongly in a government guided by the votes of senators. While Brutus loves Caesar as a friend, he opposes the ascension of any single man to the position of dictator, and he fears that Caesar aspires to such power.
- Julius Caesar. A great Roman general and senator, recently returned to Rome in triumph after a successful military campaign. While his good friend Brutus worries that Caesar may aspire to dictatorship over the Roman republic, Caesar seems to show no such inclination, declining the crown several times.
- Antony. A friend of Caesar. Antony claims allegiance to Brutus and the conspirators after Caesar’s death in order to save his own life. Later, however, when speaking a funeral oration over Caesar’s body, he spectacularly persuades the audience to withdraw its support of Brutus and instead condemn him as a traitor.
- Cassius. A talented general and longtime acquaintance of Caesar. Cassius dislikes the fact that Caesar has become godlike in the eyes of the Romans. He slyly leads Brutus to believe that Caesar has become too powerful and must die, finally converting Brutus to his cause by sending him forged letters claiming that the Roman people support the death of Caesar.
Romeo and Juliet Characters Analysis features noted Shakespeare scholar William Hazlitt's famous critical essay about the characters of Romeo and Juliet. ROMEO AND JULIET is the only tragedy which Shakespear has written entirely on a love-story.
Shakespeare's chief source for Julius Caesar was Thomas North's translation of Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans, by the famous historian Plutarch. Other Shakespeare plays based on events from Roman history include Coriolanus and Antony and Cleopatra. Being a historical play, Julius Caesar draws on real-life
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Brutus. Marcus Junius Brutus, Roman senator and mastermind of the plot to assassinate Julius Caesar, is the central character of the play. Brutus is first seen in 1.2., discussing with Cassius why the republic would be best served with Caesar's removal.