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  1. Marullus proceeds to question, “Knew you not Pompey?” asking if they remember straining and cheering to see Pompey, not Caesar, in his chariot. Now that Caesar has defeated Pompey, why are ...

  2. www.cliffsnotes.com › literature › jScene 1 - CliffsNotes

    Analysis. Understand the opening scenes of Shakespeare's plays and you understand what follows: The scene has been painted with brilliant strokes. As Julius Caesar opens, Flavius and Marullus, tribunes of Rome, are attempting to reestablish civil order. But it's too little, too late: There is disorder in the streets.

  3. MARULLUS: Look, Caesar has settled an inner struggle. Whether or not that is for the good of Rome is yet to be determined. What is certainly not for the good of Rome is giving Caesar more power than he should have.

  4. Murellus asks, suggesting that Caesar’s victory does not merit a triumph since it involves no conquering of a foreign foe to the greater glory of Rome (I.i. 31 – 33). Murellus reminds the commoners of the days when they used to gather to watch and cheer for Pompey’s triumphant returns from battle.

  5. Nov 21, 2023 · Marullus, a Roman elected official, appears with his friend Flavius in the brief first scene of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. In his brief appearance, we learn that he is an elitist who...

  6. Marullus’s opinions about Caesar clue us into the plays intense interest in political rhetoric. Indeed, Julius Caesar is more a character spoken about than a character who speaks. Caesar’s standing as a ruler, first introduced in this moment, remains a central topic of debate throughout the play.

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  8. Julius Caesar Act 1 Scene 1. In this opening scene, two Roman tribunes, Flavius and Marullus, lecture a crowd of commoners celebrating Julius Caesars return to Rome. They chide the...