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      • Cassius, mistakenly believing that the battle has been lost and that Titinius has been taken captive, orders Pindarus to kill him. When Titinius returns, he puts his wreath of victory on Cassius’s head and kills himself. Brutus orders his legions into battle again in order to conquer the still undefeated Antony.
      www.folger.edu/explore/shakespeares-works/julius-caesar/read/5/3/
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  2. Brutus, with the ghostly visitor of the previous night fresh in his mind, also interprets Cassius’s death as the doings of a vengeful Caesar. In believing himself immortal, Caesar opened himself up to his murder by the conspirators, and his death seemed to disprove his faith in his own permanence.

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      Cassius seduced Brutus’s wife Brutus asked for money and...

  3. Titinius and Messala return to where Cassius is lying. Titinius has a wreath of laurels on his head, a sign of victory, and is telling Messala that Brutus has defeated Octavius but Antony has conquered Cassius' army. He sees Cassius on the ground and realizes that Cassius misunderstood what happened on the battle field.

  4. Antony thinks that Brutus and Cassius are attacking them in order to make themselves look braver than they are. A messenger alerts them that the opposing army is approaching. Antony gives Octavius an order about how to advance his troops, which Octavius disputes.

  5. Octavius demands to lead the more important army division, despite his inexperience. Brutus and Cassius arrive with their men, and the opposing leaders hold a brief conference. The exchange, short and bitter, ends with Octavius and Antony storming away.

  6. Summary. At the battlefield at Philippi, Antony and Octavius ready themselves for battle against the forces of Brutus and Cassius. Antony tells Octavius that his spies have informed him...

  7. Jul 31, 2015 · Brutus and Cassius exchange accusations in Brutus’s tent. They grow angry with each other but are quickly reconciled, and Brutus tells Cassius of Portia’s death. With Titinius and Messala they plot their military strategy.

  8. In William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, Cassius is under the impression that their armies have been defeated by the forces of Antony and Octavius. This conviction emerges amid the pivotal conflict pitting their group, commanded by Cassius and Brutus, against the allies of Octavius and Mark Antony.

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