She meets the Soothsayer, who still fears for Caesar and wants to warn him. Act 2, scene 4 Portia, who has been told of the conspirators’ plan to kill Caesar, waits anxiously for news of their success.Act 2, scene 3 Artemidorus waits in the street for Caesar in order to give him a letter warning him of the conspiracy.He is joined by Brutus and the rest of the conspirators, as well as by Mark Antony. Caesar changes his mind and decides to go. Decius Brutus, arriving to accompany Caesar to the Capitol, convinces him that the senators plan to crown Caesar that day but that they may never renew their offer should they suspect he is afraid. Calphurnia, Caesar’s wife, persuades him to stay home because she fears for his safety. Act 2, scene 2 It is now the fifteenth of March.Brutus, joined by Caius Ligarius, departs for Caesar’s. When the other conspirators have left, Portia, Brutus’s wife, begs of him an explanation for his sudden change of mood. Visited by the conspirators, he agrees to join them but rejects their plan to kill Mark Antony as well as Caesar. When he is brought one of the unsigned letters that Cassius has had left for him to find, Brutus decides to act. Act 2, scene 1 Brutus anxiously ponders joining the conspiracy against Caesar.When Cinna joins them, Cassius sends him to leave letters where Brutus may find them and be persuaded that his opposition to Caesar is desired by many. Cicero having left, Cassius arrives to persuade Casca to join the conspiracy to liberate Rome from the threat of Caesar’s kingship. Act 1, scene 3 Casca, meeting Cicero, describes the marvels visible in the streets that night and suggests that the marvels foretell important events to come.Cassius, alone at the end of the scene, expresses his surprise that Brutus, who is one of Caesar’s favorites, is willing to conspire against Caesar and decides to take immediate advantage of this willingness. After Brutus and Cassius talk with Casca about Mark Antony’s public offer of the crown to Caesar, Brutus agrees to continue his conversation with Cassius the next day. Cassius urges Brutus to oppose Caesar for fear that Caesar may become king. When Caesar and others exit, Cassius and Brutus remain behind. Act 1, scene 2 A soothsayer advises Caesar that the fifteenth of March will be a dangerous day for him.The tribunes Marullus and Flavius try to shame the people into returning to their places of work by reminding them how much they loved Caesar’s rival Pompey, whom Caesar has destroyed and whose sons he has just defeated. Act 1, scene 1 In Rome the people are taking a holiday to celebrate the triumphant return of Julius Caesar.Brutus commits suicide, praised by Antony as “the noblest Roman of them all.” In the battle which follows, Cassius, misled by erroneous reports of loss, persuades a slave to kill him Brutus’s army is defeated. Brutus and Cassius escape as Antony joins forces with Octavius Caesar.Encamped with their armies, Brutus and Cassius quarrel, then agree to march on Antony and Octavius. Antony uses a funeral oration to turn the citizens of Rome against them. At the Senate, the conspirators stab Caesar to death. A conspirator, Decius Brutus, persuades him to go to the Senate with the other conspirators and his friend, Mark Antony. Cassius and others convince Brutus to join a conspiracy to kill Caesar.On the day of the assassination, Caesar plans to stay home at the urging of his wife, Calphurnia. Brutus, Caesar’s friend and ally, fears that Caesar will become king, destroying the republic. As the action begins, Rome prepares for Caesar’s triumphal entrance. The first part of the play leads to his death the second portrays the consequences. Entire Play Caesar’s assassination is just the halfway point of Julius Caesar.You loved Caesar before with good reason and cause, so what prevents you from mourning him now? Why have men lost their reason? I feel as though my heart is on the coffin with Caesar. I am not here to contradict Brutus, but I just wanted to tell you what I know. Does this seem like ambition to you?! But, Brutus says he was ambitious, and Brutus is an honourable man. On Lupercal, I offered him the crown thrice, and he refused it each time. Caesar filled Rome's coffers, and cared for the poor, and this is ambition?! But, Brutus says he was, and Brutus is an honourable man. To me, he was the best friend I could have hoped for- but Brutus says that he was ambitious, and Brutus is honourable. But, Brutus and the rest, they are all honourable man, so I come to speak about Caesar. Brutus told you that Caesar was ambitious, and Caesar paid dearly for this fault, by Brutus and his men. The good that people do is usually buried and forgotten with them and only their evil is remembered. I am here only to bury Caesar, not to praise him.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |