in honesty
(for i am armed so strong in honesty)
3 parts.
Titinius and Messala
In Act 1, scene 2, Brutus says of Caesar "He hath the falling sickness" (likely meaning epilepsy). Cassius replies that it is the three of them (Brutus, Cassius and Casca) who have the 'falling sickness' -- meaning the lack of will to confront Caesar over his abuse of power.
Marullus and Flavius-the Tribunes Gnaeus Pompey. Sextus Pompey. Julius Caesar. Portia- Brutus' wife. Cinna-the poet. Cinna-the conspirator. Young Cato-son of Marcus Cato. Caius Cassius. Marcus Brutus.
Cassius plans to stay and wait with his army so that when Antony and Octavius get towards them they will be tired and use their resources; however Brutus over rules his plan with his own. He wanted their military to go towards them, because there was a city between the their army and Antony's, and if they didn't get their first Antony could persuade them to join forces with them, making them more powerful then his own army.
Cassius and casca want brutus to win.
3 parts.
Brutus had a verbal duel with Caius Cassius over certain misunderstanding where they both misjudged each other's actions.
The Triumvirs (Octavius, Mark Antony and Lepidus) decide which of the conspirators shall live and which shall die. Mark Antony assures Octavius that Lepidus does not and will not ever have any serious power... The two men start planning their attack on Brutus' and Cassius' forces. Brutus learns that Cassius has finally arrived. Brutus is angry with Cassius, Cassius saying he has done his friend no wrong. Brutus wanting privacy from his troops, tells Cassius to step into his tent where he will discuss the issue further... Brutus angrily attacks Cassius first for contradicting his order to remove Lucius Pella for taking bribes and then Cassius himself for his own dishonesty. Cassius is upset by this but eventually Brutus chooses to forgive his friend. We learn that Portia, Brutus' wife has died, over one hundred senators have been put to death by the Triumvirs and that a large army led by Mark Antony and Octavius is approaching their position... Brutus is greeted by Caesar's Ghost which tells Brutus he will see Caesar again at Philippi.
Titinius and Messala
In Act 1, scene 2, Brutus says of Caesar "He hath the falling sickness" (likely meaning epilepsy). Cassius replies that it is the three of them (Brutus, Cassius and Casca) who have the 'falling sickness' -- meaning the lack of will to confront Caesar over his abuse of power.
In the Begining of the play they were fine with eachother, toward the end of the play thye end up fighting because cassius thought that brutus thought that he was wrong, so in the end they were not close any more they changed dramatically over the time of the play.
Caesar sees Cassius as a dangerous man. The reason why is because Caesar describes that men like Cassius are never comfortable while someone ranks up higher than them... That and he is skinny (this was discussed between only him and Antony, so you would have to read the play in order to understand it a bit, try Sparknotes)
Oedipus claims that the blind prophet Tieresias is plotting with Creon to take the throne.
Understand this first--Julius Caesar by Shakespeare should not be looked on as a book, any more than Beethoven's 5th Symphony should be looked on as a book. There are printed instructions for both on how to play them, but neither is primarily meant to be read and both are meant to be performed and listened to. In the play, Brutus is not the one limited by politics. He has his own stoic philosophy and standards of morality which guide his actions throughout the play. His nobility and high moral standards make him a valuable ally for Cassius because he lends credibility to the conspiracy. But at the same time, Cassius is limited by the politics required to keep Brutus on his side. Cassius knows that Antony is a dangerous opponent and wants to get rid of him but that conflicts with Brutus's morality. The political motive of getting rid of a dangerous enemy is curbed by the political motive of keeping Brutus as an ally. In the end, Cassius gives in to Brutus. The same thing happens over and over, as Brutus makes political mistakes because he is not limited by politics but only by his personal code of ethics. Brutus is a political naïf.
It proves dat Caesar was very proud, over-confident and he treated himself like GOD
Both were achieved by defeating rival groups of aristocrats - Julius over Pompey and his family and the Cassius-Casca-Brutus gang, and Augustus over Mark Antony.