He had epilepsy.
FLAVIUS
Act 3 , Scene 1 , Line 244
Marcus Brutus on line 95 of Act 5 Scene 3 of Julius Caesar ;D
Cassius say that line in act 2 scene 1 Line 192.
Rearrange the word order of a line -apex
Mark Antony in Act 3 Scene 2 of Juilus Caesar to the townspeople right after Caesar was murdered by Brutus and his gang of assassins, he effectively turned the people away against Brutus, he was misquoting Brutus' line from the beginning of the play
No. Julius Caesar's line ended with the death of his daughter. Augustus, who was related to Caesar, had his line ended with the death of Nero. More than likely there were minor relatives who have faded from history. However, there is no way to trace one's genealogy back to Caesar. Ancient records have been destroyed, lost, or not even kept at all.No. Julius Caesar's line ended with the death of his daughter. Augustus, who was related to Caesar, had his line ended with the death of Nero. More than likely there were minor relatives who have faded from history. However, there is no way to trace one's genealogy back to Caesar. Ancient records have been destroyed, lost, or not even kept at all.No. Julius Caesar's line ended with the death of his daughter. Augustus, who was related to Caesar, had his line ended with the death of Nero. More than likely there were minor relatives who have faded from history. However, there is no way to trace one's genealogy back to Caesar. Ancient records have been destroyed, lost, or not even kept at all.No. Julius Caesar's line ended with the death of his daughter. Augustus, who was related to Caesar, had his line ended with the death of Nero. More than likely there were minor relatives who have faded from history. However, there is no way to trace one's genealogy back to Caesar. Ancient records have been destroyed, lost, or not even kept at all.No. Julius Caesar's line ended with the death of his daughter. Augustus, who was related to Caesar, had his line ended with the death of Nero. More than likely there were minor relatives who have faded from history. However, there is no way to trace one's genealogy back to Caesar. Ancient records have been destroyed, lost, or not even kept at all.No. Julius Caesar's line ended with the death of his daughter. Augustus, who was related to Caesar, had his line ended with the death of Nero. More than likely there were minor relatives who have faded from history. However, there is no way to trace one's genealogy back to Caesar. Ancient records have been destroyed, lost, or not even kept at all.No. Julius Caesar's line ended with the death of his daughter. Augustus, who was related to Caesar, had his line ended with the death of Nero. More than likely there were minor relatives who have faded from history. However, there is no way to trace one's genealogy back to Caesar. Ancient records have been destroyed, lost, or not even kept at all.No. Julius Caesar's line ended with the death of his daughter. Augustus, who was related to Caesar, had his line ended with the death of Nero. More than likely there were minor relatives who have faded from history. However, there is no way to trace one's genealogy back to Caesar. Ancient records have been destroyed, lost, or not even kept at all.No. Julius Caesar's line ended with the death of his daughter. Augustus, who was related to Caesar, had his line ended with the death of Nero. More than likely there were minor relatives who have faded from history. However, there is no way to trace one's genealogy back to Caesar. Ancient records have been destroyed, lost, or not even kept at all.
Lizzy Borden did a song called Notorious where a common line is: Notorious Hail Caesar
ethos
FLAVIUS
The carol is called "Do you hear what I hear" and the first line is "Said the night wind to the little lamb." It was written in 1962.
Since you are talking about "conspirators" I guessed that the play you were talking about was Julius Caesar. Act II Scene 2 (at least in my copy) starts with Caesar's line "Nor heaven nor earth have been at peace tonight". The conspirators hardly say anything in it. However, at the end of the scene Caesar says to Trebonius, "Be near me that I may remember you" and Trebonius responds "Caesar, I will. (Aside) And so near will I be, that your best friends shall wish I had been further." The last part of the line is said by the actor under his breath, or turning away from Caesar, so the audience hears what is said, but Caesar does not appear to. This is a convention, of course; the actor playing Caesar knows and can hear Trebonius's line, but pretends that he cannot, so the audience can know that Trebonius is sharing his thought only with the audience and not with Caesar. Sometimes in films or some productions this is accomplished by a voiceover where we hear Trebonius's thought without seeing him say it. This is just as much a convention as having him say the line directly to the audience, since we cannot hear people's thoughts. The name of this convention or device is given in the script: it is called an "aside", and is especially useful where the character detects some irony as in this case. Sometimes a character will deliver a string of asides commenting on the stupidity of another character--Act II Scene 2 of Shakespeare's play Cymbeline consists almost exclusively of such remarks. Cymbeline is a play rife with asides, but there are loads also in Othello, and other Shakespeare plays. Back to Caesar, Brutus has a short aside about two lines after Trebonius's.
And you Brutus? These were the famous last lines of Julius Caesar as he was stabbed in the Senate house multiple times by the senators. Brutus was the last to stab Caesar and had betrayed Caesar's friendship with him. The play Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare also uses this line as Caesar is killed.
Julius Caesar
Act 3 , Scene 1 , Line 244
"beware the ides of march"
This statement meant that in Brutus and Caesar were equals. The significance of this line is that it suggests that Brutus could rule Rome.