Neither of those guys takes his wife seriously.
Portia and Calpurnia were the wives of the two most important men in this play, and the two most important man in Rome at that point in time. Portia was a woman who was madly in love with her husband Brutus. She loved when he was around, but hated whenever he left.. She felt that something was going wrong and she could not even think of her husband in some type of danger. Portia also seems to be a very alert woman. This shows that she has very acute senses. Portia is also a very strong woman. She hurt herself to prove a point to her husband. Like Calpurnia, Portia is also a very humble and obedient wife. Calpurnia is quite similar to Portia. She felt that the life of Caesar was in trouble that day, and did not want him to leave the house either. She loved her husband a lot, and she knew that her dreams of Caesar dying were warnings. Calpurnia is humble and obedient wife of Julius Caesar They are two females that seemed to be quite flattering. Neither of the woman seemed to be inferiors than the guys in this story. these woman were not less intelligent then the other characters in the play .They were actually both very smart. Portia for knowing that Brutus' health was at stake when he left the house, and Calpurnia as well whenever Caesar left for the Capitol. Both were very good looking and elegant. Sadly they both were housewife's .
Well there's Caesar like Julius Caesar, Cinna like Cinna the poet or on of the conspirators who killed Caesar, Octavia from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, Cato like Cato the elder, there's also a Brutus and Portia form Julius Caesar play.
In Julius Caesar, common people treated Julius like a god. Brutus knew people wanted Julius to be King, but Brutus feared that "power corrupts; absolute power corrupts absolutely". Brutus thought power centered in one man, Caesar, would overturn the republic.
Portia dies by swallowing fire, or as we would say burning coal. Brutus reacts to her death is sorrow, but in calm sorrow - without weeping and such. He simply accepts her death and moves on.
Yes. They were friends, but Brutus felt he had to kill Caesar for Rome. Basically, he loved Rome more than he loved Caesar.
Only if Caesar isn't good for the people
Decius interprets Calphurnia's dream as a way to ersuade Caesar to come out of his house instead of hiding. He tells him that the blood in the dream does not mean death but a way of energizing Rome and that all of his men will laugh at him for believing in such a foolish thing.
The reactions to signs and dreams by characters like Casca, Calpurnia, Brutus, and Caesar reflect the importance of divination and superstition in ancient Roman culture. Romans believed in omens and signs as a way to communicate with the gods and predict the future. This cultural context influenced how these characters interpreted and acted upon the signs they received, shaping their decisions and actions.
he had said that he didn't like how Caesar was getting all of the credit for everything and that he was wrong for helping the plebians mortem tyrannis
from the 1st part of the book,,,he doesn't like Caesar at all
Brutus tells the group that Antony was like one of Caesar's arms. He was implying that once they killed Caesar, it would render Antony powerless.
He found it necessary to kill Caesar because the other senators persuaded Brutus to join and he did not like his behavior.