Want this question answered?
Marc Antony begins his indictment of Julius Caesar assassins during the middle of the speech after praising Brutus the conspirator as an "honorable" and "noble man." He cites how Caesar "loved" the people, and Brutus particularly, who among the conspirators he then called "traitors." He closes indirectly asking "Rome," to "rise and mutiny," against the conspirators.
There are two main ironies in the crowd's reaction to Brutus's speech. First, Brutus explains to the crowd that the only reason he killed Caesar was that Caesar was too ambitious. Brutus says he participated in murdering Caesar in order to keep from getting too much power.
Brutus and Cassius delivered speech to convince the roman mob and give proper reasons for Caesar's death. Then Mark Antony delivered his funeral speech where he succeeded to influence the mindset of the fickle-minded mob in his favour. They began considering Julius Caesar to be the noblest man in Rome. They ran into rage against the conspirators. Brutus and Cassius were driven out of the Gates of Rome and Cinna the poet was killed when the mob punished him for a matching name with Cinna the Conspirator. The armies of 'Brutus and Cassius' and 'Antony and Octabius' geared to fight each other.
Brutus explains his motives for killing Caesar in the only soliloquy he speaks in the play. From the opening words of this speech-"It must be by his death"-the verb "must" indicates that Brutus has already determined the course of action that he must follow: Caesar must die to preserve the welfare of the republic. The rest of the opening statement is an attestation of the nobility of Brutus's character; he is not motivated by petty, personal jealousies as Cassius is, but by genuine concern for the good, the honour and welfare of Rome.
Mark Anthony must speak from the pulpit from where Brutus will deliver his speech. He must not speak any ill about the group which murdered Caesar. He will just speak whatever good he can devise of Caesar. He will speak in the pulpit after Brutus.
Anthony tricks Brutus into letting him give a soliloquy at Caesar's funeral. He uses the opportunity to sarcastically implicate Brutus and Cassius in Caesar's murder. He says that Brutus considered Caesar "ambitious" using his speech to use Brutus' own words against him.
Cassius wants Brutus to join in a conspiracy to kill Julius Caesar. He tells Brutus stories of Caesar to poison his mind and make Brutus believe that Caesar wants to set himself up as a tyrant.
Brutus is the one that is more democratic. After Caesar gets killed, when Brutus and Antony give the speech to the plebians or villagers, Antony want to make sure Brutus and Cassius get what they deserved for what they did. For Brutus, he wants the govt. to change, and to change Rome into a republic.
Marc Antony begins his indictment of Julius Caesar assassins during the middle of the speech after praising Brutus the conspirator as an "honorable" and "noble man." He cites how Caesar "loved" the people, and Brutus particularly, who among the conspirators he then called "traitors." He closes indirectly asking "Rome," to "rise and mutiny," against the conspirators.
There were two men that had the name "Brutus." If you're talking about the one that was like Julius Caesar's son and gave the speech, you're thinking of Marcus Brutus. But if you're talking about the one against Caesar and the one who wanted to start the conspiracy, that's Cassius Brutus. The twowere brothers-in-law. I know his last name was brutusIt was not! in fact his name was Marcus Junius Brutus, and the other you were talking about, was Caius Cassius.Decius Brutus (full name Decius Junius Brutus--Junius Brutus was the family name) was the brother-in-law who was also a conspirator against Caesar and was the man who lured Caesar out of his house to the Senate by telling him that his wife had misinterpreted her dream. Not Caius Cassius
A monologue is a speech made by one person, either in the presence or absence of others. Julius Caesar is a play by William Shakespeare. "Julius Caesar Monologue" is a long speech made by someone in that play. Mark Antony has a long monologue in the play and so does Brutus. Various characters have shorter speeches long enough to consider as monologues: Cassius, Casca, Brutus and Antony again, and even Caesar.
You can find the words of the famous speech given by Brutus at Caesar's funeral online at Word Info. You can also find the speech in the book Julius Caesar.
There are two main ironies in the crowd's reaction to Brutus's speech. First, Brutus explains to the crowd that the only reason he killed Caesar was that Caesar was too ambitious. Brutus says he participated in murdering Caesar in order to keep from getting too much power.
they are less upset about Caesar's death.
Brutus's purpose was to control the crowd as was Anthony's. Brutus began his speech with a hostile crowd against him as a murderer of the popular Julius Caesar.
Brutus and Cassius delivered speech to convince the roman mob and give proper reasons for Caesar's death. Then Mark Antony delivered his funeral speech where he succeeded to influence the mindset of the fickle-minded mob in his favour. They began considering Julius Caesar to be the noblest man in Rome. They ran into rage against the conspirators. Brutus and Cassius were driven out of the Gates of Rome and Cinna the poet was killed when the mob punished him for a matching name with Cinna the Conspirator. The armies of 'Brutus and Cassius' and 'Antony and Octabius' geared to fight each other.
Brutus explains his motives for killing Caesar in the only soliloquy he speaks in the play. From the opening words of this speech-"It must be by his death"-the verb "must" indicates that Brutus has already determined the course of action that he must follow: Caesar must die to preserve the welfare of the republic. The rest of the opening statement is an attestation of the nobility of Brutus's character; he is not motivated by petty, personal jealousies as Cassius is, but by genuine concern for the good, the honour and welfare of Rome.