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Antony
Decius Brutus, one of the conspirators. Not to be confused with the play's largest role, Marcus Brutus.
Brutus tells them to bathe their hands in Caesar's blood, then walk to the marketplace with their bloodied swords to proclaim peace, freedom, and liberty.
Brutus replies that he wishes he were worthy of such an honorable wife.although Brutus appears completely determined in his interactions with the conspirators, his inability to confess his thoughts to Portia signifies that he still harbors traces of doubt regarding the legitimacy of his plan.
to tell brutus that he would see him at philippi
Antony
Decius Brutus, one of the conspirators. Not to be confused with the play's largest role, Marcus Brutus.
Brutus tells them to bathe their hands in Caesar's blood, then walk to the marketplace with their bloodied swords to proclaim peace, freedom, and liberty.
He tells the people that he won't tell them what's in the will because if they know that Caesar had willed things to them, they would get angry at Brutus and the other conspirators.
Brutus replies that he wishes he were worthy of such an honorable wife.although Brutus appears completely determined in his interactions with the conspirators, his inability to confess his thoughts to Portia signifies that he still harbors traces of doubt regarding the legitimacy of his plan.
Artemidorus is important because he is trying to warn Caesar of the conspirators and that Brutus is planning against him. He writes a letter to tell him and Caesar does not accept it before going into the Senate.
to tell brutus that he would see him at philippi
Cassius thinks Antony might convince the masses that Caesar was wronged instead of the conspirators helping to save them from Caesar's future power abuse
Portia sent Lucius to the capitol because she wanted her servant boy Lucius to tell Brutus that she was well and also check if Brutus was all right, also to check on the whereabouts of Caesar.
Well, here's one: Brutus is at home, pondering in a soliloquy whether Caesar ought to be murdered. He decides a pre-emptive strike is a good idea. A group of conspirators arrive at Brutus' place and they decide how, when and where they will kill Caesar. Mrs. Brutus (better known as Portia) asks Brutus what's with these parties in the wee hours of the morning, but he doesn't tell her. Another chap shows up, wanting in on the conspiracy.
Because Antony had no intention of allowing Brutus and Cassius to get away with murdering Antony's friend Caesar, or with impeding Antony's desire to become as powerful a ruler as Caesar was. He didn't give a hoot what Cassius and Brutus told him to do; he agreed with them temporarily because they were a dozen dangerous men holding bloody knives, but had every intention of breaking his word the moment he could.
We cannot know what Brutus tells the audience at that this point if you do not tell us what this point is.