Absolutely nothing. She bids him farewell, and that's the last we hear about the widow. Sorry!
Portia is a character in William Shakespeare's play "The Merchant of Venice," who is a wealthy heiress known for her intelligence and wit. Calpurnia is a character in William Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar," who is the wife of Julius Caesar and is known for her premonitions and attempts to dissuade Caesar from going to the Senate.
Portia and Calpurnia
In Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar," Decius re-interprets Calpurnia's dream by convincing Caesar that it actually symbolizes Rome being revitalized by his blood. Decius uses flattery and manipulation to persuade Caesar to ignore Calpurnia's warnings about staying home on the day of his assassination.
Julius Caesar and William Shakespeare could not have had any form of relationship due to the fact Julius Caesar lived from 100-46 B.C.E. and William Shakespeare lived from from April 1564- April 1616 C.E. There is a tragedy by Shakespeare about Julius Caesar and the conspiracy against him.
Calpurnia's dream, the soothsayer's prophecy, the bad weather.
William Shakespeare
The quotation "there is but one mind in all these men and it is bent against Caesar" is spoken by Mark Antony in Act 3, Scene 1 of William Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar." Antony is highlighting the united front of the conspirators against Caesar.
William Shakespeare
Yes
Caesar dismisses Calpurnia's concerns.
In William Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar," it is Decius Brutus who distracts Caesar, allowing the conspirators to carry out their plan to assassinate him. He cleverly interprets Calpurnia's dream in a way that convinces Caesar to go to the Senate despite her warnings. This manipulation is crucial in ensuring that the conspirators can execute their plot without immediate interference.
Calupurnia in To Kill a Mockingbird is almost like the nanny for the kids. She is a black lady, older then Atticus, and she cooks and takes care of the kids and so on. Calpurnia in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar and in Plutarch's Lives is the wife of Julius Caesar at the time of his death.