Brutus is saying that he doesn't know what time it is.
Brutus is the character with the most lines in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. Hope this helps!
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It comes from the play Julius Caesar by Shakespeare. Those lines are spoken when Caesar is being murdered and he sees Marcus Brutus approaching him with a sword.
Brutus :) A quote to prove it is: Cassius: Let Antony and Caesar fall together Brutus: Our course will seem too bloody, Caius Cassius ... (Then later in the same monologue) Brutus: And for Mark Antony, think not of him; For he can do no more than Caesar's arm When Caesar's head is off (Act 2, Scene 1, Lines 161-162 and 181-183) Enjoy!
He is used as a symbol in the political struggle for control Rome and its empire. Brutus makes a speech portraying Caesar as a potential tyrant, and Antony makes a speech portraying Caesar as a benefactor of Rome. Brutus is probably the one he influences most deeply. Shortly before he commits suicide, Brutus says, "The ghost of Caesar hath appear'd to me / Two several times by night . . . . I know my hour is come" (Act 5, Scene 5, lines 17-20.
Brutus is the character with the most lines in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. Hope this helps!
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he threw a shoe to Julius Caesar and then he did Brutus was the last person to stab Julius Caesar. He was stabbed 23 times. This is one of the most famous lines from the play "et tu Brute?" meaning " and you Brutus?". after which Caeser says " then fall Caeser." He helped kill him.
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.
It comes from the play Julius Caesar by Shakespeare. Those lines are spoken when Caesar is being murdered and he sees Marcus Brutus approaching him with a sword.
I believe his says that their cause is strong enough to bond them to their words or something along those lines
Brutus :) A quote to prove it is: Cassius: Let Antony and Caesar fall together Brutus: Our course will seem too bloody, Caius Cassius ... (Then later in the same monologue) Brutus: And for Mark Antony, think not of him; For he can do no more than Caesar's arm When Caesar's head is off (Act 2, Scene 1, Lines 161-162 and 181-183) Enjoy!
Brutus said that in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. Act 2 Scene 1 Lines 14-15.
In Scene 1 lines 32-34
The only instance of Julius Caesar using the tactic of interior lines was at the siege of Alesia during the Gallic Wars
He is used as a symbol in the political struggle for control Rome and its empire. Brutus makes a speech portraying Caesar as a potential tyrant, and Antony makes a speech portraying Caesar as a benefactor of Rome. Brutus is probably the one he influences most deeply. Shortly before he commits suicide, Brutus says, "The ghost of Caesar hath appear'd to me / Two several times by night . . . . I know my hour is come" (Act 5, Scene 5, lines 17-20.
If the definition of a tragic hero is a character with a lot of lines who ends up dead at the end of the play, Brutus fits the bill. So for that matter does Cassius. It was not important for Shakespeare to have a tragic hero in every tragedy--that concept arose long after he stopped writing.