Even in Act 1 Scene 2 we find that Antony is Caesar's acolyte, his student. And Antony hero-wroships him. His remark "O pardon me thou bleeding piece of earth" is a sincere expression of love.
He doesn't like him because he's a tool used by Caesar, bowing to his every whim. He wants to kill him at a point but Burtus explains that it's not in the party's best favor to look like butchers when all they want to do is take out Caesar.
I'n
We pity them because most of them live in such poverty.
We pity them because most of them live in such poverty.
It seems like your question was cut off. However, if you're asking about the general U.S. attitude toward a specific topic or event, please provide more details so I can respond accurately.
His opinion on Marc Antony is that Antony is just the limb of Caesar. There is no point in killing him either. Antony is a friend of Brutus and he seems loyal but then Brutus will soon find out that Antony is a traitor to him and but of course despises him.
He doesn't like him because he's a tool used by Caesar, bowing to his every whim. He wants to kill him at a point but Burtus explains that it's not in the party's best favor to look like butchers when all they want to do is take out Caesar.
I'n
Actually she had two: Julius Caesar (bore a son for him in 47BC; and Antony (bore twins for him in 37BC). It seems she was irresistible for the Romans.
The narrator's attitude towards himself and his actions can be seen as reflective and introspective. He seems to question his motives and decisions, showing a level of self-awareness and a desire for self-improvement.
Antony's famous speech from Shakespeare's Julius Caeser starts "Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears..." Brutus' speech from the same play goes "Romans, countrymen, and lovers, hear me for my cause..." What you're asking seems to be a mix of both though.
According to a letter written by Antony to Octavian, he was in a relationship with Cleopatra for nine years. In it Antony seems oblivious to the scandal his conduct was causing and tried to smooth everything over.
i think that Marc Antony is the hero of the the play the tragedy of Julius Caesar because he revealed the unknown to the people concerning the assassination of Julius Caesar ,he made people know that the conspirators so called the honorable were those behind the honor killing of Julius Caesar and he made the people revenge the death of Julius Caesar and with the aid of his nephew octaviusfrom Brutus and Cassius after the escaped from the people. therefore Marc Antony is the hero of the play the tragedy of Julius Caesar.
The author's attitude towards doctors in paragraph five and six of "The Dead Book" appears disdainful and critical. They emphasize the doctors' lack of empathy and their focus on technical procedures over the human aspect of patient care. The author seems to suggest that these doctors are too detached and clinical in their approach to medicine.
What do u mean? She seems nice in public!
The Romans did not say anything about Casca's thoughts. Any thoughts of his come from fiction: from Shakespeare's play. In Shakespeare's play, Casca does not explicitly disclose what he thinks Caesar's motive was for refusing the crown, but his scornful description of the reaction of the crowd when he did so ("the rabblement shouted, and clapped their chopped hands, and threw up their sweaty night-caps, and uttered such a deal of stinking breath because Caesar refused the crown, that it had almost choked Caesar") it would appear that Casca was of the view (surely correct) that the whole process was to amplify Caesar's already popular status with the mob.
In Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar, Caesar is murdered in the Senate at the begining of Act III. Caesar's ghost later returns to warn Brutus that he will die at Philippi - a warning that Brutus seems neither surprised, nor much troubled by.