because Chuck Norris was in side
Calpurnia requests that Caesar stay home on the Ides of March and not go to the Senate because she had a nightmare in which Caesar's statue was spouting blood in which many Romans bathed their hands.
Calpurnia had a nightmare that her husband Caesar was bleeding uncontrollably from several different wounds. She begged him to stay home because her dream was so awful.
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.
Stay home.
In Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar," Caesar initially refuses to go out because he has been warned by the soothsayer to "beware the Ides of March," and he is superstitious about the ominous signs he has encountered. His wife, Calpurnia, also has a troubling dream that foreshadows danger, urging him to stay home. Despite these warnings, Caesar ultimately dismisses their concerns, showcasing his arrogance and belief in his invincibility. This decision ultimately leads to his tragic downfall.
Dramatic irony means that the audience knows something that the characters don't. So, the dramatic irony is that we know something bad is going to happen to Caesar because it's "the tragedy of Julius Caesar" but he doesn't know. Another example is the fact that we know Brutus, his "friend" is planning on killing him, but Caesar doesn't know it yet
Julius Caesar raided Britain, but he was not emperor. Claudius led the invasion and conquest
Calpurnia interprets the dream as a warning for her husband, Julius Caesar, to stay home on the Ides of March. She sees the dream as a bad omen. On the other hand, Decius interprets the dream as a positive sign, suggesting Caesar is invincible and should attend the Senate meeting where he will be crowned.
Calpurnia, Julius Caesar's wife, requests him to stay home from the Senate on the Ides of March due to a troubling dream she had that foreshadowed danger to his life. She believes that the omens and her premonitions indicate that he is in grave danger. Despite her pleas, Caesar ultimately dismisses her concerns and decides to go to the Senate, which leads to his assassination.
Calpurnia had a dream [foreshadowing] of basically Caesar's death; she pleaded with him to stay home. However, Decius, who came to retrieve Caesar, put a different interpretation on Calpurnia's dream and Caesar went ahead and died.
The police advised people to stay home during the tornado.
He wants Octavius to be informed with all that has dealt with the death of Caesar, and to tell him to stay where he was for a small amount of time so there wasn't a chance that he was assassinated like Julius Caesar was.