he knows he’s the only person he can trust?!!
cassius seldom smiles
Caesar says "Yond Cassius has a lean and hungry look. He thinks too much. Such men are dangerous." He's giving Antony lessons in politics. Too bad for him he didn't listen to his own advice.
Caesar tells Antony that Cassius is dangerous because he perceives Cassius as someone who is ambitious and has a keen mind, capable of influencing others. Caesar notes that Cassius has a lean and hungry look, suggesting he is not content with his current status and may seek power. This observation reflects Caesar's wariness of Cassius's potential to incite dissent and challenge his authority. Overall, it underscores Caesar's awareness of the political threats surrounding him.
Antony is dangerous. Cassius foresaw that Antony, if allowed to live, would thwart the conspirators' plans and make himself a dictator.
Cassius tells Brutus that allowing Antony to speak at Caesar's funeral could be dangerous because Antony is a powerful speaker and may turn the crowd against them by reminding them of Caesar's good deeds. Cassius warns that Antony could incite the crowd to rebel against the conspirators.
Antony
"Yond Cassius has a lean and hungry look. He thinks too much. Such men are dangerous."
Caesar warns Antony that Cassius is dangerous because he perceives Cassius as someone who is ambitious, shrewd, and capable of manipulation. He believes Cassius has a lean and hungry look, suggesting he is not content with his current status and may seek power for himself. Caesar's concern reflects his awareness of Cassius's potential to incite dissent and challenge his authority within the political landscape of Rome. This highlights Caesar's growing paranoia and the tense atmosphere leading up to his eventual assassination.
The correct quotation is: "I rather tell thee what is to be fear'd Than what I fear; for always I am Caesar." Caesar is talking to Mark Antony in Act 1 of Julius Caesar. He has just said "Yon Cassius has a lean and hungry look; such men are dangerous." and he has been explaining why he thinks Cassius is dangerous. But, he is hasty to explain, it's not as though he, Caesar, is actually afraid of Cassius. Oh, no. He is only telling Antony why Cassius should be feared, not that he himself is afraid of him, for he is always Caesar, and, it is to be understood, Caesar is never afraid of anything.
No, Antony is against the conspirtors. He thought it was wrong for them to kill Caesar.
cassius
1.) War between Cassius and Brutus and Antony 2.) Dueling Eulogies between Brutus and Antony 3.) Brutus' betrayal of Caesar