Caesar refuses to read the letter from Artemidorus because he dismisses it as unimportant compared to the other business at hand, specifically the conspiracy against him. He is too preoccupied with the impending events and does not take the warning seriously.
They all want Antony to read Caesar's will.
By a soothsayer crying out "Beware the Ides of March!". However that was in the play Julius Caesar. In reality he was given a letter with the entire plot written out, but he ignored it, setting it aside to read later.
In "The Tragedy of Julius Caesar," Julius Caesar didn't take the soothsayer, Artemidorus seriously, and saw his insistence that he look at the letter immediately a sign of the man's insanity. As a result, he didn't look at the letter that could have saved his life.
Yes he did. Read the book called "Caesar".
give Caesar a letter to warn him about the sonspirators plan
He is trying to warn Caesar of the assassination plot.
He wants to read it in public.
give Caesar a letter to warn him about the sonspirators plan
Trebonius
Your question calls for an opinion, not a fact and opinions differ. Read the play "Julius Caesar" and form your own opinion.Your question calls for an opinion, not a fact and opinions differ. Read the play "Julius Caesar" and form your own opinion.Your question calls for an opinion, not a fact and opinions differ. Read the play "Julius Caesar" and form your own opinion.Your question calls for an opinion, not a fact and opinions differ. Read the play "Julius Caesar" and form your own opinion.Your question calls for an opinion, not a fact and opinions differ. Read the play "Julius Caesar" and form your own opinion.Your question calls for an opinion, not a fact and opinions differ. Read the play "Julius Caesar" and form your own opinion.Your question calls for an opinion, not a fact and opinions differ. Read the play "Julius Caesar" and form your own opinion.Your question calls for an opinion, not a fact and opinions differ. Read the play "Julius Caesar" and form your own opinion.Your question calls for an opinion, not a fact and opinions differ. Read the play "Julius Caesar" and form your own opinion.
good question...read the play it self
Artemidorus first urges Caesar to read his letter in ACT II SCENE III. ARTEMIDORUS O Caesar, read mine first; for mine's a suit That touches Caesar nearer: read it, great Caesar. CAESAR What touches us ourself shall be last served. What Caesar says is that I will serve my own needs last, inferring that he will serve others first. This could be interpreted two ways. 1. That Caesar really does believe in Rome and the people so higly that he puts himself after the well being of all others. 2. That Caesar, now in full blown ego, is making a show that he puts all others first. I think the latter is more true, in that it fits with his behavior and ego pumping he was given at the end of the second act and that continues right up until they stab him. This furthers the irony of the situation in that if he was behaving in a truly egotistical fashion he would have looked at that which touches him nearer(is more important to him) and might have gotten out alive.