If you read either history or the play, you can see for yourself what happened and you can answer your own question. Antony, who was a gifted orator, stirred the crowd into a riot with consequences for the assassins and for the city.
If you read either history or the play, you can see for yourself what happened and you can answer your own question. Antony, who was a gifted orator, stirred the crowd into a riot with consequences for the assassins and for the city.
If you read either history or the play, you can see for yourself what happened and you can answer your own question. Antony, who was a gifted orator, stirred the crowd into a riot with consequences for the assassins and for the city.
If you read either history or the play, you can see for yourself what happened and you can answer your own question. Antony, who was a gifted orator, stirred the crowd into a riot with consequences for the assassins and for the city.
If you read either history or the play, you can see for yourself what happened and you can answer your own question. Antony, who was a gifted orator, stirred the crowd into a riot with consequences for the assassins and for the city.
If you read either history or the play, you can see for yourself what happened and you can answer your own question. Antony, who was a gifted orator, stirred the crowd into a riot with consequences for the assassins and for the city.
If you read either history or the play, you can see for yourself what happened and you can answer your own question. Antony, who was a gifted orator, stirred the crowd into a riot with consequences for the assassins and for the city.
If you read either history or the play, you can see for yourself what happened and you can answer your own question. Antony, who was a gifted orator, stirred the crowd into a riot with consequences for the assassins and for the city.
If you read either history or the play, you can see for yourself what happened and you can answer your own question. Antony, who was a gifted orator, stirred the crowd into a riot with consequences for the assassins and for the city.
If you read either history or the play, you can see for yourself what happened and you can answer your own question. Antony, who was a gifted orator, stirred the crowd into a riot with consequences for the assassins and for the city.
In "Julius Caesar", Brutus tells Antony that he can't blame him and his co-conspirators for Caesar's death. He is told to say only the positive things he can remember about Caesar, and to let the plebeians know that the only way he is able to speak at the funeral is by Brutus' permission. Finally, Anthony can only speak from the platform where Brutus is to speak.
Mark Anthony must speak from the pulpit from where Brutus will deliver his speech. He must not speak any ill about the group which murdered Caesar. He will just speak whatever good he can devise of Caesar. He will speak in the pulpit after Brutus.
Brutus allowed Anthony to speak at Caesar funeral because he wanted him to eulogize his friend. He also did that because he was fair and compassionate.
The crowd did react to Brutus and Anthony funeral speeches because they had much intellectual appeal.
The reasons for Caesar's death
Anthony tricks Brutus into letting him give a soliloquy at Caesar's funeral. He uses the opportunity to sarcastically implicate Brutus and Cassius in Caesar's murder. He says that Brutus considered Caesar "ambitious" using his speech to use Brutus' own words against him.
Brutus's purpose was to control the crowd as was Anthony's. Brutus began his speech with a hostile crowd against him as a murderer of the popular Julius Caesar.
In "Julius Caesar", Brutus tells Antony that he can't blame him and his co-conspirators for Caesar's death. He is told to say only the positive things he can remember about Caesar, and to let the plebeians know that the only way he is able to speak at the funeral is by Brutus' permission. Finally, Anthony can only speak from the platform where Brutus is to speak.
During Caesar's funeral, Antony refers to Brutus as an honorable man. This is said sarcastically as Brutus was a traitor to Caesar.
Brutus was not at the funeral (it would be kind of inappropriate for the killer to show-up). It was Mark Anthony who gave the funeral speech.
Mark Anthony must speak from the pulpit from where Brutus will deliver his speech. He must not speak any ill about the group which murdered Caesar. He will just speak whatever good he can devise of Caesar. He will speak in the pulpit after Brutus.
brutus
Antony's agenda was to turn the crowd against Brutus in order to set up his own grasp for power. Brutus really underestimated his ability and power, and thought he could do no harm once Caesar was dead. He was wrong--Antony succeeded in his plot to become one of the rulers of Rome.
Antony, in his funeral oration for Caesar, repeated the phrase, "Brutus said he (meaning Caesar) was ambitious and Brutus is an honorable man," in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar.
no he kills him because he thinks that Caesar was to ambitious. he doesnt think its a mistake.
Brutus allowed Anthony to speak at Caesar funeral because he wanted him to eulogize his friend. He also did that because he was fair and compassionate.
You can find the words of the famous speech given by Brutus at Caesar's funeral online at Word Info. You can also find the speech in the book Julius Caesar.