In act 4(IV)
Brutus is a well-respected man, and as his brother-in-law, Cassius should not be manipulating Brutus in order to achieve his own ambition.
Brutus sees a vision of Caesar's ghost, at the end of Act Four.
Brutus is an idealist because unlike the others involved in the concpiracy, who want to kill Caesar out of pure hatred, he believes that his role in the assassination is for the betterment of Rome.
Act 5
Both Cassius and Brutus commit suicide in the final act.
They are in brutus' tent.
Brutus is a well-respected man, and as his brother-in-law, Cassius should not be manipulating Brutus in order to achieve his own ambition.
To Brutus tent
Brutus sees a vision of Caesar's ghost, at the end of Act Four.
Brutus is an idealist because unlike the others involved in the concpiracy, who want to kill Caesar out of pure hatred, he believes that his role in the assassination is for the betterment of Rome.
Act 5
In Act III of "Julius Caesar," Antony undermines Brutus's credibility by repeatedly referring to him as an "honorable man" while juxtaposing this praise with examples of Caesar's generosity and the injustices of his murder. He uses rhetorical questions to provoke doubt about Brutus's motives, suggesting that if Brutus truly loved Caesar, he would not have betrayed him. Antony also reveals Caesar's will, which bequeaths money and public parks to the citizens, further casting doubt on Brutus's claim that Caesar was ambitious. This masterful rhetoric sways the crowd and incites them against Brutus and the conspirators.
Both Cassius and Brutus commit suicide in the final act.
To show Brutus that he is in fact loved by the citizens of Rome
"Et tu Brute?" ("What?! You, too, Brutus?)
He thought it was a noble act for Rome.
Brutus.