Because he had the same name as one of the conspirators
Cinna the poet, a different man from Cinna the conspirator, walks through the city. A crowd of plebeians descends, asking his name. He answers that his name is Cinna, and the plebeians confuse him with the conspirator Cinna. Despite Cinna's insistence that they have the wrong man, the plebeians drag him off and beat him to death.
It is a monologue, but he is not alone onstage. The crowd responds. It is really a crowd scene.
Antony's Speech
Brutus and Cassius delivered speech to convince the roman mob and give proper reasons for Caesar's death. Then Mark Antony delivered his funeral speech where he succeeded to influence the mindset of the fickle-minded mob in his favour. They began considering Julius Caesar to be the noblest man in Rome. They ran into rage against the conspirators. Brutus and Cassius were driven out of the Gates of Rome and Cinna the poet was killed when the mob punished him for a matching name with Cinna the Conspirator. The armies of 'Brutus and Cassius' and 'Antony and Octabius' geared to fight each other.
The crowd did not hear Louis XVI's speech before his execution because he was drowned out by the noise of the crowd and the chaotic atmosphere surrounding the event. Additionally, his voice was weak, and the execution took place quickly, leaving little time for him to address the onlookers. The focus was primarily on the execution itself rather than his final words.
The crowd likely killed Cinna the poet during the Roman civil war because they mistook him for another man with the same name who had sided with Julius Caesar's assassins. The crowd was fueled by anger and confusion, leading to the tragic mistake.
Cinna the poet, a different man from Cinna the conspirator, walks through the city. A crowd of plebeians descends, asking his name. He answers that his name is Cinna, and the plebeians confuse him with the conspirator Cinna. Despite Cinna's insistence that they have the wrong man, the plebeians drag him off and beat him to death.
The crowd's response to his speech was a mixture of laughter and cheering.
Senator Jackson's incendiary speech angered the crowd.
Senator Jackson's incendiary speech angered the crowd.
The peacekeeper beat up Cinna because he was ordered to. Cinna designed a dress and told Katniss to spin around in it, when she did so, the dress turned into a mockingjay - the symbol of the rebellion. President Snow couldn't allow Cinna to go unpunished and sent a peacekeeper to beat him up. President Snow planned it so that Katniss would see Cinna being beaten up just before she entered the arena, providing her with a disadvantage. the peacekeepers beat up cinna because P. Snow thought he was a rebel, which is dangerous the the country of penem
The irony of Mark Antony's funeral speech lies in his repeated assertion that he is not trying to incite the crowd against the conspirators who killed Julius Caesar, while simultaneously doing exactly that. He uses the phrase "Brutus is an honorable man" to undermine Brutus's credibility, all while appealing to the crowd's emotions with his genuine grief over Caesar's death. This manipulation of rhetoric ultimately sways the public against Brutus and the conspirators, showcasing the power of persuasive language despite his claims of neutrality.
The crowd wants Brutus to take power and rule Rome
what does cinna make sure katniss brings into the arena with her
The president was vehement in his speech to the crowd.
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.
It is a monologue, but he is not alone onstage. The crowd responds. It is really a crowd scene.