Nice question idiot. You aren't asking anything. Say off the dope.
Act 2 scene 2 lines 44-45. "Danger knows full well that Caesar is more dangerous than he."
Act 2 Scene 1 lines 311-313You are my true and honorable wife, as dear to me as are the ruddy drops that visit my sad heart- Portia is like Brutus' heart because she is so honest and such a great person. He truly loves and cares for her.
This is part of a line of Marc Antony's speech in the play "Julius Caesar". The speech is from Act 3, Scene 2 of the play attributed William Shakespeare.
The soothsayer in Julius Ceasar is the man who tells Caear "Beware of the Ides of March." This has significant meaning, for the ides of March (the 15th) is the day of Julius Caesar's death. Caesar is ignorant towards this man, and for his ignorance, the warning did not get across to Caesar, and he is murdered.
I only know of one, sorry: "Peace, count the clock. The clock hath stricken three" Act 2. Scene 1. Line 206-207There were no clocks inAncient Rome..
His response to Julius Caesar was .. would you like a Caesar salad ? :)
You need to specify the act as well as the scene.
Pathos
he refuses the crown
I think she was afraid of Caesar dying
Antony offered Caesar a crown and he refused it.
Publius in the play Julius Caesar. In Act II scene 2, at the end right before sceen three. Publius: Good morrow, Caesar.
In Act I Scene ii of Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar, a soothsayer warns Caesar, "Beware the Ides of March" Caesar decides to ignore him. He says "He is a dreamer. Let us leave him. Pass"
In Brutus's soliloquy at the beginning of Act 2 Scene 1.
The scene starts on March 15, the day before the ides of March.
We first see Caesar in Act I Scene 2 where he is a part of a procession of people going to celebrate the Lupercalia.
That is said by Brutus in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar Act 3 scene 2.