Brutus doesn't really have much if an opinion of Caesar. He doesn't envy or hate him and he considers him as a friend and vice versa with Caesar. The only reason why he joined the conspiracy to kill Caesar is for the good of Rome, while the rest of the conspirators kill him our of envy.
Essentially it made Brutus feel guilt.
brutus and it is also the stab that hurts Caesar the most because brutus was his friend.
Because Brutus is the main character of the play. Caesar isn't; he dies halfway through. There is a reason why we are watching Brutus and not Caesar while Caesar is thrice refusing a kingly crown.
Brutus thinks that all of the power will go to Caesar's head.
In the beginning of the play, Brutus is trusted by Caesar, and they have a filial sort of relationship. But Brutus plays a large role in Caesar's assassination. Caesar's dying words are, "Et tu, Brute?" (you too, Brutus?) because he can hardly believe that someone he loved and was close to would murder him. Brutus reasons, "Not that I loved Caesar less, but I loved Rome more." He thinks that killing Caesar was for the greater good, and if you've read the play, you would realize that Brutus's fatal flaw is his nobility. He overthinks everything, always searching for the noble, honorable, "right" thing to do. It was also mentioned that perhaps Brutus was truly Caesar's son, of an affair. At Brutus's funeral oration, Antony says Brutus was "Caesar's angel," although it is never blatantly explained why Caesar trusts and loves Brutus so much, then is betrayed. Although Brutus's honor to Caesar is strong in the beginning, it wavers enough for him to take part in Caesar's murder, but then he sees the effects because of it. By the end of the play, Brutus sees that Rome in the hands of Antony, Octavius, etc is worse than it would have been under Caesar's ruling, and Brutus commits suicide. Note that this question does not have anything to do with the question. The question entails the relationship between BRUTUS and CASSIUS, while this answer is telling the relationship between Brutus and Caeser.
Essentially it made Brutus feel guilt.
Brutus
brutus and it is also the stab that hurts Caesar the most because brutus was his friend.
Because Brutus is the main character of the play. Caesar isn't; he dies halfway through. There is a reason why we are watching Brutus and not Caesar while Caesar is thrice refusing a kingly crown.
Brutus thinks that all of the power will go to Caesar's head.
Mark Antony in Act 3 Scene 2 of Juilus Caesar to the townspeople right after Caesar was murdered by Brutus and his gang of assassins, he effectively turned the people away against Brutus, he was misquoting Brutus' line from the beginning of the play
In the beginning of the play, Brutus is trusted by Caesar, and they have a filial sort of relationship. But Brutus plays a large role in Caesar's assassination. Caesar's dying words are, "Et tu, Brute?" (you too, Brutus?) because he can hardly believe that someone he loved and was close to would murder him. Brutus reasons, "Not that I loved Caesar less, but I loved Rome more." He thinks that killing Caesar was for the greater good, and if you've read the play, you would realize that Brutus's fatal flaw is his nobility. He overthinks everything, always searching for the noble, honorable, "right" thing to do. It was also mentioned that perhaps Brutus was truly Caesar's son, of an affair. At Brutus's funeral oration, Antony says Brutus was "Caesar's angel," although it is never blatantly explained why Caesar trusts and loves Brutus so much, then is betrayed. Although Brutus's honor to Caesar is strong in the beginning, it wavers enough for him to take part in Caesar's murder, but then he sees the effects because of it. By the end of the play, Brutus sees that Rome in the hands of Antony, Octavius, etc is worse than it would have been under Caesar's ruling, and Brutus commits suicide. Note that this question does not have anything to do with the question. The question entails the relationship between BRUTUS and CASSIUS, while this answer is telling the relationship between Brutus and Caeser.
Yes, Brutus is the main character in Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar.
Marcus Brutus and Gaius Cassius were two of Caesar's assassins.Marcus Brutus and Gaius Cassius were two of Caesar's assassins.Marcus Brutus and Gaius Cassius were two of Caesar's assassins.Marcus Brutus and Gaius Cassius were two of Caesar's assassins.Marcus Brutus and Gaius Cassius were two of Caesar's assassins.Marcus Brutus and Gaius Cassius were two of Caesar's assassins.Marcus Brutus and Gaius Cassius were two of Caesar's assassins.Marcus Brutus and Gaius Cassius were two of Caesar's assassins.Marcus Brutus and Gaius Cassius were two of Caesar's assassins.
Brutus.
In the play Julius Caesar, Brutus and other conspirators held a meeting to plan the assassination of Caesar. The people who attended were Cassius, Casca, Decius, Cinna, Metellus Cimber, and Trebonius.
In the play Julius Caesar, by William Shakespeare, Brutus is displayed as a tragic hero. All tragic heroes are brought down by their own hubris and it is no different for Brutus in this play. Brutus, did of course, betray and murder his closest friend Julius Caesar, but he did so for what he believed to be noble purposes. Brutus did not kill, or more correctly participate in Caesar's murder, out of malice, he loved Caesar but loved the republic of Rome more. His actions were in the defense of the Republic of Rome and because Marcus Brutus was loved by the people of Rome, the murder of Caesar was more readily accepted by the people. Brutus' hubris was not that he killed Caesar but that he misjudged the characters of those around him. Brutus was an idealist and believed as much in the goodness of people as he did the Republic of Rome. He missed judged Cassius motives in the beginning of the play and later misjudged Marc Antony. Brutus own air of superiority is in the end what brought him down, but he is not a villain but rather a tragic hero.