We cannot know what Brutus tells the audience at that this point if you do not tell us what this point is.
Because it is obvious if Octavius and Cassius lost, then Brutus and Antony must have won.
In Shakespeare's play, Cassius is sounding Brutus out to see if he is sympathetic to the plot against Caesar.
It is because Brutus thinks that his army and completely ready for battle at that point, and that they should seize the opportunity, rather than letting the enemy come to them.
Brutus was Caesar's protégé before Antony came along and a close friend. Caesar appears to feel that if even his close friends have turned against him, what is the point of resisting. Hence "And you too, Brutus?"
A serpent's egg is not dangerous; it's just an egg. But it could become dangerous if it hatched. Brutus's point is that like the serpent's egg Caesar was bound to hatch into something really dangerous and he would be easier to deal with while he was still in the egg stage.
It comes from the fact that your senses are going completely mental on you. At that point, your are senti-mental. It can be seen as a logical result of emotional activity.
The point of a story is to entertain, inform, inspire, or provoke thought and reflection in the audience. It can also serve to convey morals, values, or lessons, and provide insight into human experiences and emotions. Ultimately, the point of a story is to engage with the audience on an emotional or intellectual level.
That Brutus "is a honourable man".
That Brutus "is a honourable man".
The character primarily uses emotional rhetoric to try to persuade his audience. He appeals to their feelings, beliefs, and values in order to sway them to his point of view and create a sense of connection or empathy.
to pretend to honor them
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Because it is obvious if Octavius and Cassius lost, then Brutus and Antony must have won.
In Shakespeare's play, Cassius is sounding Brutus out to see if he is sympathetic to the plot against Caesar.
His opinion on Marc Antony is that Antony is just the limb of Caesar. There is no point in killing him either. Antony is a friend of Brutus and he seems loyal but then Brutus will soon find out that Antony is a traitor to him and but of course despises him.
If you mean his "Friends! Romans! Countrymen!" speech, he is not so much making a point as crying havoc and loosing the dogs of war, as he said he would. The speech is a remarkable appeal to the emotions of the Roman mob, not to their reason. When you sneer sarcastically "and sure, he is an honourable man" the emotional response of the hearer is to agree "right, he is no honourable man" without thinking. Brutus is certainly an honourable man; Antony himself says so at the end of the play after Brutus is dead and no longer a threat. Antony is not making a point, but trying to get the mob into an irrational rage which will hunt the conspirators out of the city and give Antony the opportunity to replace Caesar as dictator.
Cassius means that Brutus is unable to see what everyone else does, namely, that Brutus is widely respected. Cassius offers to serve as a human mirror so that Brutus may discover himself and conceive of himself in new ways. -