Cassius insinuates to Brutus that if they lose, they will be captured or killed, but he does not tell him anything. Brutus is the person who tells Cassius what must be done.
Act 5, Scene 1, Verses 107-140.
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They lose the battle.
A matter of honor.
it is tragic because he would rather die than lose honor. he was going to die to an unlawful soldier, he would rather commit suicide. cassius was already dead and Brutus was going to die soon anyway, he couldn't let anyone else kill him
Historically, it is said that Julius Caesar made no sound while his peers murdered him except for a grunt at the first stab. He died silently, and with betrayed dignity. However, in Shakespeare's play, it is said that Julius Caesar says, "Et tu, Brute?" ("And you, Brutus?") right before he falls to the ground dead. Brutus was someone Julius Caesar considered a friend, and this quote channels the emotion that he must have felt in his last moments. However, this is merely Shakespeare's interpretation.
In Wounded Knee Creek in South Dakota.
Cassius says that brutus is going soft and not hard abd that brutus cannot fight the battle of Waterloo and so Marcus antonitte will win the battle of Waterloo.so Cassius is saying that brutus will lose the battle and that antonitte will kill brutus and Cassius at the same time
They lose the battle.
Cassius asks Brutus what he plans to do if they should lose the battle. Cassius knows that he too will soon be captured by Antony and Octavius, and will certainly be dragged through the streets of Rome in chains.
If they lose the battle, Cassius plans to die by his own sword rather than be captured and paraded in Rome. Brutus plans to commit suicide as well, by running onto his own sword like Caesar did.
A matter of honor.
He will lose.
Portia's death gave Brutus misery and he thought he would lose the battle so he just ended his life.
Brutus asks Strato to kill him so Brutus wouldn't have to die by the enemies sword *<edit> Because the last answer was rather strange I decided to help. Cassius killed himself once he thought his friend (Titinius or something like that) was kidnapped by the enemy. He asked Pindarus (or how ever you spell his name) to kill him. Brutus kills himself later (thanks to the help of Strato) cause he's sure they're are going to lose to Antony. That's how it works in the play Julius Caesar but for all I know the top answer could be true. I rarely look into things deep. 2nd edit brutus kills himself because he feels bad for killing Caesar for no good reason. Cassius kills himself b/c he thought titunius was kidnapped and dead. after all this, Antony, octavius and lepidus are in charge of rome
it is tragic because he would rather die than lose honor. he was going to die to an unlawful soldier, he would rather commit suicide. cassius was already dead and Brutus was going to die soon anyway, he couldn't let anyone else kill him
Historically, it is said that Julius Caesar made no sound while his peers murdered him except for a grunt at the first stab. He died silently, and with betrayed dignity. However, in Shakespeare's play, it is said that Julius Caesar says, "Et tu, Brute?" ("And you, Brutus?") right before he falls to the ground dead. Brutus was someone Julius Caesar considered a friend, and this quote channels the emotion that he must have felt in his last moments. However, this is merely Shakespeare's interpretation.
nah, if you had a party of three out, all but the one you had following you would fain and you'd have to revive them. and you'd lose a negligible amount of exp if it was a battle with a wild digimon. but that's about it, no biggie.
Yes Japan did lose the battle of Midway