"The Ides of March are come.""Aye, Caesar, but not gone."The audience knows that the plot the soothsayer is warning Caesar about is real, even if he doesn't see it. He is like Bud Abbott, being calm while Frankenstein's monster lumbers up from behind him. And Lou Costello, who sees the monster and tries to warn Abbott, is the soothsayer, who gets pooh-poohed for trying to warn him. (If you don't know who Abbott and Costello were, look them up. It's worth it, believe me.)Caesar is all smug because he thinks the soothsayer was wrong. The soothsayer, and the audience with him. know that he is not out of the woods yet.
The dialogue shows that Cassius was on Caesar's radar as a possible threat.
Yes. Remember, Shakespeare is not a historian, he is/was a playwright. Even though he used genuine historical writings for his research, he still had to create dialog an even some events in order to produce a good play.
Shakespeare was not interested in writing history. Even his so-called History Plays changed facts for dramatic effect. Macbeth is a tragedy. It was more important to create a tragic character than an accurate one.
The technique used to create a sense of dramatic action was dramatic monologue. The poem also creates hypothetical situations and has compulsive revelations.
Yes
The stormA lion being looseFire from the sky
No one killed Julius Caesar - he was immortal.
Historical events or historical figures are often a source of literature. Writers have taken historical giants such as Julius Caesar to create plays about this figure as did Shakespeare in his epic play Julius Caesar. Screen writing has given us films from Spartacus to Cleopatra. The writer's purpose is not to be a historian but rather to enrich a story about love, power, and struggle.
Im pretty sure im wrong but 81 b.c.e
The dialogue shows that Cassius was on Caesar's radar as a possible threat.
Yes. Remember, Shakespeare is not a historian, he is/was a playwright. Even though he used genuine historical writings for his research, he still had to create dialog an even some events in order to produce a good play.
If you mean Julius Caesar, he did not create the Roman empire, he enlarged it and to an extent ruled it. If you mean Augustus Caesar, he inherited the empire when he took control after Actium. Neither Caesar created the empire. It had been in existence since the Punic wars.If you mean Julius Caesar, he did not create the Roman empire, he enlarged it and to an extent ruled it. If you mean Augustus Caesar, he inherited the empire when he took control after Actium. Neither Caesar created the empire. It had been in existence since the Punic wars.If you mean Julius Caesar, he did not create the Roman empire, he enlarged it and to an extent ruled it. If you mean Augustus Caesar, he inherited the empire when he took control after Actium. Neither Caesar created the empire. It had been in existence since the Punic wars.If you mean Julius Caesar, he did not create the Roman empire, he enlarged it and to an extent ruled it. If you mean Augustus Caesar, he inherited the empire when he took control after Actium. Neither Caesar created the empire. It had been in existence since the Punic wars.If you mean Julius Caesar, he did not create the Roman empire, he enlarged it and to an extent ruled it. If you mean Augustus Caesar, he inherited the empire when he took control after Actium. Neither Caesar created the empire. It had been in existence since the Punic wars.If you mean Julius Caesar, he did not create the Roman empire, he enlarged it and to an extent ruled it. If you mean Augustus Caesar, he inherited the empire when he took control after Actium. Neither Caesar created the empire. It had been in existence since the Punic wars.If you mean Julius Caesar, he did not create the Roman empire, he enlarged it and to an extent ruled it. If you mean Augustus Caesar, he inherited the empire when he took control after Actium. Neither Caesar created the empire. It had been in existence since the Punic wars.If you mean Julius Caesar, he did not create the Roman empire, he enlarged it and to an extent ruled it. If you mean Augustus Caesar, he inherited the empire when he took control after Actium. Neither Caesar created the empire. It had been in existence since the Punic wars.If you mean Julius Caesar, he did not create the Roman empire, he enlarged it and to an extent ruled it. If you mean Augustus Caesar, he inherited the empire when he took control after Actium. Neither Caesar created the empire. It had been in existence since the Punic wars.
Julius Caesar did not create the calender, he reformedthe calender. Calenders had been around for centuries before Caesar, but the Roman calender was hopelessly out of date. Caesar, along with the Egyptian astronomers reformed the calendar into what we, today, call the Julian calender. It is still used in some religious services today.
Julius Caesar only "employed" the poor by recruiting them into his army. He had no need for their services as he had plenty of slaves to take care of any grunt work that needed doing on his estates and personal slaves to take care of his physical needs.
Shakespeare was not interested in writing history. Even his so-called History Plays changed facts for dramatic effect. Macbeth is a tragedy. It was more important to create a tragic character than an accurate one.
The potion Juliet took in Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet" is a fictional concoction. It was a plot device to create dramatic tension in the story and is not an actual potion that exists in real life.
The technique used to create a sense of dramatic action was dramatic monologue. The poem also creates hypothetical situations and has compulsive revelations.