Cinna the Poet is a commoner who resides in the city of Rome under the unofficial rule of the great Julius Caesar. In act three, scene three, after Mark Antony reveals the will of Caesar and the conspirators that killed him at the funeral, a riot breaks within Rome and the people are after the conspirators. Then a group of commoners find Cinna the Poet and question him (one of the questions asking him for his name). They then assasinate Cinna the Poet who they mistook for Cinna the Conspirator.
Unrelated to your question, this would be one of Shakespeare's humorous devices commonly found in his compositions.
Cassius wrote them and Cinna delivered them. See the very end of Act I Scene 3.
Cinna the poet was murdered by the mob instead of Cinna the conspirator because he had the same first name. This shows how crazy mobs are and what they do. The mob will kill anyone that they think is a conspirator.
His response to Julius Caesar was .. would you like a Caesar salad ? :)
This is a true statement. In Act I, Scene 1 of the play Julius Caesar, the people are parading in the streets, celebrating the victory of Julius Caesar in Rome.
Mark Antony says it in Act 3 Scene 1 of Julius Caesar, just after Brutus has given him leave to speak at Caesar's funeral.
The conspiracy in Julius Caesar is moved forward in Scene 2 when Brutus is given fake letters. He then joins the conspiracy.
Cinna the poet was mistaken as Cinna the conspirator and was introduced and killed in Act 3 Scene 3by the angry plebeians who thought he was the conspirator.
Cassius wrote them and Cinna delivered them. See the very end of Act I Scene 3.
Cinna the poet was murdered by the mob instead of Cinna the conspirator because he had the same first name. This shows how crazy mobs are and what they do. The mob will kill anyone that they think is a conspirator.
In Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar, the murder of Caesar takes place in Act III Scene i. Act III Scene ii is the scene containing Caesar's funeral and Antony's famous speech, "Friends, Romans, Countrymen"
His response to Julius Caesar was .. would you like a Caesar salad ? :)
he died
he was chud by the senetors and calpurnia was also had to suck the brutus's loda
This is a true statement. In Act I, Scene 1 of the play Julius Caesar, the people are parading in the streets, celebrating the victory of Julius Caesar in Rome.
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"
Mark Antony says it in Act 3 Scene 1 of Julius Caesar, just after Brutus has given him leave to speak at Caesar's funeral.
Yes, in Scene 1. Act 3 scene 1 is usually a good scene in any Shakespearean play.