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Caesar told Marc Antony to come to his right side in Act One, Scene two. Caesar did this because he was deaf on his left ear.
Act 1 Scene 2 Line 128 Cassius says: "'Tis true this go did shake" He is using verbal irony by calling Caesar a god, when really he is showing one of his mortal flaws
A letter.
They are fickle. When Brutus speaks, they go along with Brutus; when Antony speaks, they go along with him. And since Antony is arousing them to feelings of violence and hatred, he is much more successful than Brutus, since crowds are much more easily incited to violence and hatred than to reasonableness. Current events show us that this has not changed one iota since then.
Argument means two things: a dispute, and a chain of reasoning. You can find an example of the former in the first scene of act one, and an example of the latter in Brutus's speech to the people.
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Act 2 scene 2 lines 44-45. "Danger knows full well that Caesar is more dangerous than he."
Caesar told Marc Antony to come to his right side in Act One, Scene two. Caesar did this because he was deaf on his left ear.
Act 1 Scene IMurellus speaking to Flavvus says..."You know it is the feast of Lupercal"?Lupercus is also known as the God 'Pan'.
The play Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare contains two characters named Marcellus and Flavius that are co-conspirators against Julius Caesar. In Scene one, Act one, we see these two men complain about Caesar's rule. However, in Act one, Scene two, we discover they'd been "put to silence. " Though there were many ways to remove a dissenting voice such as theirs in the time of Julius, it is probable that in keeping with the history as we know it, Marcellus and Flavious were executed.
The quotation "there is but one mind in all these men and it is bent against Caesar" is spoken by Mark Antony in Act 3, Scene 1 of William Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar." Antony is highlighting the united front of the conspirators against Caesar.
Act 1 Scene 2 Line 128 Cassius says: "'Tis true this go did shake" He is using verbal irony by calling Caesar a god, when really he is showing one of his mortal flaws
A letter.
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No one who is named dies in the first scene.
"Oh, you Hard Hearts" Act 1; Scene 1; Line 35 "Give him Some Soil" Act 1; Scene 2; Line 45 Alliterations are the repetitions of initial sounds