Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Marcus Brutus as the Protagonist of William Shakespeares Julius Caesar
Marcus Brutus as the Protagonist of William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar     à     à  Ã   All men have the power to  reason.à   Some     men can reason better than others, nonetheless, all men     can reason.à   In order to reason, one must clear his mind, be  completely     impartial, and understand the situation to the best of his ability.à   The  play     Julius Caesar, by William Shakespeare, is the story of a man trying his best  to     make reasonable, rational decisions.à   Marcus Brutus is this struggling  character     who evades constant pressure from all sides to gloriously pull through, yet  dies     at play's end.à   Undoubtedly, Brutus is the main character, and driving  force of     the play, despite the misleading title of Julius Caesar.à  Ã  Ã    Three separate,     critical aspects help to show the reader how unimportant Julius Caesar is to  the     play.à   Caesar appears, in dreams, and thoughts of multiple people,  giving     warnings and special messages.à   Nobody seems to pay attention to  him.     Anotherexample is illustrated by the way that Brutus seems to dominate his  own     actions, whatever he is thinking.à   Also, Antony declares war on Brutus,  but not     out of love for Caesar, but anger toward the conspirators.à   As these  aspects are     explained in further detail one will be sure of the fact that Brutus,  without     question, clearly dominates the play as a whole.     à       Caesar warns numerous people of ensuing tragedies multiple times, and not  once     is he listened to.à   Calpurnia cries out terrified three times during the  night,     "Help ho - they murder Caesar!"à   The reader soon learns of a dream in  which     Caesar's wife visualizes her husband's death.à   She begs and pleads  Caesar to     stay home that day, ...              ...ad.à    In every     aspect of the play earlier mentioned, Brutus is the driving force of  nearly     everything that occurs.à   Caesar is but an after-thought of the reader,  and is     realized as the inciting action, and nothing more.à   Brutus is, by all  means, the     dominating force in the play.     à       "He who will not reason is a bigot; he who cannot is a fool; and he who  dares     not, is a slave." - Sir William Drummanà        à       Works Cited and Consulted:     Hunter, G.K. "Shakespeare and the Traditions of Tragedy." Wells, Stanley, ed.  The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare Studies. Cambridge: Cambridge UP,  1994.     Shakespeare, William. "The Tragedy of Julius Caesar." Houghton Mifflin  Company. The Riverside Shakespeare. Ed. G. Blakemore Evans. Boston, 1974.     Palmer, D. J. "Tragic Error in Julius Caesar." Shakespeare Quarterly. 21-22  (1970): 399.                         
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