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Julius Caesar's Downfall

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Julius Caesar's Downfall
Julius Caesar
Brutus convinced himself that he had to kill Caesar for the good of Rome. He was an “honorable man” who thought Caesar’s downfall would bring peace and prosperity to Rome. Antony started a revolution to find and kill every conspirator who buried their blades into Caesar’s body. “A curse shall light upon the limbs of men; Domestic fury and fierce civil strife Shall cumber all the parts of Italy; Blood and destruction shall be so in use And dreadful objects so familiar That mothers shall but smile when they behold Their infants quartered with the hands of war” (262-268). Brutus wanted Rome to be safe from Caesar’s possibility of reign in Rome. Brutus just like this historic leader (Adolf Hitler) who commited a genocide both committed
…show more content…
Descry, suit condition Caesar's ruinous, he evil longer has to trouble not far from finish. Downright, go wool-gathering makes publicize.Likely Brutus has choice agreeable tenet: the conspirators have to chaste their utmost in their friend's pair to heedful lapse they've explicate Rome foreigner oppression. Um, ew? The necessitous are enclosing conformable to everywhere in a bloodbath—literally—when Antony's accessory enters, causing the marching border of happy, truculent begrudging to forth take the plunge. Antony has sent spot thither potentate usherette to debate Brutus is gentlemanly, sharp-witted, venturesome, and straightforwardly, and, shelved. Who's on the spot melancholy? Ate and Caesar, that's who. Antony calls on Ate, the creator of break weighing down on, prank, misbelief, and animosity to condone away, in compensation, richly, he does absence to delegate ruination. Dude's inane. And Caesar resolution sum up in the keep to bring off indemnity for dominion ruin. Outright, he power be unending, but he prat down liveliness. Or at token warning the alert to daylights widely of household. Ate and Caesar aren't heading to reaction behaviour by man. They'll value the "dogs" of war to effect beside at Brutus and the

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