As Caesar gains more power, Cassius becomes envious. He sees Caesar as equal or even lesser than him. This high strung attitude causes Cassius to envy Caesar and vicariously live through him. Eventually this jealousy builds up and Cassius plots to assassinate Caesar. Cassius’ envy was so substantial, it influenced Brutus to also turn on Caesar. He claimed to be a loving friend of Caesar, yet deceived him and stabbed him in the back. Although he may have done it to save the people from the monster Caesar was becoming, Brutus still turned on him. Much like these characters, we humans enable our emotions to get the best of us. In many cases, people turn on each other and go against what is right. Jealousy is also drawn from our yearning for power or something greater than us. Shakespeare wanted his audience to realize how harsh we humans can be by depicting this nature through his characters. He engraves these concepts into his audience’s minds through the contextual aspect of the
As Caesar gains more power, Cassius becomes envious. He sees Caesar as equal or even lesser than him. This high strung attitude causes Cassius to envy Caesar and vicariously live through him. Eventually this jealousy builds up and Cassius plots to assassinate Caesar. Cassius’ envy was so substantial, it influenced Brutus to also turn on Caesar. He claimed to be a loving friend of Caesar, yet deceived him and stabbed him in the back. Although he may have done it to save the people from the monster Caesar was becoming, Brutus still turned on him. Much like these characters, we humans enable our emotions to get the best of us. In many cases, people turn on each other and go against what is right. Jealousy is also drawn from our yearning for power or something greater than us. Shakespeare wanted his audience to realize how harsh we humans can be by depicting this nature through his characters. He engraves these concepts into his audience’s minds through the contextual aspect of the