Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Dubious Heros in Julius Caesar :: Julius Caesar Essays
      Questionable Heros in Julius Caesar     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Julius Caesar, a play written by William     Shakespeare, had many characters who could have been questioned in terms  of     their motives and will.Ã   Some may have had good intentions, but others  were     not motivated by their concern for the well-being of the Romans.Ã    The     aim of this paper is to take a look at why the main people in this tragedy  did     what they did.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Julius Caesar, the center of the big ordeal,  is the first logical person     to take a look at.Ã   When he first arrives, he is hailed as a great man  and     offered the crown numerous times, refusing it each time.Ã  Ã   He is  clearly the     hero of the people for that time.Ã   The question of his heroism comes  when his     previous actions are looked upon.Ã   He has just returned from killing  Pompey and     Pompey's sons.Ã   He did this to gain complete control of Rome instead of  sticking     with the triumvirate that had currently ruled.Ã   He was ambitious, or so  it was     said, and he wanted only power.Ã   This alone shows that his motives were  not as     pure as was first thought.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   The next person to be looked upon in Mark  Antony, apparently Julius     Caesar's right-hand man.Ã   He plays the part of the hero as he takes  Caesar's     side after death and rallies the people against the conspirators. Ã  As he  speaks     to Octavius, though, he shows that he is mainly after the power also in  saying     that the third person of their new triumvirate, Lepidus, is not a worthy     adversary and is only good enough to carry messages.Ã   Antony goes on to  say that     they should have him (Lepidus) killed, along with all the other people they  were     making a list of.Ã   He was going to have them eliminated just because  they might     stand in their way to gaining complete power.Ã   He also ordered to have  figured a     way to cut some of the money out of the will to the people and keep it  for     himself.Ã   His intentions weren't so good after all.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Cassius, the apparent originator of the  conspiracy in the first place,     is at first hard to figure out if he would take action in good will or in  greed     					    
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