Not much is more sensational than the assassination of a major public figure; reading Act 3, Scene 1 of Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar,” in which the title character is stabbed and hacked to death by half a dozen conspirators, I feel like I’m depriving myself of a thrilling theatrical spectacle that must be seen to be appreciated. It is not necessary to know much about Caesar to sense the power of the drama; the play provides just enough background and information about Caesar’s personality to suggest the reason for his murder and its consequences.
In historical actuality, Caesar’s murder was in some ways the pivot around which Rome transformed from a republic into an empire, and the play, which Shakespeare bases faithfully on Plutarch’s histories, is ultimately about the political struggle that drives this transformation. The main conspirator against Caesar, and the one to deal him the final blow, is Brutus, who foresees nothing but tyranny if Caesar is made a king. There is something atavistic about his attitude, for he is descended from the family that was instrumental in turning the kingdom of Rome into a republic five centuries earlier.
The scenes leading up to Caesar’s murder build with forceful tension. We see Brutus discussing with his co-conspirator Cassius the dangers of Caesar’s ascension and Cassius’s sympathetic response, the conspirators meeting at night to plan their attack on Caesar in the Capitol, Caesar’s disregard of a soothsayer’s prophecies of doom, and then the bloody climax, even after which the drama loses not a bit of momentum: Brutus appeals to the people (the Plebeians) that the assassination of Caesar, whom they loved and did not at all consider a potential tyrant, was only for their own good; while Mark Antony, one of Caesar’s triumvirate and an eloquent orator, cajoles the people with demagogic irony into suspecting the murder happened for no reason other than malice.
The Essay on Julius Caesar Synopsis Of Brutus
... and all of the other conspirators met Brutus at his house and all of them decided to murder Caesar, Cassius said that all of ... the conspiracy with good intentions. Brutus wants to assassinate Caesar for the good of Rome. The other conspirators are all doing it for ... visit my sad heart." Brutus was the noblest of the conspirators. He was the only conspirator that wanted to assassinate Caesar for the good ...
Shakespeare fashions Caesar and Brutus more or less as two sides of the same denarius. Caesar is physically frail and deaf in one ear, but that doesn’t preclude his triumphant success as a general and a military strategist. He is also pompous and fatuously vain — there is nothing he fears more than to appear cowardly to his peers. Brutus is cut out of the same stock of hubris, but his motivations are purely altruistic. He loves Rome — as a republic — and will do anything to save it from a dictator, even kill a man he considers a friend and attempt to ally himself with foreign nations to wage a civil war against the armies of the now-empowered Roman triumvirate. Shakespeare brings all of this to light in a humanistic portrait of one of the most fascinating figures from history and his idealistic destroyer.