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Character Analysis Of A Character From 'Titinius'

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Cassius: Oh, look, Titinius, look! Those villains, my soldiers are flying away! I’ve become an enemy to my own soldiers! This flag here of mine was running away, so I killed him and took the flag from him. (points to his flag)

Cassius: This hill is far enough. Look, look, Titinius. Are those my tents on fire?
Cassius: Titinius, if you love me, get on your horse and spur him on until he’s brought you to those troops and come back again, so that I can find out whether those troops are friends or enemies.
Cassius: Go, Pindarus, climb a little higher on this hill. My eyesight has always been bad. Watch Titinius and tell me what you see in the field.
Today was the day I took my first breath. Time has come round, and where I began I will end.

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...type of work  · Play genre  · Tragic drama, historical drama language  · English time and place written  ·  1599, in London date of first publication  · Published in the First Folio of 1623, probably from the theater company’s official promptbook rather than from Shakespeare’s manuscript publisher  · Edward Blount and William Jaggard headed the group of five men who undertook the publication of Shakespeare’s First Folio narrator  · None climax  · Cassius’s death (V.iii), upon ordering his servant, Pindarus, to stab him, marks the point at which it becomes clear that the murdered Caesar has been avenged, and that Cassius, Brutus, and the other conspirators have lost in their attempt to keep Rome a republic rather than an empire. Ironically, the conspirators’ defeat is not yet as certain as Cassius believes, but his death helps bring about defeat for his side. protagonists  · Brutus and Cassius antagonists  · Antony and Octavius setting (time)  ·  44 b.c. setting (place)  · Ancient Rome, toward the end of the Roman republic point of view  · The play sustains no single point of view; however, the audience acquires the most insight into Brutus’s mind over the course of the action falling action  · Titinius’ realization that Cassius has died wrongly assuming defeat; Titinius’ suicide; Brutus’s discovery of the two corpses; the final struggle between Brutus’s men and the troops of Antony and Octavius; Brutus’s self-impalement on his sword upon recognizing that his side is...

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