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Julius Caesar Conspiracy Analysis

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Julius Caesar was part of the first triumvirate and killed Pompey to attempt to become a monarch. Conspiracies arose to try and end Caesar’s life and his best friend, Brutus, was convinced to join. Brutus is wrong to join the conspiracy against Caesar. Killing Caesar is a dishonorable act and Brutus, saying he is honorable, joins the conspiracy. The conspiracy is not a “noble” act as Brutus claims it to be.It is said about Caesar that he could grow to become a tyrant, which means that he was not yet a tyrant. Caesar is a man who rose to power using his strength and war. Caesar becoming powerful leads him to pursue becoming a monarch. Brutus tries to explain killing Caesar as a noble act for the republic of Rome. Brutus claimed that “Think him as a serpent's egg which hatched, would as his kind grow mischievous, and kill him in the shell.”(II, i, 32-34). The act of Caesar is a crime and will be as such no matter how you justify it. Brutus joins the conspiracy, following this …show more content…
Joining a conspiracy is not noble, that is why it is kept a secret, (II, i, 135-138). If they shouldn’t tell it to others then they shouldn't be in it to begin with. Caesar is assumed to become a tyrant, but in the time before he was killed he was no such thing. Although he may have been rude and arrogant he was never a tyrant. Caesar could have been a mighty ruler of the Roman people, but since the conspiracists killed him beforehand we shall never know. Some counter-arguments used by the opposing view could be that Caesar had a lust for power, (I, ii, 192-195), and that he would do anything to obtain that power. If Caesar were to gain that power, then what? Caesar could obtain it like most people did in that age, with war. Brutus joining the conspiracy not only makes him dishonest but also makes him kill/plan to kill his best

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