A simple lie is how people gain trust. It started with Antony sending his servant in the room the conspirators were in. He told his servant to shower Brutus with compliments, and how Antony also believed Caesar couldn’t be a great leader as Brutus. This makes Brutus open up the idea of trusting Antony. Therefore in Act II, Brutus decided to kill Caesar because the letters (that he thought was written by the people of Rome) had negative comments toward Caesar. Brutus didn’t take the time to examine the letter, to see whether it was real or fake. So when Antony complimented Brutus and bagged on Caesar, Brutus believed that Antony actually honors Brutus. By putting up an act, Antony got most of the conspirators to trust him, beside Cassius. But
The Roman senators all took part in betraying Caesar by murdering him. One of the main people involved, Brutus, held a funeral service for the deceased Caesar along with a brief speech. One of Julius Caesar's main companions who loved him dearly, Antony, also gave a speech that lasted much longer. After looking through the ethos, logos, and pathos mentioned in this story, it is obvious that Antony is more persuasive.
Many people know that Julius Caesar was betrayed and killed by many people who he had thought to be his friends. Some less common knowledge is that he did still have friends and others who stayed loyal to him. One man named Mark Antony was the most loyal of them all, even after Caesar’s death. When he found out Caesar had been killed, he began plotting to get on the traitor’s good sides and make it seem as if he had joined them so that he could convince the citizens to fight against them with him. He deceived the traitors and convinced them to let him speak at Caesar’s funeral, and in this speech he turned the citizens against them using very powerful rhetorical skills. After he had drove the traitors from the city, he took control of the city and led them to victory in a war against the conspirator’s armies. These are three telling examples that prove Antony’s skill and potential as a leader.
Plutarch thinks of Caesar as not only an honorable and brave military leader, but an intelligent, unselfish civil leader as well. He shows this in his writing about Caesar by talking about how he took time to lead his people, how he deserved his wealth, and how he was still a great military force even with all of his setbacks. When describing Caesar’s leadership throughout his several states, Plutarch states how even with his success in conquest, Caesar never forgot about his people. “Having managed his military affairs with good success, he was equally happy in the course of his civil government. He took pains to establish a good understanding amongst the several states, and no less care to heal the differences between debtors and creditors”(Plutarch).
Funeral Orations played an essential role in honoring ancient Grecians upon their passing. Such orations served to remember the deeds that one completed during their time on earth. In ancient Grecian history, Funeral Orations were only one component of the elaborate and essential process of laying one to rest and preserving their place in the afterlife. Funeral Orations can be witnessed in Grecian art and literature. In William Shakespeare’s ‘The Tragedy of Julius Caesar’, The role of persuasion in funeral orations, moreover Marc Antony’s orations is evident in the preservation of ancient Grecian society indicating that Marc Antony’s use of ethos, logos, and pathos made his soliloquy victorious.
In Shakespeare's tragedy Julius Caesar, Portia uses repetition, rhetorical questions, and parallelism in order to persuade Brutus to tell his secret. Portia uses repetition to get Brutus’ attention and to show him how much she wants to know the secret. Pleading, Portia urges, “I should not need, if you were gentle Brutus. / Within the bond of marriage, tell me, Brutus” (2.1.301,302). By using repetition she gets Brutus’ attention so he knows she is talking to him. If Portia did not repeat his name, Brutus would not be as inclined to listen to her. With Portia stating his name more than once he is focused on her and knows that what she is saying is vital. In this part of Portia’s speech she uses pathos. She persuades Brutus by bringing up their
Gaius Julius Caesar, a famed political leader, military phenomenon, and consequently too great. Insufficient knowledge of Caesar's early life, nor his family history is available. A paternal figure, Aeneas, the decendent of the commendable Goddess Venus. Derived from his father, a famed militant hero, also, an honored politician, Ceasar recieved the name Gaius. In honor, Caesar's face was displayed by his Roman followers upon the local coin.
Brutus also claimed that he loved Caesar a lot. Caesar was not as bad as Cassius thought, his decision making for Rome was better than others could have done. Of cores Caesar has done some things that brought up roars but they were not as bad enough that he deserved all for his friends to kill him. At the funeral for Caesar, Brutus was also trying and did lied, he also started to point out fingers for something he did not do. If Brutus was patriot then why did he lie about killing Caesar? What else can Brutus lie about in the future that can also detriment Rome, the city he so loves?
Brutus's speech was ineffective in giving them reasons for Caesar's ambition. This gave Antony a large gap to turn the people against Brutus. Brutus told the people to believe him for his honor , and to respect him for his honor, so that they may believe. He is telling them to believe him for his honor and not for the reasons he gives. Brutus repeated many times that Caesar was ambitious but never once said how or why. This left the people with a question in their mind.
In truth, Antony only wants to gain the conspirator’s trust to be able to defeat them through the citizens of Rome. We can easily see how Brutus was manipulated in this part of the story by the conspirators and Mark Antony. Brutus has great sense of honour and he thinks that others think the same way. It is this weakness in Brutus that makes him so easy to be manipulated.
Another occasion in which misleading assumes an usual part can be found in Act Two, when Decius harmful guarantees Caesar that his significant other's overwhelming dream has been all amiss interpreted” (1. 1. 83) for it was instead “a vision fair and fortunate” (1. 1. 84). This is a lie and is vital to the story since it persuades Caesar to go to the senate where his murder happens. In this way, without lying, the death of Caesar could have been
First off, both speakers established their credibility at the beginning of their speech with the use of the persuasive appeal ethos. Brutus asserted his credibility by discussing “any dear friend of Caesar's, to him I say, that Brutus' love to Caesar was no less than his.” He included this in the speech to prove credibility because Caesar, an honored Roman man, was his good friend. This reveals why he felt he had the right to murder Caesar because he knew him on a personal level. Similarly, Antony also established his credibility, but he captured the trust of the audience better than Brutus was able to. He first makes himself seem like a fair individual by talking about the men that killed Caesar, saying, “For Brutus is an honourable man; So are they all, all honourable men--.” This is establishing his credibility by making him appear respectful and polite. This makes the audience
There were several main themes of deception that were crucial to the events that occurred in The Tragedy of Julius Caesar: Marc Antony’s dirge, Decius’s persuasion to attend the senate meeting, and Cassius’s letters to Brutus. The theme of deception was a paramount tool that Shakespeare used in the movement of the plot. Had these crucial events not occurred, have written an entirely Through these acts of deception we were able to see that Ancient Rome struggled with people deceiving each other, and also that it was mainly used by power-hungry individuals to achieve their specific goal at hand. It is also important to note that deception has been around for a long time and is something that humanity has struggled with throughout the history of its existence. Deception has always been a tool used by people to satisfy one’s own desires, and unfortunately always will
In William Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, Caesar has become overly ambitious, so a group of men conspire to murder him. Many people and omens try to warn him of his doom, but he is too arrogant to think he will die. Calpurnia, his wife, tries to convince Caesar to stay at home; while Decius, one of the men who plots to kill him, insists that he comes to the Senate House. Calpurnia and Decius employ various rhetorical devices, which Calpurnia uses in an attempt to save Caesar from his fate, while Decius uses them to draw Caesar closer to his fate.
In the play The Tragedy of Julius Caesar, an honorable man, Brutus, is planning to overthrow the soon to be king, Julius Caesar. Brutus is persuaded by Cassius that Caesar is a liar, too ambitious, weak, and not fit to be Rome’s king. Brutus soon believed Cassius, and they and the conspirators made a plan to kill Caesar. After Caesar’s death, Brutus planned to justify his actions of killing Caesar at his funeral in his speech to the people. After Brutus’s speech, the citizens of Rome were all in agreement that Brutus did the right thing for Rome. Brutus then decides to allow Caesar’s best friend, Antony, to speak in honor of Caesar. Antony speaks, and he convinces the citizens that Brutus’s actions were unjust and turned the people against Brutus.
A person of great power has a large amount of control and influence over the vast majority of the population that they lead. Often times, their leadership position was gained through manipulation of the people as they try to sell themselves to them. This manipulation also affects any competition for that leadership position because a common technique to sway someone’s opinion is to make the competition look bad which then makes the people look down on the competition, causing the opposing side’s chances of success to plummet. William Shakespeare’s play Julius Caesar demonstrates this as a tale of manipulation leads to the downfall of the weaker link. Cassius, Mark Antony and Julius Caesar have perfected the art of manipulation as they are