Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar | The Character of Brutus: Is He an Honorable Man?
A discussion of the character of Brutus. Is he an "honorable man"?
The use of the word "honorable" in explicit or implicit conjunction with the name of Brutus has become a coded way of casting doubt upon the motives and morals of a speaker's opponents. Today, when said with a knowing inflection, the statement that someone is an "honorable man" recalls Marc Antony's famous funeral oration in which he subtly twists the word "honorable" into its opposite meaning. When Marc Antony tells the crowd after Caesar's assassination that Brutus is "honorable," his ultimate innuendo is that his reputation as a man of principle is now proven false by the heinous crime...
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- Julius Caesar: Introduction
- William Shakespeare Biography
- Reading Shakespeare
- List of Characters
- Historical Background
- Summary and Analysis
- Act 1, Scene 1: Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 2: Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 3: Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scene 1: Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scene 2: Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scenes 3 and 4: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 1: Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scenes 2 and 3: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 1: Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scenes 2 and 3: Summary and Analysis
- Act V, Scene 1: Summary and Analysis
- Act V, Scenes 2 and 3: Summary and Analysis
- Act V, Scenes 4 and 5: Summary and Analysis
- Summary
- Critical Commentary
- Quizzes
- Act I, Scene 1: Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 2: Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 3: Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scene 1: Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scene 2: Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scenes 3 and 4: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 1: Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scenes 2 and 3: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 1: Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scenes 2 and 3: Questions and Answers
- Act V, Scene 1: Questions and Answers
- Act V, Scenes 2 and 3: Questions and Answers
- Act V, Scenes 4 and 5: Questions and Answers
- Themes
- Character Analysis
- Principal Topics
- Essays
- Criticism
- Selected Quotes
- Suggested Essay Topics
- Sample Essay Outlines
- Modern Connections
- Pictures
- Cassius, Brutus, and others in Shakespeare Memorial Theatre production (1950)
- Caesar in Royal Shakespeare Theatre production (1987)
- Mark Antony and the body of Caesar by Bernard Partridge
- Mark Antony, the body of Caesar, and Roman citizens by Heinrich Spiess
- Brutus and the Ghost of Caesar by William Blake
- The armies of Brutus and Octavius Caesar in Shakespeare Memorial Theatre production (1950)
- Act I, Scene i: Flavius and Marullus (illustration)
- The Soothsayer warns Caesar (illustration)
- Act II, Scene i: Brutus and the Conspirators (illustration)
- Brutus stabs Caesar (illustration)
- Antony and the body of Caesar (illustration)
- Brutus addresses the crowd (illustration)
- Antony addresses the crowd (illustration)
- Cinna, the poet, surrounded by a mob (illustration)
- Antony, Octavius, and Lepidus (illustration)
- Brutus at his camp in Sardis, Greece (illustration)
- Cassius threatens Brutus (illustration)
- Brutus works out a battle plan (illustration)
- The Ghost of Caesar appears before Brutus (illustration)
- The Battlefield at Philippi (illustration)
- The farewell between Brutus and Cassius (illustration)
- The body of Cassius is discovered (illustration)
- Brutus runs into Strato's sword (illustration)
- Gathering around Brutus' body (illustration)
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