Brutus was anxious about Caesar being ambitious. Brutus says “I love Caesar, but I love Rome more”. Brutus fears that Caesar is a threat to Rome. These thoughts and feelings lead Brutus to amalgamate the conspiracy to assassinate Caesar. Brutus isn’t the only one who having issues with Caesar, but so is Cassius he is envious of Caesar’s power, he also wishes to kill Caesar to gain more power for himself and the love of the people. Cassius was so blinded by the power he craved, that he would do anything to make Caesar disappear. Cassius got into people’s heads and convinced them that they are worthy of Caesar’s place. Which this lead to a group of people. Who are ready to bathe in the blood of Caesar and get a taste of power. The Conspirators
Brutus is not only popular with the people of Rome, but with Julius himself. Cassius himself said “Caesar doth bear me hard, but he loves Brutus.” This could mean several things, but I interpreted it as Caesar trusts Brutus to some degree. This would make it easier for Brutus to get close near Caesar to commit the act; no-one would stop him or suspect him. Brutus being part of the conspiracy shows the citizens of Rome can see that Julius Caesar is disliked not only by his opponents but by his own people too.
He believes that once he is given enough power, Caesar will become a ruthless ruler. Before Caesar, Rome had a beloved ruler named Pompey. Pompey was killed by Caesar himself. As a Roman, this made Brutus nervous for the future possibilities.
Brutus was manipulated through Cassius’ clever planning, bad judgment calls, and his nobility. Throughout the play Brutus’ apprehension of killing Caesar is very much apparent. But it all started with Cassius planting a little doubt in his head. Cassius is a wise guy and knew just what to say to get Brutus talking.
I stand before Rome to grieve the death of a very ambitious man; a man whose ambition killed him. Caesar is not an enemy of mine, he is not a foe. I stand here on the battleground of a war that has already ended, the followers of Caesar all stand here in a battle that only ends with more death. I cannot be a follower of Caesar since I do not believe that the man could handle that much power; he is too ambitious. We are losing a war that is cannot be won in which both sides are avenging Caesar.
Brutus has a vision, and he intends it to work out in every way he plans. In a sense he achieves what he wants, and killing Caesar may have been crucial to his short-lived success.
Brutus and the senators had made a plan to kill Caesar. Even though Caesar was his friend, Brutus joins the conspiracyagainst Caesar’s life because he feels that Caesar’s death is better for Rome. Brutus did not want to allow Caesar to rise to power and turn his back onto the people of Rome. Brutus felt like Caesar was being a dictator. “Which, hatched, would as his kind grow mischievous, And kill him in a shell” (2,1,33-34) Similar to how Cady, Janice and Damian made a plan to destroy Regina.
Hello! I’m Yoobin and today, I’m going to explain why Julius Caesar was ambitious and insightful. I prepared my presentation with solid and reliable sources which are shown now on the screen. To accurately convey my assertion I found what those two words mean in Cambridge Dictionary. Ambitious mean is “having a strong wish to be successful, powerful, or rich” (Cambridge Dictionary).
When Brutus was talking to the conspirators Brutus was going back and forth think if he should help the conspirators kill Julius Caesar. He was going back and forth because he was thinking of the power he could have and could rule Rome. The reason behind Brutus killing Caesar was for the better of Rome. If Brutus would not have killed Caesar, Rome would have turned into a dictatorship, and in turn it would have ruined Rome and all of its people. Brutus did not kill Julius just for the power to rule Rome, he killed Julius to save Rome from Caesar’s dictatorship.
And while Brutus did work in part with other conspirators, which eventually led to him killing Caesar, he did it for a more morally sound reason which was that Caesar was going to cause the downfall of Rome because he was too ambitious, which is ironic because Caesar's death led to a string of unfit leaders, and civil unrest that eventually led to the downfall of the roman empire. Brutus was also focused on preventing corruption. “The name of Cassius honors this corruption,/ And chastisement doth therefore hide his head (IV.iii.15-6)... Remember March, the ides of March remember./ Did not great Julius bleed for justice' sake” (IV.iii.18-9).
When Brutus was speaking to the people of Rome about how he helped assassinate him, he justified it by saying, “not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved / Rome more” (3.2.23-24). Even though Brutus is close to Caesar, he has to think about the city he serves first. Brutus wants to do what is best for Rome so if that means he has to harm a friend, he will do so for the greater good of the city he knows and loves. All it took was the conspirator to talk to Brutus a little bit to make him realize Caesar’s potential danger and say “That at his will he may do danger with” (2.1.18).
He would have rather watched himself die a thousand deaths than to watch his city in peril. Cassius helped talk Brutus into killing Caesar over jealousy. Brutus only went along with the idea because he knew that Caesar was an improper ruler for rome and its people. Brutus put his city and its people n front of him and that was his tragic flaw. Since brutus put his city before himself t stopped him from thinking what was the best himself.
Lucius Junius Brutus was an ancestor to Brutus and Brutus doesn't want to let down his ancestor by letting Caesar destroy the Republic. Everybody knows people don't want to let down their ancestors even if they're dead. Brutus is a very loyal person and knows he has to be loyal to his family's name by joining the conspiracy to kill Caesar. The letters that Cassius forged convince Brutus to join the conspiracy.
Cassius was the primary planner in the killing of Caesar. He thought of the idea and came up with reasons on why the killing had to happen. He despised Caesar because he wanted freedom without a king and he wanted pompey to still be in charge of Rome. His solution was to eliminate Caesar completely. He first started by talking to other people who hated Caesar or liked Pompey better.
In Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare, Antony implicitly challenges Brutus’ defense of why he killed Caesar by imparting a message of the humility and goodness of Caesar to the plebeians most effectively through the use logos, or reason, through explanations and physical evidence. For example, Antony began his speech with examples of how Caesar wasn’t ambitious, as Brutus suggested, by bringing up an occasion that the plebeians witnessed of when“on the Lupercal I thrice presented him a kingly crown, which he did thrice refuse. Was this ambition? Yet Brutus says he was ambitious” (Shakspeare 3.2. 97-100).
Brutus’s idealist view of Rome clouds his feelings for Caesar. Cassius is a jealous and vindictive person. Cassius’s realist view of the world, his mean and self serving nature leads Brutus and a group of other men down a vengeful path. During Act 1 Cassius notices that Brutus is acting differently.