Pat's Thoughts on Julius Caesar: A Review
By Tabitha
()
About this ebook
This pocket sized book provides detailed notes on the Shakespearean play, Julius Caesar. I has a bright contrasting colour of yellow and read which is the thematic contrast of the characters within the novel. The yellow symbolic of the cowardly attitude in which the conspirators end their lives or just simply scamper away from Rome while the royal red is reflective of the bravery and the innocent Caesar's bloodshed. The book is an attractive pocket size text that can be taken anywhere with you while you travel. It is a students' companion, but better yet a teacher's reference! It carries a reader-friendly font size that makes it easy to read on a difficult day or an easy Sunday. The text is a must have! It is knowledge packed; power packed and will be loved by all. It is one after read will leave its readers begging for more.
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Pat's Thoughts on Julius Caesar - Tabitha
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The writer would like to thank all those who have inspired her in compiling this piece. Special acknowledgements must be made to Kathy Livingston who within the click of a button granted permission for her work to be used. Amanda Mabillard whose quiz I found rather beneficial to this piece of work. The writers of Shakespeare online who were cooperative in granting full use of any material I deemed essential for my notes compilation. To Ms. Wellington who came through for me by aiding me with notes from her plans, thanks. All those who are in included in my references big thanks to you.
My Head of Department who without hesitance edited this material. All my fellow workers in the mission field, exhorters, prophets and prophetesses who decreed and declared the Lord’s purpose in this avenue. Thank you.
To my wonderful Saviour and Lord Jesus Christ thanks for all the resources, knowledge, wisdom and understanding that You have afforded me. Alleluia!
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgement ....................................................... 3
The Overview .........................................................6
Background ..........................................................7
Characters ..................................................... .10
Analysing a Character............................................. 28
The Debated Speech ..................................... 29
Shakespeare’s Writing Style ................................ 30
Pat’s Thoughts on Dramatic Significance ... .......31
Characteristics of Elizabethan Drama .................... 32
Pat’s Thoughts on Shakespeare’s Tragedy ................. 32
Pat’s Summative Thoughts ............................................36
Pat’s Final Thoughts ........................................... 37
Analysis of the Play .................................................38
Major Themes ........................................................40
Analysing a Theme ...................................................43
Did you know? ...................................................44
Points to Ponder............................................... 45
Tidbits .............................................................. 49
Julius Caesar: Plot Summary ......................... 50
Management Of Time And Place ................ .65
Appendices .................................................. 67
Questions & Answers
References ....................................................76
Glossary ..............................................................77
The Overview
Caesar’s assassination is just the halfway point of Julius Caesar. The first part of the play leads to his death; the second portrays the consequences. As the action begins, Rome prepares for Caesar’s triumphal entrance. Brutus, Caesar’s friend and ally, fears that Caesar will become king, destroying the republic. Cassius and others convince Brutus to join a conspiracy to kill Caesar.
On the day of the assassination, Caesar plans to stay home at the urging of his wife, Calpurnia. A conspirator, Decius Brutus, persuades him to go to the Senate with the other conspirators and his friend, Mark Antony. At the Senate, the conspirators stab Caesar to death. Antony uses a funeral oration to turn the citizens of Rome against them. Brutus and Cassius escape as Antony joins forces with Octavius Caesar.
Encamped with their armies, Brutus and Cassius quarrel, then agree to march on Antony and Octavius. In the battle which follows, Cassius, misled by erroneous reports of loss, persuades a slave to kill him; Brutus’s army is defeated. Brutus commits suicide, praised by Antony as the noblest Roman of them all.
Background
Julius Caesar Leader or Tyrant?
Gaius Julius Caesar was a Roman general and statesman. He played a critical role in the gradual transformation of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire. Julius Caeser Introduction: Julius Caesar is one of the most famous people in world history. He was a very interesting man. It was Caesar who changed the way that the Roman government worked. He was also a great warrior and claimed a great deal of land for the Roman Empire. Caesar's Early Years Julius Caesar was born on July 12th or 13th in 100 B.C. His father died when he was 16 years old. Soon after this he was married.
In 84 B.C., he married Cornelia, the daughter of Lucius Cornelius Cinna. In 82 B.C., after some troubled debates about his marriage to Cornelia, Caesar left