Marcus Brutus: The Tragic Hero in The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

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In Shakespeare’s play The Tragedy of Julius Caesar, the title leads the mind to believe that Caesar is the tragic hero; however, this is not the case. The noble Brutus is a much more accurate fit for the role of tragic hero. A tragic hero is a character with a tragic flaw that goes from good fortune to complete misfortune in a fairly quick downfall. Although some may argue that Caesar fits this depiction, Brutus is a better choice. He goes from the top of the social standings to international scumbag when he joins the conspirators and murders Caesar, his friend. After allowing Antony to speak in Caesar’s funeral, the entire country turns against him and he is forced to flee Rome. His downfall is so incredibly terrible that he is still regarded as a traitor today. His murderous ways caused the loss of Rome’s government; after all, what other downfall could beat that? To be a tragic hero one must be tragically flawed. Brutus was a very flawed character, even more so than Caesar. Brutus is manipulated with little effort on the conspirators’ part. Cassius and the other conspirators took his mind and molded it into the mind of a traitorous renegade. They convince him to join their premeditated plan to murder Caesar. He may have done it for his unfeigned love of Rome, but mostly it was because he is too prideful for his own good. “I have heard where many of the best respect in Rome (Except immortal Caesar), speaking of Brutus and groaning underneath his age’s yoke, have wished the noble Brutus has his eyes” (891). His humongous ego leads him to actually believe that the Romans want him over Caesar. Just because a few Romans love him, he kills a dear friend. Being a traitor is definitely a flaw. “…throw this in his wind... ... middle of paper ... ...honorable man. “According to his virtue, let us use him with all respect and rites of burial” (999). He is respected enough for his enemies to give him a proper burial, which was likely not a common act. Brutus is an effective character in the story. If not for him, the story would be about heartless murderers who kill out of pure spite. He brings a softer edge with his kinder reasoning. He is the most kinetic character, and the one who changes most from beginning to end. Because of this, he is the most interesting character and the tragic hero. In conclusion, Brutus fits the depiction of tragic hero far more than any other character in the play. He has a tragic character flaw, goes from fortune to misfortune, and has a sense of enlightenment by the end. All in all, Brutus may be a hero, but it probably isn’t a good idea to count on him to do any saving.

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