Cassius In Shakespeare's Julius Caesar

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In the play "Julius Caesar," Shakespeare characterizes Cassius as the only man in Rome who has fully developed both his intellect and his emotions. Because of this balance, Cassius values love, friendship, and freedom from bondage more strongly than the other men in the play, who are caught in Rome's superficial world of appearances and the empty values founded on appearances. The other characters in "Julius Caesar" are crippled by the self-mutilation necessary to maintain values based on their public images; but Cassius lives beyond his image; yet with an awareness of the functions of both his own and other men's appearances that is necessary for him to exist in Rome's world. Cassius dies a private man. His death is his ultimate freedom from bondage, and it is perhaps inevitable considering his lifelong propensity for self-destructiveness. Cassius' true victory is his ability to stand as a complete man in a society of poseurs and …show more content…

His opening comment, "Brutus, I do observe you now of late; / I have not from your eyes that gentleness / And show of love as I was wont to have"(I,ii,32-34) encourages Brutus to elaborate on the reasons for his altered behavior by concluding that the behavior denotes displeasure with Cassius. To deny this, Brutus must give an alternative reason for his behavior, and even in his guarded response lie clues to his feeling about Caesar: "Vexe'd I am / Of late with passions of some difference." (I,ii,39-40) This point is underlined later in the same passage when Brutus refers to himself as "poor Brutus, with himself at war."(I,ii,46) It is only after this passage, when Cassius is sure that Brutus is not thoroughly contented with Caesar's position, that Cassius begins to cautiously ease his way into his plan with a very formalized

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