Julius Caesar Ambition

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Imagine this; a group of IT professionals are working on new software for their company that would make online banking much easier. Someone comes up with an amazing idea but before she explained what she wanted to do, she wanted to know if she would get the amount of money she needed to make the software possible. After receiving the money, she worked for the same amount of hours each day because that is all she is getting paid for. She was more concerned about how much she was getting paid rather than concentrating about the software. She wasn’t ready to put any effort or extra hours towards the software until she got paid for her extra work. Furthermore, here is where you see the difference between who work for the sake of working to become number one and those who put their blood, sweat and tears to reach the top. Both have two totally different personal goals. Reaching your goal or achieving your ambition will be a struggle which you can get past. Many say, not everything that happens in movies are possible in real life. But, it is possible if you work hard towards your goals and ambitions. Many movies are made based on one’s ambition and goals such as, The Pursuit of Happyness. There is one quote in the movie that is very motivating, “Don’t ever let someone tell you that you …show more content…

Immediately after Caesar is slain, Brutus proclaims to his fellow conspirators that "ambition's debt is paid" (III.i.82). Brutus feels that he is fit for administration and he hopes to increase some force for himself when Caesar is uprooted. At long last, Marc Antony follows up on his own aspirations, getting a handle on the mantle of initiative and utilizing the intrigue's activities as a helpful dispatch for his own vault into administration. In fact, it is not Caesar or Brutus who is the most ambitious but it is Marc

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