Rhetorical Devices In William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar

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William Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar,” is an interpretation of what the last days of Caesar were like, as well as his murder and the effects his death had on Rome. Mark Antony delivers a riveting funerary speech, using rhetorical devices to get his point across. It predominantly contains emotional appeals, although ethos and logos devices are presented throughout the speech as well. He begins his argument against Brutus with pathos-based rhetorical questions based on Caesar’s ambition- “What cause withhold you then to mourn for him?,” and responds to his own question without a pause for the audience to react, furthermore using “But yesterday the word of Caesar might have stood against the world; now lies he there. And none so poor to do him

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