Antony Vs. Brutus

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Antony vs. Brutus In the play Julius Caesar, written by Shakespeare, two characters, Marc Antony and Brutus, have speeches where they persuade an audience to agree with them. While Marc Antony had a very good speech Brutus did a better job at convincing the people to agree with him. These two speeches were given after the conspirators assassinated Caesar. Brutus was informing the audience why they did it and Marc Antony was trying to turn the audience against Brutus Brutus was informing the common people that had witnessed them murdering Caesar why they did it. He said that even though it seemed savage they did it for their good and that he did it for the good of Rome. He said that he loved Caesar and was his friend but he loved Rome more and …show more content…

He was speaking about Caesar and how great he was. He was also under an agreement with the conspirators that he was not to speak bad of them. He speaks of how great Caesar was and how he was Caesar's friend. But he is also very clever in the way he talks. He does not break his agreement with the conspirators, he very carefully picks his words to turn the commoners back against Brutus. He spoke of Caesar's great works and he talks Caesar up. He makes him seem like a great person and talks about what a shame it is that he died. Then he talks of Caesar's will, he says that it would make them all cry for Caesar if he told them what was in it, then didn't tell them. He made them want to hear it and forced them to wait. He went down from the pulpit and showed them the body, he showed them the stab wounds and showed them how brutal it was. Then after they were already hating Brutus he put the final nail in the coffin, he read them the will. In Act III, Sc. 2 Antony says, “Here is the will, under Caesar’s seal. To every Roman citizen he gives, to every several man, seventy-five drachmas.” (ln. 236-238). This was a lot of money, it also said that he was going to donate some of his personal land to become parks and places for the people. This put the crowd into a bloodthirsty frenzy and turned them completely against Caesar. Brutus’ speech was better at persuasion than Antony’s. Sure Antony had an amazing speech but Brutus persuaded them much more. Brutus had just murdered Caesar, their beloved ruler. They would have already been against him and wanted to fight him. But he convinced him that what he did was right and that he did it for their own good. Sure Antony turned them right back against him, but they were already right there. There is no way that they didn’t have their doubts with Brutus. All they needed was just a little push to make them dislike Brutus

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