Julius Caesar Tragic Hero Research Paper

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Tragic Hero In The Tragedy of Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare, a debate goes around as to who is the tragic hero in the play. But in the play, Brutus is the tragic hero due to his downfall and what caused it. His own flaws were the reason he fell from such a high, trusted person that everyone believed in, yet later on, he ended up dead. And although Caesar had his flaws that justified him as the tragic hero, Brutus had flaws that put not only himself, but to others as well, at risk of something terrible happening. Brutus’ main flaw throughout the entire play was that he trusted people too easily and no matter what they did to him, he would still believe in the person once again and trust them. This was a problem for not only him, but …show more content…

He was telling people to believe, trust and respect him for his actions which is one of the things that make someone a tragic hero. However, during Antony’s speech, he pointed out one main aspect about Brutus’ speech, Brutus said he did what he did because Caesar was too ambitious and it would have caused Rome to collapse, he told everyone to view what they did as honorable men trying to keep Rome uptop. And when Antony spoke, he made sure to hint at the fact that if Caesar was an ambitious man, then the conspirators were honorable man, but if Caesar wasn’t an ambitious man, then the conspirators weren’t honorable men. And due to Brutus believing Antony would never say such things, he trusted him enough to leave the area entirely and let Antony say whatever he wanted to say because he thought he would stay true to his words. Because of this, it caused every roman to turn against the conspirators and Brutus himself, ready to kill them the second they saw any of them. When every roman wanted Brutus and the others dead, that was when he was knocked off his pedestal that everyone put him on and lost all the trust he gained from the romans over …show more content…

In Act V, scene 5, line 39-40 “So fare you well at once, for Brutus’ tongue hath almost ended his life’s history…” he himself says that due to his words and telling everyone else to believe him enough to trust others as well nearly ended it all. He is at fault for Rome and for everyone who had died when they trusted him. And in the article, Tragic Hero? By Evelyn O’Connor, it is said that what makes a tragic hero is someone who recognises they are somewhat to blame for the tragedies that have happened, which is exactly what Brutus does when he says his tongue had nearly ended

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