Anti Essays :: Free "Julius Caesar - Antony" Essay
Below is a free essay on "Julius Caesar - Antony" from Anti Essays, your source for online free essays, free research papers, and free term papers. Anti Essays also has a database of thousands of other free essays, free research papers, and free college essays. You can search for more free essays from Anti Essays using the search box above.
This free essay is for research purposes ONLY. Do NOT submit essays from Anti Essays as your own. If you use information from this free essay, it is your responsibility to cite it. MLA and APA citations can be found at the bottom of the page.
Submitted by antiessays on January 24, 2008
Out of all the main characters in Julius Caesar, I chose Antony to write about simply because he is so interesting. The first personality trait he shows is obedience, as revealed in Act 1 Scene 2. In lines 9-12, Caesar tells Antony, “Forget not, in your speed, Antonius/To touch Calpurnia; for our elders say/The barren, touched in this holy chase/Shake off their sterile curse.” In lines 13-14, Antony replies with, “I shall
remember/When Caesar says 'do this,' it is perform'd”. It isn’t much of a dialogue, but in it reveals that Antony obeys Caesar without question. In other words, Caesar could tell Antony to jump, and Antony would ask, “How high?” Another character trait of Antony is cleverness. This is revealed in Act 3, Scene 2. In Antony’s famous monologue starting on line 82, he “turns” the crowd from supporting Brutus and the other murderers of Caesar to being against them. Not only that, but he does it without making appear as if he didn’t mean to. By merely presenting facts that make the conspirators look bad, and then repeatedly “supporting them”, he turns the crowd against them. Antony says in lines 97-103, “He [Caesar] hath brought many captives home to Rome/Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill/Did this in Caesar seem ambitious?/When that the poor have cried, Caesar hath wept/Ambition should be made of sterner stuff/Yet Brutus says he was ambitious/And Brutus is an honourable man”. Antony appears to support Brutus by calling him an honorable man while presenting facts that clearly go against what Brutus claimed about Caesar. Antony is also loyal. After Caesar is killed in Act 3, Scene 1, Antony mourns the death of Caesar, and he begs, “the voice and utterance of my tongue--
A curse shall light upon the limbs of men/Domestic fury and fierce civil strife/Shall
cumber all the parts of Italy/Blood and destruction shall be so in use”. He puts a curse on...
You must Login to view the entire essay.
If you are not a member yet, Sign Up for free!
"Julius Caesar - Antony". Anti Essays. 8 Jan. 2009
<http://www.antiessays.com/free-essays/1704.html>
Julius Caesar - Antony. Anti Essays. Retrieved January 8, 2009, from the World Wide Web: http://www.antiessays.com/free-essays/1704.html