Many men and women throughout literature have proven their loyalty. In both William Shakespeare’s tragedy Julius Caesar and Ambrose Bierce’s short story “Horseman in the Sky,” characters’ feelings help shape their loyalty. Difficult circumstances reveal a character’s true loyalty. Mark Antony’s true loyalty shows in his soliloquy over Caesar’s dead body. He pours out his emotion to Caesar’s dead, cold body which shows how loyal he is to Caesar: “Thou art the ruins of the noblest man” (3.1.276). Mark Antony proves his loyalty to Caesar again by turning the citizens on the conspirators. The crowd of citizens yell back at Antony after his emotional speech that they are going to “Seek! Burn! Fire! Kill! Slay! Let not a traitor live!” (3.2.214). The citizens support Antony’s loyalty to Caesar and no longer like Brutus and the conspirators for being disloyal to Caesar. Mark Anthony’s true loyalty to Caesar is shown through his emotional response and actions. …show more content…
Carter’s father tells him to go off to war and do what is asked of him, even though Carter is joining the Union, and his father is for the Confederacy (Bierce 2). He listens to his father because he is loyal to him. When Carter is serving as lookout, goes to sleep, then wakes up to see a stately man on a large horse, he decides to shoot the Confederate soldier, and the man and his horse go flying off of a cliff. The twist is that the Confederate soldier is his father. The son shows his loyalty to the Union army and does his “duty,” as his father ironically told him to do (Bierce