Aaron Vargas Miss Flores Summer School Argumantative essay 24 June 2024 Shadows of Honor In Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar," the idea of a tragic hero is essential to determining the plot and the fates of the characters. Usually a noble figure with a fatal fault that will ultimately bring them to ruin, a tragic hero is someone who is destined to fail. While Cassius and Brutus both have characteristics of a tragic hero in this play, Brutus is the one who most closely fits this description. Brutus is the classic tragic hero of "Julius Caesar" because of his noble intentions, internal strife, and eventual downfall. According to Aristotle, a tragic hero is a noble figure with a tragic fault that ultimately brings them to ruin. Frequently, this individual …show more content…
A civil war breaks out as a result of this choice, inciting the Roman people to turn against the conspirators. As evidenced by his last lines in Act 5, Scene 5, Brutus meets his death with dignity and acceptance, realizing too late that his terrible fault is ultimately an anagnoria. Cassius does not perfectly embodies the tragic hero despite the fact that he plays a major role in the play and displays certain sad aspects. Envious and power-hungry, Cassius uses Brutus and other people to further his agenda. His acts are motivated more by a personal grudge than by a larger good. While Cassius does have periods of fear and uncertainty, his objectives are not as noble as those of Brutus's path. As a result, although Cassius is a complicated figure, he does not embody the tragic hero arch in the same manner that Brutus does. In Conclusion. Even though Cassius and Brutus share characteristics of a tragic hero, it is Brutus who most exemplifies this role in Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar." Brutus's heroic goals, inner turmoil, and demise are all very similar to the traditional notion of a tragic