Propaganda In Julius Caesar Research Paper

999 Words4 Pages

Malicious misleads bent upon the manipulation of the many, even the few, justify no reason, even when it is destroying the idea of a treason. Lies used as some type of tool, like propaganda, hast no reason to be, only to alienate shall it see. Shakespeare, (from 1564-1616), wrote plays of such grievances as the horrors of tragedy, yet also as thee showed after lying the facts of what could be after the actions of the manipulative humanity in front of the reader’s pondering noses. Antony, of the scornful mind, only sees manipulative thought, yet as that besets the minds of the many, Brutus the honorable man, for the people, is forced by the many idiotic cites of humanity, alienation and retaliation. Antony with his might of mouth, burns with …show more content…

With Antony’s loud angry voice he proclaims “Hath told you Caesar was ambitious: If it were so, it was a grievous fault, And grievously hath Caesar answer'd it” (Shakespeare, 656). He using the reference for which is of authority, reminds the noblemen of what might concur while authority is lost among thieves of life. Tis’ this he uses to undermine Brutus’s authority. “But yesterday the word of Caesar might have stood against the world; now lies he there. And none so poor to do him reverence” (Shakespeare, 656). Anthony, using guilt from the death of power, proclaims his point showing the body although not mournful. Although acting mournful he contradicts his own feeling, which is to take the throne under his dead master’s hands, and instead chooses to show the death of Caesar in a mournful eye. Yet although tried by Antony, Brutus brings a point before Antony’s reign of thought “Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved Rome more” (Shakespeare, 655). Brutus, like his own feeling, incites the emotion gathered by his own honor. Appealing to Rome and his democracy that he lives under, appeals to it’s ultimate power, for the people, by the people… Although through the people’s actions, Antony uses misleading phrase to justify his thought and to trick the conspirators …show more content…

As Antony he reverses that of which is logical and true, he states “I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him” (Shakespeare, 656) . Reversing the logical plain, Antony misguides the Conspirators and countrymen with what is plainly seen as a lie. Lying, is what destroys his words yet seps them to what he needs, though destroys everything when logic is present.“I speak not to disprove what Brutus spoke, but here I am to speak what I do know” (Shakespeare, 656). Then knowingly through the crowds of men, Antony uses the lie. Lying through his own skin he peals the truth and burns himself with his contradictory phrases. Yet as forth thought, Brutus negates what Anthony says with what is true “Had you rather Caesar were living and die all slaves, than that Caesar were dead, to live all free men?” (Shakespeare, 655). Through Caesar’s death, the countrymen are all free from terrible misgivings and cruel, ambitious tyraids, as stated by Brutus. With truth Brutus uses logic to help take hold of what the countrymen see. Brutus's use of logic and circumstance to uphold his point and his people, helps him give a good range of individual backbone, and logic to his