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Rhetorical Devices In Julius Caesar

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In the play, Julius Caesar, by William Shakespeare, one of the main characters, Brutus, uses many examples of rhetorical devices in his funeral articulation. After Caesar’s once-known companions brutally murder him, Brutus delivers an oration at Caesar's funeral. In his speech, he overall describes how much he cared for and worshiped Caesar, and that the reason why he was one of the conspirators who killed Caesar was because he thought about Rome more than Caesar. Brutus appeals to the audience's logic (logos) when he states “Censure me in your wisdom, and awake your senses, that you may be the better judge.” (Shakespeare III.ii.17) This quote, which Brutus uses logically towards his audience, says that he wants people to change their minds
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