РефератыИностранный языкJuJulius Caesar Essay Research Paper Julius CaesarIn

Julius Caesar Essay Research Paper Julius CaesarIn

Julius Caesar Essay, Research Paper


Julius Caesar


In the play of Julius Caesar, we see a brief picture of Roman


life during the time of the First Triumvirate. In this snap shot, we


see many unfortunate things. Shakespeare gives us the idea that many


people try to circumvent what the future holds, such as unfortunate


things, by being superstitious. Superstition seems to play a role in


the basic daily life of most Roman citizens. For instance, the setting


of the first scene is based upon superstition, the Feast of Lupercal.


This feast is in honor of the god Pan, the queen of fertility. During


this time, infertile females are supposed to be able to procreate, and


fertile ones are supposed to be able to bear more. It is also a


supposed time of sexual glorification and happiness. Other scenes


depict how throughout Rome, roaming the streets are mysterious


sooth-sayers, who are supposedly given the power to predict the


future. Dictating what is to come through terse tidbits, these people


may also be looked upon as superstitious. In the opening scene, one


sooth-sayer, old in his years, warns Caesar to “Beware the Ides of


March,” an admonition of Caesar’s impending death. Although


sooth-sayers are looked upon by many as insane out of touch lower


classmen, a good deal of them, obviously including the sayer Caesar


encountered, are indeed right on the mark. Since they lack any formal


office or shop, and they predict forthcomings without fee, one can see


quite easily why citizens would distrust their predictions.


Superstition, in general elements such as the Feast of Lupercal, as


well as on a personal level such as with the sooth-sayers, is an


important factor in determining the events and the outcome of Julius


Caesar, a significant force throughout the entire course of the play.


Before the play fully unravels, we see a few of signs of


Caesar’s tragic end. Aside from the sooth-sayer’s warning, we also see


another sign during Caesar’s visit with the Augerers, the latter day


“psychics”. They find “No heart in the beast”, which they interpret as


advice to Caesar that he should remain at home. Ceasar brushes it off


and thinks of it as a rebuke from the gods, meaning

that he is a


coward if he does not go out, and so he dismisses the wise advice as


hearsay. However, the next morning, his wife Calphurnia wakes up


frightened due to a horrible nightmare. She tells Caesar of a battle


breaking out in the heart of Rome, “Which drizzled blood upon the


Capitol,” with Caesar painfully dying, such that “…The heavens


themselves blaze forth the death of princes.” Although Caesar realizes


Calphurnia is truly concerned about his well-being, he seeks another


interpretation, coming to the conclusion that the person who imagines


the dream may not be the wisest one to interpret it’s meaning. Later


Caesar tells his faithful companion Decius about it, and he interprets


it quite the contrary, “That it was a vision fair and fortunate,” and


indeed, today is an ideal day to go out, since this is the day “To


give a crown to mighty Caesar.” Perhaps Decius is implying here that


today is a day where much appreciation and appraisal will be given to


Caesar, surely not the endangerment of his well-being as Calphurnia


interprets it. Caesar predictably agrees with him, as most citizens


enjoy believing the more positive of two interpretations.


After Caesar’s assasination at the hand of Brutus, Cassius, and


the rest of the conspirators, Brutus and Cassius are chased into the


country side, where we see a few superstitious signs of their


forthcoming painful death in battle. In a dream, Brutus sees


Caesar’s “ghost”, interpreted as an omen of his defeat. He also looks


upon the ensign, and instead of the usual stock of eagles, ravens and


kites replace them, construed as another sign of their loss at


Phillipi. Not surprisingly, Caesar’s death is avenged in the end, with


the two of the conspirators’ double suicide. As superstition is


inter-twined within the basis of the entire play, we can reasonably


conclude that it is because of this irrational belief of why certain


events occur and how to avoid them, that Caesar is retired and


eventually avenged. In the words of Caesar’s devoted follower and


companion Mark Antony, “His life was gentle, and the elements so mixed


in him that Nature might stand up and say to the world, ‘This was a


man!’”


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