English, asked by naveenreddyb9465, 1 year ago

Can calpurnia's dreams and fears be justified

Answers

Answered by Faine183
9
Yes, bcz at the last her dream came true, da ceasar wud be killed..
But decius Brutus made it a positive dream which compelled ceasar to cme to senate.
Hope it helps u
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Answered by bluecolor
3

After this, while he was sleeping as usual by the side of his wife, all the windows and doors of the chamber flew open at once, and Caesar, confounded by the noise and the light of the moon shining down upon him, noticed that Calpurnia was in a deep slumber, but was uttering indistinct words and inarticulate groans in her sleep; for she dreamed, as it proved, that she was holding her murdered husband in her arms and bewailing him.

Caesar's wife's dreams about her husband's assassination are only additional omens foreshadowing the actual event. Shakespeare relentlessly builds up suspense from the beginning of the play to the moment when the conspirators all close in on him and hack him to death. Shakespeare gladly used anything he could find in Plutarch to help him build suspense. Plutarch was the kind of historian who liked such anecdotes as the ones about Calpurnia's dreams. He collected them from whatever sources were available. They add a spice to Plutarch which is missing in much historical writing.

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