English, asked by radhikaraj2215, 11 months ago

Can someone please explain these lines from Julius Caesar..
"So do you too, where you percieve them thick. These growing feathers pluck'd from Caesar's wing
Will make him fly an ordinary pitch, Who else would soar above the veiw of men,
And keep us all in servile fearfulness"

Answers

Answered by malti010872
2

It doesn’t matter. Make sure that none of the statues are decorated in tribute to Caesar. I’ll walk around and force the commoners off the streets. You do the same, wherever the crowds are thick. If we take away Caesar’s support, he’ll have to come back down to earth; otherwise, he’ll fly too high and keep the rest of us in a state of fear and obedience.

Even as early as the first scene of the play, we get a sense that some Romans foresee that no good can come out of Caesar's increasing power. They predict Caesar will keep them "servile," but they can't predict the terrible outcome of their decision to assassinate him: civil war and the beginning of the end of the Roman Republic.

Mark as brainliest plzz...✌


radhikaraj2215: Thank you sooo much mate..
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