English, asked by mongssiba, 1 year ago

Mark Antony's Speech...
William Shakespeare
what is the moral of the story?​

Answers

Answered by prashant52346
0

Answer:

28 February 2013

Speech Analysis The speeches given by both Brutus and Mark Antony in William Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Julius Caesar are very persuasive to the audience that they are given to, but rhetorical devices were used in different ways in order for each to have an effect on the people of Rome. In Brutus’s speech, he uses devices such as rhetorical question and antithesis to convince the Romans that he and the conpirators did a good deed by killing Caesar. In Mark Antony’s speech, he sways them to believe that Caesar did not deserve to die, and that the conpirators were the real enemies by using rhetorical devices like rhetorical question and apostrophe

Explanation:

Even the first words of his speech serve a purpose. Antony is placing himself on the same level as the commoners. As he promised Brutus, he tells the crowd that he is speaking only to bury his beloved friend, Caesar. He states that Caesar will probably only be remembered for the bad things that he did.

Concerning Antony's speech in Julius Caesar, Act 3.2, I'll summarize the speech by stating the main points, with an emphasis on the logic Antony uses. He says: He comes not to praise Caesar, but to bury him, and if Caesar was ambitious asBrutus says, Caesar deserved to die.

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