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Brutus: An Explanation In William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar

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In William Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar”, Brutus is initially a logic and reason dependent individual who becomes more emotionally volatile and reactive as the play progresses.
Early in the play Brutus carefully examines every angle of Caesar’s rise to power and eventually his death to come to the most reasonable and logical solution or explanation. Early in the play when Brutus is presented the argument that Caesar must die, he wrestles with the idea of killing a friend and countryman, but after careful consideration he says “It must be by his death, and for my part/… He would be crowned/ How that might change his nature, there’s the question” (II, i, 10-15). In saying this, he not only states why this decision is a logical means of protecting general public from oppression, but …show more content…
He echoes this when he likens Caesar to a malicious serpent still in the egg. In this analogy he concludes that he must “…kill him in the shell” (II, i, 34). This scenario is akin to the classic children’s story of Old Yeller. In this book, the main character, a boy named Travis Coates, takes in a runaway dog that he calls Old Yeller for its age and the yellow color of its coat. As the story progresses, the boy and his family grow a bond with the dog and one night Old Yeller saves them from a wolf attack. In this fateful fight between two beasts, Old Yeller successfully chases off the threat, but not before he is wounded. Due to this wound and a recent outbreak of rabies in the area, the young Travis is forced to take his canine companion outside and kill him before he becomes sick and turns on the family. Much like in

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