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Sunday, June 2, 2019

Julius Caesar: Comparison of the Eulogies of Mark Antony and Brutus Ess

Eulogy, noun. A well versed, powerful dialect which praises someone after their death. In The Tragedy of Julius Caesar, there are two of the most famous, and repeated eulogies incessantly spoken. These eulogies are very powerful and speak to everyone. They are both create verbally very eloquently, but very different at the same time. One is written as a sadness for Caesar, while the other is written as a man who wants to make others feel guilty for his doing. Both speeches seem to push on the heart strings of Romes public. They both use different techniques of drawing the crowd into their thinking. In the speeches we can see notes of verbal irony, speech structure, and repetition of words that help to persuade the crowds of plebeians.The first way that the speeches differed is the use of verbal irony. Antonys use of irony comes close to bordering on sarcasm. Friends, Romans, countryman, lend me your ears, I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him. (III.II.80-84) says Ant ony when making his opening statement to the crowd. He addresses the crowd as friends, so as to put them on a...

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