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Shakespeare’s “Dark Mechanisms of Power” manipulation, power, ambition, authority, etc. and the Virtue of Noble persons
Shakespeare’s Play – Julius Caesar
Octavius: (Octavius later Caesar Augustus in Luke 2:1)
According to his virtue let us treat him, With all respect and rites of burial. Within my tent his bones tonight shall lie, Most like a soldier, ordered honorably.
So call and order the battlefield to rest, and let’s depart away, To divide the glories of this happy day. [End of Play] – myShakespeare Act 5, Scene 5
The Tragedy of Julius Caesar is a (historically acurate) political thriller and historical tragedy play written by William Shakespeare in 1599 A.D. (actually written by the Shakespeares Round Table Writing Society consisting of many talented writers and researchers.)
Set in ancient Rome in 44 BCE, the play chronicles the senate conspiracy against the Roman (King) dictator, his subsequent assassination on the Ides of March, and the chaotic civil war that follows.
Though named after Caesar, the central psychological focus and true protagonist of the play is Marcus Brutus, a noble statesman torn between his love for his friend and his fiercely loyal patriotism to the Roman Republic. – Google AI Gemini
Tristan and the Classics | Explore the Timeless lessons of William Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, a Tragedy Play that reveals the dangers of power, ambition, and manipulation
Dr. Atul Patil | Why do Shakespeare’s Tragedies still Haunt us 400 years later?
In this video, we dive deep into the dark secrets and psychological mastery behind William Shakespeare’s most iconic tragedies.
From the madness of Hamlet to the blinding ambition of Macbeth, we explore how a playwright (Roundtable Writers Guild) from Elizabethan I England managed to capture the rawest parts of the human experience—emotions that still resonate with us today.
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