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Both characters are also manipulated and make costly mistakes. Despite their similarities, Caesar is a self-centered, egotistical politician, who desires to become emperor. In contrast, Brutus is selfless, honorable, and wishes to preserve the Roman Republic. Brutus is also considered the protagonist of the play.
Structurally, Sophocles is foreshadowing the end of the play whilst reinforcing the socio-political message behind it, which is that pride, especially as hubris, is a negative deadly sin and will not go unnoticed by the Gods or by the people, which is the message put forward in the closing speech.
Antigone and act as symbols of honoring the gods versus honoring man. Antigone will not turn away from the gods, while insists that you must obey the laws of man. Teiresias also acts as a symbol of the will of the gods.
Fate and Free Will A central theme of Antigone is the tension between individual action and fate. While free choices, such as Antigones decision to defy Creons edict, are docHub, fate is responsible for ma
Brutus is known as a tragic hero in the play Julius Caesar because he faces a major conflict between his loyalty to his friend and his loyalty to his country.
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Both Antigone and are strong, confident characters. Their stubbornness is shown in their eagerness in the actions they take, and how they will not back out. Antigone has set her mind on burying her brother Polynices, a crime to be punished by with death.
In the tragedies Antigone and Julius Caesar, by Sophocles and Shakespeare, the characters and Brutus are similar tragic heroes. Both have noble statutes, and are driven to make their nations prosperous, but their fatal flaws, Creons pride and Brutuss overt idealism and trustingness, cause their downfall.
Antony tells the crowd to "have patience" and expresses his feeling that he will "wrong the honourable men / Whose daggers have stabb'd Caesar" if he is to read the will. The crowd, increasingly agitated, calls the conspirators "traitors" and demands that Antony read out the will.
Despite its title, Brutus serves as the protagonist of Julius Caesar. Caesar dies midway through the play and has little influence over the events that unfold. Brutus, however, stands at the very center of the action and helps instigate the play's main events.
Antigone's Justice Unlike her sister, Ismene, who believes justice is the law, Antigone extracts hers through the \u201cDivine law.\u201d Antigone buries her brother and gets the justice she seeks, yet the King's moral compass that opposes her own views this as disobedience.

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