"The ides of march are come." (Line 1, scene 1, page 43, Julius Caesar).
"Caesar arrives at the capital with the conspirators and is approached by Artemidious with a letter."
Hail, Caesar! Read this schedule." (line 3, scene 1, page 43, Artemidious.
"What touches us ourself shall be last served." (line 8, scene 1 page 43, Artemidious).
Caesar denies the letter that outlines the assassination plot and thinks Artemidious is crazy.
"Delay not, Caesar! Read it instantly."( line 9, scene 1, page 43, Artemidious).
"et tu, Bruté? Then fall Caesar" (line 77, scene 1, page 46, Julius Caesar).
Caesar later gets stabbed by the conspirators. First, by Casca and last by Brutus.
Anthony sees Caesars body and is saddened by his death. Brutus sympathetically explains that he will go over why he killed him once the multitude settles down.
"Only be patient till we have appeased the multitude, beside themselves with fear, and then we will deliver you the cause." (line 180, scene 1, page 51,Brutus).
"O Mighty Caesar! Dost thou lie so low." (line 148, scene 1, page 50, Mark Antony).
"Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved Rome more". (line 21 ,22, scene 2, page 56, Brutus).
Brutus and Cassius enter the forum with a crowd of plebeians. they explains why he killed Caesar and get everyone to turn against caesar and understand their reasoning.
Thank you for killing that tyrant!
"The noble Brutus hath told you Caesar was ambitious; if it were so it was a grievous fault." (Line 76 to 78, scene 2, page 59, Mark Antony).
Brutus and Cassius leave for Antony to now talk. he discusses why what the conspirators did to Caesar was wrong and he manages to change the plebeians minds.
They lied to us!
Over 30 Million Storyboards Created
No Downloads, No Credit Card, and No Login Needed to Try!