Alternate Ending Comic Strip

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Alternate Ending Comic Strip
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Storyboard Text

  • 
  • What means this shouting? I do fear the people choose Caesar for their king.
  • I would not, Cassius...
  • Ay, do you fear it? Then must I think you would not have it so.
  • Cassius is correct. Caesar does have great power, but he is also indeed my good friend. His downfall cannot be avoided, but I do not know if I have the will to take part in it.
  • 
  • Marcus Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus talk for a while about Gaius Julius Caesar's inherited power. Cassius hints towards the potential downfall of Caesar, while Brutus attempts to counter the idea (I, i).
  • ...fashion it thus: that what he is, augmented, would run to these and these extremities. And so should I think him as a serpent's egg and kill him in the shell? I am yet to decide the fate of mighty Caes-
  • Thinking about the possibility of tyranny in Rome, Brutus then realizes that Cassius was partially correct, and that Caesar did need to be stopped. Unable to decide between his friendship with Caesar and Rome, Brutus's mental health starts to decline due to stress and peer pressure (I, i).
  • Portia! What mean you? I am not well in health, and that is all.
  • Brutus is wise, and were he not in health he would embrace the means to come by it.
  • Brutus! What calls for this behaviour?! Make me acquainted with your cause of grief...
  • Portia is right. If I wast sick, I wouldst know how to recover quickly. This dilemma of choosing between Rome and Caesar is my sickness, and I need to make a descision.
  • I don't think I can do it... I shall not participate in this mutiny.
  • Brutus and the other conspirators meet up later at Brutus's house to discuss the assassination of Caesar (II, i). Once the conspirators leave, Brutus contemplates killing off Caesar himself, but gets interrupted by his wife, Portia, in the middle of his train of thought (II, ii).
  • Portia calls out Brutus for his strange behaviour, as he looked as if he was under a lot of stress. She then tells him that if the Brutus she knew was actually unwell, he would look to get better. Brutus takes note of this statement, as well as the sympathy Portia showed, and thinks of it in relation to the problem he was facing (II, ii).
  • Why, so I do. Good Portia, go to bed.
  • Brutus knew that he had to make a decision, and he also knew that his decision was going to be for the best. He ends up wanting to choose his friendship with Caesar over Rome, and prepares himself to inform the others about his decision (II, ii).
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