QUESTION IMAGE
Question
brutus. remember march, the ides of march, remember. did not great julius bleed for justice sake? what villain touched his body, that did stab, and not for justice? what, shall one of us, that struck the foremost man of all this world but for supporting robbers, shall we now contaminate our fingers with base bribes, and sell the mighty space of our large honours for so much trash as may be grasped thus? i had rather be a dog and bay the moon than such a roman. which statements best interpret the allusion used in the passage? choose five options. the ides means \bad news.\ the ides of march is march 15. this is a cultural and historical allusion. the soothsayer is the only character to mention the ides of march. caesars death happened on the ides of march. shakespeare was unfamiliar with the cultural and historical meanings of the ides of march when writing his play. the play was based on historical events surrounding the murder of julius caesar.
The ides of March refers to March 15 and is associated with Caesar's death, a well - known historical event. It is a cultural and historical allusion. The play is based on historical events around Caesar's murder. The soothsayer is not the only one to mention it, and Shakespeare was familiar with its meanings. "The ides" doesn't inherently mean "bad news" but has become associated with it due to Caesar's death.
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
The ides of March is March 15.
This is a cultural and historical allusion.
Caesar’s death happened on the ides of March.
The play was based on historical events surrounding the murder of Julius Caesar.