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read the excerpt from act 1, scene 3, of julius caesar. cassius. and wh…

Question

read the excerpt from act 1, scene 3, of julius caesar. cassius. and why should caesar be a tyrant then? poor man, i know he would not be a wolf but that he sees the romans are but sheep. why is this excerpt an example of verbal irony? ○ cassius speaks of the romans as sheep, but he believes they are strong independent thinkers. ○ cassius portrays caesar as a cruel - hearted tyrant, and at the same time says he pities caesar because caesar cant help himself. ○ cassius believes himself to be innocent, and only the audience knows that he is like a scheming wolf. ○ cassius wishes that he could be a cruel leader like caesar.

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

Verbal irony occurs when a speaker says the opposite of what they truly mean, or when their words carry a contradictory meaning. In the excerpt, Cassius calls Caesar a "tyrant" and a "wolf" but immediately frames Caesar's behavior as a response to the Romans being "sheep" (compliant, weak followers), implying Caesar's tyranny is enabled by the Romans, not inherent cruelty. This creates irony: he labels Caesar a cruel tyrant while also suggesting Caesar's actions are a reaction he can't fully control, pitting the harsh label against a mitigating explanation.

Answer:

Cassius portrays Caesar as a cruel-hearted tyrant, and at the same time says he pities Caesar because Caesar can't help himself.