Multiple people betrayed Julius Caesar in multiple ways. Due to the betrayals Julius Caesar ended up being killed by the conspirators. Even after the death of the great ruler Caesar, his close friends in the group of conspirators constantly betrayed him. The constant backstabbing of his friends reminds me of a couple of examples that happened to me in my life. Being constantly back stabbed can pay a toll on your life and can change who you trust and what you think of different people.
In the play, all of the conspirators plot to kill Caesar. They plan out ways that can harm him and get him out of their way so they can take over. This is an example of betrayal that I can relate to myself. As we all know, I am a football player. Every Friday night for the past couple of months, the other team had plotted to ruin my team’s dreams of winning. This feeling may not affected others on the team like it did me, but I’m sure someone felt it just like me. As you know, I’m a sophomore. Sophomores seldom start on the …show more content…
Caesar died a very bloody death from the conspirators at the senate house. Caesar never had thought that his great friend Brutus would have betrayed him and would have been part of his death. Even though, the conspirators hated Caesar, Brutus still loved him as a friend. The connection to my life is alike this situation in the play. I have never been literally stabbed in the back, but it hurt me on the inside just as bad as it would it if there was a sword shoved in my back. My first dog, cookie, supposedly ran away, but come to find out my mom actually hated my dog. Years have passed since cookie had died when my mom came to me and confessed she had killed my dog. If her story was true, she accidently shot my dog as she was trying to shoot the other dog cookie was fighting with. All in all, that event broke my heart as if my mom was betraying