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FREE ESSAY ON WOMEN OF JULIUS CAESAR

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WOMEN OF JULIUS CAESAR

Portia and Calpurnia are the two main women in the story of Julius Caesar. They had two
totally different parts in the story. One was kind of a servant wife and the other was a
equal but not equal wife. Shakespeare shows the two characters as supportive figures but
not very important ones.
Portia is the wife of Brutus. Portia considers herself as an equal to Brutus. They share
a mutual relationship and they both contribute to it. No one is better or considered
better. They had shared a perfect relationship up until the point when the conspiracy of
killing Caesar started. Portia figured it out pretty easily that something was wrong with
Brutus because they had such a close relationship. She begged him to tell her and when
Brutus said that he couldn't then she knew that their relations had faded a little. Of
course, Brutus ended up telling her what was going on. This quote resembles there
relationship.
By all your vows of great love and that great vow
Which did incorporate and make us one,
That you unfold me, yourself, and your half,
Why you are heavy, and what men tonight
Have had resort to you;
This quote tells the reader how much she cares for Brutus.
Calpurnia on the other hand is the total opposite in the eyes of the husband. She is the
wife of Caesar. Caesar treats Calpurnia as if she was the scum level of his servants. He
orders her around and never pays any attention to her. One example of this was when she
warned and begged him not to go to the capitol that day. She had a feeling that something
was going to happen and sure enough did. (Caesar was stabbed by the Senate who had been
planning against him.) 
Therefore, the two important wives in the story had two totally different roles. One was
a servant woman and the other was a equal but one that was left out of the most important
thing that was ever done by her husband. They were both similar in that they both had
husbands that were deeply involved in the conspiracy, and the major difference between
them was how they were treated as wives.
Bibliography
I wrote it myself

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