Answer:
Strangeworth believes that "people everywhere were lustful, evil, and degraded." Through her accusatory evil letters, she has turned the people of the town against each other. ... She receives a letter informing her about the destruction of her precious roses. Her belief in the wicked nature of people has been confirmed.
Caesar recognizes that certain events lie beyond human control; to crouch in fear of them is to enter a paralysis equal to, if not worse than, death. It is to surrender any capacity for freedom and agency that one might actually possess. Indeed, perhaps to face death head-on, to die bravely and honorably. In the end, Brutus interprets his and Cassius’s defeat as the work of Caesar’s ghost—not just his apparition, but also the force of the people’s devotion to him, the strong legacy of a man who refused any fear of fate and, in his disregard of fate, seems to have transcended it.
<span>Because despite the subject's grueling work and sacrifices, she is a "star," or heroin, in the eyes of the author.
Have a good day! -Wajiha</span>