Cassius and Brutus have a changing relationship throughout the play. They are completely different in character. Brutus is honest . Cassius is deceiving and selfish. They also think different about the destiny of Rome.
Initially, it is Cassius who definitely seems in control and able to manipulate Brutus, exploiting his fears of the potential dangers of Caesar's increasing power for his own purposes. Cassius wants Brutus on the side of the conspirators, as he is a respected and well-renowned person.
Brutus misjudges Cassius, and later he spoils the whole conspiracy by trusting Marc Antony. Although Brutus decides to assasinate Caesar rather tan being a true friend to him and speak about the matter, Cassius is a better friend and decides to use Brutus as a sparehead of his plan to kill Caesar. Since Brutus is well-respected, Cassius's conspiracy gains respect as well. Brutus sees Cassius as a true friend and joins the plot.
Answer:
Explanation:
If things are going really poorly, the meaning is obvious. What we are going towards has to be better than what we leave behind. Unwritten in this sentence is Lewis's belief that with faith, what lies head has to be better than where we are now. That seems strange, but people with faith believe it to be true, because a loving God will provide such a thing to happen for us. Since I know nothing of your life, I can only made comment on the last part. Lewis was devoutly religious. He believed that even if there are trials and there will be, that people will come out of those trials stronger and more prepared for whatever comes next.
Each trial is a classroom that makes us able to face even the worst news. But faith makes us stronger and more willing to accept adverse conditions.
C. The use of multiple narrators
Using someone else's work as your own, or not quoting/siting something properly.