Antony intends to rouse the population against Brutus and his co-conspirators. In order to do this, he paints a portrait of Caesar as a great man, and above all a man of the people. However, every few lines he stops to mention that Brutus and the others thought him a tyrant, and that since they were honorable, they must be believed. The yuxtaposition of enthusiastic praise for Caesar and mechanical repetition of how honorable Brutus and the others were makes the latter seem more and more ironic, until it is clear that Antony does not intend at all to paint them as honorable, but rather the opposite. This is achieved, again, through irony.
Answer:
I'm not sure but it would be a lecture
Explanation:
(P.S if anyone could possibly help me with my question, i just posted it)
No it is not. The answer is “just ninety cents a bag”
B would be the correct answer.
The narrator was speaking in the excerpt
I think its paradox because "the more things change, the more they stay the same" are two opposite things that actually make sense