The allusion to the apostle Judas, who betrayed Jesus warns listeners not to be deceived by the apparently mild British reaction to the colonists' petitions against tax laws.
He embodies fate by insisting that the prophecy will still
come true. He still warns Caesar of
danger but Caesar brushes it off. He
tries to pass a note to him but is blocked by the Conspirators who now crowd
around Caesar as he enters the hall and there he met his end.
It followed after World War because society was tired of the traditions of the past (neo-classical/ romanticism) and think 20th century.