He had the best intentions for Rome and even though it involved killing Caesar, from his point of view it was going to be worth killing him. “This is my answer it is not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved Rome more.” (A.III, S.2, L, 120) Despite having to stab Caesar in the back he always stayed true to Rome which showed in this case that he was a noble man. Even after pleasing other people with his actions, after Caesar’s death he believed in the fact that Brutus was genuinely looking out for the good of his people and was loyal towards …show more content…
Brutus being naive is also a reason what came to his downfall. Having the state of mind that everything was all under control and individuals had a quality of being honorable and noble men he was. Brutus had a lot of trust in men and figured that they will not turn their back and he to him like how they did to Caesar. Brutus allows Antony to speak at Caesar’s funeral but can not talk anything bad about the conspirators. “And you shall speak in the same pulpit whereto I am going. After my speech is ended.” (AIII,S 1 L, 255) Speaking at the funeral, Antony goes against the rules that Brutus sets and makes the crowd go against