“Et tu Brute,” is Latin, meaning, “even you, Brutus?” or thereabouts. It’s what Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar said to Brutus when he was stabbed in the Senate on the ides (15th) of March (as the street Soothsayer forewarned).
So as a hat tip to Shakespeare, soothsayers, and literary geeks, every ides of March I’ll tell you to watch your back.
Am I missing something? Ok, so my I didn’t pay as much attention in my high school literature class as I probably should have, but what is the point?
Et tu, Brute?
Ok, dumb it down a notch; I am not a literary type (I am hardly literate).
“Et tu Brute,” is Latin, meaning, “even you, Brutus?” or thereabouts. It’s what Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar said to Brutus when he was stabbed in the Senate on the ides (15th) of March (as the street Soothsayer forewarned).
So as a hat tip to Shakespeare, soothsayers, and literary geeks, every ides of March I’ll tell you to watch your back.
Got it.