Answer:
The mistakes men make are remembered after their deaths, but their good deads more often die with them.
If Caesar was power-hungry, it was a serious flaw, and he paid seriously for it.
Step-by-step explanation:
Antony who was unhappy at the death of Ceasar and who swore to avenge his death, in the speech above, remarked that the accusations made by Brutus and others against Caesar did not take into account his good deeds while alive. Thus, he implied that people tend to forget the good deeds of others when they die but only recall their bad deeds. He also showed through this statement that if the accusations about Caesar being ambitious were actually true, he paid dearly for it given the way he died.