Extravagant Declarations of Love
In Act I, scene i, Antony and
Cleopatra argue over whether their love for one another can be measured and
articulated:
CLEOPATRA: [to Antony] If it be love indeed, tell me how
much.
ANTONY: There’s beggary in the love that can be reckoned.
CLEOPATRA: I’ll set a bourn how far to be beloved.
ANTONY: Then must thou needs find out new heaven, new earth.
(I.i.14–17)
ANTONY: There’s beggary in the love that can be reckoned.
CLEOPATRA: I’ll set a bourn how far to be beloved.
ANTONY: Then must thou needs find out new heaven, new earth.
(I.i.14–17)
This exchange sets the tone for the
way that love will be discussed and understood throughout the play. Cleopatra
expresses the expectation that love should be declared or demonstrated grandly.
She wants to hear and see exactly how much Antony loves her. Love, in Antony
and Cleopatra, is not comprised of private intimacies, as it is in Romeo
and Juliet. Instead, love belongs to the public arena. In the lines quoted
above, Cleopatra claims that she will set the boundaries of her lover’s
affections, and Antony responds that, to do so, she will need to discover
uncharted territories. By likening their love to the discovery and claim of
“new heaven, new earth,” the couple links private emotions to affairs of state.
Love, in other words, becomes an extension of politics, with the annexation of
another’s heart analogous to the conquering of a foreign land.
Public Displays of Affection
In Antony and Cleopatra,
public displays of affection are generally understood to be expressions of
political power and allegiance. Caesar, for example, laments that Octavia
arrives in Rome without the fanfare of a proper entourage because it betrays
her weakness: without an accompanying army of horses, guardsmen, and
trumpeters, she cannot possibly be recognized as Caesar’s sister or Antony’s
wife. The connection between public display and power is one that the
characters—especially Caesar and Cleopatra—understand well. After Antony’s
death, their battle of wills revolves around Caesar’s desire to exhibit the
Egyptian queen on the streets of Rome as a sign of his triumph. Cleopatra
refuses such an end, choosing instead to take her own life. Even this act is
meant as a public performance, however: decked in her grandest royal robes and
playing the part of the tragic lover, Cleopatra intends her last act to be as
much a defiance of Caesar’s power as a gesture of romantic devotion. For death,
she claims, is “the way / To fool their preparation and to conquer / Their most
absurd intents” (V.ii.220–222).
Female Sexuality
Throughout the play, the male
characters rail against the power of female sexuality. Caesar and his men
condemn Antony for the weakness that makes him bow to the Egyptian queen, but
they clearly lay the blame for his downfall on Cleopatra. On the rare occasion
that the Romans do not refer to her as a whore, they describe her as an
enchantress whose beauty casts a dangerous spell over men. As Enobarbus notes,
Cleopatra possesses the power to warp the minds and judgment of all men, even
“holy priests” who “[b]less her” when she acts like a whore (II.ii.244–245).
The unapologetic openness of
Cleopatra’s sexuality stands to threaten the Romans. But they are equally
obsessed with the powers of Octavia’s sexuality. Caesar’s sister, who, in
beauty and temperament stands as Cleopatra’s opposite, is nevertheless
considered to possess power enough to mend the triumvir’s damaged relationship:
Caesar and Antony expect that she will serve to “knit [their] hearts /
With an unslipping knot” (II.ii.132–133). In this way, women are saddled with
both the responsibility for men’s political alliances and the blame for their
personal failures
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