Summary
Act I, scene i
Two tribunes, Flavius and Murellus,
enter a Roman street, along with various commoners. Flavius and Murellus
derisively order the commoners to return home and get back to work: “What, know
you not, / Being mechanical, you ought not walk / Upon a labouring day without
the sign / Of your profession?” (I.i.2–5). Murellus engages a cobbler in a
lengthy inquiry about his profession; misinterpreting the cobbler’s punning
replies, Murellus quickly grows angry with him. Flavius interjects to ask why
the cobbler is not in his shop working. The cobbler explains that he is taking
a holiday from work in order to observe the triumph (a lavish parade
celebrating military victory)—he wants to watch Caesar’s procession through the
city, which will include the captives won in a recent battle against his
archrival Pompey.
Murellus scolds the cobbler and
attempts to diminish the significance of Caesar’s victory over Pompey and his
consequent triumph. “What conquest brings he home? / What tributaries follow
him [Caesar] to Rome / To grace in captive bonds his chariot wheels?” Murellus
asks, suggesting that Caesar’s victory does not merit a triumph since it
involves no conquering of a foreign foe to the greater glory of Rome
(I.i.31–33). Murellus reminds the commoners of the days when they used to
gather to watch and cheer for Pompey’s triumphant returns from battle. Now,
however, due to a mere twist of fate, they rush out to celebrate his downfall.
Murellus scolds them further for their disloyalty, ordering them to “pray to
the gods to intermit the plague / That needs must light on this ingratitude”
(I.i.53–54).
The commoners leave, and Flavius
instructs Murellus to go to the Capitol, a hill on which rests a temple on
whose altars victorious generals offer sacrifice, and remove any crowns placed
on statues of Caesar. Flavius adds that he will thin the crowds of commoners
observing the triumph and directs Murellus to do likewise, for if they can
regulate Caesar’s popular support, they will be able to regulate his power
(“These growing feathers plucked from Caesar’s wing / Will make him fly an
ordinary pitch” [I.i.71–72]).
Analysis
Although the play opens with Flavius
and Murellus noting the fickle nature of the public’s devotion—the crowd now
celebrates Caesar’s defeat of Pompey when once it celebrated Pompey’s
victories—loyalty to Caesar nonetheless appears to be growing with exceptional
force. Caesar’s power and influence are likewise strong: Flavius and Murellus
are later punished for removing the decorations from Caesar’s statues.
It is interesting to note the
difference between the manner in which Flavius and Murellus conceive of the
cobbler and that in which Shakespeare has created him. The cobbler is a
typically Shakespearean character—a host of puns and bawdy references reveal
his dexterity with language (“all that I live by is with the awl. I meddle /
with no tradesman’s matters, nor women’s matters” [I.i.21–22]). The tribunes,
however, preoccupied with class distinctions, view the cobbler as nothing more
than a plebeian ruffian. Flavius’s reproach of the cobbler for not having his
tools about him on a workday reveals his belief that a laborer can be good for
one thing and one thing only: laboring. Murellus similarly assumes the cobbler
is stupid, although, ironically, it is Murellus himself who misunderstands the
cobbler’s answers to his questions. Murellus is unwilling to interpret the
cobbler’s shift in allegiance from Pompey to Caesar as anything but a
manifestation of dim-witted forgetfulness.
Flavius and Murellus’s concern about
Caesar’s meteoric rise to power reflects English sentiment during the
Elizabethan age about the consolidation of power in other parts of Europe. The
strengthening of the absolutist monarchies in such sovereignties as France and
Spain during the sixteenth century threatened the stability of the somewhat
more balanced English political system, which, though it was hardly democratic
in the modern sense of the word, at least provided nobles and elected
representatives with some means of checking royal authority. Caesar’s
ascendance helped to effect Rome’s transition from republic to empire, and
Shakespeare’s depiction of the prospect of Caesar’s assumption of dictatorial
power can be seen as a comment upon the gradual shift toward centralization of
power that was taking place in Europe.
In addition, Shakespeare’s
illustration of the fickleness of the Roman public proves particularly relevant
to the English political scene of the time. Queen Elizabeth I was nearing the
end of her life but had neither produced nor named an heir. Anxiety mounted
concerning who her successor would be. People feared that without resort to the
established, accepted means of transferring power—passing it down the family
line—England might plunge into the sort of chaotic power struggle that had
plagued it in the fifteenth century, during the Wars of the Roses. Flavius and
Murellus’s interest in controlling the populace lays the groundwork for
Brutus’s and Antony’s manipulations of public opinion after Caesar’s death.
Shakespeare thus makes it clear that the struggle for power will involve a
battle among the leaders to win public favor with displays of bravery and
convincing rhetoric. Considering political history in the centuries after
Shakespeare wrote Julius Caesar, especially in the twentieth century,
when Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler consolidated their respective regimes by
whipping up in the masses the overzealous nationalism that had pervaded
nineteenth-century Italy and Germany, the play is remarkably prescient.
Act I, scene ii
Caesar enters a public square with
Antony, Calpurnia, Portia, Decius, Cicero, Brutus, Cassius, Casca, and a
Soothsayer; he is followed by a throng of citizens and then by Flavius and
Murellus. Antony, dressed to celebrate the feast day, readies himself for a
ceremonial run through the city. Caesar urges him to touch Calpurnia, Caesar’s
wife, as he runs, since Roman superstition holds that the touch of a ceremonial
runner will cure barrenness. Antony agrees, declaring that whatever Caesar says
is certain to become fact.
The Soothsayer calls out from the
crowd to Caesar, telling him to beware the Ides of March. (The “ides” refers to
the fifteenth day of March, May, July, and October and the thirteenth day of
the other months in the ancient Roman calendar.) Caesar pauses and asks the man
to come forward; the Soothsayer repeats himself. Caesar ultimately dismisses
the warning, and the procession departs. Brutus and Cassius remain. Cassius
asks Brutus why he has not seemed himself lately. Brutus replies that he has
been quiet because he has been plagued with conflicting thoughts. But he
assures Cassius that even though his mind is at war with itself, he will not
let his inner turmoil affect his friendships.
Cassius and Brutus speak together.
Cassius asks Brutus if Brutus can see his own face; Brutus replies that he
cannot. Cassius then declares that Brutus is unable to see what everyone else
does, namely, that Brutus is widely respected. Noting that no mirror could
reveal Brutus’s worthiness to himself, Cassius offers to serve as a human
mirror so that Brutus may discover himself and conceive of himself in new ways.
Brutus hears shouting and says that
he fears that the people want to make Caesar their king. When Cassius asks,
Brutus affirms that he would rather that Caesar not assume the position. Brutus
adds that he loves Caesar but that he also loves honor, and that he loves honor
even more than he fears death. Cassius replies that he, too, recoils at the
thought of kneeling in awe before someone whom he does not consider his
superior, and declares, “I was born as free as Caesar, so were you. / We both
have fed as well, and we can both / Endure the winter’s cold as well as he”
(I.ii.99–101). Cassius recalls a windy day when he and Caesar stood on the
banks of the Tiber River, and Caesar dared him to swim to a distant point. They
raced through the water, but Caesar became weak and asked Cassius to save him.
Cassius had to drag him from the water. Cassius also recounts an episode when Caesar
had a fever in Spain and experienced a seizure. Cassius marvels to think that a
man with such a feeble constitution should now stand at the head of the
civilized world.
Caesar stands like a Colossus over
the world, Cassius continues, while Cassius and Brutus creep about under his
legs. He tells Brutus that they owe their underling status not to fate but to
their own failure to take action. He questions the difference between the name
“Caesar” and the name “Brutus”: why should Caesar’s name be more celebrated
than Brutus’s when, spoken together, the names sound equally pleasing and thus
suggest that the men should hold equal power? He wonders in what sort of age
they are living when one man can tower over the rest of the population. Brutus
responds that he will consider Cassius’s words. Although unwilling to be
further persuaded, he admits that he would rather not be a citizen of Rome in
such strange times as the present.
Meanwhile, Caesar and his train
return. Caesar sees Cassius and comments to Antony that Cassius looks like a
man who thinks too much; such men are dangerous, he adds. Antony tells Caesar
not to worry, but Caesar replies that he prefers to avoid Cassius: Cassius
reads too much and finds no enjoyment in plays or music—such men are never at ease
while someone greater than themselves holds the reins of power. Caesar urges
Antony to come to his right side—he is deaf in his left ear—and tell him what
he thinks of Cassius. Shortly, Caesar and his train depart.
Brutus and Cassius take Casca aside to
ask him what happened at the procession. Casca relates that Antony offered a
crown to Caesar three times, but Caesar refused it each time. While the crowd
cheered for him, Caesar fell to the ground in a fit. Brutus speculates that
Caesar has “the falling sickness” (a term for epilepsy in Elizabethan times).
Casca notes, however, that Caesar’s fit did not seem to affect his authority:
although he suffered his seizure directly before the crowd, the people did not
cease to express their love. Casca adds that the great orator Cicero spoke in
Greek, but that he couldn’t understand him at all, saying “it was Greek to me”
(I.ii.278). He concludes by reporting that Flavius and Murellus were deprived
of their positions as civil servants for removing decorations from Caesar’s
statues. Casca then departs, followed by Brutus.
Cassius, alone now, says that while
he believes that Brutus is noble, he hopes that Brutus’s noble nature may yet
be bent: “For who so firm that cannot be seduced?” he asks rhetorically
(I.ii.306). He decides to forge letters from Roman citizens declaring their
support for Brutus and their fear of Caesar’s ascent to power; he will throw
them into Brutus’s house that evening.
Analysis
While the opening scene illustrates
Caesar’s popularity with the masses, the audience’s first direct encounter with
him presents an omen of his imminent fall. Caesar’s choice to ignore the
Soothsayer’s advice proves the first in a series of failures to heed warnings
about his fate. Just as Caesar himself proves fallible, his power proves
imperfect. When Caesar orders Antony to touch Calpurnia, Antony replies that
Caesar need merely speak and his word will become fact—that is, Caesar’s
authority is so strong that his word immediately brings about the requested
action. However, while the masses may conceive of Caesar’s power thus, Caesar’s
order to Antony alerts us to the reality that he and his wife have been unable
to produce a child. The implication that Caesar may be impotent or sterile is
the first—and, for a potential monarch, the most damaging—of his physical
shortcomings to be revealed in the play.
This conversation between Brutus and
Cassius reveals the respective characters of the two men, who will emerge as
the foremost conspirators against Caesar. Brutus appears to be a man at war
with himself, torn between his love for Caesar and his honorable concern for
Rome. He worries that it is not in Rome’s best interest for Caesar to become
king, yet he hates to oppose his friend. Cassius steps into Brutus’s personal
crisis and begins his campaign to turn Brutus against Caesar, flattering
Brutus’s pride by offering to be his mirror and thus relaying to him the
ostensible high regard in which the citizens hold him.
Cassius compounds Brutus’s alarm
about Caesar’s growing power with references to his weak physical state: he
lacks stamina and is probably epileptic. But Cassius observes only Caesar’s
frail human body, his private self. When he urges Brutus to consider that the
name of Brutus should be as powerful as the name of Caesar, he fails to
understand that Caesar’s real power is not affected by private infirmities but
rather rests in his public persona, whose strength is derived from the goodwill
and good opinion of the populace.
Caesar, on the other hand, shows
much more perceptiveness in his analysis of Cassius; he observes both Cassius’s
private and public personas and notices a discord. He is made uneasy by what
appears to be Cassius’s lack of a private life—Cassius’s seeming refusal to
acknowledge his own sensibilities or nurture his spirit suggest a coldness, a
lack of human warmth. Caesar comments to Antony, “He loves no plays, / As thou
dost, Antony; he hears no music. / Seldom he smiles, and smiles in such a sort
/ As if he mocked himself, and scorned his spirit / That could be moved to
smile at anything” (I.ii.204–208). Cassius remains merely a public man, without
any suggestion of a private self. Such a man, Caesar properly recognizes, is
made uncomfortable by others’ power.
The question of Caesar’s own
ambition is raised in Casca’s account of the triumphal procession. In
describing how Antony offered Caesar a crown three times, Casca makes sure to
point out Caesar’s reluctance in refusing the crown. Since the incident is
related from Casca’s anti-Caesar perspective, it is difficult to ascertain
Caesar’s true motivations: did Caesar act out of genuine humility or did he
merely put on a show to please the crowd? Nevertheless, Casca’s mention of
Caesar’s hesitation suggests that, no matter how noble his motivations, Caesar
is capable of being seduced by power and thereby capable of becoming a
dictator, as Brutus fears.
At the close of the scene, when
Cassius plots to turn Brutus against Caesar by planting forged letters in
Brutus’s house, Cassius has shrewdly perceived that Brutus’s internal conflict
is more likely to be influenced by what he believes the populace to think than
by his own personal misgivings. Cassius recognizes that if Brutus believes that
the people distrust Caesar, then he will be convinced that Caesar must be
thwarted. Cassius aims to take advantage of Brutus’s weakest point, namely,
Brutus’s honorable concerns for Rome; Brutus’s inflexible ideals leave him open
for manipulation by Cassius. Cassius, in contrast, has made himself adaptable
for political survival by wholly abandoning his sense of honor.
Act I, scene iii
Casca and Cicero meet on a Roman
street. Casca says that though he has seen many terrible things in the natural
world, nothing compares to the frightfulness of this night’s weather. He wonders
if there is strife in heaven or if the gods are so angered by mankind that they
intend to destroy it. Casca relates that he saw a man with his hands on fire,
and yet his flesh was not burning. He describes meeting a lion near the
Capitol: bizarrely, the lion ignored him and walked on. Many others have seen
men on fire walking in the streets, and an owl, a nocturnal bird, was seen
sitting out in the marketplace during the day. When so many abnormal events
happen at once, Casca declares, no one could possibly believe that they are
natural occurrences. Casca insists that they are portents of danger ahead.
Cicero replies that men will interpret things as they will: “Indeed it is a
strange-disposèd time; / But men may construe things after their fashion, / Clean
from the purpose of the things themselves” (I.iii.33–35). Cicero asks if Caesar
is coming to the Capitol the next day; Casca replies that he is. Cicero
departs, warning that it is not a good atmosphere in which to remain outside.
Cassius enters. He has been
wandering through the streets, taking no shelter from the thunder and
lightning. Casca asks Cassius why he would endanger himself so. Cassius replies
that he is pleased—he believes that the gods are using these signs to warn the
Romans about a “monstrous state,” meaning both an abnormal state of affairs and
an atrocious government (I.iii.71). Cassius compares the night to Caesar
himself, who
like this dreadful night,
. . . thunders, lightens, opens graves, and roars
As doth the lion in the Capitol. (I.iii.72–74)
. . . thunders, lightens, opens graves, and roars
As doth the lion in the Capitol. (I.iii.72–74)
He also calls Caesar “prodigious
grown, / And fearful, as these strange eruptions are” (I.iii.76–77).
Casca reports to Cassius that the
senators plan to make Caesar king in the Senate the following day. Cassius
draws his dagger and swears to the gods that if they can make a weak man like
Caesar so powerful, then they can empower Cassius to defeat a tyrant. He
declares that Rome must be merely trash or rubbish to give itself up so easily
to Caesar’s fire. Casca joins Cassius in his censure of Caesar, and Cassius
reveals that he has already swayed a number of high-powered Romans to support a
resistance movement.
A conspirator named Cinna enters.
Cassius now divulges his latest scheme in his plot to build opposition against
Caesar: the conversion of Brutus. Cassius gives Cinna the letters he has forged
to place in Brutus’s chair in the Senate, and others to throw through Brutus’s
window and place on Brutus’s statue. Cassius claims that Brutus has already
come three-quarters of the way toward turning against Caesar; he hopes the
letters will bring him the rest of the way around. Casca comments that the
noble Brutus’s participation in their plot will bring worthiness to their
schemes, for “he sits high in all the people’s hearts, / And that which would
appear offence in us / His countenance, like richest alchemy, / Will change to
virtue and to worthiness” (I.iii.157–60).
Analysis
This scene demonstrates the
characters’ inability to interpret correctly the signs that they encounter. The
night is full of portents, but no one construes them accurately. Cassius
asserts that they signify the danger that Caesar’s possible coronation would
bring to the state, while they actually warn of the destruction that Cassius
himself threatens. Meanwhile, Cassius plots to win Brutus to his cause by
misleading him with letters; he knows that Brutus will take the written word at
face value, never questioning the letters’ authenticity.
The juxtaposition of Cicero’s grave
warning about not walking in this night’s disturbing weather with Cassius’s
self-satisfied mood upon meeting with Casca (he labels the night “very pleasing
. . . to honest men” [I.iii.43]) aligns Cassius with the evil that the omens
portend. Further, this nexus suggests a sort of pathetic fallacy—an artistic device
by means of which an inanimate entity assumes human emotions and responses
(Shakespeare was especially fond of employing pathetic fallacy with nature in
moments of turmoil, as in Macbeth, when the night grows increasingly
eerie until Macbeth observes that “Nature seems dead” right before he goes to
murder King Duncan [II.i.50]). In Julius Caesar, the terrifying
atmosphere of supernatural phenomena reflects Cassius’s horrific plan to murder
Caesar.
Furthermore, Cassius not only walks
about freely in the atmosphere of terror but relishes it: “And when the cross
blue lightning seemed to open / The breast of heaven, I did present myself /
Even in the aim and very flash of it” (I.iii.50–52). He insinuates that the
“monstrous state” of which the heavens warn refers to Caesar and his
overweening ambition, yet he himself has become something of a monster—obsessed
with bringing Caesar down, brazenly unafraid of lethal lightning bolts, and
haughty about this fearlessness (I.iii.71). As Casca notes, “It is the part of
men to fear and tremble” at such ill omens; Cassius seems to have lost his
humanity and become a beast (I.iii.54).
The various omens and portents in Julius
Caesar also raise questions about the force of fate versus free will. The
function and meaning of omens in general is puzzling and seemingly
contradictory: as announcements of an event or events to come, omens
appear to prove the existence of some overarching plan for the future, a
prewritten destiny controlled by the gods. On the other hand, as warnings
of impending events, omens suggests that human beings have the power to alter
that destiny if provided with the correct information in advance.
Act II, scene i
Brutus paces back and forth in his
garden. He asks his servant to bring him a light and mutters to himself that
Caesar will have to die. He knows with certainty that Caesar will be crowned
king; what he questions is whether or not Caesar will be corrupted by his
power. Although he admits that he has never seen Caesar swayed by power in the past,
he believes that it would be impossible for Caesar to reach such heights
without eventually coming to scorn those lower in status. Brutus compares
Caesar to the egg of a serpent “which, hatched, would as his kind grow
mischievous”; thus, he determines to “kill him in the shell” (II.i.33–34).
Brutus’s servant enters with a
letter that he has discovered near the window. Brutus reads the letter, which
accuses him of sleeping while Rome is threatened: “Brutus, thou sleep’st.
Awake, and see thyself” (II.i.46). Brutus interprets the letter as a protest
against Caesar: “Thus must I piece it out: / Shall Rome stand under one man’s
awe?” (II.i.51–52). Believing the people of Rome are telling him their desires
through this single letter, he resolves to take the letter’s challenge to
“speak, strike, redress” (II.i.47). A knock comes at the door. Brutus’s servant
announces Cassius and a group of men—the conspirators. They include Casca,
Decius, Cinna, Metellus, and Trebonius.
Cassius introduces the men, then draws
Brutus aside. The two speak briefly before rejoining the others. Cassius
suggests that they swear an oath, but Brutus demurs. They have no need of
oaths, he says, since their cause should be strong enough to bind them
together. The group discusses whether it should try to bring the esteemed
Cicero into the conspiracy, for he would bring good public opinion to their
schemes, but Brutus dissuades them, pointing out that Cicero would never follow
anyone else’s ideas. Cassius then suggests that they would do well to kill
Antony in addition to Caesar, but Brutus refuses, saying that this would make
their plan too bloody. According to Brutus, they only stand against the spirit
of Caesar, which he wishes could be destroyed without the necessity of killing
the man himself. He says that they should kill him boldly, but not viciously,
so that they might be perceived as purging the state rather than as murderers.
Cassius replies that he still fears Antony, but Brutus assures him that Antony
will be rendered harmless once Caesar is dead.
Cassius states that no one knows
whether Caesar will come to the Capitol that day, since the warnings of augurs
(seers or soothsayers) after this brutal evening might keep him at home. But
Decius assures the others that he will be able to convince Caesar to ignore his
superstitions by flattering his bravery. The conspirators depart, Brutus
suggesting that they try to behave like actors and hide their true feelings and
intentions.
Brutus’s wife, Portia, enters the
garden. She wonders what has been worrying Brutus, for his behavior has been
strange. He says that he has felt unwell. She asks why he refuses to tell her
his concerns, insisting that, as his wife, she should be told about his
problems and assuring him that she will keep his secrets. Brutus replies that
he wishes he were worthy of such an honorable wife. They hear a knock at the
door, and Brutus sends her away with a promise to talk to her later.
Ligarius enters, looking sick. He
says he would not be sick if he could be sure that Brutus was involved in a
scheme in the name of honor. Brutus says that he is. Ligarius rejoices and
accompanies Brutus offstage to hear more of the plan.
Analysis
Cassius’s words to Brutus in Act I,
scene ii have proved powerful in turning him against Caesar: while alone in his
garden, Brutus has come to the conclusion that Caesar must be killed. The
forged letter has secured this conversion; though it has appeared so
mysteriously in his house and tells him exactly what he wants to hear, Brutus
never questions its authenticity. He immediately construes the message’s
cryptic meaning according to his preconceived inclinations: “Thus must I piece
it out,” he concludes hastily, allowing for no other interpretation of the
words (II.i.51). He displays a tragic naïveté, trusting unquestioningly that
the letter speaks for the entire Roman populace.
We see now that once Brutus arrives
at a belief or proposition, he throws himself into it wholeheartedly. Upon
joining Cassius’s conspiracy, he takes control of it. He provides his own
garden as the conspirators’ meeting place and convinces the gathered men not to
take an oath, though Cassius would prefer that they do so. Brutus is the one
who sends Decius to speak to Caesar at the end of the scene, and it is he who speaks
the final words to the conspirators as they depart. So, too, does Brutus
overrule Cassius when he suggests that they assassinate Antony along with
Caesar. This position, like all of Brutus’s actions, stems from a concern for
public opinion: Brutus wants the death of Caesar to appear an honorable
gesture; if the scheme became too violent, the conspirators would sacrifice any
semblance of honor. He insists rather excessively on preserving honor in the
conspiracy, saying that in a noble cause one has no need to swear an oath to
others: “Do not stain / The even virtue of our enterprise, / Nor
th’insuppressive mettle of our spirits, / To think that or our cause or our
performance / Did need an oath” (II.i.131–135). Men swear oaths only when they
doubt the strength of each other’s devotion; to take up oaths now would be to
insult the current undertaking and the men involved. It is a rather ironic
proposition from Brutus, who has declared loyalty and friendship to Caesar and
now casts those commitments aside. Notably, Brutus asks the men not to “stain”
the virtue of their scheme, a word that evokes blood; ultimately, they will not
be able to avoid staining themselves with Caesar’s blood.
Yet, although Brutus appears
completely determined in his interactions with the conspirators, his inability
to confess his thoughts to Portia signifies that he still harbors traces of
doubt regarding the legitimacy of his plan. Portia is a symbol of Brutus’s
private life—a representative of correct intuition and morality—just as Calpurnia
is for Caesar in the next scene. Her husband’s dismissal of her intuitions,
like Caesar’s of Calpurnia’s, leads to folly and points to his largest mistake:
his decision to ignore his private feelings, loyalties, and misgivings for the
sake of a plan that he believes to be for the public good
Act II, scenes ii–iv
Act II, scene ii
Caesar wanders through his house in
his dressing gown, kept awake by his wife Calpurnia’s nightmares. Three times
she has called out in her sleep about Caesar’s murder. He sends a servant to
bid the priests to offer a sacrifice and tell him the results. Calpurnia enters
and insists that Caesar not leave the house after so many bad signs. Caesar
rebuffs her, refusing to give in to fear. But Calpurnia, who has never heeded omens
before, speaks of what happened in the city earlier that night: dead men
walked, ghosts wandered the city, a lioness gave birth in the street, and
lightning shattered the skies. These signs portend true danger, she says;
Caesar cannot afford to ignore them.
Caesar counters that nothing can
change the plans of the gods. He deems the signs to apply to the world in
general and refuses to believe that they bode ill for him personally. Calpurnia
says that the heavens proclaim the death of only great men, so the omens must
have to do with him. Caesar replies that while cowards imagine their death
frequently, thus dying in their minds several times over, brave men, refusing
to dwell on death, die only once. He cannot understand why men fear death,
which must come eventually to all.
The servant enters, reporting that
the augurs recommend that Caesar stay home. They examined the entrails of an
animal and were unable to find a heart—a bad sign. But Caesar maintains that he
will not stay home out of fear. Danger cannot affect Caesar, he says. Calpurnia
begs him to send Antony to the Senate in his place; finally Caesar relents.
Decius enters, saying that he has
come to bring Caesar to the Senate. Caesar tells him to tell the senators that
he will be absent that day. Calpurnia tells him to plead illness, but Caesar
refuses to lie. Decius then asks what reason he should offer. Caesar states
that it is simply his will to stay home. He adds that Calpurnia has had a dream
in which she saw his statue run with blood like a fountain, while many smiling
Romans bathed their hands in the blood; she has taken this to portend danger
for Caesar.
Decius disputes Calpurnia’s
interpretation, saying that actually the dream signifies that Romans will all
gain lifeblood from the strength of Caesar. He confides that the Senate has
decided to give Caesar the crown that day; if Caesar were to stay at home, the
senators might change their minds. Moreover, Caesar would lose public regard if
he were perceived as so easily swayed by a woman, or by fear. Caesar replies
that his fears now indeed seem small. He calls for his robe and prepares to
depart. Cassius and Brutus enter with Ligarius, Metellus, Casca, Trebonius, and
Cinna to escort him to the Senate. Finally, Antony enters. Caesar prepares to depart.
Act II, scene iii
Artemidorus comes onstage, reading
to himself a letter that he has written Caesar, warning him to be wary of
Brutus, Casca, and the other conspirators. He stands along the route that
Caesar will take to the Senate, prepared to hand the letter to him as he
passes. He is sad to think that the virtue embodied by Caesar may be destroyed
by the ambitious envy of the conspirators. He remains hopeful, however, that if
his letter gets read, Caesar may yet live.
Act II, scene iv
Portia sends Brutus’s servant to the
Senate to observe events and report back to her how Caesar is faring. A
Soothsayer enters, and Portia asks him if Caesar has gone to the Capitol yet.
The Soothsayer replies that he knows that Caesar has not yet gone; he intends to
wait for Caesar along his route, since he wants to say a word to him. He goes
to the street to wait, hoping Caesar’s entourage will let him speak to the
great man.
Analysis: Act II, scenes ii–iv
These scenes emphasize the many
grave signs portending Caesar’s death, as well as his stubborn refusal to heed
them. Initially, Caesar does agree to stay home in order to please Calpurnia,
showing more concern for his wife than Brutus did for Portia in the previous
scene. In appreciating Calpurnia’s fear, Caesar demonstrates an ability to pay
attention to his private matters, albeit a muffled one. But when Decius tells
him that the senators plan to offer him the crown that day, Caesar’s desire to
comfort his wife gives way to his ambition, and his public self again prevails
over his private self.
Increasingly and markedly in these
scenes, Caesar refers to himself in the third person, especially when he speaks
of his lack of fear (“Yet Caesar shall go forth, for these predictions / Are to
the world in general as to Caesar” [II.ii.28–29]). Tragically, he no longer
sees the difference between his powerful public image and his vulnerable human
body. Even at home in his dressing gown, far from the senators and crowds whose
respect he craves, he assumes the persona of “Caesar,” the great man who knows
no fear. Caesar has displayed a measure of humility in turning down the crown
the day before, but this humility has evaporated by the time he enters into his
third-person self-commentary and hastens to the Senate to accept the crown at
last.
Perhaps this behavior partially
confirms the conspirators’ charges: Caesar does seem to long for power and
would like to hold the crown; he really might become a tyrant if given the
opportunity. Whether this speculation constitutes reason sufficient to kill him
is debatable. Indeed, it seems possible that the faults that the
conspirators—with the possible exception of Brutus—see in Caesar are viewed
through the veil of their own ambition: they oppose his kingship not because he
would make a poor leader, but because his leadership would preclude their own.
In explaining the noble deed to be performed to Ligarius, Brutus describes it
as “a piece of work that will make sick men whole.” Ligarius responds, “But are
not some whole that we must make sick?” (II.i.326–327). Whereas Brutus’s
primary concern is the well-being of the people, Ligarius’s is with bringing
down those above him.
Calpurnia’s dream of the bleeding
statue perfectly foreshadows the eventual unfolding of the assassination plot:
the statue is a symbol of Caesar’s corpse, and the vague smiling Romans turn
out, of course, to be the conspirators, reveling in his bloodshed. Yet, to the
end, Caesar remains unconvinced by any omens. If one argues that omens serve as
warnings by which individuals can avoid disaster, then one must view Caesar’s
inflexibility regarding these omens as an arrogance that brings about his
death. On the other hand, Shakespeare also imparts Caesar’s stubbornness with
dignity and a touch of wisdom, as when Caesar professes that since the gods
decide the time of one’s death, death cannot be averted: if it is fated for the
conspirators to kill him, perhaps to die bravely is the most honorable, worthy
course of action he can take.
ct III, scene i
But I am constant as the Northern
Star,
Of whose true fixed and resting quality
There is no fellow in the firmament.
Of whose true fixed and resting quality
There is no fellow in the firmament.
Artemidorus and the Soothsayer await
Caesar in the street. Caesar enters with Brutus, Cassius, Casca, Decius,
Metellus, Trebonius, Cinna, Ligarius, Antony, and other senators. Artemidorus
approaches with his letter, saying that its contents are a matter of closest
concern for Caesar. Caesar responds, “What touches us ourself shall be last
served”—that is, his personal concerns are his last priority (III.i.8). Artemidorus
tells him to read it instantly, but Caesar dismisses him as crazy.
The group enters the Senate, and
Cassius worries that the assassination plot has been discovered. Trebonius
draws Antony away from the Senate room. Metellus approaches Caesar to request
that his brother, Publius Cimber, who has been banished from Rome, be granted
permission to return. Caesar answers that since Publius was banished by lawful
decree, there is not just cause for absolving his guilt. Brutus and Cassius
kneel at Caesar’s feet and repeat Metellus’s plea; Caesar answers that he will
not change his mind now, declaring himself as “constant as the Northern Star”
(III.i.60). When Cinna comes forward and kneels to plead further, Caesar adds
another comparison, suggesting that they might as well hope to “lift up
Olympus,” the mountain where the gods were believed to dwell, as to sway Caesar
in his convictions (III.i.74).
Decius and Ligarius, followed by
Casca, come forward to kneel at Caesar’s feet. Casca stabs Caesar first, and the
others quickly follow, ending with Brutus. Recognizing that Brutus, too, has
joined with the conspirators, Caesar speaks his last words: “Et tu, Brute?—Then
fall Caesar” (III.i.76). He then yields and dies. The conspirators proclaim the
triumph of liberty, and many exit in a tumult, including Lepidus and
Artemidorus. Trebonius enters to announce that Antony has fled.
Brutus tells the conspirators that
they have acted as friends to Caesar by shortening the time that he would have
spent fearing death. He urges them to bend down and bathe their hands in
Caesar’s blood, then walk to the marketplace (the Roman Forum) with their
bloodied swords to proclaim peace, freedom, and liberty. Cassius agrees,
declaring that the scene they now enact will be repeated time and again in the
ages to come as a commemorative ritual.
Antony’s servant enters with a
message: Antony, having learned of Caesar’s death, sends word that he loved
Caesar but will now vow to serve Brutus if Brutus promises not to punish him
for his past allegiance. Brutus says that he will not harm Antony and sends the
servant to bid him come. Brutus remarks to Cassius that Antony will surely be
an ally now, but Cassius replies that he still has misgivings.
Antony enters and sees Caesar’s
corpse. He marvels how a man so great in deed and reputation could end as such
a small and pathetic body. He tells the conspirators that if they mean to kill
him as well, they should do it at once, for there would be no better place to
die than beside Caesar. Brutus tells Antony not to beg for death, saying that
although their hands appear bloody, their hearts have been, and continue to be,
full of pity; although they must appear to him now as having acted in cruelty,
their actual motives stemmed from sympathy and love for the Roman populace.
Brutus tells Antony to wait until the conspirators have calmed the multitude;
then they will explain fully why they have killed Caesar. Antony says he does
not doubt their wisdom and shakes each of their bloody hands, staining the not-yet-bloodied
hands of Trebonius, who has returned from leading Antony astray, in the
process.
Antony now addresses Caesar’s
departed spirit, asking to be pardoned for making peace with the conspirators
over his dead body. After Antony praises Caesar’s bravery, Cassius questions
his loyalty. Antony assures Cassius that he indeed desires to be numbered among
their friends, explaining that he merely forgot himself for a moment upon
seeing Caesar’s body. He emphasizes that he will gladly ally himself with all of
the former conspirators, as long as they can explain to him why Caesar was
dangerous.
Brutus assures Antony that he will
find their explanation satisfactory. Antony asks if he might bring the body to
the Forum and speak a funeral oration. Brutus consents, but Cassius urges him
against granting permission. He tells Brutus that Antony will surely move the
people against them if he is allowed to speak. Brutus replies that he will
preface Antony’s words, explaining to the public the reason for the conspirators’
deed, and then explain that Antony has been allowed to speak only by Brutus’s
consent. He believes that the people will admire his magnanimity for allowing
Antony, a friend of Caesar’s, to take part in the funeral, and that the episode
will benefit the conspiracy’s public image. Cassius remains displeased, but
Brutus allows Antony to take Caesar’s body, instructing him to speak well of
them since they are doing him a favor by permitting him to give the oration.
All depart; Antony remains alone
onstage. He asks Caesar to pardon him for being gentle with his murderers.
Antony prophesies that civil strife will follow Caesar’s death and lead to much
destruction. As long as the foul deed of Caesar’s death remains unavenged, he
predicts, Caesar’s spirit will continue to seek revenge, bringing chaos to
Rome.
Octavius’s servant enters and sees
the body on the ground. Antony tells him to return to Octavius, who had been
traveling to Rome at Caesar’s behest, and keep his master out of the city; Rome
is now dangerous for Octavius, Caesar’s adopted son and appointed successor.
But Antony urges the servant to come to the Forum and hear his funeral speech.
Once they see how the public responds to the conspirators’ evil deed, they can
decide how Octavius should proceed.
Analysis
Just preceding his death, Caesar
refuses Artemidorus’s pleas to speak with him, saying that he gives last
priority to his nearest, most personal concerns. He thus again demonstrates a
split between his public and private selves, endangering himself by believing
that his public self is so strong that his private self cannot be harmed. This
sense of invulnerability manifests itself clearly when Caesar compares himself
to the North Star, which never moves from its position at the center of the
sky: “constant as the Northern Star, / Of whose true fixed and resting quality
/ There is no fellow in the firmament. / [the] one in all [that] doth hold his
place” (III.i.60–65). He not only considers himself steadfast but also
infallible, beyond the questioning of mortal men, as he compares the foolish
idea of him being persuaded of something to the impossible act of hefting the
weight of Mount Olympus. In positioning himself thus as a divine figure (the
Romans deified certain beloved figures, such as popular leaders, and believed
that, upon dying, these figures became ensconced in the firmament), Caesar
reveals his belief that he is truly a god. His refusal to pardon Metellus’s
banished brother serves to show that his belief in the sanctity of his own
authority is unwavering up to the moment that he is killed.
Cassius suggests that future
generations will remember, repeat, and retell the conspirators’ actions in the
years to come. The statement constitutes a self-referential moment in the play,
since Shakespeare’s play itself is a retelling of a retelling: the historical
murder of Caesar had been treated earlier by Plutarch (46–119? a.d.), whose Lives
of the Noble Greeks and Romans served as Shakespeare’s source. It was
Plutarch who asserted that Caesar ceased to defend himself upon recognizing
Brutus among the conspirators, and Plutarch who first gave Caesar his famous
last words, which Shakespeare preserves in the original Latin, “Et tu,
Brute?” (“And you, Brutus?” [III.i.76]). With these words, Caesar
apprehends the immensity of the plot to kill him—a plot so total that it
includes even his friends—and simultaneously levels a heartbroken reproach at
his former friend. By Shakespeare’s time, Plutarch’s lines had already achieved
fame, and an Elizabethan audience would likely have anticipated them in the
murder scene.
It is Shakespeare’s deft hand of
creation, however, that brings Antony to the scene. Despairing over Caesar’s
death, Antony knows that he poses a danger to the conspirators and that he must
pretend to support them if he wants to survive. He assures them that they have
his allegiance and shakes their hands, thus smearing himself with Caesar’s
blood and marking Trebonius with blood as well. By marking Trebonius, Antony
may be silently insisting on Trebonius’s guilt in the murder, even if his part
was less direct than that of the other conspirators. Yet he does so in a
handshake, an apparent gesture of allegiance. While the blood on Trebonius’s
hands marks him as a conspirator, the blood on Antony’s hands, like war paint,
marks him as the self-appointed instrument for vengeance against Caesar’s
killers.
Cassius’s worries about Antony’s
rhetorical skill prove justified. The first scene of the play clearly
illustrates the fickleness of the multitude, which hastens to cheer Caesar’s
triumph over a man whom it once adored. Surely the conspirators run a great
risk by letting such a fickle audience listen to the mournful Antony. Yet,
blinded by his conception of the assassination as a noble deed done for the
people and one that the people must thus necessarily appreciate, Brutus
believes that the masses will respond most strongly not to Antony’s words but
to the fact that the conspirators have allowed him to speak at all. Because he
feels that he himself, by helping to murder a dear friend, has sacrificed the
most, Brutus believes that he will be respected for giving priority to public
matters over private ones. We will see, however, that Brutus’s misjudgment will
lead to his own downfall: he grossly underestimates Antony’s oratorical skill
and overestimates the people’s conception of virtue
ct III, scenes ii–iii
He was my friend, faithful and just
to me.
But Brutus says he was ambitious,
And Brutus is an honourable man.
But Brutus says he was ambitious,
And Brutus is an honourable man.
Act III, scene ii
Brutus and Cassius enter the Forum
with a crowd of plebeians. Cassius exits to speak to another portion of the
crowd. Brutus addresses the onstage crowd, assuring them that they may trust in
his honor. He did not kill Caesar out of a lack of love for him, he says, but
because his love for Rome outweighed his love of a single man. He insists that
Caesar was great but ambitious: it was for this reason that he slew him. He
feared that the Romans would live as slaves under Caesar’s leadership.
He asks if any disagree with him,
and none do. He thus concludes that he has offended no one and asserts that now
Caesar’s death has been accounted for, with both his virtues and faults in life
given due attention. Antony then enters with Caesar’s body. Brutus explains to
the crowd that Antony had no part in the conspiracy but that he will now be
part of the new commonwealth. The plebeians cheer Brutus’s apparent kindness,
declaring that Brutus should be Caesar. He quiets them and asks them to listen
to Antony, who has obtained permission to give a funeral oration. Brutus exits.
Antony ascends to the pulpit while
the plebeians discuss what they have heard. They now believe that Caesar was a
tyrant and that Brutus did right to kill him. But they wait to hear Antony. He
asks the audience to listen, for he has come to bury Caesar, not to praise him.
He acknowledges Brutus’s charge that Caesar was ambitious and maintains that
Brutus is “an honourable man,” but he says that Caesar was his friend
(III.ii.84). He adds that Caesar brought to Rome many captives, whose
countrymen had to pay their ransoms, thus filling Rome’s coffers. He asks
rhetorically if such accumulation of money for the people constituted ambition.
Antony continues that Caesar sympathized with the poor: “When that the poor
have cried, Caesar hath wept” (III.ii.88). He reminds the plebeians of the day
when he offered the crown to Caesar three times, and Caesar three times
refused. Again, he ponders aloud whether this humility constituted ambition. He
claims that he is not trying to disprove Brutus’s words but rather to tell them
what he, Antony, knows; he insists that as they all loved Caesar once, they
should mourn for him now.
Antony pauses to weep. The plebeians
are touched; they remember when Caesar refused the crown and wonder if more
ambitious people have not stepped into his place. Antony speaks again, saying
that he would gladly stir them to mutiny and rebellion, though he will not harm
Brutus or Cassius, for they are—again—honorable men. He then brings out
Caesar’s will. The plebeians beg him to read it. Antony says that he should
not, for then they would be touched by Caesar’s love for them. They implore him
to read it. He replies that he has been speaking too long—he wrongs the
honorable men who have let him address the crowd. The plebeians call the
conspirators traitors and demand that Antony read the will.
Finally, Antony descends from the
pulpit and prepares to read the letter to the people as they stand in a circle
around Caesar’s corpse. Looking at the body, Antony points out the wounds that
Brutus and Cassius inflicted, reminding the crowd how Caesar loved Brutus, and
yet Brutus stabbed him viciously. He tells how Caesar died and blood ran down
the steps of the Senate. Then he uncovers the body for all to see. The
plebeians weep and become enraged. Antony says that they should not be stirred
to mutiny against such “honourable men” (III.ii.148). He protests that he does
not intend to steal away their hearts, for he is no orator like Brutus. He
proclaims himself a plain man; he speaks only what he knows, he says—he will
let Caesar’s wounds speak the rest. If he were Brutus, he claims, he could urge
them to rebel, but he is merely Antony.
The people declare that they will
mutiny nonetheless. Antony calls to them to let him finish: he has not yet read
the will. He now reads that Caesar has bequeathed a sum of money from his
personal holdings to every man in Rome. The citizens are struck by this act of
generosity and swear to avenge this selfless man’s death. Antony continues
reading, revealing Caesar’s plans to make his private parks and gardens
available for the people’s pleasure. The plebeians can take no more; they
charge off to wreak havoc throughout the city. Antony, alone, wonders what will
come of the mischief he has set loose on Rome. Octavius’s servant enters. He
reports that Octavius has arrived at Caesar’s house, and also that Brutus and
Cassius have been driven from Rome.
Act III, scene iii
Cinna the poet, a different man from
Cinna the conspirator, walks through the city. A crowd of plebeians descends,
asking his name. He answers that his name is Cinna, and the plebeians confuse
him with the conspirator Cinna. Despite Cinna’s insistence that they have the
wrong man, the plebeians drag him off and beat him to death.
Analysis: Act III, scenes ii–iii
Act III, scene ii evidences the
power of rhetoric and oratory: first Brutus speaks and then Antony, each with
the aim of persuading the crowd to his side. We observe each speaker’s effect
on the crowd and see the power that words can have—how they can stir emotion,
alter opinion, and induce action. Brutus speaks to the people in prose rather
than in verse, presumably trying to make his speech seem plain and to keep
himself on the level of the plebeians. He quickly convinces the people that
Caesar had to die because he would have become a tyrant and brought suffering
to them all. He desires to convey that this message comes from the mouth of a
concerned Roman citizen, not from the mouth of a greedy usurper.
Antony’s speech is a rhetorical tour
de force. He speaks in verse and repeats again and again that Brutus and the
conspirators are honorable men; the phrase “Brutus says he was ambitious, / And
Brutus is an honourable man” accrues new levels of sarcasm at each repetition
(III.ii.83–84). Antony answers Brutus’s allegation that Caesar was “ambitious”
by reminding the crowd of the wealth that Caesar brought to Rome, Caesar’s
sympathy for the poor, and his refusal to take the throne when offered
it—details seeming to disprove any charges of ambition. Pausing to weep openly
before the plebeians, he makes them feel pity for him and for his case.
Antony’s refined oratorical skill
enables him to manipulate the crowd into begging him to read Caesar’s will. By
means of praeteritio, a rhetorical device implemented by a speaker to
mention a certain thing while claiming not to mention it, Antony alerts the
plebeians to the fact that Caesar cared greatly for them: “It is not meet
[fitting] you know how Caesar loved you . . . ’Tis good you know not that you
are his heirs” (III.ii.138–142). Under the pretense of sympathetically wanting
to keep the plebeians from becoming outraged, Antony hints to them that they
should become outraged. He thus gains their favor.
Further demonstrating his charisma,
Antony descends from the pulpit—a more effective way of becoming one with the
people than Brutus’s strategy of speaking in prose. In placing himself
physically among the crowd, Antony joins the commoners without sacrificing his
rhetorical influence over them. First he speaks of Caesar’s wounds and his
horrible death; he shows the body, evoking fully the pity and anger of the
crowd. He claims, with false modesty, that he is not a great orator, like
Brutus, and that he doesn’t intend to incite revolt. Yet in this very sentence
he effects the exact opposite of what his words say: he proves himself a deft
orator indeed, and although he speaks against mutiny, he knows that at this
point the mere mention of the word will spur action.
Having prepared the kindling with
his speech, Antony lights the fire of the people’s fury with his presentation
of Caesar’s will. Caesar had intended to share his wealth with the people of
Rome and had planned to surrender his parks for their benefit. Antony predicts
and utilizes the people’s sense of injustice at being stripped of so generous a
ruler. The people completely forget their former sympathy for Brutus and rise
up against the conspirators, leaving Antony to marvel at the force of what he
has done.
In the ensuing riot, the killing of
Cinna the Poet exemplifies the irrationality of the brutality that has been
unleashed; since Caesar’s murder, Rome has become so anarchic that even a poet
finds himself in grave danger. This murder of the wrong man parallels the
conspirators’ more metaphoric murder of the wrong man: although Brutus and
Cassius believe that they have brought an end to Caesar’s charisma and
authority, they have merely brought an end to the mortal body that he
inhabited. While the body may lie dead, the true Caesar, the leader of the
people, lives on in their hearts—as he does in the anxious minds of the
conspirators: Brutus will soon encounter Caesar’s ghost near the battlefield.
The populace will now seek a man who can serve as their “Caesar”—the word has
now become a synonym for “ruler”—in his place; Caesar has instilled in the
Romans a desire to replace the old republic with a monarchy.
Act IV, scenes i–ii
He must be taught, and trained, and
bid go forth—
A barren-spirited fellow . . .
. . . a property.
A barren-spirited fellow . . .
. . . a property.
Act IV, scene i
Antony meets Octavius and Lepidus at
his house. They review a list of names, deciding who must be killed. Lepidus
agrees to the death of his brother if Antony will agree to allow his nephew to
be killed. Antony suggests that, as a way of saving money, they examine
Caesar’s will to see if they can redirect some of his funds. Lepidus departs,
and Antony asks Octavius if Lepidus is a worthy enough man to rule Rome with
him and Octavius. Octavius replies that he trusts him, but Antony harbors
doubts. Octavius points out that Lepidus is a “tried and valiant soldier,” to
which Antony responds, “So is my horse”: he goes on to compare Lepidus to a
mere animal, calling him a “barren-spirited fellow” and a mere tool
(IV.i.28–36). Antony now turns the conversation to Brutus and Cassius, who are
reportedly gathering an army; it falls to Octavius and Antony to confront them
and halt their bid for power.
There is a tide in the affairs of
men
. . .
And we must take the current when it serves . . .
. . .
And we must take the current when it serves . . .
Summary: Act IV, scene ii
Meanwhile, Brutus waits with his men
in camp and meets with Lucillius, Titinius, and Pindarus. Lucillius bears a
message from Cassius and steps aside to speak to Brutus. He says that Cassius
is becoming more and more displeased with Brutus, and Brutus worries that their
ties may be weakening. Cassius arrives with his army and accuses Brutus of
having wronged him. Brutus replies that he would not wrong him, as he considers
him his brother, and insists that they continue the discussion privately in
Brutus’s tent.
Cassius charges Brutus with having
condemned one of their men for taking bribes, even though Cassius sent letters
asking him not to, since Cassius knew the man. Brutus responds by accusing
Cassius of having taken bribes himself at times. Brutus tells him to recall the
Ides of March, when they killed Caesar because they believed that he was
corrupt. He asks Cassius if they should now allow themselves to descend into
the very corruption that they tried to eliminate. Cassius tells Brutus not to
bait him any more, for Cassius is a soldier and will fight.
The two men insult each other, and
Brutus expresses the reasons for his disappointment in Cassius. Because he
claims to be so honest himself that he cannot raise money by ignoble means, he
was forced to ask Cassius for money, but Cassius ignored him. Cassius claims
that he did not deny Brutus, but that the messenger misreported Brutus’s words.
Cassius accuses Brutus of having ceased to love him. He hopes that Antony and
Octavius will kill him soon, for, having lost his closest ally and friend, he
no longer desires to live. He offers his dagger to Brutus to kill him,
declaring, “Strike as thou didst at Caesar; for I know / When though didst hate
him worst, thou loved’st him better / Than ever thou loved’st Cassius”
(IV.ii.159–161).
Brutus tells Cassius to put his
dagger away and says that they both are merely ill-tempered. The two men
embrace and forgive each other. Outside, Lucillius is attempting to prevent a
poet from entering the tent, but the poet squeezes past him and scolds Brutus
and Cassius for arguing: “Love and be friends, as two such men should be, / For
I have seen more years, I’m sure, than ye” (IV.ii.183–184). But, having already
repledged their friendship, the two generals laugh together at the poet’s
presumptuousness and send him away.
Cassius and Brutus drink wine
together. Cassius expresses his surprise at Brutus’s earlier rage. Brutus
explains that he has been under many emotional burdens lately, the foremost of
which has been the death of his wife, Portia; he recently received news that
she killed herself by swallowing fire. Titinius and Messala enter with news
from Rome; Messala says that the triumvirate of Octavius, Antony, and Lepidus
has put a hundred senators to death. Messala asks Brutus if he has had word
from Portia, and when Brutus answers negatively, Messala comments that this
seems strange. When Brutus inquires if Messala knows something, Messala replies
that he does not. But Brutus insists that Messala tell him the truth, and
Messala reports that Portia is dead.
Brutus suggests that they march to
Philippi to meet the enemy. Cassius says that he would rather let the enemy
come to them. Brutus protests that they are at the peak of their readiness and
should seize the opportunity. Cassius relents and agrees to march. The others
depart, leaving Brutus in his tent with his servant Lucius. Brutus summons
Varro and Claudio to sleep in his tent until they are needed for early morning
messages.
The others fall asleep while Brutus
lies awake trying to read. A spectral image enters (identified in the text as
“Ghost of Caesar”). Brutus wonders if he is dreaming; he asks the form to
identify himself. The Ghost replies that he is “thy evil spirit” (IV.ii.333).
After telling Brutus that they will see each other again at Philippi, the Ghost
disappears, and Brutus wakes his attendants. He asks them if they saw anything
strange, but they reply that they did not.
Analysis: Act IV, scenes i–ii
These scenes deal with the events
that take place in the vacuum of power left by Caesar’s death. Antony’s speech
to the Roman citizens in Act III, scene ii centers on the fact that Caesar had
set aside money for each citizen. Now, ironically, he searches for ways to turn
these funds into cash in order to raise an army against Brutus and Cassius.
Although he has gained his current power by offering to honor Caesar’s will and
provide the citizens with their rightful money, we now see that he apparently
has no intention of fulfilling this promise. In a strange dialogue with
Octavius, he also badly insults Lepidus, explaining how, just as his horse has
been taught to fight, turn, stop, and move his body according to Antony’s will,
so, too, must Lepidus now be trained. Antony declares Lepidus “a
barren-spirited fellow, one that feeds / On objects, arts, and imitations”; he
reproaches Octavius, saying, “Do not talk of him / But as a property,” that is,
as a mere instrument for the furtherance of their own goals (IV.i.36–40).
Lepidus proves an effective tool for them in that he is malleable and
apparently not intelligent enough to devise his own motives. While Shakespeare
may have inserted this string of insults simply for comic relief, this abuse
serves as another illustration of Antony’s sense of political expediency: while
he does not respect Lepidus, he still uses him for his own purposes.
Meanwhile, questions of honor plague
the conspirators as well, as Cassius and Brutus exchange accusations. Their
argument seems to arise partially from a misunderstanding but also partially
from stubbornness. Though Brutus claims that his honor forbids him from raising
money in unscrupulous ways, he would still use such money as long as it was not
he himself, but rather Cassius, who raised it. We see that Brutus speaks
against corruption, but when he has no other means of paying his army, he
quickly consents to unscrupulousness, if only indirectly.
Portia’s death is reported twice in
scene ii (Plutarch’s telling, upon which Shakespeare based his play, describes
Portia’s death more explicitly: she put hot coals in her mouth and choked
herself to death). Some argue that the repetition of the announcement of
Portia’s suicide reveals the effect of revision on Shakespeare’s part; perhaps,
while adding in one section of the scene, he forgot to remove another. Other
scholars suggest that Brutus’s two separate comments regarding Portia’s death
show two separate sides of his personality—again, the private versus the
public. That is, alone with Cassius, he admits that his distress at the loss of
his wife, but before his men, he appears indifferent or dispassionate. Perhaps
the latter reaction is merely a facade, and Brutus simply has too much pride to
show his true feelings in public.
Brutus’s words to Cassius
proclaiming their readiness for battle are significant in that they emphasize
Brutus’s belief in the power of the will over fate:
We at the height are ready to decline.
There is a tide in the affairs of men
Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;
Omitted, all the voyage of their life
Is bound in shallows and in miseries.
On such a full sea are we now afloat,
And we must take the current when it serves,
Or lose our ventures. (IV.ii.269–276)
There is a tide in the affairs of men
Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;
Omitted, all the voyage of their life
Is bound in shallows and in miseries.
On such a full sea are we now afloat,
And we must take the current when it serves,
Or lose our ventures. (IV.ii.269–276)
Throughout the play, the theme of
fate versus free will proves important: here, Brutus suggests that both exist
and that one should take advantage of fate by asserting one’s will. While
subsequent events demonstrate that the force of fate (or perhaps just Antony
and Octavius’s superior maneuvering) is stronger than Brutus’s individual
actions, his speech still makes for a graceful, philosophic axiom, showing
Brutus to be a man of deep reflection.
Brutus cannot sleep—perhaps because
he is brooding internally on his guilt; in any case, this guilt is soon
manifested externally in the form of the Ghost of Caesar. This phantom’s
identification of himself to Brutus as “thy evil spirit” could mean either that
the Ghost is an evil spirit appearing to Brutus’s eyes only—a spirit that is
“his” alone—or that the Ghost represents Brutus’s own spirit, which is secretly
evil (IV.ii.333). However one interprets the arrival of the specter, the event
can only bode ill for Brutus in the battle to come.
Act V, scenes i–iii
Act V, scene i
Octavius and Antony enter the
battlefield at Philippi with their armies. A messenger arrives to report that
the enemy is ready for battle. Antony, the more experienced soldier, tells
Octavius to attack from the left. Octavius refuses and replies that he will
attack from the right and Antony can come from the left. Antony asks Octavius
why he questions his authority, but Octavius stands firm.
The enemy factions—consisting of
Brutus, Cassius, and their armies—enter; Titinius, Lucillius, and Messala are
among them. Octavius asks Antony if their side should attack first, and Antony,
now calling Octavius “Caesar,” responds that they will wait for the enemy to attack.
Antony and Octavius go to meet Brutus and Cassius. The leaders exchange
insults. Octavius draws his sword and calls for Caesar’s death to be avenged;
he swears that he will not lay the sword down again until another Caesar
(namely himself) adds the deaths of the traitors to the general slaughter. The
leaders insult each other further before parting to ready their armies for
battle.
After the departure of Antony and
Octavius, Brutus calls Lucillius to talk privately. Cassius calls Messala to do
the same. Cassius tells the soldier that it is his birthday and informs him of
recent bad omens: two mighty eagles alighted on the foremost banners of their
army and perched there, feeding from the soldiers’ hands; this morning,
however, they are gone. Now ravens, crows, and other scavenger birds circle
over the troops as if the men were diseased and weak prey. Cassius walks back
to join Brutus and comments that the future looks uncertain; if they lose, they
may never see each other again. Cassius asks Brutus if Brutus would allow
himself to be led through Rome as a captive should they lose. Brutus replies
that he would rather die than go to Rome as a defeated prisoner; he declares
that this day “must end that work the ides of March begun”—that is, the battle
represents the final stage in the struggle for power that began with the murder
of Caesar (V.i.114). He bids Cassius “for ever and for ever farewell”
(V.i.117). Cassius echoes these sentiments, and the men depart.
Act V, scene ii
The battle begins between the scenes,
and the next scene, comprising a scant total of six lines, depicts the two
sides’ first surge against each other. Brutus sends Messala to Cassius to
report that he senses a weakness in Octavius’s army and will push forward to
exploit it.
Act V, scene iii
The next scene finds Cassius
standing on a hill with Titinius, watching the battle and lamenting its course.
Though Brutus was correct in noting Octavius’s weakness, he proved overeager in
his attack, and the tide of battle has turned against him. Pindarus now runs up
to Cassius with a report: Antony’s troops have entered Cassius’s camp. He
advises Cassius to flee to some more distant spot. Cassius refuses to move but,
catching sight of a group of burning tents, asks if those tents are his.
Titinius confirms that they are. Cassius then notices a series of advancing
troops in the distance; he gives Titinius his horse and instructs him to find
out whose troops they are. Titinius obeys and rides off.
Cassius asks Pindarus to ascend a
nearby hill and monitor Titinius’s progress. Pindarus calls down his reports:
Titinius, riding hard, is soon surrounded by the unknown men; he dismounts the
horse and the unknown men cheer. Distraught at this news of what he takes to be
his best friend’s capture, Cassius tells Pindarus to watch no more. Pindarus
descends the hilltop, whereupon Cassius gives Pindarus his sword, covers his
own eyes, and asks Pindarus to kill him. Pindarus complies. Dying, Cassius’s
last words are that Caesar has now been revenged by the very sword that killed
him.
Unexpectedly, Titinius now enters
with Messala, observing that the battle rages on without sign of ending.
Although Antony’s forces defeated those of Cassius, Brutus’s legions rallied to
defeat those of Octavius. The men then discover Cassius’s body. Titinius
realizes what has happened: when he rode out to the unknown troops, he
discovered the troops to be Brutus’s; the men’s embrace of Titinius must have
appeared to Pindarus a capture, and Cassius must have misperceived their joyful
cheers of reunion as the bloodthirsty roars of the enemy’s men. Messala departs
to bring the tragic news to Brutus. Titinius mourns over Cassius’s body,
anguished that a man whom he greatly admired died over such a mistake.
Miserable, Titinius stabs himself and dies.
Brutus now enters with Messala and
his men. Finding the bodies, Brutus cries, “O Julius Caesar, thou art mighty
yet”: even in death, Caesar is reaping revenge; he seems to turn events against
his murderers from beyond the grave (V.iii.93). Brutus orders that Cassius’s
body be taken away, and the men set off to struggle again with the armies of
Antony and Octavius.
Analysis: Act V, scene i–iii
When Octavius refuses to agree to
Antony’s strategic instructions before the battle, his obstinate resolution to
follow his own will and his clarity of command echo Caesar’s first appearance
in the play. In Act I, scene ii, Antony comments, “When Caesar says ‘Do this,’
it is performed”; such authority is the mark of a powerful leader (I.ii.12).
Octavius, Caesar’s chosen successor, now has this authority too—his word equals
action. Antony, noticing this similarity between adopted son and father, begins
calling Octavius “Caesar.” Just as Caesar transforms his name from that of a
mere mortal into that of a divine figure, Antony converts “Caesar,” once one
man’s name, into the generic title for the ruler of Rome. In at least one way,
then, Caesar’s permanence is established.
The exchange between the four
leaders profits from close reading, as it compares the respective powers of
words and swords to harm. When Brutus insists that “good words are better than
bad strokes,” Antony replies, “In your bad strokes, Brutus, you give good
words. / Witness the hole you made in Caesar’s heart, / Crying ‘Long live, hail
Caesar’” (V.i.29–32). Antony suggests that Brutus’s use of rhetoric has been
just as damaging to Rome as his physical blows, for by falsely swearing
allegiance to Caesar he deceived and betrayed him—hypocritically, he murdered
Caesar even as he cheered in support of him. Cassius returns the insult by
comparing Antony’s words to an annoying bee’s buzzing, and Antony condemns
Cassius and Brutus as “flatterers” (V.i.45). The politicians engage in a
skillful rhetorical skirmish, but, ultimately, their words have no effective
power. Since Brutus’s actions have proved his words treacherous and
untrustworthy, the murder of Caesar can now be answered only in blood.
The tragic circumstances of
Cassius’s death represent another instance of misinterpretation. They refer
strongly to Caesar’s death: like Caesar, Cassius dies after failing to perceive
the truth; and he dies from his own sword, the same sword that killed Caesar.
Indeed, the entire scene attests to Caesar’s continuing power of influence from
beyond the grave: as Cassius dies, he credits the murdered leader with his
defeat. Brutus, with the ghostly visitor of the previous night fresh in his
mind, also interprets Cassius’s death as the doings of a vengeful Caesar. In
believing himself immortal, Caesar opened himself up to his murder by the
conspirators, and his death seemed to disprove his faith in his own permanence.
Yet now the power of Caesar appears to linger on, as events unfold in exact
compliance with what Caesar would have wished.
Just as the misinformation that causes
Cassius to commit suicide cheapens his death, so too do the manner and
consequence of his death render it less noble. Cassius desires a virtuous
death, and he believes that dying out of respect and sympathy for his captured
friend will afford him just such an end: “O coward that I am, to live so long /
To see my best friend ta’en before my face!” (V.iii.34–35). He cannot, however,
bring himself to perform the necessary act; though he implies that his choice
to die is brave, he does not possess the requisite bravery. Cassius’s last line
widens this gap between his conception and reality: “Caesar, thou art revenged,
/ Even with the sword that killed thee” (V.iii.44–45). Cassius attempts to
situate his death as a righteous, even graceful, working of dignified fate, and
perhaps even to compare himself to the great Caesar. Yet while the sword that
kills both is, fatefully, the same, the hands that drive it are not, ruining
Cassius’s parallel. Immediately after Cassius’s death, no dedicated friend
delivers a praise-filled, tearful eulogy celebrating his life. Rather, the only
witness, Pindarus, a lowly slave, flees to his freedom, “where never Roman
shall take note of him” (V.iii.49). Pindarus’s idea of escaping notice reflects
upon Cassius and his ignoble deeds, for which history will not remember him
kindly.
Act V, scenes iv–v
Act V, scene iv
Brutus prepares for another battle
with the Romans. In the field, Lucillius pretends that he is Brutus, and the
Romans capture him. Antony’s men bring him before Antony, who recognizes
Lucillius. Antony orders his men to go see if the real Brutus is alive or dead
and to treat their prisoner well.
Act V, scene v
Brutus sits with his few remaining
men. He asks them to hold his sword so that he may run against it and kill
himself. The Ghost of Caesar has appeared to him on the battlefield, he says,
and he believes that the time has come for him to die. His men urge him to
flee; he demurs, telling them to begin the retreat, and that he will catch up
later. He then asks one of his men to stay behind and hold the sword so that he
may yet die honorably. Impaling himself on the sword, Brutus declares that in
killing himself he acts on motives twice as pure as those with which he killed
Caesar, and that Caesar should consider himself avenged: “Caesar, now be still.
/ I killed not thee with half so good a will” (V.v.50–51).
Antony enters with Octavius,
Messala, Lucillius, and the rest of their army. Finding Brutus’s body,
Lucillius says that he is glad that his master was not captured alive. Octavius
decides to take Brutus’s men into his own service. Antony speaks over the body,
stating that Brutus was the noblest Roman of all: while the other conspirators
acted out of envy of Caesar’s power, Brutus acted for what he believed was the
common good. Brutus was a worthy citizen, a rare example of a real man.
Octavius adds that they should bury him in the most honorable way and orders
the body to be taken to his tent. The men depart to celebrate their victory.
Analysis: Act V, scenes iv–v
Brutus preserves his noble bravery
to the end: unlike the cowardly Cassius, who has his slave stab him while he,
Cassius, covers his face, Brutus decides calmly on his death and impales
himself on his own sword. Upon giving up the ghost, Brutus, like Cassius,
addresses Caesar in an acknowledgment that Caesar has been avenged; whereas
Cassius closes with a factual remark about Caesar’s murder (“Even with the
sword that killed thee” [V.iii.45]), Brutus closes with an emotional expression
that reveals how his inextinguishable inner conflict has continued to plague
him: “I killed not thee with half so good a will” (V.v.51). Additionally,
whereas the dead Cassius is immediately abandoned by a lowly slave, the dead
Brutus is almost immediately celebrated by his enemy as the noblest of Romans.
Notably, Brutus is also the only character in the play to interpret correctly
the signs auguring his death. When the Ghost of Caesar appears to him on the
battlefield, he unflinchingly accepts his defeat and the inevitability of his
death.
With Antony’s speech over Brutus’s
body, it finally becomes clear who the true hero—albeit a tragic hero—of the
play is. Although Caesar gives the play its name, he has few lines and dies
early in the third act. While Octavius has proven himself the leader of the
future, he has not yet demonstrated his full glory. History tells us that
Antony will soon be ousted from the triumvirate by Octavius’s growing power.
Over the course of the play, Cassius rises to some power, but since he lacks
integrity, he is little more than a petty schemer. The idealistic, tormented
Brutus, struggling between his love for Caesar and his belief in the ideal of a
republic, faces the most difficult of decisions—a decision in which the most is
at stake—and he chooses wrongly. As Antony observes, Brutus’s decision to enter
into the conspiracy does not originate in ambition but rather in his inflexible
belief in what the Roman government should be. His ideal proves too rigid in
the political world of the play, in which it appears that one succeeds only
through chameleonlike adaptability, through bargaining and compromise—skills
that Antony masterfully displays.
Brutus’s mistake lies in his attempt
to impose his private sense of honor on the whole Roman state. In the end,
killing Caesar does not stop the Roman republic from becoming a dictatorship,
for Octavius assumes power and becomes a new Caesar. Brutus’s beliefs may be a
holdover from earlier ideas of statesmanship. Unable to shift into the new
world order, Brutus misunderstands Caesar’s intentions and mistakes the greedy
ambition of the conspirators for genuine civic concern. Thus, Brutus kills his
friend and later dies himself. But in the end, Antony, the master rhetorician,
with no trace of the sarcasm that suffuses his earlier speech about Brutus,
still honors him as the best Roman of them all.
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