JULIUS CAESAR
Plot Overview
Two tribunes, Flavius and
Murellus, find scores of Roman citizens wandering the streets, neglecting their
work in order to watch Julius Caesar’s triumphal parade: Caesar has defeated
the sons of the deceased Roman general Pompey, his archrival, in battle. The
tribunes scold the citizens for abandoning their duties and remove decorations
from Caesar’s statues. Caesar enters with his entourage, including the military
and political figures Brutus, Cassius, and Antony. A Soothsayer calls out to
Caesar to “beware the Ides of March,” but Caesar ignores him and proceeds with
his victory celebration (I.ii.19, I.ii.25).
Cassius and Brutus, both
longtime intimates of Caesar and each other, converse. Cassius tells Brutus
that he has seemed distant lately; Brutus replies that he has been at war with
himself. Cassius states that he wishes Brutus could see himself as others see
him, for then Brutus would realize how honored and respected he is. Brutus says
that he fears that the people want Caesar to become king, which would overturn
the republic. Cassius concurs that Caesar is treated like a god though he is
merely a man, no better than Brutus or Cassius. Cassius recalls incidents of
Caesar’s physical weakness and marvels that this fallible man has become so
powerful. He blames his and Brutus’s lack of will for allowing Caesar’s rise to
power: surely the rise of such a man cannot be the work of fate. Brutus
considers Cassius’s words as Caesar returns. Upon seeing Cassius, Caesar tells
Antony that he deeply distrusts Cassius.
Caesar departs, and another
politician, Casca, tells Brutus and Cassius that, during the celebration,
Antony offered the crown to Caesar three times and the people cheered, but
Caesar refused it each time. He reports that Caesar then fell to the ground and
had some kind of seizure before the crowd; his demonstration of weakness,
however, did not alter the plebeians’ devotion to him. Brutus goes home to
consider Cassius’s words regarding Caesar’s poor qualifications to rule, while
Cassius hatches a plot to draw Brutus into a conspiracy against Caesar.
That night, Rome is
plagued with violent weather and a variety of bad omens and portents. Brutus
finds letters in his house apparently written by Roman citizens worried that
Caesar has become too powerful. The letters have in fact been forged and
planted by Cassius, who knows that if Brutus believes it is the people’s will,
he will support a plot to remove Caesar from power. A committed supporter of
the republic, Brutus fears the possibility of a dictator-led empire, worrying
that the populace would lose its voice. Cassius arrives at Brutus’s home with
his conspirators, and Brutus, who has already been won over by the letters,
takes control of the meeting. The men agree to lure Caesar from his house and
kill him. Cassius wants to kill Antony too, for Antony will surely try to
hinder their plans, but Brutus disagrees, believing that too many deaths will
render their plot too bloody and dishonor them. Having agreed to spare Antony,
the conspirators depart. Portia, Brutus’s wife, observes that Brutus appears
preoccupied. She pleads with him to confide in her, but he rebuffs her.
Caesar prepares to go to
the Senate. His wife, Calpurnia, begs him not to go, describing recent
nightmares she has had in which a statue of Caesar streamed with blood and
smiling men bathed their hands in the blood. Caesar refuses to yield to fear
and insists on going about his daily business. Finally, Calpurnia convinces him
to stay home—if not out of caution, then as a favor to her. But Decius, one of
the conspirators, then arrives and convinces Caesar that Calpurnia has
misinterpreted her dreams and the recent omens. Caesar departs for the Senate
in the company of the conspirators.
As Caesar proceeds
through the streets toward the Senate, the Soothsayer again tries but fails to
get his attention. The citizen Artemidorus hands him a letter warning him about
the conspirators, but Caesar refuses to read it, saying that his closest
personal concerns are his last priority. At the Senate, the conspirators speak
to Caesar, bowing at his feet and encircling him. One by one, they stab him to
death. When Caesar sees his dear friend Brutus among his murderers, he gives up
his struggle and dies.
The murderers bathe their
hands and swords in Caesar’s blood, thus bringing Calpurnia’s premonition to
fruition. Antony, having been led away on a false pretext, returns and pledges
allegiance to Brutus but weeps over Caesar’s body. He shakes hands with the
conspirators, thus marking them all as guilty while appearing to make a gesture
of conciliation. When Antony asks why they killed Caesar, Brutus replies that
he will explain their purpose in a funeral oration. Antony asks to be allowed
to speak over the body as well; Brutus grants his permission, though Cassius
remains suspicious of Antony. The conspirators depart, and Antony, alone now,
swears that Caesar’s death shall be avenged.
Brutus and Cassius go to
the Forum to speak to the public. Cassius exits to address another part of the
crowd. Brutus declares to the masses that though he loved Caesar, he loves Rome
more, and Caesar’s ambition posed a danger to Roman liberty. The speech
placates the crowd. Antony appears with Caesar’s body, and Brutus departs after
turning the pulpit over to Antony. Repeatedly referring to Brutus as “an honorable
man,” Antony’s speech becomes increasingly sarcastic; questioning the claims
that Brutus made in his speech that Caesar acted only out of ambition, Antony
points out that Caesar brought much wealth and glory to Rome, and three times
turned down offers of the crown. Antony then produces Caesar’s will but
announces that he will not read it for it would upset the people inordinately.
The crowd nevertheless begs him to read the will, so he descends from the
pulpit to stand next to Caesar’s body. He describes Caesar’s horrible death and
shows Caesar’s wounded body to the crowd. He then reads Caesar’s will, which
bequeaths a sum of money to every citizen and orders that his private gardens
be made public. The crowd becomes enraged that this generous man lies dead;
calling Brutus and Cassius traitors, the masses set off to drive them from the
city.
Meanwhile, Caesar’s
adopted son and appointed successor, Octavius, arrives in Rome and forms a
three-person coalition with Antony and Lepidus. They prepare to fight Cassius
and Brutus, who have been driven into exile and are raising armies outside the
city. At the conspirators’ camp, Brutus and Cassius have a heated argument
regarding matters of money and honor, but they ultimately reconcile. Brutus
reveals that he is sick with grief, for in his absence Portia has killed
herself. The two continue to prepare for battle with Antony and Octavius. That
night, the Ghost of Caesar appears to Brutus, announcing that Brutus will meet
him again on the battlefield.
Octavius and Antony march
their army toward Brutus and Cassius. Antony tells Octavius where to attack,
but Octavius says that he will make his own orders; he is already asserting his
authority as the heir of Caesar and the next ruler of Rome. The opposing
generals meet on the battlefield and exchange insults before beginning combat.
Cassius witnesses his own
men fleeing and hears that Brutus’s men are not performing effectively. Cassius
sends one of his men, Pindarus, to see how matters are progressing. From afar,
Pindarus sees one of their leaders, Cassius’s best friend, Titinius, being
surrounded by cheering troops and concludes that he has been captured. Cassius
despairs and orders Pindarus to kill him with his own sword. He dies
proclaiming that Caesar is avenged. Titinius himself then arrives—the men
encircling him were actually his comrades, cheering a victory he had earned.
Titinius sees Cassius’s corpse and, mourning the death of his friend, kills
himself.
Brutus
learns of the deaths of Cassius and Titinius with a heavy heart, and prepares
to take on the Romans again. When his army loses, doom appears imminent. Brutus
asks one of his men to hold his sword while he impales himself on it. Finally,
Caesar can rest satisfied, he says as he dies. Octavius and Antony arrive.
Antony speaks over Brutus’s body, calling him the noblest Roman of all. While
the other conspirators acted out of envy and ambition, he observes, Brutus
genuinely believed that he acted for the benefit of Rome. Octavius orders that
Brutus be buried in the most honorable way. The men then depart to celebrate
their victory
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