NOTES ON SHAKESPEARE’S JULIUS CAESAR
Notes when updated will accord with the text in Greenblatt, Stephen et al., eds. The Norton Shakespeare. 2nd edition. Four-Volume Genre Paperback Set. Tragedies. Norton, 2008. ISBN-13: 978-0-393-93152-5. Document timestamp: 11/6/2011 3:41 PM
Act 1, Scene 1
At
the beginning of the play, Shakespeare introduces a Roman world where
all people should know their place. Why is the carpenter not wearing
the clothing he should be wearing? The cobbler introduces another
theme—the idea that something is broken and must be mended. This is a
holiday time when the ordinary laws that restrain and govern people
seem to have been suspended. The strongest Romans on the scene are
certain that their moral pronouncements and symbolic acts will set
things right again, but in this belief, we must already begin to sense,
they are gravely mistaken. The common people would just as well forget
the past and live entirely in the present.
Act 1, Scene 2
In
this scene we get our first view of Julius Caesar himself. He seems a
grand enough figure, ordering great men about in an intimate way.
Still, what Julius says to Marc Antony reminds us that his wife is
unable to have children. In a way that has profound political
implications, Julius is alone in the middle of this admiring crowd, and
he must depend upon Marc Antony. Caesar will not listen to the
soothsayer. Immediately afterwards we are treated to the first
conversation between Brutus and Cassius, a conversation that turns upon
the issue of representation tied together with the all-important Roman
preoccupation with honor. Simply put, Cassius wants Brutus to see
himself through the eyes of others who expect him to save the Republic.
The honest reply that Brutus gives reminds us how difficult it is for a
person to be self-contained, self-defining. It is clear that Brutus
has been thinking along the same lines as Cassius—he would not find it
tolerable for Julius to become king. But Brutus is circumspect about
speaking what he feels. Cassius obviously resents and envies Caesar,
and seems to hold him in contempt. His reference to Virgil’s Aeneid
puts Cassius in place of Aeneas and Julius Caesar in the place of that
hero’s father, who, readers of Virgil will remember, did not make it
all the way to Italy after the Trojan remnant had set sail from their
burning city. Cassius does not so much seek justice as the opportunity
to take power for himself. He also sees a deep disjunction between what
ordinary people think Caesar is and what he actually is to those who
know him best. We like to think of the Romans as thoroughly upstanding
and ancient times as somehow simpler and more noble, but the fact is
that Roman political culture was at least as sophisticated as ours is
today: “spin” would hardly have been a foreign concept to Roman
politicians. Cassius tries to stir similar resentment in the breast of
Brutus, and connects him to his illustrious ancestor Lucius Junius
Brutus, who helped drive out the last Tarquin King from Rome. Brutus
seems naïve concerning the motives of his friend since he labels the
speech something “high.” Brutus is an idealist who can’t help but
transform everyone around him into something more noble and high-minded
than is really the case.
Julius
Caesar speaks to Marc Antony again, and makes it clear that he does
not trust Cassius, finding in him an anxiety-provoking degree of pride.
It is also manifest that Caesar surrounds himself with people willing
to tell him what he wants to hear. He is always on stage, a quality
that Casca’s comments reinforce.
Casca
is scornful of Caesar’s “act” in the presence of the common people who
would make him king. The “tag-rag” crowd seems like an ordinary
Elizabethan rabble. They follow their own appetites and are greedy for
emotional spectacle, which is exactly what they get when Caesar swoons
in an epileptic fit.
At
the end of the second scene, Cassius clarifies his scheme after Brutus
makes his exit—the plan is to manipulate Brutus by taking advantage of
his noble honesty. In this play, there are characters who stick to
their ideals (or who idealize others), and there are cynical realists
like Cassius.
Act 1, Scene 3
Cicero
proves unwilling when he speaks to Casca to buy into all the high talk
about prodigies and omens. Cicero believes what’s happening is all a
matter of interpretation. Casca fears the omens, but Cassius is
contemptuous, comparing Julius Caesar to such thunder and lightning. The
man is fearful, and a Roman must confront his fears if he would be
free. As far as Cassius is concerned, Caesar’s greatness is a mark of
the people’s degeneracy. Of course, this comment shows the weakness in
the entire conspiratorial plan: if Romans are in fact sheep, how are
they supposed to maintain the virtuous Republic of old, even if an
assassination restores that form of government? If they are fit only to
be led, why then, someone must lead them. So the argument is really
over who will dominate the populace. As Thomas Carlyle will later
write, “In the long run, every government is the exact symbol of its
people.” Democracies and republics die when the citizenry are no longer
worthy of such noble experiments or capable of sustaining them. This
is not to say that Shakespeare or his audience were sympathetic to
republican arguments—monarchy was generally considered the best form of
government in Shakespeare’s time. Both Casca and Cassius want to
borrow Brutus’s connection to heroic Roman history, thinking to render
their own bloody deeds noble and acceptable by reference to violent
acts that helped found the Republic.
Act 2, Scene 1
Brutus
says that he acts for the general good, not because he has anything in
particular against Caesar, who has always been a friend to him and a
man of reason. (As the introduction points out, Shakespeare brackets
out the way Julius Caesar attained the level of power he held at the
time of his murder. However, his bringing destruction to northern
Europe’s tribes and crossing the Rubicon aside, it remains true that
Caesar was a man of considerable merit—he was a cultivated man, not a
brute.) The main argument Brutus makes is the abstract one that power
would surely corrupt his friend, so it is necessary to extrapolate what
that friend might do if given absolute power. A man who would be king
is a serpent, and must be dealt with as such. Brutus himself is very
much taken with the heroic past connected to his family name, and like
many good Romans he is firmly wedded to the past.
At
line 63, it becomes apparent how much of a toll taking part in a
conspiracy has begun to exact upon Brutus: “Between the acting of a
dreadful thing / And the first motion, all the interim is / like a
phantasma, or a hideous dream.” When he is introduced to the
conspirators, he finds it necessary to explain just how un-Roman it is
to require an oath in such matters as they are about to undertake, and
he makes haste to check the bloodiness of their intent. Protecting Marc
Antony turns out to be a mistake, of course, but it shows Brutus’s
nobility of mind all the same. It’s possible to attribute to Brutus
some degree of less than high-minded strategizing when he says that
Antony “can do no more than Caesar’s arm / When Caesar’s head is off”
(182-83), but perhaps that would be ungenerous. Brutus seems quite
naïve throughout this scene, nowhere more so than when he says of
Caesar, “Let’s carve him as a dish fit for the gods, / Not hew him as a
carcass fit for hounds” (173-74). As always, Brutus is most
comfortable with theories and abstractions, and with ritual and
ceremony rather than practical action: the conspirators are first and
foremost “butchers,” whatever their intentions towards the state.
Brutus recognizes that Caesar’s blood must be spilled, but it’s hard to
see how his words connote recognition of the full horror in such a
deed.
At
line 233 and following, Portia shows herself to be perhaps the only
character who understands Brutus, with the possible exception of
Octavius, who treats him as a worthy opponent. She requests in strong
terms that Brutus let her in on what is troubling him, and he promises
to do so, although he is subsequently interrupted by Caius Ligarius.
But he must tell her subsequently since later on she seems aware of
what is afoot. In speaking to Caius Ligarius, Brutus again employs the
metaphor of sickness and health—it seems he sees himself as a physician
or a surgeon as well as a priest with respect to the body politic.
Act 2, Scene 2
When
talking to his wife, Caesar seems genuinely magnificent in his
disregard for death, but he also seems rather pompous in declaring
himself more dangerous than danger itself. On the whole, he is a
politician who has come to believe his own PR—always a dangerous thing
to do because it unfits a person to exercise power in real-life,
real-time situations. Because Decius Brutus understands this weakness in
Caesar, he is able to use it to bring the man out to the Capitol,
where he will meet his fate. I think Shakespeare follows the general
line that the time had already come for Rome to turn imperial, but the
fat and fond Julius Caesar he portrays is not the right man to wield
such enormous power. None of this is to say that Caesar is to be
portrayed as an old fool or a clown; rather, it seems likely that
Shakespeare’s representation of this “great man” pays tribute to the
difficulty of settling on any one image of such a colossal, polarizing
figure as Julius Caesar. On display are certain physical and character
weaknesses and a tendency towards exaggeration, but counter-balancing
these traits, in almost any worthwhile production, will be the
impressive pageantry, the sheer spectacle, surrounding Caesar’s every
move.
Act 3, Scene 1
In
the famous assassination scene, the conspirators crowd around Caesar,
with the ostensible purpose of getting him to revoke his banishment of
one Publius Cimber, brother of the conspirator Metellus Cimber.
Caesar’s words make him seem grandiose and ungenerous, and he is
instantly cut down. As in some ancient accounts, Caesar is most
surprised to find Brutus amongst those who have betrayed him. (See http://www.livius.org/caa-can/caesar/caesar_t09.html for Suetonius’ highly regarded narrative of the murder, which has Caesar maintaining dignified silence.)
Both
Cassius and Brutus make bold to consider the historic nature of what
they have just done, treating it as if it were a piece of stagecraft for
the ages. Brutus is particularly concerned to strike the right
ceremonial note, telling his fellow conspirators to bathe their hands in
the blood of the slain ruler and make their way to the marketplace,
where they will proclaim “Peace, freedom, and liberty” (110) for all.
But subsequent audiences, of course, know perfectly well how the whole
affair turned out—the death of Julius Caesar brought not the restoration
of republican ways, but rather the supremely competent imperial rule
of Augustus after a period of civil strife. So when we see the
conspirators on stage smearing themselves with the blood of the man they
have just killed, we are likely to concentrate more on the viciousness
of their deed than on the high-minded ideals that set Brutus, at
least, in motion.
Act 3, Scene 2
Immediately
after the assassination, Brutus makes the fatal mistake of trusting
Marc Antony. Antony appears diabolically skillful throughout this scene,
beginning with his earnest-seeming demand to know why Caesar deserved
to die and his eerie willingness to shake hands with the
blood-spattered killers before him, then proceeding to his obviously
genuine and yet carefully stage-managed outbursts of feeling for the
murdered Caesar and his request to pay his respects at the man’s
funeral. Cassius suspects the worst, but Brutus will have none of it,
and he brushes aside Cassius’s objections with the ridiculous
stipulation that he himself will speak first and thereby provide
sufficient explanation for what has been done. He has just agreed to
serve as the warm-up act for a master rhetorician who does not mean him
well, and we shall see what Antony makes of the demand that he not
blame the “honorable” conspirators. Operating by the ancient code of
revenge, Antony plans to “let slip the dogs of war” (273) after his
stirring words have driven the conspirators out of Rome. The deed that
these deluded men believed would bring order and liberty, Antony
correctly understands as the harbinger of violence and chaos. For the
moment, these are his elements, and with them he will set to work
forging a new order with Octavius.
The
speech that Brutus makes to the Roman mob, while noble, is also absurd
because it issues a call to Romanness to people thoroughly incapable
of any such thing. Brutus insists that he has placed love of country
above love for his old friend Caesar, and he may indeed have done so.
But the rogues and peasants to whom he speaks have no understanding of
such idealism. They value persons over principles, favors over
sacrifice. They are moved by Brutus’s words, but their instinct is to
offer him the crown they had meant to offer Caesar.
Marc
Antony’s speech is a masterpiece, full of power and deception, strong
feeling and a call to personal loyalty. Casting himself as Caesar’s
friend, Antony highlights the qualities of Julius in this capacity:
friendship, or amicitia, was amongst the highest Roman virtues, and Brutus has betrayed a man who loved and honored him. (In The Divine Comedy,
Dante places Brutus and Cassius in the lowest section of the inferno
for that reason: they are traitors to their lord.) If a man betrays his
friend, you cannot believe anything he says or trust him in any action.
( Cicero wrote a fine treatise called De Amicitia, or “On Friendship,” and Seneca’s Letters deal
with the concept insightfully.) He attacks the notion that Caesar was
ambitious or selfish, and employs a species of repetition to savage
effect respecting the word “honorable,” which comes to signify the
opposite quality after its first few uses. In the end, Antony does what
he promised Brutus not to do: he calls the conspirators traitors. He
convinces his audience that they have lost a generous, unique benefactor
at the hands of men who do not even understand that all-important
Roman concept, “honor.” Honor consists in standing by your friends,
which is exactly what Marc Antony tells the irrational, inflamed crowd
to do now. Fortune favors those willing to ride the waves of passion
that arise from great and terrible events, not those who, like Brutus,
believe troubled human affairs can be set to rights by the
dispassionate operations of reason. The latter assumption hardly seems a
good bet in the third scene, when the rabble decide that it isn’t even
worth distinguishing Cinna the poet from Cinna the assassin.
Act 4, Scene 1
Antony
the man of feeling now shows another side of himself—the side that
allows him to “lay honors” on his fellow Triumvir Lepidus and yet call
the man an ass when he’s out of earshot. This brazen contempt for “a
tried and valiant soldier” (28) surprises the youthful Octavius, but
Antony won’t change a word of his dismissive pronouncement against
Lepidus. It’s time to head for the wars Brutus and Cassius are stirring
up.
Act 4, Scenes 2-3
Back
at the camp, Brutus and Cassius become embroiled in a bitter argument
about funding for their armies—Cassius’s corrupt favoritism has made
him deny Brutus necessary pay for his men. Although the fight sounds
like schoolboy squabbling, it has a serious side: Cassius’ offense is a
dangerous one for the cause since a mutinous army is no help, and his
charge of untenderness on the part of Brutus seems genuine, so it
reinforces the play’s interest in the importance of Roman honor and
friendship. “A friend should bear his friend’s infirmities” (86), pleads
Cassius, and in the end he brings Brutus around. Shakespeare was
capable of shredding cherished notions of classical chivalry, as he does
in his later play Troilus and Cressida (1601-02), but here in Julius Caesar no
such thoroughgoing cynicism seems to be afoot. When Cassius’s
Thersites-like “cynic” struts onstage to offer his saucy rhymes, Brutus
makes Cassius dismiss the fellow as untimely and impertinent.
Brutus
and Cassius disagree more civilly about military strategy around line
200. Brutus comes down in favor of marching out to meet the enemy
rather than waiting: “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” (218-21). This is
one of the most famous pronouncements in the play, but the “tide”
metaphor is also revealing—although Brutus counsels heroic action, he
still sees this action as a reaction, as a principled response to what
the rhythm of life brings. Contrast this attitude with Marc Antony and
Octavius. Antony in particular, at least in this play if not in Antony and Cleopatra, is closer to the view of Edmund in King Lear:
“all’s meet with me that I can fashion fit.” We might argue that
Brutus, for all his unrealistic idealism, is at crucial points more
grounded in reality as something given that must be acknowledged than
his adversaries are. Antony is a supreme opportunist, but his manner of
handling the opportunity that comes to him as a gift from Brutus is
masterful, active, and creative: a fine word-chef, he whips up a
generous Julius bound to please the common people. By the end of Act 4,
Brutus is afflicted with a second vision of Caesar as his “evil spirit”
(281). Even the supernatural is arrayed against him; history is not on
his side in the struggle between republican principles and monarchical
rule.
Act 5, Scenes 1-3
Brutus
and Cassius exchange angry words with Octavius and Marc Antony, and a
bit later Brutus says to Cassius that he abhors the prospect of
suicide—evidently, he assumes he will either be victorious or be killed
in battle. But when the battle goes against his side, he must confront
the suicide of his own friend Cassius, who requires his Parthian
servant to stab him with the very sword he had used during the
assassination of Caesar. Brutus sees this act as the work of Julius
Caesar’s vengeful spirit.
Act 5, Scenes 4-5
In
the end, Brutus decides to run upon his own sword rather than face
capture. He leaves it to the people of the future and to history to
judge his actions, expressing confidence in the outcome: “I shall have
glory by this losing day / More than Octavius and Marc Antony” (36-37).
Octavius and Antony are impressed with the end Brutus makes, and Antony
declares him “the noblest Roman of them all” (5.5.68) He acted for the
general good rather than for his own personal interest. On the whole, I
think we find in Julius Caesar not so much a wholesale or
cynical rejection of the principles enunciated by the noble Brutus as a
complex, at times ambivalent exploration of those principles. Ideals
seldom, if ever, match events on the ground: participation in almost any
kind of politics compels even the best people to abandon or at least
compromise their noblest aspirations and their customary civility. This
is not to abandon politics since that really isn’t possible; it is to
see things as they are without flinching or dissembling.