RSC Live: Antony and Cleopatra (2017) - full transcript
Nay, but this dotage of our general's
overflows the measure
Those his goodly eyes, that over the files and
musters of the war have glowed like plated Mars...
...now bend, now turn the office and
devotion of their view upon a tawny front
His captain's heart, which in the scuffles of great
fights hath burst the buckles on his breast...
...reneges all temper and is become the
bellows and the fan to cool a gypsy's lust
Look where they come
Take but good note,
and you shall see in him...
...the triple pillar of the world
transformed into a strumpet's fool
Behold and see
If it be love indeed, tell me how much -
There's beggary in the love that can be reckoned
I'll set a bourn how far to be beloved - Then
must thou needs find out new heaven, new Earth
News, my good lord, from Rome
- Grates me, the sum
- Nay, hear him, Antony
Fulvia perchance is angry
Or who knows if the scarce-bearded Caesar
have not sent his powerful mandate to you
'Do this, or this, take in that kingdom,
and enfranchise that'
'Perform it, or else we damn thee'
- How, my love?
- Perchance? Nay, and most like
You must not stay here longer,
your dismission is come from Caesar
Therefore hear it, Antony
Where's Fulvia's process?
Caesar's, I would say. Both?
The messenger!
As I am Egypt's queen, thou blushest, Antony,
and that blood of thine is Caesar's homager
Else so thy cheek pays shame when
shrill-tongued Fulvia scolds. The messenger!
Let Rome in Tiber melt and the wide arch
of the ranged empire fall. Here is my space
Kingdoms are clay.
Our dungy earth alike feeds beast as man
The nobleness of life is to do thus
When such a mutual pair
and such a twain can do it...
...in which I bind, on pain of punishment,
the world to wit we stand up peerless
Excellent falsehood!
Why did he marry Fulvia and not love her?
I'll seem the fool I am not.
Antony will be himself
But stirred by Cleopatra
Now for the love of Love and her soft hours,
let's not confound the time with conference harsh
There's not a minute of our lives should stretch
without some pleasure. Now, what sport tonight?
- Hear the ambassador
- Fie, wrangling queen...
...whom everything becomes,
to chide, to laugh, to weep
Whose every passion fully strives
to make itself, in thee, fair and admired
No messenger but thine
And all alone tonight we'll wander through
the streets and note the qualities of people
Come, my queen,
last night you did desire it
Boo! Speak not to us
- Is Caesar with Antonius prized so slight?
- Sir, sometimes when he is not Antony...
...he comes too short of that great
property which still should go with Antony
I am full sorry that he approves the
common liar who thus speaks of him at Rome
Lord Alexas, sweet Alexas, most anything
Alexas, almost most absolute Alexas
Where's the soothsayer
that you praised so to the Queen?
O, that I knew this husband which you say
must change his horns with garlands
- Soothsayer!
- Your will?
Is this the man? Is it
you, sir, that know things?
In nature's infinite book of secrecy a
little I can read - Show him your hand
Bring in the banquet quickly,
wine enough Cleopatra's health to drink
Good sir, give me good fortune
- I make not, but foresee
- Pray then, foresee me one
- You shall be yet far fairer than you are
- He means in flesh
- No, you shall paint when you are old
- Wrinkles forbid!
- Vex not his prescience. Be attentive
- Hush
- You shall be more beloving than beloved
- I had rather heat my liver with drinking
Nay, hear him
Good now, some excellent fortune
Let me be married to three kings
in a forenoon and widow them all
Let me have a child at fifty
to whom Herod of Jewry may do homage
Find me to marry me with Octavius Caesar,
and companion me with my mistress
You shall outlive the lady whom you serve -
O, excellent. I love long life better than figs
You have seen and proved a fairer former
fortune than that which is to approach
Then belike my children shall have no names.
Prithee, how many boys and wenches must I have?
If every of your wishes had a womb,
and fertile every wish, a million
Out, fool! I forgive thee for a witch
You think none but your sheets
are privy to your wishes
- Nay, come. Tell Iras hers
- We'll know all our fortunes
Mine, and most of our fortunes tonight,
shall be drunk to bed
- There's a palm presages chastity, if nothing else
- Even as the overflowing Nilus presageth famine
- Go, you wild bedfellow, you cannot soothsay
- Prithee, tell her but a workaday fortune
- Your fortunes are alike
- But how, but how? Give me particulars
I have said - Am I not an
inch of fortune better than she?
Well, if you were but an inch of fortune
better than I, where would you choose it?
Not in my husband's nose
Our worser thoughts heavens mend!
Alexas, come, his fortune, his fortune!
O, let him marry a woman that cannot go,
sweet Isis, I beseech thee
And let her die, too, and give him a worse,
and let worse follow worse...
...till the worst of all follow him
laughing to his grave, fiftyfold a cuckold
Amen, dear goddess,
hear that prayer of the people
For, as it is a heartbreaking to see a handsome
man loose-wived, so it is a deadly sorrow...
- ...to behold a foul knave uncuckolded
- Amen
Lo now, if it lay in their hands to make me a cuckold,
they would make themselves whores but they'd do it
- Saw you my lord?
- No, lady
- Was he not here?
- No, madam
He was disposed to mirth, but on the
sudden a Roman thought hath struck him
- Enobarbus
- Madam?
Seek him and bring him hither
- Where's Alexas?
- Here at your service
- My lord approaches
- We will not look upon him. Go with us
Move, move
- Fulvia thy wife first came into the field
- Against my brother Lucius?
Ay. But soon that war had end, and
the time's state made friends of them...
...jointing their force 'gainst Caesar, whose better iss ue
in the war from Italy upon the first encounter drave them
Well, what worst?
- The nature of bad news infects the teller
- When it concerns the fool or coward
On.
Things that are past are done, with me
'Tis thus: Who tells me true, though in his
tale lie death, I hear him as he flattered
Labienus, this is stiff news,
hath with his Parthian force extended Asia
From Euphrates his conquering banner shook,
from Syria to Lydia and to Ionia, whilst...
- ...Antony, thou wouldst say?
- O, my lord
Speak to me home, mince
not the general tongue
Name Cleopatra as she is called in Rome.
Rail thou in Fulvia's phrase
And taunt my faults with such full licence
as both truth and malice have power to utter
Fulvia thy wife is dead
- Where died she?
- In Sicyon
Her length of sickness, with what else more
serious importeth thee to know, this bears
Forbear me
There's a great spirit gone.
Thus did I desire it
What our contempts doth often hurl from us,
we wish it ours again
She's good, being gone. The hand
could pluck her back that shoved her on
I must from this enchanting queen break off
Ten thousand harms more than
the ills I know my idleness doth hatch
- Save me, Antony!
- How now, Enobarbus!
- What's your pleasure, sir?
- I must with haste from hence
Why then we kill all our women
We see how mortal an unkindness is to them.
If they suffer our departure, death's the word
I must be gone
Under a compelling occasion, let women die.
It were pity to cast them away for nothing
Cleopatra, catching but the
least noise of this, dies instantly
I have seen her die twenty times
upon far poorer moment
I do think there is cunning in death
which commits some loving act upon her...
- ...she hath such a celerity in dying
- She is cunning past man's thought
Alack, sir, no, her passions are made
of nothing but the finest part of pure love
We cannot call her winds and waters
sighs and tears
They are greater storms and tempests
than almanacs can report
This cannot be cunning in her. If it be,
she makes a shower of rain as well as Jove
- Would I had never seen her
- O, sir, you had then left unseen...
...a wonderful piece of work, which not to have
been blest withal would have discredited your travel
Fulvia is dead
- Sir?
- Fulvia is dead
- Fulvia?
- Dead
Why, sir, give the
gods a thankful sacrifice
If there were no more women but Fulvia, then had
you indeed a cut, and the case to be lamented
This grief is crowned with consolation.
Your old smock brings forth a new petticoat
The business she hath broached in the state
cannot endure my absence
And the business you have broached here
cannot be without you
Especially that of Cleopatra's,
which wholly depends on your abode
No more light answers
I shall break the cause of our expedience
to the Queen, and get her leave to part
Sextus Pompeius hath given the dare to
Caesar and commands the empire of the sea
Our slippery people, whose love is never linked
to the deserver till his deserts are past...
...begin to throw Pompey the Great
and all his dignities upon his son
Who, high in name and power, higher than both in
blood and life, stands up for the main soldier
Whose quality, going on,
the sides of the world may danger
Say our pleasure, to such whose place is
under us, requires our quick remove from hence
I shall do it
- Where is he?
- I did not see him since
See where he is, who's with him,
what he does. I did not send you
If you find him sad, say I am dancing
If in mirth, report that I am sudden sick.
Quick, and return
Madam, methinks,
if you did love him dearly...
...you do not hold the method
to enforce the like from him
What should I do, I do not?
- In each thing give him way
- Cross him in nothing
Thou teachest like a
fool the way to lose him
- Tempt him not so too far. I wish, forbear
- In time we hate that which we often fear
But here comes Antony
I am sick and sullen
- I am sorry to give breathing to my purpose
- Help me away, dear Charmian! I shall fall
It cannot be thus long.
The sides of nature will not sustain it
- Now, my dearest queen...
- Pray you stand farther from me
- What's the matter?
- I know by that same eye there's some good news
What, says the married woman you may go?
Would she had never given you leave to come
Let her not say 'tis I that keep you here.
I have no power upon you. Hers you are
- The gods best know...
- O, never was there queen so mightily betrayed
Yet at the first I saw the
treasons planted - Cleopatra...
Why should I think
you can be mine, and true...
Though you in swearing
shake the throned gods
...who have been false to Fulvia?
Riotous madness, to be entangled with those
mouth-made vows which break themselves in swearing
- Most sweet queen...
- Nay, pray you seek no colour for your going
But bid farewell and go
When you sued staying,
then was the time for words. No going then
Eternity was in our lips and eyes,
bliss in our brows' bent
None our parts so poor
but was a race of heaven
They are so still, or thou, the greatest soldier
of the world, art turned the greatest liar
- How now, lady?
- I would I had thy inches
Thou shouldst know there were
a heart in Egypt - Hear me, queen
The strong necessity of time
commands our services awhile
But my full heart remains in use with you
Our Italy shines over with civil swords
Sextus Pompeius makes his approaches to the
port of Rome. Rich in his father's honour...
...he creeps apace into the hearts of such
as have not thrived upon the present state
My more particular, and that which most with
you should safe my going, is Fulvia's death
Though age from folly could not give
me freedom, it does from childishness
Can Fulvia die?
She's dead, my queen. Look here, and at thy
sovereign leisure read the garboils she awaked
At the last, best,
see when and where she died
O, most false love! Where be the sacred vials
thou shouldst fill with sorrowful water?
Now I see, I see, in Fulvia's death,
how mine received shall be
Quarrel no more.
By the fire that quickens Nilus' slime...
...I go from hence thy soldier, servant,
making peace or war as thou affects
Cut my lace, Charmian, come!
But let it be.
I am quickly ill and well, so Antony loves
My precious queen, forbear, and give true evidence
to his love, which stands an honourable trial
So Fulvia told me.
I prithee turn aside and weep for her
Then bid adieu to me,
and say the tears belong to Egypt
Good now, play one scene of excellent
dissembling, and let it look like perfect honour
- You'll heat my blood. No more!
- You can do better yet, but this is meetly
- Now by my sword...
- ...and target
Still he mends, but this is not the best
Look, prithee, Charmian, how this Herculean
Roman does become the carriage of his chafe
- I'll leave you, lady
- Courteous lord, one word
Sir, you and I must part, but that's not it
Sir, you and I have loved, but
there's not it. That you know well
Something it is I would...
O, my oblivion is a very Antony,
and I am all forgotten
But that your royalty holds idleness your
subject, I should take you for idleness itself
'Tis sweating labour to bear such idleness
so near the heart as Cleopatra this
But, sir, forgive me, since my becomings
kill me when they do not eye well to you
Your honour calls you hence
Therefore be deaf to my unpitied folly,
and all the gods go with you
Upon your sword sit laurel victory, and
smooth success be strewed before your feet
Let us go. Come
Our separation so abides and flies
that thou, residing here, goes yet with me
And I, hence fleeting,
here remain with thee
Away!
You may see, Lepidus,
and henceforth know...
...it is not Caesar's natural vice
to hate our great competitor
From Alexandria this is the news
He fishes, drinks,
and wastes the lamps of night in revel
Is not more manlike than Cleopatra, nor
the queen of Ptolemy more womanly than he
Hardly gave audience,
or vouchsafed to think he had partners
You shall find there a man who is the
abstract of all faults that all men follow
I must not think there are evils enough
to darken all his goodness
His faults in him seem as the spots of
heaven, more fiery by night's blackness
Hereditary rather than purchased,
what he cannot change than what he chooses
You are too indulgent
Let's grant it is not amiss
to tumble on the bed of Ptolemy...
To give a kingdom for a mirth, to sit and
keep the turn of tippling with a slave...
...to reel the streets at noon and stand
the buffet with knaves that smells of sweat
Say this becomes him...
As his composure must be rare indeed
whom these things cannot blemish
...yet must Antony no way excuse his foils when
we do bear so great weight in his lightness
Here's more news
Most noble Caesar,
Pompey is strong at sea
And it appears he is beloved
of those that only have feared Caesar
To the ports the discontents repair,
and men's reports give him much wronged
I should have known no less
It hath been taught us from the primal state
that he which is was wished until he were
And the ebbed man, never loved till never
worth love, comes deared by being lacked
This common body,
like to a vagabond flag upon the stream...
...goes to and back, lackeying the
varying tide to rot itself with motion
Caesar, I bring thee word
Menecrates and Menas, famous pirates,
makes the sea serve them...
...which they ear and wound
with keels of every kind
Many hot inroads they make in Italy
and flush youth revolt
No vessel can peep forth
but 'tis as soon taken as seen
For Pompey's name strikes more
than could his war resisted
Antony,
leave thy lascivious wassails
When thou once was beaten from Modena,
at thy heel did famine follow
Thou didst drink the stale of horses and the
gilded puddle which beasts would cough at
Thy palate then did deign
the roughest berry on the rudest hedge
Yea, like the stag when snow the pasture
sheets, the barks of trees thou browsed
On the Alps it is reported thou didst eat
strange flesh which some did die to look on
And all this... It wounds thine
honour that I speak it now...
...was borne so like a soldier
that thy cheek so much as lanked not
- 'Tis pity of him
- Let his shames quickly drive him to Rome
'Tis time we twain did show ourselves in the field,
and to that end assemble we immediate council
Pompey thrives in our idleness
Tomorrow, Caesar, I shall be
furnished to inform you rightly...
...both what by sea and land
I can be able to front this present time
Till which encounter,
it is my business too. Farewell.
Farewell, my lord. What you shall know meantime
of stirs abroad, I shall beseech you, sir...
- ...to let me be partaker
- Doubt not, sir. I knew it for my bond
If the great gods be just
they shall assist the deeds of justest men
Know, worthy Pompey,
that what they do delay they not deny
I shall do well.
The people love me, and the sea is mine
My powers are crescent, and my
auguring hope says it will come to the full
Mark Antony in Egypt sits at dinner,
and will make no wars without doors
Caesar gets money where he loses hearts
Lepidus flatters both, of both is flattered.
But he neither loves, nor either cares for him
Caesar and Lepidus are in the field.
A mighty strength they carry
- Where have you this? 'Tis false
- From Menecrates, sir
He dreams. I know they are in
Rome together, looking for Antony
But all the charms of love, salt Cleopatra,
soften thy waned lip!
Let witchcraft join with
beauty, lust with both
Tie up the libertine in a field of feasts,
keep his brain fuming
Epicurean cooks
sharpen with cloyless sauce his appetite...
...that sleep and feeding may prorogue
his honour even till a Lethe'd dullness
- How now, Menecrates?
- This is most certain that I shall deliver
Mark Antony is every hour in Rome expected. Since
he went from Egypt 'tis a space for farther travel
I could have given less matter a better ear
Menas, I did not think this amourous surfeiter
would have donned his helm for such a petty war
His soldiership is twice the other twain
But let us rear the higher our opinion...
...that our stirring can from the lap of Egypt's
widow pluck the never lust-wearied Antony
I cannot hope Caesar and Antony
shall well greet together
His wife that's dead did trespasses to
Caesar. His brother warred upon him...
...although I think not moved by Antony
But how the fear of us may cement their divisions
and bind up the petty difference, we yet not know
Be it as our gods will have it. It only stands
our lives upon to use our strongest hands
Come, Menas
- Charmian
- Madam?
- Ha, ha! Give me to drink mandragora
- Why, madam?
That I might sleep out
this great gap of time my Antony is away
You think of him too much
- O, 'tis treason
- Madam, I trust not so
- Thou, eunuch Mardian
- What's your highness' pleasure?
I take no pleasure in aught an eunuch has.
Hast thou affections?
- Yes, gracious madam
- Indeed?
Not in deed, madam, for I can do nothing
but what indeed is honest to be done
Yet have I fierce affections,
and think what Venus did with Mars
O, Charmian, where thinkest thou he is now?
Stands he, or sits he? Or does he walk?
Or is he on his horse? O happy
horse, to bear the weight of Antony!
Do bravely, horse,
for wot'st thou whom thou movest?
The demi-Atlas of this Earth,
the arm and burgonet of men
He's speaking now, or murmuring
'Where's my serpent of old Nile?'
For so he calls me. Now I feed
myself with most delicious poison
Think on me, that am with Phoebus' amorous
pinches black, and wrinkled deep in time
O, Julius Caesar, when thou wast here above
the ground, I was a morsel for a monarch
And great Pompey would stand
and make his eyes grow in my brow
There would he anchor his aspect,
and die with looking on his life
Your Highness, your Majesty,
Sovereign of Egypt, hail!
How much unlike art thou Mark Antony
Yet coming from him, that great medicine
hath with his tinct gilded thee
How goes it with my brave Mark Antony?
Last thing he did, dear queen, he kissed, the
last of many doubled kisses, this orient pearl
- His speech sticks in my heart
- Mine ear must pluck it thence
'Good friend', quoth he, 'Say the firm Roman to
great Egypt sends this treasure of an oyster'
'At whose foot, to mend the petty present, I
will piece her opulent throne with kingdoms'
'All the East, ' say thou,
'shall call her mistress'
What, was he sad, or merry?
Like to the time of the year between the extremes
of hot and cold, he was nor sad nor merry
O, well-divided disposition Note him,
note him, good Charmian, 'tis the man!
But note him. He was not sad, for he would
shine on those that make their looks by his
He was not merry, which seemed to tell them
his remembrance lay in Egypt with his joy
But between both.
O, heavenly mingle!
Be'st thou sad or merry, the violence of
either thee becomes, so does it no man's else
- Met'st thou my posts?
- Ay, madam, twenty several messengers
Why do you send so thick?
Who's born that day when I forget
to send to Antony shall die a beggar
Ink and paper, Charmian.
Welcome, my good Alexas
- Did I, Charmian, ever love Caesar so?
- O, that brave Caesar!
Be choked with such another emphasis
- Say 'the brave Antony'
- The valiant Caesar
By Isis, I will give thee bloody teeth if
thou with Caesar paragon again my man of men
By your most gracious
pardon, I sing but after you
My salad days, when I was green in judgment,
cold in blood, to say as I said then
But come, away, get me ink and paper
He shall have every day a several greeting,
or I'll unpeople Egypt
Good Enobarbus, 'tis a worthy deed,
and shall become you well...
...to entreat your captain to soft and gentle
speech - I shall entreat him to answer like himself
If Caesar move him, let Antony look over
Caesar's head and speak as loud as Mars
By Jupiter, were I the wearer of
Antonio's beard, I would not shave it today
'Tis not a time for private stomaching
Every time serves
for the matter that is then born in it
But small to greater matters must
give way - Not if the small come first
Your speech is passion.
But pray you, stir no embers up
- Here comes the noble Antony
- And yonder Caesar
If we compose well here, to Parthia.
Hark, Ventidius
I do not know, Maecenas. Ask Agrippa
Noble friends, that which combined us was most
great, and let not a leaner action rend us
What's amiss, may it be gently heard
When we debate our trivial difference loud,
we do commit murder in healing wounds
Then, noble partners,
the rather for I earnestly beseech...
...touch you the sourest points
with sweetest terms
'Tis spoken well. Were we before
our armies, and to fight, I should do thus
- Welcome to Rome
- Thank you
- Sit
- Sit, sir
Nay, then
I learn you take things ill which
are not so, or, being, concern you not
I must be laughed at if or for nothing or
a little, I should say myself offended...
...and with you chiefly in the world
More laughed at,
that I should once name you derogately...
...when to sound your
name it not concerned me
My being in Egypt,
Caesar, what was it to you?
No more than my residing here at Rome
might be to you in Egypt
Yet if you there did practise on my state,
your being in Egypt might be my question
How intend you, practised?
You may be pleased to catch at mine intent
by what did here befall me
Your wife and brother made wars upon me,
and their contestation was theme for you
You were the word of war
You do mistake your business.
My brother never did urge me in his act
Of this my letters before did satisfy you. If
you'll patch a quarrel, it must not be with this
You praise yourself by laying defects of
judgment to me, but you patched up your excuses
Not so, not so. I know you could not lack.
As for my wife...
...the third of the world is yours, which with
a snaffle you may pace easy, but not such a wife
Would we had all such wives, that the
men might go to wars with the women
I wrote to you when rioting in Alexandria.
You did pocket up my letters...
...and with taunts
did gibe my missive out of audience
Sir, he fell upon me ere admitted, then
Three kings I had newly feasted,
and did want of what I was in the morning
But next day told him of myself, which
was as much as to have asked him pardon
Let this fellow be nothing of our strife.
If we contend, out of our question wipe him
You have broken the article of your oath, which
you shall never have tongue to charge me with
- Soft, Caesar
- No, Lepidus, let him speak
The honour is sacred which he talks on now,
supposing that I lacked it
But on, Caesar.
The article of my oath?
To lend me arms and aid when I
required them, the which you both denied
Neglected, rather
And then when poisoned hours
had bound me up from mine own knowledge
As nearly as I may I'll
play the penitent to you
Truth is that Fulvia, to have me out of
Egypt, made wars here. For which myself...
...the ignorant motive, do so far ask pardon
as befits mine honour to stoop in such a case
'Tis noble spoken
If it might please you to enforce
no further the griefs between you...
...to forget them quite were to remember
that the present need speaks to atone you
Worthily spoken, Maecenas
Or, if you borrow one another's
love for the instant, you may...
...when you hear no more words of Pompey,
return it again
You shall have time to wrangle in
when you have nothing else to do
Thou art a soldier only. Speak no more -
That truth should be silent I had almost forgot
You wrong this presence, therefore speak
no more - Go to, then. Your considerate stone
I do not much dislike the matter,
but the manner of his speech
For it cannot be we shall remain in friendship,
our conditions so differing in their acts
Yet if I knew what hoop should hold us staunch,
from edge to edge of the world I would pursue it
- Give me leave, Caesar
- Speak, Agrippa
Thou hast a sister by the mother's side, admired
Octavia. Great Mark Antony is now a widower
Say not so, Agrippa. If Cleopatra heard you,
your reproof were well deserved of rashness
I am not married, Caesar.
Let me hear Agrippa further speak
To hold you in perpetual amity,
to make you brothers...
...and to knit your hearts with an unslipping
knot, take Antony Octavia to his wife
Whose beauty claims
no worse a husband than the best of men
Whose virtue and whose general graces
speak that which none else can utter
By this marriage all little jealousies,
which now seem great...
...and all great fears, which now import
their dangers, would then be nothing
Truths would be tales,
where now half-tales be truths
Her love to both would each to other
and all loves to both draw after her
Pardon what I have spoke, for 'tis a studied,
not a present thought, by duty ruminated
Will Caesar speak?
Not till he hears how Antony is touched
with what is spoke already
What power is in Agrippa, if I would say
'Agrippa, be it so', to make this good?
The power of Caesar,
and his power unto Octavia
May I never to this good purpose,
that so fairly shows, dream of impediment
Let me have thy hand.
Further this act of grace
And from this hour the heart of brothers
govern in our loves and sway our great designs
There's my hand
A sister I bequeath you
whom no brother did ever love so dearly
Let her live to join our kingdoms and our
hearts, and never fly off our loves again
Happily, amen
I did not think to draw my
sword 'gainst Pompey...
...for he hath laid strange
courtesies and great of late upon me
I must thank him only,
lest my remembrance suffer ill report
- At heel of that, defy him
- Time calls upon us
Of us must Pompey presently be sought,
or else he seeks out us
Haste we for it.
Yet, ere we put ourselves in arms...
...dispatch we the
business we have talked of
With most gladness, and do invite you to my
sister's view, whither straight I'll lead you
Let us, Lepidus, not lack your company -
Noble Antony, not sickness should detain me
Welcome from Egypt, sir
Half the heart of Caesar, worthy Maecenas!
- My honourable friend Agrippa!
- Good Enobarbus!
We have cause to be glad that matters are so
well digested. You stayed well by it in Egypt
Ay, sir, we did sleep day out of countenance
and made the night light with drinking
Eight wild boars roasted whole at a breakfast,
and but twelve persons there. Is this true?
This was but as a fly by an eagle
We had much more monstrous matter of feast,
which worthily deserved noting
She's a most triumphant lady,
if report be square to her
When she first met Mark Antony, she pursed
up his heart upon the river of Cydnus
There she appeared indeed,
or my reporter devised well for her
I will tell you
The barge she sat in
like a burnished throne burned on the water
The poop was beaten gold, purple the sails, and
so perfumed that the winds were lovesick with them
The oars were silver,
which to the tune of flutes kept stroke...
...and made the water which they beat to
follow faster, as amorous of their strokes
For her own person, it
beggared all description
She did lie in her pavilion,
cloth-of-gold, of tissue...
...overpicturing that Venus
where we see the fancy outwork nature
On each side her stood pretty dimpled boys, like
smiling Cupids, with divers-coloured fans...
...whose wind did seem to glow the delicate cheeks
which they did cool, and what they undid did
O, rare for Antony!
Her gentlewomen, like the Nereides,
so many mermaids...
...tended her in the eyes,
and made their bends adornings
At the helm a seeming mermaid steers
The silken tackle swell with the touches of those
flower-soft hands that yarely frame the office
From the barge a strange invisible perfume
hits the sense of the adjacent wharfs
The city cast her people out upon her
And Antony, enthroned in the market-place,
did sit alone, whistling to the air...
...which but for vacancy had gone to gaze
on Cleopatra too, and made a gap in nature
Rare Egyptian!
Upon her landing, Antony sent to her,
invited her to supper
She replied it should be better
he became her guest, which she entreated
Our courteous Antony, whom never
the word of 'No' woman heard speak...
...being barbered ten
times over, goes to the feast
And for his ordinary
pays his heart for what his eyes eat only
Royal wench!
She made great Caesar lay his sword to bed
He ploughed her, and she cropped
I saw her once hop forty paces through the
public street, and having lost her breath...
...she spoke and panted that she did make defect
perfection, and breathless pour breath forth
Now Antony must leave her utterly
Never. He will not
Age cannot wither her,
nor custom stale her infinite variety
Other women cloy the appetites they feed,
but she makes hungry where most she satisfies
For vilest things become themselves in her, that
the holy priests bless her when she is riggish
If beauty, wisdom, modesty can settle the heart
of Antony, Octavia is a blessed lottery to him
Let us go. Good Enobarbus, make
yourself my guest whilst you abide here
Humbly, sir, I thank you
The world and my great office
will sometimes divide me from your bosom
All which time before the gods my
knee shall bow my prayers to them for you
Goodnight, sir
My Octavia,
read not my blemishes in the world's report
I have not kept my square, but that
to come shall all be done by the rule
Good night, dear lady
- Goodnight, sir
- Goodnight
- Now, sirrah, you do wish yourself in Egypt?
- Would I had never come from thence, nor you thither
If you can, your reason?
I see it in my motion, have it not in my
tongue. But yet hie you to Egypt again
Say to me, whose fortunes shall
rise higher, Caesar's or mine?
Caesar's
If thou dost play with him at any game,
thou art sure to lose
And of that natural luck
he beats thee against the odds
Thy lustre thickens when he shines by. Thy
spirit is all afraid to govern thee near him
- But he away, 'tis noble
- Get thee gone
Say to Ventidius I would speak with him.
He shall to Parthia
Be it art or hap, he hath spoken true
The very dice obey him, and in our sports
my better cunning faints under his chance
I will to Egypt
And though I make this marriage for
my peace, in the east my pleasure lies
Give me some music.
Music, moody food of us that trade in love
The music, ho!
Let it alone. Let's to billiards.
Come, Charmian
My arm is sore. Best play with Mardian
As well a woman with an eunuch played
as with a woman
- Come, you'll play with me, sir?
- As well as I can, madam
And when good will is showed, though it
come too short, the actor may plead pardon
I'll none now.
Give me mine angle, we'll to the river
There, my music playing far off,
I will betray tawny-finned fishes
My bended hook shall pierce their
slimy jaws, and as I draw them up...
...I'll think them every one an
Antony and say 'Aha, you're caught'
'Twas merry when you wagered on your angling. When
your diver did hang a salt fish on his hook...
...which he with fervency drew up
That time? O, times!
I laughed him out of patience,
and that night I laughed him into patience
And next morn, ere the ninth hour,
I drunk him to his bed...
...then put my tires and mantles on him,
whilst I wore his sword Philippan
O, from Italy!
Ram thou thy fruitful tidings in mine ears,
that long time have been barren
- Madam, madam
- Antonio's dead!
If thou say so, villain,
thou killest thy mistress
But well and free, if thou
so yield him, there is gold
And here my bluest veins to kiss, a hand
that kings have lipped, and trembled kissing
- First, madam, he is well
- Why, there's more gold
But sirrah, mark,
we use to say the dead are well
Bring it to that, the gold I give thee will
I melt and pour down thy ill-uttering throat
- Good madam, hear me
- Well, go to, I will
But there's no goodness in thy face
If Antony be free and healthful, so
tart a favour to trumpet such good tidings
If not well, thou shouldst come like a Fury
crowned with snakes, not like a formal man
- Will it please you hear me?
- I have a mind to strike thee ere thou speakest
Yet if thou say Antony lives, is well, or
friends with Caesar or not captive to him...
...I'll set thee in a shower of gold
and hail rich pearls upon thee
- Madam, he's well
- Well said
- And friends with Caesar
- Thou art an honest man
Caesar and he are greater friends
than ever - Make thee a fortune from me
- But yet, madam...
- I do not like 'But yet'
It does allay the good precedence.
Fie upon 'But yet'
'But yet' is as a jailer to bring forth
some monstrous malefactor
Prithee, friend, power out the pack of
matter to mine ear, the good and bad together
He's friends with Caesar, in state of
health, thou sayest, and, thou sayest, free
Free, madam, no. I made no such report.
He's bound unto Octavia
- For what good turn?
- For the best turn in the bed
I am pale, Charmian
Madam, he's married to Octavia
- The most infectious pestilence upon thee!
- Good madam, patience!
What say you? Hence, horrible villain, or I'll spurn
thine eyes like balls before me. I'll unhair thy head
Thou shalt be whipped with wire and stewed
in brine, smarting in lingering pickle
Gracious madam,
I that do bring the news made not the match
Say it is not so
He is married, madam
Rogue, thou hast lived too long
Good madam, keep yourself within yourself.
The man is innocent
Some innocents 'scape not the thunderbolt
Melt Egypt into Nile,
and kindly creatures turn all to serpents
Call the slave again.
Though I am mad, I will not bite him. Call
- He is afeard to come
- I will not hurt him
These hands do lack nobility
that they strike a meaner than myself...
...since I myself have
given myself the cause
Come hither, sir
Though it be honest,
it is never good to bring bad news
Give to a gracious message an host of tongues, but
let ill tidings tell themselves when they be felt
- I have done my duty
- Is he married?
I cannot hate thee worser than I do
if thou again say 'yes'
- He's married, madam
- The gods confound thee!
- Dost thou hold there still?
- Should I lie, madam?
O, I would thou didst, so half my Egypt were
submerged and made a cistern for scaled snakes
Go, get thee hence
Hadst thou Narcissus in thy face,
to me thou wouldst appear most ugly
- He is married?
- I crave your Highness' pardon
- He is married?
- Take no offence that I would not offend you
To punish me for what you make me do
seems much unequal. He's married to Octavia
O, that his fault should make a knave
of thee, that art not what thou art sure of
Get thee hence
The merchandise which thou hast
brought from Rome are all too dear for me
Lie they upon thy hand,
and be undone by them
Good your Highness, patience - In
praising Antony, I have dispraised Caesar
- Many times, madam
- I am paid for it now
Lead me from hence, I faint
O, Iras, Charmian! 'Tis no matter
Go to the fellow, good Alexas
Bid him report the feature of Octavia,
her years, her inclination
Let him not leave out the colour
of her hair. Bring me word quickly
Let him forever go...
Let him not, Charmian
Though he be painted one way like a Gorgon,
the other way's a Mars
Bid you Alexas bring
me word how tall she is
Pity me, Charmian, but do not speak to me
Your hostages I have, so have you mine,
and we shall talk before we fight
Most meet that first we come to words, and therefore
have we our written purposes before us sent
Which if thou hast considered, let us know
if it will tie up thy discontented sword...
...and carry back to Sicily much tall youth
that else must perish here
To you all three, the senators alone of
this great world, chief factors for the gods
I do not know wherefore my father should
revengers want, having a son and friends...
...since Julius Caesar, who at Philippi the good
Brutus ghosted, there saw you labouring for him
What was it that moved
pale Cassius to conspire?
And what made the all-honoured, honest, Roman Brutus,
with the armed rest, courtiers of beauteous freedom...
...to drench the Capitol,
but that they would have one man but a man?
And that is it hath made me rig my navy,
at whose burden the angered ocean foams
With which I meant to scourge the ingratitude
that despiteful Rome cast on my noble father
Take your time
Thou canst not fear us, Pompey, with
thy sails. We'll speak with thee at sea
At land thou knowest
how much we do overcount thee
At land indeed
thou dost overcount me of my father's house
But since the cuckoo builds not for
himself, remain in it as thou mayst
Be pleased to tell us, for this is from the
present, how you take the offers we have sent you
- There's the point
- Which do not be entreated to...
...but weigh what it is worth embraced -
And what may follow, to try a larger fortune
You have made me offer of Sicily, Sardinia
And I must rid all the sea of pirates,
then to send measures of wheat to Rome
This agreed upon, to part with unhacked
edges and bear back our targes undinted
That's our offer
Know then, I came before you here
a man prepared to take this offer
But Mark Antony put me to some impatience
Though I lose the praise of it by telling, you must
know when Caesar and your brother were at blows...
...your mother came to Sicily
and did find her welcome friendly
I have heard it, Pompey, and am well studied
for a liberal thanks, which I do owe you
Let me have your hand
I did not think, sir, to have met you here
The beds in the East are soft
And thanks to you, that called me timelier
than my purpose hither, for I have gained by it
Since I saw you last,
there's a change upon you
Well, I know not what counts
harsh Fortune casts upon my face
But in my bosom shall she never come
to make my heart her vassal
- Well met here
- I hope so, Lepidus
Thus we are agreed. I crave our composition
may be written and sealed between us
That's the next to do
We'll feast each other ere we part,
and let's draw lots who shall begin
- That will I, Pompey
- No, Antony, take the lot
But, first or last, your fine Egyptian
cookery shall have the fame
I have heard that Julius Caesar
grew fat with feasting there
You have heard much
- I have fair meanings, sir
- And fair words to them
Aboard my galley I invite you all
Thy father, Pompey,
would never have made this treaty
You and I have known, sir
- At sea, I think
- We have, sir
- You have done well by water
- And you by land
I will praise any man that will praise me, though
it cannot be denied what I have done by land
Nor what I have done by water - Yes,
something you can deny for your own safety
- You have been a great thief by sea
- And you by land
There I deny my land service
But give me your hand, Menas.
We came hither to fight with you
For my part, I am sorry it is turned to a drinking.
Pompey doth this day laugh away his fortune
If he do, sure he cannot weep
it back again - You have said, sir
We looked not for Mark Antony here.
Pray you, is he married to Cleopatra?
Caesar's sister is called Octavia - True,
sir. She was the wife of Caius Marcellus
But she is now the wife of
Marcus Antonius - Pray you, sir?
'Tis true - Then is Caesar
and he forever knit together
If I were bound to divine of this unity,
I would not prophesy so
I think the policy of that purpose made more
in the marriage than the love of the parties
I think so, too. But you shall find the band
that seems to tie their friendship together...
...will be the very
strangler of their amity
Octavia is of a holy, cold, and still
conversation - Who would not have his wife so?
Not he that himself is not so, which is Mark
Antony. He will to his Egyptian dish again
- He married but his occasion here
- And thus it may be
Come, sir, will you aboard?
I have a health for you
I shall take it, sir.
We have used our throats in Egypt
Thus do they, sir. They take the flow of
the Nile by certain scales in the Pyramid
They know by the height, the lowness,
or the mean if dearth or foison follow
The higher Nilus swells,
the more it promises
As it ebbs, the seedsman upon the slime and ooze
scatters his grain, and shortly comes to harvest
- You've strange serpents there?
- Ay, Lepidus
Your serpent of Egypt is bred now of
your mud by the operation of your sun
- So is your crocodile
- They are so
- Sit, and some wine. A health to Lepidus
- Lepidus!
I am not so well as I should be,
but I'll never out
Not till you have slept.
I fear me you'll be in till then
Nay, certainly, I have heard the
Ptolemies' pyramises are very goodly things
Without contradiction I have heard that
- Pompey, a word
- Say, what is it?
Forsake thy sport, I do beseech
thee, captain, and hear me speak a word
Forbear me till anon
- This health to Lepidus
- Lepidus!
What manner of thing is your crocodile?
It is shaped, sir, like itself,
and it is as broad as it hath breadth
It is just so high as it is,
and moves with it own organs
It lives by that which nourisheth it, and
the elements once out of it, it transmigrates
- What colour is it of?
- Of it own colour too
- 'Tis a strange serpent
- 'Tis so, and the tears of it are wet
Will this description satisfy him?
With the health that Pompey gives him,
else he is a very epicure
Go hang, sir, hang! Tell me of that?
Away! Do as I bid you
If for the sake of merit thou wilt hear me,
rise from thy stool
- I think thou art mad. The matter?
- I have ever held my cap off to thy fortunes
Thou hast served me with much faith.
What's else to say?
Be jolly, lords
These quicksands, Lepidus,
keep off them, for you sink
- Wilt thou be lord of all the world?
- What sayst thou?
- Wilt thou be lord of the whole world?
That's twice - How should that be?
But entertain it, and though thou think me
poor, I am the man will give thee all the world
- Hast thou drunk well?
- No, Pompey, I have kept me from the cup
Thou art, if thou darest
be, the earthly Jove
Whatever the ocean pales or sky inclips
is thine, if thou wilt have it
Show me which way
These three world-sharers,
these competitors, are in thy vessel
Let me cut the cable, and when we are put
off, fall to their throats. All there is thine
Ah, this thou shouldst have done
and not have spoke on it
In me 'tis villainy.
In thee it had been good service
Thou must know 'tis not my profit
that does lead mine honour. Mine honour, it
Repent that ever thy tongue
hath so betrayed thine act
Being done unknown,
I should have found it afterwards well done
But must condemn it now.
Desist and drink
For this I'll never follow
thy palled fortunes more
Who seeks and will not take when
once 'tis offered shall never find it more
- This health to Lepidus
- Lepidus!
Bear him ashore.
I'll pledge it for him, Pompey
- There's a strong fellow, Menas
- Why?
He bears the third part of the world, man,
see'st not?
The third part, then, is drunk. Would
it were all, that it might go on wheels
- Drink thou. Increase the reels
- Come
This is not yet an Alexandrian feast - It
ripens towards it. Strike the vessel, ho!
Here's to Caesar
I could well forbear it. It's monstrous labour
when I wash my brain and it grows fouler
- Be a child of the time
- Possess it, I'll make answer
But I had rather fast from all, four days,
than drink so much in one
Come, let's all take hands till that the conquering
wine hath steeped our sense in soft and delicate Lethe
All take hands
Come, thou monarch of the vine,
Plumpy Bacchus, with pink eyne!
In thy vats our cares be drowned,
With thy grapes our hairs be crowned!
Cup us till the world go round!
What would you more?
Pompey, goodnight
Good brother, let me request you off.
Our graver business frowns at this levity
Gentle lords, let's part.
You see we have burnt our cheeks
Strong Enobarb is weaker than the wine,
and mine own tongue splits what it speaks
The wild disguise hath almost
anticked us all. What needs more words?
Goodnight.
Good Antony, your hand
- I'll try you on the shore
- And shall, sir. Give us your hand
O, Antony, you have my father's house
But what? We are friends.
Come down into the boat
- What, are the brothers parted?
- They have dispatched with Pompey
He is gone. The other three are sealing.
Octavia weeps to part from Rome. Caesar is sad
And Lepidus, since Pompey's feast, as Menas
says, is troubled with the green sickness
- 'Tis a noble Lepidus
- A very fine one
- O, how he loves Caesar
- Nay, but how dearly he adores Mark Antony
- Caesar? Why, he's the Jupiter of men
- What's Antony? The god of Jupiter
- Spake you of Caesar? How, the nonpareil
- O Antony, O thou Arabian bird
Would you praise Caesar, say 'Caesar'.
Go no further
Indeed, he plied them both with excellent
praises - But he loves Antony, yet he loves Caesar
Hoo, hearts, tongues, figures,
scribes, bards, poets...
...cannot think, speak, cast, write,
sing, number, his love to Antony
But as for Caesar,
kneel down, kneel down, and wonder
- Both he loves
- They are his shards and he their beetle
- So, this is to Athens. Adieu, noble Agrippa
- Good fortune, worthy soldier, and farewell
No further, sir
You take from me a great part of myself.
Use me well in it
Sister, prove such a wife as my thoughts make thee,
and as my farthest bond shall pass on thy approof
Most noble Antony, let not the
piece of virtue which is set betwixt us...
...as the cement of our love to keep it
builded, be the ram to batter the fortress of it
For better might we have loved without this
mean, if on both parts this be not cherished
- Make me not offended in your distrust
- I have said
You shall not find, though you be therein
curious, the least cause for what you seem to fear
So the gods keep you, and make
the hearts of Romans serve your ends
We will here part
Farewell, my dearest sister, fare thee well
The elements be kind to thee and make
thy spirits all of comfort. Fare thee well
My noble brother
The April's in her eyes. It is love's spring,
and these the showers to bring it on. Be cheerful
Sir, look well to my
husband's house, and...
- What, Octavia?
- I'll tell you in your ear
Her tongue will not obey her heart,
nor can her heart inform her tongue
The swan's-down feather that stands upon the swell
at the full of tide, and neither way inclines
- Will Caesar weep?
- Why, Enobarbus
When Antony found Julius Caesar dead,
he cried almost to roaring
And he wept
when at Philippi he found Brutus slain
That year indeed he
was troubled with a rheum
No, sweet Octavia, you shall hear from me still.
The time shall not outgo my thinking on you
Come, sir, come, I'll wrestle
with you in my strength of love
Look, here I have you, thus I let you go,
and give you to the gods
Adieu, be happy
Let all the number of the stars
give light to thy fair way
Farewell, farewell
Farewell
- Where is the fellow?
- Half afeard to come
Go to, go to.
Come hither, sir
Good Majesty, Herod of Jewry dare not
look upon you but when you are well pleased
That Herod's head I'll have
But how, when Antony is gone,
through whom I might command it?
- Come thou near
- Most gracious Majesty
- Did'st thou behold Octavia?
- Ay, dread queen
- Where?
- Madam, in Rome
I looked her in the face and saw her led
between her brother and Mark Antony
Is she as tall as me?
She is not, madam
- Didst hear her speak? Is she shrill-tongued or low?
- Madam, I heard her speak. She is low-voiced
That's not so good. He cannot like her long
- Like her? O Isis, 'tis impossible!
- I think so, Charmian
Dull of tongue, and dwarfish
What majesty is in her gait?
Remember, if ever thou looked'st on majesty
She creeps.
Her motion and her station are as one
She shows a body rather than a life,
a statue, than a breather
- Is this certain?
- Or I have no observance
Three in Egypt cannot make better note
He's very knowing, I do perceive it.
There's nothing in her yet
- The fellow has good judgment
- Excellent
- Guess at her years, I prithee
- Madam, she was a widow
- Widow? Charmian, hark
- And I do think she's thirty
- Bearest thou her face in mind? Is it long or round?
- Round even to faultiness
For the most part, too, they are
foolish that are so. Her hair what colour?
Brown, madam, and her
forehead as low as she would wish it
There's gold for thee.
Thou must not take my former sharpness ill
I will employ thee back again.
I find thee most fit for business
Go, make thee ready.
Our letters are prepared
- A proper man
- Indeed he is so
I repent me much that so I harried him.
Why, methinks...
...by him, this creature's no such thing
Nothing, madam
The man hath seen some majesty,
and should know
Hath he seen majesty?
Isis else defend, and serving you so long!
I have one thing more to
ask him yet, good Charmian
But 'tis no matter. Thou shalt
bring him to me where I will write
- All may be well enough
- I warrant you, madam
How now, friend Eros?
- There's strange news come, sir
- What, man?
Caesar and Lepidus
have made new wars upon Pompey
This is old. What is the success?
Caesar, having made use of Lepidus
in the wars 'gainst Pompey...
...presently denied him rivality, would not
let him partake in the glory of the action
And, not resting here, accuses him
of letters he had formerly wrote to Pompey
Upon his own appeal seizes him
- So the poor third is up
- Till death enlarge his confine
Then, world,
thou hast a pair of chaps, no more
And throw between them all the food
thou hast, they'll grind the one the other
Nay, nay, Octavia, not only that
That were excusable, that and
thousands more of semblable import
But he hath waged new wars against Pompey,
made his will and read it to public ear
Spoke scantly of me. When perforce
he could not but pay me terms of honour...
- ...cold and sickly he vented them
- O, my good lord, believe not all
Or if you must believe, stomach not all
A more unhappy lady, if this division chance,
never stood between, praying for both parts
The good gods will mock me presently when
I shall pray 'O, bless my lord and husband'
Undo that prayer by crying out as loud
'O, bless my brother'
Husband win, win brother
prays and destroys the prayer
No midway 'twixt these extremes at all
Gentle Octavia, let your best love draw to
that point which seeks best to preserve it
If I lose mine honour, I lose myself. Better
I were not yours than yours so branchless
But, as you requested,
yourself shall go between us
The meantime, lady, I'll raise the
preparation of a war shall stain your brother
Make your soonest haste,
so your desires are yours
Thanks to my lord. The Jove of power make
me, most weak, most weak, your reconciler
Wars 'twixt you twain would be
as if the world should cleave...
...and that slain men
should solder up the rift
Provide your going. Choose your own company,
and command what cost your heart has mind to
Contemning Rome,
he has done all this and more in Alexandria
Here's the manner of it. In the
marketplace, on a tribunal silvered...
...Cleopatra and himself in chairs of gold
were publicly enthroned
At their feet sat Caesarion,
whom they call my father's son...
...and all the unlawful issue that their
lust since then hath made between them
Unto her he gave the stablishment of Egypt
Made her of lower Syria, Cyprus, Lydia,
absolute queen
- This in the public eye?
- In the common showplace where they exercise
His sons he there
proclaimed the kings of kings
Great Media, Parthia, and Armenia
he gave to Alexander
To Ptolemy he assigned
Syria, Cilicia, and Phoenicia
She in the habiliments of the goddess Isis
that day appeared
And oft before gave audience, as 'tis
reported, so - Let Rome be thus informed
Who, queasy with his insolence already,
will their good thoughts call from him
The people knows it,
and have now received his accusations
Who does he accuse?
Caesar, and that,
having in Sicily Sextus Pompeius spoiled...
...we had not rated
him his part of the isle
Then does he say
he lent me some shipping, unrestored
Lastly, he frets that Lepidus
of the triumvirate should be deposed
And, being, that we detain all his revenue
- Sir, this should be answered
- 'Tis done already, and the messenger gone
I have told him Lepidus was grown too cruel
That he his high authority abused
and did deserve his change
For what I have conquered, I grant him part
But then in his Armenia and other
of his conquered kingdoms I demand the like
- He'll never yield to that
- Nor must not then be yielded to in this
Hail, Caesar, and my lords!
Hail, most dear Caesar
- That ever I should call thee castaway!
- You have not called me so, nor have you cause
Why have you stolen upon us thus?
You come not like Caesar's sister
The wife of Antony
should have an army for an usher...
...and the neighs of horse to tell of
her approach long ere she did appear
The trees by the way should have borne men, and
expectation fainted, longing for what it had not
Nay, the dust should have ascended to the
roof of heaven, raised by your populous troops
But you are come a market-maid to Rome...
...and have prevented the ostentation of our
love, which, left unshown, is often left unloved
Good my lord, to come thus was I
not constrained, but did it on my free will
My lord, Mark Antony,
hearing that you prepared for war...
...acquainted my grieved ear withal,
whereon I begged his pardon for return
Which soon he granted,
being an abstract 'tween his lust and him
Do not say so, my lord
I have eyes upon him,
and his affairs come to me on the wind
- Where is he now?
- My lord, in Athens
No, my most wronged sister.
Cleopatra hath nodded him to her
He hath given his empire up to a whore, who
now are levying the kings of the Earth for war
He hath assembled Bocchus, the
King of Libya, Archelaus of Cappadocia...
Philadelphos, King of Paphlagonia
the Thracian king, Adallas...
King Manchus of Arabia, King of Pont, Herod
of Jewry, Mithridates, King of Comagen...
Polemon and Amyntas,
the Kings of Mede and Lycaonia...
...with a more larger list of sceptres
Ay me, most wretched, that have my heart parted
betwixt two friends that does afflict each other!
Welcome to Rome,
nothing more dear to me
You are abused beyond
the mark of thought...
...and the high gods, to do you justice, makes
his ministers of us and those that love you
- Welcome, lady
- Welcome, dear madam
Each heart in Rome does love and pity you
Only the adulterous Antony, most
large in his abominations, turns you off...
...and gives his potent regiment
to a trull that noises it against us
- Is it so, sir?
- Most certain. Sister, welcome
Pray you, be ever known to patience.
My dearest sister!
- I will be even with thee, doubt it not
- But why, why, why?
Thou hast forspoke my being in these wars
and say'st it is not fit
Well, is it, is it?
Is it not denounced against us?
Why should not we be there in person?
Your presence needs must puzzle Antony
Take from his heart, take from his brain,
from his time, what should not then be spared
He is already traduced for levity
And 'tis said in Rome that Mardian, an
eunuch, and your maids manage this war
Sink Rome, and their tongues
rot that speak against us!
A charge we bear in the war, and as the president
of my kingdom will appear there for a man
Speak not against it.
I will not stay behind
Nay, I have done.
Here comes the Emperor
Is it not strange, Ventidius,
that from Tarentum and Brundusium...
...he could so quickly cut the Ionian Sea
and take in Toryne?
- You have heard on it, sweet?
- Celerity is never more admired than by the negligent
A good rebuke, which might have well becomed
the best of men, to taunt at slackness
- Ventidius, we will fight with him by sea
- By sea, what else?
- Why will my lord do so?
- For that he dares us to it
So hath my lord dared him to single fight
Ay, and to wage this battle at Pharsalia,
where Caesar fought with Pompey
But these offers, which serve not for his
vantage, he shakes off, and so should you
Your ships are not well manned, your mariners are
muleteers, reapers, people engrossed by swift impress
In Caesar's fleet are those
that often have against Pompey fought
Their ships are yare, yours heavy. No disgrace
shall fall you for refusing him at sea...
- ...being prepared for land
- By sea, by sea
Most worthy sir, you therein throw away the
absolute soldiership you have by land...
Distract your army, which doth most consist
of war-marked footmen...
Leave unexecuted your own renowned knowledge,
quite forgo the way which promises assurance...
...and give up yourself merely to
chance and hazard from firm security
- I'll fight at sea
- I have sixty sails, Caesar none better
Our overplus of shipping will we burn,
and with the rest full-manned...
...from the head of Actium
beat the approaching Caesar
But if we fail, we then can do it at land
- Scarus, thy business?
- The news is true, my lord, he is descried
- Caesar has taken Toryne
- Can he be there in person?
'Tis impossible,
strange that his power should be
Ventidius, our nineteen legions thou shalt
hold by land, and our twelve thousand horse
We'll to our ship.
Away, my Thetis
O noble emperor, do not fight by sea!
Trust not to rotten planks
Do you misdoubt this sword
and these my wounds?
Let the Egyptians and the Phoenicians
go a-ducking
We have used to conquer standing
on the earth and fighting foot to foot
Well, well, away
By Hercules, I think I am in the right
Soldier, thou art, but his whole action
grows not in the power on it
So our leader's led,
and we are women's men
Strike not by land, keep whole.
Provoke not battle till we have done at sea
Set we our squadrons on yond
side of the hill in eye of Caesar's battle
Our fortune lies upon this jump
Naught, naught, all naught!
I can behold no longer
The Antoniad, the Egyptian admiral, with
all their sixty, fly and turn the rudder
To see it mine eyes are blasted
- Gods and goddesses, all the whole synod of them!
- What's thy passion?
The greater cantle of the world is lost
with very ignorance
We have kissed away kingdoms
and provinces - How appears the fight?
On our side, like the tokened pestilence,
where death is sure
Yon ribaudred nag of Egypt, whom leprosy
overtake, in the midst of the fight...
When vantage like a pair of twins appeared
both as the same, or rather, ours the elder...
...the breeze upon her like a cow in June,
hoists sails and flies
That I beheld. Mine eyes did sicken at the
sight and could not endure a further view
She once being loofed,
the noble ruin of her magic, Antony...
...claps on his sea-wing and, like a doting mallard,
leaving the fight in height, flies after her
I never saw an action of such shame
Experience, manhood, honour
never before did violate so itself
Alack, alack
Our fortune on the sea is out of breath
and sinks most lamentably
Had our general been what he knew himself,
it had gone well
O, he has given example for our flight
most grossly by his own
Ay, are you thereabouts?
Why then, goodnight indeed
Toward Peloponnesus are they fled. 'Tis easy to
it, and there I will attend what further comes
To Caesar will I render
my legions and my horse
I'll yet follow the wounded chance of Antony,
though my reason sits in the wind against me
Hark, the land bids me tread no
more upon it. It is ashamed to bear me
Friends, come hither
I am so lated in the world
that I have lost my way forever
I have a ship laden with gold. Take that,
divide it. Fly, and make your peace with Caesar
I have myself resolved upon a course
which has no need of you
Let that be left which leaves itself.
To the sea-side straightway
Leave me, I pray, a little.
Pray you, now
Nay, do so. For indeed I have lost command.
Therefore I pray you, I'll see you by and by
Nay, gentle madam, to him, comfort him
- Do, most dear queen
- Do! Why, what else?
Let me sit down. O Juno!
No, no, no, no, no
- See you here, sir?
- Oh fie, fie, fie!
- Madam
- Madam, O good empress
- Sir, sir...
- Yes, my lord, yes
Octavius at Philippi kept his sword even like a
dancer, while I struck the lean and wrinkled Cassius
And 'twas I that the mad Brutus ended
Octavius alone dealt on lieutenantry, and
no practice had in the brave squares of war
Yet now... no matter
Ah, stand by
The Queen, my lord, the Queen
Go to him, madam, speak to him.
He's unqualitied with very shame
Well, then, sustain me
Most noble sir, arise. The Queen approaches
Her head's declined, and death will
seize her but your comfort makes the rescue
I have offended reputation,
a most unnoble swerving
Sir, the Queen
O, whither hast thou led me, Egypt?
See how I convey my
shame out of thine eyes...
...by looking back what I have left behind
'stroyed in dishonour
O, my lord, my lord, forgive my fearful sails!
I little thought you would have followed
Egypt, thou knew'st too well my heart
was to thy rudder tied by the strings...
...and thou shouldst tow me after
Over my spirit thy full supremacy
thou knewest, and that thy beck...
...might from the bidding of the
gods command me - O, my pardon!
Now I must to the young man send humble treaties,
dodge and palter in the shifts of lowness...
...who with half the bulk of the world played
as I pleased, making and marring fortunes
You did know how much you were my conqueror
And that my sword, made weak by
my affection, would obey it on all cause
Pardon, pardon!
Fall not a tear, I say.
One of them rates all that is won and lost
Give me a kiss
Even this repays me
We sent our schoolmaster.
Is he come back?
Love, I am full of lead
Some wine within there,
and our viands!
Fortune knows we scorn her most
when most she offers blows
Let him appear that's come from Antony
- Know you him?
- Caesar, 'tis his schoolmaster
An argument that he is plucked, when hither
he sends so poor a pinion of his wing...
...which had superfluous kings for
messengers not many moons gone by
Approach, and speak
- Such as I am, I come from Antony
- Declare thine office
Lord of his fortunes he salutes thee,
and requires to live in Egypt
Which not granted, he lessens
his requests, and to thee sues...
...to let him breathe between the heavens and
earth, a private man in Athens. This for him
Next, Cleopatra does confess thy greatness,
submits her to thy might...
...and of thee craves the circle of the Ptolemies
for her heirs, now hazarded to thy grace
For Antony, I have no ears to his request
The Queen of audience
nor desire shall fail...
...so she from Egypt drive her
all-disgraced friend, or take his life there
This if she perform, she shall
not sue unheard. So to them both
- Fortune pursue thee
- Bring him through the bands
To try thy eloquence now 'tis time,
dispatch. From Antony win Cleopatra
Promise, and in our name, what she requires.
Add more, from thine invention, offers
Women are not in their best fortunes strong,
but want will perjure the never-touched vestal
Try thy cunning, Demetrius
Make thine own edict for thy pains,
which we will answer as a law
- Caesar, I go
- Observe how Antony becomes his flaw...
...and what thou think'st his very
action speaks in every power that moves
Caesar, I shall
- What shall we do, Enobarbus?
- Think, and die
Is Antony or we in fault for this?
Antony only,
that would make his will lord of his reason
What though you fled from that great face of
war, whose several ranges frighted each other?
Why should he follow? The itch of his affection
should not then have nicked his captainship
'Twas a shame no less than was his loss, to
course your flying flags and leave his navy gazing
Prithee, peace
- Is that his answer?
- Ay, my lord
The Queen shall then have courtesy,
so she will yield us up?
- He says so
- Let her know it
To the boy Caesar send this grizzled head, and he
will fill thy wishes to the brim with principalities
That head, my lord?
To him again. Tell him he wears
the rose of youth upon him...
...from which the world should note
something particular
His coin, ships, legions may be a coward's.
I dare him therefore...
...to lay his gay caparisons apart and answer me
declined, sword against sword, ourselves alone
I'll write it. Follow me
Yes, like enough, high-battled
Caesar will unstate his happiness...
...and be staged to the
show against a sworder
That he should dream, knowing all measures,
the full Caesar will answer his emptiness!
Caesar, thou hast subdued his judgment too
- A messenger from Caesar
- What, no more ceremony? Admit him, sir
Mine honesty and I begin to square
The loyalty well held to fools
does make our faith mere folly
Yet he that can endure
to follow with allegiance a fallen lord...
...does conquer him that did his master
conquer, and earns a place in the story
- Caesar's will?
- Hear it apart
- None but friends. Say boldly
- So haply are they friends to Antony
He needs as many, sir, as Caesar has,
or needs not us
If Caesar please,
our master will leap to be his friend
For us, you know whose he is, we are,
and that is Caesar's
So.
Thus then, thou most renowned
Caesar entreats not to consider in what
case thou standest further than he is Caesar
Go on. Right royal
He knows that you embrace not Antony
as you did love, but as you feared him
The scars upon your honour therefore he does
pity as constrained blemishes, not as deserved
He is a god and knows what is most right. Mine
honour was not yielded, but conquered merely
To be sure of that, I will ask Antony
Shall I say to Caesar what you require of
him? For he partly begs to be desired to give
It much would please him that of his
fortunes you should make a staff to lean upon
But it would warm his spirits
to hear from me you had left Antony...
...and put yourself under his shroud,
the universal landlord
- What's your name?
- My name is Demetrius
Most kind messenger,
say to great Caesar this in deputation
I kiss his conquering hand. Tell him I am prompt
to lay my crown at his feet, and there to kneel
Tell him, from his all-obeying breath
I hear the doom of Egypt
'Tis your noblest course.
Give me grace to lay my duty on your hand
Your Caesar's father oft,
when he hath mused of taking kingdoms in...
...bestowed his lips on that unworthy place
as it rained kisses
Favours? By Jove that thunders!
Approach, there
Ah, you kite!
Now, gods and devils!
Authority melts from me of late
Have you no ears? I am Antony yet.
Take hence this jack and whip him
'Tis better playing with a lion's whelp
than with an old one dying
Moon and stars, whip him
Were it twenty of the greatest tributaries
that do acknowledge Caesar...
...should I find them
so saucy with the hand of she here...
What's her name, since she was Cleopatra?
Whip him, fellows, till like a boy you see
him cringe his face and whine aloud for mercy
- Take him hence
- Mark Antony!
Tug him away.
Being whipped, bring him again
This jack of Caesar's shall
bear us an errand to him
You were half blasted ere I knew you
Have I my pillow left unpressed in Rome,
forborne the getting of a lawful race...
...and by a gem of women,
to be abused by one that looks on feeders?
Good my lord...
- You have been a boggler ever
- O, is it come to this?
I found you as a morsel
cold upon dead Caesar's trencher
Nay, you were a fragment
of Gnaeus Pompey's...
...besides what hotter hours, unregistered in
vulgar fame, you have luxuriously picked out
- Wherefore is this?
- To let a fellow that will take rewards...
...and say 'God quit you!'
be familiar with my playfellow, your hand
This kingly seal and
plighter of high hearts!
O, that I were upon the hill of Basan,
to outroar the horned herd
- Is he whipped?
- Soundly, my lord
- Cried he? And begged he pardon?
- He did ask favour
If that thy father live, let him repent
thou wast not made his daughter
And be thou sorry to follow Caesar in his triumph,
since thou hast been whipped for following him
Henceforth the white hand of a lady
fever thee. Shake thou to look on it
Get thee back to Caesar,
tell him thy entertainment
Look thou say he makes me angry with him...
...for he seems proud and disdainful,
harping on what I am, not what he knew I was
He makes me angry
And at this time most easy 'tis to do it, when
my good stars that were my former guides...
...have empty left their orbs
and shot their fires into the abysm of hell
If he mislike my speech and what is done, tell
him he has Scarus, my enfranched bondman...
...whom he may at pleasure whip, or hang,
or torture, as he shall like to quit me
Urge it thou
Hence with thy stripes, begone
Have you done yet?
Alack, our terrene moon is now eclipsed,
and it portends alone the fall of Antony
I must stay his time
To flatter Caesar, would you mingle eyes
with one that ties his points?
- Not know me yet?
- Cold-hearted toward me?
Ah, dear, if I be so, from my cold heart let
heaven engender hail and poison it in the source
And the first stone drop in my neck.
As it determines, so dissolve my life
The next Caesarion smite,
till by degrees the memory of my womb...
...together with my brave Egyptians all, by the
discandying of this pelleted storm lie graveless
Till the flies and gnats of Nile
have buried them for prey
I am satisfied
Caesar sets down in Alexandria,
where I will oppose his fate
Our force by land hath nobly held
Our severed navy too have knit again,
and fleet, threatening most sealike
Where hast thou been, my heart?
Dost thou hear, lady?
If from the field I shall return once more
to kiss these lips, I will appear in blood
I and my sword will earn our chronicle
- There's hope in it yet
- That's my brave lord
I will be treble-sinewed, -hearted,
breathed, and fight maliciously
It is my birthday.
I had thought to have held it poor
But since my lord is Antony again,
I will be Cleopatra
We will yet do well
Call all his noble captains to my lord
Do so, we'll speak to them, and tonight
I'll force the wine peep through their scars
Come on, my queen, there's sap in it yet
The next time I do fight I'll make Death love me,
for I will contend even with his pestilent scythe
Now he'll outstare the lightning
To be furious is to be frighted out of fear,
and in that mood the dove will peck the estridge
And I see still a diminution in our
captain's brain restores his heart
When valour preys on reason,
it eats the sword it fights with
I will seek some way to leave him
He calls me 'boy', and chides
as he had power to beat me out of Egypt
Demetrius he hath whipped with rods, dares
me to personal combat, Caesar to Antony
Let the old ruffian know I have many other
ways to die. Meantime laugh at his challenge
Caesar must think, when one so great
begins to rage, he's hunted even to falling
Give him no breath, but now make boot of his
distraction. Never anger made good guard for itself
Let our best heads know that tomorrow
the last of many battles we mean to fight
Within our files there are, of those that served
Mark Antony but late, enough to fetch him in
See it done, and feast the army
We have store to do It,
and they have earned the waste
Poor Antony
He will not fight with me, Domitius?
- No
- Why should he not?
He thinks, being twenty times of
better fortune, he is twenty men to one
Tomorrow, soldier,
by sea and land I'll fight
Or I will live, or bathe my dying honour
in the blood shall make it live again
- Woo't thou fight well?
- I'll strike and cry 'Take all'
Well said. Come on
Call forth my household servants.
Let's tonight be bounteous at our meal
Give me thy hand
Thou hast been rightly honest
So hast thou, thou, and thou, and thou
You have served me well,
and kings have been your fellows
Well, my good fellows, wait on me tonight.
Scant not my cups...
...and make as much of me as when mine empire
was your fellow too, and suffered my command
- What does he mean?
- To make his followers weep
Tend me tonight.
Maybe it is the period of your duty
Haply you shall not see me more,
or if, a mangled shadow
Perchance tomorrow
you'll serve another master
I look on you as one that takes his leave
Mine honest friends, I turn you not away
But, like a master married to
your good service, stay till death
Tend me tonight two hours, I ask no more,
and the gods yield you for it
What mean you, sir, to give them
this discomfort? Look, they weep
And I, an ass, am onion-eyed.
For shame, transform us not to women
Now the witch take me if I meant it thus!
Grace grow where those drops fall
Know, my hearts, I hope well of tomorrow,
and will lead you...
...where rather I'll expect victorious life
than death and honour
Let's to supper, come,
and drown consideration
Brother, goodnight. Tomorrow is the day
It will determine one way. Fare you well
- Heard you of nothing strange about the streets?
- Nothing. What news?
- Belike 'tis but a rumour.
Goodnight to you - Well, sir, goodnight
- Soldiers, have careful watch
- And you. Goodnight, goodnight
Here we. And if tomorrow our navy thrive, I
have an absolute hope our landmen will stand up
'Tis a brave army, and full of purpose
Peace. What noise?
- List, list
- Hark
- Music in the air
- Under the earth
- It bodes well, does it not?
- No
Peace, I say.
What should this mean?
'Tis the god Hercules, whom Antony loved,
now leaves him
Follow the noise so far as we have quarter.
Let's see how it will give off
- Content
- 'Tis strange
Eros! Mine armour, Eros!
- Sleep a little
- No, my chuck
Eros, come, mine armour, Eros!
Come, good fellow, put mine iron on
If fortune be not ours today,
it is because we brave her. Come
Nay, I'll help too
- What's this for?
- Ah, let be, let be
Thou art the armourer of my heart
False, false. This, this!
Sooth, la, I'll help. Thus it must be
Well, well, we shall thrive now.
Seest thou, my good fellow?
- Go, put on thy defences
- Briefly, sir
- Is not this buckled well?
- Rarely, rarely
He that unbuckles this, till we do please to
doff it for our repose, shall hear a storm
Thou fumblest, Eros, and my queen's
a squire more tight at this than thou
Dispatch
O love, that thou couldst see my wars
today, and knewest the royal occupation...
...thou shouldst see a workman in it
The gods make this a happy day to Antony
Would thou and those thy scars
before prevailed to make me fight at land
Had'st thou done so, the kings that have revolted
and the soldier that has this morning left thee...
...would have still followed thy heels
- Who's gone this morning?
- Who? One ever near thee
Call for Enobarbus, he shall not hear thee,
or from Caesar's camp say 'I am none of thine'
- What sayest thou?
- Sir, he is with Caesar
Sir, his chests and treasure
he has not with him
- Is he gone?
- Most certain
Go, Eros, send his treasure after.
Do it
Detain no jot, I charge thee
Write to him, I will subscribe,
gentle adieus and greetings
Say that I wish he never find more cause
to change a master
O, my fortunes have corrupted honest men
Dispatch
Enobarbus!
Fare thee well, dame
Whatever becomes of me,
this is a soldier's kiss
Rebukable and worthy shameful check it
were to stand on more mechanic compliment
I'll leave thee now like a man of steel
You that will fight, follow me close.
I'll bring you to it
Adieu
Please you retire to your chamber?
Lead me.
He goes forth gallantly
That he and Caesar might
determine this great war in single fight!
Then Antony...
But now...
Well, on
Go forth, Agrippa, and begin the fight.
Our will is Antony be took alive
- Make it so known
- Caesar, I shall
The time of universal peace is near
Prove this a prosperous day, the three-nooked
world shall bear the olive freely
Antony is come into the field
Go charge Agrippa, plant those
that have revolted in the van...
...that Antony may seem to spend his fury
upon himself
Alexas did revolt.
For this pains, Caesar hath hanged him
Scarus and the rest that fell away
have entertainment but no honourable trust
I have done ill
Of which I do accuse myself so sorely
that I will joy no more
Enobarbus, Antony hath after thee sent
all thy treasure, with his bounty overplus
The messenger came on my guard, and
at thy tent is now unloading of his mules
I give it you
Mock not, Enobarbus, I tell you true.
Your emperor continues still a Jove
I am alone the villain of the Earth,
and feel I am so most
O Antony, thou mine of bounty
How wouldst thou have paid my better service,
when my turpitude thou dost so crown with gold?
This blows my heart
If swift thought break it not,
a swifter mean shall outstrike thought
But thought will do it, I feel
I fight against thee? No
I will go seek some ditch wherein to die.
The foulest best fits my latter part of life
We have beat him to his camp. Run one
before and let the Queen know of our deeds
Tomorrow before the sun shall see us, we'll
spill the blood that has today escaped
You have shown all Hectors. Enter
the city. Clip your wives, your friends
Tell them your feats,
whilst they with joyful tears...
...wash the congealment from your wounds
and kiss the honoured gashes whole
Lord of lords! O infinite virtue, comest thou
smiling from the world's great snare uncaught?
Mine nightingale,
we have beat them to their beds
Behold this man,
commend unto his lips thy favouring hand
Kiss it, my warrior. He hath fought today as if a
god in hate of mankind had destroyed in such a shape
I'll give thee, friend, an
armour all of gold. It was a king's
He has deserved it,
were it carbuncled like holy Phoebus' car
Give me thy hands
Had our great palace the capacity to camp
this host, we all would sup together...
...and drink carouses to the next
day's fate, which promises royal peril
Trumpeters,
with brazen din blast you the city's ear...
...that heaven and Earth may strike their
sounds together, applauding our approach
O, bear me witness, night.
Be witness to me, O thou blessed moon
When men revolted
shall upon record bear hateful memory...
...poor Enobarbus did
before thy face repent
O sovereign mistress of true melancholy,
the poisonous damp of night dispunge upon me
That life, a very rebel to my will,
may hang no longer on me
Throw my heart against the
flint and hardness of my fault...
...which, being dried with grief, will
break to powder and finish all foul thoughts
O Antony, nobler than my revolt is
infamous, forgive me in thine own particular
But let the world rank me in register
a master-leaver and a fugitive
O Antony! O Antony!
Their preparation is today by sea,
yet they are not joined
Swallows have built in Cleopatra's sails
their nests. The augurs say they know not...
...they cannot tell, look grimly
and dare not speak their knowledge
Antony is valiant and dejected,
and by starts his fretted fortunes...
...give him hope and fear
of what he has and has not
All is lost!
This foul Egyptian hath betrayed me
My fleet hath yielded to the foe...
...and yonder they cast their caps up
and carouse together like friends long lost
Triple-turned whore!
'Tis thou hast sold me to this novice...
...and my heart makes only wars on thee
Bid them all fly. For when I am revenged
upon my charm, I have done all
Bid them all fly. Begone
O sun, thy uprise shall I see no more
Fortune and Antony part here.
Even here do we shake hands
- Ah, thou spell, avaunt!
- Why is my lord enraged against his love?
Vanish, or I shall give thee thy deserving
and blemish Caesar's triumph
Let him take thee
and hoist thee up to the shouting plebeians
Follow his chariot,
like the greatest spot of all thy sex
Most monster-like be shown
to poorest diminutives, to dolts
And let patient Octavia plow thy visage up
with her prepared nails
'Tis well thou art
gone, if it be well to live
But better 'twere thou fell'st into my fury,
for one death might have prevented many
The witch shall die
To the young Roman boy she hath sold me,
and I fall under this plot. She dies for it
Help me, my women
O, he's more mad than Telamon for his shield.
The boar of Thessaly was never so embossed
To the monument. There lock
yourself and send him word you are dead
The soul and body rive not more in parting
than greatness going off
To the monument.
Mardian, go tell him I have slain myself
Say that the last I spoke was 'Antony',
and word it, prithee, piteously
Hence, Mardian,
and bring me how he takes my death
To the monument
Eros, thou yet beholdest me?
Ay, noble lord
Sometime we see a cloud that's dragonish,
a vapour sometime like a bear or lion...
A towered citadel, a pendent rock,
a forked mountain, or blue promontory...
...with trees upon it that nod unto
the world and mock our eyes with air
Thou hast seen these signs,
they are black vesper's pageants
Ay, my lord
That which is now a horse,
even with a thought the rack dislimns...
...and makes it indistinct as
water is in water - It does, my lord
My good knave Eros,
now thy captain is even such a body
Here I am Antony, yet cannot
hold this visible shape, my knave
I made these wars for Egypt, and the Queen,
whose heart I thought I had, for she had mine
Which whilst it was mine had
annexed unto it a million more, now lost
She, Eros, has packed cards with Caesar and
false-played my glory unto an enemy's triumph
Nay, weep not, gentle Eros.
There is left us ourselves to end ourselves
O, thy vile lady!
She has robbed me of my sword
No, Antony, my mistress loved thee and
her fortunes mingled with thine entirely
Hence, saucy eunuch, peace! She
hath betrayed me and shall die the death
Death of one person can be paid but once,
and that she has discharged
What thou wouldst do is done unto thy hand. The
last she spake was 'Antony, most noble Antony'
Then in the midst a tearing groan
did break the name of Antony
It was divided between her heart and lips.
She rendered life thy name so buried in her
- Dead, then?
- Dead
Unarm, Eros. The long day's
task is done, and we must sleep
That thou depart'st hence safe does
pay thy labour richly. Go. Off, pluck off
The sevenfold shield of Ajax
cannot keep the battery from my heart
O, cleave, my sides!
Heart, once be stronger than thy continent
Crack thy frail case.
Apace, Eros, apace
No more a soldier
Bruised pieces, go.
You have been nobly borne
From me awhile
I will overtake thee, Cleopatra,
and weep for my pardon
So it must be, for now the torch is out.
Seal, then, and all is done
Eros!
I come, my queen
Eros!
Stay for me
Where souls do couch on flowers, we'll hand in hand,
and with our sprightly port make the ghosts gaze
Dido and her Aeneas shall want troops,
and all the haunt be ours
- Come, Eros, Eros!
- What would my lord?
Thou art sworn, Eros, that when the exigent
should come, which now is come indeed...
When I should see behind me the inevitable
prosecution of disgrace and horror...
...that on my command thou then
wouldst kill me. Do it. The time is come
Thou strikest not me, 'tis Caesar
thou defeatest. Put colour in thy cheek
The gods withhold me! Shall I do that which all the
Parthian darts, though enemy, lost aim and could not?
Eros, wouldst thou be windowed in great Rome
and see thy master thus with pleached arms...
...bending down his corrigible neck,
his face subdued to penetrative shame?
I would not see it - Come, then,
for with a wound I must be cured
Draw that thy honest sword...
...which thou hast worn most useful
for thy country - O, sir, pardon me
When I did make thee free, sworest
thou not then to do this when I bade thee?
Do it at once, or thy precedent services
are all but accidents unpurposed
Draw, and come
Turn from me then that noble countenance
wherein the worship of the whole world lies
- Lo thee
- My sword is drawn
Then let it do at once
the thing why thou hast drawn it
My dear master, my captain, and my emperor, let me
say, before I strike this bloody stroke, farewell
- 'Tis said, man, and farewell
- Farewell, great chief
- Shall I strike now?
- Now, Eros
Why, there, then
Thus I do escape the
sorrow of Antony's death
Thrice nobler than myself
Thou teachest me, O valiant Eros,
what I should and thou couldst not
But I will be a bridegroom in my death
and run into it as to a lover's bed
Come then, and, Eros, thy master dies
thy scholar. To do thus I learned of thee
How, not dead?
Not dead
The guard, how? O, dispatch me!
What's the noise?
I have done my work ill, friend.
O, make an end of what I have begun
Thy death and fortunes
bid thy followers fly
This sword but shown to Caesar
with this tidings shall enter us with him
- Where's Antony?
- There, Diomed, there
Lives he?
Wilt thou not answer, man?
Art thou there, Diomed? Draw thy sword,
and give me sufficing strokes for death
Most absolute lord,
my mistress Cleopatra sent me to thee
- When did she send thee?
- Now, my lord
- Where is she?
- Locked in her monument
She had a prophesying fear of what hath come to
pass. For when she saw, which never shall be found...
...you did suspect she had disposed with Caesar,
and that your rage would not be purged...
...she sent you word she was dead
But fearing since how it might work,
hath sent me to proclaim the truth
And I am come, I dread, too late - Too
late, good Diomed. Call my guard, I prithee
What ho! The Emperor's guard!
The guard, what ho! Come, your lord calls
Bear me, good friends, where Cleopatra bides.
'Tis the last service that I shall command you
I have led you oft. Carry me now,
good friends, and have my thanks for all
O Charmian, I will never go from hence
- Be comforted, dear madam
- No, I will not
All strange and terrible events are
welcome, but comforts we despise
Our size of sorrow, proportioned to our
cause, must be as great as that which makes it
- How now? Is he dead?
- His death's upon him, but not dead
O sun, burn the great sphere thou movest in.
Darkling stand the varying shore of the world
O Antony, Antony, Antony!
Help me, Charmian! Help me, Iras! Let's
draw him hither. Help, good friends below!
Peace! Not Caesar's valour hath overthrown
Antony, but Antony's hath triumphed on itself
So it should be that none but Antony
should conquer Antony, but woe 'tis so
I am dying, Egypt, dying
Only I here importune death awhile until of many
thousand kisses the poor last I lay upon thy lips
I dare not, dear, dear my lord, pardon,
I dare not, lest I be taken
But come, come, Antony.
Help me, my women. We must draw thee up
- Assist, good friends
- O, quick, or I am gone
Here's sport indeed.
How heavy weighs my lord
Our strength is all gone into heaviness,
that makes the weight
Had I great Juno's power, the strong-winged Mercury
should fetch thee up and set thee by Jove's side
Yet come a little. Wishers were ever fools.
O, come, come, come
And welcome, welcome
Die where thou hast lived, quicken with kissing.
Had my lips that power, thus would I wear them out
I am dying, Egypt, dying. Give me
some wine, and let me speak a little
No, let me speak,
and let me rail so high...
...that the false huswife Fortune
break her wheel, provoked by my offence
One word, sweet queen.
Of Caesar seek your honour with your safety
- They do not go together
- Gentle, hear me
None about Caesar trust but Proculeius
My resolution and my hands I'll trust,
none about Caesar
The miserable change now at my end
lament nor sorrow at
But please your thoughts in feeding them
with those my former fortunes
Wherein I lived the greatest
prince of the world, the noblest
And do now not basely die, not cowardly
put off my helmet to my countryman
A Roman by a Roman valiantly vanquished
Now my spirit is going.
I can no more
Noblest of men, woo't die?
Hast thou no care of me?
Shall I abide in this dull world, which
in thy absence is no better than a sty?
O see, my women,
the crown of the earth doth melt
My lord!
O, withered is the garland of the war,
the soldier's pole is fallen
Young boys and girls
are level now with men
The odds is gone, and there is nothing
left remarkable beneath the visiting moon
O, quietness, lady
She's dead, too, our sovereign.
Royal Egypt, Empress!
- O madam, madam, madam!
- Peace, peace, Iras!
No more but even a woman
And commanded by such poor passion as the
maid that milks and does the meanest chares
It were for me to throw my
sceptre at the injurious gods...
...to tell them that this world did
equal theirs till they had stolen our jewel
All's but naught
Patience is sottish,
and impatience does become a dog that's mad
Then is it sin to rush into the secret
house of death ere death dare come to us?
How do you, women?
What, what, good cheer
Why, how now, Charmian?
My noble girls
Ah, women, women. Look, our
lamp is spent, it's out. Come, away
This case of that huge spirit now is cold
Ah women, women! Come, we have no friend
but resolution and the briefest end
Go to him, Maecenas, bid him yield
Being so frustrate, tell him,
he mocks the pauses that he makes
Caesar, I shall
Wherefore is that? And what art thou
that darest appear thus to us?
I am called Ventidius
Mark Antony I served,
and wore my life to spend upon his haters
If thou please to take me to thee,
as I was to him I'll be to Caesar
If thou pleasest not,
I yield thee up my life
- What is't thou sayest?
- I say, O Caesar, Antony is dead
The breaking of so great a thing
should make a greater crack
He is dead, Caesar,
This is his sword
I robbed his wound of it.
Behold it stained with his most noble blood
O Antony, I have followed thee to this,
but we do lance diseases in our bodies
I must perforce have shown to thee
such a declining day or look on thine
We could not stall together
in the whole world
But yet let me lament with tears
as sovereign as the blood of hearts...
That thou my brother, my competitor
in top of all design, my mate in empire...
Friend and companion in the front of war,
the arm of mine own body...
And the heart
where mine his thoughts did kindle...
...that our stars unreconciliable
should divide our equalness to this
Hear me, good friends...
But I will tell you at some meeter season
Whence are you?
The Queen my mistress, confined in her
monument, of thy intents desires instruction
That she preparedly may frame herself
to the way she's forced to
Bid her have good heart. She soon
shall know of us, by some of ours...
...how honourable and how kindly
we determine for her
- For Caesar cannot live to be ungentle
- May fortune pursue thee
Come hither, Proculeius.
Go and say we purpose her no shame
Give her what comforts
the quality of her passion shall require
Lest, in her greatness, by some
mortal stroke she do defeat us
For her life in Rome
would be eternal in our triumph
Go, and with your speediest
bring us what she says...
- ...and how you find of her
- Caesar, I shall
Go with me to my tent, where you shall see
how hardly I was drawn into this war
How calm and gentle I proceeded still
in all my writings
Go with me and see
what I can show in this
Caesar sends greeting to the Queen of Egypt
And bids thee study on what fair demands
thou meanest to have him grant thee
- What's thy name?
- My name is Proculeius
Antony did tell me of
you, bade me trust you
But I do not greatly care to be deceived
that have no use for trusting
If your master would have a queen his beggar, you
must tell him that majesty, to keep decorum...
...must no less beg than a kingdom. If he
please to give me conquered Egypt for my son...
...he gives me so much of mine own
as I will kneel to him with thanks
Be of good cheer. You're fallen
into a princely hand, fear nothing
Make your full reference freely to my lord, who is
so full of grace that it flows over on all that need
Let me report to him your sweet dependency,
and you shall find a conqueror...
...that will pray in aid for kindness
where he for grace is kneeled to
Pray you tell him I am his fortune's vassal
and I give him the greatness he has got
I hourly learn a doctrine of obedience,
and would gladly look him in the face
This I'll report, dear lady. Have comfort, for I
know your plight is pitied of him that caused it
Guard her till Caesar come
- Royal queen!
- O, Cleopatra, thou art taken, queen!
Quick, quick, good hands
Hold, worthy lady, hold
Do not yourself such wrong,
who are in this relieved, but not betrayed
What, of death, too,
that rids our dogs of languish?
Cleopatra, do not abuse my master's bounty
by the undoing of yourself
Let the world see his nobleness well acted,
which your death will never let come forth
Where art thou, Death?
Come hither, come!
Come, come, and take a queen
worth many babes and beggars
O, temperance, lady - Sir, I
will eat no meat, I'll not drink, sir
If idle talk will once be
necessary, I'll not sleep neither
This mortal house I'll ruin,
do Caesar what he can
Know, sir, that I will not wait pinioned
at your master's court
Nor once be chastised
with the sober eye of dull Octavia
Shall they hoist me up and show me
to the shouting varletry of censuring Rome?
Rather a ditch in Egypt
be gentle grave unto me
Rather on Nilus' mud lay me stark naked, and
let the waterflies blow me into abhorring
Rather make my country's high pyramides
my gibbet and hang me up in chains
You do extend these thoughts of horror
further than you shall find cause in Caesar
Proculeius, what thou hast done thy master
Caesar knows, and he hath sent for thee
- For the Queen, I'll take her to my guard
- Be gentle to her
To Caesar I will speak what you
shall please, if you'll employ me to him
Say I would die
- Most noble empress, you have heard of me
- I cannot tell
Assuredly you know me - No
matter, sir, what I have heard or known
You laugh when boys or
women tell their dreams
- Is it not your trick?
- I understand not, madam
I dreamt there was an emperor Antony
O, such another sleep,
that I might see but such another man
- If it might please you...
- His face was as the heavens
And therein stuck a sun and moon,
which kept their course...
- ...and lighted the little O, the earth
- Most sovereign creature...
His legs bestrid the ocean,
his reared arm crested the waves
His voice was propertied as all
the tuned spheres, and that to friends
But when he meant to quail and
shake the orb, he was as rattling thunder
For his bounty, there was no winter in it. An
autumn 'twas, that grew the more by reaping
His delights were dolphin-like, they showed
his back above the element they lived in
In his livery walked crowns and crownets, realms
and islands were as plates dropped from his pocket
Think you there was, or might be,
such a man as this I dreamt of?
- Gentle madam, no
- You lie up to the hearing of the gods
But if there be nor ever were one such,
it's past the size of dreaming
Nature wants stuff
to vie strange forms with fancy
Yet to imagine an Antony were nature's piece
'gainst fancy, condemning shadows quite
Hear me, good madam. Your loss is as yourself,
great, and you bear it as answering to the weight
Would I might never
overtake pursued success...
...but I do feel, by the rebound of yours,
a grief that smites my very heart at root
I thank you, sir
- Know you what Caesar means to do with me?
- I am loath to tell you what I would you knew
- Nay, pray you, sir
- Though he be honourable...
- He'll lead me, then, in triumph
- Madam, he will. I know it
Which is the Queen of Egypt?
It is the Emperor, madam
Arise. You shall not kneel
I pray you, rise. Rise, Egypt
Sir, the gods will have it thus.
My master and my lord I must obey
Cleopatra, know we will
extenuate rather than enforce
If you apply yourself to our intents, which towards you
are most gentle, you shall find a benefit in this change
But if you seek to lay on me a cruelty
by taking Antony's course...
...you shall bereave yourself
of my good purposes
And put your children to that destruction
which I'll guard them from if thereon you rely
- I'll take my leave
- And may through all the world
'Tis yours, and we, your scutcheons and your signs
of conquest, shall hang in what place you please
Cleopatra, make not your thoughts
your prisons. No, dear queen
For we intend so to dispose you as yourself
shall give us counsel. Feed and sleep
Our care and pity is so much upon you
that we remain your friend. And so adieu
- My master and my lord
- Not so. Adieu
He words me, girls, he words me, that I should
not be noble to myself. But hark thee, Charmian
Finish, good lady. The bright
day is done, and we are for the dark
Hie thee again.
I have spoke already, and it is provided
- Go put it to the haste
- Madam, I will
Madam, Caesar through
Syria intends his journey...
...and within three days
you with your children will he send before
Make your best use of this
- Agrippa, I shall remain your debtor
- I your servant
Adieu, good queen. I must attend
on Caesar - Farewell, and thanks
Now, Iras, what thinkest thou?
Thou an Egyptian puppet
shall be shown in Rome as well as I
- The gods forbid!
- Nay, 'tis most certain, Iras
Saucy lictors will catch at us like strumpets,
and scald rhymers ballad us out of tune
The quick comedians extemporally will
stage us and present our Alexandrian revels
Antony shall be brought drunken forth
And I shall see some squeaking Cleopatra
boy my greatness in the posture of a whore
I'll never see it! For I am sure mine nails
are stronger than mine eyes
Why, that's the way to fool their preparation
and to conquer their most absurd intents
Now, Charmian!
Show me, my women, like a queen
Go fetch my best attires.
I am again for Cydnus to meet Mark Antony
Sirrah Iras, go.
Now, noble Charmian, we'll dispatch indeed
And when thou hast done this chare,
I'll give thee leave to play till Doomsday
Bring our crown and all
- Wherefore's this noise?
- Here is a rural fellow...
...that will not be denied your
Highness' presence. He brings you figs
Let him come in
What poor an instrument may do
a noble deed. He brings me liberty
My resolution's placed,
and I have nothing of woman in me
Now from head to foot I am marble-constant.
Now the fleeting moon no planet is of mine
Hast thou the pretty worm of Nilus there
that kills and pains not?
Truly I have him, but I would not be the
party that should desire you to touch him
For his biting is immortal. Those that
do die of it do seldom or never recover
- Rememberest thou any that have died on it?
- Very many, men and women too
I heard of one of them no longer than yesterday.
A very honest woman, but something given to lie...
...as a woman should not
do but in the way of honesty
How she died of the biting of it, what pain she
felt. Truly, she makes a very good report of the worm
But this is most falliable,
the worm's an odd worm
- Get thee hence. Farewell
- I wish you all joy of the worm
- Farewell
- Very good. Give it nothing, I pray you...
- ...for it is not worth the feeding
- Will it eat me?
You must not think I am so simple but I
know the devil himself will not eat a woman
I know that a woman is a dish for the gods
if the devil dress her not
But truly these same whoreson devils
do the gods great harm in their women...
...for in every ten that they make,
the devils mar five
- Well, get thee gone. Farewell
- Yes, forsooth
I wish you joy of the worm
Give me my robe
Put on my crown
I have immortal longings in me
Now no more the juice of Egypt's grape
shall moist this lip
Yare, yare, good Iras, quick
Methinks I hear Antony call. I see
him rouse himself to praise my noble act
I hear him mock the luck of Caesar, which
the gods give men to excuse their after wrath
Husband, I come.
Now to that name my courage prove my title
I am fire and air.
My other elements I give to baser life
So, have you done? Come then,
and taste the last warmth of my lips
Farewell, kind Charmian
Iras, long farewell
Have I the aspic in my lips? Dost fall?
Dissolve, thick cloud, and rain,
that I may say the gods themselves do weep
This proves me base.
If she first meet the curled Antony...
...he'll make demand of her, and spend
that kiss which is my heaven to have
Come, thou mortal wretch
With thy sharp teeth this knot
intrinsicate of life at once untie
Poor venomous fool,
be angry and dispatch
- O eastern star
- Peace, peace
Dost thou not see my baby at my breast,
that sucks the nurse asleep?
- O, break, O, break!
- As sweet as balm, as soft as air, as gentle...
O Antony
Nay, I will take thee too
What should I stay...
...in this vile world?
So, fare thee well
Now boast thee, Death,
in thy possession lies a lass unparalleled
Downy windows, close
And golden Phoebus,
never be beheld of eyes again so royal
Your crown's awry.
I'll mend it, and then play
- Where's the Queen?
- Speak softly. Wake her not
- Caesar hath sent...
- Too slow a messenger
What work is here, Charmian?
Is this well done?
It is well done, and fitting for a princess
descended of so many royal kings
Ah, soldier!
Caesar, thy thoughts
touch their effects in this
Thyself art coming to see performed the
dreaded act which thou so soughtest to hinder
O sir, you are too sure an augurer.
That you did fear is done
Bravest at the last, she leveled at our
purposes and, being royal, took her own way
The manner of their deaths?
O Caesar, this Charmian lived
but now, she stood and spake
I found her trimming up the diadem
on her dead mistress
Tremblingly she stood,
and on the sudden dropped
She looks like sleep, as she would catch
another Antony in her strong toil of grace
A pair so famous
High events as these
strike those that make them
And their story is no less in pity than his
glory which brought them to be lamented
Our army shall in solemn show
attend this funeral, and then to Rome
Come, Agrippa,
see high order in this great solemnity
overflows the measure
Those his goodly eyes, that over the files and
musters of the war have glowed like plated Mars...
...now bend, now turn the office and
devotion of their view upon a tawny front
His captain's heart, which in the scuffles of great
fights hath burst the buckles on his breast...
...reneges all temper and is become the
bellows and the fan to cool a gypsy's lust
Look where they come
Take but good note,
and you shall see in him...
...the triple pillar of the world
transformed into a strumpet's fool
Behold and see
If it be love indeed, tell me how much -
There's beggary in the love that can be reckoned
I'll set a bourn how far to be beloved - Then
must thou needs find out new heaven, new Earth
News, my good lord, from Rome
- Grates me, the sum
- Nay, hear him, Antony
Fulvia perchance is angry
Or who knows if the scarce-bearded Caesar
have not sent his powerful mandate to you
'Do this, or this, take in that kingdom,
and enfranchise that'
'Perform it, or else we damn thee'
- How, my love?
- Perchance? Nay, and most like
You must not stay here longer,
your dismission is come from Caesar
Therefore hear it, Antony
Where's Fulvia's process?
Caesar's, I would say. Both?
The messenger!
As I am Egypt's queen, thou blushest, Antony,
and that blood of thine is Caesar's homager
Else so thy cheek pays shame when
shrill-tongued Fulvia scolds. The messenger!
Let Rome in Tiber melt and the wide arch
of the ranged empire fall. Here is my space
Kingdoms are clay.
Our dungy earth alike feeds beast as man
The nobleness of life is to do thus
When such a mutual pair
and such a twain can do it...
...in which I bind, on pain of punishment,
the world to wit we stand up peerless
Excellent falsehood!
Why did he marry Fulvia and not love her?
I'll seem the fool I am not.
Antony will be himself
But stirred by Cleopatra
Now for the love of Love and her soft hours,
let's not confound the time with conference harsh
There's not a minute of our lives should stretch
without some pleasure. Now, what sport tonight?
- Hear the ambassador
- Fie, wrangling queen...
...whom everything becomes,
to chide, to laugh, to weep
Whose every passion fully strives
to make itself, in thee, fair and admired
No messenger but thine
And all alone tonight we'll wander through
the streets and note the qualities of people
Come, my queen,
last night you did desire it
Boo! Speak not to us
- Is Caesar with Antonius prized so slight?
- Sir, sometimes when he is not Antony...
...he comes too short of that great
property which still should go with Antony
I am full sorry that he approves the
common liar who thus speaks of him at Rome
Lord Alexas, sweet Alexas, most anything
Alexas, almost most absolute Alexas
Where's the soothsayer
that you praised so to the Queen?
O, that I knew this husband which you say
must change his horns with garlands
- Soothsayer!
- Your will?
Is this the man? Is it
you, sir, that know things?
In nature's infinite book of secrecy a
little I can read - Show him your hand
Bring in the banquet quickly,
wine enough Cleopatra's health to drink
Good sir, give me good fortune
- I make not, but foresee
- Pray then, foresee me one
- You shall be yet far fairer than you are
- He means in flesh
- No, you shall paint when you are old
- Wrinkles forbid!
- Vex not his prescience. Be attentive
- Hush
- You shall be more beloving than beloved
- I had rather heat my liver with drinking
Nay, hear him
Good now, some excellent fortune
Let me be married to three kings
in a forenoon and widow them all
Let me have a child at fifty
to whom Herod of Jewry may do homage
Find me to marry me with Octavius Caesar,
and companion me with my mistress
You shall outlive the lady whom you serve -
O, excellent. I love long life better than figs
You have seen and proved a fairer former
fortune than that which is to approach
Then belike my children shall have no names.
Prithee, how many boys and wenches must I have?
If every of your wishes had a womb,
and fertile every wish, a million
Out, fool! I forgive thee for a witch
You think none but your sheets
are privy to your wishes
- Nay, come. Tell Iras hers
- We'll know all our fortunes
Mine, and most of our fortunes tonight,
shall be drunk to bed
- There's a palm presages chastity, if nothing else
- Even as the overflowing Nilus presageth famine
- Go, you wild bedfellow, you cannot soothsay
- Prithee, tell her but a workaday fortune
- Your fortunes are alike
- But how, but how? Give me particulars
I have said - Am I not an
inch of fortune better than she?
Well, if you were but an inch of fortune
better than I, where would you choose it?
Not in my husband's nose
Our worser thoughts heavens mend!
Alexas, come, his fortune, his fortune!
O, let him marry a woman that cannot go,
sweet Isis, I beseech thee
And let her die, too, and give him a worse,
and let worse follow worse...
...till the worst of all follow him
laughing to his grave, fiftyfold a cuckold
Amen, dear goddess,
hear that prayer of the people
For, as it is a heartbreaking to see a handsome
man loose-wived, so it is a deadly sorrow...
- ...to behold a foul knave uncuckolded
- Amen
Lo now, if it lay in their hands to make me a cuckold,
they would make themselves whores but they'd do it
- Saw you my lord?
- No, lady
- Was he not here?
- No, madam
He was disposed to mirth, but on the
sudden a Roman thought hath struck him
- Enobarbus
- Madam?
Seek him and bring him hither
- Where's Alexas?
- Here at your service
- My lord approaches
- We will not look upon him. Go with us
Move, move
- Fulvia thy wife first came into the field
- Against my brother Lucius?
Ay. But soon that war had end, and
the time's state made friends of them...
...jointing their force 'gainst Caesar, whose better iss ue
in the war from Italy upon the first encounter drave them
Well, what worst?
- The nature of bad news infects the teller
- When it concerns the fool or coward
On.
Things that are past are done, with me
'Tis thus: Who tells me true, though in his
tale lie death, I hear him as he flattered
Labienus, this is stiff news,
hath with his Parthian force extended Asia
From Euphrates his conquering banner shook,
from Syria to Lydia and to Ionia, whilst...
- ...Antony, thou wouldst say?
- O, my lord
Speak to me home, mince
not the general tongue
Name Cleopatra as she is called in Rome.
Rail thou in Fulvia's phrase
And taunt my faults with such full licence
as both truth and malice have power to utter
Fulvia thy wife is dead
- Where died she?
- In Sicyon
Her length of sickness, with what else more
serious importeth thee to know, this bears
Forbear me
There's a great spirit gone.
Thus did I desire it
What our contempts doth often hurl from us,
we wish it ours again
She's good, being gone. The hand
could pluck her back that shoved her on
I must from this enchanting queen break off
Ten thousand harms more than
the ills I know my idleness doth hatch
- Save me, Antony!
- How now, Enobarbus!
- What's your pleasure, sir?
- I must with haste from hence
Why then we kill all our women
We see how mortal an unkindness is to them.
If they suffer our departure, death's the word
I must be gone
Under a compelling occasion, let women die.
It were pity to cast them away for nothing
Cleopatra, catching but the
least noise of this, dies instantly
I have seen her die twenty times
upon far poorer moment
I do think there is cunning in death
which commits some loving act upon her...
- ...she hath such a celerity in dying
- She is cunning past man's thought
Alack, sir, no, her passions are made
of nothing but the finest part of pure love
We cannot call her winds and waters
sighs and tears
They are greater storms and tempests
than almanacs can report
This cannot be cunning in her. If it be,
she makes a shower of rain as well as Jove
- Would I had never seen her
- O, sir, you had then left unseen...
...a wonderful piece of work, which not to have
been blest withal would have discredited your travel
Fulvia is dead
- Sir?
- Fulvia is dead
- Fulvia?
- Dead
Why, sir, give the
gods a thankful sacrifice
If there were no more women but Fulvia, then had
you indeed a cut, and the case to be lamented
This grief is crowned with consolation.
Your old smock brings forth a new petticoat
The business she hath broached in the state
cannot endure my absence
And the business you have broached here
cannot be without you
Especially that of Cleopatra's,
which wholly depends on your abode
No more light answers
I shall break the cause of our expedience
to the Queen, and get her leave to part
Sextus Pompeius hath given the dare to
Caesar and commands the empire of the sea
Our slippery people, whose love is never linked
to the deserver till his deserts are past...
...begin to throw Pompey the Great
and all his dignities upon his son
Who, high in name and power, higher than both in
blood and life, stands up for the main soldier
Whose quality, going on,
the sides of the world may danger
Say our pleasure, to such whose place is
under us, requires our quick remove from hence
I shall do it
- Where is he?
- I did not see him since
See where he is, who's with him,
what he does. I did not send you
If you find him sad, say I am dancing
If in mirth, report that I am sudden sick.
Quick, and return
Madam, methinks,
if you did love him dearly...
...you do not hold the method
to enforce the like from him
What should I do, I do not?
- In each thing give him way
- Cross him in nothing
Thou teachest like a
fool the way to lose him
- Tempt him not so too far. I wish, forbear
- In time we hate that which we often fear
But here comes Antony
I am sick and sullen
- I am sorry to give breathing to my purpose
- Help me away, dear Charmian! I shall fall
It cannot be thus long.
The sides of nature will not sustain it
- Now, my dearest queen...
- Pray you stand farther from me
- What's the matter?
- I know by that same eye there's some good news
What, says the married woman you may go?
Would she had never given you leave to come
Let her not say 'tis I that keep you here.
I have no power upon you. Hers you are
- The gods best know...
- O, never was there queen so mightily betrayed
Yet at the first I saw the
treasons planted - Cleopatra...
Why should I think
you can be mine, and true...
Though you in swearing
shake the throned gods
...who have been false to Fulvia?
Riotous madness, to be entangled with those
mouth-made vows which break themselves in swearing
- Most sweet queen...
- Nay, pray you seek no colour for your going
But bid farewell and go
When you sued staying,
then was the time for words. No going then
Eternity was in our lips and eyes,
bliss in our brows' bent
None our parts so poor
but was a race of heaven
They are so still, or thou, the greatest soldier
of the world, art turned the greatest liar
- How now, lady?
- I would I had thy inches
Thou shouldst know there were
a heart in Egypt - Hear me, queen
The strong necessity of time
commands our services awhile
But my full heart remains in use with you
Our Italy shines over with civil swords
Sextus Pompeius makes his approaches to the
port of Rome. Rich in his father's honour...
...he creeps apace into the hearts of such
as have not thrived upon the present state
My more particular, and that which most with
you should safe my going, is Fulvia's death
Though age from folly could not give
me freedom, it does from childishness
Can Fulvia die?
She's dead, my queen. Look here, and at thy
sovereign leisure read the garboils she awaked
At the last, best,
see when and where she died
O, most false love! Where be the sacred vials
thou shouldst fill with sorrowful water?
Now I see, I see, in Fulvia's death,
how mine received shall be
Quarrel no more.
By the fire that quickens Nilus' slime...
...I go from hence thy soldier, servant,
making peace or war as thou affects
Cut my lace, Charmian, come!
But let it be.
I am quickly ill and well, so Antony loves
My precious queen, forbear, and give true evidence
to his love, which stands an honourable trial
So Fulvia told me.
I prithee turn aside and weep for her
Then bid adieu to me,
and say the tears belong to Egypt
Good now, play one scene of excellent
dissembling, and let it look like perfect honour
- You'll heat my blood. No more!
- You can do better yet, but this is meetly
- Now by my sword...
- ...and target
Still he mends, but this is not the best
Look, prithee, Charmian, how this Herculean
Roman does become the carriage of his chafe
- I'll leave you, lady
- Courteous lord, one word
Sir, you and I must part, but that's not it
Sir, you and I have loved, but
there's not it. That you know well
Something it is I would...
O, my oblivion is a very Antony,
and I am all forgotten
But that your royalty holds idleness your
subject, I should take you for idleness itself
'Tis sweating labour to bear such idleness
so near the heart as Cleopatra this
But, sir, forgive me, since my becomings
kill me when they do not eye well to you
Your honour calls you hence
Therefore be deaf to my unpitied folly,
and all the gods go with you
Upon your sword sit laurel victory, and
smooth success be strewed before your feet
Let us go. Come
Our separation so abides and flies
that thou, residing here, goes yet with me
And I, hence fleeting,
here remain with thee
Away!
You may see, Lepidus,
and henceforth know...
...it is not Caesar's natural vice
to hate our great competitor
From Alexandria this is the news
He fishes, drinks,
and wastes the lamps of night in revel
Is not more manlike than Cleopatra, nor
the queen of Ptolemy more womanly than he
Hardly gave audience,
or vouchsafed to think he had partners
You shall find there a man who is the
abstract of all faults that all men follow
I must not think there are evils enough
to darken all his goodness
His faults in him seem as the spots of
heaven, more fiery by night's blackness
Hereditary rather than purchased,
what he cannot change than what he chooses
You are too indulgent
Let's grant it is not amiss
to tumble on the bed of Ptolemy...
To give a kingdom for a mirth, to sit and
keep the turn of tippling with a slave...
...to reel the streets at noon and stand
the buffet with knaves that smells of sweat
Say this becomes him...
As his composure must be rare indeed
whom these things cannot blemish
...yet must Antony no way excuse his foils when
we do bear so great weight in his lightness
Here's more news
Most noble Caesar,
Pompey is strong at sea
And it appears he is beloved
of those that only have feared Caesar
To the ports the discontents repair,
and men's reports give him much wronged
I should have known no less
It hath been taught us from the primal state
that he which is was wished until he were
And the ebbed man, never loved till never
worth love, comes deared by being lacked
This common body,
like to a vagabond flag upon the stream...
...goes to and back, lackeying the
varying tide to rot itself with motion
Caesar, I bring thee word
Menecrates and Menas, famous pirates,
makes the sea serve them...
...which they ear and wound
with keels of every kind
Many hot inroads they make in Italy
and flush youth revolt
No vessel can peep forth
but 'tis as soon taken as seen
For Pompey's name strikes more
than could his war resisted
Antony,
leave thy lascivious wassails
When thou once was beaten from Modena,
at thy heel did famine follow
Thou didst drink the stale of horses and the
gilded puddle which beasts would cough at
Thy palate then did deign
the roughest berry on the rudest hedge
Yea, like the stag when snow the pasture
sheets, the barks of trees thou browsed
On the Alps it is reported thou didst eat
strange flesh which some did die to look on
And all this... It wounds thine
honour that I speak it now...
...was borne so like a soldier
that thy cheek so much as lanked not
- 'Tis pity of him
- Let his shames quickly drive him to Rome
'Tis time we twain did show ourselves in the field,
and to that end assemble we immediate council
Pompey thrives in our idleness
Tomorrow, Caesar, I shall be
furnished to inform you rightly...
...both what by sea and land
I can be able to front this present time
Till which encounter,
it is my business too. Farewell.
Farewell, my lord. What you shall know meantime
of stirs abroad, I shall beseech you, sir...
- ...to let me be partaker
- Doubt not, sir. I knew it for my bond
If the great gods be just
they shall assist the deeds of justest men
Know, worthy Pompey,
that what they do delay they not deny
I shall do well.
The people love me, and the sea is mine
My powers are crescent, and my
auguring hope says it will come to the full
Mark Antony in Egypt sits at dinner,
and will make no wars without doors
Caesar gets money where he loses hearts
Lepidus flatters both, of both is flattered.
But he neither loves, nor either cares for him
Caesar and Lepidus are in the field.
A mighty strength they carry
- Where have you this? 'Tis false
- From Menecrates, sir
He dreams. I know they are in
Rome together, looking for Antony
But all the charms of love, salt Cleopatra,
soften thy waned lip!
Let witchcraft join with
beauty, lust with both
Tie up the libertine in a field of feasts,
keep his brain fuming
Epicurean cooks
sharpen with cloyless sauce his appetite...
...that sleep and feeding may prorogue
his honour even till a Lethe'd dullness
- How now, Menecrates?
- This is most certain that I shall deliver
Mark Antony is every hour in Rome expected. Since
he went from Egypt 'tis a space for farther travel
I could have given less matter a better ear
Menas, I did not think this amourous surfeiter
would have donned his helm for such a petty war
His soldiership is twice the other twain
But let us rear the higher our opinion...
...that our stirring can from the lap of Egypt's
widow pluck the never lust-wearied Antony
I cannot hope Caesar and Antony
shall well greet together
His wife that's dead did trespasses to
Caesar. His brother warred upon him...
...although I think not moved by Antony
But how the fear of us may cement their divisions
and bind up the petty difference, we yet not know
Be it as our gods will have it. It only stands
our lives upon to use our strongest hands
Come, Menas
- Charmian
- Madam?
- Ha, ha! Give me to drink mandragora
- Why, madam?
That I might sleep out
this great gap of time my Antony is away
You think of him too much
- O, 'tis treason
- Madam, I trust not so
- Thou, eunuch Mardian
- What's your highness' pleasure?
I take no pleasure in aught an eunuch has.
Hast thou affections?
- Yes, gracious madam
- Indeed?
Not in deed, madam, for I can do nothing
but what indeed is honest to be done
Yet have I fierce affections,
and think what Venus did with Mars
O, Charmian, where thinkest thou he is now?
Stands he, or sits he? Or does he walk?
Or is he on his horse? O happy
horse, to bear the weight of Antony!
Do bravely, horse,
for wot'st thou whom thou movest?
The demi-Atlas of this Earth,
the arm and burgonet of men
He's speaking now, or murmuring
'Where's my serpent of old Nile?'
For so he calls me. Now I feed
myself with most delicious poison
Think on me, that am with Phoebus' amorous
pinches black, and wrinkled deep in time
O, Julius Caesar, when thou wast here above
the ground, I was a morsel for a monarch
And great Pompey would stand
and make his eyes grow in my brow
There would he anchor his aspect,
and die with looking on his life
Your Highness, your Majesty,
Sovereign of Egypt, hail!
How much unlike art thou Mark Antony
Yet coming from him, that great medicine
hath with his tinct gilded thee
How goes it with my brave Mark Antony?
Last thing he did, dear queen, he kissed, the
last of many doubled kisses, this orient pearl
- His speech sticks in my heart
- Mine ear must pluck it thence
'Good friend', quoth he, 'Say the firm Roman to
great Egypt sends this treasure of an oyster'
'At whose foot, to mend the petty present, I
will piece her opulent throne with kingdoms'
'All the East, ' say thou,
'shall call her mistress'
What, was he sad, or merry?
Like to the time of the year between the extremes
of hot and cold, he was nor sad nor merry
O, well-divided disposition Note him,
note him, good Charmian, 'tis the man!
But note him. He was not sad, for he would
shine on those that make their looks by his
He was not merry, which seemed to tell them
his remembrance lay in Egypt with his joy
But between both.
O, heavenly mingle!
Be'st thou sad or merry, the violence of
either thee becomes, so does it no man's else
- Met'st thou my posts?
- Ay, madam, twenty several messengers
Why do you send so thick?
Who's born that day when I forget
to send to Antony shall die a beggar
Ink and paper, Charmian.
Welcome, my good Alexas
- Did I, Charmian, ever love Caesar so?
- O, that brave Caesar!
Be choked with such another emphasis
- Say 'the brave Antony'
- The valiant Caesar
By Isis, I will give thee bloody teeth if
thou with Caesar paragon again my man of men
By your most gracious
pardon, I sing but after you
My salad days, when I was green in judgment,
cold in blood, to say as I said then
But come, away, get me ink and paper
He shall have every day a several greeting,
or I'll unpeople Egypt
Good Enobarbus, 'tis a worthy deed,
and shall become you well...
...to entreat your captain to soft and gentle
speech - I shall entreat him to answer like himself
If Caesar move him, let Antony look over
Caesar's head and speak as loud as Mars
By Jupiter, were I the wearer of
Antonio's beard, I would not shave it today
'Tis not a time for private stomaching
Every time serves
for the matter that is then born in it
But small to greater matters must
give way - Not if the small come first
Your speech is passion.
But pray you, stir no embers up
- Here comes the noble Antony
- And yonder Caesar
If we compose well here, to Parthia.
Hark, Ventidius
I do not know, Maecenas. Ask Agrippa
Noble friends, that which combined us was most
great, and let not a leaner action rend us
What's amiss, may it be gently heard
When we debate our trivial difference loud,
we do commit murder in healing wounds
Then, noble partners,
the rather for I earnestly beseech...
...touch you the sourest points
with sweetest terms
'Tis spoken well. Were we before
our armies, and to fight, I should do thus
- Welcome to Rome
- Thank you
- Sit
- Sit, sir
Nay, then
I learn you take things ill which
are not so, or, being, concern you not
I must be laughed at if or for nothing or
a little, I should say myself offended...
...and with you chiefly in the world
More laughed at,
that I should once name you derogately...
...when to sound your
name it not concerned me
My being in Egypt,
Caesar, what was it to you?
No more than my residing here at Rome
might be to you in Egypt
Yet if you there did practise on my state,
your being in Egypt might be my question
How intend you, practised?
You may be pleased to catch at mine intent
by what did here befall me
Your wife and brother made wars upon me,
and their contestation was theme for you
You were the word of war
You do mistake your business.
My brother never did urge me in his act
Of this my letters before did satisfy you. If
you'll patch a quarrel, it must not be with this
You praise yourself by laying defects of
judgment to me, but you patched up your excuses
Not so, not so. I know you could not lack.
As for my wife...
...the third of the world is yours, which with
a snaffle you may pace easy, but not such a wife
Would we had all such wives, that the
men might go to wars with the women
I wrote to you when rioting in Alexandria.
You did pocket up my letters...
...and with taunts
did gibe my missive out of audience
Sir, he fell upon me ere admitted, then
Three kings I had newly feasted,
and did want of what I was in the morning
But next day told him of myself, which
was as much as to have asked him pardon
Let this fellow be nothing of our strife.
If we contend, out of our question wipe him
You have broken the article of your oath, which
you shall never have tongue to charge me with
- Soft, Caesar
- No, Lepidus, let him speak
The honour is sacred which he talks on now,
supposing that I lacked it
But on, Caesar.
The article of my oath?
To lend me arms and aid when I
required them, the which you both denied
Neglected, rather
And then when poisoned hours
had bound me up from mine own knowledge
As nearly as I may I'll
play the penitent to you
Truth is that Fulvia, to have me out of
Egypt, made wars here. For which myself...
...the ignorant motive, do so far ask pardon
as befits mine honour to stoop in such a case
'Tis noble spoken
If it might please you to enforce
no further the griefs between you...
...to forget them quite were to remember
that the present need speaks to atone you
Worthily spoken, Maecenas
Or, if you borrow one another's
love for the instant, you may...
...when you hear no more words of Pompey,
return it again
You shall have time to wrangle in
when you have nothing else to do
Thou art a soldier only. Speak no more -
That truth should be silent I had almost forgot
You wrong this presence, therefore speak
no more - Go to, then. Your considerate stone
I do not much dislike the matter,
but the manner of his speech
For it cannot be we shall remain in friendship,
our conditions so differing in their acts
Yet if I knew what hoop should hold us staunch,
from edge to edge of the world I would pursue it
- Give me leave, Caesar
- Speak, Agrippa
Thou hast a sister by the mother's side, admired
Octavia. Great Mark Antony is now a widower
Say not so, Agrippa. If Cleopatra heard you,
your reproof were well deserved of rashness
I am not married, Caesar.
Let me hear Agrippa further speak
To hold you in perpetual amity,
to make you brothers...
...and to knit your hearts with an unslipping
knot, take Antony Octavia to his wife
Whose beauty claims
no worse a husband than the best of men
Whose virtue and whose general graces
speak that which none else can utter
By this marriage all little jealousies,
which now seem great...
...and all great fears, which now import
their dangers, would then be nothing
Truths would be tales,
where now half-tales be truths
Her love to both would each to other
and all loves to both draw after her
Pardon what I have spoke, for 'tis a studied,
not a present thought, by duty ruminated
Will Caesar speak?
Not till he hears how Antony is touched
with what is spoke already
What power is in Agrippa, if I would say
'Agrippa, be it so', to make this good?
The power of Caesar,
and his power unto Octavia
May I never to this good purpose,
that so fairly shows, dream of impediment
Let me have thy hand.
Further this act of grace
And from this hour the heart of brothers
govern in our loves and sway our great designs
There's my hand
A sister I bequeath you
whom no brother did ever love so dearly
Let her live to join our kingdoms and our
hearts, and never fly off our loves again
Happily, amen
I did not think to draw my
sword 'gainst Pompey...
...for he hath laid strange
courtesies and great of late upon me
I must thank him only,
lest my remembrance suffer ill report
- At heel of that, defy him
- Time calls upon us
Of us must Pompey presently be sought,
or else he seeks out us
Haste we for it.
Yet, ere we put ourselves in arms...
...dispatch we the
business we have talked of
With most gladness, and do invite you to my
sister's view, whither straight I'll lead you
Let us, Lepidus, not lack your company -
Noble Antony, not sickness should detain me
Welcome from Egypt, sir
Half the heart of Caesar, worthy Maecenas!
- My honourable friend Agrippa!
- Good Enobarbus!
We have cause to be glad that matters are so
well digested. You stayed well by it in Egypt
Ay, sir, we did sleep day out of countenance
and made the night light with drinking
Eight wild boars roasted whole at a breakfast,
and but twelve persons there. Is this true?
This was but as a fly by an eagle
We had much more monstrous matter of feast,
which worthily deserved noting
She's a most triumphant lady,
if report be square to her
When she first met Mark Antony, she pursed
up his heart upon the river of Cydnus
There she appeared indeed,
or my reporter devised well for her
I will tell you
The barge she sat in
like a burnished throne burned on the water
The poop was beaten gold, purple the sails, and
so perfumed that the winds were lovesick with them
The oars were silver,
which to the tune of flutes kept stroke...
...and made the water which they beat to
follow faster, as amorous of their strokes
For her own person, it
beggared all description
She did lie in her pavilion,
cloth-of-gold, of tissue...
...overpicturing that Venus
where we see the fancy outwork nature
On each side her stood pretty dimpled boys, like
smiling Cupids, with divers-coloured fans...
...whose wind did seem to glow the delicate cheeks
which they did cool, and what they undid did
O, rare for Antony!
Her gentlewomen, like the Nereides,
so many mermaids...
...tended her in the eyes,
and made their bends adornings
At the helm a seeming mermaid steers
The silken tackle swell with the touches of those
flower-soft hands that yarely frame the office
From the barge a strange invisible perfume
hits the sense of the adjacent wharfs
The city cast her people out upon her
And Antony, enthroned in the market-place,
did sit alone, whistling to the air...
...which but for vacancy had gone to gaze
on Cleopatra too, and made a gap in nature
Rare Egyptian!
Upon her landing, Antony sent to her,
invited her to supper
She replied it should be better
he became her guest, which she entreated
Our courteous Antony, whom never
the word of 'No' woman heard speak...
...being barbered ten
times over, goes to the feast
And for his ordinary
pays his heart for what his eyes eat only
Royal wench!
She made great Caesar lay his sword to bed
He ploughed her, and she cropped
I saw her once hop forty paces through the
public street, and having lost her breath...
...she spoke and panted that she did make defect
perfection, and breathless pour breath forth
Now Antony must leave her utterly
Never. He will not
Age cannot wither her,
nor custom stale her infinite variety
Other women cloy the appetites they feed,
but she makes hungry where most she satisfies
For vilest things become themselves in her, that
the holy priests bless her when she is riggish
If beauty, wisdom, modesty can settle the heart
of Antony, Octavia is a blessed lottery to him
Let us go. Good Enobarbus, make
yourself my guest whilst you abide here
Humbly, sir, I thank you
The world and my great office
will sometimes divide me from your bosom
All which time before the gods my
knee shall bow my prayers to them for you
Goodnight, sir
My Octavia,
read not my blemishes in the world's report
I have not kept my square, but that
to come shall all be done by the rule
Good night, dear lady
- Goodnight, sir
- Goodnight
- Now, sirrah, you do wish yourself in Egypt?
- Would I had never come from thence, nor you thither
If you can, your reason?
I see it in my motion, have it not in my
tongue. But yet hie you to Egypt again
Say to me, whose fortunes shall
rise higher, Caesar's or mine?
Caesar's
If thou dost play with him at any game,
thou art sure to lose
And of that natural luck
he beats thee against the odds
Thy lustre thickens when he shines by. Thy
spirit is all afraid to govern thee near him
- But he away, 'tis noble
- Get thee gone
Say to Ventidius I would speak with him.
He shall to Parthia
Be it art or hap, he hath spoken true
The very dice obey him, and in our sports
my better cunning faints under his chance
I will to Egypt
And though I make this marriage for
my peace, in the east my pleasure lies
Give me some music.
Music, moody food of us that trade in love
The music, ho!
Let it alone. Let's to billiards.
Come, Charmian
My arm is sore. Best play with Mardian
As well a woman with an eunuch played
as with a woman
- Come, you'll play with me, sir?
- As well as I can, madam
And when good will is showed, though it
come too short, the actor may plead pardon
I'll none now.
Give me mine angle, we'll to the river
There, my music playing far off,
I will betray tawny-finned fishes
My bended hook shall pierce their
slimy jaws, and as I draw them up...
...I'll think them every one an
Antony and say 'Aha, you're caught'
'Twas merry when you wagered on your angling. When
your diver did hang a salt fish on his hook...
...which he with fervency drew up
That time? O, times!
I laughed him out of patience,
and that night I laughed him into patience
And next morn, ere the ninth hour,
I drunk him to his bed...
...then put my tires and mantles on him,
whilst I wore his sword Philippan
O, from Italy!
Ram thou thy fruitful tidings in mine ears,
that long time have been barren
- Madam, madam
- Antonio's dead!
If thou say so, villain,
thou killest thy mistress
But well and free, if thou
so yield him, there is gold
And here my bluest veins to kiss, a hand
that kings have lipped, and trembled kissing
- First, madam, he is well
- Why, there's more gold
But sirrah, mark,
we use to say the dead are well
Bring it to that, the gold I give thee will
I melt and pour down thy ill-uttering throat
- Good madam, hear me
- Well, go to, I will
But there's no goodness in thy face
If Antony be free and healthful, so
tart a favour to trumpet such good tidings
If not well, thou shouldst come like a Fury
crowned with snakes, not like a formal man
- Will it please you hear me?
- I have a mind to strike thee ere thou speakest
Yet if thou say Antony lives, is well, or
friends with Caesar or not captive to him...
...I'll set thee in a shower of gold
and hail rich pearls upon thee
- Madam, he's well
- Well said
- And friends with Caesar
- Thou art an honest man
Caesar and he are greater friends
than ever - Make thee a fortune from me
- But yet, madam...
- I do not like 'But yet'
It does allay the good precedence.
Fie upon 'But yet'
'But yet' is as a jailer to bring forth
some monstrous malefactor
Prithee, friend, power out the pack of
matter to mine ear, the good and bad together
He's friends with Caesar, in state of
health, thou sayest, and, thou sayest, free
Free, madam, no. I made no such report.
He's bound unto Octavia
- For what good turn?
- For the best turn in the bed
I am pale, Charmian
Madam, he's married to Octavia
- The most infectious pestilence upon thee!
- Good madam, patience!
What say you? Hence, horrible villain, or I'll spurn
thine eyes like balls before me. I'll unhair thy head
Thou shalt be whipped with wire and stewed
in brine, smarting in lingering pickle
Gracious madam,
I that do bring the news made not the match
Say it is not so
He is married, madam
Rogue, thou hast lived too long
Good madam, keep yourself within yourself.
The man is innocent
Some innocents 'scape not the thunderbolt
Melt Egypt into Nile,
and kindly creatures turn all to serpents
Call the slave again.
Though I am mad, I will not bite him. Call
- He is afeard to come
- I will not hurt him
These hands do lack nobility
that they strike a meaner than myself...
...since I myself have
given myself the cause
Come hither, sir
Though it be honest,
it is never good to bring bad news
Give to a gracious message an host of tongues, but
let ill tidings tell themselves when they be felt
- I have done my duty
- Is he married?
I cannot hate thee worser than I do
if thou again say 'yes'
- He's married, madam
- The gods confound thee!
- Dost thou hold there still?
- Should I lie, madam?
O, I would thou didst, so half my Egypt were
submerged and made a cistern for scaled snakes
Go, get thee hence
Hadst thou Narcissus in thy face,
to me thou wouldst appear most ugly
- He is married?
- I crave your Highness' pardon
- He is married?
- Take no offence that I would not offend you
To punish me for what you make me do
seems much unequal. He's married to Octavia
O, that his fault should make a knave
of thee, that art not what thou art sure of
Get thee hence
The merchandise which thou hast
brought from Rome are all too dear for me
Lie they upon thy hand,
and be undone by them
Good your Highness, patience - In
praising Antony, I have dispraised Caesar
- Many times, madam
- I am paid for it now
Lead me from hence, I faint
O, Iras, Charmian! 'Tis no matter
Go to the fellow, good Alexas
Bid him report the feature of Octavia,
her years, her inclination
Let him not leave out the colour
of her hair. Bring me word quickly
Let him forever go...
Let him not, Charmian
Though he be painted one way like a Gorgon,
the other way's a Mars
Bid you Alexas bring
me word how tall she is
Pity me, Charmian, but do not speak to me
Your hostages I have, so have you mine,
and we shall talk before we fight
Most meet that first we come to words, and therefore
have we our written purposes before us sent
Which if thou hast considered, let us know
if it will tie up thy discontented sword...
...and carry back to Sicily much tall youth
that else must perish here
To you all three, the senators alone of
this great world, chief factors for the gods
I do not know wherefore my father should
revengers want, having a son and friends...
...since Julius Caesar, who at Philippi the good
Brutus ghosted, there saw you labouring for him
What was it that moved
pale Cassius to conspire?
And what made the all-honoured, honest, Roman Brutus,
with the armed rest, courtiers of beauteous freedom...
...to drench the Capitol,
but that they would have one man but a man?
And that is it hath made me rig my navy,
at whose burden the angered ocean foams
With which I meant to scourge the ingratitude
that despiteful Rome cast on my noble father
Take your time
Thou canst not fear us, Pompey, with
thy sails. We'll speak with thee at sea
At land thou knowest
how much we do overcount thee
At land indeed
thou dost overcount me of my father's house
But since the cuckoo builds not for
himself, remain in it as thou mayst
Be pleased to tell us, for this is from the
present, how you take the offers we have sent you
- There's the point
- Which do not be entreated to...
...but weigh what it is worth embraced -
And what may follow, to try a larger fortune
You have made me offer of Sicily, Sardinia
And I must rid all the sea of pirates,
then to send measures of wheat to Rome
This agreed upon, to part with unhacked
edges and bear back our targes undinted
That's our offer
Know then, I came before you here
a man prepared to take this offer
But Mark Antony put me to some impatience
Though I lose the praise of it by telling, you must
know when Caesar and your brother were at blows...
...your mother came to Sicily
and did find her welcome friendly
I have heard it, Pompey, and am well studied
for a liberal thanks, which I do owe you
Let me have your hand
I did not think, sir, to have met you here
The beds in the East are soft
And thanks to you, that called me timelier
than my purpose hither, for I have gained by it
Since I saw you last,
there's a change upon you
Well, I know not what counts
harsh Fortune casts upon my face
But in my bosom shall she never come
to make my heart her vassal
- Well met here
- I hope so, Lepidus
Thus we are agreed. I crave our composition
may be written and sealed between us
That's the next to do
We'll feast each other ere we part,
and let's draw lots who shall begin
- That will I, Pompey
- No, Antony, take the lot
But, first or last, your fine Egyptian
cookery shall have the fame
I have heard that Julius Caesar
grew fat with feasting there
You have heard much
- I have fair meanings, sir
- And fair words to them
Aboard my galley I invite you all
Thy father, Pompey,
would never have made this treaty
You and I have known, sir
- At sea, I think
- We have, sir
- You have done well by water
- And you by land
I will praise any man that will praise me, though
it cannot be denied what I have done by land
Nor what I have done by water - Yes,
something you can deny for your own safety
- You have been a great thief by sea
- And you by land
There I deny my land service
But give me your hand, Menas.
We came hither to fight with you
For my part, I am sorry it is turned to a drinking.
Pompey doth this day laugh away his fortune
If he do, sure he cannot weep
it back again - You have said, sir
We looked not for Mark Antony here.
Pray you, is he married to Cleopatra?
Caesar's sister is called Octavia - True,
sir. She was the wife of Caius Marcellus
But she is now the wife of
Marcus Antonius - Pray you, sir?
'Tis true - Then is Caesar
and he forever knit together
If I were bound to divine of this unity,
I would not prophesy so
I think the policy of that purpose made more
in the marriage than the love of the parties
I think so, too. But you shall find the band
that seems to tie their friendship together...
...will be the very
strangler of their amity
Octavia is of a holy, cold, and still
conversation - Who would not have his wife so?
Not he that himself is not so, which is Mark
Antony. He will to his Egyptian dish again
- He married but his occasion here
- And thus it may be
Come, sir, will you aboard?
I have a health for you
I shall take it, sir.
We have used our throats in Egypt
Thus do they, sir. They take the flow of
the Nile by certain scales in the Pyramid
They know by the height, the lowness,
or the mean if dearth or foison follow
The higher Nilus swells,
the more it promises
As it ebbs, the seedsman upon the slime and ooze
scatters his grain, and shortly comes to harvest
- You've strange serpents there?
- Ay, Lepidus
Your serpent of Egypt is bred now of
your mud by the operation of your sun
- So is your crocodile
- They are so
- Sit, and some wine. A health to Lepidus
- Lepidus!
I am not so well as I should be,
but I'll never out
Not till you have slept.
I fear me you'll be in till then
Nay, certainly, I have heard the
Ptolemies' pyramises are very goodly things
Without contradiction I have heard that
- Pompey, a word
- Say, what is it?
Forsake thy sport, I do beseech
thee, captain, and hear me speak a word
Forbear me till anon
- This health to Lepidus
- Lepidus!
What manner of thing is your crocodile?
It is shaped, sir, like itself,
and it is as broad as it hath breadth
It is just so high as it is,
and moves with it own organs
It lives by that which nourisheth it, and
the elements once out of it, it transmigrates
- What colour is it of?
- Of it own colour too
- 'Tis a strange serpent
- 'Tis so, and the tears of it are wet
Will this description satisfy him?
With the health that Pompey gives him,
else he is a very epicure
Go hang, sir, hang! Tell me of that?
Away! Do as I bid you
If for the sake of merit thou wilt hear me,
rise from thy stool
- I think thou art mad. The matter?
- I have ever held my cap off to thy fortunes
Thou hast served me with much faith.
What's else to say?
Be jolly, lords
These quicksands, Lepidus,
keep off them, for you sink
- Wilt thou be lord of all the world?
- What sayst thou?
- Wilt thou be lord of the whole world?
That's twice - How should that be?
But entertain it, and though thou think me
poor, I am the man will give thee all the world
- Hast thou drunk well?
- No, Pompey, I have kept me from the cup
Thou art, if thou darest
be, the earthly Jove
Whatever the ocean pales or sky inclips
is thine, if thou wilt have it
Show me which way
These three world-sharers,
these competitors, are in thy vessel
Let me cut the cable, and when we are put
off, fall to their throats. All there is thine
Ah, this thou shouldst have done
and not have spoke on it
In me 'tis villainy.
In thee it had been good service
Thou must know 'tis not my profit
that does lead mine honour. Mine honour, it
Repent that ever thy tongue
hath so betrayed thine act
Being done unknown,
I should have found it afterwards well done
But must condemn it now.
Desist and drink
For this I'll never follow
thy palled fortunes more
Who seeks and will not take when
once 'tis offered shall never find it more
- This health to Lepidus
- Lepidus!
Bear him ashore.
I'll pledge it for him, Pompey
- There's a strong fellow, Menas
- Why?
He bears the third part of the world, man,
see'st not?
The third part, then, is drunk. Would
it were all, that it might go on wheels
- Drink thou. Increase the reels
- Come
This is not yet an Alexandrian feast - It
ripens towards it. Strike the vessel, ho!
Here's to Caesar
I could well forbear it. It's monstrous labour
when I wash my brain and it grows fouler
- Be a child of the time
- Possess it, I'll make answer
But I had rather fast from all, four days,
than drink so much in one
Come, let's all take hands till that the conquering
wine hath steeped our sense in soft and delicate Lethe
All take hands
Come, thou monarch of the vine,
Plumpy Bacchus, with pink eyne!
In thy vats our cares be drowned,
With thy grapes our hairs be crowned!
Cup us till the world go round!
What would you more?
Pompey, goodnight
Good brother, let me request you off.
Our graver business frowns at this levity
Gentle lords, let's part.
You see we have burnt our cheeks
Strong Enobarb is weaker than the wine,
and mine own tongue splits what it speaks
The wild disguise hath almost
anticked us all. What needs more words?
Goodnight.
Good Antony, your hand
- I'll try you on the shore
- And shall, sir. Give us your hand
O, Antony, you have my father's house
But what? We are friends.
Come down into the boat
- What, are the brothers parted?
- They have dispatched with Pompey
He is gone. The other three are sealing.
Octavia weeps to part from Rome. Caesar is sad
And Lepidus, since Pompey's feast, as Menas
says, is troubled with the green sickness
- 'Tis a noble Lepidus
- A very fine one
- O, how he loves Caesar
- Nay, but how dearly he adores Mark Antony
- Caesar? Why, he's the Jupiter of men
- What's Antony? The god of Jupiter
- Spake you of Caesar? How, the nonpareil
- O Antony, O thou Arabian bird
Would you praise Caesar, say 'Caesar'.
Go no further
Indeed, he plied them both with excellent
praises - But he loves Antony, yet he loves Caesar
Hoo, hearts, tongues, figures,
scribes, bards, poets...
...cannot think, speak, cast, write,
sing, number, his love to Antony
But as for Caesar,
kneel down, kneel down, and wonder
- Both he loves
- They are his shards and he their beetle
- So, this is to Athens. Adieu, noble Agrippa
- Good fortune, worthy soldier, and farewell
No further, sir
You take from me a great part of myself.
Use me well in it
Sister, prove such a wife as my thoughts make thee,
and as my farthest bond shall pass on thy approof
Most noble Antony, let not the
piece of virtue which is set betwixt us...
...as the cement of our love to keep it
builded, be the ram to batter the fortress of it
For better might we have loved without this
mean, if on both parts this be not cherished
- Make me not offended in your distrust
- I have said
You shall not find, though you be therein
curious, the least cause for what you seem to fear
So the gods keep you, and make
the hearts of Romans serve your ends
We will here part
Farewell, my dearest sister, fare thee well
The elements be kind to thee and make
thy spirits all of comfort. Fare thee well
My noble brother
The April's in her eyes. It is love's spring,
and these the showers to bring it on. Be cheerful
Sir, look well to my
husband's house, and...
- What, Octavia?
- I'll tell you in your ear
Her tongue will not obey her heart,
nor can her heart inform her tongue
The swan's-down feather that stands upon the swell
at the full of tide, and neither way inclines
- Will Caesar weep?
- Why, Enobarbus
When Antony found Julius Caesar dead,
he cried almost to roaring
And he wept
when at Philippi he found Brutus slain
That year indeed he
was troubled with a rheum
No, sweet Octavia, you shall hear from me still.
The time shall not outgo my thinking on you
Come, sir, come, I'll wrestle
with you in my strength of love
Look, here I have you, thus I let you go,
and give you to the gods
Adieu, be happy
Let all the number of the stars
give light to thy fair way
Farewell, farewell
Farewell
- Where is the fellow?
- Half afeard to come
Go to, go to.
Come hither, sir
Good Majesty, Herod of Jewry dare not
look upon you but when you are well pleased
That Herod's head I'll have
But how, when Antony is gone,
through whom I might command it?
- Come thou near
- Most gracious Majesty
- Did'st thou behold Octavia?
- Ay, dread queen
- Where?
- Madam, in Rome
I looked her in the face and saw her led
between her brother and Mark Antony
Is she as tall as me?
She is not, madam
- Didst hear her speak? Is she shrill-tongued or low?
- Madam, I heard her speak. She is low-voiced
That's not so good. He cannot like her long
- Like her? O Isis, 'tis impossible!
- I think so, Charmian
Dull of tongue, and dwarfish
What majesty is in her gait?
Remember, if ever thou looked'st on majesty
She creeps.
Her motion and her station are as one
She shows a body rather than a life,
a statue, than a breather
- Is this certain?
- Or I have no observance
Three in Egypt cannot make better note
He's very knowing, I do perceive it.
There's nothing in her yet
- The fellow has good judgment
- Excellent
- Guess at her years, I prithee
- Madam, she was a widow
- Widow? Charmian, hark
- And I do think she's thirty
- Bearest thou her face in mind? Is it long or round?
- Round even to faultiness
For the most part, too, they are
foolish that are so. Her hair what colour?
Brown, madam, and her
forehead as low as she would wish it
There's gold for thee.
Thou must not take my former sharpness ill
I will employ thee back again.
I find thee most fit for business
Go, make thee ready.
Our letters are prepared
- A proper man
- Indeed he is so
I repent me much that so I harried him.
Why, methinks...
...by him, this creature's no such thing
Nothing, madam
The man hath seen some majesty,
and should know
Hath he seen majesty?
Isis else defend, and serving you so long!
I have one thing more to
ask him yet, good Charmian
But 'tis no matter. Thou shalt
bring him to me where I will write
- All may be well enough
- I warrant you, madam
How now, friend Eros?
- There's strange news come, sir
- What, man?
Caesar and Lepidus
have made new wars upon Pompey
This is old. What is the success?
Caesar, having made use of Lepidus
in the wars 'gainst Pompey...
...presently denied him rivality, would not
let him partake in the glory of the action
And, not resting here, accuses him
of letters he had formerly wrote to Pompey
Upon his own appeal seizes him
- So the poor third is up
- Till death enlarge his confine
Then, world,
thou hast a pair of chaps, no more
And throw between them all the food
thou hast, they'll grind the one the other
Nay, nay, Octavia, not only that
That were excusable, that and
thousands more of semblable import
But he hath waged new wars against Pompey,
made his will and read it to public ear
Spoke scantly of me. When perforce
he could not but pay me terms of honour...
- ...cold and sickly he vented them
- O, my good lord, believe not all
Or if you must believe, stomach not all
A more unhappy lady, if this division chance,
never stood between, praying for both parts
The good gods will mock me presently when
I shall pray 'O, bless my lord and husband'
Undo that prayer by crying out as loud
'O, bless my brother'
Husband win, win brother
prays and destroys the prayer
No midway 'twixt these extremes at all
Gentle Octavia, let your best love draw to
that point which seeks best to preserve it
If I lose mine honour, I lose myself. Better
I were not yours than yours so branchless
But, as you requested,
yourself shall go between us
The meantime, lady, I'll raise the
preparation of a war shall stain your brother
Make your soonest haste,
so your desires are yours
Thanks to my lord. The Jove of power make
me, most weak, most weak, your reconciler
Wars 'twixt you twain would be
as if the world should cleave...
...and that slain men
should solder up the rift
Provide your going. Choose your own company,
and command what cost your heart has mind to
Contemning Rome,
he has done all this and more in Alexandria
Here's the manner of it. In the
marketplace, on a tribunal silvered...
...Cleopatra and himself in chairs of gold
were publicly enthroned
At their feet sat Caesarion,
whom they call my father's son...
...and all the unlawful issue that their
lust since then hath made between them
Unto her he gave the stablishment of Egypt
Made her of lower Syria, Cyprus, Lydia,
absolute queen
- This in the public eye?
- In the common showplace where they exercise
His sons he there
proclaimed the kings of kings
Great Media, Parthia, and Armenia
he gave to Alexander
To Ptolemy he assigned
Syria, Cilicia, and Phoenicia
She in the habiliments of the goddess Isis
that day appeared
And oft before gave audience, as 'tis
reported, so - Let Rome be thus informed
Who, queasy with his insolence already,
will their good thoughts call from him
The people knows it,
and have now received his accusations
Who does he accuse?
Caesar, and that,
having in Sicily Sextus Pompeius spoiled...
...we had not rated
him his part of the isle
Then does he say
he lent me some shipping, unrestored
Lastly, he frets that Lepidus
of the triumvirate should be deposed
And, being, that we detain all his revenue
- Sir, this should be answered
- 'Tis done already, and the messenger gone
I have told him Lepidus was grown too cruel
That he his high authority abused
and did deserve his change
For what I have conquered, I grant him part
But then in his Armenia and other
of his conquered kingdoms I demand the like
- He'll never yield to that
- Nor must not then be yielded to in this
Hail, Caesar, and my lords!
Hail, most dear Caesar
- That ever I should call thee castaway!
- You have not called me so, nor have you cause
Why have you stolen upon us thus?
You come not like Caesar's sister
The wife of Antony
should have an army for an usher...
...and the neighs of horse to tell of
her approach long ere she did appear
The trees by the way should have borne men, and
expectation fainted, longing for what it had not
Nay, the dust should have ascended to the
roof of heaven, raised by your populous troops
But you are come a market-maid to Rome...
...and have prevented the ostentation of our
love, which, left unshown, is often left unloved
Good my lord, to come thus was I
not constrained, but did it on my free will
My lord, Mark Antony,
hearing that you prepared for war...
...acquainted my grieved ear withal,
whereon I begged his pardon for return
Which soon he granted,
being an abstract 'tween his lust and him
Do not say so, my lord
I have eyes upon him,
and his affairs come to me on the wind
- Where is he now?
- My lord, in Athens
No, my most wronged sister.
Cleopatra hath nodded him to her
He hath given his empire up to a whore, who
now are levying the kings of the Earth for war
He hath assembled Bocchus, the
King of Libya, Archelaus of Cappadocia...
Philadelphos, King of Paphlagonia
the Thracian king, Adallas...
King Manchus of Arabia, King of Pont, Herod
of Jewry, Mithridates, King of Comagen...
Polemon and Amyntas,
the Kings of Mede and Lycaonia...
...with a more larger list of sceptres
Ay me, most wretched, that have my heart parted
betwixt two friends that does afflict each other!
Welcome to Rome,
nothing more dear to me
You are abused beyond
the mark of thought...
...and the high gods, to do you justice, makes
his ministers of us and those that love you
- Welcome, lady
- Welcome, dear madam
Each heart in Rome does love and pity you
Only the adulterous Antony, most
large in his abominations, turns you off...
...and gives his potent regiment
to a trull that noises it against us
- Is it so, sir?
- Most certain. Sister, welcome
Pray you, be ever known to patience.
My dearest sister!
- I will be even with thee, doubt it not
- But why, why, why?
Thou hast forspoke my being in these wars
and say'st it is not fit
Well, is it, is it?
Is it not denounced against us?
Why should not we be there in person?
Your presence needs must puzzle Antony
Take from his heart, take from his brain,
from his time, what should not then be spared
He is already traduced for levity
And 'tis said in Rome that Mardian, an
eunuch, and your maids manage this war
Sink Rome, and their tongues
rot that speak against us!
A charge we bear in the war, and as the president
of my kingdom will appear there for a man
Speak not against it.
I will not stay behind
Nay, I have done.
Here comes the Emperor
Is it not strange, Ventidius,
that from Tarentum and Brundusium...
...he could so quickly cut the Ionian Sea
and take in Toryne?
- You have heard on it, sweet?
- Celerity is never more admired than by the negligent
A good rebuke, which might have well becomed
the best of men, to taunt at slackness
- Ventidius, we will fight with him by sea
- By sea, what else?
- Why will my lord do so?
- For that he dares us to it
So hath my lord dared him to single fight
Ay, and to wage this battle at Pharsalia,
where Caesar fought with Pompey
But these offers, which serve not for his
vantage, he shakes off, and so should you
Your ships are not well manned, your mariners are
muleteers, reapers, people engrossed by swift impress
In Caesar's fleet are those
that often have against Pompey fought
Their ships are yare, yours heavy. No disgrace
shall fall you for refusing him at sea...
- ...being prepared for land
- By sea, by sea
Most worthy sir, you therein throw away the
absolute soldiership you have by land...
Distract your army, which doth most consist
of war-marked footmen...
Leave unexecuted your own renowned knowledge,
quite forgo the way which promises assurance...
...and give up yourself merely to
chance and hazard from firm security
- I'll fight at sea
- I have sixty sails, Caesar none better
Our overplus of shipping will we burn,
and with the rest full-manned...
...from the head of Actium
beat the approaching Caesar
But if we fail, we then can do it at land
- Scarus, thy business?
- The news is true, my lord, he is descried
- Caesar has taken Toryne
- Can he be there in person?
'Tis impossible,
strange that his power should be
Ventidius, our nineteen legions thou shalt
hold by land, and our twelve thousand horse
We'll to our ship.
Away, my Thetis
O noble emperor, do not fight by sea!
Trust not to rotten planks
Do you misdoubt this sword
and these my wounds?
Let the Egyptians and the Phoenicians
go a-ducking
We have used to conquer standing
on the earth and fighting foot to foot
Well, well, away
By Hercules, I think I am in the right
Soldier, thou art, but his whole action
grows not in the power on it
So our leader's led,
and we are women's men
Strike not by land, keep whole.
Provoke not battle till we have done at sea
Set we our squadrons on yond
side of the hill in eye of Caesar's battle
Our fortune lies upon this jump
Naught, naught, all naught!
I can behold no longer
The Antoniad, the Egyptian admiral, with
all their sixty, fly and turn the rudder
To see it mine eyes are blasted
- Gods and goddesses, all the whole synod of them!
- What's thy passion?
The greater cantle of the world is lost
with very ignorance
We have kissed away kingdoms
and provinces - How appears the fight?
On our side, like the tokened pestilence,
where death is sure
Yon ribaudred nag of Egypt, whom leprosy
overtake, in the midst of the fight...
When vantage like a pair of twins appeared
both as the same, or rather, ours the elder...
...the breeze upon her like a cow in June,
hoists sails and flies
That I beheld. Mine eyes did sicken at the
sight and could not endure a further view
She once being loofed,
the noble ruin of her magic, Antony...
...claps on his sea-wing and, like a doting mallard,
leaving the fight in height, flies after her
I never saw an action of such shame
Experience, manhood, honour
never before did violate so itself
Alack, alack
Our fortune on the sea is out of breath
and sinks most lamentably
Had our general been what he knew himself,
it had gone well
O, he has given example for our flight
most grossly by his own
Ay, are you thereabouts?
Why then, goodnight indeed
Toward Peloponnesus are they fled. 'Tis easy to
it, and there I will attend what further comes
To Caesar will I render
my legions and my horse
I'll yet follow the wounded chance of Antony,
though my reason sits in the wind against me
Hark, the land bids me tread no
more upon it. It is ashamed to bear me
Friends, come hither
I am so lated in the world
that I have lost my way forever
I have a ship laden with gold. Take that,
divide it. Fly, and make your peace with Caesar
I have myself resolved upon a course
which has no need of you
Let that be left which leaves itself.
To the sea-side straightway
Leave me, I pray, a little.
Pray you, now
Nay, do so. For indeed I have lost command.
Therefore I pray you, I'll see you by and by
Nay, gentle madam, to him, comfort him
- Do, most dear queen
- Do! Why, what else?
Let me sit down. O Juno!
No, no, no, no, no
- See you here, sir?
- Oh fie, fie, fie!
- Madam
- Madam, O good empress
- Sir, sir...
- Yes, my lord, yes
Octavius at Philippi kept his sword even like a
dancer, while I struck the lean and wrinkled Cassius
And 'twas I that the mad Brutus ended
Octavius alone dealt on lieutenantry, and
no practice had in the brave squares of war
Yet now... no matter
Ah, stand by
The Queen, my lord, the Queen
Go to him, madam, speak to him.
He's unqualitied with very shame
Well, then, sustain me
Most noble sir, arise. The Queen approaches
Her head's declined, and death will
seize her but your comfort makes the rescue
I have offended reputation,
a most unnoble swerving
Sir, the Queen
O, whither hast thou led me, Egypt?
See how I convey my
shame out of thine eyes...
...by looking back what I have left behind
'stroyed in dishonour
O, my lord, my lord, forgive my fearful sails!
I little thought you would have followed
Egypt, thou knew'st too well my heart
was to thy rudder tied by the strings...
...and thou shouldst tow me after
Over my spirit thy full supremacy
thou knewest, and that thy beck...
...might from the bidding of the
gods command me - O, my pardon!
Now I must to the young man send humble treaties,
dodge and palter in the shifts of lowness...
...who with half the bulk of the world played
as I pleased, making and marring fortunes
You did know how much you were my conqueror
And that my sword, made weak by
my affection, would obey it on all cause
Pardon, pardon!
Fall not a tear, I say.
One of them rates all that is won and lost
Give me a kiss
Even this repays me
We sent our schoolmaster.
Is he come back?
Love, I am full of lead
Some wine within there,
and our viands!
Fortune knows we scorn her most
when most she offers blows
Let him appear that's come from Antony
- Know you him?
- Caesar, 'tis his schoolmaster
An argument that he is plucked, when hither
he sends so poor a pinion of his wing...
...which had superfluous kings for
messengers not many moons gone by
Approach, and speak
- Such as I am, I come from Antony
- Declare thine office
Lord of his fortunes he salutes thee,
and requires to live in Egypt
Which not granted, he lessens
his requests, and to thee sues...
...to let him breathe between the heavens and
earth, a private man in Athens. This for him
Next, Cleopatra does confess thy greatness,
submits her to thy might...
...and of thee craves the circle of the Ptolemies
for her heirs, now hazarded to thy grace
For Antony, I have no ears to his request
The Queen of audience
nor desire shall fail...
...so she from Egypt drive her
all-disgraced friend, or take his life there
This if she perform, she shall
not sue unheard. So to them both
- Fortune pursue thee
- Bring him through the bands
To try thy eloquence now 'tis time,
dispatch. From Antony win Cleopatra
Promise, and in our name, what she requires.
Add more, from thine invention, offers
Women are not in their best fortunes strong,
but want will perjure the never-touched vestal
Try thy cunning, Demetrius
Make thine own edict for thy pains,
which we will answer as a law
- Caesar, I go
- Observe how Antony becomes his flaw...
...and what thou think'st his very
action speaks in every power that moves
Caesar, I shall
- What shall we do, Enobarbus?
- Think, and die
Is Antony or we in fault for this?
Antony only,
that would make his will lord of his reason
What though you fled from that great face of
war, whose several ranges frighted each other?
Why should he follow? The itch of his affection
should not then have nicked his captainship
'Twas a shame no less than was his loss, to
course your flying flags and leave his navy gazing
Prithee, peace
- Is that his answer?
- Ay, my lord
The Queen shall then have courtesy,
so she will yield us up?
- He says so
- Let her know it
To the boy Caesar send this grizzled head, and he
will fill thy wishes to the brim with principalities
That head, my lord?
To him again. Tell him he wears
the rose of youth upon him...
...from which the world should note
something particular
His coin, ships, legions may be a coward's.
I dare him therefore...
...to lay his gay caparisons apart and answer me
declined, sword against sword, ourselves alone
I'll write it. Follow me
Yes, like enough, high-battled
Caesar will unstate his happiness...
...and be staged to the
show against a sworder
That he should dream, knowing all measures,
the full Caesar will answer his emptiness!
Caesar, thou hast subdued his judgment too
- A messenger from Caesar
- What, no more ceremony? Admit him, sir
Mine honesty and I begin to square
The loyalty well held to fools
does make our faith mere folly
Yet he that can endure
to follow with allegiance a fallen lord...
...does conquer him that did his master
conquer, and earns a place in the story
- Caesar's will?
- Hear it apart
- None but friends. Say boldly
- So haply are they friends to Antony
He needs as many, sir, as Caesar has,
or needs not us
If Caesar please,
our master will leap to be his friend
For us, you know whose he is, we are,
and that is Caesar's
So.
Thus then, thou most renowned
Caesar entreats not to consider in what
case thou standest further than he is Caesar
Go on. Right royal
He knows that you embrace not Antony
as you did love, but as you feared him
The scars upon your honour therefore he does
pity as constrained blemishes, not as deserved
He is a god and knows what is most right. Mine
honour was not yielded, but conquered merely
To be sure of that, I will ask Antony
Shall I say to Caesar what you require of
him? For he partly begs to be desired to give
It much would please him that of his
fortunes you should make a staff to lean upon
But it would warm his spirits
to hear from me you had left Antony...
...and put yourself under his shroud,
the universal landlord
- What's your name?
- My name is Demetrius
Most kind messenger,
say to great Caesar this in deputation
I kiss his conquering hand. Tell him I am prompt
to lay my crown at his feet, and there to kneel
Tell him, from his all-obeying breath
I hear the doom of Egypt
'Tis your noblest course.
Give me grace to lay my duty on your hand
Your Caesar's father oft,
when he hath mused of taking kingdoms in...
...bestowed his lips on that unworthy place
as it rained kisses
Favours? By Jove that thunders!
Approach, there
Ah, you kite!
Now, gods and devils!
Authority melts from me of late
Have you no ears? I am Antony yet.
Take hence this jack and whip him
'Tis better playing with a lion's whelp
than with an old one dying
Moon and stars, whip him
Were it twenty of the greatest tributaries
that do acknowledge Caesar...
...should I find them
so saucy with the hand of she here...
What's her name, since she was Cleopatra?
Whip him, fellows, till like a boy you see
him cringe his face and whine aloud for mercy
- Take him hence
- Mark Antony!
Tug him away.
Being whipped, bring him again
This jack of Caesar's shall
bear us an errand to him
You were half blasted ere I knew you
Have I my pillow left unpressed in Rome,
forborne the getting of a lawful race...
...and by a gem of women,
to be abused by one that looks on feeders?
Good my lord...
- You have been a boggler ever
- O, is it come to this?
I found you as a morsel
cold upon dead Caesar's trencher
Nay, you were a fragment
of Gnaeus Pompey's...
...besides what hotter hours, unregistered in
vulgar fame, you have luxuriously picked out
- Wherefore is this?
- To let a fellow that will take rewards...
...and say 'God quit you!'
be familiar with my playfellow, your hand
This kingly seal and
plighter of high hearts!
O, that I were upon the hill of Basan,
to outroar the horned herd
- Is he whipped?
- Soundly, my lord
- Cried he? And begged he pardon?
- He did ask favour
If that thy father live, let him repent
thou wast not made his daughter
And be thou sorry to follow Caesar in his triumph,
since thou hast been whipped for following him
Henceforth the white hand of a lady
fever thee. Shake thou to look on it
Get thee back to Caesar,
tell him thy entertainment
Look thou say he makes me angry with him...
...for he seems proud and disdainful,
harping on what I am, not what he knew I was
He makes me angry
And at this time most easy 'tis to do it, when
my good stars that were my former guides...
...have empty left their orbs
and shot their fires into the abysm of hell
If he mislike my speech and what is done, tell
him he has Scarus, my enfranched bondman...
...whom he may at pleasure whip, or hang,
or torture, as he shall like to quit me
Urge it thou
Hence with thy stripes, begone
Have you done yet?
Alack, our terrene moon is now eclipsed,
and it portends alone the fall of Antony
I must stay his time
To flatter Caesar, would you mingle eyes
with one that ties his points?
- Not know me yet?
- Cold-hearted toward me?
Ah, dear, if I be so, from my cold heart let
heaven engender hail and poison it in the source
And the first stone drop in my neck.
As it determines, so dissolve my life
The next Caesarion smite,
till by degrees the memory of my womb...
...together with my brave Egyptians all, by the
discandying of this pelleted storm lie graveless
Till the flies and gnats of Nile
have buried them for prey
I am satisfied
Caesar sets down in Alexandria,
where I will oppose his fate
Our force by land hath nobly held
Our severed navy too have knit again,
and fleet, threatening most sealike
Where hast thou been, my heart?
Dost thou hear, lady?
If from the field I shall return once more
to kiss these lips, I will appear in blood
I and my sword will earn our chronicle
- There's hope in it yet
- That's my brave lord
I will be treble-sinewed, -hearted,
breathed, and fight maliciously
It is my birthday.
I had thought to have held it poor
But since my lord is Antony again,
I will be Cleopatra
We will yet do well
Call all his noble captains to my lord
Do so, we'll speak to them, and tonight
I'll force the wine peep through their scars
Come on, my queen, there's sap in it yet
The next time I do fight I'll make Death love me,
for I will contend even with his pestilent scythe
Now he'll outstare the lightning
To be furious is to be frighted out of fear,
and in that mood the dove will peck the estridge
And I see still a diminution in our
captain's brain restores his heart
When valour preys on reason,
it eats the sword it fights with
I will seek some way to leave him
He calls me 'boy', and chides
as he had power to beat me out of Egypt
Demetrius he hath whipped with rods, dares
me to personal combat, Caesar to Antony
Let the old ruffian know I have many other
ways to die. Meantime laugh at his challenge
Caesar must think, when one so great
begins to rage, he's hunted even to falling
Give him no breath, but now make boot of his
distraction. Never anger made good guard for itself
Let our best heads know that tomorrow
the last of many battles we mean to fight
Within our files there are, of those that served
Mark Antony but late, enough to fetch him in
See it done, and feast the army
We have store to do It,
and they have earned the waste
Poor Antony
He will not fight with me, Domitius?
- No
- Why should he not?
He thinks, being twenty times of
better fortune, he is twenty men to one
Tomorrow, soldier,
by sea and land I'll fight
Or I will live, or bathe my dying honour
in the blood shall make it live again
- Woo't thou fight well?
- I'll strike and cry 'Take all'
Well said. Come on
Call forth my household servants.
Let's tonight be bounteous at our meal
Give me thy hand
Thou hast been rightly honest
So hast thou, thou, and thou, and thou
You have served me well,
and kings have been your fellows
Well, my good fellows, wait on me tonight.
Scant not my cups...
...and make as much of me as when mine empire
was your fellow too, and suffered my command
- What does he mean?
- To make his followers weep
Tend me tonight.
Maybe it is the period of your duty
Haply you shall not see me more,
or if, a mangled shadow
Perchance tomorrow
you'll serve another master
I look on you as one that takes his leave
Mine honest friends, I turn you not away
But, like a master married to
your good service, stay till death
Tend me tonight two hours, I ask no more,
and the gods yield you for it
What mean you, sir, to give them
this discomfort? Look, they weep
And I, an ass, am onion-eyed.
For shame, transform us not to women
Now the witch take me if I meant it thus!
Grace grow where those drops fall
Know, my hearts, I hope well of tomorrow,
and will lead you...
...where rather I'll expect victorious life
than death and honour
Let's to supper, come,
and drown consideration
Brother, goodnight. Tomorrow is the day
It will determine one way. Fare you well
- Heard you of nothing strange about the streets?
- Nothing. What news?
- Belike 'tis but a rumour.
Goodnight to you - Well, sir, goodnight
- Soldiers, have careful watch
- And you. Goodnight, goodnight
Here we. And if tomorrow our navy thrive, I
have an absolute hope our landmen will stand up
'Tis a brave army, and full of purpose
Peace. What noise?
- List, list
- Hark
- Music in the air
- Under the earth
- It bodes well, does it not?
- No
Peace, I say.
What should this mean?
'Tis the god Hercules, whom Antony loved,
now leaves him
Follow the noise so far as we have quarter.
Let's see how it will give off
- Content
- 'Tis strange
Eros! Mine armour, Eros!
- Sleep a little
- No, my chuck
Eros, come, mine armour, Eros!
Come, good fellow, put mine iron on
If fortune be not ours today,
it is because we brave her. Come
Nay, I'll help too
- What's this for?
- Ah, let be, let be
Thou art the armourer of my heart
False, false. This, this!
Sooth, la, I'll help. Thus it must be
Well, well, we shall thrive now.
Seest thou, my good fellow?
- Go, put on thy defences
- Briefly, sir
- Is not this buckled well?
- Rarely, rarely
He that unbuckles this, till we do please to
doff it for our repose, shall hear a storm
Thou fumblest, Eros, and my queen's
a squire more tight at this than thou
Dispatch
O love, that thou couldst see my wars
today, and knewest the royal occupation...
...thou shouldst see a workman in it
The gods make this a happy day to Antony
Would thou and those thy scars
before prevailed to make me fight at land
Had'st thou done so, the kings that have revolted
and the soldier that has this morning left thee...
...would have still followed thy heels
- Who's gone this morning?
- Who? One ever near thee
Call for Enobarbus, he shall not hear thee,
or from Caesar's camp say 'I am none of thine'
- What sayest thou?
- Sir, he is with Caesar
Sir, his chests and treasure
he has not with him
- Is he gone?
- Most certain
Go, Eros, send his treasure after.
Do it
Detain no jot, I charge thee
Write to him, I will subscribe,
gentle adieus and greetings
Say that I wish he never find more cause
to change a master
O, my fortunes have corrupted honest men
Dispatch
Enobarbus!
Fare thee well, dame
Whatever becomes of me,
this is a soldier's kiss
Rebukable and worthy shameful check it
were to stand on more mechanic compliment
I'll leave thee now like a man of steel
You that will fight, follow me close.
I'll bring you to it
Adieu
Please you retire to your chamber?
Lead me.
He goes forth gallantly
That he and Caesar might
determine this great war in single fight!
Then Antony...
But now...
Well, on
Go forth, Agrippa, and begin the fight.
Our will is Antony be took alive
- Make it so known
- Caesar, I shall
The time of universal peace is near
Prove this a prosperous day, the three-nooked
world shall bear the olive freely
Antony is come into the field
Go charge Agrippa, plant those
that have revolted in the van...
...that Antony may seem to spend his fury
upon himself
Alexas did revolt.
For this pains, Caesar hath hanged him
Scarus and the rest that fell away
have entertainment but no honourable trust
I have done ill
Of which I do accuse myself so sorely
that I will joy no more
Enobarbus, Antony hath after thee sent
all thy treasure, with his bounty overplus
The messenger came on my guard, and
at thy tent is now unloading of his mules
I give it you
Mock not, Enobarbus, I tell you true.
Your emperor continues still a Jove
I am alone the villain of the Earth,
and feel I am so most
O Antony, thou mine of bounty
How wouldst thou have paid my better service,
when my turpitude thou dost so crown with gold?
This blows my heart
If swift thought break it not,
a swifter mean shall outstrike thought
But thought will do it, I feel
I fight against thee? No
I will go seek some ditch wherein to die.
The foulest best fits my latter part of life
We have beat him to his camp. Run one
before and let the Queen know of our deeds
Tomorrow before the sun shall see us, we'll
spill the blood that has today escaped
You have shown all Hectors. Enter
the city. Clip your wives, your friends
Tell them your feats,
whilst they with joyful tears...
...wash the congealment from your wounds
and kiss the honoured gashes whole
Lord of lords! O infinite virtue, comest thou
smiling from the world's great snare uncaught?
Mine nightingale,
we have beat them to their beds
Behold this man,
commend unto his lips thy favouring hand
Kiss it, my warrior. He hath fought today as if a
god in hate of mankind had destroyed in such a shape
I'll give thee, friend, an
armour all of gold. It was a king's
He has deserved it,
were it carbuncled like holy Phoebus' car
Give me thy hands
Had our great palace the capacity to camp
this host, we all would sup together...
...and drink carouses to the next
day's fate, which promises royal peril
Trumpeters,
with brazen din blast you the city's ear...
...that heaven and Earth may strike their
sounds together, applauding our approach
O, bear me witness, night.
Be witness to me, O thou blessed moon
When men revolted
shall upon record bear hateful memory...
...poor Enobarbus did
before thy face repent
O sovereign mistress of true melancholy,
the poisonous damp of night dispunge upon me
That life, a very rebel to my will,
may hang no longer on me
Throw my heart against the
flint and hardness of my fault...
...which, being dried with grief, will
break to powder and finish all foul thoughts
O Antony, nobler than my revolt is
infamous, forgive me in thine own particular
But let the world rank me in register
a master-leaver and a fugitive
O Antony! O Antony!
Their preparation is today by sea,
yet they are not joined
Swallows have built in Cleopatra's sails
their nests. The augurs say they know not...
...they cannot tell, look grimly
and dare not speak their knowledge
Antony is valiant and dejected,
and by starts his fretted fortunes...
...give him hope and fear
of what he has and has not
All is lost!
This foul Egyptian hath betrayed me
My fleet hath yielded to the foe...
...and yonder they cast their caps up
and carouse together like friends long lost
Triple-turned whore!
'Tis thou hast sold me to this novice...
...and my heart makes only wars on thee
Bid them all fly. For when I am revenged
upon my charm, I have done all
Bid them all fly. Begone
O sun, thy uprise shall I see no more
Fortune and Antony part here.
Even here do we shake hands
- Ah, thou spell, avaunt!
- Why is my lord enraged against his love?
Vanish, or I shall give thee thy deserving
and blemish Caesar's triumph
Let him take thee
and hoist thee up to the shouting plebeians
Follow his chariot,
like the greatest spot of all thy sex
Most monster-like be shown
to poorest diminutives, to dolts
And let patient Octavia plow thy visage up
with her prepared nails
'Tis well thou art
gone, if it be well to live
But better 'twere thou fell'st into my fury,
for one death might have prevented many
The witch shall die
To the young Roman boy she hath sold me,
and I fall under this plot. She dies for it
Help me, my women
O, he's more mad than Telamon for his shield.
The boar of Thessaly was never so embossed
To the monument. There lock
yourself and send him word you are dead
The soul and body rive not more in parting
than greatness going off
To the monument.
Mardian, go tell him I have slain myself
Say that the last I spoke was 'Antony',
and word it, prithee, piteously
Hence, Mardian,
and bring me how he takes my death
To the monument
Eros, thou yet beholdest me?
Ay, noble lord
Sometime we see a cloud that's dragonish,
a vapour sometime like a bear or lion...
A towered citadel, a pendent rock,
a forked mountain, or blue promontory...
...with trees upon it that nod unto
the world and mock our eyes with air
Thou hast seen these signs,
they are black vesper's pageants
Ay, my lord
That which is now a horse,
even with a thought the rack dislimns...
...and makes it indistinct as
water is in water - It does, my lord
My good knave Eros,
now thy captain is even such a body
Here I am Antony, yet cannot
hold this visible shape, my knave
I made these wars for Egypt, and the Queen,
whose heart I thought I had, for she had mine
Which whilst it was mine had
annexed unto it a million more, now lost
She, Eros, has packed cards with Caesar and
false-played my glory unto an enemy's triumph
Nay, weep not, gentle Eros.
There is left us ourselves to end ourselves
O, thy vile lady!
She has robbed me of my sword
No, Antony, my mistress loved thee and
her fortunes mingled with thine entirely
Hence, saucy eunuch, peace! She
hath betrayed me and shall die the death
Death of one person can be paid but once,
and that she has discharged
What thou wouldst do is done unto thy hand. The
last she spake was 'Antony, most noble Antony'
Then in the midst a tearing groan
did break the name of Antony
It was divided between her heart and lips.
She rendered life thy name so buried in her
- Dead, then?
- Dead
Unarm, Eros. The long day's
task is done, and we must sleep
That thou depart'st hence safe does
pay thy labour richly. Go. Off, pluck off
The sevenfold shield of Ajax
cannot keep the battery from my heart
O, cleave, my sides!
Heart, once be stronger than thy continent
Crack thy frail case.
Apace, Eros, apace
No more a soldier
Bruised pieces, go.
You have been nobly borne
From me awhile
I will overtake thee, Cleopatra,
and weep for my pardon
So it must be, for now the torch is out.
Seal, then, and all is done
Eros!
I come, my queen
Eros!
Stay for me
Where souls do couch on flowers, we'll hand in hand,
and with our sprightly port make the ghosts gaze
Dido and her Aeneas shall want troops,
and all the haunt be ours
- Come, Eros, Eros!
- What would my lord?
Thou art sworn, Eros, that when the exigent
should come, which now is come indeed...
When I should see behind me the inevitable
prosecution of disgrace and horror...
...that on my command thou then
wouldst kill me. Do it. The time is come
Thou strikest not me, 'tis Caesar
thou defeatest. Put colour in thy cheek
The gods withhold me! Shall I do that which all the
Parthian darts, though enemy, lost aim and could not?
Eros, wouldst thou be windowed in great Rome
and see thy master thus with pleached arms...
...bending down his corrigible neck,
his face subdued to penetrative shame?
I would not see it - Come, then,
for with a wound I must be cured
Draw that thy honest sword...
...which thou hast worn most useful
for thy country - O, sir, pardon me
When I did make thee free, sworest
thou not then to do this when I bade thee?
Do it at once, or thy precedent services
are all but accidents unpurposed
Draw, and come
Turn from me then that noble countenance
wherein the worship of the whole world lies
- Lo thee
- My sword is drawn
Then let it do at once
the thing why thou hast drawn it
My dear master, my captain, and my emperor, let me
say, before I strike this bloody stroke, farewell
- 'Tis said, man, and farewell
- Farewell, great chief
- Shall I strike now?
- Now, Eros
Why, there, then
Thus I do escape the
sorrow of Antony's death
Thrice nobler than myself
Thou teachest me, O valiant Eros,
what I should and thou couldst not
But I will be a bridegroom in my death
and run into it as to a lover's bed
Come then, and, Eros, thy master dies
thy scholar. To do thus I learned of thee
How, not dead?
Not dead
The guard, how? O, dispatch me!
What's the noise?
I have done my work ill, friend.
O, make an end of what I have begun
Thy death and fortunes
bid thy followers fly
This sword but shown to Caesar
with this tidings shall enter us with him
- Where's Antony?
- There, Diomed, there
Lives he?
Wilt thou not answer, man?
Art thou there, Diomed? Draw thy sword,
and give me sufficing strokes for death
Most absolute lord,
my mistress Cleopatra sent me to thee
- When did she send thee?
- Now, my lord
- Where is she?
- Locked in her monument
She had a prophesying fear of what hath come to
pass. For when she saw, which never shall be found...
...you did suspect she had disposed with Caesar,
and that your rage would not be purged...
...she sent you word she was dead
But fearing since how it might work,
hath sent me to proclaim the truth
And I am come, I dread, too late - Too
late, good Diomed. Call my guard, I prithee
What ho! The Emperor's guard!
The guard, what ho! Come, your lord calls
Bear me, good friends, where Cleopatra bides.
'Tis the last service that I shall command you
I have led you oft. Carry me now,
good friends, and have my thanks for all
O Charmian, I will never go from hence
- Be comforted, dear madam
- No, I will not
All strange and terrible events are
welcome, but comforts we despise
Our size of sorrow, proportioned to our
cause, must be as great as that which makes it
- How now? Is he dead?
- His death's upon him, but not dead
O sun, burn the great sphere thou movest in.
Darkling stand the varying shore of the world
O Antony, Antony, Antony!
Help me, Charmian! Help me, Iras! Let's
draw him hither. Help, good friends below!
Peace! Not Caesar's valour hath overthrown
Antony, but Antony's hath triumphed on itself
So it should be that none but Antony
should conquer Antony, but woe 'tis so
I am dying, Egypt, dying
Only I here importune death awhile until of many
thousand kisses the poor last I lay upon thy lips
I dare not, dear, dear my lord, pardon,
I dare not, lest I be taken
But come, come, Antony.
Help me, my women. We must draw thee up
- Assist, good friends
- O, quick, or I am gone
Here's sport indeed.
How heavy weighs my lord
Our strength is all gone into heaviness,
that makes the weight
Had I great Juno's power, the strong-winged Mercury
should fetch thee up and set thee by Jove's side
Yet come a little. Wishers were ever fools.
O, come, come, come
And welcome, welcome
Die where thou hast lived, quicken with kissing.
Had my lips that power, thus would I wear them out
I am dying, Egypt, dying. Give me
some wine, and let me speak a little
No, let me speak,
and let me rail so high...
...that the false huswife Fortune
break her wheel, provoked by my offence
One word, sweet queen.
Of Caesar seek your honour with your safety
- They do not go together
- Gentle, hear me
None about Caesar trust but Proculeius
My resolution and my hands I'll trust,
none about Caesar
The miserable change now at my end
lament nor sorrow at
But please your thoughts in feeding them
with those my former fortunes
Wherein I lived the greatest
prince of the world, the noblest
And do now not basely die, not cowardly
put off my helmet to my countryman
A Roman by a Roman valiantly vanquished
Now my spirit is going.
I can no more
Noblest of men, woo't die?
Hast thou no care of me?
Shall I abide in this dull world, which
in thy absence is no better than a sty?
O see, my women,
the crown of the earth doth melt
My lord!
O, withered is the garland of the war,
the soldier's pole is fallen
Young boys and girls
are level now with men
The odds is gone, and there is nothing
left remarkable beneath the visiting moon
O, quietness, lady
She's dead, too, our sovereign.
Royal Egypt, Empress!
- O madam, madam, madam!
- Peace, peace, Iras!
No more but even a woman
And commanded by such poor passion as the
maid that milks and does the meanest chares
It were for me to throw my
sceptre at the injurious gods...
...to tell them that this world did
equal theirs till they had stolen our jewel
All's but naught
Patience is sottish,
and impatience does become a dog that's mad
Then is it sin to rush into the secret
house of death ere death dare come to us?
How do you, women?
What, what, good cheer
Why, how now, Charmian?
My noble girls
Ah, women, women. Look, our
lamp is spent, it's out. Come, away
This case of that huge spirit now is cold
Ah women, women! Come, we have no friend
but resolution and the briefest end
Go to him, Maecenas, bid him yield
Being so frustrate, tell him,
he mocks the pauses that he makes
Caesar, I shall
Wherefore is that? And what art thou
that darest appear thus to us?
I am called Ventidius
Mark Antony I served,
and wore my life to spend upon his haters
If thou please to take me to thee,
as I was to him I'll be to Caesar
If thou pleasest not,
I yield thee up my life
- What is't thou sayest?
- I say, O Caesar, Antony is dead
The breaking of so great a thing
should make a greater crack
He is dead, Caesar,
This is his sword
I robbed his wound of it.
Behold it stained with his most noble blood
O Antony, I have followed thee to this,
but we do lance diseases in our bodies
I must perforce have shown to thee
such a declining day or look on thine
We could not stall together
in the whole world
But yet let me lament with tears
as sovereign as the blood of hearts...
That thou my brother, my competitor
in top of all design, my mate in empire...
Friend and companion in the front of war,
the arm of mine own body...
And the heart
where mine his thoughts did kindle...
...that our stars unreconciliable
should divide our equalness to this
Hear me, good friends...
But I will tell you at some meeter season
Whence are you?
The Queen my mistress, confined in her
monument, of thy intents desires instruction
That she preparedly may frame herself
to the way she's forced to
Bid her have good heart. She soon
shall know of us, by some of ours...
...how honourable and how kindly
we determine for her
- For Caesar cannot live to be ungentle
- May fortune pursue thee
Come hither, Proculeius.
Go and say we purpose her no shame
Give her what comforts
the quality of her passion shall require
Lest, in her greatness, by some
mortal stroke she do defeat us
For her life in Rome
would be eternal in our triumph
Go, and with your speediest
bring us what she says...
- ...and how you find of her
- Caesar, I shall
Go with me to my tent, where you shall see
how hardly I was drawn into this war
How calm and gentle I proceeded still
in all my writings
Go with me and see
what I can show in this
Caesar sends greeting to the Queen of Egypt
And bids thee study on what fair demands
thou meanest to have him grant thee
- What's thy name?
- My name is Proculeius
Antony did tell me of
you, bade me trust you
But I do not greatly care to be deceived
that have no use for trusting
If your master would have a queen his beggar, you
must tell him that majesty, to keep decorum...
...must no less beg than a kingdom. If he
please to give me conquered Egypt for my son...
...he gives me so much of mine own
as I will kneel to him with thanks
Be of good cheer. You're fallen
into a princely hand, fear nothing
Make your full reference freely to my lord, who is
so full of grace that it flows over on all that need
Let me report to him your sweet dependency,
and you shall find a conqueror...
...that will pray in aid for kindness
where he for grace is kneeled to
Pray you tell him I am his fortune's vassal
and I give him the greatness he has got
I hourly learn a doctrine of obedience,
and would gladly look him in the face
This I'll report, dear lady. Have comfort, for I
know your plight is pitied of him that caused it
Guard her till Caesar come
- Royal queen!
- O, Cleopatra, thou art taken, queen!
Quick, quick, good hands
Hold, worthy lady, hold
Do not yourself such wrong,
who are in this relieved, but not betrayed
What, of death, too,
that rids our dogs of languish?
Cleopatra, do not abuse my master's bounty
by the undoing of yourself
Let the world see his nobleness well acted,
which your death will never let come forth
Where art thou, Death?
Come hither, come!
Come, come, and take a queen
worth many babes and beggars
O, temperance, lady - Sir, I
will eat no meat, I'll not drink, sir
If idle talk will once be
necessary, I'll not sleep neither
This mortal house I'll ruin,
do Caesar what he can
Know, sir, that I will not wait pinioned
at your master's court
Nor once be chastised
with the sober eye of dull Octavia
Shall they hoist me up and show me
to the shouting varletry of censuring Rome?
Rather a ditch in Egypt
be gentle grave unto me
Rather on Nilus' mud lay me stark naked, and
let the waterflies blow me into abhorring
Rather make my country's high pyramides
my gibbet and hang me up in chains
You do extend these thoughts of horror
further than you shall find cause in Caesar
Proculeius, what thou hast done thy master
Caesar knows, and he hath sent for thee
- For the Queen, I'll take her to my guard
- Be gentle to her
To Caesar I will speak what you
shall please, if you'll employ me to him
Say I would die
- Most noble empress, you have heard of me
- I cannot tell
Assuredly you know me - No
matter, sir, what I have heard or known
You laugh when boys or
women tell their dreams
- Is it not your trick?
- I understand not, madam
I dreamt there was an emperor Antony
O, such another sleep,
that I might see but such another man
- If it might please you...
- His face was as the heavens
And therein stuck a sun and moon,
which kept their course...
- ...and lighted the little O, the earth
- Most sovereign creature...
His legs bestrid the ocean,
his reared arm crested the waves
His voice was propertied as all
the tuned spheres, and that to friends
But when he meant to quail and
shake the orb, he was as rattling thunder
For his bounty, there was no winter in it. An
autumn 'twas, that grew the more by reaping
His delights were dolphin-like, they showed
his back above the element they lived in
In his livery walked crowns and crownets, realms
and islands were as plates dropped from his pocket
Think you there was, or might be,
such a man as this I dreamt of?
- Gentle madam, no
- You lie up to the hearing of the gods
But if there be nor ever were one such,
it's past the size of dreaming
Nature wants stuff
to vie strange forms with fancy
Yet to imagine an Antony were nature's piece
'gainst fancy, condemning shadows quite
Hear me, good madam. Your loss is as yourself,
great, and you bear it as answering to the weight
Would I might never
overtake pursued success...
...but I do feel, by the rebound of yours,
a grief that smites my very heart at root
I thank you, sir
- Know you what Caesar means to do with me?
- I am loath to tell you what I would you knew
- Nay, pray you, sir
- Though he be honourable...
- He'll lead me, then, in triumph
- Madam, he will. I know it
Which is the Queen of Egypt?
It is the Emperor, madam
Arise. You shall not kneel
I pray you, rise. Rise, Egypt
Sir, the gods will have it thus.
My master and my lord I must obey
Cleopatra, know we will
extenuate rather than enforce
If you apply yourself to our intents, which towards you
are most gentle, you shall find a benefit in this change
But if you seek to lay on me a cruelty
by taking Antony's course...
...you shall bereave yourself
of my good purposes
And put your children to that destruction
which I'll guard them from if thereon you rely
- I'll take my leave
- And may through all the world
'Tis yours, and we, your scutcheons and your signs
of conquest, shall hang in what place you please
Cleopatra, make not your thoughts
your prisons. No, dear queen
For we intend so to dispose you as yourself
shall give us counsel. Feed and sleep
Our care and pity is so much upon you
that we remain your friend. And so adieu
- My master and my lord
- Not so. Adieu
He words me, girls, he words me, that I should
not be noble to myself. But hark thee, Charmian
Finish, good lady. The bright
day is done, and we are for the dark
Hie thee again.
I have spoke already, and it is provided
- Go put it to the haste
- Madam, I will
Madam, Caesar through
Syria intends his journey...
...and within three days
you with your children will he send before
Make your best use of this
- Agrippa, I shall remain your debtor
- I your servant
Adieu, good queen. I must attend
on Caesar - Farewell, and thanks
Now, Iras, what thinkest thou?
Thou an Egyptian puppet
shall be shown in Rome as well as I
- The gods forbid!
- Nay, 'tis most certain, Iras
Saucy lictors will catch at us like strumpets,
and scald rhymers ballad us out of tune
The quick comedians extemporally will
stage us and present our Alexandrian revels
Antony shall be brought drunken forth
And I shall see some squeaking Cleopatra
boy my greatness in the posture of a whore
I'll never see it! For I am sure mine nails
are stronger than mine eyes
Why, that's the way to fool their preparation
and to conquer their most absurd intents
Now, Charmian!
Show me, my women, like a queen
Go fetch my best attires.
I am again for Cydnus to meet Mark Antony
Sirrah Iras, go.
Now, noble Charmian, we'll dispatch indeed
And when thou hast done this chare,
I'll give thee leave to play till Doomsday
Bring our crown and all
- Wherefore's this noise?
- Here is a rural fellow...
...that will not be denied your
Highness' presence. He brings you figs
Let him come in
What poor an instrument may do
a noble deed. He brings me liberty
My resolution's placed,
and I have nothing of woman in me
Now from head to foot I am marble-constant.
Now the fleeting moon no planet is of mine
Hast thou the pretty worm of Nilus there
that kills and pains not?
Truly I have him, but I would not be the
party that should desire you to touch him
For his biting is immortal. Those that
do die of it do seldom or never recover
- Rememberest thou any that have died on it?
- Very many, men and women too
I heard of one of them no longer than yesterday.
A very honest woman, but something given to lie...
...as a woman should not
do but in the way of honesty
How she died of the biting of it, what pain she
felt. Truly, she makes a very good report of the worm
But this is most falliable,
the worm's an odd worm
- Get thee hence. Farewell
- I wish you all joy of the worm
- Farewell
- Very good. Give it nothing, I pray you...
- ...for it is not worth the feeding
- Will it eat me?
You must not think I am so simple but I
know the devil himself will not eat a woman
I know that a woman is a dish for the gods
if the devil dress her not
But truly these same whoreson devils
do the gods great harm in their women...
...for in every ten that they make,
the devils mar five
- Well, get thee gone. Farewell
- Yes, forsooth
I wish you joy of the worm
Give me my robe
Put on my crown
I have immortal longings in me
Now no more the juice of Egypt's grape
shall moist this lip
Yare, yare, good Iras, quick
Methinks I hear Antony call. I see
him rouse himself to praise my noble act
I hear him mock the luck of Caesar, which
the gods give men to excuse their after wrath
Husband, I come.
Now to that name my courage prove my title
I am fire and air.
My other elements I give to baser life
So, have you done? Come then,
and taste the last warmth of my lips
Farewell, kind Charmian
Iras, long farewell
Have I the aspic in my lips? Dost fall?
Dissolve, thick cloud, and rain,
that I may say the gods themselves do weep
This proves me base.
If she first meet the curled Antony...
...he'll make demand of her, and spend
that kiss which is my heaven to have
Come, thou mortal wretch
With thy sharp teeth this knot
intrinsicate of life at once untie
Poor venomous fool,
be angry and dispatch
- O eastern star
- Peace, peace
Dost thou not see my baby at my breast,
that sucks the nurse asleep?
- O, break, O, break!
- As sweet as balm, as soft as air, as gentle...
O Antony
Nay, I will take thee too
What should I stay...
...in this vile world?
So, fare thee well
Now boast thee, Death,
in thy possession lies a lass unparalleled
Downy windows, close
And golden Phoebus,
never be beheld of eyes again so royal
Your crown's awry.
I'll mend it, and then play
- Where's the Queen?
- Speak softly. Wake her not
- Caesar hath sent...
- Too slow a messenger
What work is here, Charmian?
Is this well done?
It is well done, and fitting for a princess
descended of so many royal kings
Ah, soldier!
Caesar, thy thoughts
touch their effects in this
Thyself art coming to see performed the
dreaded act which thou so soughtest to hinder
O sir, you are too sure an augurer.
That you did fear is done
Bravest at the last, she leveled at our
purposes and, being royal, took her own way
The manner of their deaths?
O Caesar, this Charmian lived
but now, she stood and spake
I found her trimming up the diadem
on her dead mistress
Tremblingly she stood,
and on the sudden dropped
She looks like sleep, as she would catch
another Antony in her strong toil of grace
A pair so famous
High events as these
strike those that make them
And their story is no less in pity than his
glory which brought them to be lamented
Our army shall in solemn show
attend this funeral, and then to Rome
Come, Agrippa,
see high order in this great solemnity