Julius Caesar (Folio 1, 1623)
Peer Reviewed
The Tragedie of Julius Cæsar
113
¶For my part, I haue walk'd about the streets,
485Submitting me vnto the perillous Night;
¶And thus vnbraced, Caska, as you see,
490Euen in the ayme, and very flash of it.
¶It is the part of men, to feare and tremble,
495Cassi. You are dull, Caska:
¶You looke pale, and gaze, and put on feare,
¶Why Birds and Beasts, from qualitie and kinde,
¶Why Old men, Fooles, and Children calculate,
505Why all these things change from their Ordinance,
¶Their Natures, and pre-formed Faculties,
¶That Heauen hath infus'd them with these Spirits,
¶To make them Instruments of feare, and warning,
¶Now could I (Caska) name to thee a man,
¶Most like this dreadfull Night,
¶That Thunders, Lightens, opens Graues, and roares,
¶As doth the Lyon in the Capitoll:
515A man no mightier then thy selfe, or me,
¶In personall action; yet prodigious growne,
520Cassi. Let it be who it is: for Romans now
¶Haue Thewes, and Limbes, like to their Ancestors;
¶But woe the while, our Fathers mindes are dead,
¶And we are gouern'd with our Mothers spirits,
¶And he shall weare his Crowne by Sea, and Land,
¶In euery place, saue here in Italy.
¶Cassi. I know where I will weare this Dagger then;
¶Therein, yee Gods, you Tyrants doe defeat.
¶But Life being wearie of these worldly Barres,
¶If I know this, know all the World besides,
¶That part of Tyrannie that I doe beare,
Thunder still.
¶Cask. So can I:
¶So euery Bond-man in his owne hand beares
¶The power to cancell his Captiuitie.
545Poore man, I know he would not be a Wolfe,
¶But that he sees the Romans are but Sheepe:
¶He were no Lyon, were not Romans Hindes.
¶Begin it with weake Strawes. What trash is Rome?
¶For the base matter, to illuminate
¶So vile a thing as Cæsar. But oh Griefe,
¶Before a willing Bond-man: then I know
¶And dangers are to me indifferent.
¶That is no flearing Tell-tale. Hold, my Hand:
560And I will set this foot of mine as farre,
¶As who goes farthest.
¶Cassi. There's a Bargaine made.
¶Now know you, Caska, I haue mou'd already
¶Some certaine of the Noblest minded Romans
565To vnder-goe, with me, an Enterprize,
¶Of Honorable dangerous consequence;
¶And I doe know by this, they stay for me
¶In Pompeyes Porch: for now this fearefull Night,
570And the Complexion of the Element
¶Is Fauors, like the Worke we haue in hand,
¶
Enter Cinna.
575haste.
¶Cassi. 'Tis Cinna, I doe know him by his Gate,
¶Cinna. To finde out you: Who's that, Metellus
¶Cymber?
580Cassi. No, it is Caska, one incorporate
¶To our Attempts. Am I not stay'd for, Cinna?
¶Cinna. I am glad on't.
¶What a fearefull Night is this?
¶If you could but winne the Noble Brutus
¶To our party---
¶Cassi. Be you content. Good Cinna, take this Paper,
590And looke you lay it in the Pretors Chayre,
¶Where Brutus may but finde it: and throw this
¶In at his Window; set this vp with Waxe
¶Vpon old Brutus Statue: all this done,
¶Repaire to Pompeyes Porch, where you shall finde vs.
595Is Decius Brutus and Trebonius there?
¶Cinna. All, but Metellus Cymber, and hee's gone
¶Cassi. That done, repayre to Pompeyes Theater.
600
Exit Cinna.
¶Come Caska, you and I will yet, ere day,
¶See Brutus at his house: three parts of him
¶Is ours alreadie, and the man entire
¶Vpon the next encounter, yeelds him ours.
¶And that which would appeare Offence in vs,
¶His Countenance, like richest Alchymie,
¶Cassi. Him, and his worth, and our great need of him,
610You haue right well conceited: let vs goe,
¶For it is after Mid-night, and ere day,
¶We will awake him, and be sure of him.
¶
Exeunt.
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Actus
