Cassius
explains that Brutus accused a man named Lucius Pella of taking bribes.
Cassius wrote to him, saying that he knew Lucius Pella was innocent. But
Brutus just ignored him.
Brutus
says it was unnecessary for Cassius to intervene in such a small matter.
Then he says that Cassius himself sometimes allows unworthy people to
buy offices in his service. Cassius, angered, says that if anyone other
than Brutus made such a remark, he would kill him. But Brutus is not
intimidated. He says that they killed Caesar in the name of justice.
Should one of them now accept bribes?
Cassius
warns him to stop, and says he is more experienced than Brutus and
therefore able to make management decisions. They fall to quarreling.
Brutus tells Cassius he is hot-tempered and should control his anger.
But Brutus will not let it disturb him. They quarrel further over
whether Cassius said he was a better soldier than Brutus. Cassius says
that even Caesar would not have dared to anger him in this way, and
Brutus responds by saying Cassius would not have dared to have provoked
him to anger.
Brutus
then goes to the heart of the matter. He wrote to Cassius, asking for
money so he could pay his soldiers, because he could not bring himself
to raise it by taxing the peasants. But Cassius refused.
Cassius
denies the charge and blames his messenger. He protests that Brutus
exaggerates his faults. He gives a despairing speech in which he says he
is weary of the world, and he invites Brutus to kill him with his own
dagger. This breaks the tension, because Brutus realizes that it is
better just to let Cassius be angry when the mood takes him. It is soon
over. Brutus confesses that he spoke in anger too. They are reconciled.
Brutus promises that if Cassius should be angry with him in the future,
he will not take it so seriously.
There
is a disturbance outside as a poet urges the two men to be friends.
After this, Brutus explains to Cassius that he is weighed down by grief,
and that is why he became angry. His wife Portia, distressed by his
absence and the strength of Octavius and Antony, committed suicide by
swallowing burning coals. Brutus and Cassius drink wine to forget their
sorrows.
Titinius
and Messala enter and describe the military situation. Octavius and
Antony are marching on them with a large army. They have put a hundred
senators to death. Brutus has different information, that only seventy
senators were killed.
Brutus
raises the question of whether they should march to Philippi to meet the
opposing army. Cassius says it would be better not to. They should let
Antony's army advance, so they get exhausted, while Brutus and
Cassius's forces stay fresh. Brutus disagrees. He warns that as the
opposing army advances, they may pick up new recruits from the towns
they pass through, where Brutus and Cassius are unpopular. But if Brutus
and Cassius march on Philippi, they can prevent this happening. He
insists that the time is right for them to strike. Their forces are at
their strongest. If they wait, their strength may decline, while the
enemy's will increase. Cassius accepts Brutus's argument and they
part on good terms.
Brutus's
servant Lucius plays some music. After Lucius falls asleep, Brutus reads
a book. He is startled by the appearance of the ghost of Caesar. The
ghost says that he will reappear to Brutus at Philippi. Then he
disappears. Brutus awakens his servants, but none of them saw the ghost.
Analysis
This
scene shows the instability of the alliance between Brutus and Cassius.
First, their personalities clash. Cassius is hot-tempered, but Brutus,
although calmer, becomes tiresome in his insistence on his own honesty
and rectitude. Second, the two men rarely agree on strategy. Cassius
again makes the mistake of deferring to Brutus's judgment. But the
scene also shows Brutus's decency, in his gentle concern for the
welfare of his servants. We are also reminded that although Caesar is
dead, his ghostly presence still dominates the play.
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