Julius Caesar

Julius Caesar

By William Shakespeare

Julius Caesar: Act 3, Scene 1 Summary

Plot Summary / Storyline

  • On the way to the Capitol, Caesar pushes aside Artemidorus' letter, saying personal matters must wait.
  • At the Senate, the conspirators kneel and beg for Publius Cimber's recall; when Caesar proudly refuses, they stab him one by one.
  • Brutus strikes last; Caesar, shocked to see him, says "Et tu, Brute? Then fall, Caesar," and dies.
  • The conspirators bathe their hands and swords in Caesar's blood and declare liberty for Rome.
  • Antony arrives, pretends to accept their reasons, and shakes their bloody hands, but privately asks Caesar's corpse to forgive him and hints at revenge.
  • Brutus allows Antony to speak at Caesar's funeral, after Brutus, under certain rules.

Commentary on Act 3, Scene 1

The assassination is carefully staged: the conspirators hide their real plan behind a fake request about Publius Cimber, showing political murder disguised as law and justice.

Caesar's final words to Brutus make the murder feel like a deep personal betrayal, not just a political act.

The bloody scene in the Senate, with the conspirators calling it "peace, freedom and liberty," creates strong irony: their "freedom" comes through chaos and violence, not order.

Antony's calm, controlled reaction shows his intelligence; by seeming friendly, he saves his own life and gains time to plan.

Allowing Antony to speak at the funeral is Brutus' worst political mistake; it comes from his innocent belief that everyone will act honourably, which is not true in politics.