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English Literature
20
Shakespearean Studies
Antony and Cleopetra
[ M. F. Haq & M. Saeed] -
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Antony and Cleopatra
BY
William Shakespeare
Plot Overview
Mark Antony, one of the three rulers of the Roman Empire, spends his time in Egypt, living a
life of decadence and conducting an affair with the country’s beautiful queen, Cleopatra. When a
message arrives informing him that his wife, Fulvia, is dead and that Pompey is raising an army
to rebel against the triumvirate, Antony decides to return to Rome. In Antony’s absence,
Octavius Caesar and Lepidus, his fellow triumvirs, worry about Pompey’s increasing strength.
Caesar condemns Antony for neglecting his duties as a statesman and military officer in order to
live a decadent life by Cleopatra’s side.
The news of his wife’s death and imminent battle pricks Antony’s sense of duty, and he feels
compelled to return to Rome. Upon his arrival, he and Caesar quarrel, while Lepidus
ineffectually tries to make peace. Realizing that an alliance is necessary to defeat Pompey,
Antony and Caesar agree that Antony will marry Caesar’s sister, Octavia, who will solidify their
loyalty to one another. Enobarbus, Antony’s closest friend, predicts to Caesar’s men that, despite
the marriage, Antony will surely return to Cleopatra.
In Egypt, Cleopatra learns of Antony’s marriage and flies into a jealous rage. However, when a
messenger delivers word that Octavia is plain and unimpressive, Cleopatra becomes confident
that she will win Antony back. The triumvirs meet Pompey and settle their differences without
going to battle. Pompey agrees to keep peace in exchange for rule over Sicily and Sardinia. That
evening, the four men drink to celebrate their truce. One of Pompey’s soldiers discloses to him a
plan to assassinate the triumvirs, thereby delivering world power into Pompey’s hands, but
Pompey dismisses the scheme as an affront to his honor. Meanwhile, one of Antony’s -generals
wins a victory over the kingdom of Parthia.
Antony and Octavia depart for Athens. Once they are gone, Caesar breaks his truce, wages war
against Pompey, and defeats him. After using Lepidus’s army to secure a victory, he accuses
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Lepidus of treason, imprisons him, and confiscates his land and possessions. This news angers
Antony, as do the rumors that Caesar has been speaking out against him in public. Octavia pleads
with Antony to maintain a peaceful relationship with her brother. Should Antony and Caesar
fight, she says, her affections would be painfully divided. Antony dispatches her to Rome on a
peace mission, and quickly returns to Egypt and Cleopatra. There, he raises a large army to fight
Caesar, and Caesar, incensed over Antony’s treatment of his sister, responds in kind. Caesar
commands his army and navy to Egypt. Ignoring all advice to the contrary, Antony elects to fight
him at sea, allowing Cleopatra to command a ship despite Enobarbus’s strong objections.
Antony’s forces lose the battle when Cleopatra’s ship flees and Antony’s follows, leaving the
rest of the fleet vulnerable.
Antony despairs, condemning Cleopatra for leading him into infamy but quickly forgiving her.
He and Cleopatra send requests to their conqueror: Antony asks to be allowed to live in Egypt,
while Cleopatra asks that her kingdom be passed down to her rightful heirs. Caesar dismisses
Antony’s request, but he promises Cleopatra a fair hearing if she betrays her lover. Cleopatra
seems to be giving thought to Caesar’s message when Antony barges in, curses her for her
treachery, and orders the innocent messenger whipped. When, moments later, Antony forgives
Cleopatra, Enobarbus decides that his master is finished and defects to Caesar’s camp.
Antony meets Caesar’s troops in battle and scores an unexpected victory. When he learns of
Enobarbus’s desertion, Antony laments his own bad fortune, which he believes has corrupted an
honorable man. He sends his friend’s possessions to Caesar’s camp and returns to Cleopatra to
celebrate his victory. Enobarbus, undone by shame at his own disloyalty, bows under the weight
of his guilt and dies. Another day brings another battle, and once again Antony meets Caesar at
sea. As before, the Egyptian fleet proves treacherous; it abandons the fight and leaves Antony to
suffer defeat. Convinced that his lover has betrayed him, Antony vows to kill Cleopatra. In order
to protect herself, she quarters herself in her monument and sends word that she has committed
suicide. Antony, racked with grief, determines to join his queen in the afterlife. He commands
one of his attendants to fulfill his promise of unquestioned service and kill him. The attendant
kills himself instead. Antony then falls on his own sword, but the wound is not immediately
fatal. He is carried to Cleopatra’s monument, where the lovers are reunited briefly before
Antony’s death. Caesar takes the queen prisoner, planning to display her in Rome as a testament
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to the might of his empire, but she learns of his plan and kills herself with the help of several
poisonous snakes. Caesar has her buried beside Antony.
Mark Antony
Throughout the play, Antony grapples with the conflict between his love for Cleopatra and his
duties to the Roman Empire. In Act I, scene i, he engages Cleopatra in a conversation about the
nature and depth of their love, dismissing the duties he has neglected for her sake: “Let Rome in
Tiber melt, and the wide arch / Of the ranged empire fall” (I.i.35–36). In the very next scene,
however, Antony worries that he is about to “lose [him]self in dotage” (I.ii.106) and fears that
the death of his wife is only one of the ills that his “idleness doth hatch” (I.ii.119). Thus, Antony
finds himself torn between the Rome of his duty and the Alexandria of his pleasure. The
geographical poles that draw him in opposite directions represent deep-seated conflicts between
his reason and emotion, his sense of duty and his desire, his obligations to the state and his
private needs.
Antony’s understanding of himself, however, cannot bear the stress of such tension. In his mind,
he is first and foremost a Roman hero of the first caliber. He won his position as one of the three
leaders of the world by vanquishing the treacherous Brutus and Cassius, who conspired to
assassinate his predecessor, Julius Caesar. He often recalls the golden days of his own heroism,
but now that he is entangled in an affair with the Egyptian queen, his memories do little more
than demonstrate how far he has strayed from his ideal self. As he points out to Octavia in Act
III, scene iv, his current actions imperil his honor, and without his honor—the defining
characteristic of the Roman hero—he can no longer be Antony: “If I lose my honor, / I lose
myself. Better I were not yours / Than yours so branchless” (III.iv.22–24). Later, having suffered
defeat at the hands of both Caesar and Cleopatra, Antony returns to the imagery of the stripped
tree as he laments, “[T]his pine is barked / That overtopped them all” (IV.xiii.23–24). Rather
than amend his identity to accommodate these defeats, Antony chooses to take his own life, an
act that restores him to his brave and indomitable former self. In suicide, Antony manages to
convince himself and the world (as represented by Cleopatra and Caesar) that he is “a Roman by
a Roman / Valiantly vanquished” (IV.xvi.59–60).
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Cleopatra
The assortment of perspectives from which we see Cleopatra illustrates the varying
understandings of her as a decadent foreign woman and a noble ruler. As Philo and Demetrius
take the stage in Act I, scene i, their complaints about Antony’s neglected duties frame the
audience’s understanding of Cleopatra, the queen for whom Antony risks his reputation. Within
the first ten lines of the play, the men declare Cleopatra a lustful “gipsy,” a description that is
repeated throughout the play as though by a chorus (I.i.10). Cleopatra is labeled a “wrangling
queen” (I.i.50), a “slave” (I.iv.19), an “Egyptian dish” (II.vi.123), and a “whore” (III.vi.67); she
is called “Salt Cleopatra” (II.i.21) and an enchantress who has made Antony “the noble ruin of
her magic” (III.x.18).
But to view Cleopatra as such is to reduce her character to the rather narrow perspective of the
Romans, who, standing to lose their honor or kingdoms through her agency, are most threatened
by her. Certainly this threat has much to do with Cleopatra’s beauty and open sexuality, which,
as Enobarbus points out in his famous description of her in Act II, scene ii, is awe-inspiring. But
it is also a performance. Indeed, when Cleopatra takes the stage, she does so as an actress,
elevating her passion, grief, and outrage to the most dramatic and captivating level. As
Enobarbus says, the queen did not walk through the street, but rather
Hop[ped] forty paces . . .
And having lost her breath, she spoke and panted,
That she did make defect perfection,
And breathless, pour breath forth.
(II.ii.235–238)
Whether whispering sweet words of love to Antony or railing at a supposedly disloyal servant,
Cleopatra leaves her onlookers breathless. As Antony notes, she is a woman “[w]hom everything
becomes—to chide, to laugh / To weep” (I.i.51–52). It is this ability to be the perfect
embodiment of all things—beauty and ugliness, virtue and vice—that Cleopatra stands to lose
after her defeat by Caesar. By parading her through the streets of Rome as his trophy, he intends
to reduce her character to a single, base element—to immortalize her as a whore. If Antony
cannot allow his conception of self to expand to incorporate his defeats, then Cleopatra cannot
allow hers to be stripped to the image of a boy actor “squeaking Cleopatra . . . / I’th’ posture of a
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whore” (V.ii.216–217). Cleopatra often behaves childishly and with relentless self-absorption;
nevertheless, her charisma, strength, and indomitable will make her one of Shakespeare’s
strongest, most awe-inspiring female characters.
Octavius Caesar
Ocatavius Caesar is both a menacing adversary for Antony and a rigid representation of Roman
law and order. He is not a two-dimensional villain, though, since his frustrations with the ever-
neglectful Antony seem justified. When he complains to Lepidus that he resents having to “bear /
So great weight in [Antony’s] lightness,” we certainly understand his concern (I.iv.24–25). He
does not emerge as a particularly likable character—his treatment of Lepidus, for instance,
betrays the cruel underside of Caesar’s aggressive ambitions—but he is a complicated one. He is,
in other words, convincingly human. There is, perhaps, no better example of Caesar’s humanity
than his conflicted feelings about Antony. For a good deal of the play, Caesar seems bent, rather
ruthlessly, on destroying Antony. When he achieves this desired end, however, he does not relish
the moment as we might expect. Instead, he mourns the loss of a great soldier and musters
enough compassion to be not only fair-minded but also fair-hearted, commanding that the lovers
be buried beside one another.
Themes
The Struggle Between Reasonand Emotion
In his opening lines to Demetrius, Philo complains that Antony has abandoned the military
endeavors on which his reputation is based for Cleopatra’s sake. His criticism of Antony’s
“dotage,” or stupidity, introduces a tension between reason and emotion that runs throughout the
play (I.i.1). Antony and Cleopatra’s first exchange heightens this tension, as they argue whether
their love can be put into words and understood or whether it exceeds such faculties and
boundaries of reason. If, according to Roman consensus, Antony is the military hero and
disciplined statesmen that Caesar and others believe him to be, then he seems to have happily
abandoned his reason in order to pursue his passion. He declares: “Let Rome in Tiber melt, and
the wide arch / Of the ranged empire fall” (I.i.35–36). The play, however, is more concerned
with the battle between reason and emotion than the triumph of one over the other, and this battle
is waged most forcefully in the character of Antony. More than any other character in the play,
Antony vacillates between Western and Eastern sensibilities, feeling pulled by both his duty to
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the empire and his desire for pleasure, his want of military glory and his passion for Cleopatra.
Soon after his nonchalant dismissal of Caesar’s messenger, the empire, and his duty to it, he
chastises himself for his neglect and commits to return to Rome, lest he “lose [him]self in
dotage” (I.ii.106).
As the play progresses, Antony continues to inhabit conflicting identities that play out the
struggle between reason and emotion. At one moment, he is the vengeful war hero whom Caesar
praises and fears. Soon thereafter, he sacrifices his military position by unwisely allowing
Cleopatra to determine his course of action. As his Roman allies—even the ever-faithful
Enobarbus—abandon him, Antony feels that he has, indeed, lost himself in dotage, and he
determines to rescue his noble identity by taking his own life. At first, this course of action may
appear to be a triumph of reason over passion, of -Western sensibilities over Eastern ones, but
the play is not that simple. Although Antony dies believing himself a man of honor, discipline,
and reason, our understanding of him is not nearly as straight-forward. In order to come to terms
with Antony’s character, we must analyze the aspects of his identity that he ignores. He is, in the
end, a man ruled by passion as much as by reason. Likewise, the play offers us a worldview in
which one sensibility cannot easily dominate another. Reason cannot ever fully conquer the
passions, nor can passion wholly undo reason.
The Clash of East and West
Although Antony and Cleopatra details the conflict between Rome and Egypt, giving us an idea
of the Elizabethan perceptions of the difference between Western and Eastern cultures, it does
not make a definitive statement about which culture ultimately triumphs. In the play, the Western
and Eastern poles of the world are characterized by those who inhabit them: Caesar, for instance,
embodies the stoic duty of the West, while Cleopatra, in all her theatrical grandeur, represents
the free-flowing passions of the East. Caesar’s concerns throughout the play are certainly
imperial: he means to invade foreign lands in order to invest them with traditions and
sensibilities of his own. But the play resists siding with this imperialist impulse. Shakespeare, in
other words, does not align the play’s sympathies with the West; Antony and Cleopatra can
hardly be read as propaganda for Western domination. On the contrary, the Roman
understanding of Cleopatra and her kingdom seems exceedingly superficial. To Caesar, the
queen of Egypt is little more than a whore with a flair for drama. His perspective allows little
room for the real power of Cleopatra’s sexuality—she can, after all, persuade the most decorated
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of generals to follow her into ignoble retreat. Similarly, it allows little room for the indomitable
strength of her will, which she demonstrates so forcefully at the end of the play as she refuses to
allow herself to be turned into a “Egyptian puppet” for the entertainment of the Roman masses
(V.ii.204).
In Antony and Cleopatra, West meets East, but it does not, regardless of Caesar’s triumph over
the land of Egypt, conquer it. Cleopatra’s suicide suggests that something of the East’s spirit, the
freedoms and passions that are not represented in the play’s conception of the West, cannot be
subsumed by Caesar’s victory. The play suggests that the East will live on as a visible and
unconquerable counterpoint to the West, bound as inseparably and eternally as Antony and
Cleopatra are in their tomb.
The Definition of Honor
Throughout the play, characters define honor variously, and often in ways that are not intuitive.
As Antony prepares to meet Caesar in battle, he determines that he “will live / Or bathe [his]
dying honour in the blood / Shall make it live again” (IV.ii.5–7). Here, he explicitly links the
notion of honor to to that of death, suggesting the latter as a surefire means of achieving the
former. The play bears out this assertion, since, although Antony and Cleopatra kill themselves
for different reasons, they both imagine that the act invests them with honor. In death, Antony
returns to his identity as a true, noble Roman, becoming “a Roman by a Roman / Valiantly
vanquished” (IV.xvi.59–60), while Cleopatra resolves to “bury him, and then what’s brave,
what’s noble, / Let’s do it after the high Roman fashion” (IV.xvi.89–90). At first, the queen’s
words seem to suggest that honor is a distinctly Roman attribute, but Cleopatra’s death, which is
her means of ensuring that she remains her truest, most uncompromised self, is distinctly against
Rome. In Antony and Cleopatra, honor seems less a function of Western or Eastern culture than
of the characters’ determination to define themselves on their own terms. Both Antony and
Cleopatra secure honorable deaths by refusing to compromise their identities.
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Motifs
MAIN IDEAS MOTIFS
Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts, or literary devices that can help to develop and inform the text’s
major themes.
Extravagant Declarations of Love
In Act I, scene i, Antony and Cleopatra argue over whether their love for one another can be
measured and articulated:
CLEOPATRA: [to Antony] If it be love indeed, tell me how much.
ANTONY: There’s beggary in the love that can be reckoned.
CLEOPATRA: I’ll set a bourn how far to be beloved.
ANTONY: Then must thou needs find out new heaven, new earth.
(I.i.14–17)
This exchange sets the tone for the way that love will be discussed and understood throughout
the play. Cleopatra expresses the expectation that love should be declared or demonstrated
grandly. She wants to hear and see exactly how much Antony loves her. Love, in Antony and
Cleopatra, is not comprised of private intimacies, as it is in Romeo and Juliet. Instead, love
belongs to the public arena. In the lines quoted above, Cleopatra claims that she will set the
boundaries of her lover’s affections, and Antony responds that, to do so, she will need to
discover uncharted territories. By likening their love to the discovery and claim of “new heaven,
new earth,” the couple links private emotions to affairs of state. Love, in other words, becomes
an extension of politics, with the annexation of another’s heart analogous to the conquering of a
foreign land.
Public Displays of Affection
In Antony and Cleopatra, public displays of affection are generally understood to be expressions
of political power and allegiance. Caesar, for example, laments that Octavia arrives in Rome
without the fanfare of a proper entourage because it betrays her weakness: without an
accompanying army of horses, guardsmen, and trumpeters, she cannot possibly be recognized as
Caesar’s sister or Antony’s wife. The connection between public display and power is one that
the characters—especially Caesar and Cleopatra—understand well. After Antony’s death, their
battle of wills revolves around Caesar’s desire to exhibit the Egyptian queen on the streets of
Rome as a sign of his triumph. Cleopatra refuses such an end, choosing instead to take her own
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life. Even this act is meant as a public performance, however: decked in her grandest royal robes
and playing the part of the tragic lover, Cleopatra intends her last act to be as much a defiance of
Caesar’s power as a gesture of romantic devotion. For death, she claims, is “the way / To fool
their preparation and to conquer / Their most absurd intents” (V.ii.220–222).
Female Sexuality
Throughout the play, the male characters rail against the power of female sexuality. Caesar and
his men condemn Antony for the weakness that makes him bow to the Egyptian queen, but they
clearly lay the blame for his downfall on Cleopatra. On the rare occasion that the Romans do not
refer to her as a whore, they describe her as an enchantress whose beauty casts a dangerous spell
over men. As Enobarbus notes, Cleopatra possesses the power to warp the minds and judgment
of all men, even “holy priests” who “[b]less her” when she acts like a whore (II.ii.244–245).
The unapologetic openness of Cleopatra’s sexuality stands to threaten the Romans. But they are
equally obsessed with the powers of Octavia’s sexuality. Caesar’s sister, who, in beauty and
temperament stands as Cleopatra’s opposite, is nevertheless considered to possess power enough
to mend the triumvir’s damaged relationship: Caesar and Antony expect that she will serve to
“knit [their] hearts / With an unslipping knot” (II.ii.132–133). In this way, women are saddled
with both the responsibility for men’s political alliances and the blame for their personal failures.
Symbols
MAIN IDEAS SYMBOLS
Symbols are objects, characters, figures, or colors used to represent abstract ideas or concepts.
Shape-Changing Clouds
In Act IV, scene xv, Antony likens his shifting sense of self to a cloud that changes shape as it
tumbles across the sky. Just as the cloud turns from “a bear or lion, / A towered citadel, a
pendent rock,” Antony seems to change from the reputed conqueror into a debased victim
(IV.xv.3–4). As he says to Eros, his uncharacteristic defeat, both on the battlefield and in matters
of love, makes it difficult for him to “hold this visible shape” (IV.xv.14).
Cleopatra’s Fleeing Ships
The image of Cleopatra’s fleeing ships is presented twice in the play. Antony twice does battle
with Caesar at sea, and both times his navy is betrayed by the queen’s retreat. The ships remind
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us of Cleopatra’s inconstancy and of the inconstancy of human character in the play. One cannot
be sure of Cleopatra’s allegiance: it is uncertain whether she flees out of fear or because she
realizes it would be politically savvy to align herself with Caesar. Her fleeing ships are an
effective symbol of her wavering and changeability.
The Asps
One of the most memorable symbols in the play comes in its final moments, as Cleopatra applies
deadly snakes to her skin. The asps are a prop in the queen’s final and most magnificent
performance. As she lifts one snake, then another to her breast, they become her children and she
a common wet nurse: “Dost thou not see my baby at my breast, / That sucks the nurse asleep?”
(V.ii.300–301). The domestic nature of the image contributes to Cleopatra’s final
metamorphosis, in death, into Antony’s wife. She assures him, “Husband, I come” (V.ii.278).
Key Facts
MAIN IDEAS KEY FACTS
Full Title · The Tragedy of Antony and Cleopatra
Author · William Shakespeare
Type Of Work · Play
Genre · Tragedy
Language · English
Time And Place Written · 1606–1607, London, England
Date Of First Publication · Published in the First Folio of 1623
Publisher · The First Folio was published by a group of printers, publishers, and booksellers:
William and Isaac Jaggard, William Aspey, John Smethwick, and Edward Blount. Isaac
Jaggard’s and Edward Blount’s names appear on the title page of the folio.
Tone · Tragic, poetic, grandiose, decadent, stoic
Setting (Time) · 40–30 b.c.
Setting (Place) · The Roman Empire and Egypt
Protagonist · Mark Antony, one of the triumvirs of Rome
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Major Conflict · Antony is torn between his duties as a Roman ruler and soldier and his desire
to live in Egypt with his lover, Cleopatra. This inner conflict leads him to become embroiled in a
war with Caesar, one of his fellow triumvirs.
Rising Action · Caesar lures Antony out of Egypt and back to Rome, and marries Antony to his
sister, Octavia. Antony eventually returns to Egypt and Cleopatra, and Caesar prepares to lead an
army against Antony.
Climax · Antony disgraces himself by fleeing the battle of Actium to follow Cleopatra,
betraying his own image of himself as a noble Roman.
Falling Action · Cleopatra abandons Antony during the second naval battle, leaving him to
suffer an insurmountable defeat.
Themes · The struggle between reason and emotion; the clash of East and West; the definition
of honor
Motifs · Extravagant declarations of love; public displays of affection; female sexuality
Symbols · Shape-changing clouds; Cleopatra’s fleeing ships; the asps
Foreshadowing · The play’s repeated mentions of snakes—for instance, Lepidus’s drunken
ravings about the creatures of the Nile—foreshadow Cleopatra’s chosen means of suicide.
Quote 1
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 a weight in his lightness. If he filled
His vacancy with his voluptuousness,
Full surfeits and the dryness of his bones
Call on him for’t. But to confound such time
That drums him from his sport, and speaks as loud
As his own state and ours—’tis to be chid
As we rate boys who, being mature in knowledge,
Pawn their experience to the present pleasure,
And so rebel to judgement.
(I.iv.16–33)
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In Act I, scene iv, Caesar meets with Lepidus to discuss the threat that Pompey poses to the
empire. Here, he chastises Antony for staying in Egypt, where he pursues pleasure at the expense
of his duty to the state. Caesar’s speech is significant for two reasons. First, it defines the
Western sensibilities against which Cleopatra’s Egypt is judged and by which Antony is
ultimately measured. As Caesar dismisses Antony’s passion for Cleopatra as boyish
irresponsibility, he asserts the Roman expectation of duty over pleasure, reason over emotion.
These competing worlds and worldviews provide the framework for understanding the coming
clashes between Caesar and Antony, Antony and Cleopatra, and Cleopatra and Caesar.
Second, Caesar’s speech to Lepidus is significant for its suggestion that the oppositional worlds
delineated here are a result of perception. For example, just as our perception of Antony changes
according to the perceptions of other characters—to Caesar he is negligent and mighty; to
Cleopatra, noble and easily manipulated; to Enobarbus, worthy but misguided—so too our
understanding of East and West depends upon the ways in which the characters perceive them.
To Caesar, Alexandria is a den of iniquity where the noontime streets are filled with “knaves that
smell of sweat.” But we should resist his understanding as the essential definition of the East; we
need only refer to Cleopatra’s very similar description of a Roman street to realize that place, as
much as character, in Antony and Cleopatra, is a quilt of competing perceptions: “[m]echanic
slaves / With greasy aprons, rules, and hammers shall / Uplift us to the view” (V.ii.205–207).
Quote 2
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 ne’er the word of ‘No’ woman heard speak,
Being barbered ten times o’er, goes to the feast,
And for his ordinary pays his heart
For what his eyes eat only.
. . .
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,
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And breathless, pour forth breath.
. . .
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.
(II.ii.225–245)
Enobarbus makes this speech, one of the most famous of the play. The lines before this oft-
quoted passage begin with the description of Cleopatra floating down the Nile on her gilded
barge. Enobarbus moves on to tell the men gathered on Pompey’s ship how Antony met
Cleopatra. It seems that the general, particularly susceptible to the wants of women, fell under
the queen’s spell immediately. Whatever power Antony had in relation to the queen, he
surrenders it almost immediately—in fact, before the two even meet: “She replied / It should be
better he became her guest,” and Antony, never having denied a woman’s wishes, agrees. In
addition to demonstrating the queen’s power over Antony, this passage describes Cleopatra’s
talent for performance. Her performance in “the public street” makes “defect”—her inability to
breathe—“perfection.” Whether sitting stately on her “burnished throne” (II.ii.197) or hopping
“forty paces,” Cleopatra never loses her ability to quicken the breath of her onlookers or
persuade the “holy priests” to bless what they would certainly, in others, condemn.
Quote 3
You take from me a great part of myself.
Use me well in’t. Sister, prove such a wife
As my thoughts make thee, and as my farthest bond
Shall pass on thy aproof. 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.
(III.ii.24–33)
Following the advice that Agrippa offers him in Act II, scene ii, Caesar offers Antony his sister,
Octavia, as a means of securing peace between them. This gesture attests to the power that men
ascribe to women and female sexuality in this play. What men consider the wrong kind of female
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sexuality—embodied proudly and openly by Cleopatra—stands as a threat to men, their reason,
and sense of duty. What they consider the right kind, however, as represented by the modest
“piece of virtue” Octavia, promises to be “the cement” of Caesar’s love for Antony. Caesar’s
language, here, is particularly important: the words he chooses to describe Antony’s union to
Octavia and, by extension, his reunion with Caesar, belong to the vocabulary of builders:
“the cement of our love / To keep it builded, be the ram to batter / The fortress of it” (emphasis
added). This language makes an explicit connection between the private realm of love and the
public realm of the state, a connection that causes Caesar more than a little anxiety throughout
the play.
Quote 4
Sometimes 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’t that nod unto the world
And mock our eyes with air. Thou hast seen these signs;
They are black vesper’s pageants.
. . .
That which is now a horse even with a thought
The rack disdains, and makes it indistinct
As water is in water.
. . .
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’t
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.
(IV.xv.3–22)
After Cleopatra’s ships abandon Antony in battle for the second time, the general faces the
greatest defeat of his military career. Antony is accustomed only to victory, and his
understanding of self leaves little room for defeat, either on the battlefield or in terms of love. As
a Roman, Antony has a rigid perception of himself: he must live within the narrowly defined
confines of the victor and hero or not live at all. Here, he complains to his trusted attendant, Eros,
15
about the shifting of his identity. He feels himself helplessly changing, morphing from one man
to another like a cloud that turns from a dragon to a bear to a lion as it moves across the sky. He
tries desperately to cling to himself—”Here I am Antony”—but laments he “cannot hold this
visible shape.” Left without military might or Cleopatra, Antony loses his sense of who he is.
Rather than amend his identity to incorporate this loss, rather than become an Antony conquered,
he chooses to end his life. In the end, he clings to the image of himself as the unvanquished hero
in order to achieve this last task: “[t]here is left us / Ourselves to end ourselves.”
Nay, ’tis most certain, Iras. Saucy lictors
Will catch at us like strumpets, and scald rhymers
Ballad us out o’ 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
I’ th’ posture of a whore.
(V.ii.210–217)
Soon after Antony’s death, Cleopatra determines to follow her lover into the afterlife. She
commits to killing herself and, in Act V, scene ii, convinces her handmaids of the rightness of
this decision. She conjures up a horrific image of the humiliation that awaits her as Caesar’s
trophy, employing the vocabulary of the theater, fearing that “quick comedians / Extemporally
will stage us.” She imagines that Antony will be played as a drunk, and a squeaking boy will
portray her as a whore. Given that, throughout the play, Cleopatra is a consummate actress—we
are never quite sure how much of her emotion is genuine and how much theatrical fireworks—
her refusal to let either Antony or herself be portrayed in such a way is especially significant. To
Cleopatra, the Roman understanding of her character and her relationship with Antony is a gross
and unacceptable wrong. It does not mesh with the grandness of her self-perception—rather than
being a queen of the order of Isis, she will go down in history “[i]’ th’ posture of a whore.” Just
as Antony cannot allow his self-image to expand to include defeat, Cleopatra refuses to allow her
image to be stripped to its basest parts.
16
The End

More Related Content

Antony and cleopatra (Critical Study & Analysis)

  • 1. English Literature 20 Shakespearean Studies Antony and Cleopetra [ M. F. Haq & M. Saeed] -
  • 2. 1 Antony and Cleopatra BY William Shakespeare Plot Overview Mark Antony, one of the three rulers of the Roman Empire, spends his time in Egypt, living a life of decadence and conducting an affair with the country’s beautiful queen, Cleopatra. When a message arrives informing him that his wife, Fulvia, is dead and that Pompey is raising an army to rebel against the triumvirate, Antony decides to return to Rome. In Antony’s absence, Octavius Caesar and Lepidus, his fellow triumvirs, worry about Pompey’s increasing strength. Caesar condemns Antony for neglecting his duties as a statesman and military officer in order to live a decadent life by Cleopatra’s side. The news of his wife’s death and imminent battle pricks Antony’s sense of duty, and he feels compelled to return to Rome. Upon his arrival, he and Caesar quarrel, while Lepidus ineffectually tries to make peace. Realizing that an alliance is necessary to defeat Pompey, Antony and Caesar agree that Antony will marry Caesar’s sister, Octavia, who will solidify their loyalty to one another. Enobarbus, Antony’s closest friend, predicts to Caesar’s men that, despite the marriage, Antony will surely return to Cleopatra. In Egypt, Cleopatra learns of Antony’s marriage and flies into a jealous rage. However, when a messenger delivers word that Octavia is plain and unimpressive, Cleopatra becomes confident that she will win Antony back. The triumvirs meet Pompey and settle their differences without going to battle. Pompey agrees to keep peace in exchange for rule over Sicily and Sardinia. That evening, the four men drink to celebrate their truce. One of Pompey’s soldiers discloses to him a plan to assassinate the triumvirs, thereby delivering world power into Pompey’s hands, but Pompey dismisses the scheme as an affront to his honor. Meanwhile, one of Antony’s -generals wins a victory over the kingdom of Parthia. Antony and Octavia depart for Athens. Once they are gone, Caesar breaks his truce, wages war against Pompey, and defeats him. After using Lepidus’s army to secure a victory, he accuses
  • 3. 2 Lepidus of treason, imprisons him, and confiscates his land and possessions. This news angers Antony, as do the rumors that Caesar has been speaking out against him in public. Octavia pleads with Antony to maintain a peaceful relationship with her brother. Should Antony and Caesar fight, she says, her affections would be painfully divided. Antony dispatches her to Rome on a peace mission, and quickly returns to Egypt and Cleopatra. There, he raises a large army to fight Caesar, and Caesar, incensed over Antony’s treatment of his sister, responds in kind. Caesar commands his army and navy to Egypt. Ignoring all advice to the contrary, Antony elects to fight him at sea, allowing Cleopatra to command a ship despite Enobarbus’s strong objections. Antony’s forces lose the battle when Cleopatra’s ship flees and Antony’s follows, leaving the rest of the fleet vulnerable. Antony despairs, condemning Cleopatra for leading him into infamy but quickly forgiving her. He and Cleopatra send requests to their conqueror: Antony asks to be allowed to live in Egypt, while Cleopatra asks that her kingdom be passed down to her rightful heirs. Caesar dismisses Antony’s request, but he promises Cleopatra a fair hearing if she betrays her lover. Cleopatra seems to be giving thought to Caesar’s message when Antony barges in, curses her for her treachery, and orders the innocent messenger whipped. When, moments later, Antony forgives Cleopatra, Enobarbus decides that his master is finished and defects to Caesar’s camp. Antony meets Caesar’s troops in battle and scores an unexpected victory. When he learns of Enobarbus’s desertion, Antony laments his own bad fortune, which he believes has corrupted an honorable man. He sends his friend’s possessions to Caesar’s camp and returns to Cleopatra to celebrate his victory. Enobarbus, undone by shame at his own disloyalty, bows under the weight of his guilt and dies. Another day brings another battle, and once again Antony meets Caesar at sea. As before, the Egyptian fleet proves treacherous; it abandons the fight and leaves Antony to suffer defeat. Convinced that his lover has betrayed him, Antony vows to kill Cleopatra. In order to protect herself, she quarters herself in her monument and sends word that she has committed suicide. Antony, racked with grief, determines to join his queen in the afterlife. He commands one of his attendants to fulfill his promise of unquestioned service and kill him. The attendant kills himself instead. Antony then falls on his own sword, but the wound is not immediately fatal. He is carried to Cleopatra’s monument, where the lovers are reunited briefly before Antony’s death. Caesar takes the queen prisoner, planning to display her in Rome as a testament
  • 4. 3 to the might of his empire, but she learns of his plan and kills herself with the help of several poisonous snakes. Caesar has her buried beside Antony. Mark Antony Throughout the play, Antony grapples with the conflict between his love for Cleopatra and his duties to the Roman Empire. In Act I, scene i, he engages Cleopatra in a conversation about the nature and depth of their love, dismissing the duties he has neglected for her sake: “Let Rome in Tiber melt, and the wide arch / Of the ranged empire fall” (I.i.35–36). In the very next scene, however, Antony worries that he is about to “lose [him]self in dotage” (I.ii.106) and fears that the death of his wife is only one of the ills that his “idleness doth hatch” (I.ii.119). Thus, Antony finds himself torn between the Rome of his duty and the Alexandria of his pleasure. The geographical poles that draw him in opposite directions represent deep-seated conflicts between his reason and emotion, his sense of duty and his desire, his obligations to the state and his private needs. Antony’s understanding of himself, however, cannot bear the stress of such tension. In his mind, he is first and foremost a Roman hero of the first caliber. He won his position as one of the three leaders of the world by vanquishing the treacherous Brutus and Cassius, who conspired to assassinate his predecessor, Julius Caesar. He often recalls the golden days of his own heroism, but now that he is entangled in an affair with the Egyptian queen, his memories do little more than demonstrate how far he has strayed from his ideal self. As he points out to Octavia in Act III, scene iv, his current actions imperil his honor, and without his honor—the defining characteristic of the Roman hero—he can no longer be Antony: “If I lose my honor, / I lose myself. Better I were not yours / Than yours so branchless” (III.iv.22–24). Later, having suffered defeat at the hands of both Caesar and Cleopatra, Antony returns to the imagery of the stripped tree as he laments, “[T]his pine is barked / That overtopped them all” (IV.xiii.23–24). Rather than amend his identity to accommodate these defeats, Antony chooses to take his own life, an act that restores him to his brave and indomitable former self. In suicide, Antony manages to convince himself and the world (as represented by Cleopatra and Caesar) that he is “a Roman by a Roman / Valiantly vanquished” (IV.xvi.59–60).
  • 5. 4 Cleopatra The assortment of perspectives from which we see Cleopatra illustrates the varying understandings of her as a decadent foreign woman and a noble ruler. As Philo and Demetrius take the stage in Act I, scene i, their complaints about Antony’s neglected duties frame the audience’s understanding of Cleopatra, the queen for whom Antony risks his reputation. Within the first ten lines of the play, the men declare Cleopatra a lustful “gipsy,” a description that is repeated throughout the play as though by a chorus (I.i.10). Cleopatra is labeled a “wrangling queen” (I.i.50), a “slave” (I.iv.19), an “Egyptian dish” (II.vi.123), and a “whore” (III.vi.67); she is called “Salt Cleopatra” (II.i.21) and an enchantress who has made Antony “the noble ruin of her magic” (III.x.18). But to view Cleopatra as such is to reduce her character to the rather narrow perspective of the Romans, who, standing to lose their honor or kingdoms through her agency, are most threatened by her. Certainly this threat has much to do with Cleopatra’s beauty and open sexuality, which, as Enobarbus points out in his famous description of her in Act II, scene ii, is awe-inspiring. But it is also a performance. Indeed, when Cleopatra takes the stage, she does so as an actress, elevating her passion, grief, and outrage to the most dramatic and captivating level. As Enobarbus says, the queen did not walk through the street, but rather Hop[ped] forty paces . . . And having lost her breath, she spoke and panted, That she did make defect perfection, And breathless, pour breath forth. (II.ii.235–238) Whether whispering sweet words of love to Antony or railing at a supposedly disloyal servant, Cleopatra leaves her onlookers breathless. As Antony notes, she is a woman “[w]hom everything becomes—to chide, to laugh / To weep” (I.i.51–52). It is this ability to be the perfect embodiment of all things—beauty and ugliness, virtue and vice—that Cleopatra stands to lose after her defeat by Caesar. By parading her through the streets of Rome as his trophy, he intends to reduce her character to a single, base element—to immortalize her as a whore. If Antony cannot allow his conception of self to expand to incorporate his defeats, then Cleopatra cannot allow hers to be stripped to the image of a boy actor “squeaking Cleopatra . . . / I’th’ posture of a
  • 6. 5 whore” (V.ii.216–217). Cleopatra often behaves childishly and with relentless self-absorption; nevertheless, her charisma, strength, and indomitable will make her one of Shakespeare’s strongest, most awe-inspiring female characters. Octavius Caesar Ocatavius Caesar is both a menacing adversary for Antony and a rigid representation of Roman law and order. He is not a two-dimensional villain, though, since his frustrations with the ever- neglectful Antony seem justified. When he complains to Lepidus that he resents having to “bear / So great weight in [Antony’s] lightness,” we certainly understand his concern (I.iv.24–25). He does not emerge as a particularly likable character—his treatment of Lepidus, for instance, betrays the cruel underside of Caesar’s aggressive ambitions—but he is a complicated one. He is, in other words, convincingly human. There is, perhaps, no better example of Caesar’s humanity than his conflicted feelings about Antony. For a good deal of the play, Caesar seems bent, rather ruthlessly, on destroying Antony. When he achieves this desired end, however, he does not relish the moment as we might expect. Instead, he mourns the loss of a great soldier and musters enough compassion to be not only fair-minded but also fair-hearted, commanding that the lovers be buried beside one another. Themes The Struggle Between Reasonand Emotion In his opening lines to Demetrius, Philo complains that Antony has abandoned the military endeavors on which his reputation is based for Cleopatra’s sake. His criticism of Antony’s “dotage,” or stupidity, introduces a tension between reason and emotion that runs throughout the play (I.i.1). Antony and Cleopatra’s first exchange heightens this tension, as they argue whether their love can be put into words and understood or whether it exceeds such faculties and boundaries of reason. If, according to Roman consensus, Antony is the military hero and disciplined statesmen that Caesar and others believe him to be, then he seems to have happily abandoned his reason in order to pursue his passion. He declares: “Let Rome in Tiber melt, and the wide arch / Of the ranged empire fall” (I.i.35–36). The play, however, is more concerned with the battle between reason and emotion than the triumph of one over the other, and this battle is waged most forcefully in the character of Antony. More than any other character in the play, Antony vacillates between Western and Eastern sensibilities, feeling pulled by both his duty to
  • 7. 6 the empire and his desire for pleasure, his want of military glory and his passion for Cleopatra. Soon after his nonchalant dismissal of Caesar’s messenger, the empire, and his duty to it, he chastises himself for his neglect and commits to return to Rome, lest he “lose [him]self in dotage” (I.ii.106). As the play progresses, Antony continues to inhabit conflicting identities that play out the struggle between reason and emotion. At one moment, he is the vengeful war hero whom Caesar praises and fears. Soon thereafter, he sacrifices his military position by unwisely allowing Cleopatra to determine his course of action. As his Roman allies—even the ever-faithful Enobarbus—abandon him, Antony feels that he has, indeed, lost himself in dotage, and he determines to rescue his noble identity by taking his own life. At first, this course of action may appear to be a triumph of reason over passion, of -Western sensibilities over Eastern ones, but the play is not that simple. Although Antony dies believing himself a man of honor, discipline, and reason, our understanding of him is not nearly as straight-forward. In order to come to terms with Antony’s character, we must analyze the aspects of his identity that he ignores. He is, in the end, a man ruled by passion as much as by reason. Likewise, the play offers us a worldview in which one sensibility cannot easily dominate another. Reason cannot ever fully conquer the passions, nor can passion wholly undo reason. The Clash of East and West Although Antony and Cleopatra details the conflict between Rome and Egypt, giving us an idea of the Elizabethan perceptions of the difference between Western and Eastern cultures, it does not make a definitive statement about which culture ultimately triumphs. In the play, the Western and Eastern poles of the world are characterized by those who inhabit them: Caesar, for instance, embodies the stoic duty of the West, while Cleopatra, in all her theatrical grandeur, represents the free-flowing passions of the East. Caesar’s concerns throughout the play are certainly imperial: he means to invade foreign lands in order to invest them with traditions and sensibilities of his own. But the play resists siding with this imperialist impulse. Shakespeare, in other words, does not align the play’s sympathies with the West; Antony and Cleopatra can hardly be read as propaganda for Western domination. On the contrary, the Roman understanding of Cleopatra and her kingdom seems exceedingly superficial. To Caesar, the queen of Egypt is little more than a whore with a flair for drama. His perspective allows little room for the real power of Cleopatra’s sexuality—she can, after all, persuade the most decorated
  • 8. 7 of generals to follow her into ignoble retreat. Similarly, it allows little room for the indomitable strength of her will, which she demonstrates so forcefully at the end of the play as she refuses to allow herself to be turned into a “Egyptian puppet” for the entertainment of the Roman masses (V.ii.204). In Antony and Cleopatra, West meets East, but it does not, regardless of Caesar’s triumph over the land of Egypt, conquer it. Cleopatra’s suicide suggests that something of the East’s spirit, the freedoms and passions that are not represented in the play’s conception of the West, cannot be subsumed by Caesar’s victory. The play suggests that the East will live on as a visible and unconquerable counterpoint to the West, bound as inseparably and eternally as Antony and Cleopatra are in their tomb. The Definition of Honor Throughout the play, characters define honor variously, and often in ways that are not intuitive. As Antony prepares to meet Caesar in battle, he determines that he “will live / Or bathe [his] dying honour in the blood / Shall make it live again” (IV.ii.5–7). Here, he explicitly links the notion of honor to to that of death, suggesting the latter as a surefire means of achieving the former. The play bears out this assertion, since, although Antony and Cleopatra kill themselves for different reasons, they both imagine that the act invests them with honor. In death, Antony returns to his identity as a true, noble Roman, becoming “a Roman by a Roman / Valiantly vanquished” (IV.xvi.59–60), while Cleopatra resolves to “bury him, and then what’s brave, what’s noble, / Let’s do it after the high Roman fashion” (IV.xvi.89–90). At first, the queen’s words seem to suggest that honor is a distinctly Roman attribute, but Cleopatra’s death, which is her means of ensuring that she remains her truest, most uncompromised self, is distinctly against Rome. In Antony and Cleopatra, honor seems less a function of Western or Eastern culture than of the characters’ determination to define themselves on their own terms. Both Antony and Cleopatra secure honorable deaths by refusing to compromise their identities.
  • 9. 8 Motifs MAIN IDEAS MOTIFS Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts, or literary devices that can help to develop and inform the text’s major themes. Extravagant Declarations of Love In Act I, scene i, Antony and Cleopatra argue over whether their love for one another can be measured and articulated: CLEOPATRA: [to Antony] If it be love indeed, tell me how much. ANTONY: There’s beggary in the love that can be reckoned. CLEOPATRA: I’ll set a bourn how far to be beloved. ANTONY: Then must thou needs find out new heaven, new earth. (I.i.14–17) This exchange sets the tone for the way that love will be discussed and understood throughout the play. Cleopatra expresses the expectation that love should be declared or demonstrated grandly. She wants to hear and see exactly how much Antony loves her. Love, in Antony and Cleopatra, is not comprised of private intimacies, as it is in Romeo and Juliet. Instead, love belongs to the public arena. In the lines quoted above, Cleopatra claims that she will set the boundaries of her lover’s affections, and Antony responds that, to do so, she will need to discover uncharted territories. By likening their love to the discovery and claim of “new heaven, new earth,” the couple links private emotions to affairs of state. Love, in other words, becomes an extension of politics, with the annexation of another’s heart analogous to the conquering of a foreign land. Public Displays of Affection In Antony and Cleopatra, public displays of affection are generally understood to be expressions of political power and allegiance. Caesar, for example, laments that Octavia arrives in Rome without the fanfare of a proper entourage because it betrays her weakness: without an accompanying army of horses, guardsmen, and trumpeters, she cannot possibly be recognized as Caesar’s sister or Antony’s wife. The connection between public display and power is one that the characters—especially Caesar and Cleopatra—understand well. After Antony’s death, their battle of wills revolves around Caesar’s desire to exhibit the Egyptian queen on the streets of Rome as a sign of his triumph. Cleopatra refuses such an end, choosing instead to take her own
  • 10. 9 life. Even this act is meant as a public performance, however: decked in her grandest royal robes and playing the part of the tragic lover, Cleopatra intends her last act to be as much a defiance of Caesar’s power as a gesture of romantic devotion. For death, she claims, is “the way / To fool their preparation and to conquer / Their most absurd intents” (V.ii.220–222). Female Sexuality Throughout the play, the male characters rail against the power of female sexuality. Caesar and his men condemn Antony for the weakness that makes him bow to the Egyptian queen, but they clearly lay the blame for his downfall on Cleopatra. On the rare occasion that the Romans do not refer to her as a whore, they describe her as an enchantress whose beauty casts a dangerous spell over men. As Enobarbus notes, Cleopatra possesses the power to warp the minds and judgment of all men, even “holy priests” who “[b]less her” when she acts like a whore (II.ii.244–245). The unapologetic openness of Cleopatra’s sexuality stands to threaten the Romans. But they are equally obsessed with the powers of Octavia’s sexuality. Caesar’s sister, who, in beauty and temperament stands as Cleopatra’s opposite, is nevertheless considered to possess power enough to mend the triumvir’s damaged relationship: Caesar and Antony expect that she will serve to “knit [their] hearts / With an unslipping knot” (II.ii.132–133). In this way, women are saddled with both the responsibility for men’s political alliances and the blame for their personal failures. Symbols MAIN IDEAS SYMBOLS Symbols are objects, characters, figures, or colors used to represent abstract ideas or concepts. Shape-Changing Clouds In Act IV, scene xv, Antony likens his shifting sense of self to a cloud that changes shape as it tumbles across the sky. Just as the cloud turns from “a bear or lion, / A towered citadel, a pendent rock,” Antony seems to change from the reputed conqueror into a debased victim (IV.xv.3–4). As he says to Eros, his uncharacteristic defeat, both on the battlefield and in matters of love, makes it difficult for him to “hold this visible shape” (IV.xv.14). Cleopatra’s Fleeing Ships The image of Cleopatra’s fleeing ships is presented twice in the play. Antony twice does battle with Caesar at sea, and both times his navy is betrayed by the queen’s retreat. The ships remind
  • 11. 10 us of Cleopatra’s inconstancy and of the inconstancy of human character in the play. One cannot be sure of Cleopatra’s allegiance: it is uncertain whether she flees out of fear or because she realizes it would be politically savvy to align herself with Caesar. Her fleeing ships are an effective symbol of her wavering and changeability. The Asps One of the most memorable symbols in the play comes in its final moments, as Cleopatra applies deadly snakes to her skin. The asps are a prop in the queen’s final and most magnificent performance. As she lifts one snake, then another to her breast, they become her children and she a common wet nurse: “Dost thou not see my baby at my breast, / That sucks the nurse asleep?” (V.ii.300–301). The domestic nature of the image contributes to Cleopatra’s final metamorphosis, in death, into Antony’s wife. She assures him, “Husband, I come” (V.ii.278). Key Facts MAIN IDEAS KEY FACTS Full Title · The Tragedy of Antony and Cleopatra Author · William Shakespeare Type Of Work · Play Genre · Tragedy Language · English Time And Place Written · 1606–1607, London, England Date Of First Publication · Published in the First Folio of 1623 Publisher · The First Folio was published by a group of printers, publishers, and booksellers: William and Isaac Jaggard, William Aspey, John Smethwick, and Edward Blount. Isaac Jaggard’s and Edward Blount’s names appear on the title page of the folio. Tone · Tragic, poetic, grandiose, decadent, stoic Setting (Time) · 40–30 b.c. Setting (Place) · The Roman Empire and Egypt Protagonist · Mark Antony, one of the triumvirs of Rome
  • 12. 11 Major Conflict · Antony is torn between his duties as a Roman ruler and soldier and his desire to live in Egypt with his lover, Cleopatra. This inner conflict leads him to become embroiled in a war with Caesar, one of his fellow triumvirs. Rising Action · Caesar lures Antony out of Egypt and back to Rome, and marries Antony to his sister, Octavia. Antony eventually returns to Egypt and Cleopatra, and Caesar prepares to lead an army against Antony. Climax · Antony disgraces himself by fleeing the battle of Actium to follow Cleopatra, betraying his own image of himself as a noble Roman. Falling Action · Cleopatra abandons Antony during the second naval battle, leaving him to suffer an insurmountable defeat. Themes · The struggle between reason and emotion; the clash of East and West; the definition of honor Motifs · Extravagant declarations of love; public displays of affection; female sexuality Symbols · Shape-changing clouds; Cleopatra’s fleeing ships; the asps Foreshadowing · The play’s repeated mentions of snakes—for instance, Lepidus’s drunken ravings about the creatures of the Nile—foreshadow Cleopatra’s chosen means of suicide. Quote 1 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 a weight in his lightness. If he filled His vacancy with his voluptuousness, Full surfeits and the dryness of his bones Call on him for’t. But to confound such time That drums him from his sport, and speaks as loud As his own state and ours—’tis to be chid As we rate boys who, being mature in knowledge, Pawn their experience to the present pleasure, And so rebel to judgement. (I.iv.16–33)
  • 13. 12 In Act I, scene iv, Caesar meets with Lepidus to discuss the threat that Pompey poses to the empire. Here, he chastises Antony for staying in Egypt, where he pursues pleasure at the expense of his duty to the state. Caesar’s speech is significant for two reasons. First, it defines the Western sensibilities against which Cleopatra’s Egypt is judged and by which Antony is ultimately measured. As Caesar dismisses Antony’s passion for Cleopatra as boyish irresponsibility, he asserts the Roman expectation of duty over pleasure, reason over emotion. These competing worlds and worldviews provide the framework for understanding the coming clashes between Caesar and Antony, Antony and Cleopatra, and Cleopatra and Caesar. Second, Caesar’s speech to Lepidus is significant for its suggestion that the oppositional worlds delineated here are a result of perception. For example, just as our perception of Antony changes according to the perceptions of other characters—to Caesar he is negligent and mighty; to Cleopatra, noble and easily manipulated; to Enobarbus, worthy but misguided—so too our understanding of East and West depends upon the ways in which the characters perceive them. To Caesar, Alexandria is a den of iniquity where the noontime streets are filled with “knaves that smell of sweat.” But we should resist his understanding as the essential definition of the East; we need only refer to Cleopatra’s very similar description of a Roman street to realize that place, as much as character, in Antony and Cleopatra, is a quilt of competing perceptions: “[m]echanic slaves / With greasy aprons, rules, and hammers shall / Uplift us to the view” (V.ii.205–207). Quote 2 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 ne’er the word of ‘No’ woman heard speak, Being barbered ten times o’er, goes to the feast, And for his ordinary pays his heart For what his eyes eat only. . . . 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,
  • 14. 13 And breathless, pour forth breath. . . . 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. (II.ii.225–245) Enobarbus makes this speech, one of the most famous of the play. The lines before this oft- quoted passage begin with the description of Cleopatra floating down the Nile on her gilded barge. Enobarbus moves on to tell the men gathered on Pompey’s ship how Antony met Cleopatra. It seems that the general, particularly susceptible to the wants of women, fell under the queen’s spell immediately. Whatever power Antony had in relation to the queen, he surrenders it almost immediately—in fact, before the two even meet: “She replied / It should be better he became her guest,” and Antony, never having denied a woman’s wishes, agrees. In addition to demonstrating the queen’s power over Antony, this passage describes Cleopatra’s talent for performance. Her performance in “the public street” makes “defect”—her inability to breathe—“perfection.” Whether sitting stately on her “burnished throne” (II.ii.197) or hopping “forty paces,” Cleopatra never loses her ability to quicken the breath of her onlookers or persuade the “holy priests” to bless what they would certainly, in others, condemn. Quote 3 You take from me a great part of myself. Use me well in’t. Sister, prove such a wife As my thoughts make thee, and as my farthest bond Shall pass on thy aproof. 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. (III.ii.24–33) Following the advice that Agrippa offers him in Act II, scene ii, Caesar offers Antony his sister, Octavia, as a means of securing peace between them. This gesture attests to the power that men ascribe to women and female sexuality in this play. What men consider the wrong kind of female
  • 15. 14 sexuality—embodied proudly and openly by Cleopatra—stands as a threat to men, their reason, and sense of duty. What they consider the right kind, however, as represented by the modest “piece of virtue” Octavia, promises to be “the cement” of Caesar’s love for Antony. Caesar’s language, here, is particularly important: the words he chooses to describe Antony’s union to Octavia and, by extension, his reunion with Caesar, belong to the vocabulary of builders: “the cement of our love / To keep it builded, be the ram to batter / The fortress of it” (emphasis added). This language makes an explicit connection between the private realm of love and the public realm of the state, a connection that causes Caesar more than a little anxiety throughout the play. Quote 4 Sometimes 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’t that nod unto the world And mock our eyes with air. Thou hast seen these signs; They are black vesper’s pageants. . . . That which is now a horse even with a thought The rack disdains, and makes it indistinct As water is in water. . . . 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’t 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. (IV.xv.3–22) After Cleopatra’s ships abandon Antony in battle for the second time, the general faces the greatest defeat of his military career. Antony is accustomed only to victory, and his understanding of self leaves little room for defeat, either on the battlefield or in terms of love. As a Roman, Antony has a rigid perception of himself: he must live within the narrowly defined confines of the victor and hero or not live at all. Here, he complains to his trusted attendant, Eros,
  • 16. 15 about the shifting of his identity. He feels himself helplessly changing, morphing from one man to another like a cloud that turns from a dragon to a bear to a lion as it moves across the sky. He tries desperately to cling to himself—”Here I am Antony”—but laments he “cannot hold this visible shape.” Left without military might or Cleopatra, Antony loses his sense of who he is. Rather than amend his identity to incorporate this loss, rather than become an Antony conquered, he chooses to end his life. In the end, he clings to the image of himself as the unvanquished hero in order to achieve this last task: “[t]here is left us / Ourselves to end ourselves.” Nay, ’tis most certain, Iras. Saucy lictors Will catch at us like strumpets, and scald rhymers Ballad us out o’ 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 I’ th’ posture of a whore. (V.ii.210–217) Soon after Antony’s death, Cleopatra determines to follow her lover into the afterlife. She commits to killing herself and, in Act V, scene ii, convinces her handmaids of the rightness of this decision. She conjures up a horrific image of the humiliation that awaits her as Caesar’s trophy, employing the vocabulary of the theater, fearing that “quick comedians / Extemporally will stage us.” She imagines that Antony will be played as a drunk, and a squeaking boy will portray her as a whore. Given that, throughout the play, Cleopatra is a consummate actress—we are never quite sure how much of her emotion is genuine and how much theatrical fireworks— her refusal to let either Antony or herself be portrayed in such a way is especially significant. To Cleopatra, the Roman understanding of her character and her relationship with Antony is a gross and unacceptable wrong. It does not mesh with the grandness of her self-perception—rather than being a queen of the order of Isis, she will go down in history “[i]’ th’ posture of a whore.” Just as Antony cannot allow his self-image to expand to include defeat, Cleopatra refuses to allow her image to be stripped to its basest parts.