Today’s Totally Random
Lines
Antony,
The posture of your blows are yet unknown;
But for your words, they rob the Hybla bees,
And leave them honeyless.
Cassius
Julius Caesar
Act V, Scene
i, Line 34
Octavius and Marc Antony are at the head of one army, whilst Brutus and Cassius lead another. The four men are meeting for a parlay before the battle that’s about to take place. This particular exchange begins with Brutus saying
Good words are better than bad strokes, Octavius.
I’m pretty sure
that Brutus doesn’t want to have this battle, but Marc Antony throws those
words right back in Brutus’s face,
In your
bad strokes, Brutus, you give good words;
Witness
the hole you made in Caesar’s heart,
Crying, ‘Long
live! Hail, Caesar!’
Well, he’s got a really good point there: Brutus and Cassius are part of the group that stabbed Caesar to death. But Cassius nevertheless fires right back with Today’s Lines about Marc Antony’s words being so sweet that they could rob the Hybla bees of their honey. Hybla was famous for it’s honey, and Cassius is implying that Antony’s words are sweet but treacherous since they rob the honey. And they are treacherous; Marc Antony is very dangerous with his words.
This is the
scene before that battle, near the end of the play, and Cassius and Brutus will both
be dead shortly. Marc Antony and Octavius will have avenged the killing of
Caesar.
Words and
actions: both can be pretty dangerous.

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