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Act 1 Summary and Analysis

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285 views2 pages

Act 1 Summary and Analysis

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japleen kaur
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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SUMMARY AND ANALYSIS: ACTS AND SCENES

Antony and Cleopatra | Act 1, Scene 1 | Summary


The play begins in a room in Cleopatra's palace in Alexandria, Egypt, in the
middle of a conversation between two of Antony's companions, Philo and
Demetrius. Philo explains that love for Cleopatra has addled Antony's
thinking and weakened his courage. Previously Antony embodied Mars, god
of war; now he seems more like a servant waiting on Cleopatra. Antony and
Cleopatra enter. Philo murmurs that Antony, formerly "triple pillar of the
world," has become a "strumpet's fool." Antony and Cleopatra, who don't see
the two men, are deep in a laughing conversation about Antony's limitless
love for Cleopatra. A messenger interrupts them, bringing news from Rome.

Cleopatra teasingly says maybe Fulvia, Antony's wife, is angry at him. Or—of
lesser consequence—maybe Caesar has some instructions. After all, she
hints, Antony is the servant of both Fulvia and Caesar. Ignoring the taunt,
Antony replies he belongs where he is; the Empire is worthless clay
compared to his love for Cleopatra. Lovers are the world's true nobility, and
Antony and Cleopatra's love is the noblest of all.

Cleopatra persists in her teasing. If he loves her, Cleopatra, so much, why did
he marry Fulvia? Again Antony refuses to take the bait, asking instead what
they should do that evening. Though Cleopatra repeats he should listen to
the messenger, Antony orders the man not to speak. He, Cleopatra, and their
retinue exit, leaving Philo and Demetrius to shake their heads at Antony's
folly.

Analysis
Though Scene 1 is brief, it pinpoints the play's essential conflicts. Philo's
opening speech sets out the problems; the rest of the scene illustrates his
words. He is acting as a mini-chorus, introducing the main characters and
the conflict they embody. In a sense the real play begins after his
introduction, but his words also affect the way the audience first
encounters Antony: they are encouraged to see him as diminished and
undignified in his devotion, not as the noble lover he thinks he is.

Antony has abandoned his responsibilities as both a leader and a soldier, but
Philo and Demetrius know him to be a great man. They clearly feel no
respect for Cleopatra, whom Philo dismisses as a lustful Egyptian. Antony's
"dotage" may be mere silliness or folly, but it is not as bad as Cleopatra's
lust. The word dotage suggests love has weakened Antony's brain. In using
the word lust in describing Cleopatra, Philo implies her attraction to Antony
is purely physical, not emotional.

Should the audience take Philo's word that Cleopatra is Antony's inferior? At
this point it is too early to tell. Philo makes it clear he doesn't think she's
worth Antony's adulation, but probably any loyal soldier would feel this way.
Still, Cleopatra's first line is a demand Antony prove how much he loves her
—not an expression of her love for him. This statement hints at her
insecurity, as does her unreasonable jealousy of Fulvia, whom Antony met
and married long before coming to Egypt.

Both Cleopatra and Antony use exaggerated rhetoric to discuss their love.
Although imaginative and poetic, it suggests a certain self-consciousness—as
well it might, since they are declaiming in front of several people. Not only
do they consider themselves Heroic Beings In Love; they want everyone to
know how they feel. This stagey, overwrought dialogue will be a frequent
feature in the play.

Despite Cleopatra's fussing and measuring exactly how much Antony loves
her, she seems to have a clearer sense of Antony's responsibilities than he
does. Twice she urges him to listen to the news from Rome: "Your dismission
is come from Caesar. Therefore hear it, Antony." Cleopatra is a queen, after
all. She knows visitors from distant places deserve attention, although she is
less interested in political instruction than in a possible message from her
rival Fulvia.

For his part Antony is determined to ignore the messenger. He also seems to
believe his and Cleopatra's love has colossal importance: "Kingdoms are clay
... we stand up peerless." The idea that lovers are greater than kings is
typical in love poetry, but it is disconcerting to hear it in a conversation
between two actual rulers. There is a hint Antony suspects his time with
Cleopatra is limited: "Let's not confound the time with conference harsh. /
There's not a minute of our lives should stretch without some pleasure now."
He might not speak this way if he thought he and Cleopatra had all the time
in the world to enjoy themselves.

Shakespeare inserts a clever detail in lines 9 and 10. As Philo jeers that
Antony has become "the fan to cool a gypsy's lust," Cleopatra immediately
enters—fanned by eunuch slaves. Both Philo and Shakespeare may be
implying that love has "unmanned" Antony, a theme that returns throughout
the play.

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