A side-by-side translation of Act 2, Scene 3 of The Tragedy of Antony and Cleopatra from the original Shakespeare into modern English.
Original Text |
Translated Text |
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Source: Folger Shakespeare Library | |
Enter Antony, Caesar; Octavia between them. ANTONY OCTAVIA All which time ANTONY, to Caesar Goodnight, sir.—My Octavia, CAESAR Goodnight. Caesar and Octavia exit. | Antony, Octavia, and Caesar are back at Caesar’s palace in Rome. Antony promises Octavia that though his work will take him away from her often, he won’t indulge in any monkey business, no matter how naughty he’s been in the past. |
Enter Soothsayer. ANTONY SOOTHSAYER Would I had never come from thence, ANTONY If you can, your reason? SOOTHSAYER I see it in my motion, have it not in my | After Caesar and Octavia leave, Antony meets with a soothsayer who tells him he should have never left Egypt, and should get back there ASAP. |
ANTONY SOOTHSAYER Caesar’s. ANTONY Speak this no more. SOOTHSAYER | Antony asks whether he or Caesar will have better fortune, and the man replies that Caesar will. Further, Antony should stay as far away from Caesar as possible, as Antony’s fortune is muted, and his greatness lessened, whenever Caesar is around. |
ANTONY Get thee gone. Soothsayer exits. He shall to Parthia. Be it art or hap, Enter Ventidius. O, come, Ventidius. They exit. | Antony totally believes the soothsayer and says that though he married Octavia to make peace, he needs to return to his girl in Egypt. He call on his soldier Ventidius to go to Parthia (modern-day Iraq) and fight on his behalf. (Parthia was one of Rome’s last surviving major enemies in the East.) |