[60]. Julius Caesar, II, I, ll. 154–191.

[61]. Particularly in “Marcus Antonius,” page 161.

[62]. Page [114] et seq.

[63]. “Marcus Antonius,” p. 119. Skeat.

[64]. “Marcus Antonius,” p. 164. Skeat.

[65]. Pescetti throughout this scene follows Appian rather than Plutarch. Appian says: “Some thought that Antony ought to be killed also because he was consul with Caesar, and was his most powerful friend, and the one of the most repute with the army; but Brutus said that they would win the glory of tyrannicide from the death of Caesar alone, because that would be the killing of a king. If they should kill his friends also, the deed would be imputed to private enmity and to the Pompeian faction.” (Civil Wars, Bk. II, Ch. XVI., White’s Trans.)

[66]. This parallel is noted by Ayres (in work cited before).

[67]. Noted by Ayres.

[68]. Substantially the same in Appian.

[69]. Marcus Brutus, p. 117–118.