V,4 <br />Enter ANTONY and OCTAVIUS. <br /> <br />ANTONY: Everything runs and history leaf has been turned over. <br />OCTAVIUS: I escaped the fight but shall take part in my new wars. <br />ANTONY: Maybe somebody of our enemies was honourable. <br />OCTAVIUS: Maybe. Many of them trusted a woolly system of power. <br />ANTONY: We sure were more clever than the traitors. <br /> <br />V,5 <br />Rome. Enter LUCIUS CAESETIUS FLAVIUS tribun of the People and MARULLUS. <br /> <br />FLAVIUS: I am greeting the new legate to Greece among his legionaries. <br />MARULLUS: You are welcome. I shall call my only legion 'eleventh'. Today a poet must be soldier, too. <br />FLAVIUS: Have I to speak Greek with you? The free Greek towns are nominally independent and to despoil them will be difficult for you. <br />MARULLUS: I already saw too despoiled girls. I shall buy some fine tunics for them. <br />FLAVIUS: You overrate history. <br />MARULLUS: Look at this flute. (He plays a few notes) 'Before I die I shall learn a new air' said Socrates. And it will be a happy air. (Exeunt omnes)<br /><br />Paolo Giuseppe Mazzarello<br /><br />http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/m-julius-caesar-exeunt-omnes/