The Life and Death of Julius Caesar — Act 1, Scene 1: Rome. A street.

In a Rome street during the feast of Lupercal, Flavius and Marullus stop a group of commoners who are roaming about instead of working. They question a carpenter and a cobbler, mocking their trades and scolding them for being in the streets in holiday clothes. When the cobbler says the people have come to see Caesar’s triumph, Marullus angrily reminds them that they once celebrated Pompey just as eagerly and now shamefully honor Caesar instead. He drives the commoners away and tells them to pray for forgiveness. After they leave, Flavius and Marullus agree to remove decorations from Caesar’s statues and clear the streets of crowds.