The Life and Death of Julius Caesar — Act 3, Scene 3: A street.

In a Rome street after Antony’s funeral speech, Cinna the poet enters, troubled by a dream that he feasted with Caesar and feeling driven outside despite his fear. A group of citizens stops him and questions him sharply about his name, where he is going, where he lives, and whether he is married. Cinna answers that he is going to Caesar’s funeral as a friend and lives near the Capitol. When he gives his name, the citizens mistake him for Cinna the conspirator and turn on him at once. Ignoring his protests that he is only the poet, they decide to kill him and then rush off to attack the houses of the conspirators.