The Tragedy of Coriolanus — Act 1, Scene 1: Rome. A street.

In a Rome street, a group of starving citizens gathers with weapons and blames Caius Marcius for their misery, wanting to kill him and force cheaper corn from the patricians. Menenius Agrippa arrives and tries to calm them with a speech comparing the state to a body ruled by its belly, but the citizens remain angry. Caius Marcius then appears and insults the crowd harshly, while Menenius reports that their demands have led to the creation of tribunes. A messenger announces that the Volsces are in arms, and the senators call Marcius to serve in the war. After the citizens leave, Sicinius and Brutus discuss Marcius’s pride and their concerns about him.