Timon of Athens — Act 3, Scene 5: The same. The senate-house. The Senate sitting.

In the senate-house, the senators agree that a man must die for a bloody killing, and they reject mercy. Alcibiades arrives with attendants and pleads for his friend’s life, arguing that the man acted in noble anger and has served Athens well in war. The senators refuse to soften their judgment, saying the law must punish murder and that revenge is no excuse. Alcibiades then turns his plea into a protest, but the senators dismiss him and banish him from Athens as well, ordering the condemned man executed at once. Alone after they leave, Alcibiades bitterly reflects on the city’s greed and his own wrongs.