Timon of Athens — Act 4, Scene 1: Without the walls of Athens.

Timon enters alone outside the walls of Athens and launches into a furious curse against the city and its people. He denounces the wall for protecting corrupt citizens, attacks matrons, children, slaves, senators, bankrupts, servants, daughters, and sons, and imagines society collapsing into theft, betrayal, lust, disease, and disorder. He rejects all social bonds, laws, religion, and domestic loyalty as false or rotten. Timon then turns his anger fully on Athens itself, calling for its destruction and wishing that disease and poison spread among its people. At the end, he declares that he will go to the woods, where even wild beasts seem kinder than humankind.