Titus Andronicus — Act 4, Scene 3: The same. A public place.

Titus, still grieving over the wrongs done to his family, comes into a public place with Marcus, Young Lucius, Publius, Sempronius, Caius, and other gentlemen, carrying arrows with messages tied to them. He speaks as if justice has vanished from Rome and decides to appeal to the gods, assigning each arrow to a different deity and ordering the men to shoot them into the emperor’s court. After they do so, Marcus jokes about one arrow’s accidental effect in the court. A Clown then arrives with two pigeons and a message, and Titus treats him as a messenger from heaven. He gives the Clown a written petition, places a knife in it, and sends him to the emperor.