<P> Plutarch also reports that Caesar said nothing, but merely pulled his toga over his head when he saw Brutus among the conspirators . </P> <P> In the play Julius Caesar (1599), Caesar says "Et tu, Brute? Then fall, Caesar!" Shakespeare was making use of a phrase already in use: for example it is said, by Edmond Malone, to have appeared in a work that has been lost: Richard Eedes's Latin play Caesar Interfectus of 1582 . It also occurs in Shakespeare's earlier play, The True Tragedie of Richard Duke of Yorke, and the death of good King Henrie the Sixth, with the Whole Contention betweene the two Houses Lancaster and Yorke of 1595, which is the earliest printed version of Henry VI, Part 3 . </P> <P> It has been argued that the phrase can be interpreted as a curse or threat . One theory states that the historic Caesar adapted the words of a Greek sentence which to the Romans had long since become proverbial: The complete phrase is said to have been "You too, my son, will have a taste of power," of which Caesar only needed to invoke the opening words to foreshadow Brutus' own violent death, in response to his assassination . There is a poem by Horace, Satires; Book I, Satire 7, written approximately 30 BC, that mentions Brutus and his tyrannicide; in discussing that poem, author John Henderson considers that the expression "E-t t-u Br - u-t-e", (as he hyphenates it), can be interpreted as a complaint containing a "suggestion of mimetic compulsion". </P>

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