St. Elmo's fire on a man's hand, lions walking the streets of Rome, owls flying in the daytime, that sort of thing.
This is said by Casca in Act I, Scene III.
he is scared
The information Casca gives about Marullus and Flavius is that the tribunes were stripped of the positions as civil servants for removing decorations from Caesar's statutes. This is from Julius Caesar, Act 1, Scene i.
At the end of Act 1 Scene 3, Cassius and Casca plan to wake up Brutus in the middle of the night to meet with him and confirm his participation in the conspiracy.
Casca
Casca is terrified by the storm that opens Act 1 Scene 3. He says "never till tonight, never till now, / Did I go through a tempest dropping fire"(9-10). He imagines there must be "civil strife" in heaven to produce such a storm etc
Casca and Cassius are going to Brutus's house to give him anonymous letters about how great he is and how he needs to take down Julius Caesar.
The weather is terrible. He sees a man with his hands on fire, but his flesh was not burning. He sees a lion at the capital. Many people are walking around on fire and an owl is seen during the day.
There is : Act 1 scene 1 Act 1 scene 2 Act 1 scene 3 Act 1 scene 4 Act 1 scene 5 Act 2 scene 1 Act 2 scene 2 Act 2 scene 3 Act 2 scene 4 Act 2 scene 5 Act 2 scene 6 Act 3 scene 1 Act 3 scene 2 Act 3 scene 3 Act 3 scene 4 Act 3 scene 5 Act 4 scene 1 Act 4 scene 2 Act 4 scene 3 Act 4 scene 4 Act 4 scene 5 Act 5 scene 1 Act 5 scene 2 Act 5 scene 3 x meikaah
Romeo and Juliet hold conversations in Act I Scene 5, Act II Scene 2, Act II Scene 6 and Act III Scene 5.
During the Storm in act 1 scene 2 Casca describes seeing fire from the sky and feeling an earthquake."Are you not moved, when all the sway of earth shapes like a thing unfirm?" "…never till tonight, never till now, did I go through a tempest dropping fire."
When Casca says "speak hands for me" in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, he is urging his hands to act on his behalf, as he feels overwhelmed and unable to articulate his feelings verbally. This line occurs during the chaotic scene of Caesar's assassination, where emotions run high, and he is caught in the moment of betrayal and violence. It reflects the intensity of the situation and his desire for action over words.