He probably wanted to be sure to remember who they were so he could have his revenge on them later.
They wash their hands in Caesar's blood.
Anthony was a true friend of Caesar because he was with Caesar till the end. He made the people revolt against the conspirators. His speech was genuine and had emotions and feelings. He cleverly gains the sympathy of the people by reading them his will. Unlike Brutus he was a faithful friend of Caesar. He was willing to die in the hands of the conspirators with the same sword that killed Caesar.
In 'The Tragedy of Julius Caesar,' Brutus suggests the conspirators bathe their hands in Caesar's blood before going to the market place. They are then to carry their bloodied swords to the market, and proclaim peace, freedom, and liberty.
they washed their hands in his blood
He refused to touch the conspirators' bloody hands
Because they where sick Romans, no other reason why then that.
In William Shakespeare's famous play, 'Julius Caesar,' it is indeed vitally important to Brutus that each and every one of the conspirators 'bathe' his hands in the spilled blood of Caesar. In so doing, each conspirator will acknowledge responsibility for the killing, thereby legitimizing it still further and perhaps lending greater strength to the 'liberation' movement which the killing was intended to begin.
Brutus tells them to bathe their hands in Caesar's blood, then walk to the marketplace with their bloodied swords to proclaim peace, freedom, and liberty.
trebonius
In Act 3, Scene 1 of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, Marc Antony initially feigns support for the conspirators by shaking their hands and agreeing with their decision to assassinate Caesar. However, it becomes clear that Antony's true feelings lie with Caesar when he asks to speak at Caesar's funeral.
It is nonfiction. The play was based on events that actually occurred. It portrayed Julius Caesar's life and his untimely, tragic death at the hands of his supposed friends.
He was the first of many to stab ceasar. He also said, "Speak hands for me!" It was the last thing said before Caeser's murder.