We see Portia again on the eve of the assassination and see how warmly anxious she is in her nervousness regarding her husband. Essentially she is not sturdy; she is as high-strung and nervous as Calpurnia. But unlike Calpurnia, she would not put obstacles in the way of her husband. Rather she would suffer in silence at home, tortured with uncertainty, impatient for news.
This power to bear all circumstances however adverse is born of the stoical training she had received from her father Cato. She has steeled herself against calamities. Proudly she declares that she has put herself to the test of severe physical pain in order to test her powers of endurance.
There is something magnificently in Portia's life and her death. When her husband fled from Rome and was embroiled in the uncertainties of a civil war, she fell distracted, and her attendants absent, swallowed fire." Her husband with her, she can bear everything; away from him, she breaks down and commits suicide.
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