Although it is a little bit confusing to discern the various options, the best summary of this monologue is Antony shakes the hands of all the conspirators and says he knows that his love for Caesar puts him in an unstable position. Then he imagines that it would break Caesar’s heart to see Antony making peace with his assassins.
This scene takes place right before Antony's praising oration over Caesar's corpse, and right after Brutus's speech in defense of their actions. Antony sincerely shakes the hands of the perpetrators, but, by doing so, he acknowledges that they might judge him as a coward or a flatterer, who is afraid of sharing Caesar's fate, and that Caesar's spirit might suffer from seeing him doing that.
(Mark) Antony was a supporter of Julius Caesar and had served as his general, and when, as part of a conspiracy, he was assassinated at the hands of various Roman senators on the Ides of March of 44 BC, he eventually became his successor. He, nevertheless, spared the assassins a punishment, but eventually fought against two of them, Brutus and Cassius, in a civil war.
Prevention, recognition, and legal equality for people with mental disabilities were among the stated priorities of the Smith-Sears Veterans Rehabilitation Act, which<span> became law in 1918: The Act provided for the promotion of vocational rehabilitation and return to civil employment of disabled persons discharged from the U.S. military.</span>
One of the major impacts that the US Supreme Court case Griswold v. Connecticut had on women's rights was that "<span>b)The case overturned a statute that prevented the use of contraceptives," since Planned Parenthood had been at the heart of the controversy over privacy. </span><span />
It started in 1939 and ended in 1945