The answer is:
Antony displays Caesar’s will and says that if the people read it, they would worship Caesar so much that they would want something from him to worship as a relic.
In Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar," Antony refuses to read Caesar's will at first because he believes Romans will be so deeply moved that their reverence for him would make them kiss Ceasar's wounds, diptheir napkins in is blood and take his hair as a costly object to pass from generation to generation. Actually, Antony later reveals that in his will Caesar has left an amount of money from his own to every man in Rome.