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E'en to the body-guard, who holds his watch

Within the precincts of the imperial palace!

QUESTENBERG.

What's the short meaning of this long harangue?

BUTLER.

That the respect, the love, the confidence,

Which makes us willing subjects of Duke Friedland,

Are not to be transferred to the first comer

That Austria's court may please to send to us.

We have not yet so readily forgotten

How the command came into Friedland's hands.

Was it, forsooth, the emperor's majesty

That gave the army ready to his hand,

And only sought a leader for it? No.

The army then had no existence. He,

Friedland, it was who called it into being,

And gave it to his sovereign-but receiving

No army at his hand; nor did the emperor

Give Wallenstein to us as general. No,

It was from Wallenstein we first received

The emperor as our master and our sovereign;

And he, he only, binds us to our banners!

OCTAVIO (interposing and addressing QUESTENBERG).

My noble friend,

This is no more than a remembrancing

That you are now in camp, and among warriors;

The soldier's boldness constitutes his freedom.

Could he act daringly, unless he dared

Talk even so? One runs into the other.

The boldness of this worthy officer,

[Pointing to BUTLER.

Which now is but mistaken in its mark,

Preserved, when naught but boldness could preserve it,

To the emperor, his capital city, Prague,

In a most formidable mutiny

Of the whole garrison. [Military music at a distance.

Hah! here they come!

ILLO.

The sentries are saluting them: this signal

Announces the arrival of the duchess.

OCTAVIO (to QUESTENBERG).

Then my son Max., too, has returned. 'Twas he

Fetched and attended them from Caernthen hither.

ISOLANI (to ILLO).

Shall we not go in company to greet them?

ILLO.

Well, let us go-Ho! Colonel Butler, come.

[To OCTAVIO.

You'll not forget that yet ere noon we meet

The noble envoy at the general's palace.

[Exeunt all but QUESTENBERG and OCTAVIO.

SCENE III.

QUESTENBERG and OCTAVIO.

QUESTENBERG (with signs of aversion and astonishment).

What have I not been forced to hear, Octavio!

What sentiments! what fierce, uncurbed defiance!

And were this spirit universal--

OCTAVIO.

Hm!

You're now acquainted with three-fourths of the army.

QUESTENBERG.

Where must we seek, then, for a second host

To have the custody of this? That Illo

Thinks worse, I fear me, than he speaks. And then

This Butler, too-he cannot even conceal

The passionate workings of his ill intentions.

OCTAVIO.

Quickness of temper-irritated pride;

'Twas nothing more. I cannot give up Butler.

I know a spell that will soon dispossess

The evil spirit in him.

QUESTENBERG (walking up and down in evident disquiet).

Friend, friend!

O! this is worse, far worse, than we had suffered

Ourselves to dream of at Vienna. There

We saw it only with a courtier's eyes,

Eyes dazzled by the splendor of the throne.

We had not seen the war-chief, the commander,

The man all-powerful in his camp. Here, here,

'Tis quite another thing.

Here is no emperor more-the duke is emperor.

Alas, my friend! alas, my noble friend!

This walk which you have ta'en me through the camp

Strikes my hopes prostrate.

OCTAVIO.

Now you see yourself

Of what a perilous kind the office is,

Which you deliver to me from the court.

The least suspicion of the general

Costs me my freedom and my life, and would

But hasten his most desperate enterprise.

QUESTENBERG.

Where was our reason sleeping when we trusted

This madman with the sword, and placed such power

In such a hand? I tell you, he'll refuse,

Flatly refuse to obey the imperial orders.

Friend, he can do it, and what he can, he will.

And then the impunity of his defiance-

Oh! what a proclamation of our weakness!

OCTAVIO.

D'ye think, too, he has brought his wife and daughter

Without a purpose hither? Here in camp!

And at the very point of time in which

We're arming for the war? That he has taken

These, the last pledges of his loyalty,

Away from out the emperor's dominions-

This is no doubtful token of the nearness

Of some eruption.

QUESTENBERG.

How shall we hold footing

Beneath this tempest, which collects itself

And threats us from all quarters? The enemy

Of the empire on our borders, now already

The master of the Danube, and still farther,

And farther still, extending every hour!

In our interior the alarum-bells

Of insurrection-peasantry in arms-

All orders discontented-and the army,

Just in the moment of our expectation

Of aidance from it-lo! this very army

Seduced, run wild, lost to all discipline,

Loosened, and rent asunder from the state

And from their sovereign, the blind instrument

Of the most daring of mankind, a weapon

Of fearful power, which at his will he wields.

OCTAVIO.

Nay, nay, friend! let us not despair too soon

Men's words are even bolder than their deeds;

And many a resolute, who now appears

Made up to all extremes, will, on a sudden,

Find in his breast a heart he wot not of,

Let but a single honest man speak out

The true name of his crime! Remember, too,

We stand not yet so wholly unprotected.

Counts Altringer and Gallas have maintained

Their little army faithful to its duty,

And daily it becomes more numerous.

Nor can he take us by surprise; you know

I hold him all encompassed by my listeners.

What'er he does, is mine, even while 'tis doing-

No step so small, but instantly I hear it;

Yea, his own mouth discloses it.

QUESTENBERG.

'Tis quite

Incomprehensible, that he detects not

The foe so near!

OCTAVIO.

Beware, you do not think,

That I, by lying arts, and complaisant

Hypocrisy, have sulked into his graces,

Or with the substance of smooth professions

Nourish his all-confiding friendship! No-

Compelled alike by prudence, and that duty

Which we all owe our country and our sovereign,

To hide my genuine feelings from him, yet

Ne'er have I duped him with base counterfeits!

QUESTENBERG.

It is the visible ordinance of heaven.

OCTAVIO.

I know not what it is that so attracts

And links him both to me and to my son.

Comrades and friends we always were-long habit,

Adventurous deeds performed in company,

And all those many and various incidents

Which stores a soldier's memory with affections,

Had bound us long and early to each other-

Yet I can name the day, when all at once

His heart rose on me, and his confidence

Shot out into sudden growth. It was the morning