Gordon! good-night, and for the last time take

A fair leave of the place. Send out patrols

To make secure, the watchword may be altered.

At the stroke of ten deliver in the keys

To the duke himself, and then you've quit forever

Your wardship of the gates, for on to-morrow

The Swedes will take possession of the citadel.

TERZKY (as he is going, to BUTLER).

You come, though, to the castle?

BUTLER.

At the right time.

[Exeunt TERZKY and ILLO.

SCENE VIII.

GORDON and BUTLER.

GORDON (looking after them).

Unhappy men! How free from all foreboding

They rush into the outspread net of murder

In the blind drunkenness of victory;

I have no pity for their fate. This Illo,

This overflowing and foolhardy villain,

That would fain bathe himself in his emperor's blood.

BUTLER.

Do as he ordered you. Send round patrols,

Take measures for the citadel's security;

When they are within I close the castle-gate

That nothing may transpire.

GORDON (with earnest anxiety).

Oh! haste not so!

Nay, stop; first tell me--

BUTLER.

You have heard already,

To-morrow to the Swedes belongs. This night

Alone is ours. They make good expedition.

But we will make still greater. Fare you well.

GORDON.

Ah! your looks tell me nothing good. Nay, Butler,

I pray you promise me!

BUTLER.

The sun has set;

A fateful evening doth descend upon us,

And brings on their long night! Their evil stars

Deliver them unarmed into our hands,

And from their drunken dream of golden fortunes

The dagger at their hearts shall rouse them. Well,

The duke was ever a great calculator;

His fellow-men were figures on his chess-board

To move and station, as his game required.

Other men's honor, dignity, good name,

Did he shift like pawns, and made no conscience of

Still calculating, calculating still;

And yet at last his calculation proves

Erroneous; the whole game is lost; and low!

His own life will be found among the forfeits.

GORDON.

Oh, think not of his errors now! remember

His greatness, his munificence; think on all

The lovely features of his character,

On all the noble exploits of his life,

And let them, like an angel's arm, unseen,

Arrest the lifted sword.

BUTLER.

It is too late.

I suffer not myself to feel compassion,

Dark thoughts and bloody are my duty now.

[Grasping GORDON's hand.

Gordon! 'tis not my hatred (I pretend not

To love the duke, and have no cause to love him).

Yet 'tis not now my hatred that impels me

To be his murderer. 'Tis his evil fate.

Hostile occurrences of many events

Control and subjugate me to the office.

In vain the human being meditates

Free action. He is but the wire-worked [8] puppet

Of the blind Power, which, out of its own choice,

Creates for him a dread necessity.

What too would it avail him if there were

A something pleading for him in my heart-

Still I must kill him.

GORDON.

If your heart speak to you

Follow its impulse. 'Tis the voice of God.

Think you your fortunes will grow prosperous

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