MAX. (continuing).

In their fear

They call a spirit up, and when he comes,

Straight their flesh creeps and quivers, and they dread him

More than the ills for which they called him up.

The uncommon, the sublime, must seem and be

Like things of every day. But in the field,

Ay, there the Present Being makes itself felt.

The personal must command, the actual eye

Examine. If to be the chieftain asks

All that is great in nature, let it be

Likewise his privilege to move and act

In all the correspondences of greatness.

The oracle within him, that which lives,

He must invoke and question-not dead books,

Not ordinances, not mould-rotted papers.

OCTAVIO.

My son! of those old narrow ordinances

Let us not hold too lightly. They are weights

Of priceless value, which oppressed mankind,

Tied to the volatile will of their oppressors.

For always formidable was the League

And partnership of free power with free will.

The way of ancient ordinance, though it winds,

Is yet no devious path. Straight forward goes

The lightning's path, and straight the fearful path

Of the cannon-ball. Direct it flies, and rapid;

Shattering that it may reach, and shattering what it reaches,

My son, the road the human being travels,

That, on which blessing comes and goes, doth follow

The river's course, the valley's playful windings,

Curves round the cornfield and the hill of vines,

Honoring the holy bounds of property!

And thus secure, though late, leads to its end.

QUESTENBERG.

Oh, hear your father, noble youth! hear him

Who is at once the hero and the man.

OCTAVIO.

My son, the nursling of the camp spoke in thee!

A war of fifteen years

Hath been thy education and thy school.

Peace hast thou never witnessed! There exists

An higher than the warrior's excellence.

In war itself war is no ultimate purpose,

The vast and sudden deeds of violence,

Adventures wild, and wonders of the moment,

These are not they, my son, that generate

The calm, the blissful, and the enduring mighty!

Lo there! the soldier, rapid architect!

Builds his light town of canvas, and at once

The whole scene moves and bustles momently.

With arms, and neighing steeds, and mirth and quarrel

The motley market fills; the roads, the streams

Are crowded with new freights; trade stirs and hurries,

But on some morrow morn, all suddenly,

The tents drop down, the horde renews its march.

Dreary, and solitary as a churchyard;

The meadow and down-trodden seed-plot lie,

And the year's harvest is gone utterly.

MAX.

Oh, let the emperor make peace, my father!

Most gladly would I give the blood-stained laurel

For the first violet [5] of the leafless spring,

Plucked in those quiet fields where I have journeyed.

OCTAVIO.

What ails thee? What so moves thee all at once?

MAX.

Peace have I ne'er beheld? I have beheld it.

From thence am I come hither: oh, that sight,

It glimmers still before me, like some landscape

Left in the distance,-some delicious landscape!

My road conducted me through countries where

The war has not yet reached. Life, life, my father-

My venerable father, life has charms

Which we have never experienced. We have been

But voyaging along its barren coasts,

Like some poor ever-roaming horde of pirates,

That, crowded in the rank and narrow ship,

House on the wild sea with wild usages,

Nor know aught of the mainland, but the bays

Where safeliest they may venture a thieves' landing.

Whate'er in the inland dales the land conceals

Of fair and exquisite, oh, nothing, nothing,

Do we behold of that in our rude voyage.

OCTAVIO (attentive, with an appearance of uneasiness).

And so your journey has revealed this to you?

MAX.

'Twas the first leisure of my life. O tell me,

What is the meed and purpose of the toil,

The painful toil which robbed me of my youth,

Left me a heart unsouled and solitary,

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