Unless thou wouldst resign thy power forever.

Think on the other hand-thou canst not spurn

The emperor's high commands and solemn orders,

Nor longer temporize, nor seek evasion,

Wouldst thou avoid a rupture with the court.

Resolve then! Wilt thou now by one bold act

Anticipate their ends, or, doubting still,

Await the extremity?

WALLENSTEIN.

There's time before

The extremity arrives.

ILLO.

Seize, seize the hour,

Ere it slips from you. Seldom comes the moment

In life, which is indeed sublime and weighty.

To make a great decision possible,

O! many things, all transient and all rapid,

Must meet at once: and, haply, they thus met

May by that confluence be enforced to pause

Time long-enough for wisdom, though too short,

Far, far too short a time for doubt and scruple!

This is that moment. See, our army chieftains,

Our best, our noblest, are assembled round you,

Their king-like leader! On your nod they wait.

The single threads, which here your prosperous fortune

Hath woven together in one potent web

Instinct with destiny, O! let them not

Unravel of themselves. If you permit

These chiefs to separate, so unanimous

Bring you them not a second time together.

'Tis the high tide that heaves the stranded ship,

And every individual's spirit waxes

In the great stream of multitudes. Behold

They are still here, here still! But soon the war

Bursts them once more asunder, and in small

Particular anxieties and interests

Scatters their spirit, and the sympathy

Of each man with the whole. He who to-day

Forgets himself, forced onward with the stream,

Will become sober, seeing but himself.

Feel only his own weakness, and with speed

Will face about, and march on in the old

High road of duty, the old broad-trodden road,

And seek but to make shelter in good plight.

WALLENSTEIN.

The time is not yet come.

TERZKY.

So you say always.

But when will it be time?

WALLENSTEIN.

When I shall say it.

ILLO.

You'll wait upon the stars, and on their hours,

Till the earthly hour escapes you. Oh, believe me,

In your own bosom are your destiny's stars.

Confidence in yourself, prompt resolution,

This is your Venus! and the sole malignant,

The only one that harmeth you is doubt.

WALLENSTEIN.

Thou speakest as thou understandest. How oft

And many a time I've told thee Jupiter,

That lustrous god, was setting at thy birth.

Thy visual power subdues no mysteries;

Mole-eyed thou mayest but burrow in the earth,

Blind as the subterrestrial, who with wan

Lead-colored shine lighted thee into life.

The common, the terrestrial, thou mayest see,

With serviceable cunning knit together,

The nearest with the nearest; and therein

I trust thee and believe thee! but whate'er

Full of mysterious import Nature weaves,

And fashions in the depths-the spirit's ladder,

That from this gross and visible world of dust,

Even to the starry world, with thousand rounds,

Builds itself up; on which the unseen powers

Move up and down on heavenly ministries-

The circles in the circles, that approach

The central sun with ever-narrowing orbit-

These see the glance alone, the unsealed eye,

Of Jupiter's glad children born in lustre.

[He walks across the chamber, then returns, and standing still, proceeds.

The heavenly constellations make not merely

The day and nights, summer and spring, not merely

Signify to the husbandman the seasons

Of sowing and of harvest. Human action,

That is the seed, too, of contingencies,

Strewed on the dark land of futurity

In hopes to reconcile the powers of fate

Whence it behoves us to seek out the seed-time,

To watch the stars, select their proper hours,

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