The Death of Wallenstein (play)

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The Death of Wallenstein (play) Page 7

by Friedrich Schiller


  Oh, do not doubt of that! A resolution!

  Does there remain one to be taken?

  COUNTESS.

  Hush!

  Collect yourself! I hear your mother coming.

  THERLA.

  How shall I bear to see her?

  COUNTESS.

  Collect yourself.

  SCENE III.

  To them enter the DUCHESS.

  DUCHESS (to the COUNTESS).

  Who was here, sister? I heard some one talking,

  And passionately, too.

  COUNTESS.

  Nay! there was no one.

  DUCHESS.

  I am growing so timorous, every trifling noise

  Scatters my spirits, and announces to me

  The footstep of some messenger of evil.

  And you can tell me, sister, what the event is?

  Will he agree to do the emperor's pleasure,

  And send the horse regiments to the cardinal?

  Tell me, has he dismissed von Questenberg

  With a favorable answer?

  COUNTESS.

  No, he has not.

  DUCHESS.

  Alas! then all is lost! I see it coming,

  The worst that can come! Yes, they will depose him;

  The accursed business of the Regensburg diet

  Will all be acted o'er again!

  COUNTESS.

  No! never!

  Make your heart easy, sister, as to that.

  [THEKLA, in extreme agitation, throws herself upon her mother,

  and enfolds her in her arms, weeping.

  DUCHESS.

  Yes, my poor child!

  Thou too hast lost a most affectionate godmother

  In the empress. Oh, that stern, unbending man!

  In this unhappy marriage what have I

  Not suffered, not endured? For even as if

  I had been linked on to some wheel of fire

  That restless, ceaseless, whirls impetuous onward,

  I have passed a life of frights and horrors with him,

  And ever to the brink of some abyss

  With dizzy headlong violence he bears me.

  Nay, do not weep, my child. Let not my sufferings

  Presignify unhappiness to thee,

  Nor blacken with their shade the fate that waits thee.

  There lives no second Friedland; thou, my child,

  Hast not to fear thy mother's destiny.

  THEELA.

  Oh, let us supplicate him, dearest mother!

  Quick! quick! here's no abiding-place for us.

  Here every coming hour broods into life

  Some new affrightful monster.

  DUCHESS.

  Thou wilt share

  An easier, calmer lot, my child! We, too,

  I and thy father, witnessed happy days.

  Still think I with delight of those first years,

  When he was making progress with glad effort,

  When his ambition was a genial fire,

  Not that consuming flame which now it is.

  The emperor loved him, trusted him; and all

  He undertook could not but be successful.

  But since that ill-starred day at Regensburg,

  Which plunged him headlong from his dignity,

  A gloomy, uncompanionable spirit,

  Unsteady and suspicious, has possessed him.

  His quiet mind forsook him, and no longer

  Did he yield up himself in joy and faith

  To his old luck and individual power;

  But thenceforth turned his heart and best affections

  All to those cloudy sciences which never

  Have yet made happy him who followed them.

  COUNTESS.

  You see it, sister! as your eyes permit you,

  But surely this is not the conversation

  To pass the time in which we are waiting for him.

  You know he will be soon here. Would you have him

  Find her in this condition?

  DUCHESS.

  Come, my child!

  Come, wipe away thy tears, and show thy father

  A cheerful countenance. See, the tie-knot here

  Is off; this hair must not hang so dishevelled.

  Come, dearest! dry thy tears up. They deform

  Thy gentle eye. Well, now-what was I saying?

  Yes, in good truth, this Piccolomini

  Is a most noble and deserving gentleman.

  COUNTESS.

  That is he, sister!

  THEKLA (to the COUNTESS, with narks of great oppression of spirits).

  Aunt, you will excuse me?

  (Is going).

  COUNTESS.

  But, whither? See, your father comes!

  THEKLA.

  I cannot see him now.

  COUNTESS.

  Nay, but bethink you.

  THEKLA.

  Believe me, I cannot sustain his presence.

  COUNTESS.

  But he will miss you, will ask after you.

  DUCHESS.

  What, now? Why is she going?

  COUNTESS.

  She's not well.

  DUCHESS (anxiously).

  What ails, then, my beloved child?

  [Both follow the PRINCESS, and endeavor to detain her. During

  this WALLENSTEIN appears, engaged in conversation with ILLO.

  SCENE IV.

  WALLENSTEIN, ILLO, COUNTESS, DUCHESS, THEKLA.

  WALLENSTEIN.

  All quiet in the camp?

  ILLO.

  It is all quiet.

  WALLENSTEIN.

  In a few hours may couriers come from Prague

  With tidings that this capital is ours.

  Then we may drop the mask, and to the troops

  Assembled in this town make known the measure

  And its result together. In such cases

  Example does the whole. Whoever is foremost

  Still leads the herd. An imitative creature

  Is man. The troops at Prague conceive no other,

  Than that the Pilsen army has gone through

  The forms of homage to us; and in Pilsen

  They shall swear fealty to us, because

  The example has been given them by Prague.

  Butler, you tell me, has declared himself?

  ILLO.

  At his own bidding, unsolicited,

  He came to offer you himself and regiment.

  WALLENSTEIN,

  I find we must not give implicit credence

  To every warning voice that makes itself

  Be listened to in the heart. To hold us back,

  Oft does the lying spirit counterfeit

  The voice of truth and inward revelation,

  Scattering false oracles. And thus have I

  To entreat forgiveness for that secretly.

  I've wronged this honorable gallant man,

  This Butler: for a feeling of the which

  I am not master (fear I would not call it),

  Creeps o'er me instantly, with sense of shuddering,

  At his approach, and stops love's joyous motion.

  And this same man, against whom I am warned,

  This honest man is he who reaches to me

  The first pledge of my fortune.

  ILLO.

  And doubt not

  That his example will win over to you

  The best men in the army.

  WALLENSTEIN.

  Go and send

  Isolani hither. Send him immediately.

  He is under recent obligations to me:

  With him will I commence the trial. Go.

  [Exit ILLO.

  WALLENSTEIN (turns himself round to the females).

  Lo, there's the mother with the darling daughter.

  For once we'll have an interval of rest-

  Come! my heart yearns to live a cloudless hour

  In the beloved circle of my family.

  COUNTESS.

&n
bsp; 'Tis long since we've been thus together, brother.

  WALLENSTEIN (to the COUNTESS, aside).

  Can she sustain the news? Is she prepared?

  COUNTESS.

  Not yet.

  WALLENSTEIN.

  Come here, my sweet girl! Seat thee by me,

  For there is a good spirit on thy lips.

  Thy mother praised to me thy ready skill;

  She says a voice of melody dwells in thee,

  Which doth enchant the soul. Now such a voice

  Will drive away from me the evil demon

  That beats his black wings close above my head.

  DUCHESS.

  Where is thy lute, my daughter? Let thy father

  Hear some small trial of thy skill.

  THEKLA.

  My mother

  I--

  DUCHESS.

  Trembling? Come, collect thyself. Go, cheer

  Thy father.

  THEKLA.

  O my mother! I-I cannot.

  COUNTESS.

  How, what is that, niece?

  THEKLA (to the COUNTESS).

  O spare me-sing-now-in this sore anxiety,

  Of the overburdened soul-to sing to him

  Who is thrusting, even now, my mother headlong

  Into her grave.

  DUCHESS.

  How, Thekla! Humorsome!

  What! shall thy father have expressed a wish

  In vain?

  COUNTESS.

  Here is the lute.

  THEKLA.

  My God! how can I--

  [The orchestra plays. During the ritornello THEKLA expresses in her

  gestures and countenance the struggle of her feelings; and at the

  moment that she should begin to sing, contracts herself together, as

  one shuddering, throws the instrument down, and retires abruptly.

  DUCHESS.

  My child! Oh, she is ill--

  WALLENSTEIN.

  What ails the maiden?

  Say, is she often so?

  COUNTESS.

  Since then herself

  Has now betrayed it, I too must no longer

  Conceal it.

  WALLENSTEIN.

  What?

  COUNTESS.

  She loves him!

  WALLENSTEIN.

  Loves him? Whom?

  COUNTESS.

  Max. does she love! Max. Piccolomini!

  Hast thou never noticed it? Nor yet my sister?

  DUCHESS.

  Was it this that lay so heavy on her heart?

  God's blessing on thee,-my sweet child! Thou needest

  Never take shame upon thee for thy choice.

  COUNTESS.

  This journey, if 'twere not thy aim, ascribe it

  To thine own self. Thou shouldst have chosen another

  To have attended her.

  WALLENSTEIN.

  And does he know it?

  COUNTESS.

  Yes, and he hopes to win her.

  WALLENSTEIN.

  Hopes to win her!

  Is the boy mad?

  COUNTESS.

  Well-hear it from themselves.

  WALLENSTEIN.

  He thinks to carry off Duke Friedland's daughter!

  Ay? The thought pleases me.

  The young man has no groveling spirit.

  COUNTESS.

  Since

  Such and such constant favor you have shown him--

  WALLENSTEIN.

  He chooses finally to be my heir.

  And true it is, I love the youth; yea, honor him.

  But must he therefore be my daughter's husband?

  Is it daughters only? Is it only children

  That we must show our favor by?

  DUCHESS.

  His noble disposition and his manners--

  WALLENSTEIN.

  Win him my heart, but not my daughter.

  DUCHESS.

  Then

  His rank, his ancestors--

  WALLENSTEIN.

  Ancestors! What?

  He is a subject, and my son-in-law

  I will seek out upon the thrones of Europe.

  DUCHESS

  O dearest Albrecht! Climb we not too high

  Lest we should fall too low.

  WALLENSTEIN.

  What! have I paid

  A price so heavy to ascend this eminence,

  And jut out high above the common herd,

  Only to close the mighty part I play

  In life's great drama with a common kinsman?

  Have I for this--

  [Stops suddenly, repressing himself.

  She is the only thing

  That will remain behind of me on earth;

  And I will see a crown around her head,

  Or die in the attempt to place it there.

  I hazard all-all! and for this alone,

  To lift her into greatness.

  Yea, in this moment, in the which we are speaking

  [He recollects himself.

  And I must now, like a soft-hearted father,

  Couple together in good peasant fashion

  The pair that chance to suit each other's liking-

  And I must do it now, even now, when I

  Am stretching out the wreath that is to twine

  My full accomplished work-no! she is the jewel,

  Which I have treasured long, my last, my noblest,

  And 'tis my purpose not to let her from me

  For less than a king's sceptre.

  DUCHESS.

  O my husband!

  You're ever building, building to the clouds,

  Still building higher, and still higher building,

  And ne'er reflect, that the poor narrow basis

  Cannot sustain the giddy tottering column.

  WALLENSTEIN (to the COUNTESS).

  Have you announced the place of residence

  Which I have destined for her?

  COUNTESS.

  No! not yet,

  'Twere better you yourself disclosed it to her.

  DUCHESS.

  How? Do we not return to Carinthia then?

  WALLENSTEIN.

  No.

  DUCHESS.

  And to no other of your lands or seats?

  WALLENSTEIN.

  You would not be secure there.

  DUCHESS.

  Not secure.

  In the emperor's realms, beneath the emperor's

  Protection?

  WALLENSTEIN.

  Friedland's wife may be permitted

  No longer to hope that.

  DUCHESS.

  O God in heaven!

  And have you brought it even to this!

  WALLENSTEIN.

  In Holland

  You'll find protection.

  DUCHESS

  In a Lutheran country?

  What? And you send us into Lutheran countries?

  WALLENSTEIN.

  Duke Franz of Lauenburg conducts you thither.

  DUCHESS.

  Duke Franz of Lauenburg?

  The ally of Sweden, the emperor's enemy.

  WALLENSTEIN.

  The emperor's enemies are mine no longer.

  DUCHESS (casting a look of terror on the DUKE and the COUNTESS).

  Is it then true? It is. You are degraded

  Deposed from the command? O God in heaven!

  COUNTESS (aside to the DUKE).

  Leave her in this belief. Thou seest she cannot

  Support the real truth.

  SCENE V.

  To them enter COUNT TERZKY.

  COUNTESS.

  Terzky!

  What ails him? What an image of affright!

  He looks as he had seen a ghost.

  TERZKY (leading WALLENSTEIN aside).

  Is it thy command that all the Croats--

  WALLENSTEIN.

  Mine!

  TERZKY.

  We are betrayed.

  WALLENSTEIN.

  What?r />
  TERZKY.

  They are off! This night

  The Jaegers likewise-all the villages

  In the whole round are empty.

  WALLENSTEIN.

  Isolani!

  TERZKY.

 

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