Because ye are determined that he is guilty, Yes, ye-ye force him, in his desperation, I see with boding heart the near approach That I must bear me on in my own way. [During his exit the curtain drops. ACT IV. SCENE I.- A Room fitted up for astrological labours, and provided with celestial charts, with globes, telescopes, quadrants, and other mathematical instruments.-Seven colossal figures, representing the planets, each with a transparent star of a different colour on its head, stand in a semicircle in the background, so that Mars and Saturn are nearest the eye.—The remainder of the Scene, and its disposition, is given in the Fourth Scene of the Second Act. There must be a curtain over the figures, which may be dropped, and conceal them on occasions. [In the Fifth Scene of this Act it must be dropped; but in the Seventh Scene, it must be again drawn up wholly or in part.] WALLENSTEIN at a black table, on which a Speculum Astro logicum is described with chalk. SENI is taking observations through a window. Wal. All well-and now let it be ended, Seni.— Come, The dawn commences, and Mars rules the hour. We must give o'er the operation. Come, We know enough. Seni. Your Highness must permit me Just to contemplate Venus. She's now rising: Like as a sun, so shines she in the east. Wal. She is at present in her perigee, And shoots down now her strongest influences. [Contemplating the figure on the table. Auspicious aspect! fateful in conjunction, And Venus, take between them the malignant That makes each influence of double strength. Wal. And sun and moon, too, in the Sextile aspect, The soft light with the veh❜ment—so I love it. Seni. And both the mighty Lumina by no Wal. The empire of Saturnus is gone by: Lord of the secret birth of things is he; Within the lap of earth, and in the depths Of the imagination dominates ; And his are all things that eschew the light. The time is o'er of brooding and contrivance; The scheme, and most auspicious positure It suffers no delaying. [While SENI opens the door for TErtsky, WallenSTEIN draws the curtain over the figures. Ter. [enters.] Hast thou already heard it? He is taken. Gallas has given him up to the Emperor. [SENI draws off the black table and exit. SCENE II.-WALLENSTEIN, COUNT TERTSKY. Wal. [to Tertsky.] Who has been taken?—Who is given up? Ter. The man who knows our secrets, who knows every Negotiation with the Swede and Saxon, Through whose hands all and every thing has passed Wal. [drawing back.] Nay, not Sesina?—Say, Ter. All on his road for Regensburg to the He was plunged down upon by Gallas' agent, To Thurn, to Kinsky, to Oxenstiern, to Arnheim: All this is in their hands; they have now an insight Into the whole-our measures, and our motives. SCENE III.-To them enters ILLO. Illo. [to TERTSKY.] Has he heard it? Illo [to WALLENSTEIN.] Thinkest thou still press! Retreat is now no longer in thy power. Ter. They have documents against us, and in hands, Which show beyond all power of contradiction |