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Egmont. You deem me lost? Orange. You are lost! Consider! Only a brief respite is left you. Farewell. [Exit. Egmont (alone). Strange that the thoughts of other men should exert such an influence over us. These fears would never have entered my mind; and this man infects me with his solicitude. Away! 'Tis a foreign drop in my blood! Kind nature, cast it forth! And to erase the furrowed lines from my brow there yet remains indeed a friendly means. ACT III Scene I.--Palace of the Regent Margaret of Parma Regent. I might have expected it. Ha! when we live immersed in anxiety and toil, we imagine that we achieve the utmost that is possible; while he, who, from a distance, looks on and commands, believes that he requires only the possible. O ye kings! I had not thought it could have galled me thus. It is so sweet to reign!--and to abdicate? I know not how my father could do so; but I will also. Machiavel appears in the back-ground Regent. Approach, Machiavel. I am thinking over this letter from my brother. Machiavel. May I know what it contains? Regent. As much tender consideration for me as anxiety for his states. He extols the firmness, the industry, the fidelity, with which I have hitherto watched over the interests of his Majesty in these provinces. He condoles with me that the unbridled people occasion me so much trouble. He is so thoroughly convinced of the depth of my views, so extraordinarily satisfied with the prudence of my conduct, that I must almost say the letter is too politely written for a king--certainly for a brother. Machiavel. It is not the first time that he has testified to you his just satisfaction. Regent. But the first time that it is a mere rhetorical figure. Machiavel. I do not understand you. Regent. You soon will.--For after this preamble he is of opinion that without soldiers, without a small army indeed,---I shall always cut a sorry figure here! We did wrong, he says, to withdraw our troops from the provinces at the remonstrance of the inhabitants; a garrison, he thinks, which shall press upon the neck of the burgher, will prevent him, by its weight, from making any lofty spring. |  |
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