"Verily the great work is accomplished," "The machine goes round, the creator takes his rest." "So for a million years will it rotate" "Before one single cog need be renewed." "Arise then, guardian spirits of light, arise." "Begin your unending courses." "Once more I would delight in you" "As you hum beneath my feet." "Thou Lucifer keep'st silence;" "stand'st in self conceit." "Dost thou not find a word of praise for me," "Or doesn't my creation please thee?" "What should please me in it?" "Some bits of matter Are clothed with divers properties" "Which they did not exhibit before And-maybe thou didst not guess" "Or if thou didst thou couldst not change" "The kneaded up into some globes" "Are now attracting, chasing and repelling." "Man, if he once finds out the secret" "Will do the same thing in his laboratory." "Thou wilt put thy man in thy great kitchen And overlook it, when he bungles," "A slovenly cook who thinks that he is God." "But when he wastes and spoils the brew" "Then thy wrath flares up too late;" "What else dost thou expect from amateurs?" "Thou hast composed thy hymn of praise" "And put it on a gramophone And wilt not get bored for ever and ever" "That the same old tune always goes on like that." "A tiny spark downtrodden in the mire" "May ape, but won't be like his Lord;" "Fate and freewill will harry one another" "And intellectual harmony will be lacking." "Homage, not criticism is my due." "What is not in my nature" "I can't give." "That mean host is full of adulation," "And it's quite proper that they should give praise," "Thou gavest them life, as light gives birth to shade" "But I have lived from all eternity." "Shameless!" "Wert thou not born of matter?" "Where before that was thy domain and power?" "That's just the question I might put to thee." "An endless time ago did I conceive my plan," "What was brought forth to-day, already lived within me." "'Midst thy conceits didst thou not feel the void" "Which put a barrier to all existence" "And thereby forced you to create?" "That barrier was named Lucifer" "The primaeval spirit of negation." "Thou madest matter," "I thereby gained space." "Where life is, death stands nigh;" "Depression follows after happiness;" "Shadows are cast by light, in hope there's doubt;" "Where'er thou art, thou wilt see me there," "And I who know thee, should I do thee homage?" "Jointly we have created." "I claim my share." "Be it as thou dost desire." "Look down upon the earth, amongst the trees of Eden," "See those two slender ones, just in the middle." "I curse them, let them be thine." "With niggard hand thou metest out, great Lord as thou art," "Yet one foot sole of earth will be enough" "Where negation can get a foothold" "It will overturn thy world." "Adam, only avoid, avoid these two trees." "Another spirit guards their luscious fruit" "And he who tastes thereof shall die the death." "Why are these two trees fairer than all others," "Why just these two forbidden?" "Why is the sky blue?" "The forest green?" "Let us obey the voice, follow me, Eve." "Hail, brother spirit!" "I did not know that other men existed." "Oh!" "There's still a great deal that thou dost not know," "And that thou wilt not know." "Dost thou think the good old man Would have created thee from dust" "Merely to share the world with thee?" "Thou praisest him, he looks after thee," "He says to thee:" "Take this, beware of that," "Protects and guides thee like a fleecy sheep." "There's no necessity for thee to be self conscious." "Self conscious?" "Am I not fully conscious?" "Do I not feel the blessed beams of sunshine" "The sweet joy of existence" "And the infinite goodness of my God" "Who made me to be God over this earth?" "So too perhaps deludes himself that little worm" "Which eats the fruit in front of you," "In what respect dost thou hold thyself more noble?" "Aye, one thing there is and that is thought" "Which all unconscious lies torpid in thy breast," "That can give thee manhood, making thee confide in thy own strength, to choose 'twixt good and evil" "Thyself to plan out thine own destiny" "And free thyself from tutelage." "But perhaps 'tis better for thee like a worm" "To pullulate in a soft couch of dung" "In ignorance to wear away thy life." "Thou speakest of great things, they make me dizzy." "What you say is new and lovely." "But knowledge by itself is not enough," "That it may be embodied in great deeds," "There must be immortality as well." "For what can life's short span accomplish?" "These two trees hold both these secrets," "O man, beware!" "Boughs rustling in the wind." "These two trees are mine." "Who then art thou?" "Thou seem'st to be, in truth, a man like us." "The spirit kingdom is beyond thy range of vision," "To thee the greatest of all things is man." "Likewise the dog's ideal is dog," "He honours thee by taking thee as comrade." "But just as thou disdainest him And standest over him as destiny" "In the same way we look down on thee Proud of our membership of the spirit world." "Why then didst thou not stay in the bright sky," "Why to this world of dust com'st thou amongst us?" "I require strife, a want of harmony" "Which begets new strength and gives us a new world," "Where in himself the spirit may be great;" "Thither who dares may come along with me." "God said that punishment would follow" "If we did not choose the path appointed by him." "Why should he punish?" "Surely if he choose The path he wanted us to follow," "At the same time he must have made us so" "That guilty inclination would not draw us from it." "If sin forms part of his design..." "Behold, the first philosopher appears!" "Many will follow in thy track, my fair young sister," "Who will discuss this in a million ways;" "not one will arrive." "Hadn't you better give up speculation?" "Speculation is the death of action." "The Lord has cursed it." "But pick it all the same" "Let come what must befall us." "Let us be wise like God." "And as well Forever young." "Here, this way, this way." "This is the tree of immortality." "Make haste." "Adam," "Adam, thou hast abandoned me." "I too leave thee, see what thou canst do by thyself." "Are you discouraged?" "Not at all!" "This is merely the shiver of awakening." "Let us away my wife, anywhere-away!" "This place is now most strange and desolate." "The family and property Will be the world's twain motive power" "The source of all its pleasures and its pains." "These two ideas will grow unceasingly." "Begetting everything that's great and noble" "And, Saturn-like, devouring their own offspring." "Thou speak'st in riddles." "Thou hast promised knowledge," "For this I have renounced instinctive pleasures" "And what's the upshot?" "Why, don't you feel it?" "I feel that just as I am left by God" "Who thrust me empty handed to the desert" "So I have left God." "I myself have become God to myself, and what I shall achieve Is duly mine." "What should I thank him for?" "My mere existence?" "For if life's burden is worth while" "'Tis only by the fruits of my hard toil;" "But if the bond of gratitude to God is broken," "For that thy help was not required" "My own strength had sufficed me." "If I would leap, my body is held back;" "If contemplation raises me to higher spheres," "Hunger compels me humbly to descend" "Down to the well trodden earth again." "This bond is stronger than I am myself." "Ah, so thou art a truly feeble spirit" "If this invisible cobweb, this mere nothing" "Which a hundred thousand beings don't perceive" "And in its toils, freely quite free Leap about... can yet defy thee." "And that is only able to defy me" "Because, like me, it is a spirit." "Thou deem'st perhaps because he works in secret silently he is not strong." "Do not think that." "Only the work of man glitters and chatters" "Limited to life's short span." "Let me have just one glance at this activity" "A moment only, thou knowest my heart is strong" "Glance around and see with spirit eyes" "Appear, Spirit!" "Old Satan, none but he Would dare to summon thee." "What spectre art thou?" "It was not thee I called." "The spirit of the earth is weak and mild." "What appeared to thee weak in the heavenly choir" "Is endlessly strong in its own proper sphere." "Behold, I am here, yet mark this to vex is not the same thing as to direct." "If I put on my proper shape, thou wouldst succumb" "And these two worms here be annihilated." "But say, in what way may man approach Thy proud entourage should he take thee for his god?" "Dispersed in streams, in clouds, in woods" "In every place where man shall look for me" "I see no use in all this brilliant play Passing before me." "I cannot understand it." "For me it's only one more mystery." " Let me see..." " Let me see too." "What I shall strive and suffer for..." "in all these changes" "Whether my charms will not get withered or be lost." "So let it be." "I will put a charm on you" "You shall survey the future to its end." "What can it be which does not let great Pharaoh" "Take his repose upon his cushioned throne?" "Why dost thou renounce the pleasures of the day" "And the sweet visions which come by night" "When already, all the glory and the power Of this great world belong to thee?" "They are not freely given, I make no effort" "To obtain them, nor have to thank myself for them." "But in this work which here I undertake" "I hold that I have found the path Which leads to genuine greatness." "Nature is rapt in admiration at its art," "It will proclaim my name throughout the ages," "The earthquake and the tempest cannot overturn it:" "Man has become more powerful than God." "O Pharaoh, art thou too made happy By these imaginings?" "Put thy hand upon thy heart." "Not I," "I feel a void, an unutterable void." "But that's no matter." "I have not aspired to happiness" "Only to fame, which opens out before me." "Suppose one day thou come to recognize" "That glory is a plaything of the moment." "That cannot be!" "And yet if?" "I should turn to die Cursing the coming generations of mankind." "My lord!" "Help me!" "Thou implor'st in vain." "He who has never shared our sufferings" "Can never comprehend them!" "The voice of pain is low, The throne is high." "Why dost thou not call on me" "Who shelter thee and on my body take Each stroke." "Leave them there." "Begone." "Who is this woman, what is her magic charm" "By which, as with a chain, she drags great Pharaoh" "Down to herself as she grovels in the dust?" "That once again is one of those threads" "With which thy lord in derision has encircled thee," "That thou may'st know thou art a caterpillar Though in thy own conceit thou art a butterfly." "Thou hast already seen the strength of this thin thread," "I cannot break it." "Do not do that." "The more it hurts, the more I like to feel it." "It is not seemly that a sage and king Should groan beneath its yoke." "Millions for one man." "Why matters it, great Pharaoh?" "Well then I say it is an excellent thing That one less slave should be upon the earth." "A trifling thing to thee, 'tis all the world to me." "Alas, who will there be to love me now?" "I will love thee henceforth." "Remove the corpse." "O, Great Pharaoh, I know that thy command is thy serf's fate" "And offer no resistance, only let me have a short time to myself, then give thy commands." "Let me not hear that word again." "Will my kingdom Never extend beyond the word "Command"?" "Sufficient for the moment, if thy command Does not give pain oh, in this first moment Do not begrudge my tears for this dead man." "How beautiful he is, ah my God, how beautiful." "Beauty and death;" "strange contrast" "That calm repose mocks our endeavours" "Thou art defied by a runaway slave," "Who says "I was stronger than thy chains."" "What is the matter, beloved?" "Dost thou not hear The people's cries?" "Certainly they are not music;" "but pay no heed." "Give me a kiss and forget the world." "Put a stop to those cries of distress." "I can't do that, it is the people's right" "Inherited together with the yoke." "My lady, thou art pained, and I do not know How I may help thee." "Oh Pharaoh, crush me, but forgive me," "If the people's cries will not let me rest." "I an apostate daughter of the people" "Feel in my heart that torture." "And I feel with thee" "Thou art sad and it is through my fault;" "Banish me from thyself, or teach me how" "I can be deaf." "Thou wert better teacher" "In that thou mad'st me hear these lamentations." "I will no longer hear them." "Behold, the slave folk Shall be freed." "What is that Glory worth Which is accomplished in one man alone" "By the destruction and the groans of millions," "All of them fellowmen like him?" "Pharaoh, thou art a fanatic." "Surely fate has destined the crowd to be a beast of burden" "A thing to turn a mill without cessation, Since for that end it was created." "To-day thou giv'st it freedom." "Yet what thou throwest away it will not get," "And to-morrow will look out for a new master." "Canst thou suppose that thou couldst yoke its neck" "If it did not feel that it must have a master If it were fully conscious of itself?" "Why does it groan, as if it suffered pain From slavery?" "It suffers though it does not know the cause." "All men aspire to domination." "It is that feeling and not brotherhood" "Which towards freedom's banner drives The great crowd" "The people is like a sea, into whose depth" "No ray of light can pierce the obscurity." "Only the wave upon its surface shines," "In whom the people's instinct has become conscious," "And who acclaimed as freedom's champion Dares thrust himself up to thy splendid place." "The folk meanwhile gains nothing," "The master is still there, but has another name." "Thy syllogisms are unending circles," "Is there indeed no possible escape?" "There is a way." "Say to a chosen few" ""Behold, by this I set thee up above the crowd, thou art ennobled."" "They will believe thee." "Tempt not with such enticing sophistries." "What will my fame be?" "While you two are kissing" "Dost thou not feel the tepid breeze Which fans thy face and then flies off?" "It leaves some specks of dust behind it." "In one year that is only some lines deep," "In a century it has thickened to a cubit." "In some thousand years thy pyramid will be buried" "And thy name covered in a heap of sand," "A terrible picture!" "Fear not, only thy spirit will be lost," "Thy body as a mummy will remain" "To be a curiosity for schoolboys" "Hellish bedazzlement, avaunt," "In my ear still resounds "A million for one man"" "For these millions will I procure their due" "In a free state - elsewhere it cannot be." "And wilt thou leave me too, thy love?" "Not at such a gallop, thou'lt reach thy goal" "All in good time, perhaps sooner than thou thinkest," "My King!" "Shouldst thou return with shattered hopes" "This breast will offer shelter to thy heart." "Let us pray that Heaven will defend our country's right" "And bring your hero father safely back to us." "Have you no fear, mother, lest he may be beaten?" "No, no, my son, your father is a hero and will conquer." "Only one thing about him do I fear:" "That he may not conquer himself." "How's that?" "In each man's soul there is a powerful call, Ambition." "In the slave it is asleep" "Or being restricted degenerates into crime." "But nurtured with the blood of liberty And so augmented, it becomes civic virtue," "And gives to life all that is great and noble," "But if it become too strong, turning on its mother" "It struggles with her, till one of them is killed." "If your father should be mastered by Ambition..." "Let us pray, my son." "There's no exciting news, it almost seems As if the foe had not withstood our army." "And here at home too everyone's asleep." "Is there no one to concoct some scheme As in the old days?" "I've loafed about this place since morning" " And haven't found a buyer for my vote." " A slight disturbance wouldn't hurt us." "Get further off!" "This is my place." "The country is in danger, if I don't speak." "It will be lost if you do." "Hireling, get down." "You're not a hireling, for no one would buy you." "Citizens!" "It pains me to lift up my voice" "Because it pains a noble heart to humble Greatness to the dust;" "and it is a great man whom I must drag before the seat of justice" " from his triumphal car." " That's right; adorn with flowers the victim" "You have destined for the sacrifice." "But though it makes my heart ache, I will speak" "Because, O glorious and sovereign people," "I prize you more than your commander." "This mean spirited starving mob?" "Down with him!" "I do not ask green laurels for my husband's head," "But only the peace of home for his heroic heart." "You hear the impeachment, men!" "Great Miltiades Has sold his country." "Oh you lie, you lie!" "Hear me, or when it is too late shame and regret will overtake you." "He is bribed." "Death to him." "Shout will you." "If you don't you'll be struck off my pay list." "My lord, I'm hoarse, and I should like To shout." "There, grease your gullet." "Death!" "Death!" "...he who overtops His fellow citizens by a head." "They can't bear that." "You too, old Orispes whom my husband freed From slavery, do you now shout for his death?" "Pardon me, mistress, for the two of us Only one can live." "I and my three children Are fed by him who tells me how to vote." "But you Thersites, and you all, you all" "Who can sleep quietly in comfort" "Because my husband drove away the foe From your doors." "Oh, ungrateful men!" "Kill him!" "Kill him!" "All is lost!" "The foe is at the gates." "It can't be so." "Does not our victorious general oppose the foe?" "It's he who is the foe." "When he learnt what you were scheming against him" "His heart was filled with noble rage" "And while you talk he's here with fire and sword." "You, traitors, brought all this upon us." "Let's do for them!" "Long live the general!" "What shall we do, let him escape who can" "We are done for!" "We are done for!" "No." "Do homage to him Out there before the gates!" "Long live our general!" "Long live the leader!" "Spare us your highness." "What have you done?" "Why do you supplicate?" "What can the strong ask of the weak?" "But my wife and child have not come to meet me" "Can some misfortune have befallen them!" "Ah, Miltiades, why have you come, when I your wife cannot take pleasure in your coming?" "What's this?" "I do not understand." "The people Asks me for pardon; my wife curses me" "And my breast is bleeding for my country." "The country and my heart bleed more than you" "Or say why you have come at the head of a host?" "Is not this escort fitting to my rank?" "I have come because this grievous wound Has rendered me unequal to my duties." "I have come to hand back my power" "To the sovereign people who sent me forth And to render my account to them." "Lo, I dismiss you, my comrades in arms!" "Oh, Miltiades!" "Wasn't I right, that he is a traitor?" "That Darius has bought him?" "The wound is only sham." "Death to him!" "Traitor!" "Death to him!" "Traitor!" "A ridiculous accusation; a traitor, I who won at Marathon?" "Why did you disband your troops?" "Why don't you set on fire this den of sin?" "This rabble is only fit to be in chains" "And knows that you, nobler than all of them together," "Were born to be their master." "Why does the sovereign people allow itself To be reviled like this?" "Who takes their part is suspect." "Shout you beggars or you will die of hunger." " What are you hesitating about?" " What are you hesitating about?" "Death to him!" "I do not curse these bastard people." "It is their nature not their fault." "And servitude brought them down to be the bloody instrument of some proud agitators." "'Twas I alone who was a fool in thinking" "That such a folk had need of liberty." "Defend yourself, you are not done for yet." "Traitor!" "Traitor!" "Do it, for this people But lately grovelled in the dust before you." "Ah, that's just why it would be useless." "The people would not forgive their own shame." " Well, are you disabused?" " Oh, greatly!" "Don't you see you would be a better master For the stupid crowd than they are to you?" "...if as a pure mother" "You educate my son to be a citizen, then you will be foolish, and a proper mock for the painted girl, who in a brothel sits." "Guide me, O Lucifer, to some new road," "And laughing I will gaze on other's virtues, Other's pains, wanting enjoyment merely." "Long live our fatherland." "Sergiolus, look how restrained and dexterous" "That gladiator with the red ribbon is." "I'll bet you that he beats the other one." "No, by Hercules!" "Hercules indeed, Who of us still believes in Gods?" "Swear by your Julia, then I might believe you." "So be it." "That's a powerful kind of oath Substituting one false God for another." "Why does lust attract us like Tantalus" "If we are not as strong as Hercules," "And a despised slave after a week of pain" "Enjoys an hour of pleasure, which in vain his master longs for?" "Ah, what a glorious lecture on morality!" "But what do you wager?" "If I should lose Be Julia yours." "And if you win?" "Your horse is mine." "Recipe ferrum!" "Cowardly mongrel!" "How your heart is palpitating, Julia." "I cannot find repose upon it." "But just take a look at that sour face!" "What good is that lovely girl to him..." "Truly, I fear lest the poor fellow is already infected with the black death" "Which devastates the town." "Away with dance and music." "I am cloyed with all this sea of everlasting sweetness." "My heart desires some bitterness." "Some lunatics are being crucified" "Who dream of Justice and Fraternity." "That's right," "Why did they discuss other people's business?" "The beggar wants the rich to be his brother" "Exchange the parts, and he will crucify you." "Your cheerfulness has vanished as it seems" "Is there no more wine, or is your wit used up," "So that the sour-faced man has had enough of it?" "One of us must certainly be afraid" "Or have become reformed." "Damnation take you, if you think that." "Well then, I'll summon a new guest amongst us," "Perhaps he'll bring in renewed gaiety." "We'll offer him a cup of drink." "Drink comrade, it's your turn to-day and mine to-morrow." "Perhaps you would rather have a kiss?" "Embrace him," "And steal the obol out of his mouth." "If I kiss you, why shouldn't I kiss him?" "Stop." "You'll infect yourself with plague." "You miserable brood-generation of poltroons" "So long as happiness is smiling on you," "Mock at God and virtue, trampling on them." "But as soon as danger is knocking at your doors," "So soon as you feel God's finger touching you" "You cringe like cowards..." "But all in vain, in the ancient gods you have lost faith, they are frozen into stones." "They crumble into dust;" "you do not find the new God." "You race of curs, you will leave deserted" "The scene of this great world now purified." "The plague..." "I am lost!" "Will no one help me of you all Who have shared so much pleasure with me?" "It's your turn to-day and mine to-morrow." "I and the great God can succour you" "The eternal God of holy love." "Lift up yourself to Him." "See with this water Your soul is purified from dross" "And hastens to Him." "Ah, Sergiolus, how many noble feelings You might have found in this breast" "Where you only sought for fleeting pleasure." "And in myself, too." "Oh, if God lives if he has care for us and we are subject to him" "May he bring into the world a new people." "I feel, all that was ours is worn out, We are too weak." "The Lord has heard you." "Gaze around." "The rotten earth begins to breed anew," "These barbarian warriors dressed in bearskins" "Whose horses trample on the harvestings Of bygone centuries, and are stabled In temples now abandoned, will infuse new blood Into the debased and shrunken veins." "And who in the circus chant a hymn" "While a furious tiger lacerates their breast will bring a new spirit:" "Fraternity, and freedom for the individual, which will shake the world." "Let your aim be:" "To give praise to God" "For yourself, work," "Let each be free, to realise all that is within him." "There's only one commandment:" "Love." "Up to the fight, up to have enthusiasm For the new doctrine." "To create a new world whose flower will be Chivalry..." "This vision sends a shudder down my spine, but haven't I got to struggle with mankind?" "What I can't do, he will do in my place," "I've often seen this game before" "When the glory has slowly disappeared" "The cross of blood will still remain behind." "Stop!" "Why do you flee from us like that?" "Do you not perceive this holy sign?" "Observe, you see such is the accursed fruit if with ignoble aims, so many freebooters wave in their hands the holy banner, and by craven flattery of the people's passions impose themselves, as uninvited leaders" "Knights, my friends!" "Our duty will be to hold in check this filthy demon and guide him against his inclination always to do whate'er is great and noble." "You speak beautifully, Tancred, but yet if the people has ceased to believe that you are leader?" "Where the spirit is, there is the victory." "I will crush it." "But if the spirit is in the people Will you descend to it?" "Why, descend?" "Won't it be nobler, if I raise it up?" "Brotherhood seems to be a marvellous affair." "Don't jest." "Oh, do not think that I don't feel the sublime truth." "May it inspire all who have the holy spark." "The man who struggles towards us we receive with joy," "A sword tap lifts him into our rank of knighthood;" "But we must guard our Order's treasures, against the chaos seething up against it." "When this knightly Order which you founded like a lighthouse among the ocean's waves goes out, it will fall half down and be a greater danger to the hardy seamen" "Than a reef which never had a beacon." "Before our Order crumbles its holy doctrines may have reached the people; in that case nothing will be lost." "The holy doctrines" "It's just they which always are a curse." "When by some chance you light upon them you twist them and you point them you split them and you sharpen them, till they become a folly and a fetter." "Observe this sword, if by a hair's breadth it is bigger or smaller, it still remains a sword," "You can proceed like this indefinitely and at what precise point do you reach the limit?" "But why do I exert myself?" "This talk is tiring" "Only just take a look round for yourself." "Friends!" "...my men are tired and ask for shelter." "In the metropolis of Christendom they surely do not ask in vain?" "The question is:" "Aren't you more heretical than the heathen?" "Say, what do you believe, Homo ousion Or Homoi ousion?" " I don't understand." " Don't tell them." "That's crucial." "Look, he's doubtful, he is a false believer." "Cursed be he that gives them shelter." "My father, we are warriors of the holy sepulchre but the people of this town refuse us shelter to rest ourselves after our toilsome journey." "You, who are so powerful, help our cause." "My son, for paltry things I can't now spare the time." "The glory of God, the people's welfare call me." "I have to sit in judgement on some heretics," "Who, strewing poison, thrive like weeds." "Although with fire and sword we extirpate them," "With renewed strength hell always sends them to us" "But albeit that you be crusaders why do you seek out the Saracen in distant lands?" "Here is a foe more dangerous." "Rise up then." "Up to their villages and exterminate them." "Spare neither woman, child, nor aged man." "My father, you don't want these innocents." "The snake is harmless when it's small," "Or if it has lost its poison fang, but do you spare it?" "Verily it must be a monstrous sin, which inflames to such anger the Church of Charity." "My son, true charity does not cajole the body but leads the soul to turn back again," "If needs be with fire and sword" "These false believers, in the mysterious doctrine of the Holy Trinity, proclaim the Homoi ousion" "While the Church has made the Homo ousion" "Into an article of faith." "My friends, abandon that iota." "It will be a finer sacrifice to give up your lives fighting heroically for the Holy Sepulchre." "Satan, tempt not, for our true faith" "We shed our blood where God ordains." "Ha, shameless one!" "Do you boast your faith is true?" "Did not the Council of Rimini go with us, and countless other Councils?" "It went astray." "But did not Nicaea and other orthodox councils pronounce for us?" "Schismatics." "Have you even one Church father" "Comparable with Arius or the two Eusebius?" "And have you got an Athanasius?" " Where are your martyrs?" " More than yours!" "Fine Martyrs, whom the Devil tricked with mystifications to a damned death." "I tell you, you are great Babylon that whore of whom St. John wrote and who'll perish from the face of the of Earth." "You are the Beast with seven heads Antichrist," "Antichrist, of whom St. John speaks." "Knaves, frauds..." "Slaves, snakes, and gluttons!" "Comrades of the Devil!" "To the pyre with them for the glory of God." "For the glory of God, you say well, scoundrel," "For the glory of God the victim falls." "The idea lives, and the flame which flares up, Will lighten up the centuries to come." "Why do you stand so dumb, tell me, what makes you shudder?" "Do you see a tragedy in that?" "Just look on it as if it were a comedy and you'll enjoy it." "Alas, don't jest!" "For the sake of an iota to go to death so resolutely?" "What then is the sublime, the grand?" "That which perhaps is laughable to others." "These two ideas only differ by a thread." "Why have I to gaze on all this sin," "Who is the sinner who has cut it down?" "It is danger which unites, and makes the martyrs," "The sinner is the triumph of the faith which divides and creates a hundred different interests." "I should turn back to my northern home where in the shadows of ancestral forests human worth and pure simplicity" "Defy the poison of this polished age, if a secret voice did not for ever whisper that 'twas my fate to make this age anew." "Vain endeavour!" "Never will you achieve that an individual can withstand his age:" "The age is a torrent which sweeps along or drowns, the individual is a swimmer not a leader." "Who are successful, have understood their century." "But have not brought forth new ideas." "The cock's crow does not bring the dawn of day," "But the cock crows because the day is dawning." "Warriors, buy!" "Buy the doctrine of penance" "Which in all doubtful cases will give you guidance," "It teaches you-for how many years the murderer, the fornicator, the church robber, or the false witness" " will suffer in hell." " This way." "And teaches that a rich man can redeem one year's punishment with about a pound, while a poor man can do it for three shillings." "Buy this valuable book, buy!" " This way." " One for us, too, holy father." "Save me, Champion." "How can a body be so spiritual..." "A spiritual body?" " Oh oh Heaven, I thank thee." "Knight, you have saved me, how can I thank you?" "Is not a word from you a rich reward?" "A poor enough reward;" "shan't I get even that?" "And what thanks should I owe to you?" "Either I am grateful and the like danger threatens me again, or I am ungrateful and so damned." "O lady, whither may I lead you." "Command me." "Before us stands the cloister's door..." "Ah, but its door will not shut out all hope from me, will it?" "And will these walls shut you in too?" "They will, but the key won't be cast into the sea." "A great pity!" "What a sweet elegy could be composed" "Upon this doleful case." "Out of my sight, deceiver!" "Give me a token, I will pin it on this cross!" "O lady!" "Give me hope and not affliction." "Within the Cloister wall hope does not grow." "Why, won't it then be a great idea when I dive to the sea's depths to get your key?" "I don't want that." "I'm off at once." "The deep sea monsters show their teeth at me." "Come back, come back, I am dying of fright." "Perhaps after all the key will be in my window." "Your raiment shows you are not yet a nun." "Let me know your name at least." "Isaura is my name." "Knight, what is yours?" "I am Tancred." "Tancred," "God be with you!" "Isaura, oh, do not leave me so hastily." "Brief has been this moment, even for a dream." "How can I go on dreaming if you remain a riddle, and I am unable to weave into a web the dear threads of your fate?" "And don't you want to know my fate?" "...you loved, you were deceived, you loved again, and that time you played false." "Again you loved-you grew weary of your hero." "Your empty heart now seeks for a new lodger." "I never should have thought you such a ninny as to suppose that now my heart was empty." "Sir, be quick!" "God be with you!" "You coward-Have I got to do everything?" "The key will be in the window, not in the sea." "And why, why!" "Will this wretched wall prevent me?" "I who have so despoiled the heathen;" "can I not scale this rampart?" "You cannot, it is guarded by the spirit of the age," "Mightier than you." "I am worn out," "I want to rest." "Rest then." "But I hardly think your spirit and your restless strength will let you rest." "Who is it, who is burning over there, a heretic or witch?" "I don't know." "It's not the fashion now to take an interest." "Ah, what a falling off from those good times." "On such a chilly evening this fire comes in well." "Cast my horoscope, Kepler," "Last night I had bad dreams." "I am frightened with the conjunctures of my star." "It shall be done, my lord, as you command." "As soon as these climacteric days are passed," "Let us again take up the great task which lately was left unaccomplished." "I understand, your Majesty." "One word more." "There are bad rumours in the court about you," "That you have become a believer in new doctrines," "And criticise the dogmas of the holy church." "Just at the time when your mother lies in prison" "Under a serious charge of horrid witchcraft;" "and there is reason for suspecting you," "When stubbornly and indefatigably you strive to set her free." "Your Majesty!" "Surely I am her son." "The holy church, my son, is your truer mother." "Let the world alone, it is well as it is." "Don't like a bungler try to better it." "Have I not overloaded you with favours?" "I raised you up towards my throne, and only by that did you obtain the fair hand of Borbala Muller," "Therefore, my son, again I say 'Take heed!" "'" "Oh, go away, sir knight, for God's sake have pity." "My poor husband?" "For God's sake, gentlemen, spare him from such a suspicion." "Oh, sir, it's good that we have met," "I want to make a journey to my property, and wish to have a weather forecast." "But I, I want to know my son's nativity," "Last night past midnight he was born." "Both will be ready in the morning, sirs." "The company disperses, let's go, too." "Good-night, my lady." " In an hour." " In the arbour on the right." "Good-night, gentlemen." "Come, my dear John." "John, I must have some money." "I haven't got a filler, you've already taken all." "Can I endure perpetual want?" "The court ladies shine like peacocks So that I am ashamed to appear among them." "Am I not worn out night and day?" "I sell my knowledge for your sake," "And I proclaim what I well know is false." "What do I get from these sinful gains?" "In this world I have need of nothing Except the night and shining stars," "The secret harmony of the spheres." "All else be yours." "You, too, shall have what I shall get to-morrow." "You throw into my face your sacrifices," "But do I not, too, sacrifice my life For you?" "I am a daughter of a noble house, and have joined my fortune to your doubtful rank." "Is it not through me that you have attained to better society?" "Are spirit and knowledge of a doubtful rank?" "Apart from that, where is nobility?" "What you call nobility is a mouldering, decaying fetish, which has lost its soul, mine is for ever young and strong." "Oh, woman, if you could understand me how endlessly I loved you!" "I ought to leave you, plucking out my heart," "And despite the pain I might feel calmer, and you, without me, might be happier;" "But the Church's voice prevent us;" "together we must suffer till we die." "But, my John, do not be so gloomy." "I do not want to make you miserable." "We have made it up now, haven't we?" "Good-night!" "Don't forget the money in the morning." "The sphere she is born into does the harm." "Hi, famulus!" "Your orders, master?" "A weather forecast and a nativity is what I want, prepare them on the spot." "But don't make them quite ridiculous." "I doubt if I could invent anything Which would scandalise a parent;" "isn't each new born baby a Messiah, A brilliant star, in its fond parent's eyes, and only later on becomes the usual lout." "Bring wine!" "I'm shivering," "This is a frosty world, I needs must warm it." "In this pigmy age one needs inspiriting." "Oh, limitless great sky, open to me" "Your book of mystery and holiness," "If I by watching could find out thy law," "I would forget the age and all about me." "Thou art eternal, while all else is fleeting." "Thou liftest me up, while all else weighs me down." "Oh, I hear it, I hear it, the song of the future," "I have found the word, that mighty talisman which shall rejuvenate the aged earth." "Equality, fraternity, liberty." "Death to those who fail to recognize them!" "I say that, too." "Two words will save the great idea attacked on every side to all good men we say the one" ""The country is in danger, and they awake." "The other we thunder at the miscreant" "That word is "Tremble" and they are destroyed." "Give us arms, only arms and a leader!" "That's right," "You only ask for arms though you are suffering from so many wants:" "Your clothes fall off in rags, your feet are bare," "But by your bayonets you will get all," "For you will be victorious." "The people is invincible." "Just now there flowed the blood of a general" "Who at the head of his troops allowed himself to be defeated." "The traitor!" "Put me in his place citizen, and I will wipe out this stain." "Your self-confidence, my friend, is praiseworthy, but the guarantee that you will keep your word, must first be earned upon the field of battle." "Good-bye, till after victory." "If only I could share their lot" "But only strife, not glory, comes to me." "No foe by whom to fall 'tis glorious" "My foe lurks thief-like in his hiding-place" "Plotting against me and the holy fatherland." "Death, death to the aristocrats." "Let's go, let's go to the dungeons," "Let's judge them, the people judges righteously." "The danger is not there, the bolts are strong!" "Treason lifts its head and grins and whets its dagger on the Convention's benches." "To the Convention, then;" "it has not yet been purged enough." "To the Convention later, but first let's go for practice to the dungeons." "What a noble pair." "Their proud faces and their fine linen are clear proofs of their crime." "I do not know what sympathy draws me to you." "But at my own risk, I will save you." "No, Danton, for if we are criminals" "You betray the country, if you do not condemn us," "If we are not, your clemency is futile." "Join our armies and your career lies open." "I have no permission, citizen, from the King to let me join a foreign army." "Why do you rush so rashly to your death?" "Do you suppose that this noble prerogative befits only you, men of the people?" "Do you defy me?" "I will save you against your will and for this act a soberer posterity" "When party passion has burnt out to ashes" "Will give me thanks." "National guards!" "To my quarters with him, you shall answer for him." "This awful platform is my world." "As you stepped on to it, a piece of heaven descended, and enfolded me with holiness." "The consecrated victim as it goes to death ought not to suffer from the flouts and jeers of priests." "Believe me, it is I who am the victim." "Though I am envied for my power," "Midst this blood my loneliness torments me." "I feel how good 'twould be to love." "Oh, woman, if but for one day you would teach me that heavenly knowledge on the morrow quietly I would lay my head beneath the axe." "How can you yearn for love in this world of horror?" "Does not your conscience terrify you?" "Conscience is the ordinary man's prerogative." "The man of destiny does not have time to look about him." "When did you hear of a hurricane which stopped" "Because a weak rose was bending o'er its path?" "And who would have audacity enough to judge the chosen of the people?" "Are you not a woman, am I not a man?" "We should never understand each other." "From those soft lips don't utter such hard words." "Softer words aren't fitting for the scaffold." "If now an enemy or a good friend should see" "He would laugh and would not fear me any more." "And still:" "I beg of you one ray of hope." "We have done justice!" "O fate, who can withstand thee?" "Now to the Convention, Citizen, lead the way." "Have you made out the list of traitors?" "Spend a night with me, great man." "In truth, citizen, it seems that you, too, have become a blue-blooded aristocrat" "You are a man, I am a young woman," "My admiration draws me to you, great man." "Woman, that my nights will be fewer than the number of traitors in this country." "To the Convention, to the Convention!" "...only give us their names." "How should he name them?" "He is the worst of all." "St. Just, you dare accuse me, know you not how strong I am?" "Formerly you were among the people;" "now they are wise and know you, and will ratify the decree of the Convention" "I recognise no judge above me except the people, and I know the people is my friend." "Your friend is he who is the country's enemy." "The sovereign people soon will judge you." "Before it I accuse you, traitor to your country," "Of trafficking with public property" "Of sympathising with the aristocracy," "Of aspiring to be dictator." "St. Just, beware, my word is thunder," "Arrest him in the name of Liberty." "Robespierre, you have only got a start." "That is the whole matter, don't boast of it." "Don't let him speak!" "From this place I summon you In three months' time to follow me this way." "There's no beheading on this occasion." "Where am I?" "Oh, where am I, where are my dreams?" "They have gone off with the fumes, my master." "How splendid was the vision that appeared to me." "Blind is the man who cannot see God's spark," "If it has been besmeared with blood and dirt." "Its vice, its virtue, how gigantic and how prodigious, both of them for they were hall marked with the stamp of strength." "Oh, why did I wake up?" "That gazing round I better should perceive the smallness of the age" "For God's sake, dearest, calm yourself." "If we are noticed you will cause a scandal." "Just so, scandal is all you think about." "To you, a knight who cannot brook reproach." "You mock at woman till the time when she discards her virgin chastity as a prejudice of her ancestors, then..." "So it was nothing but a dream and it is over." "But not entirely," "Ideas are more powerful than base matter which violence can destroy." "Ideas live on for ever." "Sir, day advances, it is your hour for teaching." "The young men already impatiently assemble" "To waylay one word of your philosophy." "Don't mock, oh, don't mock at knowledge." "Don't you instruct many distinguished youths?" "I don't instruct, I only train them" "You were so kind, sir, as to invite me" " Promising to satisfy my thirst for knowledge." " True, true." "Well, here I am, my soul trembles with desire" "To see into the workshop of all nature" "To comprehend all and to increase my enjoyment," "Mastering the world of matter" "Do not desire so much, then perhaps you may succeed." "Whatever mysteries you shall reveal, Great man, will be a gain to me." "That's good." "I see that you are worthy." "You shall see reality as I do myself," "Your hand on it that you will not betray what you shall learn." "...in its essence I understand nothing." "Well, you see, I do not and believe me, no one else does." "Philosophy is only the poetry of the things we can't conceive." "It is the meekest of all sciences" "Because by itself it quietly beguiles the time" "But it has numberless associates" "Who pompously block our path which by their sanctity serve to protect the powers that be." "...will it be so for ever?" "One day all that will be laughed at," "The statesman whom we call the great," "The orthodox whom we admire posterity will view as mountebanks." "Then take up these yellow parchments these mildewed folios, and throw them all" "Into the fire." "Why should you learn in books what song is like, the nature of a forest, while your life flows joyless between the dusty chamber walls?" "Together let's say farewell to the school." "May your rosy youth lead you on to the sunbeams and the songs of joy;" "You guardian spirit of doubt, lead me to the new world which will develop..." "But now life stands before me in its fullness," "How beautiful, how animated its song of strife." "Heard from a height it has a hymn-like beauty." "The raucous voice, the groan, the sigh, blend to a melody before it rises here." "That's how God hears;" "that is why He believes that He has fashioned this world to be good." "The mossy walls have tumbled down." "No more we see those phantom bugbears haloed with sanctity, which the past leaves to the future a curst Legacy of pain." "The field of competition opens free." "To-day we don't build pyramids with stones." "At such a height as this we had not heard the groans of slaves in Egypt" "And yet how God-like were their works." "This decayed point of view I cannot take, down to the new world I go with firm resolve" "And do not fear that I shall not find again" "Poetry and great ideas amongst its surging billows." "You have no cause to feel anxiety" "As long as there is matter, so long my power remains as its negation striving with it." "And law puts barriers to desire so long will poetry and great ideas live as negation in the spirit world." "This way, this way, dear good gentlemen," "The show is just going to begin," "An amazingly diverting comedy" "To see, how the snake beguiled the first woman, then as now inquisitive, and how she then ensnared the man as well." "Ah, Adam, here they are talking about us." "Oh, stop your pointless jokes." "Let's go on farther." "A pointless joke." "Just see how they enjoy them-selves" "These pink-cheeked boys, who so lately dozed on their forms." "You can see a frisky monkey how with great dignity he apes a man." "You can see a bear who is a dancing master." "This way, this way, dear good gentlemen." "Does Shakespeare really give you greater pleasure" "Than these boys get from these caricatures?" "The caricature is just what I can't stand." "The taste of ancient Greece still sticks to you." "Why do you take up this good place?" "You're a fine bird." "The man who is tired of life and hangs himself provides a show for nothing." "Little violets, first harbingers Of beautiful spring." "Buy; buy;" "Little violets." "Little violets." "Little violets." "Buy; buy." "Little violets." "Little violets." "Buy..." "This wretched flower always competes with us" "And we can't push it out of fashion" "But a fair neck requires expensive pearls." "What lovely stuffs, what expensive trinkets." "If only there was someone to buy us some." "An up-to-date young man only does that when he has bad intentions." "That's not so, they have lost their taste, they are spoilt with caviare and prostitutes." "We'd see who would be master and know how to enjoy himself." " Sir, what can I do for you?" " Nothing." "Then get off from my bench, you vagabonds," "Do you suppose I live by thieving?" "How dare you speak like that?" "Ignore the rascal." "Well, let's be off, let's go on seeing how man is brutalised to brutishness." "Is this not wonderful?" "My fellow..." "Tell me, do you, yourself, enjoy your music?" "This is my place, here is my licence." "Have pity on me, if you don't I die," "For a fortnight I have been out of work." "Then you are no genuine beggar," "But a blackleg from heaven knows where." "I'll call the Police." "By Christ's five wounds, give something to the cripple," "Kind ladies and gentlemen." "By Christ's five wounds..." "This way, this way, dear beautiful young lady," "No one can serve you cheaper than I." "Don't you believe him, his measures are false." "His wares are old." "This way, dear young lady." "Little violets..." "Little violets..." "A fair neck requires expensive pearls." "Fairing..." "Give something to the cripple..." "Look, Lucifer, you hold me back in this vile spot while almost unperceived there flutters by Felicity personified." "She comes from Church, how beautiful she is." "She went there to be seen and, perhaps, too, to see." "Your jest is cold, don't soil her with it." "Devotion still is hovering on her lips." "I see you are converted, and you are becoming pietist." "In a young girl's heart I want to have superstition." "What dignity, what virgin modesty." "I hardly dare approach her." "Courage, you're not a novice at the game," "On close inspection she may be for sale." " Quiet!" " She may be more expensive than the others." "This green boy, will he obtain what my man's heart longs for in vain?" "No doubt Arthur's parents Are quite well off, but I don't know what they may think of his courting you," "So don't neglect completely that bear" "Who to-day surprised you with this nosegay." "Allow me, ladies, to attend you, so that you take no harm from all this crowd." " What impudence!" " Be off, you forward fellow," "Can you suppose she is the kind of girl to whom anyone may pay a compliment?" "What else could anyone do?" "I have often dreamed Of woman's ideal perfection..." "Dream what you like, but all the same, the man for whom her charms unfold won't be a good-for-nothing lout like you." "O, precious lady, wonder of the world," "Only show to me your little white hand," "A handsome bridegroom - ah, he's very near - fine children, health and fortune." "My sister, tell my comrade's fortune, too." "I don't see clearly - hunger or the gallows." "Don't turn away from me like that." "Mother, won't you let." "I'll call the police, if you don't clear off." "O divine poetry, hast thou entirely vanished from this prosaic world?" "Most decidedly not." "Don't be so fastidious," "There's matter enough for your imagination." "High endeavour is nowhere to be found." "That, too, is found on the school benches, where life is not yet parsimonious." "Buck up, boys, we've left the dust behind us, We'll have a jolly good time to-day." "Out to the country, I hate the town with its regulations and its shopkeepers." "Let's try to have a row with somebody." "If we drag off the girls out of the arms of these Tommies." "Ripping, ripping, we'll hang the Philistines." "A pleasing sight in this dreary world," "I feel in it the germs of better times." "You will see how the germ develops." "Once it has shaken off the classroom dust." "Do what I may, the competition is too strong for me." "Everyone will have the cheapest goods," "I am compelled to adulterate." "The workmen's wages must come down." "It can't be done, they are on the verge of striking," "Because they haven't got a living wage, the dogs." "They ought to be dealt with much more firmly." "Let them work in our factories half the night, the other half is quite enough for sleep." "Why did you let me see them?" "...where has that maiden gone to?" "Assist me and make her listen to me." "Reply as I ask you and in your arms she'll fall." "Now you see, my lord, how disagreeable it is," "Disguised like this to mix among the people." "Each moment we stumble on a new insult." "I crave a word, you are disguised." "I paid you out with my prediction because from me there's nothing hid." "For Satan's old associate am I." "Well, that's the limit, you old hag." "A lovely girl is pining for you." " How can I get her?" " Perhaps she is yours already." "But she refused..." "Mark me, she will return ere long." "Get out of my way!" "Treat me with respect." "In learning my hair has turned white," "As I the hidden treasures of nature" "Dug out with indefatigable industry." "For man's advantage have I toiled and here I show the glorious result." "What is this strange fool, Lucifer?" "This phial contains elixir vitae" "Rejuvenator of the sick and old." "Science which plays the mountebank that it may live." "Precisely as you played the savant, only more noise is needed than of yore." "Gathered by great Pharaohs of past times." "This is Tancred's magic philtre," "I never got as far as that." "This cosmetic was fair Helen's," "This book is Kepler's Astrology." "Do you hear what he's selling?" "Buy, buy, you'll never regret it," "A chance like this there never was or will be." "Just look at these people, atheists all the lot, and yet they scramble for a marvel." "That gentleman..." "It's no good your talking, we know who you are." "May I be damned if all this isn't true." "Looked at from all sides, that's a hundred times better than to fade away with a shawl on your head." "Look at him, there he is searching for you." "His hands are delicate, he looks like a gentleman." "I'm not averse to his companion." "Look, there is the fair one;" "how she pines for you." "I fly to her what bliss." "You must not forget the go-between." "Could you buy a fairing for me?" " That cosmetic is good for everything." " Don't be abashed." "Diamonds and pearls I'll string on your fair neck." "Down over there I saw many jewellers," "But that's not for a poor girl like me." "How lovely, how sweet, how I shall be envied." "But that heart let me see it no more." "He's going to be hanged." "What luck that we are here." "Such an affecting sight and a fine opportunity to shine in my jewels." " What's the rascal's crime?" " I don't know." "He worked a good while in Lovel's factory." "But lead's a poison and he absorbed it constantly," "Then he spent many weeks in hospital." "His charming wife was reduced to poverty." "Lovel's son was young and kind hearted..." "The husband got well and did not find his wife..." "His place was filled, in vain he looked for work." "This miserable man had a knife in his hand" "Let us stop, my friend, only a moment" "For me to lay my nosegay at this holy picture." "Don't let her, or it will be the end of us." "From childhood it has been my habit" "Not to forget this picture as I pass by it." "Innocent child, I'm not going to stop her." "My God, what's that?" "Be quiet, my dear, the folk are noticing" "Far richer jewels shall replace them on your neck." "Away from me, away!" "Help, have mercy!" "A pair of swindlers and a horrid old witch have disgraced an honest woman." "They gave false coin, they should be here." "Adam, let's go, it's best not to stay here." "Again I am mistaken," "I believed it was enough to overturn the phantoms of the past and to secure that force could freely act." "Dogs fighting for a bone, that's what it is." "In place of this I wish for a society which without punishing protects, and gives encouragement without fear, and all unite their strength" "To a common end conceived by science, an order ordered by intelligence." "Presumptuous man, because your narrow vision" "Can see down there a mere disordered throng" "Do you suppose there is no common aim, no system in life's workshop?" "Look, and see the work that they accomplish." "They work for us, and not for their small selves." "I have played out my comedy." "I amused you, but not myself." "Everyone has drunk up his wine." "My customers, good-night." "My little violets are all sold out." "New ones will soon grow on my grave." "I'm no longer drunk, my paint has come off." "Here 'tis so cold, will it be better down there?" "Each one wished to see his future, now he shuts his eyes in terror." "We duped each other with pretence of knowledge," "Now we are all startled at the truth." "My riches did not bring me happiness, now I shall get tranquillity for nothing." "Remain, my chains, on this vile earth." "Beyond this threshold I expect juster laws." "Why do you stand, yawning gulf, at my feet?" "Don't suppose that your blackness deters me." "Into it falls mere earth-begotten dust." "I shall step over you in glory." "The spirit of love, of poetry and youth" "Opens for me the way to my eternal country;" "Here in this earth my smile gives pleasure only when, like a sunbeam, it lights up a face." "Adam!" "Recognize you her?" "Ah, Eve," "Eve." "What country is this, what people have we got to?" "Those old ideas exist no more." "Wasn't country a paltry conception" "Originally begotten by prejudice," "Then cherished by narrowness and rivalry." "Now the whole earth is one country," "All now are comrades with a common aim," "And the calm course of their fair ordered life has for its guardian Science which they revere." "My soul's ideal is then accomplished," "All now is well, as I desired it should be." "There's only one thing I regret country, that idea might, I think, have remained under this new regime." "Man's heart needs limitation, the boundless frightens it, it loses in intensity if it is dispersed," "Man clings to what is past and what will be;" "I fear that the inspiring force of this great world." "I see you give up your idea," "Even before it has been realised." "By no means think that, but I should like to know" "What is the spirit by which the whole world is fused together?" "Well, come along then." "...let's look at the museum," "It can't be matched In all the world." "The extinct animals of the ancient world" "In genuine specimens are represented there." "All excellently stuffed." " That is..." " Be careful Adam, you'll betray yourself." "Many strange tales about them have come down to us." "Of this one, they tell a tale that man" "Kept helm as a friend, gratis, without working." "But what are the animals which still survive?" "Only such useful animals as up till now science has not found out how to replace," "The pig, die sheep, but not nearly so Imperfect as they were made by bungling Nature." "...this enormous piece of coal" "There used to be whole mountains of this substance, and men could find ready to hand" "That which now science must extract from air with Immense labour." "This mineral here was called Iron and until It was exhausted" "This Little specimen Is gold." "Show me something else, I know all that." "Truly you are very learned, stranger," "This Little specimen of gold Is of great repute." "Well let us look at the plants of past time," "See, there Is the last rose, which with a hundred thousand others," "Took the most fertile places from the waving corn." "Truly It was a singular sign of those times how eagerly men cared for toys Like these." "The spirit, too, produced Its flowers poetry and the chimeras of belief dissipated Its best strength, so that Life's true end was never reached." "Here as a curiosity we preserve Two of such works." "So there remain these few pages as heirlooms from the great days." "But have not these the power to set ablaze Their mongrel descendants, rousing them to act And overturn your artificial world?" "A proper observation, we have thought of that." "The poison they contain Is very deadly," "And therefore no one Is allowed to read them who has not passed the age of sixty years and devoted his Life to science." "Yet the nurse's fairy tales" "Don't those inspire the tender heart with vague presentiments?" "They do." "And that Is why our nurses only tell the children the truths of algebra and geometry." "You murderers!" "Let us pass on." "How gaudy are those thousand other objects, how childish." "All were the wasteful work of human hands." "Does water from that glass taste more refreshing?" "Is that arm-chair more comfortable to sit on?" "Now all these things are machlne-made." "Their shape Is simpler and more suitable," "Perfect workmanship Is guaranteed" "Because a man who makes a screw to-day" "Remains at screw-making through all his days." "Then the work has no life, no individuality, which lives on after the craftsman's death." "Where is the opportunity for power and thought upon this regular and ordered world?" "Is it nothing to have attained fraternity?" "What man now suffers from material want?" "Opinions such as yours are really criminal." "Tell me, what then is the idea which is able so to inspire these people for one common end?" "With us it is the will to live." "When on this earth man first appeared" "'Twas like a well-stocked larder man only needed to stretch out his hand to gather in it everything he needed," "So he, unthinking, used it up like a cheese mite;" "and on its sweet intoxication found time in fanciful hypotheses to search for poetry and stimulus." "But now, since we have come to the last mouthful, we must live sparingly;" "long ago we saw the cheese was nearly done and we should die of hunger." "And earth no longer bring forth vegetation..." "It's lucky that our talk has led to this for this is just what I am working at." "Man has grown very old, if to make an organism he turns to his alembic." "Look how it seethes, look how it sparkles," "Now here, now there, floating forms move," "In this heated, well-closed flask," "But I within this flask set bounds to it and call it from its obscure hiding-place." "I don't yet see a sign of life." "That will come soon." "I who have sought out a hundred times dissected life..." "Each time you've only practised on a corpse." "What are you jeering at?" "Don't you see" "It only wants a spark to bring forth life." "But the spark, where will you get that from?" "Only one step more and we have done it." "But he who has not made this single step" "Has done nothing, knows nothing." "The others only get you to the door" "That step alone leads to the sanctuary." "Oh, will there ever be a man to make it?" "It never shall be." "This alembic for me is too small and too big." "Thou knowest me, Adam?" "What is that for?" "Work has stopped." "This is the time when faults are punished and women and children are distributed." "Let us go, then;" "it is part of my work." "Number 30." "Here I am." "You have overheated the boiler again," "It really looks as if you wanted to endanger the entire phalanster." "You do not know the magic lure of fire." "What's this I see." "I recognise that man." "He was Luther." "You are talking nonsense, so no dinner to-day." "But I will fan the fire again tomorrow!" "Number 209." "Here." "Three times already I have admonished you for seeking a quarrel without cause." "Without cause, because I don't complain?" "Don't contradict." "Ah, Cassius," "Do you know me?" "I am he who fought with you at Philippi." "Can a bad system, mere theory come to this" "That it impedes and does not recognise a noble heart like yours." "You will be treated till you are tamed." "Number 400." "Yes, I heard you." "Once more you have been so absorbed in dreaming that your flock has been doing damage." "To keep you awake you shall kneel on peas." "Even on peas I shall dream of beauty." "Oh, Plato, what a part is yours in the community which you yearned for." "Number 72." "You left your work against the rules." "...because I was always making chair legs, and one of a most miserable shape." "I have often begged that I might alter them." "Permission was refused." "I wanted for a change To make chair backs; but all in vain." "Michael-Angelo, what hell it must be for the divinity within your breast not to create." "For this breach of rule you will go to your room and not enjoy this fine warm day." "To-day two children have reached the age when they no longer need a mother's care," "The education institute awaits them" "Bring them forth." "What radiant apparition!" "So in this dreary world there still exists poetry." "What do you find in this common woman you, who have tasted the kiss of Semiramis?" "This child should be educated as a doctor the other as a shepherd." "Well, take them off." "Don't touch him." "That's my child," "Take it away." "What are you stopping for?" "Ah, my baby!" "You men!" "If aught of holiness is in you leave that child to his mother." "You, stranger, play a daring game." "If once we let revive that ancient prejudice, the family:" "At once would topple down all the achievements of holy science." "What is your frigid science to me?" "Don't touch that child." "Oh, my child!" "These two women have no mates, let those step forth who claim to pair with them." "A fanatic and a neurotic woman will produce degenerates..." "But I don't stand off, if she wishes for me." "I am yours, you high-souled man." "I love you, woman, with a burning heart." "I love you, too, and feel it is for ever." "This is sheer madness." "In this enlightened century where does this come from?" "A belated ray from Eden's garden." "I've heard enough;" "take them to the hospital." "We must be quick about it, Adam, off we go." "This place appears so lone, so strange." "I feel, how small the earth is, so that it restricts" "My lofty spirit, and I yearn to quit its sphere;" "But yet, alas," "I weep, that I have left it." "Ah, Lucifer!" "Glance back upon our Earth." "The well-known landscape with a hundred favourite spots" "Is flattened out into a featureless plain." "What was interesting is all washed out." "What has become of that?" "A grey patch on a globe which, circling, is lost to sight amid a thousand comrades, and that was our Earth." "Oh, Lucifer, and then she" "Must we remain parted from her, too?" "From our high point of view you speak in vain," "Beauty is the first thing to vanish, after that greatness and strength, till nought remains for us, but bare mathematics." "The stars remain behind us." "I see no end, I feel no obstacle." "Loveless and strife-less to what can life attain?" "This deep cold terrifies me, Lucifer!" "If your great heroism has reached its limit, let us go back to play our parts in the dust." "Who says that?" "Onwards, onwards," "The pain will only last till every tie" "Which binds me to the earth is severed finally." "But what is this?" "I find it hard to breathe, my brain is confused, my strength is drained away" "Was it not a mere fable that Antaeus, could only live so long as he was touching the dust of earth." "Yes, it is no mere myth." "You already know me, the Spirit of the Earth." "'Tis I alone who breathe in you;" "you know it." "Here is the boundary to which my power extends." "If you return you'll live - go on, and you'll perish." "I defy you, you frighten me in vain," "My body may be yours, my spirit is my own," "There is no limit to thought and truth they were prior to your world of matter." "Vain man!" "Try it and have a monstrous fall." "Did its perfume exist before the rose, shape before bodies, sunbeams before the sun?" "If only you could see your orphan soul whirling round in endless space." "And all of your tense feelings are merely a radiation from this heap of matter." "Which you call the earth;" "and if'twere other than it is it could no more exist for you." "The fair, the ugly, happiness and hell from my spirit alone can be derived." "You shall not daunt me, my soul aspires." "Adam, Adam," "God will not brook that you approach him and will destroy you utterly." "But ...will not death soon kill me?" "This is my end." "Let this doll-god now circle in the void as a new planet, on which again perhaps life will develop for my benefit." "Too soon do you exult, O Lucifer." "It's not so easy to break from my kingdom." "Return to yourself, my son." "I live again." "I know it, for I suffer," "It is so frightful to be annihilated." "Oh, Lucifer!" "Take me back to my earth" "I mean to strive again and shall be happy." "After so many trials can you yet believe" "That your new struggles won't be useless?" "That you will reach your goal?" "Really Man's childish heart must be indomitable." "It is no matter." "The end, the ending of the glorious fight." "The end is death, life is a struggle" "And man's end is the struggle itself." "Truly fine comfort." "But to-morrow you will jeer at what you fight for to-day." "True, true, but all the same, although my ideas were foolish, still they were inspired, carrying humanity forward." "Have you forgotten what the Savant said," "Your earth would freeze, the struggle would be over." "If science does not defy it," "But it will defy it, I feel, I know it." "What then?" "Will there be struggle, greatness, force in that artificial world, well ordered according to the theories of pure reason?" "Only let it save the earth, science will pass away." "As all else when its mission is fulfilled." "And then anew the spirit will arise, which will reanimate it with new life." "Only lead me back again, I burn to see." "Back, then." "Why have we come to this endless world of ice where death with hollow eyes gazes upon us?" "And the red-faced moon shines from behind the mist like a death lamp in a sepulchre." "Oh, lead me where the palms are green to that fair land of sun and scents." "We are there." "That blood-red ball is the sun, beneath our feet lies the equator." "Science has failed to conquer destiny." "Monstrous world!" "It's only good to die." "First, last man in this world:" "I should like to know how my race has fallen" "In noble strife majestically or wretchedly, shrinking inch by inch, void of all greatness and not worth a tear?" "Oh, if you are so vain of your great soul," "You do not wish to stand at last as witness by your own death-bed." "Who then can tell which was reality?" "The feeble moaning of the final struggle is mocking laughter at our life of strife." "Why did I not perish in the heights" "Rather than thus myself to hear my epitaph." "...calm yourself, mankind still exists," "That degenerate form, can that caricature be the usurping heir of my grandeur?" "Why did you let me see him, Lucifer?" "Truly" "This consolation is worse than my affliction." "Then gods really exist above us." "Stop!" "A word with you." "Have mercy, Lord," "I will sacrifice to you the first seal I take" "If you will only hear me and not kill me." "What rightful claim have you to that seal" "That with its life you should redeem your own?" "That of the stronger:" "Do I not see around me how the swift fish devours the worm" "The seal devours die fish, and I the seal?" "And the great spirit will feed on you." "I know, I know, but the short space of time which in your clemency you will let me live," "I will purchase with a bloody sacrifice." " What a cowardly point of view." " And have you acted differently?" "The sole difference between you is" "That he sacrifices seals, but you human beings to the divinity which you have created in your own likeness, as he does to his." "Almighty God," "Look down, and blush to see how miserable is man, the masterpiece of your creation." "Your comrade's very angry, is he hungry, too?" "On the contrary, he's angry just because he is not hungry." "This is no time for your bad jokes." "It's no joke, it's the fact." "You reason like a well-fed man, while your comrade's philosophy comes from an empty stomach." "With reason you won't vanquish one another." "You would agree at once, if either you were hungry, or if he were full." "The animal is always first in you" "And only when it is appeased man becomes conscious, and in his great pride despises his real nature." "Can many of you manage to live in this place?" "Yes, many, more than on my fingers I can count." "I have, it's true, already killed all my neighbours; but in vain, new ones always come." "If you are God, I beg you let there be fewer men and more seals." "Lucifer, let's go." "I have had enough." "Let us first take a look at his wife." "Don't you find an old acquaintance in her?" "Embrace her:" "You will mortally offend this honourable man, if to his wife you don't show such an act of respect." "Help, Lucifer, away from here." "Awake, awake, your dream is over." "Horrible visions;" "where have you gone to?" "How all around me lives and smiles just as I left it, yet my heart is broken." "Presumptuous man!" "You wish, perhaps, that the earth should tremble, if a worm should perish." "Did I only dream, or am I dreaming now," "And is life but a dream?" "Why, why these moments of consciousness," "That we may see the horror of non-existence?" "Do you shed tears?" "It is mere cowardice not to resist and to accept a blow" "He who is strong, calmly gazes on the eternal characters of destiny, and does not grumble..." "Such destiny directs events, while you are its mere tool which it thrusts on." "No, no, you lie, the will is free." "I renounced paradise for the sake of that." "In my dreams I have learnt many things, ...and now I, of my own free will, can take another path." "Each individual may be free" "But the whole race is fettered;" "Enthusiasm, like a torrent, sweeps man on," "For one object to-day, to-morrow for another." "The pyre will not be lacking of its prey" "And scoffers will be there in plenty." "The statistician who collects the facts vices and virtues in due proportions beliefs, insanity and suicide..." "Stop!" "I can defy thee, too, O God." "Am I not the sole man in the world?" "One leap as the final scene" "And I cry out:" "The Comedy is over." "The last scene, what balderdash!" "Is not each minute an end and a beginning?" "Is it for this you have seen some thousand years?" "Adam..." "If you give ear perhaps it will be easier" "Because what up till now was doubtful is now quite certain:" "The future." "What?" "I know your face will smile if I whisper." "But come a little nearer;" "Oh, Adam, I feel myself a mother." "Lord, thou hast conquered." "Worm!" "Have you forgotten your greatness for which you have to thank me?" "What are you boasting of, you foolish woman?" "Your son in Eden was conceived in sin" "He brings all sin and misery to the world." "If God so wills it, another will be conceived in misery, who will efface it by bringing brotherhood into the world." "Up from the dust, you animal." "Arise, Adam, I take you into my favour again." "I observe that here a family scene develops, beautiful perhaps to sentiment, but endlessly boring to the intellect." "I had best make off." "Lucifer." "My words concern you, too, so stay." "O Lord, horrible sights have tormented me." "I know not, what truth is in them." "Tell me, oh, tell me, what my fate will be;" "Is my life bounded by these narrow confines struggling in which my soul is strained like wine, so that at last when it is clarified and dust absorbs it?" "Or hast thou ordained the noble spirit to a better fate?" "Will my progeny in time make progress and be entitled to draw nigh thy throne?" "Do not enquire further into those secrets which God's hand in his beneficence has hidden from your longing eyes." "If you perceived that your spirit's sojourn on this earth was only transitory, that beyond eternity awaits you" "No longer would it be virtuous to suffer here." "Should you see that dust will absorb your soul" "What then would urge you, for some great idea to renounce the enjoyment of the fleeting moment?" "Your arm is strong your heart sublime;" "The field which summons you to work is endless," "And if you take good heed, you will hear a voice unceasingly recalling and uplifting you." "Only follow that." "And if amidst the din of active life, Heaven's voice is silenced this weak woman with a purer soul" "Less near to the contamination of the world will hear it." "You, Lucifer, go on working;" "Your feigned science, your foolish negation will be the yeast which brings to fermentation" "But your atonement will be endless perpetually seeing what you desire to corrupt" "Becoming a new germ of beauty and nobility." "Ah, I heard the song, thanks be to God." "I feel it, too, and I will follow it." "Ah, but the end!" "Would that I might forget it." "Man, I have spoken:" "Struggle and have faith." "I require strife, a want of harmony" "Which begets new strength and gives us a new world." "The end is death, life is a struggle" "And man's end is the struggle itself." "Translated by O. P. Sanger"