The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 03 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 544 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 03.

The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 03 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 544 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 03.

TASKMASTER, MASON, WORKMAN and LABORERS

TASK. (with a stick, urging on the workmen).

Up, up!  You’ve rested long enough.  To work! 
The stones here!  Now the mortar, and the lime! 
And let his lordship see the work advanced,
When next he comes.  These fellows crawl like snails!

     [To two laborers, with loads.]

What! call ye that a load?  Go, double it. 
Is this the way ye earn your wages, laggards?

1ST. W.

’Tis very hard that we must bear the stones,
To make a keep and dungeon for ourselves!

TASK.

What’s that you mutter?  ’Tis a worthless race,
For nothing fit but just to milk their cows,
And saunter idly up and down the hills.

OLD MAN (sinks down exhausted).

I can no more.

TASK. (shaking him).

Up, up, old man, to work!

1ST. W.

Have you no bowels of compassion, thus
To press so hard upon a poor old man
That scarce can drag his feeble limbs along?

MASTER MASON and WORKMEN.

Shame, shame upon you—­shame!  It cries to heaven.

TASK.

Mind your own business.  I but do my duty.

1ST W.

Pray, Master, what’s to be the name of this
Same castle, when ’tis built?

TASK.

The Keep of Uri;
For by it we shall keep you in subjection.

WORK.

The Keep of Uri?

TASK.

Well, why laugh at that?

2D W.

Keep Uri, will you, with this paltry place!

1ST W.

How many molehills such as that must first
Be piled up each on each, ere you make
A mountain equal to the least in Uri?

[TASKMASTER retires up the stage.]

MAS.  M.

I’ll drown the mallet in the deepest lake,
That served my hand on this accursed pile.

[Enter TELL and STAUFFACHER.]

STAUFF.

O, that I had not lived to see this sight!

TELL.

Here ’tis not good to be.  Let us proceed.

STAUFF.

Am I in Uri—­Uri, freedom’s home?

MAS.  M.

O, Sir, if you could only see the vaults
Beneath these towers.  The man that tenants them
Will ne’er hear cock crow more.

STAUFF.

O God!  O God!

MASON.

Look at these ramparts and these buttresses,
That seem as they were built to last forever.

TELL.

What hands have built, my friend, hands can destroy.

[Pointing to the mountains.]

That home of freedom God hath built for us.

[A drum is heard.  People enter bearing a cap upon a pole, followed by a crier.  Women and children thronging tumultuously after them.]

1ST W.

What means the drum?  Give heed!

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 03 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.