Page:Wallenstein, a drama in 2 parts - Schiller (tr. Coleridge) (1800).djvu/40

18 I know not what it is that so attracts And links him both to me and to my son. Comrades and friends we always were—long habit, Adventurous deeds perform'd in company, And all those many and various incidents Which store a soldier's memory with affections, Had bound us long and early to each other— Yet I can name the day, when all at once His heart rose on me, and his confidence Shot out into sudden growth. It was the morning Before the memorable fight at Lützner. Urg'd by an ugly dream, I sought him out, To press him to accept another charger. At distance from the tents, beneath a tree, I found him in a sleep. When I had wak'd him, And had related all my bodings to him, Long time he star'd upon me, like a man Astounded; thereon fell upon my neck, And manifested to me an emotion That far outstripp'd the worth of that small service. Since then his confidence has follow'd me With the same pace that mine has fled from him.

You lead your son into the secret?

No!

What? and not warn him either what bad hands His lot has plac'd him in? 5