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counsel. OCT. My Son! despise not these old narrow forms! They are as barriers, precious walls and fences, Which oppressed mortals have erected To mod'rate the rash will of their oppressors. For the uncontrolled has ever been destructive. The way of Order, though it lead through windings, Is the best. Right forward goes the lightning And the cannon-ball: quick, by the nearest path, They come, op'ning with murderous crash their way, To blast and ruin! My Son! the quiet road Which men frequent, where peace and blessings travel, Follows the river's course, the valley's bendings; Modest skirts the cornfield and the vineyard, Revering property's appointed bounds; And leading safe though slower to the mark. QUEST. O, hear your Father! him who is at once A hero and a man! OCT. It is the child O' th' camp that speaks in thee, my Son: a war Of fifteen years has nursed and taught thee; peace Thou hast never seen. My Son, there is a worth Beyond the worth of warriors: ev'n in war itself The object is not war. The rapid deeds Of power, th' astounding wonders of the moment-- It is not these that minister to man Aught useful, aught benignant or enduring. In haste the wandering soldier comes, and builds With canvas his light town: here in a moment Is a rushing concourse; markets open; Roads and rivers crowd with merchandise And people; Traffic stirs his hundred arms. Ere long, some morning, look,--and it is gone! The tents are struck, the host has marched away; Dead as a churchyard lies the trampled seed-field, And wasted is the harvest of the year. MAX. O Father! that the Kaiser _would_ make peace! The bloody laurel I would gladly change For the first violet Spring should offer us, The tiny pledge that Earth again was young! OCT. How's this? What is it that affects thee so? MAX. Peace I have never seen? Yes, I have seen it! Ev'n now I come from it: my journey led me Through lands as yet unvisited by war. O Father! life has charms, of which we know not: We have but seen the barren coasts of life; Like some wild roving crew of lawless pirates, Who, crowded in their narrow noisome ship, Upon the rude sea, with rude manners dwell; Naught of the fair land knowing but the bays, Where they may risk their hurried thievish landing. Of the loveliness that, in its peaceful dales, The land conceals--O Father!--O, of this, In our wild voyage we have seen no glimpse. OCT. [_gives increased attention_] And d
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