Love and Intrigue by Johann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller
page 91 of 149 (61%)
page 91 of 149 (61%)
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in his hand, and is met by a SERVANT.
FERDINAND. Is the marshal here? SERVANT. My lord, his highness the president is inquiring for you. FERDINAND. Fire and fury! I ask is the marshal here? SERVANT. His honor is engaged at the faro-table, above stairs. FERDINAND. Tell his honor, in the name of all the devils in hell, to make his appearance this instant! [Exit SERVANT. SCENE II. FERDINAND (hastily reading the letter, at one moment seeming petrified with astonishment, at the next pacing the room with fury). Impossible! quite impossible! A form so heavenly cannot hide so devilish a heart. And yet!--and yet! Though all the angels of heaven should descend on earth and proclaim her innocence--though heaven and earth, the Creator and the created, should, with one accord, vouch for her innocence--it is her hand, her own hand! Treachery, monstrous, infernal treachery, such as humanity never before witnessed! This, then, was the reason she so resolutely opposed our flight! This it was--Oh, God! Now I awake from my dream! Now the veil is lifted! This, then, is why she surrendered with so much seeming heroism her claims on my affection, and all but |
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