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, will he not grant The meed of a brave fight, captivity?-- Or we may treat with him, make terms for yielding. _Ozias_. We know his mind: he hath written it plain In the torn flesh of our ambassadors. His mind to us is death; we can but choose Between sharp swords and the slow slaying of thirst. _Judith_. He may torment us if we yield. _Ozias_. He may. But not to yield is grisly and sure torment. _Judith_. There must be hope, if we could reckon right! _Ozias_. Well, thou and God have five days more to build A bridge of hope over our broken world. And, for the town even now fearfully aches In scalding thirst, not five days had I granted, Had it not been for somewhat I must say Secretly to thee. _Judith_. Secretly? Then here; Send off these men to labour at their groans Elsewhere; for not within my house thou comest; I'll have no thoughts against God in my house. [OZIAS _disperses the citizens_. _Ozias_. Judith, we are two upright minds in this Herd of grovelling cowardice. We should, To spiritual vision which can see Stature of spirit, seem to stand in our folk Like two unaltered stanchions in the heap Of a house pulled down by fire. I know thy soul Tempered by trust in God against this ruin; But not in God, but in mortality Thy soul stands founded; and death even now Is digging at thy station in the world; And as a man with ropes and windlasses Pulls for new building columns of wreckt halls Down with a breaking fall, so death has rigged His skill about us, so he will break us down, Ruin our height and courage; and as stone, Carved with the beautiful pride of kings, hath made, Hammer'd to rubble and ground for mortar, walls Of farms and byres, our kill'd and broken natures, With all their beauty of passion, yea, and delight In God, death will shape and grind up to new Housing for souls not royal as we are, New flesh and mind for mean souls and dull hearts: For death is only life destroying life To roof the coming swarms in mortal shelter Of flesh and mind experienced in joy. _Judith_. Thy specious prologue means no good, I trow. Thou wert to tell me wherefore for five days We may pretend to be God's people still; Why thou didst not make us over to death Soon as the folk began to wail despair. _Ozias_. This reasoning will tell thee why.--No need, I think, to bring up into speech the years Since in the barley-field Manasses lay Shot by the sun. I tried (nor fail
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