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SCENE IX.
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321

SCENE IX.

Valentinian, Maximus.
Val.
Let Ætius know that I expect him here.
[to an attendant.
Yes, friend, his glory now begins to cast
A shade o'er Valentinian: every one
Dwells in my presence on th' exploits of Ætius:
Rome stiles him her deliverer: he himself
Knows his own power too well: I must, to ensure
His faith, exalt him to Honoria's bed;
So shall the marriage-bond be his reward,
And my security.

Max.
Indeed the people
Have idoliz'd him to excess: they seem
As if unmindful of their sovereign's name,
And may if he command—but I have done—
Ætius I think is true, and doubts are vain;
But were he not, methinks to exalt him thus
Would ill secure his faith.

Val.
A gift so mighty
Must quench ambition in the soul.

Max.
Will rather
Excite it: when the conflagration rises,
The stream but adds new fuel to the flame.

Val.
How shall I better hope to bind him to me?
Wouldst thou I should pursue a tyrant's steps,
And grow the mark of universal hatred?


322

Max.
The earliest art of reigning is to bear
The hatred of mankind: a monarch still
Must exercise dominion o'er offenders;
And hatred more secures the throne than love.

Val.
No, Maximus, the man who makes himself
Too much the object of another's fear,
Thence adds to his own terrors: all extremes
Together meet; and on some future day,
The headstrong vulgar, from excess of fear,
May gather boldness.

Max.
You, my lord, best know
The arts of reigning; monarchs have a light
Unknown to subjects: zeal for your repose
Urg'd me thus far. I meant but to remind you
That it becomes us with preventive care,
While danger threatens, to provide for safety.
When gently murmuring as it goes,
The hollow riv'let scarcely flows,
A pebble can its lapse oppose,
A slender branch the course restrain.
But when, with falling waters swell'd,
In narrow banks no longer held,
The billows rise above the shore,
And bear along, with deepening roar,
The crumbling fences to the main.

[Exit.