THE COUNCIL OF REPUBLICS
A Philosophical Meditation on Democracy, Power, Civilization, and Political Judgment
ACT I
THE HALL BEYOND TIME
Scene I
The Summoning
The stage is dark.
A single shaft of white light slowly reveals an immense circular chamber whose proportions seem impossible. The walls are formed not of stone but of words carved into translucent marble. Passages from constitutions, declarations, charters and treaties appear and disappear beneath the surface like currents beneath clear water.
No flags are visible.
No throne exists.
At the center stands an enormous round table of polished walnut. Its surface bears no ornament except a compass rose engraved in silver. Eight empty chairs surround it.
Beyond tall arches there is no landscape. Instead the audience sees history itself moving silently: the signing of constitutions, battlefields, ships crossing oceans, factories, cities rising, satellites orbiting the Earth, crowds voting, financial markets flickering across immense screens, rockets ascending toward the heavens.
A great bell sounds once.
Silence.
Another bell.
From opposite ends of the chamber two figures emerge.
One walks with measured elegance, carrying a leather portfolio.
The other removes a tall hat before entering, as though crossing into sacred ground.
They recognize one another immediately.
JEFFERSON
Mr. Lincoln.
LINCOLN
Mr. Jefferson.
A pause.
JEFFERSON
How curious.
I spent much of my earthly life wondering what sort of republic my generation had begun.
You spent yours discovering whether it deserved to survive.
LINCOLN
Every generation believes it inherits a finished Constitution.
None does.
Each receives only another draft.
JEFFERSON
(quietly smiling)
That sentence I should have written.
LINCOLN
No.
You wrote the one that made mine necessary.
A longer silence.
Jefferson walks slowly around the table.
His fingers move lightly over the wood.
Almost unconsciously he traces the compass engraved at its center.
JEFFERSON
This room is not American.
LINCOLN
No.
JEFFERSON
Nor European.
LINCOLN
No.
JEFFERSON
Then it belongs to history.
LINCOLN
Or to judgment.
Jefferson looks up.
JEFFERSON
You always had a gift for making a single word heavier than a paragraph.
LINCOLN
One learns economy when every sentence may cost lives.
The chamber grows brighter.
A distant sound—
not music,
not wind,
but the murmuring of centuries.
Jefferson studies the walls.
A sudden laugh echoes through the chamber before its owner appears.JEFFERSON
The words are changing.
LINCOLN
History seldom leaves its manuscripts alone.
JEFFERSON
I recognize Athens.
Rome.
The Magna Carta.
Our Declaration.
The Constitution.
Gettysburg...
But there are writings unknown to me.
LINCOLN
Unknown to me as well.
History evidently continued after we stopped participating in it.
Energetic footsteps.
The doors swing open.
He surveys the chamber with unmistakable delight.THEODORE ROOSEVELT
Magnificent!
Absolutely magnificent!
I have attended royal palaces, jungle expeditions, war rooms and scientific laboratories—
but this!
Gentlemen, if eternity insists upon architecture, I congratulate eternity.
ROOSEVELT
Jefferson.
Lincoln.
I suspected I would eventually encounter one or both of you.
Though I confess I expected fewer books and considerably more cavalry.
LINCOLN
Colonel Roosevelt.
ROOSEVELT
Mr. Lincoln—
you remain entirely too solemn.
Death appears not to have improved your disposition.
LINCOLN
Nor yours.
ROOSEVELT
Excellent.
Then both of us remain useful.
Roosevelt walks around the chamber like an explorer discovering a new continent.
He pauses before one of the arches.
Outside, armored divisions become container ships.
Container ships become data streams.
Data streams become satellites.
ROOSEVELT
Remarkable.
Power changes its uniform every century.
It never resigns its commission.
JEFFERSON
You still begin with power.
ROOSEVELT
Naturally.
Civilizations that forget power usually become footnotes in someone else's history.
JEFFERSON
And civilizations that worship it?
ROOSEVELT
Become empires.
Sometimes the distinction depends entirely upon who writes the history.
A fourth voice enters before either can reply.
Young.
Measured.
Amused.
KENNEDY
Then let us hope no historians are present.
They are capable of making every statesman appear wiser after his funeral than he ever was during his presidency.
John Fitzgerald Kennedy enters.
He looks at each man in turn.
Not ceremonially—
personally.
KENNEDY
Mr. Jefferson.
President Lincoln.
Colonel Roosevelt.
A slight smile.
This may be the first room in which seniority is measured by centuries rather than elections.
ROOSEVELT
Young man—
you always did know how to enter a room.
KENNEDY
Politics teaches timing.
History teaches humility.
I discovered the second rather late.
The four men stand around the empty table.
None sits.
Jefferson studies Kennedy.
JEFFERSON
You governed after mankind entered the atomic age.
KENNEDY
Unfortunately.
JEFFERSON
I governed when a republic still believed oceans were protection.
Mr. Lincoln governed when oceans no longer prevented civil war.
Colonel Roosevelt governed when oceans became highways.
You governed when oceans disappeared.
KENNEDY
That is not a bad summary of American history.
Roosevelt laughs approvingly.
ROOSEVELT
Splendid!
We have scarcely begun and already the conversation advances.
A deep resonance fills the chamber.
The walls brighten.
Words continue appearing across the marble.
Not merely English.
French.
Latin.
Greek.
German.
Languages of treaties.
Languages of revolutions.
Languages of civilizations arguing across centuries.
The four presidents instinctively turn toward the table.
This time they sit.
No one has invited them.
The room itself has.
Jefferson speaks first.
Slowly.
Almost as if addressing the chamber rather than the men before him.
JEFFERSON
Gentlemen...
We have not been assembled to remember.
Memory requires no conference.
Nor have we been summoned to defend our reputations.
History has already passed whatever judgments it considers appropriate.
No—
we have been called because the republic—
not merely ours, but the very idea of republican government—
has entered another age of uncertainty.
The questions appear new.
I suspect they are ancient.
Only their costumes have changed.
Lincoln folds his hands.
Roosevelt leans forward.
Kennedy watches without speaking.
Jefferson continues.
JEFFERSON
Our task, I believe, is neither to praise the past nor condemn the present.
It is to ask whether liberty, constitutional government, and democratic civilization possess sufficient wisdom to govern a century more powerful than any we ourselves inhabited.
If they do—
the republic endures.
If they do not—
history will write another chapter.
Without consulting us.
A profound silence.
Far beyond the arches, the images of history begin moving faster.
Steam yields to electricity.
Electricity to electronics.
Electronics to invisible networks of light.
The chamber itself seems to breathe.
The council has begun.
Blackout.
Scene II
The Republic Under Examination
The same chamber.
The light is steadier now.
The walls no longer shift rapidly but seem to listen.
A long silence. None of the four men is eager to speak first.
Lincoln finally breaks it.
LINCOLN
A physician who speaks before examining his patient usually treats his own imagination rather than the disease.
Before we prescribe remedies, perhaps we should first ask—
what troubles the republic?
ROOSEVELT
Only one thing?
My dear Lincoln, you've become an optimist.
LINCOLN
The gravest illness generally explains the lesser ones.
KENNEDY
Or produces them.
Jefferson folds his hands.
JEFFERSON
Very well.
What, in your judgment, is the republic's principal affliction?
LINCOLN
It has become uncertain what it exists to preserve.
A silence.
ROOSEVELT
Explain.
LINCOLN
During my lifetime the answer was obvious.
The Union.
Everything else followed.
Today I observe governments extraordinarily occupied with administration—
yet strangely reluctant to define purpose.
One cannot steer a nation indefinitely by improving the machinery while declining to discuss the destination.
JEFFERSON
Purpose is dangerous.
Governments that become too certain of purpose generally begin enlarging their authority to achieve it.
The history of liberty is largely the history of limiting certainty.
ROOSEVELT
And the history of civilization is largely the history of acting before certainty arrives.
If Columbus had waited for complete evidence he would never have sailed.
If Washington had demanded perfect information he would never have crossed the Delaware.
Action has always preceded certainty.
KENNEDY
There is another possibility.
Perhaps modern governments possess too much information.
The others look toward him.
KENNEDY
Every generation imagines ignorance to be its greatest obstacle.
Our successors appear to suffer the opposite condition.
Endless information.
Endless analysis.
Endless consultation.
Each decision becomes surrounded by so much data that judgment itself becomes timid.
Jefferson nods slowly.
JEFFERSON
Reason was intended to liberate decision—
not postpone it indefinitely.
KENNEDY
Exactly.
Technology has accelerated knowledge.
It has not accelerated wisdom.
ROOSEVELT
Nor courage.
A faint smile appears on Lincoln's face.
LINCOLN
Colonel Roosevelt would measure civilization by courage.
Kennedy laughs quietly.ROOSEVELT
Would you not?
A Constitution cannot defend itself.
Markets cannot defend themselves.
Courts cannot defend themselves.
Even liberty eventually requires someone willing to stand between it and its enemies.
Documents possess no muscles.
People do.
JEFFERSON
Yet muscles have often mistaken themselves for minds.
ROOSEVELT
True.
But minds have equally mistaken themselves for governments.
KENNEDY
Gentlemen...
It occurs to me that all four of us governed during crises.
Perhaps that explains our disagreement.
Mr. Jefferson feared concentrated power because he had overthrown empire.
Mr. Lincoln exercised extraordinary power because the Union was collapsing.
Colonel Roosevelt expanded executive authority because America had become a great power.
I inherited nuclear weapons that could destroy civilization before Congress could finish debating procedure.
History educated each of us differently.
JEFFERSON
Which makes history an unreliable professor.
KENNEDY
Or an honest one.
A pause.
Jefferson rises.
He walks toward one of the arches.
Outside, the audience now sees immense cities illuminated through the night.
Aircraft cross oceans.
Digital networks pulse across continents.
Ships carry thousands of containers.
Millions of people move through stations and airports.
The world appears immeasurably more connected than any the four presidents knew.
Jefferson speaks without turning.
He gestures toward the immense panorama.JEFFERSON
When I wrote that governments derive "their just powers from the consent of the governed,"
the governed knew one another.
Their representatives knew them.
Government remained close enough that liberty possessed a human face.
Today...
...I wonder whether civilization has become too large for republican instincts.
Can citizens genuinely govern systems they scarcely understand?
Can consent remain meaningful when institutions become incomprehensibly vast?
Lincoln answers quietly.
A silence follows.LINCOLN
Every century asks whether democracy has become impossible.
Every century underestimates ordinary citizens.
JEFFERSON
Do you believe that still?
LINCOLN
I do.
But I also believe citizens require truth.
Not certainty.
Truth.
If they cease believing what is true—
or cease agreeing that truth exists independently of politics—
self-government becomes performance.
Not government.
A noticeable stillness settles over the chamber.
Kennedy speaks almost to himself.
KENNEDY
Information without trust.
Power without confidence.
Freedom without common purpose.
Those are dangerous combinations.
ROOSEVELT
Dangerous—
but not unprecedented.
The Romans confronted decadence.
The British confronted imperial exhaustion.
Europe confronted ideological fanaticism.
America confronts something different.
Success.
Jefferson turns.
JEFFERSON
Success?
ROOSEVELT
Yes.
No civilization has ever remained vigorous merely because it became wealthy.
Comfort slowly persuades free peoples that history has ended.
History never agrees.
It merely changes opponents.
Lincoln studies Roosevelt carefully.
LINCOLN
You suggest prosperity breeds complacency.
ROOSEVELT
Frequently.
A people who inherit greatness often mistake inheritance for achievement.
The republic ceases asking,
"What shall we build?"
and begins asking,
"How shall we preserve what others built?"
Civilizations rarely begin declining because they become poor.
They begin declining because they cease imagining greatness still lies ahead.
A long silence.
The four men contemplate the thought.
The chamber grows darker.
Only the great round table remains brightly illuminated.
Jefferson returns to his seat.
His voice is softer now.
JEFFERSON
Then perhaps we have misidentified the patient.
We have spoken as though the republic suffers chiefly from institutional fatigue.
I begin to suspect the deeper question concerns civic character.
No constitution—
however wisely written—
can permanently compensate for a people that gradually loses confidence in its own responsibilities.
Lincoln nods.
Kennedy remains thoughtful.
Roosevelt smiles faintly.
The debate has finally reached first principles.
Beyond the arches the images slow once more.
The world waits.
Blackout.
Scene III
The Burden of Power
The same chamber.
The light beyond the arches changes.
The American landscape slowly dissolves.
In its place appear the capitals of the world.
Washington.
London.
Paris.
Moscow.
Beijing.
Delhi.
Tokyo.
The lights of hundreds of cities merge into a single web stretching across the globe.
No one speaks immediately.
It is Kennedy who finally breaks the silence.
KENNEDY
The republic no longer lives in the world Mr. Jefferson inherited.
Nor even in Colonel Roosevelt's.
Power has become global.
Every decision now travels farther than the nation that makes it.
A financial panic crosses oceans overnight.
A virus ignores borders.
A missile arrives before diplomacy.
The republic cannot retreat into innocence merely because it remembers having once possessed it.
JEFFERSON
Perhaps not.
Yet neither should it mistake necessity for virtue.
History has always supplied governments with reasons to enlarge themselves.
Emergency has proved the oldest ally of ambition.
ROOSEVELT
History has also been remarkably indifferent toward nations unwilling to defend themselves.
JEFFERSON
Defense.
Yes.
Empire.
No.
ROOSEVELT
Empires seldom announce themselves as such.
Neither do responsibilities.
A pause.
Lincoln watches the exchange without intervening.
Kennedy leans back thoughtfully.
KENNEDY
May I suggest that both of you are arguing with ghosts?
Neither empire nor isolation adequately describes the present age.
America has become something unprecedented.
Not Rome.
Not Britain.
Not Athens.
Lincoln finally speaks.Something history has never before attempted.
A democratic superpower.
That combination creates obligations no political philosopher had previously considered.
JEFFERSON
Then perhaps political philosophy has some catching up to do.
KENNEDY
Or perhaps politics has outrun philosophy.
LINCOLN
No.
Politics never outruns philosophy.
It merely forgets where it came from.
A silence follows.
Lincoln slowly rises.
He walks toward the great arch overlooking the world.
The audience sees refugees moving across continents.
Warships crossing oceans.
Financial markets opening.
Satellites orbiting silently.
Children attending school.
Factories.
Forests.
Deserts.
The Earth itself slowly rotating.
LINCOLN
Every age believes its problems unprecedented.
Every age is partly correct.
But one question never changes.
What does power owe justice?
Not—
what can power accomplish—
but what obligations accompany its possession?
I asked that question during civil war.
I suspect every great nation must eventually ask it.
ROOSEVELT
Justice without strength accomplishes remarkably little.
LINCOLN
Strength without justice accomplishes far too much.
Roosevelt smiles.
Not dismissively.
Respectfully.
ROOSEVELT
There speaks the lawyer.
LINCOLN
There speaks the soldier.
A moment of mutual recognition passes between them.
Jefferson breaks the silence.
JEFFERSON
Colonel Roosevelt—
allow me a question.
Suppose the republic becomes indispensable to world order.
Who then protects the republic from becoming indispensable to itself?
Roosevelt considers the question carefully.
Unlike before, he does not answer immediately.
A long pause.ROOSEVELT
A fair question.
Perhaps the fairest yet asked.
Power intoxicates nations exactly as it intoxicates men.
Yet I distrust another danger more.
Civilizations occasionally become so afraid of misusing power that they cease using it altogether.
Vacuums do not remain empty.
Nature abhors them.
History exploits them.
KENNEDY
That was the dilemma of my presidency.
One cannot preserve peace merely by wishing for it.
Nor preserve liberty by imposing it.
Between passivity and intervention lies a narrow road.
Most governments discover it only after wandering into one ditch or the other.
JEFFERSON
Did yours?
Kennedy does not answer immediately.
His expression changes.
For the first time there is visible weariness.
A deep silence.KENNEDY
Sometimes.
Not always.
Presidents rarely know which decisions history will applaud.
They know only which decisions cannot be avoided.
Lincoln watches Kennedy with unusual sympathy.
A distant bell sounds.LINCOLN
That burden has changed less than governments imagine.
Once.
Then again.
The chamber itself appears to awaken.
The words carved into the walls begin moving more rapidly.
Treaties.
Declarations.
Constitutions.
Peace agreements.
War declarations.
Each appears briefly before yielding to another.
Jefferson studies them.
JEFFERSON
Remarkable.
History is no longer showing victories.
It is showing decisions.
KENNEDY
Perhaps history has finally learned what statesmen eventually do.
Battles settle less than choices.
Suddenly the walls stop moving.
One inscription alone remains illuminated.
It is not American.
Not French.
Not British.
Not Roman.
Only two words appear in brilliant light.
BALANCE OF POWER
Roosevelt looks upward.
His face brightens.
ROOSEVELT
Ah...
Now we approach the true subject.
Jefferson reads the words more cautiously.
Lincoln remains silent.
Kennedy slowly rises.
KENNEDY
Balance of power.
The oldest principle in international politics.
Perhaps the least understood.
Perhaps the most abused.
Yet no discussion of the present world can avoid it.
Gentlemen—
before we ask whether democracy can survive the twenty-first century—
we must first ask whether the international order itself can.
A profound silence.
Far beyond the arches the Earth slowly turns in darkness.
The four presidents remain seated around the great table.
For the first time,
they no longer appear merely to represent America.
They appear to represent four different understandings of civilization itself.
The lights slowly fade.
Scene IV
The Republic and the Machine
The chamber is quieter than before.
The arches no longer reveal armies or capitals.
Instead, vast streams of light race across the globe.
Invisible networks.
Financial transactions.
Satellites.
Research laboratories.
Robotic factories.
Entire civilizations connected by signals that no eye can follow.
The four presidents watch in silence.
JEFFERSON
When I was a young man, the greatest machine in America was a printing press.
It multiplied words.
It did not replace judgment.
Today I see machines performing calculations that once occupied entire governments.
Tell me—
who governs whom?
The machine the citizen—
or the citizen the machine?
KENNEDY
Neither.
At least not yet.
The real question is who governs those who design the machine.
Technology has never been politically neutral.
The telegraph changed diplomacy.
Radio changed politics.
Television changed elections.
These new instruments may change government itself.
ROOSEVELT
I remain unconvinced.
Civilizations have always feared new tools.
The crossbow.
Steam.
Electricity.
Every generation mistakes innovation for revolution.
Human nature remains remarkably conservative.
JEFFERSON
Does it?
I am less certain.
The farmer who read his own newspaper governed differently from the citizen who receives every opinion already interpreted by strangers.
Reason weakens when it ceases to exercise itself.
LINCOLN
That is not a technological problem.
It is a moral one.
Jefferson looks toward Lincoln.
LINCOLN
No invention has ever relieved mankind of the responsibility to distinguish truth from falsehood.
The instrument changes.
The obligation does not.
A pause.
KENNEDY
Yet instruments influence character.
A nation that speaks only in moments may lose the ability to think in generations.
Politics becomes immediate.
Government becomes permanent campaigning.
Leadership becomes performance.
The audience applauds.
The nation quietly forgets to govern itself.
Roosevelt leans forward.
Roosevelt laughs.ROOSEVELT
You place too much blame upon technology.
Weakness existed long before electricity.
Athens possessed demagogues without television.
Rome possessed corruption without computers.
Human vanity requires remarkably little assistance.
KENNEDY
I agree.
Technology did not invent vanity.
It industrialized it.
ROOSEVELT
That, Mr. Kennedy, is a sentence worthy of publication.
JEFFERSON
Permit an older man one anxiety.
I designed institutions on the assumption that citizens would deliberate.
Not constantly.
Not perfectly.
But sufficiently.
Suppose they cease deliberating altogether.
Suppose they merely react.
What becomes of republican government?
Lincoln answers slowly.
A silence settles over the chamber.LINCOLN
Then the republic survives only in form.
Not in spirit.
The ballot remains.
Self-government quietly departs.
Far beyond the arches the audience now sees immense data centers.
Universities.
Research laboratories.
Trading floors.
Military headquarters.
Everything appears connected.
Everything appears fragile.
Kennedy rises.
He speaks almost as though thinking aloud.
KENNEDY
There is another transformation.
Perhaps the greatest.
Knowledge itself no longer belongs principally to governments.
Nor universities.
Nor churches.
Nor newspapers.
It exists everywhere—
and nowhere.
Authority becomes increasingly difficult to recognize.
Citizens trust institutions less.
Institutions trust citizens less.
The distance between them widens.
That distance worries me more than any foreign adversary.
ROOSEVELT
Foreign adversaries eventually announce themselves.
Domestic uncertainty seldom does.
It accumulates quietly—
until a nation discovers that confidence has disappeared while everyone was occupied measuring prosperity.
JEFFERSON
Confidence...
An interesting word.
The Constitution cannot manufacture it.
Markets cannot purchase it.
Armies cannot compel it.
Yet without it every institution slowly loses legitimacy.
Lincoln nods.
LINCOLN
Trust is the invisible constitution.
Without it the written one becomes increasingly difficult to enforce.
Another silence.
The chamber darkens.
One by one the illuminated networks fade.
Only the Earth remains suspended beyond the arches.
Blue.
Beautiful.
Small.
Roosevelt studies it.
ROOSEVELT
How curious.
For centuries mankind struggled to conquer geography.
Now geography appears conquered.
Yet politics has become no easier.
Kennedy smiles faintly.
KENNEDY
Science reduces distance.
It does not reduce disagreement.
Jefferson slowly returns to the center of the chamber.
He looks from one president to the next.
JEFFERSON
We have examined the republic.
Its institutions.
Its citizens.
Its technologies.
Its burdens.
And yet we continue speaking as Americans.
Perhaps that itself has become a limitation.
A thoughtful silence.
Lincoln understands immediately.
LINCOLN
You believe our experience is no longer sufficient.
JEFFERSON
I believe no republic, however successful, possesses a monopoly on political wisdom.
Roosevelt smiles.Europe spent centuries confronting problems long before America existed.
Balance of power.
Revolution.
Empire.
Nationalism.
Diplomacy.
Questions that still govern the modern world.
Perhaps it is time we consulted those who wrestled with them before us.
A broad, unmistakable smile.
Kennedy rises.ROOSEVELT
Excellent.
At last our conference becomes dangerous.
Jefferson looks toward the great marble walls.KENNEDY
Whom would you invite?
The inscriptions begin changing once more.
French replaces English.
German appears beside Latin.
Ancient treaties emerge from the stone.
His voice is quiet.
Almost ceremonial.
JEFFERSON
Not merely statesmen.
Architects.
Men who attempted, however imperfectly, to design international order itself.
The chamber grows still.
Somewhere beyond sight—
another door begins to open.
Blackout.
Scene V
The Invitation
Darkness.
The chamber is barely visible.
The great round table stands alone beneath a single circle of white light.
The four Presidents remain seated, each absorbed in his own thoughts.
Time itself appears suspended.
A deep bell sounds.
Once.
Twice.
Three times.
The marble walls begin to glow from within.
The inscriptions move—not rapidly as before—but deliberately, as though centuries are rearranging themselves.
The words of the Declaration of Independence slowly yield to passages from the Treaty of Utrecht...
...the Congress of Vienna...
...the Atlantic Charter...
...the Charter of the United Nations.
The chamber seems larger.
Older.
The air itself has become heavier.
JEFFERSON
Do you hear it?
KENNEDY
What?
JEFFERSON
History changing its language.
Lincoln listens.
LINCOLN
No.
Not changing.
Expanding.
Roosevelt rises.
He walks slowly around the chamber.
His earlier exuberance has given way to curiosity.
ROOSEVELT
Every civilization imagines itself unique.
Most eventually discover they inherited far more than they created.
America inherited a republic.
It also inherited Europe.
Whether it wished to or not.
JEFFERSON
Just so.
We borrowed philosophy from Athens...
law from Rome...
constitutional restraint from England...
He looks toward the illuminated walls.science from the Enlightenment...
and diplomacy—
—from men whose names our citizens seldom remember.
KENNEDY
Yet whose decisions still govern the world.
A pause.
LINCOLN
There is something humbling in that.
Every generation believes itself original.
History generally disagrees.
The great bell sounds again.
This time its echo does not fade.
It becomes many voices.
Whispers.
Debates.
Treaties being negotiated.
Kings arguing.
Parliaments shouting.
Cannons.
Church bells.
The sounds of centuries merge into one immense murmur.
The four men instinctively stand.
The chamber itself is no longer merely a room.
It has become a witness.
Jefferson slowly approaches the center of the compass engraved upon the great table.
He places both hands upon it.
When he speaks his voice possesses a ceremonial gravity none of the others has yet heard.
JEFFERSON
No republic becomes wise by listening only to itself.
Power may produce confidence.
It seldom produces wisdom.
We have spoken as Americans.
We must now listen as students of civilization.
For the republic is no longer merely an American experiment.
It has become part of the larger history of nations.
If we are to understand its future,
we must consult those who devoted their lives to preserving—or reshaping—the international order itself.
He closes his eyes.
JEFFERSON
Let those whose thoughts altered the destiny of continents enter this council.
Not to praise us.
Not to condemn us.
But to argue.
For truth has never feared another voice.
Silence.
Nothing happens.
Roosevelt smiles.
ROOSEVELT
Perhaps eternity requires a louder invitation.
Suddenly the chamber trembles.
Not violently—
but with immense authority.
The walls begin moving outward.
Columns rise where none had existed.
The ceiling disappears into darkness.
The round table slowly expands.
Four additional chairs emerge from the marble floor.
No hand has fashioned them.
They simply become visible, as though they had always existed.
Lincoln speaks almost in a whisper.
LINCOLN
The room has been expecting them.
We had not.
A brilliant shaft of light appears at the far end of the hall.
Within it a solitary figure gradually becomes visible.
Not yet distinct.
Only a silhouette.
Then another.
Then another.
Then another.
Four figures.
Waiting.
Unmoving.
History itself appears to hesitate.
Kennedy watches in silence.
KENNEDY
Strange.
I know none of their faces.
Yet I recognize every one of them.
Jefferson slowly removes his spectacles.
He looks not surprised—
but respectful.
JEFFERSON
One does not often meet the men with whom one has been conversing for two centuries without knowing it.
The first silhouette steps forward.
A cane strikes the marble.
Measured.
Elegant.
Almost musical.
The second figure does not move.
He waits.
The third stands with military rigidity.
The fourth seems carved from granite.
No words are spoken.
Their presence alone alters the atmosphere.
Roosevelt instinctively straightens his posture.
Lincoln removes his hat.
Kennedy buttons his jacket.
Jefferson inclines his head.
For the first time since the council began,
the four American Presidents appear less like hosts than participants.
The first figure reaches the edge of the light.
His features remain hidden.
Only his voice emerges.
Calm.
Cultivated.
Amused.
VOICE
Gentlemen...
You have discussed the balance of power for an entire evening.
How generous of you to invite those who invented the conversation.
Blackout.
End of Act I.
ACT II
Scene I
The European Masters
The curtain rises slowly.
The Hall Beyond Time has changed.
It has become older.
The marble has acquired the warm glow of centuries.
The inscriptions upon the walls no longer move.
They wait.
The great round table now seats eight.
Only four chairs are occupied.
The remaining four stand empty.
The shaft of light at the far end of the chamber grows brighter.
The first figure steps forward.
He walks neither hurriedly nor ceremoniously.
His pace suggests a man who has spent a lifetime allowing others to arrive first.
A silver-topped cane touches the marble.
Once.
Twice.
Three times.
He removes his gloves with almost mathematical precision.
TALLEYRAND
Gentlemen...
I fear you have begun without diplomacy.
A faint smile crosses Roosevelt's face.
ROOSEVELT
Then you must be Prince Talleyrand.
TALLEYRAND
I have been called considerably worse.
He surveys the room.
Not hurriedly.
Not proudly.
Simply observing.
TALLEYRAND
Interesting.
No throne.
Excellent.
Thrones encourage certainty.
Round tables encourage disappointment.
Kennedy smiles.
KENNEDY
And which do you prefer?
TALLEYRAND
Disappointment.
It is generally more compatible with peace.
Jefferson studies him carefully.
Talleyrand pauses.JEFFERSON
You negotiated with kings.
Empires.
Revolutionaries.
Republics.
How did you reconcile so many masters?
The faintest trace of amusement appears.
TALLEYRAND
I never attempted such an impossible task.
I merely reconciled their interests long enough for civilization to survive another season.
Principles inspire men.
Interests persuade governments.
Confusing the two has prolonged many unnecessary wars.
Before anyone can answer, another figure emerges.
He walks erect.
Measured.
Every movement disciplined.
His uniform bears no ornament beyond necessity.
His face reveals neither pleasure nor anxiety.
Only order.
He stops beside Talleyrand.
METTERNICH
Prince.
You continue to underestimate principles.
TALLEYRAND
Only those loudly proclaimed.
Metternich inclines his head toward the American Presidents.
METTERNICH
Gentlemen.
Keen silence.
Lincoln rises.
LINCOLN
Prince Metternich.
History remembers you as the guardian of order.
METTERNICH
History usually remembers slogans.
It rarely remembers responsibilities.
I did not preserve order because I distrusted liberty.
I preserved order because I had witnessed revolution.
There is a difference.
Jefferson leans forward.
A thoughtful silence.JEFFERSON
There is also a difference between preserving civilization and preserving privilege.
METTERNICH
Indeed.
Unfortunately, revolutions seldom distinguish between them.
They burn libraries together with palaces.
They destroy institutions together with tyrannies.
The crowd rarely possesses the patience required for constitutional reform.
Roosevelt watches both men with obvious enjoyment.
Talleyrand smiles.ROOSEVELT
Splendid.
We've barely begun and already Europe disagrees with itself.
A deep voice interrupts.TALLEYRAND
Europe has survived largely because it disagreed with itself.
Agreement has often proved considerably more dangerous.
A cigar appears before the man himself.VOICE
Especially when accompanied by excessive enthusiasm.
Then the unmistakable silhouette.
Broad shoulders.
Determined stride.
Hat.
Walking stick.
The room instinctively recognizes him before his face becomes visible.
CHURCHILL
I apologize for my delay.
Eternity contains remarkably poor railway connections.
Even Jefferson laughs.
Churchill removes his hat.
He looks around the chamber.
His eyes immediately notice every detail.
The walls.
The inscriptions.
The table.
The empty chair.
Finally—
the four Americans.
CHURCHILL
Mr. Jefferson.
Mr. Lincoln.
Colonel Roosevelt.
President Kennedy.
Had circumstances been kinder,
I should have preferred meeting you under less metaphysical conditions.
KENNEDY
Prime Minister—
welcome.
CHURCHILL
Thank you.
Though I confess some disappointment.
I expected better whisky.
Talleyrand murmurs almost inaudibly.
TALLEYRAND
An Englishman remains faithful to his traditions.
CHURCHILL
As every sensible Frenchman remains faithful to his irony.
Gentle laughter eases the atmosphere.
Then—
silence.
Another figure appears.
Unlike Churchill,
he does not seek attention.
He simply commands it.
Tall.
Military.
His bearing possesses almost Roman simplicity.
He walks without haste.
Without flourish.
When he reaches the table,
he does not sit.
He looks first at Churchill.
Then Jefferson.
Then Lincoln.
Finally at the chamber itself.
DE GAULLE
Messieurs.
A pause.
No one speaks.
Even Churchill waits.
De Gaulle surveys the globe beyond the arches.
Only then does he speak again.
DE GAULLE
Civilizations have a curious habit.
Each believes itself permanent—
shortly before discovering history has other plans.
Silence.
He takes his seat.
The eight chairs are now occupied.
For the first time,
the table is complete.
No one speaks.
The chamber itself seems to acknowledge that something extraordinary has occurred.
Jefferson slowly rises.
He looks around the council.
His voice carries neither triumph nor ceremony.
Only purpose.
JEFFERSON
Gentlemen—
welcome.
The republic has questioned itself.
It now seeks the judgment of history.
Not history as written by scholars—
but history as shaped by those who bore its burdens.
We have discussed liberty.
Constitution.
Power.
Technology.
The responsibilities of democratic government.
Yet one question remains unanswered.
Can free nations preserve both liberty and peace in an age where power itself has become global?
I believe no American alone should answer that question.
That is why you have been invited.
A long silence follows.
Churchill looks toward Talleyrand.
Talleyrand toward Metternich.
Metternich toward de Gaulle.
Finally Churchill turns back to Jefferson.
A faint smile appears.
CHURCHILL
Mr. Jefferson...
You have asked Europe a question it has been attempting to answer for nearly five centuries.
I rather suspect we shall require the remainder of eternity.
The great bell sounds.
Once.
The Council of Republics has become the Council of Civilizations.
Blackout.
Scene II
Order and Liberty
The Council is assembled.
No one presides.
The silence itself has become the chairman.
Talleyrand gently turns a crystal glass that has somehow appeared before him.
Roosevelt smiles.TALLEYRAND
Mr. Jefferson...
Permit an observation.
You Americans possess a charming habit.
Whenever the world becomes complicated,
you begin discussing principles.
Europe generally begins by examining maps.
Jefferson does not.
A silence.JEFFERSON
Because maps explain where nations are.
Principles explain why they deserve to exist.
TALLEYRAND
Do they?
Poland disappeared.
Its principles remained intact.
Europe admired them greatly.
Unfortunately, admiration proved insufficient.
Lincoln studies Talleyrand.
LINCOLN
You suggest justice depends upon power.
TALLEYRAND
No.
Only its survival.
There is an unfortunate distinction.
Justice may exist without power.
It simply does not remain sovereign very long.
Churchill lights a cigar.
Churchill meets Jefferson's gaze.CHURCHILL
Prince Talleyrand has expressed inelegantly what history has demonstrated repeatedly.
Weak virtue invites strong vice.
JEFFERSON
And powerful nations often redefine vice as necessity.
Neither man looks away.
Churchill nods slowly.CHURCHILL
Necessity has buried many illusions, Mr. Jefferson.
The twentieth century did not permit governments the luxury of philosophical consistency.
One negotiated with Stalin because Hitler existed.
History occasionally presents choices between evils rather than between good and evil.
LINCOLN
That is true.
It is also dangerous.
Statesmen who invoke necessity too frequently eventually cease recognizing limits.
A long silence follows.CHURCHILL
An entirely fair warning.
Yet permit me another.
Statesmen who refuse necessity altogether generally leave their successors no country in which to practice virtue.
De Gaulle finally speaks.
His voice is low.
Measured.
Every word appears weighed before being spoken.
No one interrupts.DE GAULLE
England speaks of necessity.
America speaks of liberty.
Austria speaks of order.
France remembers something older.
Grandeur.
Metternich folds his hands.DE GAULLE
A nation that ceases respecting itself eventually asks others to define its interests.
From that moment,
its independence becomes ceremonial.
Not real.
KENNEDY
General—
can national grandeur coexist with democratic compromise?
DE GAULLE
It must.
Otherwise democracy becomes administration,
not government.
Roosevelt leans forward.METTERNICH
Interesting.
All of you continue speaking as though nations were immortal.
They are not.
Civilizations perish.
Institutions decay.
Order is therefore not a luxury.
It is civilization's first duty.
Jefferson turns toward him.
JEFFERSON
Even at liberty's expense?
METTERNICH
Especially before liberty can survive.
Revolutionaries imagine liberty creates order.
Experience generally demonstrates the reverse.
Metternich remains perfectly composed.ROOSEVELT
Then tell us, Prince—
how much liberty should a government postpone while constructing order?
One year?
Ten?
A century?
Roosevelt laughs.METTERNICH
Until institutions become stronger than passions.
Not mockingly.
With genuine admiration.
Lincoln intervenes quietly.ROOSEVELT
There speaks Vienna.
Metternich inclines his head.LINCOLN
And yet...
Passions also built nations.
Without passion there would have been no American Revolution.
No Italian unification.
No Greek independence.
No abolition.
History cannot be written entirely by administrators.
The chamber grows darker.METTERNICH
Quite so.
Nor can it survive them.
Outside the arches the audience sees Europe.
Not as a map—but as centuries unfolding.
The Thirty Years' War.
The French Revolution.
The Congress of Vienna.
The trenches of 1914.
The ruins of 1945.
Then—
a peaceful continent rebuilding itself.
The images vanish.
Talleyrand quietly observes them disappear.
No one answers immediately.TALLEYRAND
Gentlemen...
You have all spoken of ideals.
Permit an old diplomat one practical question.
Who governs the twenty-first century?
Governments?
Markets?
Technology?
Public opinion?
Or fear?
For the first time since the conference began,
the Council is silent.
Not because it lacks opinions—
but because each man recognizes that the question admits no easy reply.
Churchill removes his cigar.
Lincoln lowers his eyes.
Jefferson clasps his hands behind his back.
Roosevelt stops pacing.
Kennedy looks toward the Earth beyond the arches.
Finally Kennedy speaks.
Softly.
The others turn toward him.KENNEDY
Perhaps we have arrived at the wrong conference.
We have assembled statesmen.
Yet the forces now shaping history are not all states.
There are powers that command neither armies nor territory—
and yet influence every nation represented in this room.
Kennedy continues.
KENNEDY
If that is true...
then the balance of power itself has changed.
Not disappeared.
Changed.
A profound silence.
The bell sounds once.
The debate has entered a new century.
Blackout.
Scene III
The New Sovereigns
The chamber remains silent after Kennedy's final words.
"The balance of power itself has changed."
The words seem to linger in the air.
Beyond the arches, the familiar map of the world slowly dissolves.
National borders fade.
In their place appear luminous networks stretching across continents.
Financial markets awaken.
Data streams circle the Earth.
Satellites drift silently overhead.
Thousands of autonomous machines perform tasks invisible to the human eye.
Talleyrand is the first to notice.
Churchill rises.TALLEYRAND
Curious...
The nations have disappeared.
No...
They have merely become more difficult to see.
He walks toward the arches.
For a long moment he says nothing.
He gestures toward the glowing networks.CHURCHILL
During my lifetime, one knew where power resided.
Cabinets.
Parliaments.
General staffs.
Shipyards.
Steel mills.
Today...
Kennedy joins him....I find myself unable to determine where government ends and influence begins.
Roosevelt does not answer immediately.KENNEDY
Because influence no longer wears a uniform.
It travels through markets...
algorithms...
information...
capital...
and increasingly through machines capable of making decisions once reserved for governments.
ROOSEVELT
Machines do not govern.
Men govern.
They always have.
KENNEDY
Do they?
Suppose a financial algorithm transfers billions before a minister has finished reading his briefing.
Suppose an autonomous system determines military responses faster than generals.
Suppose public opinion is shaped before citizens know they are being persuaded.
Who, then, governs?
Talleyrand smiles almost imperceptibly.
Jefferson rises.TALLEYRAND
President Kennedy has rediscovered an old diplomatic principle.
Power often migrates long before governments recognize that it has moved.
He appears deeply troubled.
A long silence.JEFFERSON
Permit me a simpler question.
Who is accountable?
If power becomes invisible...
if decisions emerge from systems too complicated for ordinary citizens to understand...
to whom does a free people address its grievances?
Lincoln speaks.
Metternich folds his hands.LINCOLN
The republic cannot survive if responsibility becomes anonymous.
Every public act must ultimately belong to someone.
Otherwise government ceases to be republican.
It becomes mechanical.
Churchill nods.METTERNICH
Or bureaucratic.
Modern governments have discovered a remarkable invention.
No one is responsible.
Everyone followed procedure.
The institution apologizes.
The individual disappears.
Jefferson turns.CHURCHILL
A nation may survive poor judgment.
It rarely survives the disappearance of responsibility.
DE GAULLE
Responsibility requires sovereignty.
Without sovereignty...
responsibility becomes theatre.
De Gaulle does not hesitate.JEFFERSON
General...
Define sovereignty.
A pause.DE GAULLE
The capacity to decide one's own destiny.
The chamber falls silent.Not merely to administer it.
JEFFERSON
And if markets decide?
DE GAULLE
Then markets govern.
JEFFERSON
If foreign technologies determine communication?
DE GAULLE
Then technology governs.
JEFFERSON
If intelligence systems recommend every important decision?
DE GAULLE
Then governments gradually become spectators of their own authority.
Lincoln studies the illuminated networks.
Kennedy nods.LINCOLN
The question is older than it appears.
We once feared kings.
Later we feared armies.
Then monopolies.
Now perhaps we fear complexity itself.
Roosevelt slowly walks around the great table.KENNEDY
Complexity without accountability.
That is something new.
His voice has lost none of its confidence, but it has gained reflection.
Talleyrand quietly interjects.ROOSEVELT
I confess...
I spent my life believing power should be exercised vigorously.
I never imagined a century in which power might be exercised without anyone clearly possessing it.
That troubles me.
Because one cannot reform what one cannot identify.
The others look toward him.TALLEYRAND
On the contrary.
One often identifies it.
One merely gives it another name.
Churchill laughs softly.TALLEYRAND
Influence.
Efficiency.
Globalization.
Innovation.
Progress.
History has always preferred agreeable vocabulary.
Power itself seldom changes.
Only its manners improve.
Another silence.CHURCHILL
Prince...
You remain magnificently cynical.
TALLEYRAND
Not cynical.
Experienced.
Beyond the arches, the networks suddenly disappear.
A single child appears.
She sits before a small screen.
Around her flows more information than existed in entire kingdoms only a century earlier.
She looks upward.
The image vanishes.
Jefferson watches it disappear.
Lincoln rises slowly.JEFFERSON
There...
That is the republic.
Not here.
Not this council.
Not constitutions carved in marble.
There.
In the education of one citizen.
If she learns to think freely...
the republic survives.
If she merely learns to consume information...
it does not matter how perfect her institutions appear.
The chamber grows brighter.LINCOLN
Mr. Jefferson...
For the first time this evening...
I believe we agree completely.
The inscriptions begin moving again.
Not treaties.
Not battles.
Not constitutions.
Single words.
Truth.
Responsibility.
Liberty.
Power.
Justice.
Memory.
Judgment.
The words revolve slowly around the chamber like planets around an invisible sun.
No one speaks.
Finally Churchill breaks the silence.
His voice is unusually subdued.
CHURCHILL
No one answers.Gentlemen...
Perhaps we have spent too much of our discussion asking who governs the world.
A more urgent question presents itself.
Who governs those who possess the power to govern the world?
For perhaps the first time in history...
the Council has encountered a question greater than any one civilization.
The great bell sounds.
Once.
The echoes linger.
Blackout.
Scene IV
The Limits of Democracy
The chamber remains dimly lit.
The words—Truth. Responsibility. Liberty. Power. Justice. Memory. Judgment.—continue their slow orbit around the hall.
Outside the arches, the Earth turns silently.
No armies march.
No treaties are signed.
Only humanity goes about its ordinary life.
The silence is finally broken by Metternich.
METTERNICH
Permit me an uncomfortable question.
Does democracy always govern wisely?
No one answers immediately.
Jefferson is the first to respond.
JEFFERSON
No.
But neither does monarchy.
Nor aristocracy.
Nor empire.
The wisdom of government has never depended entirely upon its form.
METTERNICH
Just so.
Yet modern democracies increasingly behave as though elections settle questions that only history can answer.
Governments change.
Reality does not.
Kennedy leans forward.
KENNEDY
You believe democracy promises too much.
METTERNICH
I believe politicians promise too much.
There is a difference.
Churchill smiles.
CHURCHILL
A distinction every voter eventually discovers.
Gentle laughter.
ROOSEVELT
Then what would you have governments tell their people?
That difficult choices are unavoidable?
That prosperity cannot always increase?
That sacrifice remains necessary?
No politician survives such speeches.
CHURCHILL
Some do.
Not many.
Lincoln has remained unusually quiet.
He now speaks.
LINCOLN
Perhaps we ask too much of democracy.
It was never intended to eliminate disagreement.
It was intended to civilize it.
A thoughtful silence follows.
JEFFERSON
Precisely.
Majorities possess authority.
They do not possess infallibility.
That is why constitutions exist.
To remind temporary majorities that some principles are older than elections.
Talleyrand slowly rotates his cane.
TALLEYRAND
Gentlemen...
You continue speaking as though constitutions govern nations.
They do not.
People govern nations.
Constitutions merely record the best intentions of those who once governed wisely.
A pause.
TALLEYRAND
The true constitution of every nation is its political culture.
Everything else is commentary.
Roosevelt nods reluctantly.
ROOSEVELT
There is considerable truth in that.
Institutions reflect character more often than they create it.
DE GAULLE
Character...
A long pause.
That word has become unfashionable.
Modern politics prefers management.
Leadership has quietly become administration.
Administrators calculate.
Leaders decide.
Civilizations require both.
They rarely receive both simultaneously.
Kennedy studies de Gaulle.
KENNEDY
General—
do you believe democratic leaders have become too cautious?
DE GAULLE
No.
Too temporary.
They think in electoral cycles.
History thinks in generations.
The conversation falls silent.
Beyond the arches appears an ancient oak tree.
Season after season passes.
Leaves grow.
Fall.
Snow.
Spring.
The tree remains.
Metternich watches it.
METTERNICH
There.
A civilization.
Slow growth.
Deep roots.
Patience.
No revolution ever planted such a tree.
Jefferson quietly replies.
JEFFERSON
No.
But revolutions have often made it possible for free men to sit beneath one.
For the first time, Metternich smiles.
Not broadly.
Respectfully.
METTERNICH
A fair answer.
A bell sounds in the distance.
Not from the chamber.
From somewhere beyond history itself.
Kennedy rises.
He walks toward the arch.
His reflection appears beside the turning Earth.
KENNEDY
There is another question.
Perhaps the most difficult of all.
Can democracy remain effective when governments must make decisions whose consequences extend fifty years—
while citizens understandably worry about next month?
Climate.
Debt.
Demography.
Technology.
Education.
Defense.
Every generation borrows from the future.
Who represents those not yet born?
A long silence.
Lincoln slowly removes his spectacles.
LINCOLN
The unborn possess no vote.
Yet every statesman governs partly on their behalf.
That is the highest form of public trust.
Churchill joins him.
CHURCHILL
Quite so.
The politician asks,
"How long until the next election?"
The statesman asks,
"What sort of nation will inherit the next century?"
Talleyrand raises an eyebrow.
TALLEYRAND
And history asks neither.
It merely records the answer.
A silence.
The words circling the chamber begin to change.
New words appear.
Prudence.
Courage.
Restraint.
Foresight.
Humility.
Jefferson studies them carefully.
JEFFERSON
Interesting.
Humility.
Jefferson smiles.Political philosophy seldom places that among the virtues of government.
Perhaps it should.
ROOSEVELT
Humility is useful—
provided it does not become hesitation.
A silence follows.JEFFERSON
Colonel,
you remain wonderfully consistent.
ROOSEVELT
One should never apologize for consistency.
Only for refusing to learn.
The eight men sit quietly around the table.
There is no sense of victory.
No one has prevailed.
Yet something has changed.
Their disagreements have become more precise.
More respectful.
More difficult.
Lincoln looks slowly around the Council.
His voice is almost reflective.
LINCOLN
Gentlemen...
This conference began with a question about republics.
We have since discussed nations...
civilizations...
technology...
power...
and democracy.
Yet one subject remains strangely absent.
He pauses.
War.
Every eye turns toward him.
The chamber darkens.
Beyond the arches, the Earth slowly disappears.
Only darkness remains.
In that darkness,
a single distant flash appears—
followed by another.
No sound.
Only light.
The Council understands immediately.
The next discussion cannot be postponed.
Blackout.
Scene V
War, Peace, and the Fate of Civilization
Complete darkness.
A single bell sounds.
The Earth slowly reappears beyond the great arches.
It is not at peace.
Across its surface, points of light ignite and fade.
Some are cities.
Some are explosions.
Some no one can identify.
The Council remains seated.
No one speaks.
It is Churchill who finally breaks the silence.
CHURCHILL
There is an old illusion.
That mankind learns from war.
I have never believed it.
Mankind learns from victory.
It learns even more slowly from defeat.
War itself teaches remarkably little.
It merely examines what nations already are.
A long silence.
Jefferson slowly rises.LINCOLN
And what did it reveal?
CHURCHILL
Character.
Cowardice.
Endurance.
Folly.
Greatness.
Usually all at once.
Kennedy nods almost imperceptibly.JEFFERSON
I have often wondered whether governments speak too readily of war.
Words such as honor...
security...
destiny...
are pronounced with remarkable ease.
Only the dead fully understand their cost.
ROOSEVELT
True.
Yet there are moments when refusing to fight produces casualties no less real.
History rarely offers a choice between bloodshed and peace.
More often it offers a choice between different kinds of tragedy.
A profound silence.KENNEDY
During one October...
the world discovered that civilization could disappear not through conquest—
but through calculation.
The danger no longer lay in hatred.
It lay in error.
One misunderstood message.
One impatient commander.
One mistaken signal.
For thirteen days...
human history balanced upon judgment.
Not weaponry.
Even Churchill lowers his head.
Lincoln folds his hands.METTERNICH
Which confirms an older observation.
The stability of civilization has always depended less upon weapons than upon restraint.
The greatest victory in diplomacy is often the catastrophe that never occurs.
TALLEYRAND
Quite so.
History celebrates battles because they are visible.
It almost never celebrates the wars successfully avoided.
Diplomacy suffers from a peculiar injustice.
Its greatest achievements leave no monuments.
A silence.LINCOLN
Yet there are wars that cannot be avoided.
Had the Union dissolved...
constitutional government might well have become an interesting historical experiment rather than a living principle.
There are causes for which peace itself becomes surrender.
Churchill looks directly at Lincoln.
De Gaulle rises.CHURCHILL
Mr. President...
On that point...
we are in complete agreement.
He walks slowly toward the great arch.
The Earth continues turning before him.
His back remains toward the Council.
DE GAULLE
The chamber grows darker.Europe spent centuries believing war was politics continued by other means.
Then came the twentieth century.
We discovered that modern war threatens politics itself.
If civilization destroys itself...
there remains no victor.
Only archaeology.
Beyond the arches the audience sees not armies—
but ruins.
Libraries reduced to ash.
Cathedrals shattered.
Bridges collapsed.
Children wandering through streets of broken stone.
No nation is identified.
No flag is visible.
Only civilization itself appears wounded.
Jefferson cannot look away.
JEFFERSONThere...That is what every declaration of war should contain.Not speeches.Not flags.Only this.Perhaps governments would become considerably more cautious.
More quietly than at any previous moment.
Churchill removes his cigar.ROOSEVELT
No soldier worthy of command ever mistakes war for glory.
The young often do.
The old seldom.
He sets it aside without lighting it.
Talleyrand smiles faintly.CHURCHILL
I have been praised far too often for speeches delivered during war.
Permit me a confession.
Every speech I ever gave represented the failure of countless earlier conversations.
The finest speech is the one history never requires.
Gentle laughter.TALLEYRAND
A surprisingly diplomatic sentiment.
CHURCHILL
Old age occasionally improves one's profession.
The tension eases—but only briefly.
Kennedy rises.
His expression is thoughtful.
Not anxious.
Thoughtful.
A silence unlike any before.KENNEDY
Gentlemen...
Permit me to ask a question no previous century could have imagined.
Suppose future wars are fought increasingly by machines.
Suppose algorithms choose targets.
Suppose autonomous systems determine retaliation.
Suppose governments gradually cease making immediate battlefield decisions.
Who then bears moral responsibility?
No one answers.
Even Talleyrand appears unsettled.
Finally Lincoln speaks.
His voice is almost a whisper.
Metternich slowly nods.LINCOLN
The machine bears none.
Its designer bears some.
Its commander bears more.
Its government bears still more.
Responsibility cannot be delegated.
Only decisions can.
If civilization forgets that distinction...
it will possess extraordinary intelligence...
and very little wisdom.
Jefferson returns to the table.METTERNICH
There speaks the jurist.
LINCOLN
No.
There speaks a citizen.
He looks around the Council.
One by one.
Not hurriedly.
As though measuring two centuries of political thought.
JEFFERSON
Perhaps we have misunderstood peace.
Peace is not merely the absence of war.
Nor is liberty merely the absence of tyranny.
Both require constant maintenance.
Both demand institutions.
Character.
Education.
Self-restraint.
The republic survives not because conflict disappears—
but because civilized people learn to govern conflict before conflict governs them.
A long silence.
The words carved into the walls begin glowing once more.
This time they form neither constitutions nor treaties.
Only one sentence.
It circles the chamber in every language.
POWER WITHOUT WISDOM ENDANGERS CIVILIZATION.
No one reads it aloud.
They simply watch.
Churchill finally breaks the silence.
CHURCHILL
Mr. Jefferson...
Perhaps this conference has reached its first conclusion.
Not its last.
Its first.
JEFFERSON
Which is?
CHURCHILL
That the greatest danger to civilization is no longer the strength of its enemies.
It is the possibility that free societies forget why they deserve defending.
A silence.
No one disputes him.
No one entirely agrees.
The Council has learned something more valuable than agreement.
It has learned precision.
The great bell sounds.
Once.
Twice.
Three times.
The lights slowly diminish.
Only the round table remains illuminated.
Eight statesmen sit in thoughtful silence.
No applause.
No triumph.
Only the weight of history.
Blackout.
Scene VI
The Unknown Tribunal
Complete darkness.
No bell.
No music.
Silence itself has become the curtain.
Slowly, almost imperceptibly, a pale light returns.
The Hall Beyond Time appears unchanged.
Yet something is different.
The inscriptions upon the marble walls no longer move.
The great round table remains.
The eight chairs remain occupied.
But the Earth beyond the arches has vanished.
Beyond them there is only an immeasurable white horizon.
Neither sky.
Nor cloud.
Nor light.
Only an emptiness without distance.
No one speaks.
It is Jefferson who finally breaks the silence.
JEFFERSON
A long silence.Gentlemen...
I believe we have reached the limits of philosophy.
TALLEYRAND
No.
Only the limits of certainty.
Philosophy survives remarkably well beyond them.
METTERNICH
Order does not.
ROOSEVELT
Nor civilization.
Churchill slowly rises.
He walks toward the arches.
He expects to see the Earth.
There is nothing.
He stops.
Lincoln studies the empty horizon.CHURCHILL
The world has disappeared.
DE GAULLE
No.
Only our view of it.
No one answers.LINCOLN
Strange...
Throughout our discussions we assumed we were observing history.
Perhaps...
history has been observing us.
Kennedy slowly rises.
He walks to the center of the compass engraved upon the table.
He studies it carefully.
The Council becomes perfectly still.KENNEDY
Has anyone noticed...
that no one ever invited us here?
Jefferson looks up.
Talleyrand's expression changes for the first time.JEFFERSON
No.
KENNEDY
Nor has anyone ever presided.
No chairman.
No sovereign.
No moderator.
No host.
We simply...
began speaking.
Not fear.
Recognition.
A silence unlike any before.TALLEYRAND
How extraordinarily diplomatic.
Churchill turns.
CHURCHILL
What do you mean?
TALLEYRAND
Only this.
The finest interrogator is the one who never appears to ask a question.
Metternich slowly stands.
METTERNICH
You suggest...
we have not been conducting this conference.
TALLEYRAND
I suggest only that every conversation has an audience.
Sometimes invisible.
The marble walls begin to glow.
Not with constitutions.
Not with treaties.
Words begin appearing.
One sentence after another.
Every sentence spoken during the Council.
Jefferson's.
Lincoln's.
Roosevelt's.
Kennedy's.
Churchill's.
De Gaulle's.
Metternich's.
Talleyrand's.
They rise from the stone exactly as they had once been spoken.
Nothing has been forgotten.
Nothing altered.
Nothing omitted.
The eight men watch in silence.
LINCOLN
A transcript...
JEFFERSON
Impossible.
TALLEYRAND
On the contrary.
Entirely possible.
Someone has been keeping minutes.
No commentary.
No interpretation.
Only testimony.
The chamber itself has become a record.
Churchill slowly removes his hat.
For the first time his voice is almost uncertain.
CHURCHILL
Then...
this was never merely a conversation.
The silence itself answers.
A sound.
Not a bell.
Not footsteps.
Paper.
Very distant.
Thousands of pages turning.
One after another.
Like archives being opened.
Or evidence being examined.
The sound continues.
Then stops.
A voice is heard.
Neither loud nor soft.
Neither male nor female.
Neither young nor old.
Calm.
Measured.
Without emotion.
THE VOICE
The witnesses have completed their testimony.
The Voice continues.
THE VOICE
The record is sufficient.
Jefferson speaks toward the unseen presence.
No answer.JEFFERSON
Before whom?
Lincoln asks quietly—
Silence.LINCOLN
By what authority?
Churchill steps forward.
Again—CHURCHILL
Who stands accused?
no answer.
The chamber remains perfectly still.
Only after a long pause does the Voice speak once more.
The white horizon slowly brightens.THE VOICE
The proceedings continue.
None of the eight men can see beyond it.
It reveals nothing.
It conceals everything.
Roosevelt turns toward Jefferson.
Jefferson answers almost to himself.ROOSEVELT
You once wrote that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.
Perhaps judgment derives its authority elsewhere.
Kennedy looks around the chamber.JEFFERSON
Perhaps.
Kennedy looks toward the unseen horizon.KENNEDY
We have debated liberty...
power...
justice...
war...
peace...
technology...
democracy...
Yet none of us asked the simplest question.
LINCOLN
Which?
No one answers.KENNEDY
Who keeps the final ledger?
Because no one knows.
The marble walls begin emptying themselves.
Every quotation disappears.
Every inscription vanishes.
Every constitution.
Every treaty.
Every declaration.
Until only one page remains illuminated.
Blank.
Completely blank.
De Gaulle studies it.
The Voice speaks again.DE GAULLE
History...
has not yet written its final chapter.
METTERNICH
Nor closed its final case.
For the last time.
THE VOICE
The witnesses are excused.
Call...
the first defendant.
No one appears.
They wait.
Nothing happens.
Jefferson slowly removes his spectacles.
Lincoln lowers his head.
Roosevelt stands motionless.
Kennedy does not look away.
Talleyrand quietly folds his gloves.
Metternich clasps his hands.
Churchill replaces his hat.
De Gaulle stands at attention.
They are no longer statesmen.
They are merely men.
The light slowly fades.
The horizon disappears.
The chamber vanishes.
Complete darkness.
After several seconds...
the sound of a single gavel.
Once.
Nothing more.
No curtain.
No music.
Only silence.
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