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  • Title: Vera
  • or, The Nihilists
  • Author: Oscar Wilde
  • Release Date: August 30, 2008 [EBook #26494]
  • Language: English
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  • VERA; OR, THE NIHILISTS.
  • _Of this work, 200 copies only have been printed, for
  • private circulation. This is No...._
  • VERA;
  • OR, THE NIHILISTS.
  • A DRAMA
  • IN A PROLOGUE, AND FOUR ACTS.
  • BY
  • OSCAR WILDE.
  • NOW FIRST PUBLISHED.
  • [Device]
  • _PRIVATELY PRINTED_,
  • 1902.
  • This Play was written in 1881, and is now published from the author's
  • own copy, showing his corrections of and additions to the original
  • text.
  • PERSONS IN THE PROLOGUE.
  • PETER SABOUROFF (an Innkeeper).
  • VERA SABOUROFF (his Daughter).
  • MICHAEL (a Peasant).
  • COLONEL KOTEMKIN.
  • Scene, Russia. Time, 1795.
  • PERSONS IN THE PLAY.
  • IVAN THE CZAR.
  • PRINCE PAUL MARALOFFSKI (Prime Minister of Russia).
  • PRINCE PETROVITCH.
  • COUNT ROUVALOFF.
  • MARQUIS DE POIVRARD.
  • BARON RAFF.
  • GENERAL KOTEMKIN.
  • A PAGE.
  • _Nihilists._
  • PETER TCHERNAVITCH, President of the Nihilists.
  • MICHAEL.
  • ALEXIS IVANACIEVITCH, known as a Student of Medicine.
  • PROFESSOR MARFA.
  • VERA SABOUROFF.
  • _Soldiers, Conspirators, &c._
  • Scene, Moscow. Time, 1800.
  • PROLOGUE.
  • SCENE.--_A Russian Inn._
  • _Large door opening on snowy landscape at back of stage._
  • _PETER SABOUROFF and MICHAEL._
  • PETER (_warming his hands at a stove_). Has Vera not come back yet,
  • Michael?
  • MICH. No, Father Peter, not yet; 'tis a good three miles to the post
  • office, and she has to milk the cows besides, and that dun one is a rare
  • plaguey creature for a wench to handle.
  • PETER. Why didn't you go with her, you young fool? she'll never love you
  • unless you are always at her heels; women like to be bothered.
  • MICH. She says I bother her too much already, Father Peter, and I fear
  • she'll never love me after all.
  • PETER. Tut, tut, boy, why shouldn't she? you're young and wouldn't be
  • ill-favoured either, had God or thy mother given thee another face.
  • Aren't you one of Prince Maraloffski's gamekeepers; and haven't you got
  • a good grass farm, and the best cow in the village? What more does a
  • girl want?
  • MICH. But Vera, Father Peter--
  • PETER. Vera, my lad, has got too many ideas; I don't think much of ideas
  • myself; I've got on well enough in life without 'em; why shouldn't my
  • children? There's Dmitri! could have stayed here and kept the inn; many
  • a young lad would have jumped at the offer in these hard times; but he,
  • scatter-brained featherhead of a boy, must needs go off to Moscow to
  • study the law! What does he want knowing about the law! let a man do his
  • duty, say I, and no one will trouble him.
  • MICH. Ay! but Father Peter, they say a good lawyer can break the law as
  • often as he likes, and no one can say him nay.
  • PETER. That is about all they are good for; and there he stays, and has
  • not written a line to us for four months now--a good son that, eh?
  • MICH. Come, come, Father Peter, Dmitri's letters must have gone
  • astray--perhaps the new postman can't read; he looks stupid enough, and
  • Dmitri, why, he was the best fellow in the village. Do you remember how
  • he shot the bear at the barn in the great winter?
  • PETER. Ay, it was a good shot; I never did a better myself.
  • MICH. And as for dancing, he tired out three fiddlers Christmas come two
  • years.
  • PETER. Ay, ay, he was a merry lad. It is the girl that has the
  • seriousness--she goes about as solemn as a priest for days at a time.
  • MICH. Vera is always thinking of others.
  • PETER. There is her mistake, boy. Let God and our Little Father look to
  • the world. It is none of my work to mend my neighbour's thatch. Why,
  • last winter old Michael was frozen to death in his sleigh in the
  • snowstorm, and his wife and children starved afterwards when the hard
  • times came; but what business was it of mine? I didn't make the world.
  • Let God and the Czar look to it. And then the blight came, and the black
  • plague with it, and the priests couldn't bury the people fast enough,
  • and they lay dead on the roads--men and women both. But what business
  • was it of mine? I didn't make the world. Let God and the Czar look to
  • it. Or two autumns ago, when the river overflowed on a sudden, and the
  • children's school was carried away and drowned every girl and boy in it.
  • I didn't make the world--let God and the Czar look to it.
  • MICH. But, Father Peter--
  • PETER. No, no, boy; no man could live if he took his neighbour's pack
  • on his shoulders. (_Enter VERA in peasant's dress._) Well, my girl,
  • you've been long enough away--where is the letter?
  • VERA. There is none to-day, Father.
  • PETER. I knew it.
  • VERA. But there will be one to-morrow, Father.
  • PETER. Curse him, for an ungrateful son.
  • VERA. Oh, Father, don't say that; he must be sick.
  • PETER. Ay! sick of profligacy, perhaps.
  • VERA. How dare you say that of him, Father? You know that is not true.
  • PETER. Where does the money go, then? Michael, listen. I gave Dmitri
  • half his mother's fortune to bring with him to pay the lawyer folk of
  • Moscow. He has only written three times, and every time for more money.
  • He got it, not at my wish, but at hers (_pointing to VERA_), and now for
  • five months, close on six almost, we have heard nothing from him.
  • VERA. Father, he will come back.
  • PETER. Ay! the prodigals always return; but let him never darken my
  • doors again.
  • VERA (_sitting down pensive_). Some evil has come on him; he must be
  • dead! Oh! Michael, I am so wretched about Dmitri.
  • MICH. Will you never love any one but him, Vera?
  • VERA (_smiling_). I don't know; there is so much else to do in the world
  • but love.
  • MICH. Nothing else worth doing, Vera.
  • PETER. What noise is that, Vera? (_A metallic clink is heard._)
  • VERA (_rising and going to the door_). I don't know, Father; it is not
  • like the cattle bells, or I would think Nicholas had come from the fair.
  • Oh! Father! it is soldiers!--coming down the hill--there is one of them
  • on horseback. How pretty they look! But there are some men with them
  • with chains on! They must be robbers. Oh! don't let them in, Father; I
  • couldn't look at them.
  • PETER. Men in chains! Why, we are in luck, my child! I heard this was to
  • be the new road to Siberia, to bring the prisoners to the mines; but I
  • didn't believe it. My fortune is made! Bustle, Vera, bustle! I'll die a
  • rich man after all. There will be no lack of good customers now. An
  • honest man should have the chance of making his living out of rascals
  • now and then.
  • VERA. Are these men rascals, Father? What have they done?
  • PETER. I reckon they're some of those Nihilists the priest warns us
  • against. Don't stand there idle, my girl.
  • VERA. I suppose, then, they are all wicked men.
  • (_Sound of soldiers outside; cry of "Halt!" enter Russian officer with a
  • body of soldiers and eight men in chains, raggedly dressed; one of them
  • on entering hurriedly puts his coat above his ears and hides his face;
  • some soldiers guard the door, others sit down; the prisoners stand._)
  • COLONEL. Innkeeper!
  • PETER. Yes, Colonel.
  • COLONEL (_pointing to Nihilists_). Give these men some bread and water.
  • PETER (_to himself_). I shan't make much out of that order.
  • COLONEL. As for myself, what have you got fit to eat?
  • PETER. Some good dried venison, your Excellency--and some rye whisky.
  • COLONEL. Nothing else?
  • PETER. Why, more whisky, your Excellency.
  • COLONEL. What clods these peasants are! You have a better room than
  • this?
  • PETER. Yes, sir.
  • COLONEL. Bring me there. Sergeant, post your picket outside, and see
  • that these scoundrels do not communicate with any one. No letter
  • writing, you dogs, or you'll be flogged for it. Now for the venison.
  • (_To PETER bowing before him._) Get out of the way, you fool! Who is
  • that girl? (_sees VERA_).
  • PETER. My daughter, your Highness.
  • COLONEL. Can she read and write?
  • PETER. Ay, that she can, sir.
  • COLONEL. Then she is a dangerous woman. No peasant should be allowed to
  • do anything of the kind. Till your fields, store your harvests, pay your
  • taxes, and obey your masters--that is your duty.
  • VERA. Who are our masters?
  • COLONEL. Young woman, these men are going to the mines for life for
  • asking the same foolish question.
  • VERA. Then they have been unjustly condemned.
  • PETER. Vera, keep your tongue quiet. She is a foolish girl, sir, who
  • talks too much.
  • COLONEL. Every woman does talk too much. Come, where is this venison?
  • Count, I am waiting for you. How can you see anything in a girl with
  • coarse hands? (_He passes with PETER and his aide-de-camp into an inner
  • room._)
  • VERA (_to one of the Nihilists_). Won't you sit down? you must be tired.
  • SERGEANT. Come now, young woman, no talking to my prisoners.
  • VERA. I shall speak to them. How much do you want?
  • SERGEANT. How much have you?
  • VERA. Will you let these men sit down if I give you this? (_Takes off
  • her peasant's necklace._) It is all I have; it was my mother's.
  • SERGEANT. Well, it looks pretty enough, and is heavy too. What do you
  • want with these men?
  • VERA. They are hungry and tired. Let me go to them?
  • ONE OF THE SOLDIERS. Let the wench be, if she pays us.
  • SERGEANT. Well, have your way. If the Colonel sees you, you may have to
  • come with us, my pretty one.
  • VERA (_advances to the Nihilists_). Sit down; you must be tired.
  • (_Serves them food._) What are you?
  • A PRISONER. Nihilists.
  • VERA. Who put you in chains?
  • PRISONER. Our Father the Czar.
  • VERA. Why?
  • PRISONER. For loving liberty too well.
  • VERA (_to prisoner who hides his face_). What did you want to do?
  • DMITRI. To give liberty to thirty millions of people enslaved to one
  • man.
  • VERA (_startled at the voice_). What is your name?
  • DMITRI. I have no name.
  • VERA. Where are your friends?
  • DMITRI. I have no friends.
  • VERA. Let me see your face!
  • DMITRI. You will see nothing but suffering in it. They have tortured me.
  • VERA (_tears the cloak from his face_). Oh, God! Dmitri! my brother!
  • DMITRI. Hush! Vera; be calm. You must not let my father know; it would
  • kill him. I thought I could free Russia. I heard men talk of Liberty one
  • night in a café. I had never heard the word before. It seemed to be a
  • new god they spoke of. I joined them. It was there all the money went.
  • Five months ago they seized us. They found me printing the paper. I am
  • going to the mines for life. I could not write. I thought it would be
  • better to let you think I was dead; for they are bringing me to a living
  • tomb.
  • VERA (_looking round_). You must escape, Dmitri. I will take your place.
  • DMITRI. Impossible! You can only revenge us.
  • VERA. I shall revenge you.
  • DMITRI. Listen! there is a house in Moscow--
  • SERGEANT. Prisoners, attention!--the Colonel is coming--young woman,
  • your time is up.
  • (_Enter COLONEL, AIDE-DE-CAMP and PETER._)
  • PETER. I hope your Highness is pleased with the venison. I shot it
  • myself.
  • COLONEL. It had been better had you talked less about it. Sergeant, get
  • ready. (_Gives purse to PETER._) Here, you cheating rascal!
  • PETER. My fortune is made! long live your Highness. I hope your Highness
  • will come often this way.
  • COLONEL. By Saint Nicholas, I hope not. It is too cold here for me. (_To
  • VERA._) Young girl, don't ask questions again about what does not
  • concern you. I will not forget your face.
  • VERA. Nor I yours, or what you are doing.
  • COLONEL. You peasants are getting too saucy since you ceased to be
  • serfs, and the knout is the best school for you to learn politics in.
  • Sergeant, proceed.
  • (_The COLONEL turns and goes to top of stage. The prisoners pass out
  • double file; as DMITRI passes VERA he lets a piece of paper fall on the
  • ground; she puts her foot on it and remains immobile._)
  • PETER (_who has been counting the money the COLONEL gave him_). Long
  • life to your Highness. I will hope to see another batch soon. (_Suddenly
  • catches sight of DMITRI as he is going out of the door, and screams and
  • rushes up._) Dmitri! Dmitri! my God! what brings you here? he is
  • innocent, I tell you. I'll pay for him. Take your money (_flings money
  • on the ground_), take all I have, give me my son. Villains! Villains!
  • where are you bringing him?
  • COLONEL. To Siberia, old man.
  • PETER. No, no; take me instead.
  • COLONEL. He is a Nihilist.
  • PETER. You lie! you lie! He is innocent. (_The soldiers force him back
  • with their guns and shut the door against him. He beats with his fists
  • against it._) Dmitri! Dmitri! a Nihilist! (_Falls down on floor._)
  • VERA (_who has remained motionless, picks up paper now from under her
  • feet and reads_). "99 Rue Tchernavaya, Moscow. To strangle whatever
  • nature is in me; neither to love nor to be loved; neither to pity nor to
  • be pitied; neither to marry nor to be given in marriage, till the end is
  • come." My brother, I shall keep the oath. (_Kisses the paper._) You
  • shall be revenged!
  • (_VERA stands immobile, holding paper in her lifted hand. PETER is lying
  • on the floor. MICHAEL, who has just come in, is bending over him._)
  • END OF PROLOGUE.
  • ACT I.[1]
  • SCENE.--_99 Rue Tchernavaya, Moscow. A large garret lit by oil lamps
  • hung from ceiling. Some masked men standing silent and apart from one
  • another. A man in a scarlet mask is writing at a table. Door at back.
  • Man in yellow with drawn sword at it. Knocks heard. Figures in cloaks
  • and masks enter._
  • _Password._ Per crucem ad lucem.
  • _Answer._ Per sanguinem ad libertatem.
  • (_Clock strikes. CONSPIRATORS form a semicircle in the middle of the
  • stage._)
  • [2]PRESIDENT. What is the word?
  • FIRST CONSP. Nabat.
  • PRES. The answer?
  • SECOND CONSP. Kalit.
  • PRES. What hour is it?
  • THIRD CONSP. The hour to suffer.
  • PRES. What day?
  • FOURTH CONSP. The day of oppression.
  • PRES. What year?
  • FIFTH CONSP. Since the Revolution of France, the ninth year.[2]
  • PRES. How many are we in number?
  • SIXTH CONSP. Ten, nine, and three.
  • PRES. The Galilæan had less to conquer the world; but what is our
  • mission?
  • SEVENTH CONSP. To give freedom.
  • PRES. Our creed?
  • EIGHTH CONSP. To annihilate.
  • PRES. Our duty?
  • NINTH CONSP. To obey.
  • PRES. Brothers, the questions have been answered well. There are none
  • but Nihilists present. Let us see each other's faces. (_The CONSPIRATORS
  • unmask._) Michael, recite the oath.
  • MICHAEL. To strangle whatever nature is in us; neither to love nor to be
  • loved, neither to pity nor to be pitied, neither to marry nor to be
  • given in marriage, till the end is come; to stab secretly by night; to
  • drop poison in the glass; to set father against son, and husband against
  • wife; without fear, without hope, without future, to suffer, to
  • annihilate, to revenge.
  • PRES. Are we all agreed?
  • CONSPIRATORS. We are all agreed. (_They disperse in various directions
  • about the stage._)
  • PRES. 'Tis after the hour, Michael, and she is not yet here.
  • MICH. Would that she were! We can do little without her.
  • ALEXIS. She cannot have been seized, President? but the police are on
  • her track, I know.
  • MICH. You always seem to know a good deal about the movements of the
  • police in Moscow--too much for an honest conspirator.
  • PRES. If those dogs have caught her, [3]the red flag of the people will
  • float on a barricade in[3] every street till we find her! It was foolish
  • of her to go to the Grand Duke's ball. I told her so, but she said she
  • wanted to see the Czar and all his cursed brood face to face once.
  • ALEXIS. Gone to the State ball?
  • MICH. I have no fear. She is as hard to capture as a she-wolf is, and
  • twice as dangerous; besides, she is well disguised. But is there any
  • news from the Palace to-night, President? What is that bloody[4] despot
  • doing now besides torturing his only son? Have any of you seen him? One
  • hears strange stories about him. They say he loves the people; but a
  • king's son never does that. You cannot breed them like that.
  • PRES. Since he came back from abroad a year ago his father has kept him
  • in close prison in his palace.
  • MICH. An excellent training to make him a tyrant in his turn; but is
  • there any news, I say?
  • PRES. A council is to be held to-morrow, at four o'clock, on some secret
  • business the spies cannot find out.
  • MICH. A council in a king's palace is sure to be about some bloody work
  • or other. But in what room is this council to be held?
  • PRES. (_reading from letter_). In the yellow tapestry room called after
  • the Empress Catherine.
  • MICH. I care not for such long-sounding names. I would know where it is.
  • PRES. I cannot tell, Michael. I know more about the insides of prisons
  • than of palaces.
  • MICH. (_speaking suddenly to ALEXIS_). Where is this room, Alexis?
  • ALEXIS. It is on the first floor, looking out on to the inner courtyard.
  • But why do you ask, Michael?
  • MICH. Nothing, nothing, boy! I merely take a great interest in the
  • Czar's life and movements, and I knew you could tell me all about the
  • palace. Every poor student of medicine in Moscow knows all about king's
  • houses. It is their duty, is it not?
  • ALEXIS (_aside_). Can Michael suspect me? There is something strange in
  • his manner to-night. Why doesn't she come? The whole fire of revolution
  • seems fallen into dull ashes when she is not here.
  • [5]MICH. Have you cured many patients lately, at your hospital, boy?
  • ALEX. There is one who lies sick to death I would fain cure, but cannot.
  • MICH. Ay, and who is that?
  • ALEX. Russia, our mother.
  • MICH. The curing of Russia is surgeon's business, and must be done by
  • the knife. I like not your method of medicine.[5]
  • PRES. Professor, we have read the proofs of your last article; it is
  • very good indeed.
  • MICH. What is it about, Professor?
  • PROFESSOR. The subject, my good brother, is assassination considered as
  • a method of political reform.
  • MICH. I think little of pen and ink in revolutions. One dagger will do
  • more than a hundred epigrams. Still, let us read this scholar's last
  • production. Give it to me. I will read it myself.
  • PROF. Brother, you never mind your stops; let Alexis read it.
  • MICH. Ay! he is as tripping of speech as if he were some young
  • aristocrat; but for my own part I care not for the stops so that the
  • sense be plain.
  • ALEX. (_reading_). "The past has belonged to the tyrant, and he has
  • defiled it; ours is the future, and we shall make it holy." Ay! let us
  • make the future holy; let there be one revolution at least which is not
  • bred in crime, nurtured in murder!
  • MICH. They have spoken to us by the sword, and by the sword we shall
  • answer! You are too delicate for us, Alexis. There should be none here
  • but men whose hands are rough with labour or red with blood.
  • PRES. Peace, Michael, peace! He is the bravest heart among us.
  • MICH. (_aside_). He will need to be brave to-night.
  • (_The sound of sleigh bells is heard outside._)
  • VOICE (_outside_). Per crucem ad lucem.
  • _Answer of man on guard._ Per sanguinem ad libertatem.
  • MICH. Who is that?
  • VERA. God save the people!
  • PRES. Welcome, Vera, welcome! [6]We have been sick at heart till we saw
  • you; but now methinks the star of freedom has come to wake us from the
  • night.[6]
  • VERA. [7]It is night, indeed, brother! Night without moon or star![7]
  • Russia is smitten to the heart! The man Ivan whom men call the Czar
  • strikes now at our mother with a dagger deadlier than ever forged by
  • tyranny against a people's life!
  • MICH. What has the tyrant[8] done now?
  • VERA. To-morrow martial law is to be proclaimed in Russia.
  • OMNES. Martial law! We are lost! We are lost!
  • ALEX. Martial law! Impossible!
  • MICH. Fool, nothing is impossible in Russia but reform.
  • VERA. Ay, martial law. The last right to which the people clung has been
  • taken from them. Without trial, without appeal, without accuser even,
  • our brothers will be taken from their houses, shot in the streets like
  • dogs, sent away to die in the snow, to starve in the dungeon, to rot in
  • the mine. Do you know what martial law means? It means the strangling of
  • a whole nation. [9]The streets will be filled with soldiers night and
  • day; there will be sentinels at every door.[9] No man dare walk abroad
  • now but the spy or the traitor. Cooped up in the dens we hide in,
  • meeting by stealth, speaking with bated breath; what good can we do now
  • for Russia?
  • PRES. We can suffer at least.
  • VERA. We have done that too much already. The hour is now come to
  • annihilate and to revenge.
  • PRES. Up to this the people have borne everything.
  • VERA. Because they have understood nothing. But now we, the Nihilists,
  • have given them the tree of knowledge to eat of and the day of silent
  • suffering is over for Russia.
  • MICH. Martial law, Vera! This is fearful tidings you bring.
  • PRES. It is the death warrant of liberty in Russia.
  • VERA. Or the tocsin of[10] revolution.
  • MICH. Are you sure it is true?
  • VERA. Here is the proclamation. I stole it myself at the ball to-night
  • from a young fool, one of Prince Paul's secretaries, who had been given
  • it to copy. It was that which made me so late.
  • (_VERA hands proclamation to MICHAEL, who reads it._)
  • MICH. "To ensure the public safety--martial law. By order of the Czar,
  • father of his people." The father of his people!
  • VERA. Ay! a father whose name shall not be hallowed, whose kingdom shall
  • change to a republic, whose trespasses shall not be forgiven him,
  • because he has robbed us of our daily bread; with whom is neither might,
  • nor right, nor glory, now or for ever.
  • PRES. It must be about this that the council meet to-morrow. It has not
  • yet been signed.
  • ALEX. It shall not be while I have a tongue to plead with.
  • MICH. Or while I have hands to smite with.
  • VERA. Martial law! O God, how easy it is for a king to kill his people
  • by thousands, but we cannot rid ourselves of one crowned man in Europe!
  • What is there of awful majesty in these men which makes the hand
  • unsteady, the dagger treacherous, the pistol-shot harmless? Are they not
  • men of like passions with ourselves, vulnerable to the same diseases, of
  • flesh and blood not different from our own? What made Olgiati tremble at
  • the supreme crisis of that Roman life, [11]and Guido's nerve fail him
  • when he should have been of iron and of steel? A plague, I say, on these
  • fools of Naples, Berlin, and Spain![11] Methinks that if I stood face to
  • face with one of the crowned men my eye would see more clearly, my aim
  • be more sure, my whole body gain a strength and power that was not my
  • own! Oh, to think what stands between us and freedom in Europe! a few
  • old men, wrinkled, feeble, tottering dotards whom a boy could strangle
  • for a ducat, or a woman stab in a night-time. And these are the things
  • that keep us from democracy, that keep us from liberty. But now
  • methinks the brood of men is dead and the dull earth grown sick of
  • child-bearing, else would no crowned dog pollute God's air by living.
  • OMNES. Try us! Try us! Try us!
  • MICH. We shall try thee, too, some day, Vera.
  • VERA. I pray God thou mayest! Have I not strangled whatever nature is in
  • me, and shall I not keep my oath?
  • MICH. (_to PRESIDENT_). Martial law, President! Come, there is no time
  • to be lost. We have twelve hours yet before us till the council meet.
  • [12]Twelve hours! One can overthrow a dynasty in less time than
  • that.[12]
  • PRES. [13]Ay! or lose one's own head.[13]
  • (_MICHAEL and the PRESIDENT retire to one corner of the stage and sit
  • whispering. VERA takes up the proclamation, and reads it to herself;
  • ALEXIS watches and suddenly rushes up to her._)
  • ALEX. Vera!
  • VERA. Alexis, you here! Foolish boy, have I not prayed you to stay away?
  • All of us here are doomed to die before our time, fated to expiate by
  • suffering whatever good we do; but you, with your [14]bright boyish
  • face,[14] you are too young to die yet.
  • ALEX. One is never too young to die for one's country!
  • VERA. Why do you come here night after night?
  • ALEX. Because I love the people.
  • VERA. But your fellow-students must miss you. Are there no traitors
  • among them? You know what spies there are in the University here. O
  • Alexis, you must go! You see how desperate suffering has made us. There
  • is no room here for a nature like yours. You must not come again.
  • ALEX. Why do you think so poorly of me? Why should I live while my
  • brothers suffer?
  • VERA. You spake to me of your mother once. You said you loved her. Oh,
  • think of her!
  • ALEX. I have no mother now but Russia, my life is hers to take or give
  • away; but to-night I am here to see you. They tell me you are leaving
  • for Novgorod to-morrow.
  • VERA. I must. They are getting faint-hearted there, and I would fan the
  • flame of this revolution into such a blaze that the eyes of all kings in
  • Europe shall be blinded. If martial law is passed they will need me all
  • the more there. There is no limit, it seems, to the tyranny of one man;
  • but there shall be a limit to the suffering of a whole people.
  • ALEX. God knows it, I am with you. But you must not go. [15]The police
  • are watching every train for you.[15] When you are seized they have
  • orders to place you without trial in the lowest dungeon of the
  • palace.[16] I know it--no matter how. [17]Oh, think how without you the
  • sun goes from our life, how the people will lose their leader and
  • liberty her priestess.[17] Vera, you must not go!
  • VERA. If you wish it, I will stay. I would live a little longer for
  • freedom, a little longer for Russia.
  • ALEX. When you die then Russia is smitten indeed; when you die then I
  • shall lose all hope--all.... Vera, this is fearful news you
  • bring--martial law--it is too terrible. I knew it not, by my soul, I
  • knew it not!
  • VERA. How could you have known it? It is too well laid a plot for that.
  • This great White Czar, whose hands are red with the blood of the people
  • he has murdered, whose soul is black with his iniquity, is the cleverest
  • conspirator of us all. Oh, how could Russia bear two hearts like yours
  • and his!
  • ALEX. Vera, the Emperor was not always like this. There was a time when
  • he loved the people. It is that devil, whom God curse, Prince Paul
  • Maraloffski who has brought him to this. To-morrow, I swear it, I shall
  • plead for the people to the Emperor.
  • VERA. Plead to the Czar! Foolish boy, it is only those who are
  • sentenced to death that ever see our Czar. Besides, what should he care
  • for a voice that pleads for mercy? The cry of a strong nation in its
  • agony has not moved that heart of stone.
  • ALEX. (_aside_). Yet shall I plead to him. They can but kill me.
  • PROF. Here are the proclamations, Vera. Do you think they will do?
  • VERA. I shall read them. [18]How fair he looks?[18] Methinks he never
  • seemed so noble as to-night. Liberty is blessed in having such a lover.
  • ALEX. Well, President, what are you deep in?
  • MICH. We are thinking of the best way of killing bears. (_Whispers to
  • PRESIDENT and leads him aside._)
  • PROF. (_to VERA_). And the letters [19]from our brothers at Paris and
  • Berlin. What answer shall we send to them?[19]
  • VERA (_takes them mechanically_). Had I not strangled nature, sworn
  • neither to love nor be loved, methinks[20] I might have loved him. Oh, I
  • am a fool, a traitor myself, a traitor myself! But why did he come
  • amongst us with his bright[21] young face, his heart aflame for liberty,
  • his pure white soul? Why does he make me feel at times as if I would
  • have him as my king, Republican though I be? Oh, fool, fool, fool! False
  • to your oath! weak as water! Have done! Remember what you are--a
  • Nihilist, a Nihilist!
  • PRES. (_to MICHAEL_). But you will be seized, Michael.
  • MICH. I think not. I will wear the uniform of the Imperial Guard, and
  • the Colonel on duty is one of us. It is on the first floor, you
  • remember; so I can take a long shot.
  • PRES. Shall I tell the brethren?
  • [22]MICH. Not a word, not a word! There is a traitor amongst us.
  • VERA. Come, are these the proclamations? Yes, they will do; yes, they
  • will do. Send five hundred to Kiev and Odessa and Novgorod, five
  • hundred to Warsaw, and have twice the number distributed among the
  • Southern Provinces, though these dull Russian peasants care little for
  • our proclamations, and less for our martyrdoms. When the blow is struck,
  • it must be from the town, not from the country.
  • MICH. Ay, and by the sword not by the goose-quill.
  • VERA. Where are the letters from Poland?
  • PROF. Here.
  • VERA. Unhappy Poland! The eagles of Russia have fed on her heart. We
  • must not forget our brothers there.[22]
  • PRES. Is this true, Michael?
  • MICH. Ay, I stake my life on it.
  • PRES. [23]Let the doors be locked, then.[23] Alexis Ivanacievitch
  • entered on our roll of the brothers as a Student of the School of
  • Medicine at Moscow. Why did you not tell us of this bloody scheme[24] of
  • martial law?
  • ALEX. I, President?
  • MICH. Ay, you! You knew it, none better. Such weapons as these are not
  • forged in a day. Why did you not tell us of it? A week ago there had
  • been time [25]to lay the mine, to raise the barricade, to strike one
  • blow at least for liberty.[25] But now the hour is past. It is too late,
  • [26]it is too late![26] Why did you keep it a secret from us, I say?
  • ALEX. Now by the hand of freedom, Michael, my brother, you wrong me. I
  • knew nothing of this hideous law. By my soul, my brothers, I knew not of
  • it! How should I know?
  • MICH. Because you are a traitor! Where did you go when you left us the
  • night of our last meeting here?
  • [27]ALEX. To mine own house, Michael.[27]
  • MICH. Liar! I was on your track. You left here an hour after midnight.
  • Wrapped in a large cloak, you crossed the river in a boat a mile below
  • the second bridge, and gave the ferryman a gold piece, you, the poor
  • student of medicine! You doubled back twice, and hid in an archway so
  • long that I had almost made up my mind to stab you at once, only that I
  • am fond of hunting. So! you thought that you had baffled all pursuit,
  • did you? Fool! I am a bloodhound that never loses the scent. I followed
  • you from street to street. At last I saw you pass swiftly across the
  • Place St. Isaac, whisper to the guards the secret password, enter the
  • palace by a private door with your own key.
  • CONSPIRATORS. The palace!
  • VERA. Alexis!
  • MICH. I waited. All through the dreary watches of our long Russian night
  • I waited, that I might kill you with your Judas hire still hot in your
  • hand. But you never came out; you never left that palace at all. I saw
  • the blood-red sun rise through the yellow fog over the murky town; I saw
  • a new day of oppression dawn on Russia; but you never came out. So you
  • pass nights in the palace, do you? You know the password for the guards!
  • you have a key to a secret door. Oh, you are a spy--you are a spy! I
  • never trusted you, [28]with your soft white hands, your curled hair,
  • your pretty graces.[28] You have no mark of suffering about you; you
  • cannot be of the people. You are a spy--[29]a spy--traitor.[29]
  • OMNES. Kill him! Kill him! (_draw their knives_.)
  • VERA (_rushing in front of ALEXIS_). Stand back, I say, Michael! Stand
  • back all! [30]Do not dare[30] lay a hand upon him! He is the noblest
  • heart amongst us.
  • OMNES. Kill him! Kill him! He is a spy!
  • VERA. Dare to lay a finger on him, and I leave you all to yourselves.
  • PRES. Vera, did you not hear what Michael said of him? He stayed all
  • night in the Czar's palace. He has a password and a private key. What
  • else should he be but a spy?
  • VERA. Bah! I do not believe Michael. It is a lie! It is[31] a lie!
  • Alexis, say it is a lie!
  • ALEX. It is true. Michael has told what he saw. I did pass that night in
  • the Czar's palace. Michael has spoken the truth.
  • VERA. Stand back, I say; stand back! Alexis, I do not care. I trust you;
  • you would not betray us; you would not sell the people for money. You
  • are honest, true! Oh, say you are no spy!
  • ALEX. Spy? You know I am not. I am with you, my brothers, to the death.
  • MICH. Ay, to your own death.
  • ALEX. Vera, you[32] know I am true.
  • VERA. I know it well.
  • PRES. Why are you here, traitor?
  • ALEX. Because I love the people.
  • MICH. Then you can be a martyr for them?
  • VERA. You must kill me first, Michael, before you lay a finger on him.
  • PRES. Michael, we dare not lose Vera. It is her whim to let this boy
  • live. We can keep him here to-night. Up to this he has not betrayed us.
  • (_Tramp of soldiers outside, knocking at door._)[33]
  • VOICE. Open in the name of the Emperor!
  • MICH. He _has_ betrayed us. This is your doing, spy!
  • PRES. Come, Michael, come. We have no time to cut one another's throats
  • while we have our own heads to save.
  • VOICE. Open in the name of the Emperor!
  • PRES. Brothers, be masked all of you. [34]Michael, open the door. It is
  • our only chance.[34]
  • (_Enter GENERAL KOTEMKIN and soldiers._)
  • GEN. All honest citizens should be in their own houses at an hour before
  • midnight, and not more than five people have a right to meet privately.
  • Have you not noticed the proclamation, fellows?
  • MICH. Ay, you have spoiled every honest[35] wall in Moscow with it.
  • VERA. Peace, Michael, peace. Nay, Sir, we knew it not. We are a company
  • of strolling players travelling from Samara to Moscow to amuse His
  • Imperial Majesty the Czar.
  • GEN. But I heard loud voices before I entered. What was that?
  • VERA. We were rehearsing a new tragedy.
  • GEN. Your answers are too _honest_ to be true. Come, let me see who you
  • are. Take off those players' masks. By St. Nicholas, my beauty, if your
  • face matches your figure, you must be a choice morsel! Come, I say,
  • pretty one; I would sooner see your face than those of all the others.
  • PRES. O God! if he sees it is Vera, we are all lost!
  • GEN. No coquetting, my girl. Come, unmask, I say, or I shall tell my
  • guards to do it for you.
  • ALEX. Stand back, I say, General Kotemkin!
  • GEN. Who are you, fellow, that talk with such a tripping tongue to your
  • betters? (_ALEXIS takes his mask off_.) His Imperial Highness the
  • Czarevitch!
  • OMNES. The Czarevitch! [36]It is all over![36]
  • [37]PRES. He will give us up to the soldiers.[37]
  • MICH. (_to VERA_). Why did you not let me kill him? Come, we must fight
  • to the death for it.
  • VERA. Peace! he will not betray us.
  • ALEX. A whim of mine, General! You know how my father keeps me from the
  • world and imprisons me in the palace. I should really be bored to death
  • if I could not get out at night in disguise sometimes, and have some
  • romantic adventure in town. I fell in with these honest folks a few
  • hours ago.
  • GEN. But, your Highness--
  • ALEX. Oh, they are excellent actors, I assure you. If you had come in
  • ten minutes ago, you would have witnessed a most interesting scene.
  • GEN. Actors, are they, Prince?
  • ALEX. Ay, and very ambitious actors, too. They only care to play before
  • kings.
  • GEN. I' faith, your Highness, I was in hopes I had made a good haul of
  • Nihilists.[38]
  • ALEX. Nihilists in Moscow, General! with you as head of the police?
  • Impossible!
  • GEN. So I always tell your Imperial father. But I heard at the council
  • to-day that that woman Vera Sabouroff, the head of them, had been seen
  • in this very city. The Emperor's face turned as white as the snow
  • outside. I think I never saw such terror in any man before.
  • ALEX. She is a dangerous woman, then, this Vera Sabouroff?
  • GEN. The most dangerous in all Europe.
  • ALEX. Did you ever see her, General?
  • GEN. Why, five years ago, when I was a plain Colonel, I remember her,
  • your Highness, a common waiting girl in an inn. If I had known then what
  • she was going to turn out, I would have flogged her to death on the
  • roadside. She is not a woman at all; she is a sort of devil! For the
  • last eighteen months I have been hunting her, and caught sight of her
  • once last September outside Odessa.
  • ALEX. How did you let her go, General?
  • GEN. I was by myself, and she shot one of my horses just as I was
  • gaining on her. If I see her again I shan't miss my chance. The Emperor
  • has put twenty thousand roubles on her head.
  • ALEX. I hope you will get it, General; but meanwhile you are frightening
  • these honest people out of their wits, and disturbing the tragedy. Good
  • night, General.
  • GEN. Yes; but I should like to see their faces, your Highness.
  • ALEX. No, General; you must not ask that; you know how these gipsies
  • hate to be stared at.
  • GEN. Yes. But, your Highness--
  • ALEX. (_haughtily_). General, they are my friends, that is enough. And,
  • General, not a word of this little adventure here, you understand. I
  • shall rely on you.
  • GEN. I shall not forget, Prince. But shall we not see you back to the
  • palace? The State ball is almost over and you are expected.
  • ALEX. I shall be there; but I shall return alone. Remember, not a word
  • about my strolling players.
  • GEN. Or your pretty gipsy, eh, Prince? your pretty gipsy! I' faith, I
  • should like to see her before I go; she has such fine eyes through her
  • mask. Well, good night, your Highness; good night.
  • ALEX. Good night, General.
  • (_Exit GENERAL and the soldiers._)
  • VERA (_throwing off her mask_). Saved! and by you!
  • ALEX. (_clasping her hand_). Brothers, you trust me now?
  • TABLEAU.
  • END OF ACT I.
  • ACT II.
  • SCENE.--_Council Chamber in the Emperor's Palace, hung with yellow
  • tapestry. Table, with chair of State, set for the Czar; window behind,
  • opening on to a balcony. As the scene progresses the light outside gets
  • darker._
  • _Present._--PRINCE PAUL MARALOFFSKI, PRINCE PETROVITCH, COUNT ROUVALOFF,
  • BARON RAFF, COUNT PETOUCHOF.
  • PRINCE PETRO. So our young scatter-brained Czarevitch has been forgiven
  • at last, and is to take his seat here again.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Yes; if that is not meant as an extra punishment. For my
  • own part, at least, I find these Cabinet Councils extremely exhausting.
  • PRINCE PETRO. Naturally; you are always speaking.
  • PRINCE PAUL. No; I think it must be that I have to listen sometimes.
  • COUNT R. Still, anything is better than being kept in a sort of prison,
  • like he was--never allowed to go out into the world.
  • PRINCE PAUL. My dear Count, for romantic young people like he is, the
  • world always looks best at a distance; and a prison where one's allowed
  • to order one's own dinner is not at all a bad place. (_Enter the
  • CZAREVITCH. The courtiers rise._) Ah! good afternoon, Prince. Your
  • Highness is looking a little pale to-day.
  • CZARE. (_slowly, after a pause_). I want change of air.
  • PRINCE PAUL (_smiling_). A most revolutionary sentiment! Your Imperial
  • father would highly disapprove of any reforms with the thermometer in
  • Russia.
  • CZARE. (_bitterly_). My Imperial father had kept me for six months in
  • this dungeon of a palace. This morning he has me suddenly woke up to see
  • some wretched Nihilists hung; it sickened me, the bloody butchery,
  • though it was a noble thing to see how well these men can die.
  • PRINCE PAUL. When you are as old as I am, Prince, you will understand
  • that there are few things easier than to live badly and to die well.
  • CZARE. Easy to die well! A lesson experience cannot have taught you,
  • whatever you may know of a bad life.
  • PRINCE PAUL (_shrugging his shoulders_). Experience, the name men give
  • to their mistakes. I never commit any.
  • CZARE. (_bitterly_). No; crimes are more in your line.
  • PRINCE PETRO. (_to the CZAREVITCH_). The Emperor was a good deal
  • agitated about your late appearance at the ball last night, Prince.
  • [1]COUNT R. (_laughing_). I believe he thought the Nihilists had broken
  • into the palace and carried you off.
  • BARON RAFF. If they had you would have missed a charming dance.[1]
  • PRINCE PAUL. And[2] an excellent supper. Gringoire really excelled
  • himself in his salad. Ah! you may laugh, Baron; but to make a good salad
  • is a much more difficult thing than cooking accounts. To make a good
  • salad is to be a brilliant diplomatist--the problem is so entirely the
  • same in both cases. To know exactly how much oil one must put with one's
  • vinegar.
  • BARON RAFF. A cook and a diplomatist! an excellent parallel. If I had a
  • son who was a fool I'd make him one or the other.
  • PRINCE PAUL. I see your father did not hold the same opinion, Baron.
  • But, believe me, you are wrong to run down cookery. For myself, the only
  • immortality I desire is to invent a new sauce. I have never had time
  • enough to think seriously about it, but I feel it is in me, I feel it is
  • in me.
  • CZARE. You have certainly missed your _metier_,[3] Prince Paul; the
  • _cordon bleu_ would have suited you much better than the Grand Cross of
  • Honour. But you know you could never have worn your white apron well;
  • you would have soiled it too soon, your hands are not clean enough.
  • PRINCE PAUL (_bowing_). Que voulez vous? I manage your father's
  • business.
  • CZARE. (_bitterly_). You mismanage my father's business, you mean! Evil
  • genius of his life that you are! before you came there was some love
  • left in him. It is you who have embittered his nature, poured into his
  • ear the poison of treacherous counsel, made him hated by the whole
  • people, made him what he is--a tyrant!
  • (_The courtiers look significantly at each other._)
  • PRINCE PAUL (_calmly_). I see your Highness does want change of air. But
  • I have been an eldest son myself. (_Lights a cigarette._) I know what it
  • is when a father won't die to please one.
  • (_The CZAREVITCH goes to the top of the stage, and leans against the
  • window, looking out._)
  • PRINCE PETRO. (_to BARON RAFF_). Foolish boy! [4]He will be sent into
  • exile, or worse, if he is not careful.[4]
  • BARON RAFF. Yes.[5] What a mistake it is to be sincere!
  • PRINCE PETRO. The only folly you have never committed, Baron.
  • BARON RAFF. One has only one head, you know, Prince.
  • PRINCE PAUL. My dear Baron, your head is the last thing any one would
  • wish to take from you. (_Pulls out snuffbox and offers it to PRINCE
  • PETROVITCH._)
  • PRINCE PETRO. Thanks, Prince! Thanks!
  • PRINCE PAUL. Very delicate, isn't it? I get it direct from Paris. But
  • under this vulgar Republic everything has degenerated over there.
  • "Cotelettes à l'impériale" vanished, of course, with the Bourbon, and
  • omelettes went out with the Orleanists. La belle France is entirely
  • ruined, Prince, through bad morals and worse cookery. (_Enter the
  • MARQUIS DE POIVRARD._) Ah! Marquis. I trust Madame la Marquise is well.
  • MARQUIS DE P. You ought to know better than I do, Prince Paul; you see
  • more _of_ her.
  • PRINCE PAUL (_bowing_). Perhaps I see more _in_ her, Marquis. Your wife
  • is really a charming woman, so full of _esprit_, and so satirical too;
  • she talks continually of you when we are together.
  • PRINCE PETRO. (_looking at the clock_). His Majesty is a little late
  • to-day, is he not?
  • PRINCE PAUL. What has happened to you, my dear Petrovitch? you seem
  • quite out of sorts. You haven't quarrelled with your cook, I hope? What
  • a tragedy that would be for you; you would lose all your friends.
  • PRINCE PETRO. I fear I wouldn't be so fortunate as that. You forget I
  • would still have my purse.[6] But you are wrong for once; my chef and I
  • are on excellent[7] terms.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Then your creditors or Mademoiselle Vera Sabouroff have
  • been writing to you? I find both of them such excellent correspondents.
  • But really you needn't be alarmed. I find the most violent proclamations
  • from the Executive Committee, as they call it, left all over my house. I
  • never read them; they are so badly spelt as a rule.
  • PRINCE PETRO. Wrong again, Prince; the Nihilists leave me alone for some
  • reason or other.
  • PRINCE PAUL (_aside_). Ah! true. I forgot. Indifference is the revenge
  • the world takes on mediocrities.
  • PRINCE PETRO. I am bored with life,[8] Prince. Since the opera season
  • ended I have been a perpetual martyr to ennui.
  • PRINCE PAUL. The maladie du siècle! You want a new excitement, Prince.
  • Let me see--you have been married twice already; suppose you
  • try--falling in love, for once.
  • BARON R. Prince, I have been thinking a good deal lately--
  • PRINCE PAUL (_interrupting_). You surprise me very much, Baron.
  • BARON R. I cannot understand your nature.
  • PRINCE PAUL (_smiling_). If my nature had been made to suit your
  • comprehension rather than my own requirements, I am afraid I would have
  • made a very poor figure in the world.
  • COUNT R. There seems to be nothing in life about which you would not
  • jest.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Ah! my dear Count, life is much too important a thing ever
  • to talk seriously about it.
  • CZARE. (_coming back from the window_). I don't think Prince Paul's
  • nature is such a mystery. He would stab his best friend for the sake of
  • writing an epigram on his tombstone, or experiencing a new sensation.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Parbleu! I would sooner lose my best friend than my worst
  • enemy. To have friends, you know, one need only be good-natured; but
  • when a man has no enemy left there must be something mean about him.
  • CZARE. (_bitterly_). If to have enemies is a measure of greatness, then
  • you must be a Colossus, indeed, Prince.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Yes, I know I'm the most hated man in Russia, except your
  • father, [9]except your father, of course,[9] Prince. He doesn't seem to
  • like it much, by the way, but I do, I assure you. (_Bitterly._) I love
  • to drive through the streets and see how the canaille scowl at me from
  • every corner. It makes me feel I am a power in Russia; one man against a
  • hundred millions! Besides, I have no ambition to be a popular hero, to
  • be crowned with laurels one year and pelted with stones the next; I
  • prefer dying peaceably in my own bed.
  • CZARE. And after death?
  • PRINCE PAUL (_shrugging his shoulders_). Heaven is a despotism. I shall
  • be at home there.
  • CZARE. Do you never think of the people and their rights?
  • PRINCE PAUL. The people and their rights bore me. I am sick of both. In
  • these modern days to be vulgar, illiterate, common and vicious, seems to
  • give a man a marvellous infinity of rights that his honest fathers never
  • dreamed of. Believe me, Prince, in good democracy every man should be an
  • aristocrat; but these people in Russia who seek to thrust us out are no
  • better than the animals in one's preserves, and made to be shot at, most
  • of them.
  • CZARE. (_excitedly_). If they are[10] common, illiterate, vulgar, no
  • better than the beasts of the field, who made them so?
  • (_Enter AIDE-DE-CAMP._)
  • AIDE-DE-CAMP. His Imperial Majesty, the Emperor! (_PRINCE PAUL looks at
  • the CZAREVITCH, and smiles._)
  • (_Enter the CZAR, surrounded by his guard._)
  • CZARE. (_rushing forward to meet him_). Sire!
  • CZAR (_nervous and frightened_). Don't come too near me, boy! Don't come
  • too near me, I say! There is always something about an heir to a crown
  • unwholesome to his father. Who is that man over there? I don't know him.
  • What is he doing? Is he a conspirator? Have you searched him? Give him
  • till to-morrow to confess, then hang him!--hang him!
  • PRINCE PAUL. Sire, you are anticipating history. This is Count
  • Petouchof, your new ambassador to Berlin. He is come to kiss hands on
  • his appointment.
  • CZAR. To kiss my hand? There is some plot in it. He wants to poison me.
  • There, kiss my son's hand; it will do quite as well.
  • (_PRINCE PAUL signs to COUNT PETOUCHOF to leave the room. Exit PETOUCHOF
  • and the guards. CZAR sinks down into his chair. The courtiers remain
  • silent._)
  • PRINCE PAUL (_approaching_). Sire! will your Majesty--
  • CZAR. What do you startle me like that for? No, I won't. (_Watches the
  • courtiers nervously._) Why are you clattering your sword, sir? (_To
  • COUNT ROUVALOFF._) Take it off, I shall have no man wear a sword in my
  • presence (_looking at CZAREVITCH_), least of all my son. (_To PRINCE
  • PAUL._) You are not angry with me, Prince? You won't desert me, will
  • you? Say you won't desert me. What do you want? You can have
  • anything--anything.
  • PRINCE PAUL (_bowing very low_). Sire, 'tis enough for me to have your
  • confidence. (_Aside._) I was afraid he was going to revenge himself and
  • give me another decoration.
  • CZAR (_returning to his chair_). Well, gentlemen.
  • MARQ. DE POIV. Sire, I have the honour to present to you a loyal address
  • from your subjects in the Province of Archangel, expressing their horror
  • at the last attempt on your Majesty's life.
  • PRINCE PAUL. The last attempt but two, you ought to have said, Marquis.
  • Don't you see it is dated three weeks back?
  • CZAR. They are good people in the Province of Archangel--honest, loyal
  • people. They love me very much--simple, loyal people; give them a new
  • saint, it costs nothing. Well, Alexis (_turning to the CZAREVITCH_)--how
  • many traitors were hung this morning?
  • CZARE. There were three men strangled, Sire.
  • CZAR. There should have been three[11] thousand. I would to God that
  • this people had but one neck that I might strangle them with one noose!
  • Did they tell anything? whom did they implicate? what did they confess?
  • CZARE. Nothing, Sire.
  • CZAR. They should have been tortured then; why weren't they tortured?
  • Must I always be fighting in the dark? Am I never to know from what root
  • these traitors spring?
  • CZARE. What root should there be of discontent among the people but
  • tyranny and injustice amongst their rulers?
  • CZAR. What did you say, boy? tyranny! tyranny! Am I a tyrant? I'm not. I
  • love the people. I'm their father. I'm called so in every official
  • proclamation. Have a care, boy; have a care. You don't seem to be cured
  • yet of your foolish tongue. (_Goes over to PRINCE PAUL, and puts his
  • hand on his shoulder._) Prince Paul, tell me were there many people
  • there this morning to see the Nihilists hung?
  • PRINCE PAUL. Hanging is of course a good deal less of a novelty in
  • Russia now, Sire, than it was three or four years ago; and you know how
  • easily the people get tired even of their best amusements. But the
  • square and the tops of the houses were really quite crowded, were they
  • not, Prince? (_To the CZAREVITCH who takes no notice._)
  • CZAR. That's right; all loyal citizens should be there. It shows them
  • what to look forward to. Did you arrest any one in the crowd?
  • PRINCE PAUL. Yes, Sire, a woman for cursing your name. (_The CZAREVITCH
  • starts anxiously._) She was the mother of the two criminals.
  • CZAR (_looking at CZAREVITCH_). She should have blessed me for having
  • rid her of her children. Send her to prison.
  • CZARE. The prisons of Russia are too full already, Sire. There is no
  • room in them for any more victims.
  • [12]CZAR. They don't die fast enough, then. You should put more of them
  • into one cell at once. You don't keep them long enough in the mines. If
  • you do they're sure to die; but you're all too merciful. I'm too
  • merciful myself. Send her to Siberia.[12] She is sure to die on the way.
  • (_Enter an AIDE-DE-CAMP._) Who's that? Who's that?
  • AIDE-DE-CAMP. A letter for his Imperial Majesty.
  • CZAR (_to PRINCE PAUL_). I won't open it. There may be something in it.
  • PRINCE PAUL. It would be a very disappointing letter, Sire, if there
  • wasn't. (_Takes letter himself, and reads it._)
  • PRINCE PETRO. (_to COUNT ROUVALOFF_). It must be some sad news. I know
  • that smile too well.
  • PRINCE PAUL. From the Chief of the Police at Archangel, Sire. "The
  • Governor of the province was shot this morning by a woman as he was
  • entering the courtyard of his own house. The assassin has been seized."
  • CZAR. I never trusted the people of Archangel. It's a nest of Nihilists
  • and conspirators. Take away their saints; they don't deserve them.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Your Highness would punish them more severely by giving
  • them an extra one. Three governors shot in two months. (_Smiles to
  • himself._) Sire, permit me to recommend your loyal subject, the Marquis
  • de Poivrard, as the new governor of your Province of Archangel.
  • MARQ. DE POIV. (_hurriedly_). Sire, I am unfit for this post.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Marquis, you are too modest. Believe me, there is no man
  • in Russia I would sooner see Governor of Archangel than yourself.
  • (_Whispers to CZAR._)
  • CZAR. Quite right, Prince Paul; you are always right. See that the
  • Marquis's letters are made out at once.
  • PRINCE PAUL. He can start to-night, Sire. I shall really miss you very
  • much, Marquis. I always liked your taste in wines and wives extremely.
  • MARQ. DE POIV. (_to the CZAR_). Start to-night, Sire? (_PRINCE PAUL
  • whispers to the CZAR._)
  • CZAR. Yes, Marquis, to-night; it is better to go at once.
  • PRINCE PAUL. I shall see that Madame la Marquise is not too lonely while
  • you are away; so you need not be alarmed for her.
  • COUNT R. (_to PRINCE PETROVITCH_). I should be more alarmed for myself.
  • CZAR. The Governor of Archangel shot in his own courtyard by a woman!
  • I'm not safe here. I'm not safe anywhere, with that she devil of the
  • revolution, Vera Sabouroff, here in Moscow. Prince Paul, is that woman
  • still here?
  • PRINCE PAUL. They tell me she was at the Grand Duke's ball last night. I
  • can hardly believe that; but she certainly had intended to leave for
  • Novgorod to-day, Sire. The police were watching every train for her;
  • but, for some reason or other, she did not go. Some traitor must have
  • warned her. But I shall catch her yet. A chase after a beautiful woman
  • is always exciting.
  • CZAR. You must hunt her down with bloodhounds, and when she is taken I
  • shall hew her limb from limb. I shall stretch her on the rack till her
  • pale white body is twisted and curled like paper in the fire.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Oh, we shall have another hunt immediately for her, Sire!
  • Prince Alexis will assist us, I am sure.
  • CZARE. You never require any assistance to ruin a woman, Prince Paul.
  • CZAR. Vera, the Nihilist, in Moscow! O God,[13] were it not better to
  • die at once the dog's death they plot for me than to live as I live now!
  • Never to sleep, or, if I do, to dream such horrid dreams that Hell
  • itself were peace when matched with them. To trust none but those I have
  • bought, to buy none worth trusting! To see a traitor in every smile,
  • poison in every dish, a dagger in every hand! To lie awake at night,
  • listening from hour to hour for the stealthy creeping of the murderer,
  • for the laying of the damned mine! You are all spies! you are all spies!
  • You worst of all--you, my own son! Which of you is it who hides these
  • bloody proclamations under my own pillow, or at the table where I sit?
  • Which of ye all is the Judas who betrays me? O God! O God! methinks
  • there was a time once, in our war with England, when nothing could make
  • me afraid. (_This with more calm and pathos._) I have ridden into the
  • crimson heart of war, and borne back an eagle which those wild islanders
  • had taken from us. Men said I was brave then. My father gave me the Iron
  • Cross of valour. Oh, could he see me now with this coward's livery ever
  • in my cheek! (_Sinks into his chair._) I never knew any love when I was
  • a boy. I was ruled by terror myself, how else should I rule now?
  • (_Starts up._) But I will have revenge; I will have revenge. For every
  • hour I have lain awake at night, waiting for the noose or the dagger,
  • they shall pass years in Siberia, centuries in the mines! Ay! I shall
  • have revenge.
  • CZARE. Father! have mercy on the people. Give them what they ask.
  • PRINCE PAUL. And begin, Sire, with your own head; they have a particular
  • liking for that.
  • CZAR. The people! the people! A tiger which I have let loose upon
  • myself; but I will fight with it to the death. [14]I am done with half
  • measures.[14] I shall crush these Nihilists at a blow. There shall not
  • be a man of them, ay, or a woman either, left alive in Russia. [15]Am I
  • Emperor for[15] nothing, that a woman should hold me at bay? Vera
  • Sabouroff shall be in my power, I swear it, before a week is ended,
  • [16]though I burn my whole city to find her.[16] She shall be flogged by
  • the knout, stifled in the fortress, strangled in the square!
  • CZARE. O God!
  • CZAR. For two years her hands have been clutching at my throat; for two
  • years she has made my life a hell; but I shall have revenge. Martial
  • law, Prince, martial law over the whole Empire; that will give me
  • revenge. A good measure, Prince, eh? a good measure.
  • PRINCE PAUL. And an economical one too, Sire. It would carry off your
  • surplus population in six months, and save you many expenses in courts
  • of justice; they will not be needed now.
  • CZAR. Quite right. There are too many people in Russia, too much money
  • spent on them, too much money in courts of justice. I'll shut them up.
  • CZARE. Sire, reflect before--
  • CZAR. When can you have the proclamations ready, Prince Paul?
  • PRINCE PAUL. They have been printed for the last six months, Sire. I
  • knew you would need them.
  • CZAR. That's good! That's very good! Let us begin at once. Ah, Prince,
  • if every king in Europe had a minister like you--
  • CZARE. There would be less kings in Europe than there are.
  • CZAR (_in frightened whisper, to PRINCE PAUL_). What does he mean? Do
  • you trust him? His prison hasn't cured him yet. Shall I banish him?
  • Shall I (_whispers_)...? The Emperor Paul did it. The Empress Catherine
  • there[17] (_points to picture on the wall_) did it. Why shouldn't I?
  • PRINCE PAUL. Your Majesty, there is no need for alarm. The Prince is a
  • very ingenuous young man. He pretends to be devoted to the people, and
  • lives in a palace; preaches socialism, and draws a salary that would
  • support a province. He'll find out one day that the best cure for
  • Republicanism is the Imperial crown, and will cut up the "bonnet rogue"
  • of Democracy to make decorations for his Prime Minister.
  • CZAR. You are right. If he really loved the people, he could not be my
  • son.
  • PRINCE PAUL. If he lived with the people for a fortnight, their bad
  • dinners would soon cure him of his democracy. Shall we begin, Sire?
  • CZAR. At once. Read the proclamation. Gentlemen, be seated. Alexis,
  • Alexis, I say, come and hear it! It will be good practice for you; you
  • will be doing it yourself some day.
  • CZARE. I have heard too much of it already. (_Takes his seat at the
  • table. COUNT ROUVALOFF whispers to him._)
  • CZAR. What are you whispering about there, Count Rouvaloff?
  • COUNT R. I was giving his Royal Highness some good advice, your Majesty.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Count Rouvaloff is the typical spendthrift, Sire; he is
  • always giving away what he needs most. (_Lays papers before the CZAR._)
  • I think, Sire, you will approve of this:--"Love of the people," "Father
  • of his people," "Martial law," and the usual allusions to Providence in
  • the last line. All it requires now is your Imperial Majesty's signature.
  • CZARE. Sire!
  • PRINCE PAUL (_hurriedly_). I promise your Majesty to crush every
  • Nihilist in Russia in six months if you sign this proclamation; every
  • Nihilist in Russia.
  • CZAR. Say that again! To crush every Nihilist in Russia; to crush this
  • woman, their leader, who makes war upon me in my own city. Prince Paul
  • Maraloffski, I create you Marechale of the whole Russian Empire to help
  • you to carry out martial law.
  • CZAR. Give me the proclamation. I will sign it at once.
  • PRINCE PAUL (_points on paper_). Here, Sire.
  • CZARE. (_starts up and puts his hands on the paper_). Stay! I tell you,
  • stay! The priests have taken heaven from the people, and you would take
  • the earth away too.
  • PRINCE PAUL. We have no time, Prince, now. This boy will ruin
  • everything. The pen, Sire.
  • CZARE. What! is it so small a thing to strangle a nation, to murder a
  • kingdom, to wreck an empire? Who are we who dare lay this ban of terror
  • on a people? Have we less vices than they have, that we bring them to
  • the bar of judgment before us?
  • PRINCE PAUL. What a Communist the Prince is! He would have an equal
  • distribution of sin as well as of property.
  • CZARE. Warmed by the same sun, nurtured by the same air, fashioned of
  • flesh and blood like to our own, wherein are they different to us, save
  • that they starve while we surfeit, that they toil while we idle, that
  • they sicken while we poison, that they die while we strangle?
  • CZAR. How dare--?
  • CZARE. I dare all for the people; but you would rob them of common
  • rights of common men.
  • CZAR. The people have no rights.
  • CZARE. Then they have great wrongs. Father, they have won your battles
  • for you; from the pine forests of the Baltic to the palms of India they
  • have ridden on victory's mighty wings in search of your glory! Boy as I
  • am in years, I have seen wave after wave of living men sweep up the
  • heights of battle to their death; ay, and snatch perilous conquest from
  • the scales of war when the bloody crescent seemed to shake above our
  • eagles.
  • CZAR (_somewhat moved_). Those men are dead. What have I to do with
  • them?
  • CZARE. Nothing! The dead are safe; you[18] cannot harm them now. They
  • sleep their last long sleep. Some in Turkish waters, others by the
  • windswept heights of Norway and the Dane! But these, the living, our
  • brothers, what have you done for them? They asked you for bread, you
  • gave them a stone. They sought for freedom, you scourged them with
  • scorpions. You have sown the seeds of this revolution yourself!--
  • PRINCE PAUL. And are we not cutting down the harvest?
  • CZARE. Oh, my brothers! better far that ye had died in the iron hail and
  • screaming shell of battle than to come back to such a doom as[19] this!
  • The beasts of the forests have their lairs, and the wild beasts their
  • caverns, but the people of Russia, conquerors of the world, have not
  • where to lay their heads.
  • PRINCE PAUL. They have the headsman's block.
  • CZARE. The headsman's block! Ay! you have killed their souls at your
  • pleasure, you would kill their bodies now.
  • CZAR. Insolent boy! Have you forgotten who is Emperor of Russia?
  • CZARE. No! The people reign now, by the grace of God.[20] You should
  • have been their shepherd; you have fled away like the hireling, and let
  • the wolves in upon them.
  • CZAR. Take him away! Take him away, Prince Paul!
  • CZARE. God hath given this people tongues to speak with; you would cut
  • them out that they may be dumb in their agony, silent in their torture!
  • But God hath given them hands to smite with, and they shall smite! Ay!
  • from the sick and labouring womb of this unhappy land some revolution,
  • like a bloody child, shall[21] rise up and slay you.
  • CZAR (_leaping up_). Devil! Assassin! Why do you beard me thus to my
  • face?
  • CZARE. Because I[22] am a Nihilist! (_The ministers start to their feet;
  • there is dead silence for a few minutes._)
  • CZAR. A Nihilist! a Nihilist! Scorpion whom I have nurtured, traitor
  • whom I have fondled, is this your bloody secret? Prince Paul
  • Maraloffski, Marechale of the Russian Empire, arrest the Czarevitch!
  • MINISTERS. Arrest the Czarevitch!
  • CZAR. A Nihilist! If you have sown with them, you shall reap with them!
  • If you have talked with them, you shall rot with them! If you have lived
  • with them, with them you shall die!
  • PRINCE PETRO. Die!
  • CZAR. A plague on all sons, I say! There should be no more marriages in
  • Russia when one can breed such vipers as you are! Arrest the Czarevitch,
  • I say!
  • PRINCE PAUL. Czarevitch! by order of the Emperor, I demand your sword.
  • (_CZAREVITCH gives up sword; PRINCE PAUL places it on the table._)
  • Foolish boy! you are not made for a conspirator; you have not learned to
  • hold your tongue. Heroics are out of place in a palace.
  • CZAR (_sinks into his chair with his eyes fixed on the CZAREVITCH_). O
  • God!
  • CZARE. If I am to die for the people, I am ready; one Nihilist more or
  • less in Russia, what does that matter?
  • PRINCE PAUL (_aside_). A good deal I should say to the one Nihilist.
  • [23]CZARE. The mighty brotherhood to which I belong has a thousand such
  • as I am, ten thousand better still! (_The CZAR starts in his seat._) The
  • star of freedom is risen already, and far off I hear the mighty wave
  • democracy break on these cursed shores.[23]
  • PRINCE PAUL (_to PRINCE PETROVITCH_). In that case you and I had better
  • learn how to swim.
  • CZARE. Father, Emperor, Imperial Master, I plead not for my own life,
  • but for the lives of my brothers, the people.
  • PRINCE PAUL (_bitterly_). Your brothers, the people, Prince, are not
  • content with their own lives, they always want to take their neighbour's
  • too.
  • CZAR (_standing up_). I am sick of being afraid. I have done with terror
  • now. From this day I proclaim war against the people--war to their
  • annihilation. As they have dealt with me, so shall I deal with them. I
  • shall grind them to powder, and strew their dust upon the air. There
  • shall be a spy in every man's house, a traitor on every hearth, a
  • hangman in every village, a gibbet in every square. Plague, leprosy, or
  • fever shall be less deadly than my wrath; I will make every frontier a
  • grave-yard, every province a lazar-house, and cure the sick by the
  • sword. I shall have peace in Russia, though it be the peace of the dead.
  • Who said I was a coward? Who said I was afraid? See, thus shall I crush
  • this people beneath my feet! (_Takes up sword of CZAREVITCH off table
  • and tramples on it._)
  • CZARE. Father, beware, the sword you tread on may turn and wound you.
  • The people suffer long, but vengeance comes at last, vengeance with red
  • hands and bloody purpose.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Bah! the people are bad shots; they always miss one.
  • CZARE. There are times when the people are instruments of God.
  • CZAR. Ay! and when kings are God's scourges for the people. Oh, my own
  • son, in my own house! My own flesh and blood against me! Take him away!
  • Take him away! Bring in my guards. (_Enter the Imperial Guard. CZAR
  • points to CZAREVITCH, who stands alone at the side of the stage._) To
  • the blackest prison in Moscow! Let me never see his face again.
  • (_CZAREVITCH is being led out._) No, no, leave him! I don't trust
  • guards. They are all Nihilists! They would let him escape and he would
  • kill me, kill me! No, I'll bring him to prison myself, you and I (_to
  • PRINCE PAUL_). I trust you, you have no mercy. I shall have no mercy.
  • Oh, my own son against me! How hot it is! The air stifles me! I feel as
  • if I were going to faint, as if something were at my throat. Open the
  • windows, I say! Out of my sight! Out of my sight! I can't bear his eyes.
  • Wait, wait for me. (_Throws window open and goes out on balcony._)
  • PRINCE PAUL (_looking at his watch_). The dinner is sure to be spoiled.
  • How annoying politics are and eldest sons!
  • VOICE (_outside, in the street_). God save the people! (_CZAR is shot,
  • and staggers back into the room._)
  • CZARE. (_breaking from the guards, and rushing over_). Father!
  • CZAR. Murderer! Murderer! You did it! Murderer! (_Dies._)
  • TABLEAU.
  • END OF ACT II.
  • ACT III.
  • _Same scene and business as Act I. Man in yellow dress, with drawn
  • sword, at the door._
  • _Password outside._ Væ tyrannis.
  • _Answer._ Væ victis (_repeated three times_).
  • (_Enter CONSPIRATORS, who form a semicircle, masked and cloaked._)
  • PRESIDENT. What hour is it?
  • FIRST CONSP. The hour to strike.
  • PRES. What day?
  • SECOND CONSP. The day of Marat.[1]
  • PRES. In what month?
  • SECOND CONSP. The month of liberty.
  • PRES. What is our duty?
  • FOURTH CONSP. To obey.
  • PRES. Our creed?
  • FIFTH CONSP. Parbleu, Mons. le President, I never knew you had one.
  • CONSPS. A spy! A spy! Unmask! Unmask! A spy!
  • PRES. [2]Let the doors be shut. There are others but Nihilists
  • present.[2]
  • CONSPS. Unmask! Unmask! [3]Kill him! kill him![3] (_Masked CONSPIRATOR
  • unmasks._) Prince Paul!
  • VERA. Devil! Who lured you into the lion's den?
  • CONSPS. Kill him! kill him![4]
  • PRINCE PAUL. En vérité, Messieurs, you are not over-hospitable in your
  • welcome.
  • VERA. Welcome! What welcome should we give you but the dagger or the
  • noose?
  • PRINCE PAUL. I had no idea, really, that the Nihilists were so
  • exclusive. Let me assure you that if I had not always had an _entree_
  • to the very best society, and the very worst conspiracies, I could never
  • have been Prime Minister in Russia.
  • VERA. The tiger cannot change its nature, nor the snake lose its venom;
  • but are you turned a lover of the people?
  • PRINCE PAUL. Mon Dieu, non, Mademoiselle! I would much sooner talk
  • scandal in a drawing-room than treason in a cellar. Besides, I hate the
  • common mob, who smell of garlic, smoke bad tobacco, get up early, and
  • dine off one dish.
  • PRES. What have you to gain, then, by a revolution?
  • PRINCE PAUL. Mon ami, I have nothing left to lose. That scatter-brained
  • boy, this new Czar, has banished me.
  • VERA. To Siberia?
  • PRINCE PAUL. No, to Paris. He has confiscated my estates, robbed me of
  • my office and my cook. I have nothing left but my decorations. I am here
  • for revenge.[5]
  • PRES. Then you have a right to be one of us. [5]We also meet daily for
  • revenge.[5]
  • PRINCE PAUL. You want money, of course. No one ever joins a conspiracy
  • who has any. Here. (_Throws money on table._) You have so many spies
  • that I should think you want information. Well, you will find me the
  • best informed man in Russia on the abuses of our Government. I made them
  • nearly all myself.
  • VERA. President, I don't trust this man. He has done us too much harm in
  • Russia to let him go in safety.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Believe me, Mademoiselle, you are wrong; I will be a most
  • valuable addition to your circle; as for you, gentlemen, if I had not
  • thought that you would be useful to me I shouldn't have risked my neck
  • among you, or dined an hour earlier than usual so as to be in time.
  • PRES. Ay, if he had wanted to spy on us, Vera, he wouldn't have come
  • himself.
  • PRINCE PAUL (_aside_). No; I should have sent my best friend.
  • PRES. Besides, Vera, he is just the man to give us the information we
  • want about some business we have in hand to-night.
  • VERA. Be it so if you wish it.
  • PRES. Brothers, is it your will that Prince Paul Maraloffski be
  • admitted, and take the oath of the Nihilist?
  • CONSPS. It is! it is!
  • PRES. (_holding out dagger and a paper_). Prince Paul, the dagger or the
  • oath?
  • PRINCE PAUL (_smiles sardonically_). I would sooner annihilate than be
  • annihilated. (_Takes paper._)
  • PRES. Remember: [6]Betray us, and as long as the earth holds poison or
  • steel, as long as men can strike or woman betray, you shall not escape
  • vengeance.[6] The Nihilists never forget their friends, or forgive their
  • enemies.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Really? I did not think you were so civilized.
  • VERA (_pacing up and down_). Why is he not here? He will not keep the
  • crown. I know him well.
  • PRES. Sign. (_PRINCE PAUL signs_.) You said you thought we had no creed.
  • You were wrong. Read it!
  • VERA. This is a dangerous thing, President. What can we do with this
  • man?
  • PRES. We can use him.
  • VERA. And afterwards?
  • PRES. (_shrugging his shoulders_). Strangle him.
  • PRINCE PAUL (_reading_). "The rights of humanity!" In the old times men
  • carried out their rights for themselves as they lived, but nowadays
  • every baby seems born with a social manifesto in its mouth much bigger
  • than itself.[7] "Nature is not a temple, but a workshop: we demand the
  • right to labour." Ah, I shall surrender my own rights in that respect.
  • VERA (_pacing up and down behind_). Oh, will he never come? will he
  • never come?
  • PRINCE PAUL. "The family as subversive of true socialistic and communal
  • unity is to be annihilated." Yes, President, I agree completely with
  • Article 5. A family is a terrible incumbrance, especially when one is
  • not married. (_Three knocks at the door._)
  • VERA. Alexis at last!
  • _Password._ Væ tyrannis!
  • _Answer._ Væ victis!
  • (_Enter MICHAEL STROGANOFF._)
  • PRES.[8] Michael, the regicide! Brothers, let us do honour to a man who
  • has killed a king.
  • [9]VERA (_aside_). Oh, he will come yet.[9]
  • PRES. Michael, you have saved Russia.
  • MICH. Ay, Russia was free for a moment [10]when the tyrant fell, but the
  • sun of liberty has set again like that false dawn which cheats our eyes
  • in autumn.
  • PRES. The dread night of tyranny is not yet past for Russia.
  • MICH. (_clutching his knife_).[10] One more blow, and the end is come
  • indeed.
  • VERA (_aside_). One more blow! What does he mean? Oh, impossible! but
  • why is he not with us? Alexis! Alexis! why are you not here?
  • PRES. But how did you escape, Michael? They said you had been seized.
  • MICH. I was dressed in the uniform of the Imperial Guard. The Colonel on
  • duty was a brother, and gave me the password. I drove through the troops
  • in safety with it, and, thanks to my good horse, reached the walls
  • before the gates were closed.
  • PRES. What a chance his coming out on the balcony was!
  • MICH. A chance? There is no such thing as chance. It was God's finger
  • led him there.
  • PRES. And where have you been these three days?
  • MICH. Hiding in the house of the priest Nicholas at the cross-roads.
  • PRES. Nicholas is an honest man.
  • MICH. Ay, honest enough for a priest. I am here now for vengeance on a
  • traitor!
  • VERA (_aside_). O God, will he never come? Alexis! why are you not here?
  • You cannot have turned traitor!
  • MICH. (_seeing PRINCE PAUL_). Prince Paul Maraloffski here! By St.
  • George, a lucky capture! This must have been Vera's doing. She is the
  • only one who could have lured that serpent into the trap.
  • PRES. Prince Paul has just taken the oath.
  • VERA. Alexis, the Czar, has banished him from Russia.
  • MICH. Bah! A blind to cheat us. We will keep Prince Paul here, [11]and
  • find some office for him in our reign of terror.[11] He is well
  • accustomed by this time to bloody work.
  • PRINCE PAUL (_approaching MICHAEL_). That was a long shot of yours, mon
  • camarade.
  • MICH. I have had a good deal of practice shooting, since I have been a
  • boy, off your Highness's wild boars.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Are my gamekeepers like moles, then, always asleep?
  • MICH. No, Prince. I am one of them; but, like you, I am fond of robbing
  • what I am put to watch.
  • PRES. This must be a new atmosphere for you, Prince Paul. We speak the
  • truth to one another here.
  • PRINCE PAUL. How misleading you must find it. You have an odd medley
  • here, President--a little rococo, I am afraid.
  • PRES. You recognise a good many friends, I dare say?
  • PRINCE PAUL. Yes, there is always more brass than brains in an
  • aristocracy.
  • PRES. But you are here yourself?
  • PRINCE PAUL. I? As I cannot be Prime Minister, I must be a Nihilist.
  • There is no alternative.
  • VERA. O God, will he never come? The hand is on the stroke of the hour.
  • Will he never come?
  • MICH. (_aside_). President, you know what we have to do? 'Tis but a
  • sorry hunter who leaves the wolf cub alive to avenge his father. How are
  • we to get at this boy? It must be to-night. To-morrow he will be
  • throwing some sop of reform to the people, and it will be too late for a
  • Republic.
  • PRINCE PAUL. You are quite right. Good kings are the enemies of
  • Democracy, and when he has begun by banishing me you may be sure he
  • intends to be a patriot.
  • MICH. I am sick of patriot kings; [12]what Russia needs is a
  • Republic.[12]
  • PRINCE PAUL. Messieurs, I have brought you two documents which I think
  • will interest you--the proclamation this young Czar intends publishing
  • to-morrow, and a plan of the Winter Palace, where he sleeps to-night.
  • (_Hands paper._)
  • VERA. [13]I dare not ask them what they are plotting about.[13] Oh, why
  • is Alexis not here?
  • PRES. Prince, this is most valuable information. Michael, you were
  • right. If it is not to-night it will be too late. Read that.
  • MICH. Ah! A loaf of bread flung to a starving nation. [14]A lie to cheat
  • the people.[14] (_Tears it up._) It must be to-night. I do not believe
  • in him. Would he have kept his crown had he loved the people? But how
  • are we to get at him?
  • PRINCE PAUL. The key of the private door in the street. (_Hands key._)
  • PRES. Prince, we are in your debt.
  • PRINCE PAUL (_smiling_). The normal condition of the Nihilists.
  • MICH. Ay, but we are paying our debts off with interest now. Two
  • Emperors in one week. That will make the balance straight. We would have
  • thrown in a Prime Minister if you had not come.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Ah, I am sorry you told me. It robs my visit of all its
  • picturesqueness and adventure. I thought I was perilling my head by
  • coming here, and you tell me I have saved it. One is sure to be
  • disappointed if one tries to get romance out of modern life.
  • MICH. It is not so romantic a thing to lose one's head, Prince Paul.
  • PRINCE PAUL. No, but it must often be very dull to keep it. Don't you
  • find that sometimes? (_Clock strikes six._)
  • VERA (_sinking into a seat_). Oh, it is past the hour! It is past the
  • hour!
  • MICH. (_to PRESIDENT_). Remember to-morrow will be too late.
  • PRES. Brothers, it is full time. Which of us is absent?
  • CONSPS. Alexis! Alexis!
  • PRES. Michael, read Rule 7.
  • MICH. "When any brother shall have disobeyed a summons to be present,
  • the President shall enquire if there is anything alleged against him."
  • PRES. Is there anything against our brother Alexis?
  • CONSPS. He wears a crown! He wears a crown!
  • PRES. Michael, read Article 7 of the Code of Revolution.
  • MICH. "Between the Nihilists and all men who wear crowns above their
  • fellows, there is war to the death."
  • PRES. Brothers, what say you? Is Alexis, the Czar, guilty or not?
  • OMNES. He is guilty!
  • PRES. What shall the penalty be?
  • OMNES. Death!
  • PRES. Let the lots be prepared; it shall be to-night.
  • PRINCE PAUL. Ah, this is really interesting! I was getting afraid
  • conspiracies were as dull as courts are.
  • PROF. MARFA. My forte is more in writing pamphlets than in taking shots.
  • Still a regicide has always a place in history.
  • MICH. If your pistol is as harmless as your pen, this young tyrant will
  • have a long life.
  • PRINCE PAUL. You ought to remember, too, Professor, that if you were
  • seized, as you probably would be, and hung, as you certainly would be,
  • there would be nobody left to read your own articles.
  • PRES. Brothers, are you ready?
  • VERA (_starting up_). Not yet! Not yet! I have a word to say.
  • MICH. (_aside_). [15]Plague take her! I knew it would come to this.[15]
  • VERA. This boy has been our brother. Night after night he has perilled
  • his own life to come here. [16]Night after night, when every street was
  • filled with spies, every house with traitors.[16] Delicately nurtured
  • like a king's son, he has dwelt among us.
  • PRES. Ay! under a false name. [17]He lied to us at the beginning. He
  • lies to us now at the end.[17]
  • VERA. I swear he is true. There is not a man here who does not owe him
  • his life a thousand times. When the bloodhounds were on us that night,
  • who saved us [18]from arrest, torture, flogging, death,[18] but he ye
  • seek to kill?--
  • MICH. To kill all tyrants is our mission!
  • VERA. He is no tyrant. I know him well! He loves the people.
  • PRES. We know him too; he is a traitor.
  • VERA. A traitor! Three days ago he could have betrayed every man of you
  • here, [19]and the gibbet would have been your doom.[19] He gave you all
  • your lives once. Give him a little time--a week, a month, a few days;
  • but not now!--O God,[20] not now!
  • CONSPS. (_brandishing daggers_). To-night! to-night! to-night!
  • VERA. Peace, you gorged adders; peace!
  • MICH. What, are we not here to annihilate? shall we not keep our oath?
  • VERA. Your oath! your oath! [21]Greedy that you are of gain, every man's
  • hand lusting for his neighbour's pelf, every heart set on pillage and
  • rapine;[21] who, of ye all, if the crown were set on his head, would
  • give an empire up for the mob to scramble for? The people are not yet
  • fit for a Republic in Russia.
  • PRES. Every nation is fit for a Republic.
  • MICH. The man is a tyrant.
  • VERA. A tyrant! Hath he not dismissed his evil counsellors. That
  • ill-omened raven of his father's life hath had his wings clipped and his
  • claws pared, and comes to us croaking for revenge. Oh, have mercy on
  • him![22] Give him a week to live!
  • PRES. Vera pleading for a king!
  • VERA (_proudly_). I plead not for a king, but for a brother.
  • MICH. For a traitor to his oath, for a coward who should have flung the
  • purple back to the fools that gave it to him. No, Vera, no. The brood of
  • men is not dead yet, nor the dull earth grown sick of child-bearing. No
  • crowned man in Russia shall pollute God's air by living.
  • PRES. You bade us try you once; we have tried you, and you are found
  • wanting.
  • MICH. Vera, I am not blind; I know your secret. You love this boy, this
  • young prince with his pretty face, his curled hair, his soft white
  • hands. Fool that you are, dupe of a lying tongue, do you know what he
  • would have done to you, this boy you think loved you? He would have made
  • you his mistress, used your body at his pleasure, thrown you away when
  • he was wearied of you; you, the priestess of liberty, the flame of
  • Revolution, the torch of democracy.
  • VERA. What he would have done to me matters little. To the people, at
  • least, he will be true. He loves the people--at least, he loves liberty.
  • PRES. So he would play the citizen-king, would he, while we starve?
  • [23]Would flatter us with sweet speeches, would cheat us with promises
  • like his father, would lie to us as his whole race have lied.[23]
  • MICH. And you whose very name made every despot tremble for his life,
  • you, Vera Sabouroff, you would betray liberty for a lover and the people
  • for a paramour!
  • CONSPS. [24]Traitress! Draw the lots; draw the lots![24]
  • VERA. In thy throat thou liest, Michael! I love him not. He loves me
  • not.
  • MICH. You love him not? Shall he not die then?
  • VERA (_with an effort, clenching her hands_). Ay, it is right that he
  • should die. He hath broken his oath. [25]There should be no crowned man
  • in Europe. Have I not sworn it? To be strong our new Republic should be
  • drunk with the blood of kings. He hath broken his oath. As the father
  • died so let the son die too.[25] Yet not to-night, not to-night. Russia,
  • that hath borne her centuries of wrong, can wait a week for liberty.
  • Give him a week.
  • PRES. We will have none of you! Begone from us to this boy you love.
  • MICH. Though I find him in your arms I shall kill him.
  • CONSPS. To-night! To-night! To-night!
  • MICH. (_holding up his hand_). A moment! I have something to say.
  • (_Approaches VERA; speaks very slowly._) Vera Sabouroff, have you
  • forgotten your brother? (_Pauses to see effect; VERA starts._) Have you
  • forgotten that young face, pale with famine; those young limbs twisted
  • with torture; the iron chains they made him walk in? What week of
  • liberty did they give him? What pity did they show him for a day? (_VERA
  • falls in a chair._) Oh! you could talk glibly enough then of vengeance,
  • glibly enough of liberty. When you said you would come to Moscow, your
  • old father caught you by the knees and begged you not to leave him
  • childless and alone.[26] I seem to hear his cries still ringing in my
  • ears, but you were as deaf to him as the rocks on the roadside; as chill
  • and cold as the snow on the hill. You left your father that night, and
  • three weeks after he died of a broken heart. You wrote to me to follow
  • you here. I did so; first because I loved you; but you soon cured me of
  • that; whatever gentle feeling, whatever pity, whatever humanity, was in
  • my heart you withered up and destroyed, as the canker worm eats the
  • corn, and the plague kills the child. You bade me cast out love from my
  • breast as a vile thing, you turned my hand to iron, and my heart to
  • stone; you told me to live for freedom and for revenge. I have done so;
  • but you, what have you done?
  • VERA. Let the lots be drawn! (_CONSPIRATORS applaud._)
  • PRINCE PAUL (_aside_). Ah, the Grand Duke will come to the throne sooner
  • than he expected. He is sure to make a good king under my guidance. He
  • is so cruel to animals, and never keeps his word.
  • MICH. Now you are yourself at last, Vera.
  • VERA (_standing motionless in the middle_). The lots, I say, the lots!
  • I am no woman now. My blood seems turned to gall; my heart is as cold as
  • steel is; my hand shall be more deadly. From the desert and the tomb the
  • voice of my prisoned brother cries aloud, and bids me strike one blow
  • for liberty. The lots, I say, the lots!
  • PRES. Are you ready. Michael, you have the right to draw first; you are
  • a Regicide.
  • VERA. O God, into my hands! Into my hands! (_They draw the lots from a
  • bowl surmounted by a skull._)
  • PRES. Open your lots.
  • VERA (_opening her lot_). The lot is mine! see the bloody sign upon it!
  • Dmitri, my brother, you shall have your revenge now.
  • PRES. Vera Sabouroff, you are chosen to be a regicide. God has been good
  • to you. The dagger or the poison? (_Offers her dagger and vial._)
  • VERA. I can trust my hand better with the dagger; it never fails. (_Take
  • dagger._) I shall stab him to the heart, as he has stabbed me. Traitor,
  • to leave us for a ribbon, a gaud, a bauble, to lie to me every day he
  • came here, to forget us in an hour. [27]Michael was right, he loved me
  • not, nor the people either.[27] Methinks that if I was a mother and bore
  • a man-child I would poison my breast to him, lest he might grow to a
  • traitor or to a king. (_PRINCE PAUL whispers to the PRESIDENT._)
  • PRES. Ay, Prince Paul, that is the best way. Vera, the Czar[28] sleeps
  • to-night in his own room in the north wing of the palace. Here is the
  • key of the private door in the street. The passwords of the guards will
  • be given to you. His own servants will be drugged. You will find him
  • alone.
  • VERA. It is well. I shall not fail.
  • PRES. We will wait outside in the Place St. Isaac, under the window. As
  • the clock strikes twelve from the tower of St. Nicholas you will give us
  • the sign that the dog is dead.
  • VERA. And what shall the sign be?
  • PRES. You are to throw us out the bloody dagger.
  • MICH. Dripping with the traitor's life.
  • PRES. Else we shall know that you have been seized, and we will burst
  • our way in, drag you from his guards.
  • MICH. And kill him in the midst of them.
  • PRES. Michael, you will head us?
  • MICH. Ay, I shall head you. See that your hand fails not, Vera
  • Sabouroff.
  • [29]VERA. Fool, is it so hard a thing to kill one's enemy.[29]
  • PRINCE PAUL (_aside_). This is the ninth conspiracy I have been in in
  • Russia. They always end in a "voyage en Siberie" for my friends and a
  • new decoration for myself.
  • MICH. It is your last conspiracy, Prince.
  • PRES. At twelve o'clock, the bloody dagger.
  • VERA. Ay, red with the blood of that false heart. I shall not forget it.
  • (_Standing in the middle of the stage._) [30]To strangle whatever nature
  • is in me, neither to love nor to be loved, neither to pity nor to be
  • pitied. Ay! it is an oath, an oath. Methinks the spirit of Charlotte
  • Corday has entered my soul now. I shall carve my name on the world, and
  • be ranked among the great heroines. Ay! the spirit of Charlotte Corday
  • beats in each petty vein, and nerves my woman's hand to strike, as I
  • have nerved my woman's heart to hate. Though he laughs in his dreams, I
  • shall not falter. Though he sleep peacefully I shall not miss my
  • blow.[30] Be glad, my brother, in your stifled cell; be glad and laugh
  • to-night. To-night this new-fledged Czar shall post with bloody feet to
  • Hell, and greet his father there! [31]This Czar! O traitor, liar, false
  • to his oath, false to me! To play the patriot amongst us, and now to
  • wear a crown; to sell us, like Judas, for thirty silver pieces, to
  • betray us with a kiss![31] (_With more passion._) O Liberty, O mighty
  • mother of eternal time, thy robe is purple with the blood of those who
  • have died for thee! Thy throne is the Calvary of the people, thy crown
  • the crown of thorns. O crucified mother, the despot has driven a nail
  • through thy right hand, and the tyrant through thy left! Thy feet are
  • pierced with their iron. When thou wert athirst thou calledst on the
  • priests for water, and they gave thee bitter drink. They thrust a sword
  • into thy side. They mocked thee in thine agony of age on age. [32]Here,
  • on thy altar, O Liberty, do I dedicate myself to thy service; do with me
  • as thou wilt![32] (_Brandishing dagger._) The end has come now, and by
  • thy sacred wounds, O crucified mother, O Liberty, I swear that Russia
  • shall be saved!
  • CURTAIN.
  • END OF ACT III.
  • ACT IV.
  • SCENE.--_Antechamber of the CZAR'S private room. Large window at the
  • back, with drawn curtains over it._
  • _Present._--PRINCE PETROVITCH, BARON RAFF, MARQUIS DE POIVRARD, COUNT
  • ROUVALOFF.
  • PRINCE PETRO. He is beginning well, this young Czar.
  • BARON RAFF (_shrugs his shoulders_). All young Czars do begin well.
  • COUNT R. And end badly.
  • [1]MARQ. DE POIV. Well, I have no right to complain. He has done me one
  • good service, at any rate.
  • PRINCE PETRO. Cancelled your appointment to Archangel, I suppose?
  • MARQ. DE POIV. Yes; my head wouldn't have been safe there for an
  • hour.[1]
  • (_Enter GENERAL KOTEMKIN._)
  • BARON RAFF. Ah! General, any more news of our romantic Emperor?
  • GEN. KOTEMK. You are quite right to call him romantic, Baron; a week ago
  • I found him amusing himself in a garret with a company of strolling
  • players; to-day his whim is all the convicts in Siberia are to be
  • recalled, and political prisoners, as he calls them, amnestied.
  • PRINCE PETRO. Political prisoners! Why, half of them are no better than
  • common murderers!
  • COUNT R. And the other half much worse?
  • BARON RAFF. Oh, you wrong them, surely, Count. Wholesale trade has
  • always been more respectable than retail.
  • COUNT R. But he is really too romantic. He objected yesterday to my
  • having the monopoly of the salt tax. He said the people had a right to
  • have cheap salt.
  • MARQ. DE POIV. Oh, that's nothing; but he actually disapproved of a
  • State banquet every night because there is a famine in the Southern
  • provinces. (_The young CZAR enters unobserved, and overhears the rest._)
  • PRINCE PETRO. Quelle bétise! The more starvation there is among the
  • people, the better. It teaches them self-denial, an excellent virtue,
  • Baron, an excellent virtue.
  • BARON RAFF. I have often heard so; I have often heard so.
  • GEN. KOTEMK. He talked of a Parliament, too, in Russia, and said the
  • people should have deputies to represent them.
  • BARON RAFF. As if there was not enough brawling in the streets already,
  • but we must give the people a room to do it in. But, Messieurs, the
  • worst is yet to come. He threatens a complete reform in the public
  • service on the ground that the people are too heavily taxed.
  • MARQ. DE POIV. He can't be serious there. What is the use of the people
  • except[2] to get money out of? But talking of taxes, my dear Baron, you
  • must really let me have forty thousand roubles to-morrow? my wife says
  • she must have a new diamond bracelet.
  • COUNT R. (_aside to BARON RAFF_). Ah, to match the one Prince Paul gave
  • her last week, I suppose.
  • PRINCE PETRO. I must have sixty thousand roubles at once, Baron. My son
  • is overwhelmed with debts of honour which he can't pay.
  • BARON RAFF. What an excellent son to imitate his father so carefully!
  • GEN. KOTEMK. You are always getting money. I never get a single kopeck I
  • have not got a right to. It's unbearable; it's ridiculous! My nephew is
  • going to be married. I must get his dowry for him.
  • PRINCE PETRO. My dear General, your nephew must be a perfect Turk. He
  • seems to get married three times a week regularly.
  • GEN. KOT. Well, he wants a dowry to console him.
  • COUNT R. I am sick of town. I want a house in the country.
  • MARQ. DE POIV. I am sick of the country. I want a house in town.
  • BARON RAFF. Mes amis, I am extremely sorry for you. It is out of the
  • question.
  • PRINCE PETRO. But my son, Baron?
  • GEN. KOTEMK. But my nephew?
  • MARQ. DE POIV. But my house in town?
  • COUNT R. But my house in the country?
  • MARQ. DE POIV. But my wife's diamond bracelet?
  • BARON RAFF. Gentlemen, impossible! The old _regime_ in Russia is dead;
  • the funeral begins to-day.
  • COUNT R. Then I shall wait for the resurrection.
  • PRINCE PETRO. Yes, but, _en attendant_, what are we to do?
  • BARON RAFF. What have we always done in Russia when a Czar suggests
  • reforms?--nothing. You forget we are diplomatists. Men of thought should
  • have nothing to do with action. Reforms in Russia are very tragic, but
  • they always end in a farce.
  • COUNT R. I wish Prince Paul were here. [3]By the bye, I think this boy
  • is rather ungrateful to him. If that clever old Prince had not
  • proclaimed him Emperor at once without giving him time to think about
  • it, he would have given up his crown, I believe, to the first cobbler he
  • met in the street.
  • PRINCE PETRO. But do you think, Baron, that Prince Paul is really
  • going?[3]
  • BARON RAFF. He is exiled.
  • PRINCE PETRO. Yes; but is he going?
  • BARON RAFF. I am sure of it; at least he told me he had sent two
  • telegrams already to Paris about his dinner.
  • COUNT R. Ah! that settles the matter.
  • CZAR (_coming forward_). Prince Paul better send a third telegram and
  • order (_counting them_) six extra places.
  • BARON RAFF. The devil!
  • CZAR. No, Baron, the Czar. Traitors! There would be no bad kings in the
  • world if there were no bad ministers like you. It is men such as you who
  • wreck mighty empires on the rock of their own greatness. Our mother,
  • Russia, hath no need of such unnatural sons. You can make no atonement
  • now; it is too late for that. The grave cannot give back your dead, nor
  • the gibbet your martyrs, but I shall be more merciful to you. I give you
  • your lives! That is the curse I would lay on you. But if there is a man
  • of you found in Moscow by to-morrow night your heads will be off your
  • shoulders.
  • BARON RAFF. You remind us wonderfully, Sire, of your Imperial father.
  • CZAR. I banish you all from Russia. Your estates are confiscated to the
  • people. You may carry your titles with you. Reforms in Russia, Baron,
  • always end in a farce. You will have a good opportunity, Prince
  • Petrovitch, of practising self-denial, that excellent virtue! that
  • excellent virtue! So, Baron, you think a Parliament in Russia would be
  • merely a place for brawling. Well, I will see that the reports of each
  • session are sent to you regularly.
  • BARON RAFF. Sire, you are adding another horror to exile.
  • CZAR. But you will have such time for literature now. You forget you are
  • diplomatists. Men of thought should have nothing to do with action.
  • PRINCE PETRO. Sire, we did but jest.
  • CZAR. Then I banish you for your bad jokes. Bon voyage, Messieurs.[4] If
  • you value your lives you will catch the first train for Paris. (_Exeunt
  • MINISTERS._) Russia is well rid of such men as these. They are the
  • jackals that follow in the lion's track. [5]They have no courage
  • themselves, except to pillage and rob.[5] But for these men and for
  • Prince Paul my father would have been a good king, would not have died
  • so horribly as he did die. How strange it is, the most real parts of
  • one's life always seem to be a dream! The council, the fearful law which
  • was to kill the people, the arrest, the cry in the courtyard, the
  • pistol-shot, my father's bloody hands, and then the crown! One can live
  • for years sometimes, without living at all, and then all life comes
  • crowding into a single hour. I had no time to think. Before my father's
  • hideous shriek of death had died in my ears I found this crown on my
  • head, the purple robe around me, and heard myself called a king. I would
  • have given it up all then; it seemed nothing to me then; but now, can I
  • give it up now? Well, Colonel, well? (_Enter COLONEL OF THE GUARD._)
  • COLONEL. What password does your Imperial Majesty desire should be given
  • to-night?
  • CZAR. Password?
  • COLONEL. [6]For the cordon of[6] guards, Sire, on night duty around the
  • palace.
  • CZAR. You can dismiss them. I have no need of them. (_Exit COLONEL._)
  • (_Goes to the crown lying on the table._) What subtle potency lies
  • hidden in this gaudy bauble, the crown,[7] that makes one feel like a
  • god when one wears it? To hold in one's hand this little fiery coloured
  • world, to reach out one's arm to earth's uttermost limit, to girdle the
  • seas with one's hosts; this is to wear a crown! to wear a crown! The
  • meanest serf in Russia who is loved is better crowned than I. How love
  • outweighs the balance! How poor appears the widest empire of this
  • golden world when matched with love! Pent up in this palace, with spies
  • dogging every step, I have heard nothing of her; I have not seen her
  • once since that fearful hour three days ago, when I found myself
  • suddenly the Czar of this wide waste, Russia. Oh, could I see her for a
  • moment; tell her now the secret of my life I have never dared utter
  • before; tell her why I wear this crown, when I have sworn eternal war
  • against all crowned men! There was a meeting to-night. I received my
  • summons by an unknown hand; but how could I go? I who have broken my
  • oath! who have broken my oath!
  • (_Enter PAGE._)
  • PAGE. It is after eleven, Sire. Shall I take the first watch in your
  • room to-night?
  • CZAR. Why should you watch me, boy? The stars are my best sentinels.
  • PAGE. It was your Imperial father's wish, Sire, never to be left alone
  • while he slept.
  • CZAR. My father was troubled with bad dreams. Go, get to your bed, boy;
  • it is nigh on midnight, and these late hours will spoil those red
  • cheeks. (_PAGE tries to kiss his hand._) Nay, nay; we have played
  • together too often as children for that. Oh, to breathe the same air as
  • her, and not to see her! the light seems to have gone from my life, the
  • sun vanished from my day.
  • PAGE. Sire,--Alexis,--let me stay with[8] you to-night! There is some
  • danger over you; I feel there is.
  • CZAR. What should I fear? I have banished all my enemies from Russia.
  • Set the brazier here, by me; it is very cold, and I would sit by it for
  • a time. Go, boy, go; I have much to think about to-night. (_Goes to back
  • of stage, draws aside curtain. View of Moscow by moonlight._) The snow
  • has fallen heavily since sunset. How white and cold my city looks under
  • this pale moon! And yet, what hot and fiery hearts beat in this icy
  • Russia, for all its frost and snow! Oh, to see her for a moment; to tell
  • her all; to tell her why I am a king! But she does not doubt me; she
  • said she would trust in me. Though I have broken my oath, she will have
  • trust. It is very cold. Where is my cloak? I shall sleep for an hour.
  • Then I have ordered my sledge, and, though I die for it, I shall see
  • Vera to-night. Did I not bid thee go, boy? What! must I play the tyrant
  • so soon? Go, go! I cannot live without seeing her. My horses will be
  • here in an hour; one hour between me and love! How heavy this charcoal
  • fire smells. (_Exit the PAGE. Lies down on a couch beside brazier._)
  • (_Enter VERA in a black cloak._)
  • VERA. Asleep! God, thou art good! Who shall deliver him from my hands
  • now? [9]This is he! The democrat who would make himself a king, the
  • republican who hath worn a crown, the traitor who hath lied to us.
  • Michael was right. He loved not the people. He loved me not.[9] (_Bends
  • over him._) Oh, why should such deadly poison lie in such sweet lips?
  • Was there not gold enough in his hair before, that he should tarnish it
  • with this crown? But my day has come now; the day of the people, of
  • liberty, has come! Your day, my brother, has come! Though I have
  • strangled whatever nature is in me, I did not think it had been so easy
  • to kill. One blow and it is over, and I can wash my hands in water
  • afterwards, I can wash my hands afterwards. Come, I shall save Russia. I
  • have sworn it. (_Raises dagger to strike._)
  • CZAR (_staring up, seizes her by both hands_). Vera, you here! My dream
  • was no dream at all. Why have you left me three days alone, when I most
  • needed you? O God, you think I am a traitor, a liar, a king? I am, for
  • love of you. Vera, it was for you I broke my oath and wear my father's
  • crown. I would lay at your feet this mighty Russia, which you and I
  • have loved so well; would give you this earth as a footstool! set this
  • crown on your head. The people will love us. We will rule them by love,
  • as a father rules his children. There shall be liberty in Russia for
  • every man to think as his heart bids him; liberty for men to speak as
  • they think. I have banished the wolves that preyed on us; I have brought
  • back your brother from Siberia; I have opened the blackened jaws of the
  • mine. The courier is already on his way; within a week Dmitri and all
  • those with him will be back in their own land. The people shall be
  • free--are free now--and you and I, Emperor and Empress of this mighty
  • realm, will walk among them openly, in love. When they gave me this
  • crown first, I would have flung it back to them, had it not been for
  • you, Vera. O God! It is men's custom in Russia to bring gifts to those
  • they love. I said, I will bring to the woman I love a people, an empire,
  • a world! Vera, it is for you, for you alone, I kept this crown; for you
  • alone I am a king. Oh, I have loved you better than my oath! Why will
  • you not speak to me? You love me not! You love me not! You have come to
  • warn me of some plot against my life. What is life worth to me without
  • you? (_CONSPIRATORS murmur outside._)
  • VERA. Oh, lost! lost! lost!
  • CZAR. Nay, you are safe here. It wants five hours still of dawn.
  • To-morrow, I will lead you forth to the whole people--
  • VERA. To-morrow--!
  • CZAR. Will crown you with my own hands as Empress in that great
  • cathedral which my fathers built.
  • VERA (_loosens her hands violently from him, and starts up_). I am a
  • Nihilist! I cannot wear a crown!
  • CZAR (_falls at her feet_). I am no king now. I am only a boy who has
  • loved you better than his honour, better than his oath. For love of the
  • people I would have been a patriot. For love of you I have been a
  • traitor. Let us go forth together, we will live amongst the common
  • people. I am no king. I will toil for you like the peasant or the serf.
  • Oh, love me a little too! (_CONSPIRATORS murmur outside._)
  • VERA (_clutching dagger_). To strangle whatever nature is in me, neither
  • to love nor to be loved, neither to pity nor---- Oh, I am a woman! God
  • help me, I am a woman! O Alexis! I too have broken my oath; I am a
  • traitor. I love. Oh, do not speak, do not speak--(_kisses his
  • lips_)--the first, the last time. (_He clasps her in his arms; they sit
  • on the couch together._)
  • CZAR. I could die now.
  • VERA. What does death do in thy lips? Thy life, thy love are enemies of
  • death. Speak not of death. Not yet, not yet.
  • CZAR. I know not why death came into my heart. Perchance the cup of life
  • is filled too full of pleasure to endure. This is our wedding night.
  • VERA. Our wedding night!
  • CZAR. And if death came himself, methinks that I could kiss his pallid
  • mouth, and suck sweet poison from it.
  • VERA. Our wedding night! Nay, nay. Death should not sit at the feast.
  • There is no such thing as death.
  • CZAR. There shall not be for us. (_CONSPIRATORS murmur outside._)
  • VERA. What is that? Did you not hear something?
  • CZAR. Only your voice, that fowler's note which lures my heart away like
  • a poor bird upon the limed twig.
  • VERA. Methought that some one laughed.
  • CZAR. It was but the wind and rain; the night is full of storm.
  • (_CONSPIRATORS murmur outside._)
  • VERA. It should be so indeed. Oh, where are your guards? where are your
  • guards?
  • CZAR. Where should they be but at home? I shall not live pent round by
  • sword and steel. The love of a people is a king's best body-guard.
  • VERA. The love of a people!
  • CZAR. Sweet, you are safe here. Nothing can harm you here. O love, I
  • knew you trusted me! You said you would have trust.
  • VERA. I have had trust. O love, the past seems but some dull grey dream
  • from which our souls have wakened. This is life at last.
  • CZAR. Ay, life at last.
  • VERA. Our wedding night! Oh, let me drink my fill of love to-night! Nay,
  • sweet, not yet, not yet. How still it is, and yet methinks the air is
  • full of music. It is some nightingale who, wearying of the south, has
  • come to sing in this bleak north to lovers such as we. It is the
  • nightingale. Dost thou not hear it?
  • CZAR. Oh, sweet, mine ears are clogged to all sweet sounds save thine
  • own voice, and mine eyes blinded to all sights but thee, else had I
  • heard that nightingale, and seen the golden-vestured morning sun itself
  • steal from its sombre east before its time for jealousy that thou art
  • twice as fair.
  • VERA. Yet would that thou hadst heard the nightingale. Methinks that
  • bird will never sing again.
  • CZAR. It is no nightingale. 'Tis love himself singing for very ecstasy
  • of joy that thou art changed into his votaress. (_Clock begins striking
  • twelve._) Oh, listen, sweet, it is the lover's hour. Come, let us stand
  • without, and hear the midnight answered from tower to tower over the
  • wide white town. Our wedding night! What is that? What is that?
  • (_Loud murmurs of CONSPIRATORS in the street._)
  • VERA (_breaks from him and rushes across the stage_). The wedding guests
  • are here already! Ay, you shall have your sign! (_Stabs herself._) You
  • shall have your sign! (_Rushes to the window._)
  • CZAR (_intercepts her by rushing between her and window, and snatches
  • dagger out of her hand_). Vera!
  • VERA (_clinging to him_). Give me back the dagger! Give me back the
  • dagger! There are men in the street who seek your life! Your guards have
  • betrayed you! This bloody dagger is the signal that you are dead.
  • (_CONSPIRATORS begin to shout below in the street._) Oh, there is not a
  • moment to be lost! Throw it out! Throw it out! Nothing can save me now;
  • this dagger is poisoned! I feel death already in my heart.
  • CZAR (_holding dagger out of her reach_). Death is in my heart too; we
  • shall die together.
  • VERA. Oh, love! love! love! be merciful to me! The wolves are hot upon
  • you! you must live for liberty, for Russia, for me! Oh, you do not love
  • me! You offered me an empire once! Give me this dagger now! Oh, you are
  • cruel! My life for yours! What does it matter? (_Loud shouts in the
  • street, "VERA! VERA! To the rescue! To the rescue!_")
  • CZAR. The bitterness of death is past for me.
  • VERA. Oh, they are breaking in below! See! The bloody man behind you!
  • (_CZAREVITCH turns round for an instant._) Ah! (_VERA snatches dagger
  • and flings it out of window._)
  • CONSPS. (_below_). Long live the people!
  • CZAR. What have you done?
  • VERA. I have saved Russia (_Dies._)
  • TABLEAU.
  • CORRECTIONS AND ADDITIONS.
  • MADE BY THE AUTHOR IN HIS ORIGINAL COPY.
  • _The numbers of the "Notes" correspond with the superior figures in the
  • body of the text._
  • ACT I.
  • Note [1]: Changed to 2 in violet pencil.
  • [2]: Lines from 2 to 2 scored out.
  • [3]: These lines scored out, and "we will have" added.
  • [4]: This word underlined.
  • [5]: These lines scored out.
  • [6]: These lines scored out, "what news to-night?" inserted.
  • [7]: Lines scored out.
  • [8]: Altered to "He."
  • [9]: Lines scored out.
  • [10]: Altered to "signal for."
  • [11]: Lines scored out.
  • [12]: Lines scored out.
  • [13]: Altered to "Be calm, Michael!"
  • [14]: These words underlined.
  • [15]: Words underlined.
  • [16]: Word underlined.
  • [17]: Lines scored out.
  • [18]: Words scored out.
  • [19]: Lines scored out, "from Berlin" inserted.
  • [20]: Word scored through.
  • [21]: Altered to "strong."
  • [22]: These lines scored through.
  • [23]: Scored through.
  • [24]: Altered to "martial law scheme."
  • [25]: Altered to "To raise the barricades."
  • [26]: Crossed out.
  • [27]: The word "pause" as a stage direction inserted.
  • [28]: Lines crossed out.
  • [29]: Scored through.
  • [30]: Scored through.
  • [31]: Word underlined.
  • [32]: Word underlined.
  • [33]: Words "Who is there?" inserted.
  • [34]: Scored through.
  • [35]: Scored through.
  • [36]: Scored through.
  • [37]: Altered to "He has sold us."
  • [38]: Word underlined.
  • ACT II.
  • Note [1]: Lines scored through.
  • [2]: Altered to "you missed."
  • [3]: Altered to "profession."
  • [4]: Scored through.
  • [5]: Word scored through.
  • [6]: Insert "for them to go to."
  • [7]: Insert "dining."
  • [8]: Altered to "bored to death."
  • [9]: Scored through.
  • [10]: Word underlined.
  • [11]: Altered to "a."
  • [12]: Lines scored through.
  • [13]: "O God!" scored through.
  • [14]: Scored through.
  • [15]: Lines scored through.
  • [16]: Words scored through.
  • [17]: Word underlined.
  • [18]: Word underlined.
  • [19]: Words underlined.
  • [20]: Stage direction, "a pause" indicated.
  • [21]: Altered to "may."
  • [22]: Word "I" underlined.
  • [23]: This speech cut out.
  • ACT III.
  • Note [1]: "Marat" underlined.
  • [2]: Altered to "VERA. Unmask! a spy!"
  • [3]: Scored through.
  • [4]: Scored through.
  • [5]: Scored through.
  • [6]: Lines scored through.
  • [7]: Insert "and quite as unintelligible."
  • [8]: Alter "PRES." to "VERA."
  • [9]: Scored through.
  • [10]: These lines struck out.
  • [11]: This passage scored through.
  • [12]: This is struck out.
  • [13]: Scored through.
  • [14]: Scored through.
  • [15]: This speech cut out.
  • [16]: Lines scored through.
  • [17]: Lines scored through.
  • [18]: Cut out this passage and insert "Alexis" after "but."
  • [19]: Lines scored through.
  • [20]: Altered to "No! No!"
  • [21]: This passage is cut out.
  • [22]: Insert "Alexis" in place of "him."
  • [23]: Lines scored through.
  • [24]: This speech cut out.
  • [25]: This passage is scored through.
  • [26]: The words "no laugh" are inserted here--possibly as a stage
  • direction.
  • [27]: Passage scored through.
  • [28]: In place of "the Czar" read "Alexis."
  • [29]: Delete this speech.
  • [30]: This passage is scored out.
  • [31]: This passage is scored out.
  • [32]: This passage is scored out.
  • ACT IV.
  • Note [1]: These three speeches are scored through.
  • [2]: Insert "for the politician."
  • [3]: All these lines are cut out.
  • [4]: Alter to "Gentlemen."
  • [5]: Cut out this sentence.
  • [6]: Words scored through.
  • [7]: Delete "the crown."
  • [8]: Substitute "stop near" for "stay with."
  • [9]: This passage is cut out.
  • Transcriber's Note:
  • Inconsistent hyphenation has been standardised. Minor typographical
  • errors have been corrected without note, whilst significant
  • amendments have been listed below:
  • p. 25, 'Place S. Isaac' amended to _Place St. Isaac_;
  • p. 36, 'Prince Petouchof' amended to _Count Petouchof_.
  • End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Vera, by Oscar Wilde
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