ARCHBISHOP.

Can it be so? The traitor, canst thou trust--

MARFA.

He is my son. Yes! by these signs alone

I recognize him. By thy Czar's alarm

I recognize him. Yes! He lives! He comes!

Down, tyrant, from thy throne, and shake with fear!

There still doth live a shoot from Rurik's stem;

The genuine Czar-the rightful heir draws nigh,

He comes to claim a reckoning for his own.

ARCHBISHOP.

Dost thou bethink thee what thou say'st? 'Tis madness!

MARFA.

At length-at length has dawned the day of vengeance,

Of restoration. Innocence is dragged

To light by heaven from the grave's midnight gloom.

The haughty Godunow, my deadly foe,

Must crouch and sue for mercy at my feet;

Oh, now my burning wishes are fulfilled!

ARCHBISHOP.

Can hate and rancorous malice blind you so?

MARFA.

Can terror blind your monarch so, that he

Should hope deliverance from me-from me-

Whom he hath done immeasurable wrong?

I shall, forsooth, deny the son whom heaven

Restores me by a miracle from the grave,

And to please him, the butcher of my house,

Who piled upon me woes unspeakable?

Yes, thrust from me the succor God has sent

In the sad evening of my heavy anguish?

No, thou escap'st me not. No, thou shalt hear me,

I have thee fast, I will not let thee free.

Oh, I can ease my bosom's load at last!

At last launch forth against mine enemy

The long-pent anger of my inmost soul!

Who was it, who,

That shut me up within this living tomb,

In all the strength and freshness of my youth,

With all its feelings glowing in my breast?

Who from my bosom rent my darling son,

And chartered ruffian hands to take his life?

Oh, words can never tell what I have suffered,

When, with a yearning that would not be still,

I watched throughout the long, long starry nights,

And noted with my tears the hours elapse!

The day of succor comes, and of revenge;

I see the mighty glorying in his might.

ARCHBISHOP.

You think the Czar will dread you-you mistake.

MARFA.

He's in my power-one little word from me,

One only, sets the seal upon his fate!

It was for this thy master sent thee here!

The eyes of Russia and of Poland now

Are closely bent upon me. If I own

The Czarowitsch as Ivan's son and mine,

Then all will do him homage; his the throne.

If I disown him, then he is undone;

For who will credit that his rightful mother,

A mother wronged, so foully wronged as I,

Could from her heart repulse its darling child,

To league with the despoilers of her house?

I need but speak one word and all the world

Deserts him as a traitor. Is't not so?

This word you wish from me. That mighty service,

Confess, I can perform for Godunow!

ARCHBISHOP.

Thou wouldst perform it for thy country, and

Avert the dread calamities of war,

Shouldst thou do homage to the truth. Thyself,

Ay, thou hast ne'er a doubt thy son is dead;

And couldst thou testify against thy conscience?

MARFA.

These sixteen years I've mourned his death; but yet

I ne'er have seen his ashes. I believed

His death, there trusting to the general voice

And my sad heart-I now believe he lives,

Trusting the general voice and my strong hope.

'Twere impious, with audacious doubts, to seek

To set a bound to the Almighty's will;

And even were he not my heart's dear son,

Yet should he be the son of my revenge.

In my child's room I take him to my breast,

Whom heaven has sent me to avenge my wrongs.

ARCHBISHOP.

Unhappy one, dost thou defy the strong?

From his far-reaching arm thou art not safe

Вы читаете Demetrius (play)
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×