And do thy mission by another's lips.

DEMETRIUS.

My lord archbishop, I stand here to claim

A kingdom, and the state of royalty.

'Twould ill beseem me should I quake before

A noble people, and its king and senate.

I ne'er have viewed a circle so august,

But the sight swells my heart within my breast

And not appals me. The more worthy ye,

To me ye are more welcome; I can ne'er

Address my claim to nobler auditory.

ARCHBISHOP OF GNESEN.

. . . . The august republic

Is favorably bent. . . . .

DEMETRIUS.

Most puissant king! Most worthy and most potent

Bishops and palatines, and my good lords,

The deputies of the august republic!

It gives me pause and wonder to behold

Myself, Czar Ivan's son, now stand before

The Polish people in their Diet here.

Both realms were sundered by a bloody hate,

And, whilst my father lived, no peace might be.

Yet now hath Heaven so ordered these events,

That I, his blood, who with my nurse's milk

Imbibed the ancestral hate, appear before you

A fugitive, compelled to seek my rights

Even here in Poland's heart. Then, ere I speak,

Forget magnanimously all rancors past,

And that the Czar, whose son I own myself,

Rolled war's red billows to your very homes.

I stand before you, sirs, a prince despoiled.

I ask protection. The oppressed may urge

A sacred claim on every noble breast.

And who in all earth's circuit shall be just,

If not a people great and valiant,-one

In plenitude of power so free, it needs

To render 'count but to itself alone,

And may, unchallenged, lend an open ear

And aiding hand to fair humanity.

ARCHBISHOP OF GNESEN.

You do allege you are Czar Ivan's son;

And truly, nor your bearing nor your speech

Gainsays the lofty title that you urge,

But shows us that you are indeed his son.

And you shall find that the republic bears

A generous spirit. She has never quailed

To Russia in the field! She loves, alike,

To be a noble foe-a cordial friend.

DEMETRIUS.

Ivan Wasilowitch, the mighty Czar

Of Moscow, took five spouses to his bed,

In the long years that spared him to the throne.

The first, a lady of the heroic line

Of Romanoff, bare him Feodor, who reigned

After his father's death. One only son,

Dmitri, the last blossom of his strength,

And a mere infant when his father died,

Was born of Marfa, of Nagori's line.

Czar Feodor, a youth, alike effeminate

In mind and body, left the reins of power

To his chief equerry, Boris Godunow,

Who ruled his master with most crafty skill.

Feodor was childless, and his barren bride

Denied all prospect of an heir. Thus, when

The wily Boiar, by his fawning arts,

Had coiled himself into the people's favor,

His wishes soared as high as to the throne.

Between him and his haughty hopes there stood

A youthful prince, the young Demetrius

Iwanowitsch, who with his mother lived

At Uglitsch, where her widowhood was passed.

Now, when his fatal purpose was matured,

He sent to Uglitsch ruffians, charged to put

The Czarowitsch to death.

One night, when all was hushed, the castle's wing,

Where the young prince, apart from all the rest,

With his attendants lay, was found on fire.

The raging flames ingulfed the pile; the prince

Unseen, unheard, was spirited away,

And all the world lamented him as dead.

All Moscow knows these things to be the truth.

ARCHBISHOP OF GNESEN.

Yes, these are facts familiar to us all.

The rumor ran abroad, both far and near,

That Prince Demetrius perished in the flames

When Uglitsch was destroyed. And, as his death

Raised to the throne the Czar who fills it now,

Fame did not hesitate to charge on him

This murder foul and pitiless. But yet,

His death is not the business now in hand!

This prince is living still! He lives in you!

So runs your plea. Now bring us to the proofs!

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