Bethought me of a little psalter which

I carried from the cloister when I fled.

Within this book were certain words in Greek

Inscribed there by the Igumen himself.

What they imported was unknown to me,

Being ignorant of the language. Well, the psalter

Was sent for, brought, and the inscription read.

It bore that Brother Wasili Philaret

(Such was my cloister-name), who owned the book,

Was Prince Demetrius, Ivan's youngest son,

By Andrei, an honest Diak, saved

By stealth in that red night of massacre.

Proofs of the fact lay carefully preserved

Within two convents, which were pointed out.

On this the Boiars at my feet fell down,

Won by the force of these resistless proofs,

And hailed me as the offspring of their Czar.

So from the yawning gulfs of black despair

Fate raised me up to fortune's topmost heights.

And now the mists cleared off, and all at once

Memories on memories started into life

In the remotest background of the past.

And like some city's spires that gleam afar

In golden sunshine when naught else is seen,

So in my soul two images grew bright,

The loftiest sun-peaks in the shadowy past.

I saw myself escaping one dark night,

And a red lurid flame light up the gloom

Of midnight darkness as I looked behind me

A memory 'twas of very earliest youth,

For what preceded or came after it

In the long distance utterly was lost.

In solitary brightness there it stood

A ghastly beacon-light on memory's waste.

Yet I remembered how, in later years,

One of my comrades called me, in his wrath

Son of the Czar. I took it as a jest,

And with a blow avenged it at the time.

All this now flashed like lightning on my soul,

And told with dazzling certainty that I

Was the Czar's son, so long reputed dead.

With this one word the clouds that had perplexed

My strange and troubled life were cleared away.

Nor merely by these signs, for such deceive;

But in my soul, in my proud, throbbing heart

I felt within me coursed the blood of kings;

And sooner will I drain it drop by drop

Than bate one jot my title to the crown.

ARCHBISHOP OF GNESEN.

And shall we trust a scroll which might have found

Its way by merest chance into your hands

Backed by the tale of some poor renegades?

Forgive me, noble youth! Your tone, I grant,

And bearing, are not those of one who lies;

Still you in this may be yourself deceived.

Well may the heart be pardoned that beguiles

Itself in playing for so high a stake.

What hostage do you tender for your word?

DEMETRIUS.

I tender fifty, who will give their oaths,-

All Piasts to a man, and free-born Poles

Of spotless reputation,-each of whom

Is ready to enforce what I have urged.

There sits the noble Prince of Sendomir,

And at his side the Castellan of Lublin;

Let them declare if I have spoke the truth.

ARCHBISHOP OF GNESEN.

How seem these things to the august Estates?

To the enforcement of such numerous proofs

Doubt and mistrust, methinks, must needs give way.

Long has a creeping rumor filled the world

That Dmitri, Ivan's son, is still alive.

The Czar himself confirms it by his fears.

-Before us stands a youth, in age and mien

Even to the very freak that nature played,

The lost heir's counterpart, and of a soul

Whose noble stamp keeps rank with his high claims.

He left a cloister's precincts, urged by strange,

Mysterious promptings; and this monk-trained boy

Was straight distinguished for his knightly feats.

He shows a trinket which the Czarowitsch

Once wore, and one that never left his side;

A written witness, too, by pious hands,

Gives us assurance of his princely birth;

And, stronger still, from his unvarnished speech

And open brow truth makes his best appeal.

Such traits as these deceit doth never don;

It masks its subtle soul in vaunting words,

And in the high-glossed ornaments of speech.

No longer, then, can I withhold the title

Which he with circumstance and justice claims

And, in the exercise of my old right,

I now, as primate, give him the first voice.

ARCHBISHOP OF LEMBERG.

My voice goes with the primate's.

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