Oscar Wilde: The Complete Works. Knowledge house
Try us! Try us! Try us!
michael
We shall try thee, too, some day, Vera.
vera
I pray God thou mayest! Have I not ·31· strangled whatever nature is in me, and shall I not keep my oath?
michael
[To President.] Martial law, President! Come, there is no time to be lost. We have twelve hours yet before us till the council meet. Twelve hours! One can overthrow a dynasty in less time than that.
president
Ay! or lose one’s own head.
[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.]
alexis
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 bright boyish face, you are too young to die yet.
·32· alexis
One is never too young to die for one’s country!
vera
Why do you come here night after night?
alexis
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.
alexis
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!
alexis
I have no mother now but Russia, my life is hers to take or give away; but to-night I am ·33· 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.
alexis
God knows it, I am with you. But you must not go. The police are watching every train for you. When you are seized they have orders to place you without trial in the lowest dungeon of the palace. I know it—no matter how. Oh, think how without you the sun goes from our life, how the people will lose their leader and liberty her priestess. 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.
alexis
When you die then Russia is smitten indeed; ·34· 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!
alexis
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.
·35· alexis
[Aside.] Yet I shall plead to him. They can but kill me.
professor
Here are the proclamations, Vera. Do you think they will do?
vera
I shall read them. How fair he looks? Methinks he never seemed so noble as to-night. Liberty is blessed in having such a lover.
alexis
Well, President, what are you deep in?
michael
We are thinking of the best way of killing bears. [Whispers to President and leads him aside.]
professor
[To Vera.] And the letters from our brothers at Paris and Berlin. What answer shall we send to them?
vera
[Takes them mechanically.] Had I not strangled nature, sworn neither to love nor to ·36· be loved, methinks 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 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!
president
[To Michael.] But you will be seized, Michael.
michael
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.
president
Shall I tell the brethren?
michael
Not a word, not a word! There is a traitor amongst us.
vera
Come, are these the proclamations? Yes, ·37· 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.
michael
Ay, and by the sword, not by the goose-quill.
vera
Where are the letters from Poland?
professor
Here.
vera
Unhappy Poland! The eagles of Russia have fed on her heart. We must not forget our brothers there.
president
Is this true, Michael?
michael
Ay, I stake my life on it.
·38· president
Let the doors be locked, then. 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 of martial law?
alexis
I, President?
michael
Ay, you!