MICHAEL:
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! Give him a week to live!
PRESIDENT:
Vera, pleading for a king!
VERA:
[(proudly)] I plead not for a king, but for a brother.
MICHAEL:
For a traitor to his oath, a coward who should have flung the purple back to the fools that gave it him. No, Vera, no. The brood of men is not yet dead, nor the dull earth grown sick of childbearing. No crowned man in Russia shall pollute God's air by living.
PRESIDENT:
You bade us try you once. We have tried you, and you are found wanting.
MICHAEL:
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.
PRESIDENT:
So, he would play the citizen-king, would he, while we starve? Would flatter us with sweet speeches, would cheat us with promises like his father, would lie to us as his whole race have lied.
MICHAEL:
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!
CONSPIRATORS:
Traitress! Draw the lots; draw the lots!
VERA:
In thy throat thou liest, Michael! I love him not. He loves me not.
MICHAEL:
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. 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. 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.
PRESIDENT:
We will have none of you! Begone from us to this boy you love.
MICHAEL:
Though I find him in your arms I shall kill him.
CONSPIRATORS:
To-night! To-night! To-night!
MICHAEL:
[(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 to die childless and alone.