LYuBA. Has he refused? How do you know?
PRINCESS. I was there myself! Vasily Andreevich, who is a Member of the Council, told me all about it. Boris just walked in and told them he would serve no longer, would take no oath, and in fact said everything Nicholas Ivanovich has taught him.
NICHOLAS IVaNOVICH. Princess! Can such things be taught?
PRINCESS. I don"t know. Only this is not Christianity! What is your opinion, Father?
PRIEST. I am no longer "Father."
PRINCESS. Well, all the same. However, you are also one of them! No, I cannot leave things in this state. And what cursed Christianity it is that makes people suffer and perish. I hate this Christianity of yours.
It"s all right for you, who know you won"t be touched; but I have only one son, and you have ruined him!
NICHOLAS IVaNOVICH. Do be calm, Princess.
PRINCESS. Yes you, you have ruined him! And having ruined him, you must save him. Go and persuade him to abandon all this nonsense. It"s all very well for rich people, but not for us.
LYuBA [crying] Papa, what can be done?
NICHOLAS IVaNOVICH. I will go. Perhaps I can be of some use. [Takes off his ap.r.o.n].
PRINCESS [helping him on with his coat] They would not let me in, but now we will go together and I shall get my way. [Exeunt].
Curtain.
SCENE 2
A Government office. A Clerk is seated at a table, and a Sentinel is pacing up and down. Enter a General with his Adjutant. The Clerk jumps up, the Sentinel presents arms.
GENERAL. Where is the Colonel?
CLERK. Gone to see that new conscript, Your Excellency.
GENERAL. Ah, very well. Ask him to come here to me.
CLERK. Yes, Your Excellency.
GENERAL. And what are you copying out? Isn"t it the conscript"s evidence?
CLERK. Yes, sir, it is.
GENERAL. Give it here.
The Clerk hands General the paper and exit. The General hands it to his Adjutant.
GENERAL. Please read it.
ADJUTANT [reading] "These are my answers to the questions put to me, namely: (1) Why I do not take my oath. (2) Why I refuse to fulfil the demands of the Government. (3) What induced me to use words offensive not only to the army but also to the Highest Authorities. In reply to the first question: I cannot take the oath because I accept Christ"s teaching, which directly and clearly forbids taking oaths, as in St.
Matthew"s Gospel, ch. 5 vv. 33-37, and in the Epistle of St. James, ch. 5 v. 12."
GENERAL. Of course he must be arguing! Putting his own interpretations!
ADJUTANT [goes on reading] "The Gospel says: "Swear not at all, but let your yea be yea, and your nay, nay; and what is more than these is of the evil one!" St. James"s Epistle says: "Before all things, brethren, swear not by the heavens nor by the earth, nor by any other oath; but let your yea be yea, and your nay, nay, that ye fall not into temptation!" But apart from the fact that the Bible gives us such clear injunctions not to swear--or even if it contained no such injunctions--I should still be unable to swear to obey the will of men, because as a Christian I must always obey the will of G.o.d, which does not always coincide with the will of men."
GENERAL. He must be arguing! If I had my way, there would be none of this.
ADJUTANT [reading] "I refuse to fulfil the demands of men calling themselves the Government, because ..."
GENERAL. What insolence!
ADJUTANT. "Because those demands are criminal and wicked. They demand of me that I should enter the army, and learn and prepare to commit murder, though this is forbidden both in the Old and the New Testaments, and above all by my conscience. To the third question ..."
Enter Colonel followed by Clerk. The General shakes hands with Colonel.
COLONEL. You are reading the evidence?
GENERAL. Yes. Unpardonably insolent language. Well, go on.
ADJUTANT. "To the third question: What induced me to use offensive words before the Court, my answer is: that I was induced to do so by the wish to serve G.o.d, and in order to expose the fraud carried on in His name.
This desire, I hope to retain till I die, and therefore ..."
GENERAL. Come; that"s enough; one can"t listen to all this balderdash.
The fact is all this sort of thing must be eradicated, and action taken to prevent the people being perverted. [To Colonel] Have you spoken to him?
COLONEL. I have been doing so all the time. I tried to shame him, and also to convince him that it would only be worse for himself, and that he would gain nothing by it. Besides that, I spoke of his relations. He was very excited, but holds to his opinions.
GENERAL. A pity you talked to him so much. We are in the army not to reason, but to act. Call him here!
Exit Adjutant with Clerk.
GENERAL [sits down] No, Colonel, that"s not the way. Fellows of this kind must be dealt with in a different manner. Decisive measures are needed to cut off the diseased limb. One maggoty sheep infects the whole flock. In these cases one must not be too squeamish. His being a Prince, and having a mother and a fiancee, is none of our business. We have a soldier before us and we must obey the Tsar"s will.
COLONEL. I only thought that we could move him more easily by persuasion.
GENERAL. Not at all--by firmness; only by firmness! I have dealt with men of that sort before. He must be made to feel that he is a nonent.i.ty--a grain of dust beneath a chariot wheel, and that he cannot stop it.
COLONEL. Well, we can try!
GENERAL [getting irritable] No need to try! I don"t need to try! I have served the Tsar for forty-four years, I have given and am giving my life to the service, and now this fellow wants to teach me and wants to read me theological lectures! Let him take that to the Priest, but to me--he is either a soldier or a prisoner. That"s all!
Enter Boris guarded by two Soldiers and followed by Adjutant and Clerk.
GENERAL [pointing with a finger] Place him there.
BORiS. I need no placing. I shall stand or sit where I like, for I do not recognise your authority.
GENERAL. Silence! You don"t recognise authority? I will make you recognise it.