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BJORNSTJERNE BJORNSON
1832-1910
MARY
QUEEN OF SCOTS
A DRAMA IN FIVE ACTS
BJORNSTJERNE BJORNSON
translated from the Norwegian
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AUG SAHL3ERG
SPECIALTY SYNDICATE PRESS
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
1912
Copyright 1912, by Aug. Sahlberg
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PT 2 2 it*
M 3 CS
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MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
259978
CHARACTERS.
Mary Stuart, Queen of Scotland.
Henry Darn ley, her consort, titular king.
James, Earl of Murray, her half-brother.
Lord Stuart, the same.
The Duchess of Argyle, her half-sister.
Maitland, Earl of Lethington, her secretary of
state.
David Rizzio, her private secretary of foreign
correspondence.
James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell.
The Earl of Morton.
Lord Ruthven.
Lord Lindsay.
Andrew Kerr.
William Taylor.
Captain Erskine of the guards.
A Citizen.
John" Knox.
Courtiers, Warriors, Citizens
The first and second acts pass in the first days
of March, 1566, at Holyrood Castle in Edin-
burgh, the third act in the fall of the same year,
the fourth act in the spring of the next year
(1567), both in and at Edinburgh, the fifth at
Dunbar Castle, a little over two months there-
after.
Mary, Queen of Scots
ACT FIRST
The large drawing-room in the castle of Holy-
rood,
SCENE FIRST.
The drawing-room festively decorated. There
is a ball, there is just being danced a Purpose.
The Queen dances with her half-brother, Lord
Stuart; among the dancers the Earl of Leth-
ington zvilh the Countess of Argyle. the Earl
of Morton, the Earl of Bothwell, Quite in
front stand Lord Lindsay, Andrew Kerr and
n Citizen, all three dressed in dark and peculiar
tclothes; several Presbyterians crowd around
them. Rizzio is seen a little later on the other
side in a whispering, quiet conversation with a
noble. Toward the close Darnley enters alone.
(The following conversation is carried on
every time the music becomes soft or a rest is
taken.)
8 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Lindsay.
Look, the dancing lines wind as snakes in the
sun ! Listen, the music plays with the flames of
hell! The devil's roar of laughter is in it!
Andrew Kerr.
Hush, hush; the penalty will overwhelm them
as the sea overwhelmed Pharao's army.
Lindsay.
Look, how they whisper! The infecting
breath of sin ! See their voluptuous smile, see
the ladies' frivolous gowns.
Citizen.
All which Knox preaches is wasted on this
court !
4
Lindsay.
He is as the prophet in Israel, he does not
speak in vain ; for the Lord Himself will re-
deem His words upon the ungodly race.
Andrew Kerr.
There is David Rizzio.
Several.
He, there to the right? —
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 9
Andrew Kerr.
The Catholic seducer !
Lindsay.
The pope's secret agent !
Andrew Kerr.
Member of the new Jesu society?
Citizen.
The devil's smartest machinator !
Andrew Kerr.
Within eight days he shall also get work in
his shop!
Lindsay.
Let us part. We create suspicion !
Andrew Kerr
(to the citizens and others).
Come I
(They go behind the dancers. Rizzio has
gone up on his side of the stage. Darnley
comes quickly down toivard Lindsay and watches
the dance.)
Lindsay
(behind him),
Mv Lord!
10 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Darnley
(does not answer).
Lindsay.
My Lord ! (As before.) My Lord, ally your-
self with the Lord's faithful people! Save us
from this Jesebel !
Darnley.
Oh, how charming she is !
Lindsay.
She is granted this power by the devil! Be*
Ware, my Lord, you have now suffered and wept
long enough under it!
Darnley.
I have suffered and wept, but look at her, if
she is not worth it ! No, she has this power from
heaven; for at the sight of her I am exalted as
on a nice, clear spring-day! Look, look, her
every motion gleams like the sun! When she
bows there falls a shadow; when she rises there
come sun-beams, when she steps forward hearts
throb in unison !
Ltndsay.
He is mad !
(Goes.)
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS U
Darnley.
Every time I see her, it seems to me that I
never have seen her before! If I did not want
to speak to her once more, I must be as the
snowy mountain at Loch Linnch ! She is more
alone than the royal power with all its splendor \
{He stays until the dance is finished, and the
queen, led by Stuart, comes up in front, where
Stuart with bent knees expresses his thanks for
the dance, absents himself, speaks to a servant
and comes back again immediately; Darnley
ffoes up to her in the meanwhile. ,)
Darn lev.
I am more impatient for a conversation witfo
your grace than as a boy I was for fairy-tales.
Stuart.
Supper is ready, we expect the order from
your grace.
Queen,
Then ask the ladies and gentlemen to enjoy
themselves. We, ourselves, wish to wait here
with the King.
Stuart
{invites to supper after which each retires
with his lady, while festive march is played.}
12 MART, QUEEN OF SCOTS
SCENE SECOND.
Darnley.
The dance has brought roses to your cheeks.
They were perhaps not intended for me, but ray
heart has kept them.
Queen.
My Lord, if it is a matter which allows post-
ponement—
Darnley.
No, it allows no postponement, my heart is
being lacerated, I can't do the measured walk in
a cold ceremonial. Mary, why have we grown
apart ?
Queen.
Because my Lord prefers other company to
ours.
Darnley.
I ? — Am I then myself without you ?
Queen.
Oh, among my Lord's pot-companions together
with frivolous women it is certain! v more jovous
than in our rooms.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 13
Darn lev.
Oh, do not mention what I might do to deaden
my sorrow and pain. But nobody except Mary
of Scotland can cause me that.
Queen.
Is it an accusation you intend to make?
Darnley.
He that loves to desperation, has an accusa-
tion against every living thing* [against joy be-
cause it is too joyous, against sorrow because it
is too sad. I waste my time as a day laborer
who will not work for less than a certain price;
but there is a price under which I even do not
want to live. — ] Oh. what shall I do to regain
your love?
Queen.
It is too bad, my Lord, that I can not men-
tion any price too high.
Darnley.
You are of the Guises' family, — splendent as
the diamond and also as hard.
*That enclosed between brackets might
be omitted at the performance.
14 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
Antonius melted a diamond which Cleopatra
drank.
Daunley.
But that cost many millions.
Queen.
It was that I wanted to recall.
Darnley.
I am poor; for I have given everything to
you, — even my peace of conscience.
Queen.
What I gave you as compensation you have
also wasted.
Darnley.
Oh, Mary, the first months of our marriage I
believed that you loved me!
Queen.
My God ! I believed the same !
Darnley.
But now there has come one between us !
Queen.
My Lord !
(Starts to go.)
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 15
Darnley.
No, listen to me, or it might be too late.
Queen
(stops).
Do you threaten?
Darnley.
Mary, you do not know what love can force
one to !
Queen.
Yes, — to rudeness !
Darnley
(excitedly).
To still more! I could in cold blood . . no,
do not force me, Mary !
Queen.
That is just what I am not able to do.
Darnley.
But the day you are able to do it you shall
repent of it !
Queen
(more excitedly ) .
No, show yourself as a man; my God! I am
a woman !
IB MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Darnley.
Oh, only that flash in your eye, only that mo-
tion, and I love you again to frenzy !
Queen.
Yes, you can love, Henry !
Darnley.
But you can't, Mary !
Queen
(smiles).
Darnley.
That smile says both yes and no, but there
are thousands of each, and I can not count.
Queen.
It is also only a page who counts the smiles
of his mistress.
Darnley.
If I knew one who tried to, I would kill him.
Queen.
Jealousy is also a page-fault.
Darnley.
It is impossible to love without being jealous.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 17
Queen.
Not even when I return the love? —
Darnley.
No; for you never return it otherwise than
that you have some left.
Queen*
Poor Darnley!
Darnley.
If you weTe able to feel pity, you would re-
vnove the cause of the sickness, — then you would
remove him that hurts me.
Queen.
Then I should have to remove my whole court.
Darnley.
No, only one!
Queen.
My Lord!
Darnley.
There is one to whom you show more confi-
dence than to all others put together!
Queen.
Then this one is worthy of it.
18 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Darnley.
You provoke not only me, but the proud
nobility of the whole of Scotland by promoting
an adventurer.
Queen.
What more are the others ?
Darnley.
Nobles !
Queen.
He to whom I give my confidence is ennobled.
Darnley.
But others are more worthy of it I
Queen.
He that best serves my plans is most worthy
of it !
Darnley.
Others love you more !
Queen.
My God ! I have come to Scotland for some-
thing else than to — love I
Darnley.
I should wish it were true, when we speak
about — Rizzio !
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 19
Queen.
My Lord!
Darn ley.
For the reports which are current deprive me
<■ >f my sleep 1
Queen.
Choose a better pillow than Edinburgh's float-
ing rumors ! —
Darnley.
Well, let them be as a fog, they nevertheless
always return . . . let my whole jealousy be naive
vis the bird's aimless flight, it is nevertheless my
'existence, and therefore you must please be so
kind as to pay attention to it!
Queen.
By removing Rizzio? Never 1
Darnley,
Is that your last word?
Queen,
^ly last!
Darnley.
Well. If you do not pay any regard to me, I
shall neither pay any regard to you!
20 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
You vex me, my Lord.
Darnley.
Now I shall not speak about it again, — but
act.
Queen.
You have said that so often that it annoys me.
Darnley.
That you scoff at the love which you yourself
have nourished really does not surprise me; for
I know that you can even bring it to the scaffold.
Queen
(is silent).
Darnley.
Poor Chatelard, it cost him his life; but it is
foretold that evervbodv who loves vou will have
to pay therefor with his life.
Queen
(is silent).
Darnley.
Oh, Mary ! — No, snake in woman-slough, evil
plays in a cascade which draw people to their
death and laugh giddily over them, — I shall
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 21
nevertheless find the net which catches you, and
the horror which conquers you ; I shall neverthe-
less live to see the day when I shall cause you
to weep, Scotland's beautiful sphinx, — weep
blood !
Queen.
Then it will not be the first time!
(She bursts out weeping.)
Darn lev.
Oh, Mary, forgive me, I am not bad; it is
only since the day I saw you that such thoughts
have grown on me; but then you must also
have power to remove them. Oh, be gentle. . .
Queen.
Now I am going to Rizzio !
(She goes.)
SCENE THIRD.
Darnley
(alone).
To Rizzio? To Rizzio! I shall follow! I
shall kill him in the large drawing-room in the
22 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
presence of all Scotland's lords ! . . . No, that
would only hit him, but not her. I must hit her,
she must learn to fear; for she loves only him
whom she fears! She said it herself: "Become
a man!" said she. Yes, I shall that, and the
deed which makes me a man shall frighten you as
if you were a child! Lethington is right. Mor-
ton is right, . . . where are they now? [What?
Gratitude? Gratitude toward her? She scorns
me daily, she denies me the crown, she lets me
live an idle life as mock-king, half a mockery to
others, but wholly to myself, and] she besmirches
my honor and gives my right to another. She
sees the need and miserv of mv soul, but she
lets me live in it.
(Music is heard from the inner rooms.)
This music rose six months ago at the dances
of the intoxicating marriage festival, now it finds
me alone and in the darkness of bad thoughts.
But she has remained in the light of the festal
drawing-room — and on the arm of another! Oh,
how soon did the fall come ! The leaves of love
have faded and fallen off; I once saw flowers,
but did not discover any fruits. (The music
becomes louder.) But in there — what color and
delight. Wait, wait ... an evening I shall break
in with a hundred steel-clad men; then there
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 23
shall be a glare as of blue ice, and the red color
shall flow over it ! There is Lethington ! Have
our thoughts also an echo I
SCENE FOURTH.
Lethington.
I come from a scene in the large drawing-room
which has amazed all. The queen. . .
Darnley.
... the queen !
Lethington.
. . . entered, went straight toward David
Rizzio, whispered to him, then took his arm and
led him to the inner rooms.
Darnley.
Oh, gracious God, preserve my wits!
Lethington.
I was standing at the side of the French
Envoy. He said: "To what room do you think
they are going now?"
Darnley.
He is lying!
24 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Lethington.
I answered at once: "Doubt can not be
raised about such a high lady's manners."
Darnley.
Oh, too great, Lethington, too great!
Lethington.
The French Envoy remarked: "Yesterday
3ne saw David give audience in a blue dressing-
2jown ! among them that had entry was the
:meen."
Darnley.
It is a devilish lie, she has never called upon
dim.
Lethington.
This is word for word as I on your account
answered, and England's Envoy who just joined
is eagerly contradicted it; for he knew for sure
:hat Rizzio on the contrary had called upon the
jueen in — dressing gown.
Darnley.
Ha, ha, ha!
t
Lethington.
Yes, it is only to laugh at. •
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 25
Dai.xlev.
Ha, ha, lia ! my honor, my life is only to laugh
at; my sleepless love also, and my mother's
crushed happiness, and my father's immense
pride, only to laugh at! — Lethington, you are a
damned rascal ! You lead me directly to my de-
struction ; I feel it, and can, nevertheless, not re-
sist. For it is only with her that I can seek sal-
vation against you; but she pushes me back as a
prey for your rapacity.
Lethington.
1 wish your grace a rapid recovery.
(Starts to leave.)
Darn ley.
Lethington, do not go away from me ! Lething-
ton ! Yes, I am sick, I have not slept for many
nights, I fear being alone ; sometimes I fear for
my wits. Oh, Lethington, why, I am still almost
a child, only nineteen, I am not strong enough to
bear so hard a fate. And then I love her too
much! Oh, if she only would say a single kind
word to me, even if it were that she was guilty,
only if she would ask my pardon, I would for-
give her, Lethington !
Lethington.
That God and vour honor forbid.
26 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Darn ley.
I know that; but I have no other God and
honor than her love. If she only would come
back to me with tears, I would take her into my
arms and carry her before the proudest court of
Europe and openly confess that I am the most
happy man in the world !
Oh, I have been that, Lethington! The first
two months of our marriage she wanted only to
be where I was. This lady, Europe's prettiest,
most witty and most charming, she was mine ; the
most charming dream any youth has dreamt that
was my daily life, and I was only eighteen !
But it soon came to an end. . .
(He weeps.)
Lethington.
A man revenges such a thing, he does not
weep.
Darnlev.
It is childish,— I know that; but now the
emptiness of the night is my day, and the dis-
turbance of the day has moved down into my
night. If I were not allowed to weep once in a
while, my painful thoughts would break my
heart.
(Weeps.)
MARY, QUEEA OF SCOTS 27
Lethington.
.. Consequently it is best to drop the entire plan.
Darnley.
Which, Lethington?
Lethington.
Perhaps you do not even wish that any one
of us shall challenge the impudent fellow to a
duel. . .
Darnley.
A duel? Give David Rizzio an even piece of
steel in his hand? From behind, Lethington, with
twenty stabs, and still some when he is lying
dead! [Undress him so and string him up to
shame and disgrace to all the world. He that
ruined my happiness must also perish as every
bad insect!] Lethington, why there is no crime
on earth more awful than to coax one's wife into
his confidence, and then deceive her.
Lethington.
Have vou never done it vourseif, Henry
Darnley ?
Darnley.
I have not before known what it was.
28 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Lethington.
But are you now also so sure in your case?
The appearance is strong; but perhaps it is ap-
pearance; what if she now assured you of her in-
nocence ?
Darnley.
She laughs, when I speak about it, yes, she
assured me almost of the contrary.
[Lethington.
She defies vou?
Darnley.
Yes, she now went straight to Rizzio.
Lethington.
Perhaps just because she felt herself strong
in her innocence?
Darnley.
But why does she not prove it to me? Why,
she sees my suffering?!
Lethington.
She does not love you.
Darnley.
No !
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 29
Lethington.
And she does not fear you.
Darnlev.
That is just the misfortune!
Lethington.
Her defying nature loves only him whom she
fears !
Darnley,
It is so; just so !
Lethington.
If your grace consequently could get her to
fear. . .
Darnley.
That is what I want, [Lethington!
Lethington.
But for that courage is necessary !
Darnley.
I shall try; for my whole future is at stake!
Lethington.
Even if she assured positively that your asser-
tion is false.
/• • a
30 MARY., QUEEN OF SCOTS
Darnlev.
But if it were false, Lethington?
Lethington.
Then it could be true ! For she does not love,
and she does not fear.
Darnley.
You are right, you are right !
Lethington.
But do you see how easily you give up !
Darnley.
I shall not! — ] But Lethington . . if she in
a moment of danger applied to me as her natural
protector ? —
Lethington.
Then ask her why she did not come sooner.
Darnley.
You are right . . . now she shuns me, now she
defies me.
LetHington.
If you yield at the moment of the punishment*
she will also despise you, and later she will know
no limit.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS M
DarnleY.
That is true.
Lethington.
Guilty or innocent — she must find her
master ! . t .
Darnley.
Or my life is the torment of hell, d sneaking
consumption which every one of her moments
can make worse.
Lethington.
Your grace must know that just during the
last few days there has become a more intimate
relation between Rizzio and her than ever before*
Darnley.
How do you know that?
LethingtoN.
He has been overwhelmed with gifts; I have
heard that in clothes alone he owns many thou-
sand pounds.
Darnley.
Disgraceful, disgraceful!
Lethington.
She has just added from her own ornaments
to his collection of jewels and precious stones.
32 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Darn ley.
Is there then more doubt ! Oh, Lethington, I
have called Murray home, I have called his whole
expelled party, — I have united myself with my
enemies, yes, with the devil himself — rather
than to put up with this shame and suffering.
Lethington.
Murray is on the way ... we must make
haste !
Darnley.
Come to me to-morrow, let us make a more
definite appointment, put all a going, but hurry;
for if a sharp action will not soon bloodlet my
bad blood, then vou will find me suffocated a
morning !
Lethington.
Do not speak so loudly, your grace, somebody
is coming.
Darnley.
I want to go out, I must have air and room.
Lethington, a couple of my servants, ask them to
accompany me, I will mount a horse and ride out
in the forest.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 33
Lethington.
15 ut it is deep night.
Dark ley.
Yes, we are suited for one another !
(lie goes, Lethington follows him, but meets
■>n the door a servant.)
Lethington
(to the servant).
Please find servants for the king, he wants to
ride out. Be quiek !
(The servant goes out.)
SCENE FIFTH
Lethington.
Poor Darnley ! (Sees Morton in the door.)
No one is here.
Morton
(remains standing).
But somebody might come here.
Lethington.
Have you. my Lord, seen the new picture of
the queen? (Places himself before it. Morton
34 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
comes and does likewise.) It is an excellent
likeness.
Morton.
The expression seems to me too defiant.
Lethington.
I think it can be corrected.
Morton.
Have you inquired into that ?
Lethington.
I am sure it will be corrected.
Morton.
Do they agree?
Lethington.
In everything.
Morton.
And the time?
Lethington
(confidentially) .
At once! — [One can't wait. The Spanish sub-
sidies have arrived, she will also get the prop-
erties of the exiled. Within eight days she will
begin open war against the Protestants and
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 35
against England ... as her allies she has all
Europe !]
Morton
(softly),
Then to-morrow?
Lethington
(likewise}.
To-morrow, Knox's house, at four o'clock in
the afternoon 3
.Morton
(likewise).
But they are on the track. The king has been
tattling, Lord Stuart has heard him threaten.
Lethington.
Then they must be put on a false scent.
Morton.
You want Murray's ring to throw into the
Italia
(Gives it.)
Lethington.
Yes. — Nothing more here.
Morton
(loudly).
36 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
An excellent picture indeed; only the im-
perious expression must be moderated.
Lethington
(loudly).
And the Italian false shirt taken away. (Mor-
ton goes in the meanwhile up, along and out.)
There comes Rizzio — aha ! in conversation with
Stuart !
(Up along, to the side and out.)
SCENE SIXTH.
Rizzio.
I believe, nevertheless, that my Lord sees
specters in broad da}r-light. The exiled Murray
is in want in England, his faction in still great-
er, Elizabeth does not want to help them; Eliz-
abeth only helps them that succeed. From where
then do they get means to start another rebellion
in Scotland ?
Stuart.
Not rebellion, Monsieur; I have not spoken
about rebellion. No, it is worse!
Rizzio.
What is worse than rebellion ?
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 37
Stuart.
Assassination.
Rizzio
(horrified).
Assassination! (Crosses himself .) The Holy
Virgin will protect her own faith and its true
servants.
Stuart.
The Holy Virgin has her notions as every
other woman, and I advise Monsieur to strength-
en the guards of the castle.
Rizzio.
I thank my Lord for the sagacious advice.
Stuart.
Madame ma soeur knows herself that there
have already been attempts made three times on
her dear person in this rough country. This
time it might perhaps be directed against sev-
eral.
Rizzio.
Whom does my Lord mean ?
Stuart.
Monsieur knows that he is not loved by this
country's nobles.
38 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Rizzio.
The saint Antonius of Padua, my patron saint,
will protect me against bad people. The queen,
my high mistress, will graciously watch my
safety.
Stuart.
Speak to Mr. Erskine, captain of the guards;
it is certainly he that can protect monsieur.
Rizzio.
Thank you, my Lord, I shall speak to him.
Stuart.
Monsieur, not for his own sake, but because
madame ma soeur shows him especial favor, have
I said this to him. Monsieur, I have to lead off
the dance.
Rizzio.
Mv Lord!
SCENE SEVENTH.
Rizzio.
Assassination !
(As he turns around, Lethington stands just
behind him; he is horrified )
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 39
Lethingtox.
Are you afraid I will assassinate you?
Rizzio.
Who has said? —
Lethingtox.
J wish to speak to you. It is Count Morton
who has sent me. You know he does not like to
speak to you himself.
RlZZIO.
When such a polite messenger is at his ser-
vice, I suppose it serves him best.
Lethingtox.
He is himself messenger from a still greater
personage.
Rizzio.
From whom?
Lethingtox.
From Murray.
, Rizzio.
The exiled rebel! So they carry on negotia-
tions?
Lethingtox.
As to that you must ask Morton himself.
40 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Rizzio.
Murray's matters are completely indifferent
to me as, also, are they that take care of them.
Lethington.
It might be that one might make matters a
little interesting for you.
Rizzio.
They will hardlv succeed in that.
(Sits.)
Lethington
(aside).
He sits in my presence !
Rizzio.
Please sit down, Mr. Secretary of the State !
Lethington.
I am very much obliged to you, Mr. Private
Secretary! (Sits clown with his back portly
toward him and both his feet on a chair.) Have
you no passions, David Rizzio?
Rizzio.
It is dangerous for a politician to entertain
passions.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 41
Lethington.
A remark so true that I have just recently
made it. Nevertheless . . .
(He begins to play with Count Murray's
ring.)
Rizzio.
You mean that nobody can claim to be free
from passion?
Lethington
(ivith emphasis).
Yes.
Rizzio.
But then it is the thing to take care that they
are identical in all points with our work. . .
Lethington.
... so no hand can come between ; certainlv ! —
Rizzio.
And if I should tell, why I have succeeded
so far, in that only I seek the reason.
Lethington.
Indeed, not absurd.
Rizzio.
The Scotch are prone to have some inher-
42 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
itaiice, dream, revenge, ambition to take care
of. and therefore get into trouble.
Lethington.
That is true, especially in this disturbed time
of transition, during which old and new are fight-
ing for souls.
Rizzio.
I came as a stranger to this country, I have
only the aim to be true and of use to my queen.
Lethington.
Therefore she prefers you to us, — it is quite
natural.
Rizzio.
If it is not just natural, it is not without pru-
dence anyway.
Lethington.
No, no.
Rizzio.
The result has not spoken against it.
Lethington.
The Catholic cause now stands well, that is
true
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 43
Rizzio.
What wonderful ring is it anyway the Earl
is holding there?
Lethington.
A costly one, is it not ?
Rizzio
()'ises).
I have seldom seen such a splendor ! What ? —
It is worth more than the largest crown-dia-
mond !
Lethington.
Were you once clerk in a jeweler's shop!
Rizzio.
When I buy precious stones, I send for them.
Lktiuisgtox.
I am glad that at last one can value this
precious stone.
Rizzio.
I love pretty stones; I myself have a collec-
tion.
Lethington.
If you love stones, you must know this one;
lor collectors have sharp eyes.
44 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Rizzio
[views it more closely}.
The Earl of Murray's! Have you bought it?
Lethington.
No, he wants to give it away !
Rizzio.
This immense fortune ... to whom?
Lethington.
To you, David Rizzio !
Rizzio.
To me !
Lethington
{rises}.
The proud Count Murray begs you to plead
his cause with his sister, the queen ; — can you
get a greater proof how completely you have
conquered ! The Protestant party which a few
years ago was uncontrolled master is so forced
back that its first man must beg for grace from
the secret agent of the Pope at this court.
Rizzio.
It pains you, Earl of Lethington?
Lethington.
I should not be the frank man that I am, if
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 45
I concealed that it pains me. — Here is the ring!
Rizzio.
The Earl of Murray's misfortune also pains
me; but I can't help him to come back.
Lethington.
You will not?
Rizzio.
I can understand that with your usual acute-
ness you have found my passion ; but I am sorry
to say that in this it does not coincide with the
policy of the queen. Au revoir — !
(About to go.)
Lethington
(opens the door of the stove to throw the
ring in).
Rizzio.
For the Madonna's sake ! What are vou
doing?
Lethington,
It now has no destination,
Rizzio.
Why, it is a fortune, it is more than all I own I
46 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Lethington.
Do you want to save it?
Rizzio.
Of course !
Lethington.
Then take it.
Rizzio.
Xo. — But give it to his sister, the queen; let
her keep it for the earl !
Lethington.
For the earl — -
(Starts to throw it into the stove.)
Rizzio.
You do not know its value; you do not know
what you destroy. .
Lethington.
Weil, then you might as well keep it your-
self »
Rizzio.
Keep it? Well, — with pleasure! — but not as
if my way of procedure should in any way be
bound by that.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 47
Lethington.
Bul, as a daily remembrance, nevertheless,
bow unhappy the queen's brother is.
(Gives it.)
RlZZIO
(takes it).
And as a daily remembrance of a proud
moment in my life!
Lethington.
To that you have a right of course. But T
suppose I may hope that this, the Earl of Mur-
ray's submission, has not been altogether in
vain.
RlZZIO
You yourself must understand that after
this proof I can not any longer consider Count
Murray and his party dangerous. I can't say
more.
SCENE EIGHTH.
Stuart.
Monsieur, madame ma soeur commands vour
presence.
48 MARY, QUEEN OE SCOTS
Lethington.
Mr. Secretary!
Rizzio.
My Lord!
•Lethington
(goes).
Rizzio.
WHere is the queen?
Stuart.
I shall guide him.
Rizzio.
As to the advice which my Lord so kindly
gave me, I can now assure my Lord that it was
quite unnecessary.
Stuart.
That gives me pleasure, Monsieur.
Rizzio.
Not with murderous weapon, but with plead-
ings and gifts they seek us. And the highly
amusing air with which some noblemen at this
court deem it necessary to have intercouse with
me never seemed to me more amusing than now.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 49
Au revoir! But why, there is the queen her-
self!—
Stuart.
Her usual impatience surpasses all rules of
etiquette. . .
Queen.
First business, then dance! Close the doors!
Stuart,
What must one think!
{Goes out,)
SCENE NINTH.
Queen.
What is this. Rizzior They spefk to me the
third time about an attack.
Rizzio.
Also to your grace?
Queen,
Also to you?
Rizzio,
Yes. just now! —
50 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
Peculiar. The king also recently threatened
me.
Rizzio.
Your grace thinks that he is in league with. . .
Queen.
With whom? . . .
Rizzio.
[With those who are contemplating an at-
tack. . .
Queen.
Who are contemplating an attack?
Rizzio.
I do not know. (Pause.} Ts it the exiled?
Queen.
Mv brother Count Murray? Darnlev should
enter into an alliance with my . . . with mv
enemies? — What has then occured here?
Rizzio.
Your grace must best know that ! —
Queen.
He recently demanded of me — (Stops, tool's
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 51
■:it Rizzio, laughs J Darnley is a fool. The
whole matter is fabrication.
Rizzio.
Your grace is never safe. . .
Queen.
What proof do you have then?]
Rizzio.
Does your grace recognize this ring?
Queen,
My brother's?
Rizzio.
With this Count Murray wants to find his
way back to your grace's halls- —
Queen.
And through you it had to be done?
Rizzio.
They tried it! — But here is the ring.
{Wants to (jive it, she sees it, but does not
take it.)
Queen.
They ascribe to you a great influence with us,
Rizzio.
52 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Rizzio.
Only to make me a suspect in the eyes of
your grace.- — Here is the ring!
Queen
(as before).
Why are vou more faithful to me than the
others, Rizzio?—
Rizzio.
It is of more use to examine into why they
try to make us feel safe at the same time as an
assault is hinted at. . .
Queen.
Many before have also been true to me; but
they have all had their reasons, — reasons which
I have seen. . .
Rizzio.
Your grace, they are certainly meditating
plots against you; I simulated that I myself felt
safe, but I am not! —
Queen.
You must be very sure of our favor. David
Rizzio. since you do not even answer us !
Rizzio.
I do not answer, because I only see an intrigue
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 53
in all this: they are trying to deprive me of
your grace's favor, and that at a very import-
ant moment.
Queen.
I begin to tire of all this importance they as-
cribe to you. — and which you also ascribe to
yourself.
Rizzio.
Your grace is unjust toward me; — but I shad
try to endure it, — as I daily endure indignities
for the sake of your grace.
Queen.
But why in the world do you do it? — There
is something you are concealing.
Ri::-'io.
If anything concerning me is mysterious to
your grace, then my acts toward your grace, the
policies which till this day have borne so great
fruits for the Catholic cause, must be proof
enough that I am devoted to you.
Queen.
That is true ! But why am I always to hear
i". whv shall I be in debt to vou for that?— Whv
54 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
don't you for example want to become a noble-
man ?
Rizzio.
Because it would hurt me.
Queen.
But a high rank, nevertheless?
Rizzio.
I do not care about what is only appearances.
Queen.
It is money, precious stones. . .
Rizzio.
Yes. that is a sure investment.
[Queen
And costly clothes.
Rizzio.
I am uncomely by nature, I must strive to im-
prove it.] But, your grace, let not the enemy's
seed, nevertheless, grow into your soul immedi-
ately. Let us not on account of these trifles
lose sight of the great danger, the first dark
streak of which is seen far away. [Lethington
lias designs, he and Murray and Morton; I
simulated that T was ignorant and felt myself
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 55
safe, but I am afraid ! They must have many
aids ; for the matter is so spread that even so
egotistically occupied a person as Lord Stuart
has got track of it; — surely, scouts must now
ride out at night; for watchfires are seen in the
big forests !]
Queen.
I have now been assaulted three times^ and
have come out safe ! I do not care about it !
Rizzio.
Your grace has such great courage. . .
Queen.
And you so little ! . . .
Rizzio.
J have a care for the welfare of ''our grace!
Queen.
But have you that? Why do you put up with
my notions and the slander of others ?
Rizzio
(angry).
When a child has grown tired of the violin
it has been playing on, it will break it to look
at it on the inside!
56 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
Consequently the day I look at you inside ? . . .
Rizzio.
Your grace, may I now go?
Queen.
Can't I get this violin together, if I once have
looked at it on the inside? . . .
Rizzio.
No.
Queen.
Then you aim at something very high in
your affection !
Rizzio.
Your grace has no more use for me to-day,
I suppose. . .
(Starts to go.)
Queen.
Rizzio !
Rizzio.
Yes, your grace. . .
Queen.
We two can't work together any more ; I can't
speak confidentially to a masked man.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 57
Rizzio.
There is something cruel in your heart; it is
not the first time I have seen it!
Queen.
Are you afraid of any one, that you will not
say it?
*
Rizzio.
I beg you, let me go now !
Queex.
— Your enemy, the king?
Rizzio.
Xo !—
Queen.
The nobles? — (As he is silent.} Is your desire
some unheard of exaltation, — well, vou shall
have it in spite of the nobility !
Rizzio.
It is not the nobilitv I am afraid of.
Queen.
Alas, I understand ... it is the whole public
opinion of Euroue. But whv, vou know, Rizzio,
it amuses me to furnish material for gossip.
58 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Rizsio.
I am afraid of none in the world — except —
Queen.
Except?-— Then mention it!
Rizzio.
You yourself !
Queen.
Me! — Now I order you to speak!
Rizzio.
You are without limit and regard ; it pleases
you to see me consumed by the most powerful
passion, — for I have one ! — it is that which has
inflamed me and it will inflame me to the great-
est deeds in your service so long as it burns to
the last spark. — after that I am nothing.
Queen.
Such eloquence! — Rizzio, I do not recognize
you !
Rizzio.
No, most gracious Queen, you hiave never
known me ! My silence has been a daily lie,, and
mv fretfulness the seal. But now, when you
have opened, my lips for the awful truth, now
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 59
you shall know it: Only he that has a great
aim can forsake all small ones; only he to whom
one thought gives strength can suffer ; only he
that is waitings can put up with peculiar notions,
scorn, slander, malice !
Queen.
But what is it though?
Rizzio.
It is, — yes, know first though, it is not as
Darnley, who is tiring and pursuing you, not as
those, who before the world will boast of a
glance, a word, a dance , not as those that make
noise and duel for your honor; — I do not like
to be mentioned as vour lover, but one dav or
another, — if even far in the future, if a life full
of sacrifices and fidelity is necessary, — neverthe-
less, at last, to become it —
Queex.
Ha, ha, ha, ha ! Ha, ha, ha, ha ! Ha, ha,
ha, ha !
Rizzio
( despa i ri ngly\
Laugh at me, but remember, what silent love
has done for you during these toilsome years ! —
60 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Then laugh at me and cast me away, as all the
others, — why, that is your aim !
(Goes out.)
SCENE TENTH.
Queen
(suddenly serious).
Didn't I think so ? He also was lurking for
a feeble moment! He also my secret enemy!
Can't I find any one in the whole world, whom
I can rely upon? [The great dread, which so
suddenly seizes me, does that prophesy that it
will have a bad ending? — Yes, it will!] They
that come to serve me intend to rob me ; they
that love me are worse to rne than they that
hate me! I feel as if torn to pieces and can't
compose myself. Oh, you Virgin Mary, who
always are praying for me! You that gave me
name, vou the woman's eternal symbol, shine
forth glorifying me: for there is nobody who
helps me! [The husband I selected is alter-
nately a child and a jealous tyrant: my own
brother turned rebel, and against my council I
have to protect myself as against a snake, with
which I am locked in the same room] Oh, I
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 61
need protection ! I have a need, a longing, but
I do not know where I dare to go. (Pause.)
The silent, patient Rizzio also ! — Darnley , you
are nevertheless more faithful in your way than
all the others,- — and you are so young! I was too
strict before, I shall set it all right again.
(Rings; a servant enters.) Call Lord Stuart!
(The servant goes.) Darnley loves, and one in
love can do everything!
SCENE ELEVENTH,
Stuart
(aside).
Rizzio is not here? (Loudly.) Madam!
Queen.
Let the music start up, and let the dance
begin !
Stuart.
Immediately, immediately, your grace!
Queen.
Call Darnley and tell him that I ask for the
first dance.
62 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Stuart.
With the king?
Queen,
Yes.
Stuart,
But the king has not been seen!
Queen.
Oh, look for him in his suite; if he has
locked himself in, knock on his door and shout
that I am waiting for him with longing.
Stuart.
The king?
Queen
(severely") ,
The king! — But hurry!
Stuart.
I hurry, I hurry! (Aside,) Are We going to
make love to the king at this court?
Queen.
Hut go, though !
Stuart.
f am flying;.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 63
SCENE TWELFTH.
Queen.
Where I am placed, I must work; what comes
from the circumstances,, I must put up with !
(The music starts.)
I possess youth and strength, I have great
designs and powerful allies ! My life will soon
enter into the high council of mighty acts ; the
{rifling which torments me will then cease of
itself!
(The dancers come in pairs; among them
Bothwell, Lethington and Morton.)
SCENE THIRTEENTH,
Stuart.
I am very sorry, Madam, but the king is not
in his rooms.
Queen.
Then search for him everywhere. Take more
people with you; he must come!
64 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Stuart.
He must come !
(Fie goes.)
Lethington.
Is it the king they are searching for?
Several.
Yes.
LetHingtoN,
I saw the king ride away.
Queen.
Ride away . . . in the middle of the night?
Lethington.
I made the same remark; but "we are suited
to one another," answered he.
Queen.
Poor Darnley ! I was too strict before. Oh,
he should have been here now! Now is the
moment !
Stuart.
Whom does your grace desire to honor with
vour choice ?
Queen.
None! — I do not dance.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 65
Stuart.
Oh, your grace, do not make us despair. It
would be as if tearing down the flowers and ex-
tinguishing the lights.
The Duchess of Argyle.
Your grace must not cause us this sorrow. We
have been waiting so long!
(Several ladies urge her.)
Queen.
Well, to please you, my dear. . .
All.
Thank you, your grace!
(They arrange themselves in order.)
Queen.
Which nobleman does your grace want to
honor ?
Queen
(views them, says as she turns away).
Is there among them all a single one, who
has not deceived me in an hour of trouble, or
who may not do so? — Yes, there is one!
(To Stuart.)
The Earl of Bothwell!
(The music r/rorcs louder. Eotlncell comes
66 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
and bends his knee before the queen, takes her
hand and leads her up to the dancers. He
places himself vis a vis Stuart and the Duchess
of Argyle, who lead off. The dance is a slow,
old one.)
{The curtain falls.)
ACT SECOND
SCENE FIRST.
Knox
{walks slowly up and down with both hands
behind him. A knock on the door).
Come In!
(He continues his xvalking,)
Lindsay and Morton
(enter)^
Cjood afternoon!
Lindsay.
We are ordered hither at four o^elock.
Knox
(as before).
I know that.
(Silence.)
Morton.
Is Ruthven able to be one of the party?
68 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Knox.
I do not know.
Lindsay
(to Morton as they are going toward the front).
How many men has my Lord enlisted?
Morton,
Five hundred archers.
Lindsay,
That is not many.
Morton.
I relv on those fellows; thev have served
before where blood has flown. Some of them
oftener than any one of us.
Lindsay.
The palace-guard is small so it is quickly
bound. But afterwards the citizens might come.
Morton.
My men do not esteem a citizen more than a
bull. Most of them have served in France or
Germany or Denmark; war is their trade and
their pleasure.
Lindsay,
If I were king, I should forbid this enlisting
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 69
for foreign countries. It depraves the people.
Morton.
On the contrary, it better prepares the people
for war.
Lindsay.
I always disagreed with the Earl of Murray
about these matters. He really sold the children
of the country to strangers.
Morton.
He sold boys and got back men. Murray
always knows what he is doing.
Lindsay.
Do you think he will arrive at the right time?
The hour is now approaching.
Morton.
He -that has to tidvel secretly must often make
a circuit. -If any one has gotten a message from
him. it must be Knox.
Lindsay
(to Knox).
Have you heard anything from Murray?
70 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Knox
(as before).
Yes.
Morton.
Is he coming?
Knox.
Immediately.
Lindsay
(to Morton).
That is well, then let us sit down while we
are waiting. I do not deny that I am a little
excited. One controls it better when one sits
down.
Morton.
Then I am entirely quiet. I am only a little
vexed at Knox's not speaking to us. I think I
shall speak to him.
Lindsay.
No, don't do that.
Morton
(to Knox).
What does Knox think about the condition
of the country?
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 7l
Knox.
Nothing.
Lindsay
No, what is the use, Morton?
Morton.
What does Knox say about our undertaking?
Knox.
Neither anything about that.
Morton.
Do you think we serve God by this ?
Knox.
Everything serves God.
Morton.
If this Italian, David Rizzio, got the Evan-
gelical doctrine entirely rooted out here in Scot-
land, would that also serve God?
Knox.
Everything which occurs is predestined, and
then it would be predestined that another and
better generation should receive the blessing,
and this one perish.
72 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Lindsay.
Stop now, Morton !
Morton.
Then we could cease doing anything; — for
what is going to occur, will occur anyway?
Knox.
Certainly. It does not put so much as a straw
toward his destination, neither does it take any
thing from it. What you do, you do only for
vour own salvation.
Morton.
But if I am from the beginning destined to
damnation, then it is impossible for me to be
saved ?
Knox.
He that from the beginning knows that you
shall be condemned, knows also from the begin-
ning that you would deserve it.
Lindsay.
This is blasphemy, Morton.
Morton.
It must be tiresome for God to look at every-
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 73
thing which he knows beforehand even from the
beginning.
Knox.
He certainly has his thoughts about it. as
I have mine about your speech, — although I
also knew it beforehand.
(Silence. A knock on the door.)
SCENE SECOND.
Knox.
Come !
(The door is opened, Ruthven enters, armed,
leaning on a servant. The two rise, Lindsay
places a chair for him, Morton supports him.)
Morton.
You overtax yourself, Ruthven. It would be
better for you to keep your bed.
Ruthven
(to the servant, when he is taken to seat).
Go. Wait outside!
Lindsay.
This was not the meaning, Lord Ruthven, that
74 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
you,, sick as you are, should trouble yourself!
RUTHVEN.
But I do not rely on you!
Morton.
But there are enough of us, though.
Lindsay.
And everything ready.
Ruthven.
When the queen begins to weep, then you will
let your hands drop. I know you.
Lindsay.
God forbid that we should not esteem the
welfare of this country higher than her tears.
Morton.
My Lord nevertheless does not himself intend
to go with us to the palace?
Ruthven.
Yes, if you have to carry me thither !
Lindsay.
But what do you want there as sick as you
are?
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 75
RUTHVEN.
Take care that the rascal is really killed. —
Where is Lethington?
Lindsay.
The day we all should sign he had left the
city.
RUTHVEN.
There you see ! There you see ! Can I rely
on such people?
Morton.
Lethington is careful.
Ruthven.
Is it now time to be careful? Look at me!
The danger is so great that even sick people
must rise to fight !
Morton.
Each to his task. Lethington has benefited
our case, when no one else could. He has been
able to do that, because he never exposed him-
self.
Lindsay.
How sick you are, Ruthven.
76 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
RUTHVEN.
Yes, the night is bad, the day is worse. —
Where is Knox ?
Knox
{stops a moment).
Ruthven !
RuTHVEN.
Well, are you there ! — I feel ill, Knox.
Knox.
I see that.
RUTHVEN.
Why don't vou come to me?
Knox.
Because vou still do not have need for me.
Ruthven.
Yes, Knox, you do not know what it is to be
lying without sleep, thinking of one's life. You
should have come, Knox.
Knox.
No, it was too soon.
Ruthven.
Too soon ? What do vou mean bv that, Knox ?
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 77
Knox.
When you have reached the point that yotf
wish to die, Ruthven, then I shall come.
Ruthven
(rises in horror, falls back again).
You mistake mv sickness, Knox. It is not
sickness unto death, it is rheumatism with the
agonies of hell ; I can become a cripple, and
yet not die. — Why are you silent, Knox?
Knox.
Because answer is unnecessary,
Ruthven.
If I knew it were death, I should not Wait; 1
would finish it myself.
Kxox.
That is the straight way to hell.
Ruthven.
Oh, Knox, do not say that! — If you would
mass, — no, it is true, there are no more masses,
Knox, come and sit down and talk with me.
Knox
(places himself before him).
What do you want with me?
?§ MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
RuTHVEN.
You are too severe, Knox, — your whole relig^
ion is too severe, — we get no help.
Knox.
No, it must come from yourself.
RuTttVEN.
I know that, therefore I defy sickness and go
with the others to the palace. If we get that
ungodly woman, the plague of the whole churchy
removed, and kill her seducer, the servant of
Beelzebub, it will, I suppose, be counted a little
in my favor On that day, — isn't it true, Knox?
Knox.
I do not know that.
RutMven.
Don't you know that, Knox? Why, you en*
Courage it, we are here in your house.
Knox.
I haVe never encouraged it!
RutHven-.
But what is your opinion? Yott terrify me,
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS W
Lindsay
(steps forward).
Vou terrify me too, Knox ! I do not know the
motive of the others; but mine is zeal for the
church.
RuTHVEX.
Then tell lis your opinion. Knox ! We tremble
in fear of it,
kxox".
Not my opinion, but the opinion of the Bible'
about ungodly kings and their dynasty. Then
listen; The prophet Achaia said to king Jero-
boam: "Thou hast had other gods than mey
therefore thy dynasty shall be destroyed." —
The prophet Elias said to Acnab: "/ will de-
stroy thy dynasty just as Jeroboam's." The
prophet Elisha anointed the subject Jehu as
king. "That he, should destroy Achab's dynasty."
But Jehu is as one of you, not pure in the eyes
of the Lord, nevertheless he is as a rod of pun-
ishment in His hand. — The sentence of God is
evident: but let eVel'V one who undertakes the
excution be careful ! For the sentence of God
is as a double-edged sword which wounds both
ways. Woe unto him that brandishes it from
desire for possession of the goods of the church ;
BO MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
would that it put him to death ! — Woe unto him
that lifts it to revenge his own family, — would
that it slay and destroy him as lightning from
the sky! Woe unto him that is doing it from
revenge and hate, woe, woe unto all them that
are doing; it in unbelief and obduracv ! — Other
encouragement I can not give you.
(Goes as before; silence for a long time.)
RuTHVEN.
When one in old time sought a Catholic priest,
he went aWay consoled. When we ask for bread,
you give stones. — I think I shall go home again,.
Lindsay.
No ! These Words have powerfully strength-
ened my purpose, yes, bound the sword to my
hand, so to speak. Even if I should perish, even
if my intention were not so entirely pure, which
I suppose is possible for a human being, —
where the sentence of the Lord is so clearly
pronounced as here, it is one's duty to under-
take it.
RutHvEN.
Then 1 have not correctly Understood his
Words.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 81
Morton.
Thev also seem to me to strike both sides :
but I do here as I always do, when words seem
'incomprehensible to me, keep to the act. Why,
Knox himself is one of the party.
RuTHVEN.
No, Knox will not be with us.
Morton.
Not with sword in hand ; he is a man of peace.
But he is, nevertheless, with us in the plan.
(A knock.)
All,
That is Murray]
SCENE THIRD.
Murray, covered in a cape, which he immediate-
ly throws off).
Morton.
Yes, it Is Murray !
Lindsay.
Now there are a thousand more men in Scot-
land ! Now I begin to feel easy ! Welcome !
82 . MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
(He hastens toward him and embraces him,
Morton likewise.}
Murray
(to Ruthven).
Good evening my friends! You are sick,
Ruthven,,
RuTHVEN.
Yes, so sick that I do not even recover by
seeing you! Welcome to Scotland! (They em-
brace one another.') But everything is not all
right here.
Morton.
It shall be better ! (He sees Knox, goes
toward him.) Your blessing ! (He bends Jcnee
before him.)
Knox
(with his hand on his head).
God give you a simple belief and a strong will.
God forgive you your offences.
(The curtain falls. Change of scene.)
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 83
Mary Stuart's cabinet de repos.
SCENE FOURTH.
As the curtain goes up, laughter and the close
of a Spanish song to playing on the harp is'
heard from one side. From the other a covered
supper-table is rolled in at the same time.
Pages come and place themselves in order after
some jesting. From the first side come the
Queen, led by Stuart, the Duchess of Argyle,
led by Captain Erskine, and Rizzio alone.
Queen.
With this song must come the most costly
wine. (All sit down; as they are seated the
queen says to the pages.) Is this the new
Cyprus- wine which the king of Spain has sent?
A page.
Yes, your grace !
Queen.
The world's most famous wine!
Stuart.
How I am longing for the first glass '
Duchess.
Yes, more than the sultan, who sacrificed
18.000 warriors to get hold of it.
84 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Stuart.
Good wine is as a feast-shot expected for a
long time. Good humor becomes prevalent and
hilarity is spread.
Duchess.
Good wine is as a witty saying, it burns and
makes free.
Queen.
Good wine is as the sun after a rain, a message
from the eternal spring of joy.
Duchess.
Good wine arches the rain-bow over the land-
scape of our thoughts with beauty and promises.
Stuart.
Good wine is as music, says Ronsard ; it purls
melodiously through our being.
Queen".
Good wine, I say, is as a sweet secret, it
whispers and laughs in our inner self.
Duchess.
Good wine is as praise, it doubles our
strength.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 85
Stuart.
Or as flattery, which deceives.
Queen
(lifts her glass).
The first glass lifts us up on our steed for a
merry ride.
Duchess
(lifts her glass).
The other forms charming landscapes around
us.
Stuart
(lifts his glass).
The third throws us off.
Queen.
But if we, after this eulogy, let the first
glass stand?
(Places it on the table, all do the same.)
Duchess
(laughing).
That would be a greater abstinence than Eve
was capable of.
Rizzio.
It is, nevertheless, too small to be called ab-
stinence.
86 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Duchess.
It is often more difficult, Rizzio, to show
abstinence in the smaller than in the greater
things.
Queen.
Perhaps Rizzio knows about abstinence, —
please give us a definition !
Rizzio.
Your grace !
Stuart.
But quickly!
Duchess.
But he must not search for it so far away as
the wine comes from.
Queen.
What is abstinence, Rizzio?
Rizzio.
H'm, — to give that which one has most desire
for.
(All laugh.)
Stuart.
Where did you attend school, Monsieur?
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 87
Queen.
In Turin, the definition is from Piedmont.
Rjzzio
(points to the wine).
I was just thinking of that standing before us.
Duchess.
Or of that sitting near you.
Rizzio.
If I should decide myself, I feel it the most
difficult abstinence to abstain from letting others
be sufferers from one's own adversity.
Stuart.
Monsieur means to abstain from revenge.
Rizzio.
No. I have seldom felt temptation to strike
back, but often to let the blow go further.
Stuart.
No, back!
The Others.
Yes, back !
Queen.
The revenge is as sweet wine, — this be our
last simile. — Your health !
(They all take their glasses.)
88 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen
(drinking).
But Rizzio must practice abstinence! (They
drink.) The best wine I ever drank!
Stuart.
Charmant !
Duchess,
Magnifique!
Queen.
Rizzio did really not drink. Ha, ha, ha ! —
My friend, it was not my meaning though.
Duchess.
The toast of abstinence is best drunk in that
manner.
Queen.
Was it the toast of abstinence we drank ? Was
it not that of revenge?
Stuart.
Yes, sweet revenge !
Rizzio.
Revenge can be gratifying to us, but not
sweet
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 89
All the Others.
Yes, yes !
( i'EEX,
The sweetness of revenge is as, — yes, let me
find a living picture, as Bothwell ! Both-
well is as revenge, the revenge is Bothwell !
The Others.
But Bothwell is neither sweet nor handsome.
Queen.
Bothwell ! — There exists a beauty which I
will call horrible, and Bothwell possesses that.
Duchess.
It is consequently that with one eye.
Queen.
Well yes. that he only has one eye. belongs to
it. In the marked face, lies a dim writing whose
riddle captivates. The hundred rumors which
follow him as a fleet where he sails forth, gather
spectators. His quick, vehement behavior fright-
ens them away again, the daring in all his judg-
ments astounds, and then this that his cold-
ness possesses warmth, his warmth coldness . . .
yes, it is only contrasts ; but Bothwell is such,
and su^h is also that kind of beautv.
90 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
SCENE FIFTH.
(Henry Darnley, somewhat tipsy).
All
(except the queen).
The king !
(They rise, only the queen remains sitting.)
Darnley.
Please keep your seats, keep your seats, pretty
alliance of joy! I am only coming for a visit to
my own wife, I will only embrace you, you won-
derful seducing —
(He embraces and kisses her.)
Queen.
My Lord!
Darnley
(taking a chair and sitting down, back of the
queen).
Are not my kisses according to your grace's
taste! Are you thinking of that Judas gave?
(Leaning familiarly on her chair.) I am think-
ing of all them which you gave me in sweet de-
ceit. Oh, I am so glad, so glad ; for in the future
you shall never more kiss any other than me,
you Scotland's wild swan !
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 91
Queen
(rises).
Thank you for this evening, ladies and gentle-
men: I am not feeling quite well. Excuse me,
my LoH !
(Tries to pass by him.)
Darnley.
Oh no, no, you can't pass by, you dearest; no,
now first vou shall always stav with me. Here
more merry people are coming, look at him there,
how gay he is !
SCENE SIXTH.
(Ruthven stands in the door pale, leaning on
his drawn sword, behind him more armed people,
who force their way in with him.)
(The former gather around the queen.)
Queen.
What is this? Why armed men?
(No answer.)
Queen
(goes forward).
Lord Ruthven ! Who has given you permis-
92 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
sicn to force your way into the queen's room un-
announced ?
RUTHVEN.
We come because that David Rizzio is here —
and has been here too long.
Queen.
Impudence !
Ruthven.
If your grace will not remove him, then the
nobility of Scotland must do so; for they shall
maintain the dignity of the throne.
Stuart and Arthur Erskine
(dratc their swords and hurry forth).
Queen.
The guards up here, arrest them all !
Ruthven.
Quiet, Arthur Erskine, quiet, Stuart. The
guard is arrested ; Morton and Lindsay keep the
castle occupied.
Queen, Erskine, Stuart, Duchess.
High treason !
Stuart.
No brave knight will see his queen offended;
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS M
Arthur Erskine, we can't protect her, but we can
fall, nevertheless !j — Sapristi !
(Thrusts a man down, so he falls and is car^
tied away J goes forth toward the crowd, Er shine
follows; short melee, in which they are sur-*
rounded and forced out.)
Stuart.
The damned French parade rapier ! If I only
had a Scotch weapon! Oh, Madam, God pro-
tect you ! —
The Duchess of Argyll
(forward to the queen).
1 will seek James Mel will, the citizens shall
come! The alarm-bells shall ring!
Queen.
Would that God in heaven also let His be
heard.
Duchess
(as she is hindered from getting out).
Am I David Rizzio? Has that fellow eyes in
his head?
Ruth vex.
Let her pass, she can't do anything. (She1
arts out.?) Nov/ to our work.
94 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
Holy Vil'gin ! What country have you sent
me to !
Ruthven
(to the warriors who are coming in again).
Seize David Rizzio !
Rizzio
(who has been standing farthest forward in
One of the corners entirely quiet, goes now im-
petuously over to the queen and throws himself
On his knees).
Justice, your grace, they will murder me !
(He keeps himself behind the queen.)
Queen.
This is high treason. None dare come hither !
Ruthven.
Seize David Rizzio!
Queen.
But why, what has he done?
Ruthven.
He has offended your Majesty's honor, and
with that the King's, your consort's, and the
nobility and the people over whom you rule! — -
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS M
Queen.
By the eternal truth, that is an impudent
slander for which you shall suffer!
RUTHVEN.
H'm! — we certainly shall take care that your
grace never more shall have power in this
countrv. — Forward, seize him !
Rizzio
(behind her on his knees).
Oh, I told you there was danger, but you
would not listen to me. You have been unjust
toward me, — now you must protect me !
Queen.
If you have a charge against him, I shall
bring it before the parliament of lords. T tell
you: Obev the law, do not overrule the order of
this country, as you force your way into and
overturn everything in the apartments of your
queen ! Truly there will come a day after this I
Ruthven.
Yes, on the day of judgment everything will
be judged! In the name of the church and the
law, forward against this idolater and seducer !
(The warriors go over to the other side.)
86 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Rizzio.
Justice ! I have served you with fidelity !
Queen.
But is there among you riot a single one who
Will obey his queen? Call Bothwell, call Hunt-
ley, there are nevertheless men in the castle of
Holyrood !
RuTHVEN,
Their rooms are locked !
Queen]
(strongly).
But am I not the Lord's anointed. And voil
will let me stand helpless and alone! — Think of
what you are doing; you murder the laws, you
rebel against the royalty appointed by God, you
soil the sacred purple, you tear asunder the
Holy Writ ! — Back, insane !
(They yield.)
Ruthven.
It is as I said: This Woman Would soon
Conquer you.
(Steps forward himself to seize Rizzio, who
throws himself on his knees and clutches het
dress.)
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 97
R]zzio.
Help ! Help !
Queen;
(supplicatingly) .
Oh, you violate still more, you violate the right
K>i the woman from eternity. The greatest sin
which men can commit is to let a woman feel
ner feebleness. Regard and lenience shall keep
guard around her, pity be her intercessor, and
her feebleness a bar against the rough violence
of passion! If you tear that down, oh, then
there is no limit any longer, all will intermingle
as animals. — Do not begin with your own queen,
where will it then end ! —
Several.
Ruthven, let that be enough !
RuTHVEN.
Now she is meek, but tomorrow she will bring
Us to the scaffold.
SCENE SEVENTH.
[Lindsay enters.)
Lindsay.
If there is no one who fears God and the
98 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
country's honor more than this woman, then I
do!
(Forward toward Rizzio.)
Queen
(in his way).
Over my corpse then shall you come to him!
Lindsay.
Is not necessary !
(Will seize her.)
Queen]
(back).
Who dares lay hand on his queen?
Lindsay
(yields).
She did not say that of her own accord !
(The others also yield.)
Andrew Kerr
(forces his way forward and cocks a pistol).
If no one dare touch her, then we should
rather shoot her down !
(He takes aim.)
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS ^
Queen
{forward).
Yes, do that ! But know that I carry two
lives, and both Scotland's first !
{He lowers the pistol.)
Ruth vex.
Then the king, her consort, must seize her,
nobody can forbid him that !
Queen
{to Darnley who is standing at the table).
His first duty as husband forbids that; for
that is to protect me ! His second as King for-
bids it ; for that is to chase vou awav ! Henrv
Darnlev. order these men to withdraw. Mv
God ! here at last is an occasion to shaw that vou
are a man !
Darnley.
Now I will show it — by resisting all your
begging for Rizzio! —
Queen.
Oh, they have made use of your horrible sim-
plicity. Don't you then remember that it is
Rizzio who helped you up to the throne! — God
forgive him that, now we suffer both therefor !
100 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Darnley.
I remember more than that.
Queen.
It is slander, by all that you consider sacred,
it is a lie! (Toward him.) Oh, Darnley, you
have lost my love, be now a man, and you will
get it back !
(The conspirators make use of Rizzio's stand-
ing unprotected ; now they throw themselves
over him; he himself was standing listening to
the words of his queen.)
Rizzio.
Help, help !
Queen.
Oh, Jesus, Mary, I forgot him! (Rushes after
him, but Darnley places himself in her way.)
How dare you bar my way?
Darnley.
For the sake of vour safetv ; for vour life is
here in danger.
Queen.
What is mv life, when thev have broken down
my dignity as queen and woman?
(She goes forward, he hinders her.)
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS ^
Darnley.
Thev shall not hurt him !
Rizzio
(has the whole time been crying for help, assur-
ing of his innocence; now he shouts to the
queen).
Oh, on account of my faithfulness I suffer
this ! Save me !
Queen.
I can't!
(The others out with Rizzio.)
SCENE EIGHTH.
Queen.
Oh. why did I come to this country ! No
friends, not a protector, all traitors against me,
and I am only a woman !
(She bursts out crying and swoons. Darnley
takes her to a seat. There comes somebody and
takes his dagger off his girdle and runs out
again.)
Darnley
(looking after him).
That is right, that is right ! With my dagger
102 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
he must be killed ! (He looks at the queen, who
is lying in a swoon.) There is nevertheless that
which conquers her! . . . (Leans over her.)
Mary, listen to me! — (She makes an averting
motion with her hand, as if he is disgusting to
her.) Mary, understand it; — not you, but him!
— You are to me always dear just the same!
(The queen again makes the same motion and
looks up.) Think over, Mary, how badly you
have treated me ! — Such a thing was necessary,
- — Mary — do you now understand, — how I love
vou ! —
SCENE NINTH.
(Ruthven enters again.)
Ruthven
(throws himself dozen on a chair.)
Wine, I tremble !
(Darnley runs up and gives him a glass, which
he empties in one swallow.)
Queen
(tvho is looking up).
Rizzio's glass ! It was poured for revenge !
Ruthven.
That does not matter; now he is killed!
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 103
Queen
(rushes up).
Oh, that blood shall be dear to many of vou !
RuTHVEN.
Just so ! The worse your pain rages, the
stronger support you give to suspicion !
Queen
(stops and considers).
I understand your meaning ! But, if it were
the simplest of my servants, I would rather lay
down my life than see him killed in my pro-
tecting presence. Because I have suffered this
humiliation, because you have wrung from me
this pride, therefore I now weep, — although
without tears !
Ruthven.
It had to come to this ! When the ruler does
not follow the law, the law comes to the ruler !
You have been this country's whip, now it is
swung in your own palace.
Queen.
Oh, that anybody dare say this to me!
(She covers her face.)
106 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
healthy — soon you will meet Rizzio before the
eternal Judge !
RUTHVEN.
Take me away ! Call my servants !
Lindsay.
Lord Ruthven is sick, Ruthven's servants !
(They come, he is led away.)
SCENE ELEVENTH.
Queen
(goes up and down vehemently, stops now and
then).
Darnley
(stands quietly viewing her).
No, she is strong still. She is flapping her
wings as an eagle whose talons are bound. How
pretty she is ! But I do not give up : she shall
tremble from rage, but later from fear ! — Mary !
Queen
(stops).
Do not call me by that name ! You must
understand that I can't be your wife any longer.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 107
Darnley.
You were not before, that is true. But now
you shall become it ! The Catholic church does
not know divorce; you are mine till death, from
to-day only mine !
Queen.
God in heaven, why, you can't wish to have
my life bound to this person! — Oh, what a
future !
(She covers her face.)
Darnley.
Do you see, there is no other way. I am now
your master ! Speak a word of submission ! You
do not leave this castle, before it is spoken, —
no, not if it should last for years !
Queen.
I speak a word of submission ?
Darnley.
Yes.
Queen.
Traitor! Son of a traitor! I shall never be
satisfied until your soul is pierced by the same
anguish that mine is at this moment !
(She passes through the door from whence she
came.)
108 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
SCENE TWELFTH.
Darnley
{alone).
This fight will be both harder and longer
than I expected. — Has the smart Lethington
deceived himself ! Or deceived me ! It is not
fear that conquers her. Could I have been mis-
taken ? Should I have lost her to-day for
ever? No, there must be something that paves
the way. Love, the most humble,, devoted and
imploring doesn't do it,— then it must be this !
Yes, it must be fear ; let us wait, let us only
wait ! — The horse rears and kicks until it is
wet with foam, but then it yields, let us only hold
on! — I will see Rizzio ! I will see, if the pain
of death is delineated in his features !
{He goes.)
SCENE THIRTEENTH.
Morton.
Who the devil has saddled us with the citi-
zens ?
Lindsay.
What shall we do with them?
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 100
Morton.
Shoot them down !
Lindsay.
No, no shots; for that is to awaken the whole
of Scotland ! We must speak to them. We must
assure them that what is done is done in be-
half of the Reformed church.
Morton.
Oh, nobody will believe that talk.
Lindsay.
When I tell you, Earl of Morton, that that
was my reason, then I wish to learn if you still
call it talk?
Morton.
Have what reason vou wish, but do not trv
the citizens. For they have a kind of enthu-
siasm for their young queen. If she but speaks
to them, they will storm the castle!
Lindsay.
Then we shall also speak to them in the name
of religion.
Morton.
Yes, try which is the stronger. Either vour
religion or a pretty woman who weeps !
HO MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Lindsay.
Then she must not speak to them.
Morton.
Her windows face toward them. Who can
forbid it?
Lindsay.
She must not !
Morton.
Well, — then I know of only one means!—-
Lindsay.
No shooting, no shooting !
Morton.
X-M; at the citizens, but —
Lindsay.
/Vhat do you mean?
Morton.
Do you feel, that if she speaks^ this castle
will burn and our goods and our lives be a heap
of flames ?
Lindsay.
I feel there is danger.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS HI
Morton.
Have I the command here?
Lindsay.
I think we both have it.
Morton.
I think that two can't have it.
Lindsay.
Then I am the older one.
Morton.
Then draw your sword, Lindsay; for I wish
■ o become the older one!
Lindsay.
Are you getting crazy?
Morton
(quietly).
So, but I am dropping this partnership. —
Draw vour sword, Lord Lindsav !
Lindsay.
Lord Lindsay lets not himself be frightened!
Morton.
And a Douglas lets not himself be forced
aside !
H2 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Lindsay.
Who is forcing you aside ?
Morton.
Death and hell, you all do it! Was it not I
that set it on foot, but Lethington who took the
honor? Was it not I who brought the men
together, but Ruthven who took the command?
Now it is my turn; I wish to do what none of
you dare — end this trouble by a stroke !- — Draw
your sword, you are in my way !
Lindsay.
He is crazy.
{They draw swords.)
SCENE FOURTEENTH.
(Armed people come.)
One
(quickly) .
There is danger, there is danger ! The citi-
zens demand to see the queen, they storm the
castle !
Morton.
Burst the queen's door open, place guards at
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 113
her windows. If she approaches, shoot her
down.
Lindsay.
But Patrick Lindsay will shoot him who dares
do that !
Morton.
Then it shall be I ! — Follow me, soldiers !
(Out, some of them follow him.)
Lindsay.
I call upon you and heaven to bear me wit-
ness, that I never have known this man.
(Out, some of them offer him.)
(There is quiet a while among them that still
remain. They listen; from below is shouted'.
''The Earl of Murray forever!" Immediately
afterwards is shouted nearer: "The regent of
the country forever!" The shout reaches the
scene, and the Earl of Murray, accompanied
by two noblemen and a crowd of neople, ap-
pears.)
SCENE FIFTEENTH.
Murray.
"Where is the queen? The people demand to
114 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
see the queen! — You do not answer! — Is she in
danger ?
Queen
(in disorder — night robe).
Help, help, Scotland's men, drawn swords
are put upon my breast! (She sees an un-
sheathed sword and utters a shriek.) Hide,
hide! I can't stand to see it! (She weeps,)
Scotlana b men, protect your queeii! (On her
knees.) Or be merciful and kill me, but with-
out my seeing it! There, there again. (She
leaps up, looks around disturbed.)
Oh, why did I come to this country? I do not
understand you, I am afraid of you; let me go
home again ! — Oh, when I saw Scotland's shores
in fog and cold I was standing freezing on the
wet deck, then I felt something tingle as fire
through my breast, and now I feel it again. Oh,
let me go home to France again ! Oh, how
awful it is here ! I rode into your dark, heavy
city, you came in long processions with biblical
drawings above your heads, drawings of only
murder and fire ; you were sawing away on in-
struments without sound, you sang dreary
psalms, — oh, let me go home to France! There
is sun again in France, there is pity for a
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS H5
woman, there is quiet regard and respect for
the laws, and there is kindness toward him that
Is deserted, and there is my family and there
wTere the days of my childhood; oh, let me go
home again to France! (On her knees,) (Mor-
ton and followers come; then she rises fright-
ened and flees.) There they are! Now they
want to kill me!
Murray
(foiward).
Hide your sword, Earl of Morton! (He
does it immediately, but men behind him do
not.) Earl of Morton, arrest the men behind
you, who have not hidden their weapons ! (Mor-
ton does it, they are immediately surrounded
and brought out. — To Lindsay, who has also
rome.) Lord Lindsay assumes guard of the
castle ! No armed man dares enter the queen's
rooms under punishment of death ! — March!
(The stage cleared.)
SCENE SIXTEENTH.
Queen
(who with astonishment becomes aware of Mur-
ray and has listened to him).
116 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
James ! (In his arms.) Oh, if you had been
here, all this would not have happened !
Murray.
If I had been here, Henry Darnley would not
be your consort, and Scotland's lords not your
enemies I
Queen.
Oh, James, would that I had followed your
advice I
Murray.
There is still time for that !
Queen.
No, now I must depart ! — I will not stay here
any longer, and I am sick — oh, so sick !
Murray.
Your grace needs rest. — I shall assume the
government.
Queen.
Then you must revenge me, James !
Murray.
Do not think of revenge, only think of your
soon becoming a mother; see that you rest your-
self !
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS H7
Queen.
Yes. rest vou sav ... as humbled as I am, I
can't enjoy it.'
Murray.
Go to family and friends, put aside all sor-
rowful thoughts ; — I shall take care that you
get restitution !
Queen.
Oh, this load of shame; this pressure upon
my heart of the tears which I can not weep,
that I can not lay aside! — No, something must
first be done !
(A horseman in the door. She sees him. The
horseman on his knees, reaches forth a letter
with a respectful greeting, she takes it; he goes).
Queen
(reads).
"Within three days three thousand men. —
Bothwell !" . . . (She does not apprehend it,
she reads it over again.) "Within three days
three thousand men.-— Bothwell !"
118 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
SCENE SEVENTEENTH.
Queen,
(turns around, sees Darnley in the door, runs
up toward him and brings him forth).
Will you save me ?
Darnley
(horrified, lets her go).
Queen
(holding up the letter).
Bothwell will in three days have three thou-
sand men,— flight and disgrace is awaiting all
the rebels ! — On what side do you want to be ?
Darnley.
Has Bothwell escaped !
Murray
(aside).
Jesus! Has he escaped !
Queen
(to Darnley).
Now you can keep me arrested and take me
with you on your flight ; but never shall any one
obtain anything else than Scotland's wrath and
the imprecation of the whole world through it !
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 119
— And you, Henry, you shall not have so much
love as the iron bar before my window!
Darnley
(horrified) .
Who has let Bothwell escape!
Queen.
Yes, now comes the repentence, Henry! But
if you will let the guards go, if you will se-
cretly, quickly take me to Bothwell's camp, then
I think that even during the flight this night
shall be able to see the dawn of the morning of
forgiveness !
Darnley.
Oh, Mary!
Queen.
As true as the sky above you is filled with
flashings of lightning of revenge, you shall hear
it crash awfully around you a night, when you
are hurled down into the hell of the anguish of
your conscience, — or you take me in your arms
and ride silentlv awav from here, — over to Dun-
bar's well fortified castle. — Now vou must hurrv
and choose, Henry !
>
120 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Darnley.
Oh, Mary! . . . The men, who are my allies,
I have sworn not to sacrifice!
Queen.
One should not betray traitors? — But me,
whom you love, me you can betray ! — Listen to
me now; your cause is lost, if you prefer to be
convicted with them for high treason, well, that
is a quick way to become a widow !
Darnley.
Oh, Mary, for your sake I gave up my father-
land, for your sake my religion, for your sake
I have become a murderer; shall also this insane
love cause me to become a traitor? — No, I
will not !
Queen.
I feci there are others who shall lose their
soul this night, — but let us first come out of it!
— Henry, flee with me, and only the coming
spring under the old trees at Dunbar castle
knows what you can gain ! (He is becoming
enlivened.) — But I can't promise you anything,
— not any thing! — I do not want to deceive you:
— a great pain troubles me. which you must first
be able to relieve !
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 121
Darnley
(softly).
Murray, — is our cause lost?
Murray
(softly).
As far as the whole was calculated as a sur-
prise, it certainly is lost.
Queen;
(to Murray).
You — James, you returned home to assume
the government in Darnley's name; — but now
he does not furnish this name any longer —
(When the queen pauses to let Darnley speak,
but he is silent, says)
Murray.
I see that !
Queen.
But will you rule in my name?
Murray.
In your name ? — Under conditions — certainly !
Queen.
Give Bothwell and me the conspirators, and
I shall give you the country to rule.
(Pause.)
122 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
[Murray.
The questions of religion?
Queen.
May rest for a while. — When I again take
them up, you may go.]
Murray.
I should like to be of use to my country. —
I shall take vour offer under consideration!
[Queen
(quickly) .
But you do not give the conspirators any
hint.
Murray.
Your flight will certainly give it to them.
Queen.
But you do not help them?
Murray.
Their case is dropped.]
Queen.
You leave the conspirators to their fate?
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 123
Murray.
As they themselves left me to mine — to-day
a year ago.
Queen.
They are convicted ! — Now Henry Darn-
ley !—
Darnley.
I also am convicted !
Queen.
Henry, I believe the crime you committed
toward me, you committed through love, but
then the same love must have healing power.
Henrv, on Dunbar castle we two have much
to talk about, alone. — For three months I must
have rest. Henry, are you not longing to be
alone with me for three months?
Darnley.
If I am longing — ?
Queen.
We have never been alone.
Darnley.
Not since we were married.
124 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
That was the devil in our marriage.
Darnley.
It was that.
Queen.
Well, then — take me away from here to Dun-
bar's well fortified castle!
Darnley.
They that follow us will soon take you away
from me.
Queen.
Nobody shall follow us.
Darnley.
None except I ?
Queen.
None !
Darnley.
Is it really true?
Queen.
I have said it.
Darnley.
Then your words light a thousand torches on
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS '
both sides of the waj' even till we arrive at Dun-
bar!
Queen.
Then you must also protect me, Henry!
Darn ley.
As the princess of a fairy tale behind an
enchanted castle! None but I — and for three
months, promise that!
Queen.
For three months, and now spring is coming!
Darnley.
Mary, can we be together for three months —
Queen.
We can be together for a whole lifetime ! — ■
But then you would have to become a different
person. —
Darnley.
Before the word becomes a wish, before the
glance becomes a word, before the thought be-
comes a glance, I shall have caught and per-
formed it ! Oh, a life of sacrifice is the noblest
I can think of ! But you did not allow me
that before. Yes. I thought at last that it
126 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
was just the contrary you wished, — therefore
came this night. . .
Queen
(breaking him off).
. . . which we so quickly shall flee away
from, that not even our speech must hang on it.
Darnley ! Murray ! (She goes between them
and takes their hands and leads them forward.)
We all three have to forget and to forgive. —
Now, James, my brother, now you promise me
to he quiet and silent.
(Murray nods his head approvingly.)
And you, my . . . you, Henry, dispatch the
guards, you go alone with me to Dunbar's well
fortified castle?
Dahnley.
As you like !
(Darnley and Murray go.)
Queen.
I am so tired, so nervous . . . But neverthe-
less ; I am now again Scotland's queen, God's
grace my throne, and the law my sword ! —
(The curtain falls.)
ACT THIRD
Knox's house.
SCENE FIRST.
(John Knox is reading in a big booh. A knock.*)
Knox.
Come in !
(William Taylor enters.)
Taylor.
My old teacher and benefactor ! Have vou
time to grant me an interview !
Knox.
Most willingly.
Taylor.
I have become page to the king, the unhappy
Henry Darnley. — I am seeking help for him.
Knox.
From me?
128 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Taylor.
From a godly man. No one in Scotland can
be sick in his soul without longing for John
KnoX.
Knox.
Is Henry Darnley longing for me?
Taylor.
Yes;' — things went bad at Dunbar castle! —
He is disappointed and deserted by all, also by
himself.
Knox.
A single flickering sigh from a lacerated soul
nobody can pay attention to.
Taylor.
Oh no, there is more. He is badly treated by
the queen and by all those around him; his by
nature peaceful mind is melted into despair.
Now somebody must come to help him, now is the
time of seeding.
Knox.
Of serious repentance, of severe atonement he
Is not capable. He is a reed.
Taylor.
His love for the queen has nevertheless been
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 129
sincere. That might be developed toward a
higher love.
[Knox.
Yes. if she did not meddle any more.
Taylor.
There is no danger. She detests him.
Knox.
What has now again happened?
Taylor.
She demanded of him, that he publicly dis-
avow all participation in the conspiracy; for
otherwise she could not punish the conspirators ;
this he was weak enough to do. But they took
revenge and proved, that he at one time had even
signed her abdication of the throne. — This she
can't forget.
Knox.
Yes, see what kind of a wretch he is.'
Taylor.
If she demanded that he execrate his own
mother, he would do it!]
Knox.
TTe has, consequently, a faculty for devotion?
130 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Taylor.
Wonderful! But he can't rule it; — thus he
plagued her further with his jealousy.
Knox.
Whv, Rizzio is now dead?
Taylor.
Then he was jealous of the dead Rizzio. He
did not even allow the queen to honor the mem-
ory of Rizzio. From this came the worst; when
the queen was delivered of a son, she was moved
as all young mothers and demanded to see the
father; but in an attack of jealousy he pretend-
ed not to know that it was his son ! — She never
will forgive him that!
Knox.
He is a mixture of a refractory child and of
dishonest weakness.
Taylor.
But this childishness was once so filled with
love, — by that was also the queen charmed. If
she had had a strong character, around which
his soul could wind itself, he would now be a
•nnn. Thcv are both to blame.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 131
Knox.
He is wavering over her whims as children
waver over the shavings which they throw in a
pond, and to which they themselves make artifi-
cial storm. Listen, William, I will have nothing
to do willi this. — I have more serious things.
(Reads,)
[TayloRv
Forgive me, Sir, I have myself inspired him
with this thought; he is longing now.
Knox.
I forgive you on account of your good inten-
tion; but you ought to have seen that 1 have no
time for that kind of uncertain longings.
(Reads.)]
(Pause.)
Taylor.
I was myself as wretched, when I came to von
the first time.
Knox.
I can transplant the green tree, but not the
dry.
Taylor.
As long as there is a fresh branch, there is
hope in the spring.
132 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Knox.
Then I would first have to see it. Go now,,
William ! There are not many hours left of my
life; those I have I must use.
Taylor
(aside").
He is waiting outside ! — Shall he also go dis-
appointed from this door, then the next one is
that of death.
Knox.
Is there anything else you want?
Taylor.
No, Sir !
Knox.
You have come into a depraved house, Will-
lam, you should — not seek temptation.
Taylor.
I have only sought the company of one, whom
all others deserted.
Knox.
Well, that is creditable to you, — But let me
have rest !
(Reads.)
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 133
Taylor.
Good bye, Sir! (in a low voice.) I think never-
theless, I shall risk it!
Knox.
Good bye, William! (Taylor goes; Knox reads,
stops.) Such wisdom! The poet's words are
as coin of precious metal which keeps its value,
but the impression becomes worn and soon it is
not current any more. The word of the Lord is
as the diamond, it is never worn and sparkles
with the same lustre till the Lord's last day.
(A Knock.)
Come in !
SCENE SECOND.
Darxley
(covered with a cloak).
Are you alone ?
Knox.
Yes !
Darnley.
Do you want to speak to an unhappy man?
134 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Knox.
Always.
Darnley
(throws off his cloak).
Do you know me?
Knox
(rises).
The King !
Darnley.
No, not any longer ! Only the poor Henry
Darnley !
Knox
(coldly).
What do you want here?
Darnley.
Advice, consolation, help ! — Yes, I do not
know what I want ; but I have no one else to
go to.
Knox.
You have deserted our church, have embraced
the Catholic — seek now the consolation of that!
Darnley.
That has none ; now I want to return to the
Protestant !
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 135
Knox.
But this church is more severe than that.
Darn ley.
It is not the church I seek, it is a strong man;
I am in need !
Knox
{lays his book aside, goes near to him, looks in
Jlis eyes).
What do you want?
Darn ley.
Seek help to protect myself ; I am tempted
night and day to commit suicide.
Knox.
To flee from a short and temporal anguish,
you want to seek out an eternal?
Darnley.
God can't punish one any more, that has al-
ready suffered so much.
Knox.
He does not punish the man, but the sin; when
vou carry the sin over with vou, he must also
punish it further.
136 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Darnley.
Where shall I then go? The whole earth has
only blame, scorn and torment for me.
Knox.
Please sit down, I want to talk to vou.
Darnley.
But be not severe !
Knox
(has taken a chair and moved near to him').
You have broken with your queen, Elizabeth,
and with your fatherland, to come to this woman.
Darnley.
Yes.
Knox.
You have deserted the faith of your childhood
for Mary's sake.
Darnley.
Yes.
Knox.
And later you have scorned it.
Darnley.
Yes.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 137
Knox.
But immediately when you thought Mary was
untrue., you also scorned her and threw yourself
into debauchery and defiance.
Darnley.
Yes.
Knox.
You turned traitor against her and sold her
to the conspirators.
Darnley.
Yes.
Knox.
Then you again sold the conspirators to her.
Darnley.
Yes.
Knox.
But then the conspirators took revenge and
communicated to the queen that you even had
signed her abdication of the throne.
Darnley.
Yes.
Knox.
The conspirators had for a long time treated
138 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
you with contempt; now she also did it, — and
with her all the people! Then you thought of
flight, but you can't go to England, for there
your enemies are; neither to France, for there
her friends are ; to no Catholic country , for
there she is loved; to no Protestant, for there
vou are yourself held in contempt
Darnley.
Yes, Lord Jesus ! So it is ! The countries of
the whole world are closed against me as is the
heart of every man, — oh, have pity !
Knox.
For him, to whom life has been so dark and
severe on earth, light is quickly kindled in heav-
en. Truly, my son, I shall help you '
Darnley
(on his knees).
Oh, for heaven's sake.
Knox
(freeing himself from him, strokes his hair back
from off his face).
Yes, for its sake! There still shall come that
day on which you shall feel yourself quiet and
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 139
Daknley.
Here on earth?
Knox.
Here on earth. Sometime one becomes as
miserable as you are now, that both he and
others really can feel that there exist an eter-
nity and a commiserator — for otherwise we
would not advance.
Darnley.
Xow, I will never more leave you!
Knox.
You must, nevertheless, my son !
Darnlev.
No, you alone can teach me to forget her, and
if you do that, oh, how I shall love you through
my whole life; for I can love, you must believe!
Knox.
Not me, not me! I shall soon go away from
you, but He will be here all days.
Darnley.
Oh, I understand you !
140 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Knox.
And He shall send you a help, you do not
have any thought of.
Darn ley.
But you must stay with me; I devour your
every word, as the suffocating inhales the air;
vou must continue with me!
Knox.
My son, you have a wonderful faculty for be-
lief; I tell you, you shall regain your health!
Darn ley.
Oh, Knox! May I always come to you as a
son?
Knox.
Be cheerful, — from this moment you are that!
Darnley
(arms around his neck).
Oh. I need love so very much!
Knox.
You shall learn to give it to a greater one. —
But now, mv son, I must leave vou; I am order-
ed to he present at the queen's entry into the
city; — I suppose you will do likewise?
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 141
Darnley.
Why did you mention her? I now had a
peace, which I have not felt for many months.
Knox.
Von elective yourself very much, my son, if
you think that you can gain it without a fight.
You must be able to face both scorn and punish-
ment, otherwise no physician is of any use! Are
n not going to the palace?
Darnley.
Yes !
Knox.
Then attend !
Darnley.
Oh, that is only to receive new humiliations*
— I know that.
Knox.
Then receive them ! You do not gain cour-
age, neither forgiveness the cheaper.
Darnley.
Oil. Knox, you do not understand what it is;
you, that are alwavs strouG1. . .
142 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Knox.
To sum it up, if you can't take upon yourself
self-inflicted humiliation, then you can't make
yourself fit for grace, — and I can't help you.
Darn ley.
Oh, if my courage failed at the moment. . .
Knox.
We shall pray !
Dafnley.
Will you then help me?
Knox.
With all my might! Come now. . .
Darn ley.
(takes the clonk).
I must shroud myself.
Knox.
Why? Summer's day !
Darnley.
Oh, they must not see me coming from here.
Knox.
Thev saw vou in old davs come out from the
a/ » */
taverns; are vou more ashamed of. . .
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 143
Darnley.
You make me ashamed. I will go without
the cloak !
(Throws it off.)
Knox.
Right, my son !
Darnley.
Let us go then !
Knox.
Yes. (Goes.)
Darnley.
But the people . . . when they see me, they
whisper and laugh. . .
Knox.
Not when you go with me.
Darnley.
I will accompany you !
(They go.)
(Change of scene.)
SCENE THIRD.
Throne — hall in Holyrood.
(Music. Large and elegant assembly of citi"
144 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
sens, nobles and courtiers. The queen under a
canopy, the Earl of Murray next to her on one
side, Lord Stuart on the other.)
A Citizen
(kneeling) .
This Presbyterian assembly of Edinburgh's
citizens want to pay you homage! Begging for
protection for our militant church, we congratu-
late vou on vour victory over the traitors and
enemies and implore God's blessing on the child
that just is born to you for the union of two
realms, whose right heir he alone is. ■ (Risi?ig.)
God bless Scotland's queen Mary !
(It is repeated accompanied by thp flourish-
ing of trumpets.)
Queen.
Together with our citizens we thank the high
assembly, that our entry here has become one of
victory. They that rebelled as high traitors
have either perished by the sword, or are in
prison, or fugitives. God once more wished to
manifest by our enemies' destruction, that our
right is from Him. and that He Himself wat-
ches over us. Therefore has He also in times of
danger graciously presented us with an heir, —
whose youth T trust vou with, Scottish men! —
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 145
Then it is left to thank the men, who in these
days have assisted us — first of all the Earl of
Bothwell, Scotland's High Admiral, our Lord
Lieutenant at the frontier. God has granted
this man the second time to save our honor and
our realm ! He has conquered the rebels and
restored the law in Scotland. We are sorry that
he is not here personally to receive our reward.
It is our duty to thank the Earl of Murray, our
brother. In time of danger he embraced our
cause. The order in the interior, which the
country now enjoys, is due to him. Many faith-
ful citizens I have to thank, also you citizens of
Edinburgh. We know one another now! Al-
though a woman, our Majesty does not let the
offence against her go unpunished, and your
faithfulness is my honor's strongest buckler!
All.
The Queen forever !
The Citizen
(kneeling).
Edinburgh wishes to celebrate this day with
a great feast. We wish humbly to ask your
grace to be present in a short while.
146 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen*
(joyously).
I thank the citizens of Edinburgh. Within an
hour I expect you here, so I can accompany you !
I thank you !
(He retires.)
We wish to have a conversation with John
Knox.
Darnley
(forward, bends his knee).
I kneel here with a prayer for your future and
with a welcome to vour iovful entrv !
Queen.
We thank your grace, whom we in vain ex-
pected to see at our side during the entry. — We
hope now that you may lead us to the feast of
the citizens, — for the moment we give audience.
(He bows and goes.)
SCENE FOURTH.
Knox
(to the queen, who has fallen into a r every, as
she is looking after Darnley).
Whv am I called?
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 147
Queen
(nerving herself).
Listen to me, under this festal robe my heart
is throbbing from sorrow and doubt. I have sor-
row in my house, sorrow that can never become
joy. (she stops a moment) and doubt I have in
ray government, doubt about where I shall go. —
I will not conceal from you in this to me so im-
portant a moment, that Rizzio fell a victim to my
own indiscreetness in more than one respect.
With him my whole policy fell; for he alone
held the reins. — But before I again begin the
negotiations with the Catholic powers, I wish to
once more seek an agreement with you. Do not
push me back ; be now, if only for once, mild and
good to me, and tell me: Is a reconciliation not
at all possible?
Knox.
I have answered your grace so many times on
this point.
Queen.
To make sheer demands is not any attempt at
an agreement. —
Knox.
Your grace knows that I can not bargain
about the truth.
148 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
No, no ! But tell me what is necessary.
Knox.
This is necessary: You shall abjure the Cath-
olic religion and shun the pope's seduction ; for
he is the great antichrist.
Queen.
Oh; do not speak in that way ! Remember,
that I was baptized in my childhood in the Cath-
olic faith, that I married in it in my youth, and
that my dead were buried in it, — my whole heart
is with it !
Knox.
Then it is no wonder that you are irresolute;
for, as Martha, have you not elected the better
part.
Queen.
Spare me, — let us speak about the situation
and about the future ; for I am near to despera-
tion !
Knox.
For God wished to warn you!
Queen.
What do you mean?
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 149
Knox.
That you, after what you have experienced,
are stiJl trying a half act, an agreement, instead
of a whole act, — I say that is to defy God.
Queen.
1 do not understand you !
Knox.
Then I shall speak clearly. When Manasse
defied God, he was carried off to Assyria in
captivity. First when he humbled himself, he
returned to his ancestors' throne. But his son
Anion did not humble himself before the Lord
arid was killed by his own servants.
Queen.
Jesus, Mary! This is to preach rebellion,
Knox.
This is to preach Holy Writ.
Queen.
This is against all Christian ethics; for the
king is the Lord's anointed.
Knox.
Manasse was also the Lord's anointed.
150 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
Oh, Knox! You will be the cause of all my
misfortune !
Knox.
For I can't change the Scripture!
Queen.
But you could be a human being !
(She weeps.)
Knox
( mildly ) .
Oh, would that there were the right contri-
tion in this weeping, so I could say with the
prophet Hulda: "Because thy heart is moved
by the words thou hast heard, and because thou
humbledst thyself before the Lord and has wept
before me, therefore thou shalt meet thy an-
cestors in peace, so thy eyes shall not see all the
disaster I will bring upon this place."
Queen.
I will humble myself, I will not force my
faith on this people. I will not again live to
see a night like that on which Rizzio was killed.
But I demand forbearance, tolerance ; for I show
it myself. That is a sacrifice I am making; let
that anvwav be counted in mv favor !
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 151
Knox.
\\ hen King Saul made offer unto the Lord to
reconcile him and wished to keep something
for himself, Samuel said: Dost thou think the
Lord hath greater desire for offerings than for
obedience? — Refractoriness is ungodliness and
idolatry."
Queen.
Am I then an idolatress?
Knox.
Yes.
Queen.
Oh, Knox ! It is a sin for you to say this to
me.
Knox.
If I were silent, it would be a greater sin.
The high priest Eli was a righteous man; but he
was eradicated from the earth because he did
not withhold his sons from sin.
Queen.
Listen to me: Mv faith is as sacred to me as
yours is to you. .But I shall grant you free ex-
ercise of religion with salaried parsons and all
belonging to it under the supervision of the law.
152 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Then grant me the same for the Catholics ! Let
not these horrible scenes be repeated., which are
a shame to all humanity ! Let us bear with one
another, Christianity is love anyway ! You
yourself, Knox, must try to show this love, not
thunder from the pulpits against me, your of the
Lord appointed queen, nor stir parliament a-
gainst its anointed supreme head; but rather
join in building up respect for the authorities
and the law in this desperate country!
Knox.
The Catholic doctrine has destroyed this peo-
ple. The Catholic church gives absolution from
sin for all that which their wildness, thirst of
revenge, vanity and avarice hit upon ! We have
come back to paganism ! The Lord's angel now
places himself at the gate; the entrance is barr-
ed, also every side-way, every short cut, every
roundabout way is barred. But as long as a
Catholic church-door is open, so long there is a
short cut, a side-way, a roundabout way open. —
This is my opinion, high lady, and it is irrevo-
cable.
Queen.
Horrible man! You make your doctrine a
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 153
matter of life and death for Scotland, a national
matter !
Knox.
So it is.
Queen.
And he that can't join. . .
Knox.
Perishes !
Queen.
Oh, I feeble woman, thrown into this fight,
and among this people ! Although married, I am
as a widow, although queen, I am addressed as
a criminal subject; I do not understand your
hardness.
Knox.
No, you do not understand neither your age
nor your people. It is in adversity, that the
Lord's deeds have the strongest effect; I think
that is the reason for your coming up here. For
your resistance will have such effect, that even
the sleeepy wakes up, the lukewarm becomes
eager ; — thus you are in spite of yourself a
blessing to this country.
154 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen*.
No, this goes too far ! I, your queen, address
an apostle of peace to get advice and consola-
tion from him. But he overwhelms my over-
tures with threats and my religion with scorn!
lie says, I live for the ruin of my people and
that it is only by the grace of the Lord, turned
into blessing, He compares me with the Bible's
ungodly regents and gives my people permission
to rebel against me !
Then I call upon heaven to bear me witness,
that I again and again have wished reconcilia-
tion, but it has stranded because of you! Take
the responsibility therefor, my heart accuses
you, and history will do it for all eternity ! — Do
not come any more before my face, shun this
country ! You were a party to the last conspir-
acy, I know that, and parsons who stir the peo-
ple against their authorities are an abomination
unto the Lord, — and we will not put up with
them within our frontiers !
Knox.
If your grace has an accusation against me, I
may humbly ask to be brought before the parlia-
ment of the countrv.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 155
Queen.
You yourself have taught that both can be
dispensed with in regard to us, do not then ex-
pect better conditions yourself! For we shall
have a government here, queen I will be. — Go !
Knox.
I ask gently . . .
Queen.
No, not a word more! — What have I not put
up with, and how have I not been begging for
reconciliation ! But, although I am the wronged,
oh, so shockingly mistreated, you are so severe,
so haughty, so hard . . . oh, you behave yourself
disgracefully toward me !
(She weeps, Knox stands a while surprised,
bows deeply and goes.)
SCENE FIFTH.
Queen.
I can't draw breath in the same country where
this horrible man is, — now he must away! My
designs, my whole life is wrapped up in him; it
136 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
is like a storm on a heath. Now he has to be
driven away. And with him his doctrine; for
that is as he, it is intolerance, agitation, rebel-
lion, arbitrary explanation of the Bible, it up-
sets civic life and order. With horror I turn
away from it ! — But with whom shall I go fur-
ther— and where?
Lord Stuart.
The Earl of Bothwell has come !
Queen*
(surprised, almost loses her composure).
Bothwell here ! I thought he was at the
frontier ?
Lord Stuart.
The frontier wars are at an end, and he is a
yictor !
(Goes, the door is opened.)
SCENE SIXTH.
(BothzveU quickly, followed by his officers).
Queen.
Welcome !
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS W
BoTHWELL.
We have hurried to join in the general entry;
but have nevertheless come too late !
Queens
To receive our thanks and reward, you have
not come too late !
Bothwell.
Allow me to recommend tjie officers in my
suite.
Queen'.
The Lord Lieutenant's recommendation is
more than enough ! Gentlemen, I shall remem-
ber you.
(They salute and retire.)
Queen*.
Oh, Bothwell, you are Scotland's sword and
the honor of your queen I
Bothwell,
I am your servant and nothing more.
Queen".
You vividly recall to-day about our seeing;
you the first time. You as a quite young man
had fought for our mother, but driven away by
158 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
a superior force you came as a fugitive to our
court in Paris. So healthy and strong did you
come into the fine apartments ! Such a longing
for home you gave me!
BOTHWELL.
I came from battles and dangers, that gives
natural superiority to one in a dancing-room.
Queen*.
Your great faculties lifted you up above the
crowd of the court ; we all saw in you the man,
who later beat Murray's rebellious party, and
who now for the second time has saved us and
Scotland ! You have been true to us through all
vicissitudes ; — there is hardly a Scottish noble-
man about whom we can say the same.
BOTHWELL.
Your grace's thanks are not worth so much to
me as her confidence. —
Queen.
Yes, I rely upon you, — in spite of all slander ;
I rely upon you !
Bothwell,
Try me, try me !
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS ^
Queen.
I have no one else ! — Oh, tell me, Both well,
how shall I get rid of the unfortunate religious
controversies.
BOTHWELL.
By not bothering yourself about them !
Queen.
That is also an advice. Ha. ha. ha '
BOTHWELL.
Draw the leaders to you, give them offices and
goods !
Queen.
I can't show their leaders any favor, for they
are exiled.
Bothwell.
Then let them come home again !
Queen.
High traitors !
Bothwell.
Who are not high traitors in Scotland ! What
does it matter if the turbulent heads make
trouble, when they only are conquered? It is
160 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
elevating thus to live among sheer conquered
people !
Queen.
You are certainly no dark Protestant, you are
Certainly Catholic ?
BOTHWELL.
1 myself have not really calculated the dif-
ference, but I have observed that there are ras-
cals among both.
Queen.
Ha, ha, ha !
Bothwell.
But since the Queen asks me, may I be al-
lowed to ask the Queen: What reward do you
get for occupying yourself with these things :
Queen.
What reward?
Bothwell.
Yes, I mean not the inner; for I have seen in
you only sighs and tears, — but outward, in the
realm or as queen ?
Queen.
It is certainly not great so far.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 161
BOTHWELL.
Unless you call it reward to be so abundantly
furnished with rebellion, treason and attack, as
your grace has been during all these years.
Queen.
But I get help !
Bothwell.
H'm — I suppose that is not more than my
regiment of cavalrv can lew on a iovous day!
From the pope perhaps a string of beads, from
King Philip some Cyprus-wine, from Catherine
— at most — a bottle of poison.
Queen.
Ha, ha, ha ! There is more truth in this than
in years of negotiations.
Bothwell.
Then something more, — if I am allowed. . .
Queen.
Speak, speak !
Bothwell.
You are young, beautiful, gifted and on ac-
count of these disturbances can never live in
peace ! — Four rebellions have shaken vour short
162 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
reign. Intrigues on the continent, English in-
trigues tear asunder your reign. Now they wish
to take you prisoner on a riding tour, then they
break into your church during the service, then
into your room at night, soon they kill your true
servants far away from you, soon in your royal
presence ! And to all this — religion as a pre-
text ! Look what reward your care for these
things gives you, — while your beautiful youth
passes, loses leaves as a rose-tree in a storm !
Queen.
Yes, it is true, it is true !
Bothwell.
If you even could effect anything by it, you
would as every brave nature not pay attention
to danger and trouble. But in what respect,
since you put your feet on Scottish ground, is
the religious position changed? The same dis-
turbance, the same lie ! —
Queen.
Yes, yes, alas yes !
Bothwell.
He that has once begun toward an aim, often
does not observe that he goes around instead of
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 163
forward. There must come a stranger to see
and warn him. I am this stranger. I tell your
grace: All that which you till this day have
thought and acted in this country's religious mat-
ters, has only brought you to the edge of an
abyss. — Let therefore these matters take care of
themselves ; be a human being, woman, youth,
queen ! The world anyway has other tunes than
psalms and other places than graves ! — Come,
I will take you by the hand and lead you to
the dance! Or to the tumult of the battle on
the foaming steed ! Take the wreath of life and
put it on your luxurious hair, you are more
charming than the fairy of the forest, take as
she, nature into your possession, while it still has
fragrance ; — fall will come soon enough !
Queen.
Man, you are breaking into my house like sun-
beams! I perceive you as a song under my
window; [I am myself standing in the dim
cloister-castle, the old pictures on the deep
arches put on life, the dreams of my childhood
awake, and I run to the open balcony. There is
a view as on a clear day in the blue colors of
jov. and you yourself are sitting under the bal-
conv nnd reaching: your hard ur> from vour steed.
164 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
while at your side my own is standing saddled.]
— I bow myself down before you, and along it
goes through the dreamed-of countries of my
childhood ! Around me again is the French
court, the joyous choir of minstrels flutter along
amid the ladies' long veils, the brave cavaliers
manage their steeds, the banners are waving, I
am queen in this circle and enraptured with joy!
—Yes, take me out to the longings of my spring !
Before one dies, one must live anyway !
BOTHWELL.
Yes, yes ! Travel in your beautiful country,
call on your lords, ascend the mountains, hunt,
dance, — then down on the bays, or out on the
sea ! There I was raised ; it is inspiring on the
sea ! There the sorrows blow away indefinitely
and courage is stretched as a sail ! There you
can conceive great designs and inhale the
strength which will bring them into execution !
Queen.
Yes, in the intercourse with you I can forget,
I can still be happy ! I feel that !
Bothwell.
Indeed, nature has also its altar, on that the
sorrow has to be offered ! — Don't vou feel bv ray
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 165
words a liking for life, which you do not intend
to give up? There are other demands in young
blood than those which are taught by monks. We
got a kiss from the strong powers of nature, we
must give it back before we die ! — He that is
pinched and sick, shall make a grasp back in
life for a renewal of youth! He whose nerves
begin to tremble shall take morning walks in
the strong, fresh air of decisions ! —
Queen.
Come, I will take my first walk.
(They go.)
SCENE SEVENTH.
Lord Stuart.
The court as well as the citizens are waiting
for your grace !
• Queen.
Let them come !
(As the doors are opened, the beginning of
the march previously played is heard.)
166 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
The Citizen
(kneeling) .
We have come to call for your grace according
to order !
(He rises.)
Darnley
(steps forward quietly).
By order of your grace I appear to take you.
to the great feast !
Queen.
I am so fortunate, my Lord, to be able to
dispense with your help — (subduedly) forever!
(Darnley stumbles back a couple of steps, so
he remains standing quite forward in the corner
to the right.) Will the Earl of Bothwell please
take us to the great feast, which really is his
work !
Bothwell
(forward, kneeling, takes her hand; louder
music).
(They arrange themselves in pairs, the queen
f.rst, led by Bothwell; they pass by Darnley
without looking at him, then pair after pair;
some look at him with a smile or scorn, others
not at all; the stage is becoming vacated, music
is heard for a long time.)
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 167
Darnley
(remains standing unmovable a long time, be-
hind him his page, William Taylor; then he
sinks down and hides his face, the page forward
at his side in prayer. Then Knox enters slowly,
places himself between them and prays).
Knox.
Take this sinful, but severely punished soul
up, take it through the fire-purification of repen-
tence into your grace!
(When Darnley perceives Knox's voice, he
looks up, reaches his hands up toward him;
when Knox has finished, he leaps up, throws
himself on his breast and sobs.)
Knox.
My son, have you had enough of life's joyous
gifts?
Darnley.
Now I have enough !
Knox.
Do you want to go thither, where everything
is eternal? —
Darnley.
Now I want to go thither, where I can get
love ; I need some one to love !
168 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Knox.
You shall find Him! — You, William, who
yourself have gone the way, you must help me
to bring him to the eternal love.
Darnley
(to Taylor).
You have not gone from me? He that did not
go away from me to-day, must stay with me till I
die ! —
/
Taylor.
Till you die !
{They embrace one another.)
(Down on the street hundreds of voices are
heard, shouting: "Mary Stuart of Scotland for-
ever!" 'The Queen forever!" Flourishes and a
salute of cannon.)
Darnley.
Now the ground is trembling at her feet. Now
she has conquered — and I have lost!
Knox
(looks at him a while in his sorrow).
I do not know if you will conquer ; but she
will lose, that I know !
(The curtain falls.)
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 169
ACT FOURTH
An old forest.
SCENE FIRST.
Song of hunters, who are not seen:
The ling behind us stands in smoke,
stands in smoke.
In front is the queen's hawk,
the queen's hawk.
Frangrance comes from birch and bird cherries,
birch and bird cherries.
The horn storms the walls of the rock,
the walls of the rock.
The air is so bracing and clear,
bracing and clear.
Hurra, up, she is first,
she is first.
Hunt, hunt — the joy itself,
the joy itself.
Hunt it in the river of death !
the river of death !
170 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
During the last horn-signal Murray and
Lethington dressed as hunters with carbines in
their hands enter quickly from the right, stop
and look toward the left, and after a couple of
•words Murray goes quickly up toward the rear
and disappears. Lethington drops back slowly
— spying. The Queen enters, led by Both-
well; sits down.
Queen.
Alone among high trees is to me as in the
quietness after a gun-shot.
BOTHWELL.
No, as if I were ljing in ambush.
Queen.
Bothwell, Bothwell! The forest is the un-
fortunates' sanctuary. All that were persecuted
on earth, have rested in the great forests. Don't
you remember David pursued by Saul, Jotham
fleeing from Abimelech, or the prophet Elias
alone with his revelations on the Mountain of
Horeb?
Bothwell.
But don't you remember our ancestors ! The
animals of the forests clothed them, the thickets
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 171
of the forest hid them ; they offered up blood on
the roots of the trees with prayers to the reveng-
ing Gods of the forest. It is revenge the forest
hides. Your progenitor, Robert Bruce, let Scot-
land's forests attack England every spring, as
Macduff behind Birnam the dark Macbeth. Do
you remember Douglas' nightly revenge? Scot-
land's history is dreaming in its forests ; there
we can wake it when we wish.
Queen.
I have often listened in the forests and heard
voices, but they were not these.
Bothwell.
In the forests I shot animals as a boy, but
robbers as a man. When it is quiet here, I must
spy ; when a branch is cracking, I take to arms.
Queen.
In the world there are two parties, the pur-
suing and the pursued. You belong to the first.
Bothwell.
Yes, two parties ! — But there is one that has
designs and another that has none.
Queen.
Let that be as it will. The whirls of the de-
sings belong out there ; here is shelter.
172 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
BOTHWELL.
No, here it begins ! When the dogs are let
loose and bark in the air, there is something in
my nature that wants to do likewise. — The for-
est excites; for it has hiding-places.
Queen
(rises).
Earl, where is our suite? We will go further.
Bothwell.
Sent away, your grace; for it was unneces-
sary.
Queen.
Your one eye twinkles as a hawk's; is it I
whom you pursue?
Bothwell.
Yes, with a love more intense than the sum-
mer-heat you are seeking shelter against.
Queen.
Bothwell, I have entrusted myself to your
care!
Bothwell.
You have entrusted me with so much, that
you must trust me with the rest.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 173
Queen.
That would not be good for either of us.
Bothwell.
I do not wish to go on the scaffold as Chate-
lard, or be killed as Rizzio, or be thrown away
as Darnley.
Queen.
Let the fate of the daring warn you !
Bothwell.
The ire of your eyes sparkles as do the stars
on a southern night !
Queen.
Bothwell, your were the proudest, the strong-
est, I had for mv defence.
Bothwell.
Ishall also defend you against all the world !
Queen.
Not against my own conscience.
Bothwell
(on his knees).
If vou already mention that, then you love
me!
(Grasps her hand.)
174 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
I mention and conjure everything between
heaven and earth against you !
BOTHWELL.
But it does not make its appearance !
Queen.
You overwhelm intellect and law, you stake
life on a moment.
BOTHWELL.
For I love.
Queen.
Rise, Bothwell, cease the error of your pas-
sions, rise toward the morning of honor as the
falcon from my hand, — and there will perhaps
Come a day —
BOTHWELL.
Then please give me a pledge of this !
Queen.
No, then you would draw me entirely over;
for you are too strong.
BOTHWELL.
Mary, no one has served you as Bothwell,
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 175
none loved you as I. They that loved you be-
iore were not men.
Queen.
That is true. — You are the strongest I have
known !
(She quickly embraces him, caresses and
kisses him, tears herself loose and disappears,)
SCENE SECOND.
BOTHWELL
(awakens as from an intoxication J he turns,
then Lethington comes from behind a tree at
the same moment).
You here?
Lethington.
Yes!
BOTHWELL
(rising).
You saw the queen? — Saw her here? — Saw
what happened ?
Lethington.
Yes.
176 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
BOTHWELL.
Then draw your sword, Earl of Lethington !
{Draws sword himself.)
Lethington
(likewise).
Yes, I now draw my sword against Henry
Darnley, the King of Scotland, for he is now in
the way !
BOTHWELL.
Kenry Darnley !
Lethington.
Now quickly, while you have the warmth, —
a barrel of powder under his room to-night, and
to-morrow there is not a child in Scotland that
will ask for him.
Bothwell.
Death and hell, Lethington, you intend to de-
ceive me !
(Starts to attack him.)
Lethington
(stops him).
Man, use your intellect ! This is what every
nobleman in Scotland secretlv wishes and what
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 177
the most prominent of them have spoken about,
even to-day, seeing you together.
BOTHWELL.
I am still not sober because of the kiss she
gave me; — is this not an ambush?
Lethington.
I solemnly assure you that hundreds of the
best noblemen of the country will appear in your
behalf in court or in a duel, wherever you might
be accused because of this.
BOTHWELL
[after he has considered).
So Darnlev has only — one night left !
Lethington.
Not a whole night! Do not give Mary of
Scotland a whole night for consideration !
(Pause.)
Bothwell
(in an undertone).
Lethington. do you think there is a power
above us !
Lethington.
I do not see much of it?
178 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
BOTHWELL.
But below ? —
Lethington,
— are the worms.
BOTHWELL
(more loudly).
But there are powers in us, — eternal or tem-
poral, from where or to where, — but from the
moment my will has taken root in the occur-
ences, I have seen it grow. I once stood in
for the Orkneys, the ocean tossed us, the clouds
flitted like wet sails, the breakers roared, and
the coast was treeless and rockv ; then I felt mv
family present, the Norwegian viking stock that
drove ashore here and from which we descend ;
it has a will-tree, that bit root into the rock, but
in the shelter of which people are now building.
Then I thought: I shall also in storm bend the
smaller wills after my own. — Lethington, con-
tract an alliance with it, do not try your strength
against it! Everything you ask for, you shall
receive on my day of honor ; for we two belong
to the same party. It is not Knox's or the
queen's, the Protestants' or the Catholics.' it is
the true alliance of courage, the knighthood of
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 179
ambition/ — Farewell.' When we again meet,
there is only one above us in Scotland, (sub-
duedly) and this one is mine!
{ Goes.)
SCENE THIRD,
Lethin-gton
(alone).
What? Should I risk anything on this will?
It has beaten us three times, and the first time
oe was only a boy. He has the nature of the
mountain-birch ; it grows in higher places than
Sail other trees, — it wants to grow in such high
places that it freezes to death. Therefore, al-
ways drive him aloft, — but do not follow him !
.Murray's is the mean temperature; all opinions
can grow in that; it is also that which gives him
power over the minds of others. So — she kissed
him! — But with this kiss she also consecrated
bim to death ! — Sbe took to flight as from a bad
deed; — but she can not pass him by; — she will
fall over that stone! — Yes. she can say that we
all love her: there is only one who hates her;
this one is her brother,
180 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
SCENE FOURTH.
Murray.
That was a short negotiation.
Lethington.
But sufficient.
Murray.
His ambition — ?
Lethington.
has a blasting power stronger than that
of powder. Darnley will be blown up this
night.
Murray.
Really ! — He goes the same way as the pow-
der ; — he is burned up !
Lethington.
Well, I can't remember having seen your Ex-
cellence so glad.
Murray
(seriously).
Did you have to promise him aid?
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS ^
Lethington.
With document and seal.
Murray.
That is risky.
Lethington.
Perhaps you will be so kind as to write it?
Murray.
You can do that much better.
Lethington.
Perhaps you will be so kind as to speak to the
lords ; vou can better assemble them.
Murray.
You have so little confidence in yourself, my
* s ft.
good Earl. — Besides there are certain things,
which for the moment forbid me that.
Lethington.
J might perhaps be initiated into them.
Murray.
At a more convenient time and place it will
give me great pleasure.
Lethington.
I once knew a man who was half born, half
182 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
royal, half legitimate; he was also half Prot-
estant and was also standing half on the side
of the people, half on that of the royal author-
ity. He was toward his sister a half brother,
he always defended her, when he couldn't attack
her. That man also had half friends ; for he
showed only half confidence. But that man did
not succeed.
Murray.
I also know this man, — but know him bet-
ter. He came into the world only half right and
for that reason he had to be very careful also
not to get half sympathies. He is not half
Protestant, not half the people's man; but policy
uses such things. His aims are always whole,
but the time and the circumstances are not. You
do not know whom he must serve ; — You do
not know the queen ! She does not mind either
designs or persons ; for she has no devotion. She
accepts our work, our love, our sacrifice to death,
— the next day she is free ! The ties that bind
her, she does not mind ; that which might be ties,
she denies. Gold, goods she gives not from
gratitude, for that she does not have, but in
purchase toward getting rid of dependence, to
feel herself without obligation. On the other
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 183
hand she calls home her worst enemy, yes, even
works with him as if nothing had happened. See,
lor instance, Morton! The fact is, she neither
loves nor hates longer than a moment. When a
being has such power, the situation is unbear-
able ; plans and persons change ; one never knows
what the next day will bring. The whole coun-
try is a camp where every man sleeps with his
sword at his side, expecting alarm ! — We may
remove Rizzio, Darnley, Bothwell, — but as
long
(Looks around.)
Lethington.
— as long as she is not removed — ?
Murray
(shrugs his shoulders) .
Be removed — ?
Lethington.
lie removed, — once again.
Murray.
There must not be any injury done her.
Lethington.
I mean, be made impossible —
184 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Murray.
Only be married to Bothwell —
Lethington.
She will never do that !
Murray.
Bothwell will not let go the hold of his prey,
— and you must help him.
Lethington.
And if she does it?
#
Murray.
Then she can hardly reign! — They will not
put up with it.
Lethington.
— But you can reign — in her son's name? —
Murray.
-Yes , if I have nothing to do with it.
Lethington.
Yes.
Murray.
You see. that I do not give half confidence.
Lethington.
Yes.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 185
Murray.
You also see/ that it is necessary that I go
away immediately. — What is entrusted to your
prudence is not necessary for me to support. I
shall remember you on my day of honor ! Fare-
well!
SCENE FIFTH.
Lethixgton.
— Yes ! — All use Lethington ! First Both-
well; — then Bothwell falls, — with him the
queen; — then Murray, — Murray falls —
probably. And then ? — Who is then going to
rule Scotland in the minor's name? (At the
same moment he turns around, sees Morton
dressed as a hunter, high up on a rock in the
rear; he is horrified.) Morton? He? . . .
Should he take the crown of my life, just as it
sunk down? Should he proudly stand there,
just as I at last arrived? No, rather a little
mine under the stone he is standing on, the dear !
(Greeting.) Good day. your excellence ! Have
you come so high up?
(Curtain falls. Change of scene.)
186 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Plain small room at Darnley 's.
SCENE SIXTH.
(Darnley and Taylor enter, the first leaning
on the other, walking very sloxvly.)
Darnley.
The evening-sun ! — Here it is better . . . Let
us go around a little. — Since I became ill, she
calls on me again. — Do you think, she will
come this evening?
Taylor.
She will certainly do that.
Darnley.
But it is getting so late ; she has to be present
at Margaret's wedding; she will not have any
time for me.
Taylor.
Alas, my lord, if you thought less about her!
Darnley
(stops).
Do not be tired, William ! I am a weak,
miserable soul, I am again sliding down from
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 187
Knox's height. — I am afraid of Knox. He
subdues me, he carries me off, — but he does not
understand me. (Goes a little, stops.) William,
the world despises the weak; for it admires
strength, even if it is strength of the bad: The
world admires the devil.-
(Goes.)
Taylor.
My Lord, do not speak thus ! Besides, the
world's opinion is not Knox's.
Darn ley
(stops).
Alas, if they understood the weak! He is
weak because there is something in his inner-
most nature to which he is true, a longing, a
love. He knows it is his destruction, he is mak-
ing a thousand attempts to get loose, but his
feeling is too deep, he sinks, yet holds on.
(Goes.)
Taylor.
This viewing of yourself weakens you, it
weakens your will-power.
Darnley
(after a short pause).
The constancv of the bad is not ridelitv, but
188 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
defiance, — nevertheless they admire it. The
bad person (stops) hardens himself into an in-
sane inclination, he fortifies himself behind hate
and burns all the bridges. The world admires
this.
(Goes.)
Taylor.
You frighten yourself ! You bar yourself
with fear on all sides.
Darnlev.
People want fight with great victory or great
defeat! (Stops.) They overlook the immense
refraction in the soul of the weak, the thousand
glimpses which come and go until the drop has
evaporated. — - See the sun set ! What a peculiar
sky! William, I am getting so afraid, look, look!
It is a sign, it is the ire of heaven! I tremble,
ch. William, let me sit down !
(7/ is done.)
Taylor.
My Lord, fight anyway a little against —
Darnley.
I can't, this trembling! Oh, read a little, help
me a little, hurry, I am so horror-struck!
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 189
Taylor,
(reads from an open book).
'Lord, how long wilt thou forget me, how long
wilt thou hide thy face from me? How long
shall I deliberate in my soul and have sorrow
in my heart during the day ? How long shall my
enemy exalt himself over me? . . /'
Darnley.
... I do not comprehend it, the words threaten
me, and changing, dark colors come over my per-
ception.
Taylor
(will again begin, but at the same time music
from orchestra is heard, which continues until
the queen has entered).
It is the queen !
Darnley.
Yes, it is she, it is Mary who does not forget
me ! Kindle the light, many lights ! She, the
horrible, the beautiful, who is taking my life5
comes, she — the fierv that consumes while she
warms ! Oh, make light here, draw the cur-
tains ! Have you not incense ? Throw smelling
water, place torches in front of the house f
a90 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
SCENE SEVENTH,
A Page.
The queen asks, if yon have any time to
bestow upon her grace.
Darnley,
All my time.
(He opens for the queen with suite, that
'Stops in the halh Taylor greets the queen by
bending his knees and retires likewise* The
doors are closed,)
SCENE EIGHTH,
(The queen is festively dressed and stops in
the middle of the floor before him. The music
ceases.)
Darnley
(on his couch)
Are vou there? Beautiful, harmonious as the
music by which you were borne hither, festively
dressed and in high spirits, beneficial-, when you
are present, but producing the anguish of love;
when yon go. Come anyway hither to me; —
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS iSl
no, stop, while I view you! — No, come! (She!
sits down on a low chair at his side, he grasps
her hand and kisses it tenderly; she looks at
him.) I dreamt last night, that I was taken up
in much sunshine. I. felt the delight, I felt as
a child, when I dreamt, that I was carried
through the air. It seemed to me, that I awoke
in a charming place, but you were not there.
Then I prayed that vou would follow, and vou
came, vou and mv mother together, and in still
more light. What was it, do you think? There
were angels in our dream; night is the intimate
of the day but it remembers all things better
than the day. —
Yesterday William read the song of Solomon,
and since it has whistled like mild winds around
my head, carrying fragrance from Lebanon.
William says it is about the church and its'
bridegroom. No, about love it is, it is the song
of love ; there is on earth written none else. The
sun of the south was necessary, the vineyards in
the Jewish people's fancy, Solomon's glory in all
its oriental warmth. I always thought of you,
while he read. You, my friend, are beautiful as
Thirza. pleasant as a big city, horrible as they
that are under the colors. Your eves are as a
dove's between vour locks, there is honev and
192 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
milk under your tongue, your height is as a
palm-tree, your manners are as a closed book.
Love they say is strong as death. Many waters
can not extinguish love, its glow is burning em-
bers, a sacred flame.
How good you are. to sit with me and talk so
much.
Queen.
Have you not observed that I still have not
said a word?
Darnley.
Then it must be your eyes and my thoughts
in them. — Now you are going to a wedding.
Queen.
Yes.
Darnley.
Then vou must think of me and mv love,
and for the sake, of that forgive me — what 1
have offended against you.
Queen.
1 have forgiven you.
Darnley.
All?— Sav all!
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 193
Queen.
Ill, — even the murder of Rizzioi
Darnley,
Oil, Mary, that you mentioned this name. —
You have not forgiven me)
Queen,
Yes. all — since I really understand vou.
• *
Darn ley.
No, von do not understand me, — if vou un-
derstood me. — oh, then you would not mention
this name \
Queen,
I mentioned it, because this evening it forces
itself in with its dark memory. It was just a*
^his time a year ago, and at this hour.
Darnley.
Oh. Mary, you are killing me!
Queen,
What is it?
Darnley.
The anguish returns, this shaking and trem-
bling.
194 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
My dear, you are not feeling well. — How
pale you are getting, and how you are per
spiring !
(She wipes his brow with he?' handkerchief,
rises and places him in a more easy position;
she again sits down, puts her hand on his
forehead.)
Darnley
(smiles).
Queen.
Are you better?
Darnley.
Yes. (Makes sign, that he wishes to hold
her other hand; she gives it to him, a little
afterwards takes the first from his brow.) No,
let it remain • It is that which chases away the
anguish. (She lays it there again.) How good
you are! — You forgive all, isn't it true?
Queen.
Yes.
Darnley.
It is so noble to forgive. I think often when
am Ivino here and do not know where vou
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 195
fire or what you are doing: — I forgive her, she
will return, she is good. I have forgiven you
nil, oh, all ! Mary, how beautiful you are now.
You are looking at me so mildly, so moved,
kiss me. (The queen shakes her head.) Yes,
as a pledge, — that we forgive.
Queen
(af/tiiv shakes he?- head).
Darnlew
But you have tears?
Queen
(bursts oul weeping and throws herself on
his breast),
Darnley.
Are thev treating; you badlv? Make your-
self my confidant. I can't defend von. but I
■ *
*can share your pain with you.
Queen
(rises and xcipes her tears).
I must go now. They are waiting for me
•it the wedding.
Darnley,
Alas, already !
196 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
But at the church I shall pray — for us both !
Darnley.
When will you call again?
Queen.
First thing tomorrow ; — I will after this come
to you oftener.
Darnley
(almost whispering).
Thank you ! — Thank you for this hour !
Queen
(stoops down and kisses him on his brow').
Farewell.
Darnley.
Thank you !
Queen
(goes, stops at the door, looks at him, says
mildly and gently).
Till we meet again !
Darnley
(likewise) .
Till we meet again !
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 197
(When she has gone, he clasps his hands
and is lying quietly.}
SCENE NINTH.
(There is music heard outside, which little
by little ceases.}
(Taylor comes.)
Taylor.
You arc praying, my Lord?
(Retires a little.)
Darnley.
Yes, — if love is a sin, then I am a great
sinner.
Taylor.
She has been good to you to-day.
Darnley.
Oh, so good; — only once she mentioned Riz-
zio's name.
(Pause.)
Taylor.
Do vou want me to retire?
198 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Darnley.
No. — Sing for me, — music, — but softly.
(Taylor sits down and is about to start sing-
ing, when dull jolts are heard beneath, as if
something heavy were rolled in.)
Darnley.
Taylor, what is this?
(They listen; it is heard again.)
Taylor.
I shall see. (Runs to the door, it is locked).
The door is barred.
Darnley
(rises in a sitting posture).
Is it barred?
Taylor
(rushes against the door, but can not open
it).
Darnley.
Come to me; this means something bad!
Taylor
(comes, Darnley half rises, they embrace
one another and hold on to one another a
while thus; noise is heard again).
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 199
My Lord,, let us go to your room, from there
we can come to the garden !
Darnley.
I can't !
Taylor.
I — I will help you down ; come !
Darnley
(going with him).
What can they want with me? What have
I done now again?
Taylor
(as the door to the room is opened).
It is dark here.
(Just as they are outside, is heard)
Darnley.
Help; help !
Taylor
(likewise).
Help !
(The curtain falls quickly, while there is
heard a horrible cracking as of an explosion.)
200 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
[ACT FIFTH]
Two months later.
Dunbar castle. Old-fashioned room with
ante-room.
SCENE FIRST.
A host of horsemen come, keeping time,
arrange themselves in two ranks placed against
one another, standing throughout the ante-room
and a little inside, they let their spears meet
and under these comes Bothwell as a cavalry-
flourish resounds, fully armed, leading the
queen, dressed for traveling and veiled. When
they have entered and Bothwell has led her to
a seat, which she does not accept, the captain
of the horsemen steps forth with a banner he
htmself has received. bearing Scotland's
weapon. It is set up after wh'.ch the whole
troop marches away. At the same moment the
queen throws her veil aside and hurries forth.
Queen.
What does all this mean? We and our suite
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 201
are surrounded on the way. We are taken to
your fortified castle and placed under guard?
EOTHWELL
(on his knees).
forgive me ; my love took the risk.
Queen,
Earl of Bothwell,, explain yourself.
Bothwell.
Give me that now on which you gave pledge
Queen.
You dare ?
Bothwell.
I remember only about a promise — and about
more later.
Queen.
I do not understand; is it force?
Bothwell.
I beg only.
Queen
(sarcastically) .
Among your soldiers?
202 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
BOTHWELL
(rises).
This castle is yours, all my men your faith-
ful servants.
Queen
(quickly) .
Who are waiting for my orders?
BOTHWELL.
Yes, your grace.
Queen
(■proudly).
Take them away, — and you yourself never
again come before our eyes J
(Turns.)
Bothwell
(after a short consideration).
I have for your grace's sake twice been in
exile; I shall go the third.
(Bows and will go.)
Queen
(stops).
In ex — ? Yes, that is right! You can't
serve us any longer.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 203
BOTHWELL.
What I have done to-day, I have only done
for the protection of your grace.
Queen.
For my protection.
Bothwell.
For to-morrow another would have done it.
As widow you do not live safe in this country
any longer. Every high-born nobleman in
Scotland wants now to own the queen.
Queen
(vehemently) .
Scotland's men are animals, roaring through
the forests, wild from cruelty and sensuality.
BothWell
(forward) .
Therefore seek shelter ! I am faithful to
you.
Queen.
You have been that, Bothwell, and you could
— no, also you — go!
204 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
BOTHWELL.
Do not be afraid of me, black dove of the
forest ! We two shall fly well together.
Queen.
There is something in you which horrifies
me.
BOTHWELL.
Yes, from the moment you fled from me
under the darkness of the trees, but threw the
tire-spark of the kiss after you, it has grown.
Queen.
Both well !
BOTHWELL.
Now I know and will only do one thing.
Queen.
Consider — !
Bothwell
('passionately, on his knees).
No, now vou must become mv wife !
Queen
(in strong surprise).
I — yours: — Mary Stuart of Scotland, James
Hepburn's — ha, ha, ha, ha! (Bothwell springs
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 205
up like a flash of lightning.) Xo. I did not
(Rather long pause.)
laugh.
Queen.
There is a greatness in your spirit; winds
sometimes charms me, — sometimes again — yes,
as you now are standing there, I am afraid of
you, afraid of you more than of all lords put
together.
BOTHWELL.
Then it must be because you have reason
for it.
Queen.
Do not try to fight with me ! Certainly I am
not strong, as when Rizzio was killed, but my
defense is out there. What will mv family, my
people, what will Europe say, if I am brought
in here as a prisoner, and come out again as
your wife?
BOTHWELL.
What will they say if Mary Stuart is ah
with me as my prisoner and comes out again
— without being my wife?
206 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
All Saints! — They will say — they will think
(Pause.)
BoTHWELL.
There is no ehoice.
Queen.
Righteous God! That was the reason then!
BOTHWELL.
Yes.
Queen
(slowly).
And now there is no choice between you and
shame ? Look how he is standing there in the
cold, waiting! (Rises.) Oh, you fool! (Straight
toward him.) From this cavity wherein I am
trailed, I shall go out neither conquered nor
disgraced; I have a courage which you have
not considered. I have courage to die ! — Be
careful !
Bothwell.
What will then become of your son !
Queen.
My son?- — (takes a couple of steps). Oh, my
son !
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS W
BOTHWELL.
Then he is standing without defense.^
Queen.
Oh, Jesus — Mary, I did not think of him!
BOTHWELL,
It is he for whom you have to choose!
Queen
(quickly) .
Should the only thing in the world which
I love be my destruction?
BOTHWELL.
Destruction ?
Queen
(more vehemently).
His father caused me only anguish and tears,
and should the child do likewise? Xo. No!
Bothwell.
They have nevertheless already aimed at
him.
Queen
(an.rious).
Is that possible?
Bothwell,
For he who has your son in his possession
208 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
rules you. You now prove it yourself. There-
fere seek defense for your son!
Queen
(still more vehemently) .
Oh, then he is woven into my very life .as
love in sin; all mv faults would not cause me
to fall, but on the contrary this innocent —
(Totters.) This is cruel, cruel. — Lord, pro-
tect ray senses, these constant shocks, oh, they
will at last kill me J
BoTHWELL
(helps her).
Mary. — I am strong1 Lean on me!
Queen.
Oh, I had as a child so many hopes, as a
young woman so much success, and now — (sees
Bothwell, grows strong immediately.) No, this
is a living death; rather I shall take my child
in my arms and go away from here poor!
Bothwell.
Then you will deprive him of his throne.
Queen.
Yes, it is not to desire either!
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 209
BOTHWELL.
But to that nobody on earth has right, and
least of all his mother.
Queen.
Well, then I shall fight for him against you
^ind the whole world !
BOTHWELL.
Not against me. For I shall leave Scotland.
But whom have you then?
Queen.
None, none! Oh, why did I come to this
country where I should be deserted by all !
(She sits dozen and weeps.)
{Rather long pause.)
BOTHWELL
(stands a while viewing her, then approaches).
Listen to me- Look here! (Puts forth a
document). Seventy signatures. All say that
they do not feel the queen, the heir apparent,
or the country safe, before the queen has
selected a consort from among them for her-
self. And they have chosen me for it.
(Pause, during which the queen mechanically
looks at the document.)
210 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen
(in struggle}.
And to these I should trust myself? (Rises,
without leaving her place.)
BOTHWELL.
Not to them, but to me. I have them in my
power.
Queen
(after a pause).
And I should believe you?
BOTHWELL
(a step back).
Well, — then, believe nobody !
Queen
(sits down).
My God, my God !— Where shall I turn?
BOTHWELL.
Do not be ungrateful. Have I used my hands
to another purpose than to fight for you?
Queen.
No, you have been the only one; (complainr
ingly.) — but why then you also?
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 211
BOTHWELL
(vehemently).
Oh, well, know it then: My history is like
all the others.' Either I must own vou or leave
Vou. (Overwhelmed.) I can't say more than,
that I shall go and God be my witness; I am
going !
Queen.
No, do not leave me, Bothwell! Why. I
have none other. Oh. God! (Weeps.)
Bothwell
(forward).
My queen! Mary- (Kneeling.) Oh. they shall
Hot reach you even with a word !
Queen.
What do you ask of me. Bothwell r
Bothwell
(takes forth a document).
This document is ready, when it receives your
•signature! Oh, rely upon me. you are my wife
before God and man.
Queen.
Do you promise to be good to me. Bothwell ?
212 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
I have suffered so much and now have no joy
left.
BOTHWELL.
You have your son.
Queen
(warmly) .
Yes, — do you promise to defend his young
life and his royal right? I can't.
BOTHWELL.
I promise that.
Queen.
Do you promise me — never to deny me his
company? (Weeps.)
BOTHWELL.
I promise that.
Queen
(takes the pen).
Oh, so many bright dreams, so many — No, 1
can't ! (Leans forward over her arms and
sobs.)
BOTHWELL
(rises).
You have no confidence in me.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 213
Queen
(looks up slowly).
It is not from love you are doing this.
BOTHWELL.
Not from that alone. I love you because you
have the power, but I love the power because
it is yours. If it were otherwise, I should not
serve your turn. One Darnley must be enough.
Queen.
Peace with him ! But if I would get ten
realms, I should not marry him the second
time. Oh, will you do what he couldn't, will
you protect us?
BOTHWELL.
After this I protect myself, when I protect
you!
Queen.
That is true, you can't do anything else.
(Takes the pen.) What will my family, what
will the proud royal nobility of the Guises'
say? No, no! (Lays the pen.)
BOTHWELL.
Think of vour son !
214 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
Yes ! My son, my charming boy ! God ! Now
he is sleeping in his little white bed and does
not know how his mother is struggling for his
sake.
Bothwell.
For his sake you must come to a decision.
Queen.
Yes, he is worth more than all my pride. I
will do it! God be my witness; yes, I will do
it! (Takes the pen, says mildly:) Now, Mary
is signing her sentence of death. (Writes;
throws herself backward and falls into violent
weeping.)
Bothwell
(takes the document, bends his knees before
the queen, kisses her hand and looks up at
her).
Do not weep more, Mary.
QUEEN:
Oh, yes, yes, yes, yes!
Bothwell.
The tears you weep over me, do no good.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 215
Queen.
I weep over myself. I am not queen any
longer, — oh, now it is all over, now it is all
over !
Bothwell.
These tears freeze like ice in my heart.
Queen.
Oh, that I could weep all my being away.
That I could flow tear after tear into eternity,
oh, oh, oh, oh ! Now it is all over, now it is
all over !
Bothwell.
No, now it shall begin ! Ask me for what
you wish, and you will see that it shall be
fulfilled.
Queen.
This is my first request of you, that I be
allowed to weep !
Bothwell
(rises').
I will not deny you that. (More lowly.)
But you will repent of it.
Queen
(sees Scotland's banner above her head).
216 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Oh, Scotland's banner, how poorly you have
protected me. My tears shall never be dried
on you. Leaping lion, why do you throw me
off? Where are you going, horrible, that you
can't take your easy burden with you?
BOTHWELL.
It shall do that, fear not! For the leaping
lion in it, that I shall become to you.
Queen.
Oh, it has put its claws into my heart.
SCENE SECOND.
(A horseman comes with a letter, which he
gives to Bothwell and retires immediately).
BOTHWELL
{reads, gets pale, reads again, but now more
quietly).
Your tears are not lost. Here comes a cause.
Queen
(languidly).
There can't come anything that is worse
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 217
than that which I now suffer. Oh God, oh
God!
BOTHWELL.
Then listen to this, anyway :
"To the Earl of Bothwell, Duke of the
Orkneys !
To protect the queen and the realm we here-
by break off all alliance with you.
On the march against Dunbar castle — in
the name of the allied lords.
Maitland, Earl of Lethington."
(Pause).
Queen
(pale, rises slowly).
BOTHWELL.
Traitors ! Yes, by all the devils, they are
traitors.
Queen.
You said that the nobility ....
Bothwell.
They have broken their oath, their most
sacred obligations ! — Oh, how they shall have
to repent of it !
218 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
Is this the protection, which —
BOTHWELL.
There the ravens begin to come!
SCENE THIRD.
(Another horseman enters).
BOTHWELL.
Cry out!
The Horseman.
All fields are covered by hosts of horsemen
in a gallop who ride toward the castle.
BOTHWELL.
Up with the bridges, the horses ready!
Queen
(anxious) .
Shall we flee?
Bothwell.
Yes. and we shall return with such a force
that the devil himself shall not be able to pro-
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 219
tect them. (The queen sinks dozen.) You
meant, cunning Lethington, that I should clear
the way, but you ascend the fortress. You
meant, Scotland's noblemen, that you vour-
selves would come first, but I certainly rode
too fast for you.
Now } will against will, with blow against
blow! Now fight in the old ravines! Now rise,
joyous highlander, leap down into the peace-
ful valleys with song, with fire and the exulta-
tion of death; — he that conquers, shall em-
brace the queen and the country !
Queen
(sinks down).
Horrible, horrible •
Bothwell
(vehemently, quickly).
No, the same day I reached the highest
pinnacle, I do not give up ! I shall gather
troops, where I gathered them before. I shall
beat them, where I beat them before. The
Scottish lion is now placing itself ready for
leap. The forest will soon give resonance of
cries. Come, Mary of Scotland, on horseback
and away; spears are growing behind the moun-
tains !
220 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Queen.
Yes, in blood and tears. — Let it now be
enough !
BOTHWELL
(darts back horrified).
You will not away? You will not fight?
You will surrender the country, your son and
yourself to traitors?
SCENE FOURTH.
(A Nobleman enters).
The Nobleman.
The lords have dispatched a bearer of a flag
of truce with challenge to the Earl of Bothwell.
BOTHWELL.
Ha, ha! For a duel with me? Yes, man
after man, the whole row! (The nobleman
goes.) This pleases my very soul! In the
manner of the ancients, on horseback, in full
armour, against treason and lies ! To stab
every one who dares appear as complainant,
to get God's sentence at the point of the lance
and throw it scorningly into a sand-heap. —
That you shall see from the hill !
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 221
Queen
(with detestation).
I will not look at it :
BOTHWELL.
Do not tempt my patience beyond its reach !
— Remember, I am now the only man in Scot-
land who feels inclined to fight for your fall-
ing throne •
Queen
(rises).
Strength and beauty have sometimes exer-
cised power over me, — rudeness never !
(Pause.)
Bothwell.
Forgive me if my language becomes that
of an impatient warrior ; but you do not under-
stand how to act. Come with me ! You will
take away courage from the traitors ; for where
you appear, you will recall broken oaths and
unfulfilled duties toward our fatherland. There-
fore sit on the hill while I am fighting.
Queen.
No!
222 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
BOTHWELL.
Dare you not believe in your case, — or will
you not believe in me? Remember, every one
is judged according to his behavior. If he
shows the quiet of an open face, the people
say he is right ! Come with me !
SCENE FIFTH.
{A horseman enters).
The Horseman
{quickly) .
My lord; they do not want to fight • It was
a stratagem, and we are being surrounded !
Bothwell.
Traitors to the last- {To the horseman.) Sit
tip, now we come. {The horseman goes.) Now
you must follow me farther out and to greater
fights ! By all that is dear to you on earth,
if you are taken prisoner here, then you shall
not reign an hour longer in Scotland !
Queen.
I can net reiffn over this country either.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 223
BOTHWELL.
But your son — your son !
Queen.
Can not either. And I have seen during this
hour, that he is as safe with the lords as with
you.
BOTHWELL.
Consequently you want to desert me — after
all I have risked for you during my life.
Queen.
You have received vour pay to-day.
BOTHWELL.
Well, if nothing of this kind binds, then
anyway the instinct of self-preservation binds !
In this hand lies your crown, place your faith
in that ! In the high mountains we shall find
Hamilton, Sevton and many true Catholics:
from there we beat the traitors, as truly as
Bothwell has still not lost a battle. — Everv-
thing in the world you have done but half. —
do now this in the whole.
Queen.
Yes, much good I have done but half, — there-
fore I shall now also stop with half a sin !
224 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
Bothwell.
There exists only one sin, but that is cer-
tainly also unpardonable ; that is to lose ! He
that wins is right, for he writes the laws him-
self. But I can't get right without you;
for I can't gather an army without you.
Shine on your white horse in front of the troops
only one sun-bright hour ; — the rest I shall do ■
Queen.
You should not before have deprived me of
my confidence, Bothwell !
Bothwell.
Oh, damned, stirring stubbornness, thirst of
revenge, selfish weariness, — is all it is ; — you
play dice badly with life. — But how beautiful
you are, standing there in 3rour defiance, un-
fathomable !< — I shall take you by force, — you
shall be saved — and save me !
Queen.
Try!
Bothwell.
She still has a strength I can not manage. —
They are already in the yard ! Here is no
.... oh, Mary, for the last time the star of
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 225
your life twinkles up again in me. there whistles
still a fair wind by^— reach me your hand for
a stormy trip after the fortune !
Queen
(is silent, but shakes her head).
Bothwell.
The noise down there is approaching ! . . .
I shall try alone I Not every man who runs
* a.
into the sea from a siukin.o ship drowns. But
for you there shall come a day when you will
repent that you let go your hold of the strong
swimmer, — when you from your prison-window
shall follow the birds oyer the mountain and
think of me, — shall tremble, listening to every
step that gives echo in the long halls, if it
should be a message from Bothwell. a message
from life, a message of revenge! — and if it
stays away, — you must sit until you grow old
and sallow, — still wait. — then curse Bothwell.
then say. he became the revenge. — the revenge
of all your faithlessness!
{There is shouted from the balcony-windows:
"Bothwell!")
Yes, now I am coming! — Shall I never see
you mere, you high siren in the power's star-
226 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
besprinkled surroundings ! You have lured me
by song down into the abysses ! How many
have still to be whirled down into the dance
of death around you? You always in bridal
attire; I ought to kill you before I go; for no
one should possess you, when I could not!
(From below several are shouting: "Both-
well! BothwelU")
I am coining, I am coming! — Never more
see you — oh! {He rushes toward her, embraces
her and whispers:) If we now both died? —
Then we would not be separated! — No. — (Lets
go his hold of her.) Life, liberty, and hope
with that! (Goes.)
SCENE SIXTH.
Queen
(alone).
The bird from the eagle's nest!
With him was destruction. From him also.
Now I suppose I must be through with Scot-
land, as I have not a single friend any longer.
— And no more deeds to do . . . (BothwelVs
voice from below: "Come with me, Mary, come
with me!") This was the song under the
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 227
window. — I hear them come, — they that want
my crown. But I shall not give it away. Not
for all the torments in the world. — They may
take it, then they have one sin more. — Then
thus it should end. Oh, my liberty and my
young kingdom ! It is too soon for us to part,
I have still life-blood left for you to grow in,
— well, then I shall use it to resist. They can
take everything from me, but they shall not
conquer me. They shall be forced to bear
witness :
If she could not rule the fortune,
Oh, then she could bear the misfortune.
(Starts to go, but she has hardly gone a
couple of steps before the doors are opened, a
guard marches in, halts and forms in two ranks.
Through these come Morton, Lindsay and two
noblemen.)
SCENE SEVENTH.
Lindsay.
Your grace, in the name of the assembled
lords we come —
Queen.
Welcome, you gentlemen of the nobility ! I
228 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
knew that you would hurry to the protection
of your queen. The regardful Lindsay, the
true Morton, — where are my other protectors,
my brother Murray and the brave Lethington?
Lindsay.
They are with us, your grace.
Queen.
How safe must Scotland's queen feel her-
self among such men !
Morton.
We have order to —
Queen.
— put yourselves in our service ! To that God
Himself has installed you; on your noble sword
is written: "For God, king and fatherland."
Lindsay.
If it is convenient for your grace, we will
accompany you to —
Queen.
— Our true men we follow ! What we now
have left to entrust you with, our royal right,
no man can take; for that we have from God
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 229
from our birth. Therefore^ forward ! We are
ready. Honors for the queen !
(The officers lower their weapons, the horse-
men lay their halberds crosswise, the queen goes
thereunder, later Morton, Lindsay and the two
noblemen, after which the guard marches off;
the whole procession moves slowly. Empty
stage for a while.)
SCENE EIGTHTH.
(Murray comes, follozced by Lethington, Mor-
ton and many noblemen. Later Lindsay .)
Murray.
Gentlemen: Marv Stuart has surrendered to
Scotland's lords. I know she will be received
and treated with all the respect which is due
a royal personage and a lady.
All.
Yes.
Murray.
But I know also, that Mary Stuart of Scot-
land has ceased reigning from this day.
230 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
All
(and much stronger).
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
Murray.
Her son, James VI, the King of Scotland
forever !
All.
James VI forever !
Murray.
In his name and in the name of the govern-
ment, which Scotland's parliament will appoint,
I hereby take Scotland's royal banner —
(He goes forward toward it, as they make
room for him, followed by Lethington and Mor-
ton who are looking at one another. He has
just laid his hand on it, when several voices
from the rear shout: Stop, stop!)
Lindsay
(comes, struttingly).
Stop!
SCENE NINTH.
Several.
John Knox and the people with him.
MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS 231
Lindsay.
Silence, Knox is speaking !
Knox.
The people, hearing that the action con-
cerned Scotland, wished to he a part;,- thereto
The People
(not without threat).
Knox forever !
Knox.
What Scotland's nobility has done to-day, is
certainly for the best; for everything is for the
best. But then they shall not to-day lay the
unclean hands of the fight upon this banner;
for it is not Murray's, nor Morton's, nor Leth-
ington's, it is Scotland's, it is the national
symbol under which Scotland shall conquer all
her wretchedness ; for the lion in it is the
Lord's power! — But I shall on behalf of His
church take this banner and carry it before the
people.
(He takes it amid c/reat exultation. Orchestra
plays a march, and as Knox leaves, carrying
the banner, some of the people shout: "Knox
forever!" others "Scotland forever!" The peo-
ple and the noblemen solemnly follow Knox.
232 MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS
They are received outside amid great and gen-
eral exultation; Murray, Lethington and Morton
remain.)
(The curtain falls.)
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