Peter and Alexis. Frank J. Morlock

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      COPYRIGHT INFORMATION

      Copyright © 1981, 2012 by Frank J. Morlock

      Published by Wildside Press LLC

      www.wildsidebooks.com

      DEDICATION

      To the memory of my father, Michael Morlock, Who was no Peter

      CAST OF CHARACTERS

      Foreign Minister

      Princess Charlotte

      Larion Dokoukin

      Alexis, Tsarevitch (Crown Prince) of Russia

      Afanassief, his valet

      Peter Tolstoi

      Peter I the Great, Tsar (Emperor) of Russia

      Catherine, the Tsaritsa

      Theodosius, a prelate

      Servant

      Kniaz Pope

      Kniaz Cardinals

      Ivan

      Cornelius

      Several Old Believers

      Princess Marya, Alexis’ aunt

      Princesss Eudoxia, Alexis’ mother, Peter’s divorced wife

      Prince Alexis as a child

      German Tutor

      An orderly

      Kikin

      Prince Dolgoruki

      Peter’s Courier

      Peter’s Valet

      Afrossinia, Alexis’ common-law wife

      Guards

      Courtiers

      A herald

      Priests

      Father Matthew

      Executioner

      Doctor

      NOTE

      This play is intended to be played with props but without conventional scenery. Characters, when not involved in the action, step back but remain visible to give a suggestion that what is happening involves all of them, constantly. Peter occasionally remains seated or appears on a dais. Pictures of Icons hang from the ceiling, but they do not suggest a conventional set. Occasionally the pictures change, sometimes, but not necessarily, to indicate a change of scenes; sometimes, within a scene, to indicate a change of mood.

      PROLOGUE

      The Foreign Minister is advising Princess Charlotte.

      Foreign Minister

      The Emperor understands your religious scruples, Princess Charlotte. You are a Lutheran and the Russian Crown Prince is an Orthodox. Yet, we believe Tsar Peter’s conception of Orthodoxy takes the form of the Lutheran faith. The Tsar has abolished the Patriarchate and, following the example of the Protestant Princes, he has declared himself Chief Bishop. Now that the Russians are reasonably taught and educated in schools, all of the superstitious beliefs, must, of themselves, disappear. In these schools the teachings are quite Lutheran. The monasteries are reduced in number. Miracles and relics no longer command reverence. Thus you may be at ease.

      (Princess Charlotte bows her head.)

      As to conditions there, it is true they are primitive. The Muscovites do everything because they are compelled to. Russia is a country where everything is begun and nothing is finished. Should the Tsar die, farewell to all progress. The Tsarevitch, who is to be your husband, is not as complete a partisan of the old ways as he is reputed to be. He favors progress, but does not believe in beating it into the people by force as does his father.

      (The Princess bows again.)

      As to his dissipated ways, it is true, he is a man of not strong character. But he is stubborn beyond belief. Since his father will not let him have his own way and live his own life, he protests silently by drinking Vodka, thereby deliberately unfitting himself for the role his father tries to force on him. He also gains popularity in this way. Our ambassador believes that once the Tsarevitch attains the throne, he will reform himself and cease these deliberate dissipations.

      (Smiling) The Emperor hopes that this report will satisfy your scruples and expects that you will marry the Tsarevitch, thus uniting the two greatest empires on the face of the earth.

      (Princess Charlotte bows in acquiescence.)

      (The Foreign Minister bows solemnly and withdraws.)

      ACT I

      SCENE 1

      The apartment of the Tsarevitch.

      It is small, furnished with icons and various decorations of a religious nature. Alexis is seated in an armchair. He has a hangover, and is still dressed in a dressing gown and slippers even though it is late in the day. Larion Dokoukin, an elderly man, shabbily dressed, is speaking. Alexis is about twenty-five; his keen intelligence is somewhat dulled by drink and sleep. He is thin, aesthetic, and somewhat weak-looking.

      Dokoukin

      Antichrist is coming. He, the last of the devils, is not yet come himself; but the world is teeming with his progeny. They twist everything to suit his plans. He will appear in his own due time, when all is prepared and smoothed. (fervently) He is already at the door. Soon he will enter.

      Alexis (sharply)

      And how do you know all this? Of that day it is written “Neither the son nor the angels know.” How is it you know?

      (Dokoukin remains silent.)

      Alexis (yawning)

      Are you a heretic or a Raskolnik?

      Dokoukin

      I am a clerk in the Arsenal. An informer reported me for taking bribes.

      Alexis

      Did you?

      Dokoukin

      I did. I was not compelled to, neither did I do it for the sake of extortion, but in all fairness and with a clean conscience, being satisfied with whatever was given me freely for the clerk work I did.

      (Alexis laughs at his naiveté.)

      Dokoukin

      People had for years been wont to give me trifling sums—in all two hundred and fifteen rubles. I have

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