Dimitri is an 1876 French-language grand opera in five acts by Victorin de Joncières to a libretto by Henri de Bornier and Paul Armand Silvestre after Schiller's incomplete play Demetrius, a story based on the life of the Russian pretender False Dmitriy I (reigned 1605–1606).
The Count of Lusatia arrives and tells the Abbot that the boy Vasili is in fact Dimitri, youngest son of Ivan IV and Tsar of Russia.
In an interview with the Patriarch of Moscow, Job, Marpha refuses to either reject or accept the young man as her son.
Scene 2: News arrives at Dimitri's camp outside Moscow that the citizenry have executed his rival, Boris Godunov.
Dimitri is mortally wounded and dies surrounded by Marina and Marpha, asking along with the Moscovites for God to reveal the truth.