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  The peasants, still wishing  To question old Vlásuchka,    Wisely present him  A cupful of vodka:
  "Now come, little Uncle, 300  Be gracious to strangers,    And tell us your story."
"There's nothing to tell you.    You haven't told me yet  Who you are and whence  You have journeyed to these parts,    And whither you go."
"We will not be surly    Like you. We will tell you.
We've come a great distance, 310    And seek to discover  A thing of importance.
  A trouble torments us,  It draws us away    From our work, from our homes,  From the love of our food…."
  The peasants then tell him  About their chance meeting,    Their argument, quarrel,  Their vow, and decision; 320
  Of how they had sought  In the Government "Tight-Squeeze"    And Government "Shot-Strewn"  The man who, in Russia,    Is happy and free….
  Old Vlásuchka listens, Observing them keenly.   "I see," he remarks, When the story is finished,
  "I see you are very 330 Peculiar people.   We're said to be strange here, But you are still stranger."
"Well, drink some more vodka   And tell us your tale."   And when by the vodka His tongue becomes loosened,   Old Vlásuchka tells them The following story.

I

THE DIE-HARD

"The great prince, Yutiátin,    The ancient Pomyéshchick,  Is very eccentric.
  His wealth is untold,  And his titles exalted,    His family ranks  With the first in the Empire.
  The whole of his life  He has spent in amusement,    Has known no control 10  Save his own will and pleasure.
  When we were set free  He refused to believe it:    'They lie! the low scoundrels!'
There came the posrédnik    And Chief of Police,  But he would not admit them,    He ordered them out  And went on as before,  And only became 20    Full of hate and suspicion:
'Bow low, or I'll flog you    To death, without mercy!'
The Governor himself came    To try to explain things,  And long they disputed    And argued together;
The furious voice    Of the prince was heard raging  All over the house, 30    And he got so excited  That on the same evening    A stroke fell upon him:
His left side went dead,    Black as earth, so they tell us,  And all over nothing!
  It wasn't his pocket  That pinched, but his pride    That was touched and enraged him.  He lost but a mite 40    And would never have missed it."
"Ah, that's what it means, friends,    To be a Pomyéshchick,  The habit gets into    The blood," says Mitródor,
  "And not the Pomyéshchick's  Alone, for the habit    Is strong in the peasant  As well," old Pakhóm said.
  "I once on suspicion 50  Was put into prison,    And met there a peasant  Called Sédor, a strange man,    Arrested for horse-stealing,  If I remember;
  And he from the prison  Would send to the Barin    His taxes. (The prisoner's  Income is scanty,    He gets what he begs 60  Or a trifle for working.)
  The others all laughed at him;  'Why should you send them    And you off for life  To hard labour?' they asked him.
  But he only said,  'All the same … it is better.'"
  "Well, now, little Uncle,  Go on with the story."
  "A mite is a small thing, 70    Except when it happens  To be in the eye!
  The Pomyéshchick lay senseless,  And many were sure    That he'd never recover.
His children were sent for,   Those black-moustached footguards (You saw them just now   With their wives, the fine ladies), The eldest of them 80   Was to settle all matters Concerning his father.
  He called the posrédnik To draw up the papers   And sign the agreement, When suddenly—there   Stands the old man before them!
He springs on them straight   Like a wounded old tiger, He bellows like thunder. 90
  It was but a short time Ago, and it happened   That I was then Elder, And chanced to have entered   The house on some errand, And I heard myself   How he cursed the Pomyéshchicks;
The words that he spoke   I have never forgotten:
'The Jews are reproached 100   For betraying their Master; But what are you doing?   The rights of the nobles By centuries sanctioned   You fling to the beggars!'
He said to his sons,   'Oh, you dastardly cowards! My children no longer!   It is for small reptiles— The pope's crawling breed— 110   To take bribes from vile traitors, To purchase base peasants,   And they may be pardoned!
But you!—you have sprung   From the house of Yutiátin, The Princes Yu-tiá-tin   You are! Go!… Go, leave me! You pitiful puppies!'