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The heirs were alarmed;   How to tide matters over 120 Until he should die?
  For they are not small items, The forests and lands   That belong to our father;
His money-bags are not   So light as to make it A question of nothing   Whose shoulders shall bear them;
We know that our father   Has three 'private' daughters 130 In Petersburg living,   To Generals married, So how do we know   That they may not inherit His wealth?… The Pomyéshchick   Once more is prostrated, His death is a question   Of time, and to make it Run smoothly till then   An agreement was come to, 140 A plan to deceive him:
So one of the ladies (The fair one, I fancy,   She used at that time To attend the old master   And rub his left side With a brush), well, she told him   That orders had come From the Government lately   That peasants set free 150 Should return to their bondage.   And he quite believed it.
(You see, since his illness   The Prince had become Like a child.) When he heard it   He cried with delight;
And the household was summoned   To prayer round the icons;[40] And Thanksgiving Service   Was held by his orders 160 In every small village,   And bells were set ringing.
And little by little   His strength returned partly.
And then as before   It was hunting and music,   The servants were caned And the peasants were punished.
  The heirs had, of course, Set things right with the servants, 170   A good understanding They came to, and one man   (You saw him go running Just now with the napkin)   Did not need persuading—- He so loved his Barin.
  His name is Ipát, And when we were made free   He refused to believe it; 'The great Prince Yutiátin 180   Be left without peasants! What pranks are you playing?'
  At last, when the 'Order Of Freedom' was shown him,   Ipát said, 'Well, well, Get you gone to your pleasures,   But I am the slave Of the Princes Yutiátin!'
  He cannot get over The old Prince's kindness 190   To him, and he's told us Some curious stories   Of things that had happened To him in his childhood,   His youth and old age.
(You see, I had often   To go to the Prince On some matter or other   Concerning the peasants, And waited and waited 200   For hours in the kitchens, And so I have heard them   A hundred times over.)
'When I was a young man   Our gracious young Prince Spent his holidays sometimes   At home, and would dip me (His meanest slave, mind you)   Right under the ice In the depths of the Winter. 210
  He did it in such A remarkable way, too!   He first made two holes In the ice of the river,   In one he would lower Me down in a net—   Pull me up through the other!'
And when I began   To grow old, it would happen That sometimes I drove 220   With the Prince in the Winter;
The snow would block up   Half the road, and we used To drive five-in-a-file.   Then the fancy would strike him (How whimsical, mark you!)   To set me astride On the horse which was leading,   Me—last of his slaves!
Well, he dearly loved music, 230   And so he would throw me A fiddle: 'Here! play now,   Ipát.' Then the driver Would shout to the horses, And urge them to gallop.
  The snow would half-blind me, My hands with the music   Were occupied both; So what with the jolting,   The snow, and the fiddle, 240 Ipát, like a silly Old noodle, would tumble.
  Of course, if he landed Right under the horses   The sledge must go over His ribs,—who could help it?
  But that was a trifle; The cold was the worst thing,   It bites you, and you Can do nothing against it! 250
  The snow lay all round On the vast empty desert,   I lay looking up At the stars and confessing   My sins. But—my friends, This is true as the Gospel—   I heard before long How the sledge-bells came ringing,   Drew nearer and nearer:
The Prince had remembered, 260   And come back to fetch me!'   "(The tears began falling And rolled down his face   At this part of the story.   Whenever he told it He always would cry   Upon coming to this!)
'He covered me up   With some rugs, and he warmed me, He lifted me up, 270   And he placed me beside him, Me—last of his slaves—   Beside his Princely Person! And so we came home.'"
They're amused at the story. Old Vlásuchka, when   He has emptied his fourth cup, Continues: "The heirs came   And called us together— The peasants and servants; 280   They said, 'We're distressed On account of our father.   These changes will kill him, He cannot sustain them.
  So humour his weakness:   Keep silent, and act still As if all this trouble   Had never existed; Give way to him, bow to him   Just as in old days. 290
For each stroke of barschin, For all needless labour,   For every rough word We will richly reward you.
  He cannot live long now, The doctors have told us   That two or three months Is the most we may hope for.
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Holy images.