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The other, the fair-haired,    With yellow locks streaming.
(Oh, you yellow locks,    Like spun gold do you glisten 40  And glow, in the sunshine!)
  Then perched on three high chairs  The three little Barins,    Each wearing his napkin  Tucked under his chin,    With the old nurse beside them,  And further the body    Of ancient retainers;
And facing the Prince    At the foot of the table, 50  The black-moustached footguards    Are sitting together.
Behind each chair standing    A young girl is serving,  And women are waving    The flies off with branches. 
The woolly white poodles    Are under the table,  The three little Barins    Are teasing them slyly. 60
  Before the Pomyéshchick,  Bare-headed and humble,    The Elder is standing.
"Now tell me, how soon    Will the mowing be finished?"  The Barin says, talking    And eating at once.
  "It soon will be finished.  Three days of the week    Do we work for your Highness; 70  A man with a horse,    And a youth or a woman,  And half an old woman    From every allotment.  To-day for this week  Is the Barin's term finished."
  "Tut-tut!" says the Barin,  Like one who has noticed    Some crafty intent  On the part of another. 80
  "'The Barin's term,' say you?  Now, what do you mean, pray?"
  The eye which is bright  He has fixed on the peasant.
  The Elder is hanging  His head in confusion.
  "Of course it must be  As your Highness may order.
  In two or three days,  If the weather be gracious, 90    The hay of your Highness  Can surely be gathered. 
  That's so,—is it not?"
(He turns his broad face round    And looks at the peasants.)
And then the sharp woman,    Klím's gossip, Orévna, 
Makes answer for them:    "Yes, Klím, Son-of-Jacob,  The hay of the Barin 100    Is surely more precious  Than ours. We must tend it    As long as the weather lasts;  Ours may come later."
  "A woman she is,  But more clever than you,"
  The Pomyéshchick says smiling,  And then of a sudden    Is shaken with laughter:
"Ha, ha! Oh, you blockhead! 110    Ha? ha! fool! fool! fool!  It's the 'Barin's term,' say you?    Ha, ha! fool, ha, ha!
The Barin's term, slave,    Is the whole of your life-time;  And you have forgotten    That I, by God's mercy,  By Tsar's ancient charter,    By birth and by merit,  Am your supreme master!" 120
  The strangers remark here  That Vlásuchka gently    Slips down to the grass.
  "What's that for?" they ask him.  "We may as well rest now;    He's off. You can't stop him.  For since it was rumoured    That we should be given  Our freedom, the Barin    Takes care to remind us 130  That till the last hour    Of the world will the peasant  Be clenched in the grip    Of the nobles." And really  An hour slips away    And the Prince is still speaking;
His tongue will not always    Obey him, he splutters  And hisses, falls over    His words, and his right eye 140  So shares his disquiet    That it trembles and twitches.
The left eye expands,    Grows as round as an owl's eye,  Revolves like a wheel.
  The rights of his Fathers  Through ages respected,    His services, merits,  His name and possessions,    The Barin rehearses. 150
God's curse, the Tsar's anger,    He hurls at the heads  Of obstreperous peasants.
  And strictly gives order  To sweep from the commune    All senseless ideas,  Bids the peasants remember    That they are his slaves  And must honour their master.
  "Our Fathers," cried Klím, 160  And his voice sounded strangely,    It rose to a squeak  As if all things within him    Leapt up with a passionate  Joy of a sudden    At thought of the mighty  And noble Pomyéshchicks,
"And whom should we serve    Save the Master we cherish?  And whom should we honour? 170    In whom should we hope?
We feed but on sorrows,    We bathe but in tear-drops,  How can we rebel?
  "Our tumble-down hovels,  Our weak little bodies,    Ourselves, we are yours,  We belong to our Master.
  The seeds which we sow  In the earth, and the harvest, 180    The hair on our heads—  All belongs to the Master.
  Our ancestors fallen  To dust in their coffins,    Our feeble old parents  Who nod on the oven,    Our little ones lying  Asleep in their cradles    Are yours—are our Master's,  And we in our homes 190  Use our wills but as freely    As fish in a net."
The words of the Elder    Have pleased the Pomyéshchick,  The right eye is gazing    Benignantly at him,  The left has grown smaller    And peaceful again  Like the moon in the heavens.
He pours out a goblet 200    Of red foreign wine:
"Drink," he says to the peasant.    The rich wine is burning  Like blood in the sunshine;    Klím drinks without protest.