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  (What murmurs of horror      Arise! Do you notice    The eyes, full of tears?)
  And now conies the climax,      The terrible moment,    And even the mother      Has loosened her hold    On the corpulent bobbin,      It rolls to the ground…. 210
  And see how cat Vaska      At once becomes active    And pounces upon it.
    At times less enthralling    The antics of Vaska      Would meet their deserts;
  But now he is patting      And touching the bobbin    And leaping around it      With flexible movements, 220    And no one has noticed.
    It rolls to a distance,    The thread is unwound.
  Whoever has witnessed      The peasant's delight    At the tales of the pilgrims    Will realise this:
    Though never so crushing    His labours and worries,      Though never so pressing 230    The call of the tavern,      Their weight will not deaden    The soul of the peasant      And will not benumb it.
  The road that's before him      Is broad and unending….
  When old fields, exhausted,      Play false to the reaper,    He'll seek near the forest      For soil more productive. 240
  The work may be hard,    But the new plot repays him:      It yields a rich harvest    Without being manured.
    A soil just as fertile    Lies hid in the soul      Of the people of Russia:    O Sower, then come!
  The pilgrim Ióna      Since long is well known 250    In the village of "Earthworms."
    The peasants contend 
  For the honour of giving      The holy man shelter.
  At last, to appease them,      He'd say to the women,    "Come, bring out your icons!"    They'd hurry to fetch them. 
    Ióna, prostrating    Himself to each icon, 260      Would say to the people,    "Dispute not! Be patient,    And God will decide:      The saint who looks kindest    At me I will follow."
    And often he'd follow    The icon most poor      To the lowliest hovel.
  That hut would become then      A Cup overflowing; 270    The women would run there      With baskets and saucepans,    All thanks to Ióna.
    And now, without hurry    Or noise, he's beginning      To tell them a story,    "Two Infamous Sinners,"      But first, most devoutly,    He crosses himself.
Two Infamous Sinners
Come, let us praise the Omnipotent! 280    Let us the legend relate  Told by a monk in the Priory.    Thus did I hear him narrate:
Once were twelve brigands notorious,    One, Kudeár, at their head;  Torrents of blood of good Christians    Foully the miscreants shed.
Deep in the forest their hiding-place,    Rich was their booty and rare;  Once Kudeár from near Kiev Town 290    Stole a young maiden most fair.
Days Kudeár with his mistress spent,    Nights on the road with his horde;  Suddenly, conscience awoke in him,    Stirred by the grace of the Lord.
Sleep left his couch. Of iniquity    Sickened his spirit at last;  Shades of his victims appeared to him,    Crowding in multitudes vast.
Long was this monster most obdurate, 300    Blind to the light from above,  Then flogged to death his chief satellite,    Cut off the head of his love,—
Scattered his gang in his penitence,    And to the churches of God  All his great riches distributed,    Buried his knife in the sod,
Journeyed on foot to the Sepulchre,    Filled with repentance and grief;  Wandered and prayed, but the pilgrimage    Brought to his soul no relief. 311
When he returned to his Fatherland    Clad like a monk, old and bent,  'Neath a great oak, as an anchorite,    Life in the forest he spent.
There, from the Maker Omnipotent,    Grace day and night did he crave:  "Lord, though my body thou castigate,    Grant that my soul I may save!"
Pity had God on the penitent, 320    Showed him the pathway to take,  Sent His own messenger unto him    During his prayers, who thus spake:
"Know, for this oak sprang thy preference,    Not without promptings divine;  Lo! take the knife thou hast slaughtered with,    Fell it, and grace shall be thine.
"Yea, though the task prove laborious,    Great shall the recompense be,  Let but the tree fall, and verily 330    Thou from thy load shalt be free."
Vast was the giant's circumference;    Praying, his task he begins,  Works with the tool of atrociousness,    Offers amends for his sins.
Glory he sang to the Trinity,    Scraped the hard wood with his blade.  Years passed away. Though he tarried not,    Slow was the progress he made.
'Gainst such a mighty antagonist 340    How could he hope to prevail?  Only a Samson could vanquish it,    Not an old man, spent and frail.
Doubt, as he worked, began plaguing him:    Once of a voice came the sound,  "Heh, old man, say what thy purpose is?"    Crossing himself he looked round.