âHe has given Butyokino to the convictâs wife,â Aksinya went on bawling. âGive her everything now, I donât want anything from you! Let me alone! You are all a gang of thieves here! I have seen my fill of it, I have had enough! You have robbed folks coming in and going out; you have robbed old and young alike, you brigands! And who has been selling vodka without a licence? And false money? Youâve filled boxes full of false coins, and now I am no more use!â
A crowd had by now collected at the open gate and was staring into the yard.
âLet the people look,â bawled Aksinya. âI will shame you all! You shall burn with shame! You shall grovel at my feet. Hey! Stepan,â she called to the deaf man, âlet us go home this minute! Let us go to my father and mother; I donât want to live with convicts. Get ready!â
Clothes were hanging on lines stretched across the yard; she snatched off her petticoats and blouses still wet and flung them into the deaf manâs arms. Then in her fury she dashed about the yard by the linen, tore down all of it, and what was not hers she threw on the ground and trampled upon.
âHoly Saints, take her away,â moaned Varvara. âWhat a woman! Give her Butyokino! Give it her, for the Lordâs sake!â
âWell! Wha-at a woman!â people were saying at the gate. âSheâs a wo-oman! Sheâs going itâ âsomething like!â