sang the blind man.
“Is Wee‑p‑i‑i‑ng hea‑vi‑ly, is sob‑bing!”
Makarka repeated sharply, with conviction.
“Before the Saviour, before His image—”
roared the blind man.
“Perchance the sinners will repent!”
threatened Makarka, inflating his insolent nostrils. And merging his basso with the blind man’s tenor, he articulated distinctly:
“They shall not escape God’s judgment! They shall not escape the fires eternal!”
And suddenly he broke off—in accord with the blind man—cleared his throat, and simply, in his habitual insolent tone, demanded: “Give us a contribution, merchant, to warm us up.” Thereupon, without waiting for a reply, he strode across the threshold, marched up to the bed, and thrust a small picture into Tikhon Ilitch’s hand.
It was a simple clipping from an illustrated journal, but, as he glanced at it, Tikhon Ilitch felt a sudden pain in his lower breast. Beneath the picture, which depicted trees bending before the tempest, a white zigzag athwart the storm-cloud, and a falling man, was the inscription: “Jean-Paul Richter, killed by lightning.”
And Tikhon Ilitch was dumbfounded.
But he immediately recovered himself. “Akh, the scoundrel!” he said to himself, and he slowly tore the picture into tiny bits. Then he got out of bed and, drawing on his boots, said: “Go scare someone who is a bigger