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Weinstein was slapping the wall with both hands. His large figure was enveloped in the costliest praying-shawl in the room. All that was seen of him were two wrists overgrown with red hair. Now and then he would face about and fall to striding up and down meditatively. He was a well-fed, ruddy-necked Jew of fifty with a sharp hooked nose sandwiched in between two plump florid cheeks, and a small red beard. His unb.u.t.toned coat of a rich broadcloth reached down to his heels; his trousers were tucked into the tops of well-polished boots. Once or twice an unkempt, underfed little man in a tattered shawl and with a figure and gait which left no doubt that he was a tailor by trade, barred Weinstein's way, snapping his fingers at him; then the two took to pacing the room together, shouting and chuckling in rapturous duet as they moved along, as is written: "Serve the Lord with gladness, come before His presence with singing," or "Because thou servedst not thy G.o.d with joyfulness and with gladness of heart, for the abundance of all things; therefore shalt thou serve thine enemies." That the little tailor did not enjoy an "abundance of all things" was evident from his pinched face and broken shoes. He did not rank high enough in his trade to have even Weinstein's clerk for a customer, yet at the Pietist gatherings he addressed Weinstein himself by the familiar diminutive of his first name and sometimes helped to spank him or to pelt him with burrs out of his "gladness of heart."
Yossl Parmet--Makar's father--was tiptoeing about the crowded room, smiling and whispering fondly, as though confiding glad news to himself, but his heart was not in his prayer. He was thinking of his son and the young woman who had come to plead for him. Indeed, Yossl's piety had deserted him long since. He clung to the Pietists for the sake of the emotional atmosphere that enveloped it and from his sincere admiration of the Good Jew's personality rather than from faith. He was fond of Miriam and his heart was now torn between jealousy in her behalf and anxiety about his son.
The services over, silence fell upon the congregation. The Pietists were folding up their shawls, or eyeing the floor expectantly. The minutes were pa.s.sing slowly. The stillness seemed to be growing in intensity.
Presently a song broke from somebody in a corner. It was a song without words, a new tune especially composed for the occasion. Like most "Gornovo melodies" it was meant to be gay, and like all of them it was pervaded by the mixed sadness of the Exiled People and the brooding, far-away plaint of their Slavic neighbours. There is a mingling of fire and tears in the Pietist "hop." It isn't without reason that the most rabid Oppositionist of Lithuania will sing them on the Rejoicing of the Law.
The others in the room had never heard the song before, yet several of them fell to at once, seizing the tune by intuition. The rest joined in gradually, until the whole a.s.semblage was united in chorus. The import of this kind of singing while the Good Jew is in the privacy of his room is a plea that he may issue forth and grace the crowd with his presence and "some law." They went through the tune again and again, gathering zest as they mastered its few simple bars. The melody seemed to be climbing up and down, or diving in and out; expostulating with somebody as it did so, bewailing somebody or something, appealing in the name of some dear event in the past or future. Unable to tell definitely what their tune was saying or doing, the singers craved to see the speechless song, to make out the words it seemed to be uttering, and because that was impossible their hearts were agitated with objectless sympathy and longing, and the rabbi was forgotten for awhile. They pitied the unknown man who seemed to be climbing or diving all the more because it was in their own voices that his incomprehensible words were concealed.
Little by little, however, as the novelty of the air wore off, the consciousness that they were beseeching the Man of Righteousness to come out to them blent with their yearning sympathy for their melody. They ardently believed that the Good Jew's soul had ascended on the wings of his ecstasy to the Divine Presence. All eyes were on his door. An indescribable ring of solemnity, of awe, of love and of prayer came into their voices. Their faces were transfixed with it. The melody was pouring out its very heart to the holy man.
Suddenly it all died away. The door flew open and, preceded by a stout "supervisor," appeared an elderly man with a flabby-lipped mouth and a hooked little nose. He wore a long-skirted coat of black silk with a belt of the same material wound several times round his waist, and a round cap of sable and velvet. The crowd fell apart in breathless excitement. As he advanced through the lane thus formed he was flushed and trying to conceal his embarra.s.sment in a look of grief. He seated himself at a long table and shut his eyes. Now and then he heaved a sigh, swaying his head silently, with absorbed mien. He was supposed to be in a trance of lofty meditation, abandoned to thoughts and feelings which were to bear his soul to heaven.
The crowd was literally spellbound. Yossl Parmet was pale with unuttered sobs. He was perhaps the only man in the room who perceived that the holy man was ill at ease, and this gave him a sense of the Good Jew's childlike purity which threw him into a veritable frenzy of reverence.
More than thirty years the master of mult.i.tudes and still blus.h.i.+ng! When Yossl was a young man he had changed his Good Jews several times. He had adored them all, but he had not liked them. His soul had found no rest until he moved to Zorki and met this Good Jew of Gornovo. Then he felt himself in the presence of absolute sincerity, of unsophisticated warmth of heart. This Good Jew was a nave man, timid and una.s.sertive. He had an unfeigned sense of his own supernatural powers, and was somewhat in awe of them. He felt as though there was another, a holier being within him and he feared that being in the same way as one possessed fears the unholy tenant of his soul.
Finally the Good Jew opened his eyes and began to speak. It was a simple sermon on a text taken at random from the Bible before him, but his listeners sought a hidden meaning, a mystical allusion, in the plainest of his words or gestures. Yossl could have instructed him in every branch of holy lore, yet he seized upon the exposition thirstily. In the first place, he had seen Good Jews who were even less at home in the Law than the Good Jew of Gornovo was, so that he felt grateful to him for not being a downright ignoramus. In the second place, he knew that he actually believed his own words to be inspired.
A few minutes after the sermon the Good Jew beckoned Yossl to a seat by his side. Makar's father accepted the invitation in a quiver of obsequious grat.i.tude.
"How are you, Yossl? Any news of Feivish?"
"He's in Paris now," Yossl answered with a gesture of disrelish and speaking aloud, so that the entire crowd might hear him. He hated to tell the holy man a lie, yet he did so readily, the occasion being his best opportunity for giving the story wide circulation.
"In Paris!"
"Yes, he has been there since the beginning of summer. I have letters from him."
"Letters from Feivis.h.!.+"
"He wanted to show off I suppose. Wanted his father to see he's in Paris. On my part he may go to perdition."
"What is he doing there? Studying medicine in French?"
"That's what he says in his letter. Yes, he has quite broken with Judaism, rabbi, quite a Gentile. All that is required to make the transformation complete is that he should extort bribes from Jews for allowing them to breathe. One Jew he prevents from breathing already"--pointing at himself.
The rabbi swayed his head sympathetically.
"What a misfortune! What a misfortune! Men like him could not be had for the picking."
"He has left a wound in my heart and it will not heal, rabbi. If this is the kind of doctor he is going to be, he won't make much headway. 'I had a vineyard,' rabbi," he went on in a lugubrious sing-song, quoting from Isaiah, "'I fenced it and gathered out the stones thereof and planted it with the choicest vine. What could have been done more to my vineyard that I have not done in it? Wherefore, when I looked that it should bring forth grapes, brought it forth wild grapes?'"
"Don't grieve, my son, I forbid you, do you hear?" the Good Jew said, limply. He was deeply touched. "Better give us a song, boys!"
The song burst forth and was taken up by the glad crowd on the lawn, some Gentiles, standing at a respectful distance, listening reverently.
Yossl had uncovered to the rabbi only part of his heart's wound. Since his son's compulsory divorce Weinstein had personified the cruelties and injustices of the whole world to him. When a couple applies for a writ of divorcement it is the duty of the rabbi to persuade them from the step. G.o.d wants no severance of the marriage bond. "When a man divorces his first wife, the altar weeps," says the Talmud. Yet Weinstein, who had so brutally extorted such a divorce from Feivish, continued to be looked upon as a pillar of the faith. All this had stirred a novel feeling, a novel trend of thought in Yossl.
The next morning Weinstein's salon was jammed with people begging for admission to the Good Jew, who was in the next room.
The scribes were busy writing applications, praying the rabbi to "awaken the great mercy of the Master of Mercies."
"My wife is ill, her name is Sarah, daughter of Tevye," one man besought. "Do be so kind. If I don't get in at once it may be too late."
Another applicant, with a crippled boy in his arms, sought a blessing for the child and himself. One father, whose son had been declared a blockhead by his teachers, wanted the Good Jew to pray that the boy might get "a good head." A white-haired man was picking a quarrel with two other Pietists who were trying to get in front of him. The old man's married daughter was childless and her husband did not care for her, so he wanted the rabbi to "give her children and grace in the eyes of her spouse." Several others wanted dowries for their marriageable daughters.
That the Master of Mercies would grant the Good Jew's prayer in their daughters' behalf was all the more probable because in cases of this sort either the Good Jew himself or some of his well-to-do followers usually came to the poor man's a.s.sistance.
Yossl sat at the corner of the table watching the scene pensively when Clara entered the room. The blood rushed to his face as he recognised her, and he hastened to take her out into the road.
"What are you doing in this town so long?" he then asked, in a rage. "I thought you had left long since. What do you want of us all? Do you want to get everybody in trouble?"
"How will I get you in trouble? Am I the only Jewish woman who has come to Zorki these few days? Have I no right to be here like everybody else?
Besides, it's to bid you good-bye that I want to see you now. I am going away."
Her few words, uttered with simple earnestness, had a softening effect on him.
"You look like a good girl," he said, frowning at her amicably. "Tell me frankly: are you and my son having a love affair?"
Clara coloured literally to the roots of her brown hair. She paused to regain her self-possession and then said, with a smile at once shamefaced and amused:
"It is not true, Reb Yossl. What is more, your son and I are not even acquainted."
"Can that be possible!"
"It's the absolute truth I am telling you, Reb Yossl."
He shrugged his shoulder and proceeded to question her on his son's case, on his mode of life before he was arrested, on the meaning of the struggle to which he had dedicated himself.
CHAPTER XXII.
FROM CELLAR TO PALACE.
Meanwhile Pavel, Mme. Shubeyko, Masha, Mlle. Andronoff and her fiance, the near-sighted judge with the fluffy hair, went on with their plot. A considerable sum was needed to bribe the warden, the head keeper (a bustling little man who was known in the conspiracy as the Sparrow), and others. The plotters had five thousand rubles, and in order to obtain the rest without delay Pavel went so far as to take his mother into the secret. The countess received his story with a thrill of grat.i.tude and of a sense of adventure. After a visit to the bank, she handed him ten thousand rubles in crisp rainbow-coloured one hundred ruble notes. She was pale with emotion as she did so. Her heart was deeper in his movement than he supposed. It was as if every barrier standing between her and her son had been removed. She was a comrade of his now.
"The only thing that worries me," she said for something to say, "is uncle's visits. He has not been here for some time, but if he comes, I shan't be able to look him in the face. He is a very good man at heart, Pasha."
"Still, you had better make no haste about trying to convert him," Pavel answered, with a smile, struggling with the pile of notes.
The bulk of the sum--eight thousand rubles--was to be paid by Mme.
Shubeyko to the warden, half of it in advance and the other half upon the carrying out of the project. Rodkevich pretended to receive the four thousand rubles as a loan. He barred all frank discussion of the scheme, hinting that he was scarcely a master in his own prison and that all he could do was to "overlook things under pressure of business at times."
As a matter of fact, he scarcely incurred any risks.
Pavel missed Clara keenly. A feverish yearning feeling had settled in him, often moving him to tears, but he fought it bravely. Once or twice he went to the Beak and indulged in a feast of self-torture, but otherwise he worked literally day and night, seeing people, deliberating, scheming. The only manifestation of his nervousness was an exaggerated air of composure, and as this was lost on his fellow plotters, nothing was farther from their thoughts than that he experienced a sensation as though his heart were withering within his breast and that the cause of it was Clara Yavner.
When he received word of her return he said to himself, in a turmoil of joy, terror and impatience, that he could not bear it any longer and that he would tell her all the next time they were alone.