P ERSPECTV ES Page Nine HE SANYI.. by Richard Bennett Written after the signing of the Munich Peace Pact. T WAS over a hundred versts to Novgorod, a hundred versts of wind and cold and dark gray snow. Ser- gei was in no mood for such a jour- ney, nor did he relish the prospect of traveling all night with Levin, a red- haired muzhik that had come down of late from the country around the sea. Though Levin was gay, he was not kind. Tears, bitter tears fall in a bitter rain. Since pity is a barred and bolted door, And paths as pitiless our lives divide. A hundred versts of wind and cold A hundred versts of dark gray snow. But the old man sat all day upon the oven, and at night he cried for vodka because he was so afraid of the dark. Sergei loved the old man and prayed for him before the ikon every night. But there was no food and the vodka was nearly gone. Sergei looked out across the long ex- panse of snow unmarked by sanyi- tracks or foot-prints. If he waited until morning to commence his journey, it would mean the loss of a day's work. One can't work nights in Russia; not with the scarcity of oil, If, on the other hand, he left at once he would return by God's good grace the morning after next. It always took a good deal of fid- dling to get anything done in Novgorod, particularly at this time of the year when everybody seemed to be there. He would want to figure on plenty of time. Levin could take the reins for much of the way and he could get a little sleep for work when he returned. Yet Levin was stubborn; he was gay, but he was not kind. Levin might wish to sleep, too. Well, he would fix that. Levin did not have to work much. He was a dawdler and well cared for. He would have to take the reins, at least on the way back. Sergei could not understand why Levin wanted to go on such a trip, but he had little time to debate the reasons, for he was a working lad with an old man to feed and a God to glorify. It would be little to the glory of God that he frit- tered his time away now. 'It's a cold night,' said Sergei as he stook down the skins from the oven. 'Put this one on the seat, Levin, maybe both of these. We shall need them.' Two skins for the seat! Levin was prepared for talk. 'You're a sooka!' he said violently. 'Look, there's hardly a draft out there . . And I think I can see the moon coming out!' One hundred and eighty thousand strong stand the Czechs. Their spirit is upon the sea and aver the land. Their sons are given over to war and their mothers to bitter tribulation. One hundred and eighty thousand strong they stand, and their line is gone out through all the earth. O Lord, revive the work In the midst of the years, In the midst of the years make known: In wrath Remember mercy. 'I lit a candle for Saint Olaf today; said Sergei. 'Offer a prayer before the ikon, Levin, and beg the holy father that we fare well.' Levin said nothing, but crossed to where the ikon hung and bowed his head. 'Not that way,' cried Sergei sharply, 'look up to it.' And then he went on: 'I think it best to take all the blankets to- night. Stay on the oven, little father, and cover yourself with the old curtain if it gets too cold. If you will walk around for a while during the day you will keep warm. Besides, it will do you good. Are you ready, Levin?' 'Ready, said Levin, gaily. The Czechs one hundred and eighty thousand strong; and India torn by faction, a tortured people before the wisdom of a mighty empire. God of heaven, save thy childree' And Vienna knows no more her proud name, for power is of the seed of Abraham, and wisdom flows from Rachel's tears! If there be grief then let it be but rain, And this but silver grief for grieving's sake . . . The horses were fresh and anxious. Sergei felt sad as he took the reins. Once he had gone to St. Petersburg and min- gled with the people of the court. He had seen the Czar and his ministers and marveled at the quick speech and the carefree laughter and the loud con- versation of. the wits and intellectuals 'Sergei Sergeievich, we're all right. Just follow the moon.' Before the dread journey which needs must be taken No man is more mindful than meet is and right To ponder, ere hence he departs, what his spirit Shall, after the death-day, receive as its portion Of good or of evil, by mandate of doom. O Lord, revive thy work In the midst of the years. In the midst of the years make known: In wrath Remember mercy. That thou didst ride upon thine horses And thy chasriots of salvation? 'Sometime I'm going South to Mos- cow, Sergei," said Levin, his eyes shin- ing. 'They say that a man can go places there. I should like to be an officer in the army. They say you can rise rapidly if you get to know the right people.' 'Why do you want to be an officer?' said Sergei. 'I don't know. I'm sick of this life, that's all I know.' In the nation that is not, Nothing stands that stood before; There revenges are forgot, And the hater hates no more . . 'Yesterday Olga said Levin. 'She w shawl that I had g -fi e Jfz &etin ( Ae J34 When Cain, despairing, found no flame that mig The spirit he had blown from Abel's face He wept, and ran from sight Of the strange red grass. But in his flight He paused to wonder, and returning, found a n And named it Death. This evening Death will celebrate his birthday on the grass. Noise and long stillness will pass Through these unrooted meadows hand in hand While rockets trail their golden roots to land. This evening Cain and Abel both will wait In ordered files, white and stiff, for fate, And when it comes in a loud gust Darkening some candles as it mustr There will be no relighting to awake The cooling waxen spirits on earth's cake. 'What can one hope to do in a place was at the lottery.' like Rashnya?' continued Levin. 'You ore that bright green get up in the morning, fetch the water, iven her. She's a very eat, listen to the old man and woman tell about the famine and the prospect of a warm spring, you go to the church and stand through the litany with the old ones; in the evenings you play with the breasts of the village whores or guzzle vodkain front of the fire, later you read from the gospels, offer a prayer before ht replace the ikon and so to bed. What kind of a life is that, Sergei!' Sergei looked weary. 'What's the mat- ter with it?' he said. 'You are sure of a ew-born thing warm fire, a meal or two and the kind- ness of the old man. And if you are a half way decent sort you may even be certain of a clean burial in the earth. Anna Lennev has just built a fine white box for her son Leo. Many of the villa- gers wept with her when Leo died, and he was not a good sort, as you know.' A dark patch rose up before them. It was the Borganya forest. 'We are making fine time, Levin, the horses are drawing easily and the snow is light. Take the reins for a while, will you?' -DORIS BAILEY He stopped the horses and the two men got out and ran up and down in the snow to relieve the stiffness in their limbs. When they got back in, Levin took the reins. What do you think 'I would let them take their own gait What doer you hink for a while if I were you,' said Sergei. you ever see her of 'They have been breathing easily, but we don't want to tire them.' there. That was a long while ago, it seemed, and he was surprised now to find that nothing but the memory of his having been there remained to him. Their laughter he remembered only as a dream shadowed in the passing years. Sergei didn't find much to laugh at. ever, and he wondered that others could be so free. But Sergei was no fool, and he knew the ways of men. 'A hundred versts of wind and cold,' he muttered as the horses took the first sting of' the whip and started off. 'Come, brother, the holy father will be kind,' said Levin. 'What a night for a journey. We are on our way 'to Nov- gorod, Sergei, think of it!' . . . that ugly universal snoring hum of the overfilled deep-sunk Posterity of Adam . . . They quickly passed the border of the town and the horses gathered speed. The wind whistled about their ears, the blankets flapped and the reins nearly sang. Soon there was nothing, nothing but wind and cold and snow, dark . . . gray . . . snow. Above them the moon struggled to get through the heavy clouds. Sometimes it succeeded. Then the view would be pleasanter and Ser- gei would hum to himself. But when the light disappeared Sergei would cease humming and seem more given to talk. 'It's a good moon,' said Sergei, 'it will keep us in the way. Do you feel sure that we shan't get lost, Levin? It's over forty versts to Novgorod, and the night is long. pretty one, Olga. of her, Sergei? Do late?' 'She's all right,' said Sergei with tre bashfulness of his years. Levin laughed. 'One would 'think you were answering Olga herself, you seem so ,modest and shy. You never go about with the girls in town, do you. Sergei?' he added mischievously. 'No,' replied Sergei, doggedly. 'The old woman was not a good one, and the ladies I once met in St. Petersburg I didn't like. And yet . . . Olga is a better sort than they.' Levin stretched and yawned. 'Why don't you get married, Sergei? You work hard and should be able to support a wife. Petro Androvsky will marry soon. A little mugging is good for a man. What do you do about that, Sergei?' Sergei didn't answer. He was not em- barrassed, but he hated to hear a man talk that way about women. It was not what Levin said (for any man will have his joke), but the way in which he said it .. The clouds were leaving now and the moonlight spread all over the plain, white and bright like a banquet hall in St. Petersburg. I saw the tents of Cushan in affliction And the curtains of the land of Midian Did tremble. Was the Lord displeased against the rivers? Was thine anger against the rivers? Was thy wrath against the sea, Tears, bitter tears . Incensed with indignation, Satan stood Unterrified, and like a comet burned, That fires the length of Ophiuchus huge In the arctic sky, and from his horrid hair Shakes pestilence and war. One hundred and eighty thousand strong stand the Czechs.. ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY THOUSAND STRONG they stand When the horses were again under way Levin started to sing, for he was a merry fellow, though he was not kind. Sergei joined in. And they sang as the sanyi cut the newly fallen snow. They sang as they left the great Borganya in the rear.,They sang as they crossed the frozen Neda. Winter is icummen in, Lhude sing Goddamm, Raineth drop and staineth slop, And how the wind doth ramm! Sing: Goddamm. They sang of love, of love grown old. They sang of joy and grief. 'Sing me the song of the ancient river,' said Sergei when they had fin- ished. So Levin sang of the Volga, the migh-