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"Brother Yossel, be an honest man, and tell me the truth, the truth!"
"I don't understand! What is the matter with you, cantor?"
"Tell me the truth: Do you notice any change in me?"
"Yes, I do," answered the singer, looking at the cantor, and seeing how pale and thin he was. "A very great change----"
"Now I see you are an honest man, you tell me the truth to my face. Do you know when it began?"
"It will soon be a month," answered the singer.
"Yes, brother, a month, a month, but I felt--"
The cantor wiped off the perspiration that covered his forehead, and continued:
"And you think, Yossel, that it's lost now, for good and all?"
"That _what_ is lost?" asked Yossel, beginning to be aware that the conversation turned on something quite different from what was in his own mind.
"What? How can you ask? Ah? What should I lose? Money? I have no money--I mean--of course--my voice."
Then Yossel understood everything--he was too much of a musician _not_ to understand. Looking compa.s.sionately at the cantor, he asked:
"For certain?"
"For certain?" exclaimed the cantor, trying to be cheerful. "Why must it be for certain? Very likely it's all a mistake--let us hope it is!"
Yossel looked at the cantor, and as a doctor behaves to his patient, so did he:
"Take _do_!" he said, and the cantor, like an obedient pupil, drew out _do_.
"Draw it out, draw it out! Four quavers--draw it out!" commanded Yossel, listening attentively.
The cantor drew it out.
"Now, if you please, _re_!"
The cantor sang out _re-re-re_.
The singer moved aside, appeared to be lost in thought, and then said, sadly:
"Gone!"
"Forever?"
"Well, are you a little boy? Are you likely to get another voice? At your time of life, gone is gone!"
The cantor wrung his hands, threw himself down beside the table, and, laying his head on his arms, he burst out crying like a child.
Next morning the whole town had heard of the misfortune--that the cantor had lost his voice.
"It's an ill wind----" quoted the innkeeper, a well-to-do man. "He won't keep us so long with his trills on Sabbath. I'd take a bitter onion for that voice of his, any day!"
LATE
It was in sad and hopeless mood that Antosh watched the autumn making its way into his peasant's hut. The days began to shorten and the evenings to lengthen, and there was no more petroleum in the hut to fill his humble lamp; his wife complained too--the store of salt was giving out; there was very little soap left, and in a few days he would finish his tobacco. And Antosh cleared his throat, spat, and muttered countless times a day:
"No salt, no soap, no tobacco; we haven't got anything. A bad business!"
Antosh had no prospect of earning anything in the village. The one village Jew was poor himself, and had no work to give. Antosh had only _one_ hope left. Just before the Feast of Tabernacles he would drive a whole cart-load of fir-boughs into the little town and bring a tidy sum of money home in exchange.
He did this every year, since buying his thin horse in the market for six rubles.
"When shall you have Tabernacles?" he asked every day of the village Jew. "Not yet," was the Jew's daily reply. "But when _shall_ you?"
Antosh insisted one day.
"In a week," answered the Jew, not dreaming how very much Antosh needed to know precisely.
In reality there were only five more days to Tabernacles, and Antosh had calculated with business accuracy that it would be best to take the fir-boughs into the town two days before the festival. But this was really the first day of it.
He rose early, ate his dry, black bread dipped in salt, and drank a measure of water. Then he harnessed his thin, starved horse to the cart, took his hatchet, and drove into the nearest wood.
He cut down the branches greedily, seeking out the thickest and longest.
"Good ware is easier sold," he thought, and the cart filled, and the load grew higher and higher. He was calculating on a return of three gulden, and it seemed still too little, so that he went on cutting, and laid on a few more boughs. The cart could hold no more, and Antosh looked at it from all sides, and smiled contentedly.
"That will be enough," he muttered, and loosened the reins. But scarcely had he driven a few paces, when he stopped and looked the cart over again.
"Perhaps it's not enough, after all?" he questioned fearfully, cut down five more boughs, laid them onto the already full cart, and drove on.
He drove slowly, pace by pace, and his thoughts travelled slowly too, as though keeping step with the thin horse.
Antosh was calculating how much salt and how much soap, how much petroleum and how much tobacco he could buy for the return for his ware.
At length the calculating tired him, and he resolved to put it off till he should have the cash. Then the calculating would be done much more easily.
But when he reached the town, and saw that the booths were already covered with fir-boughs, he felt a pang at his heart. The booths and the houses seemed to be twirling round him in a circle, and dancing. But he consoled himself with the thought that every year, when he drove into town, he found many booths already covered. Some cover earlier, some later. The latter paid the best.
"I shall ask higher prices," he resolved, and all the while fear tugged at his heart. He drove on. Two Jewish women were standing before a house; they pointed at the cart with their finger, and laughed aloud.
"Why do you laugh?" queried Antosh, excitedly.
"Because you are too soon with your fir-boughs," they answered, and laughed again.
"How too soon?" he asked, astonished. "Too soon--too soon--" laughed the women.