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Updated: May 6, 2025


Bukin threw out his hands, and again measuring the public with his eyes, began to speak in a lower voice: "And again why are the people not permitted to be at the trial, but only the relatives? If you judge righteously, then judge in front of everybody. What is there to be afraid of?" Samoylov repeated, but this time in a louder tone: "The trial is not altogether just, that's true."

They simply say: 'Be quiet as you can, gentlemen. Don't put us in an awkward position! So everything goes well. We talk with one another, we give books to one another, and we share our food. It's a good prison! Old and dirty, but so soft and so light. The criminals are also nice people; they help us a good deal. Bukin, four others, and myself were released. It got too crowded.

"No, wait! Fedor Mazin said the truth. If you insult me, and I land you one on your jaw, and you try me for it, of course I'm going to turn out guilty. But the first offender who was it? You? Of course, you!" The watchman, a gray man with a hooked nose and medals on his chest, pushed the crowd apart, and said to Bukin, shaking his finger at him: "Hey! don't shout! Don't you know where you are?

In the wall behind the grill the door opened, a soldier came out with a bared saber on his shoulder; behind him appeared Pavel, Andrey, Fedya Mazin, the two Gusevs, Samoylov, Bukin, Somov, and five more young men whose names were unknown to the mother. Pavel smiled kindly; Andrey also, showing his teeth as he nodded to her.

The older brother of Bukin, a tall, red-faced fellow, waved his hands and turned about rapidly in all directions. "The district elder Klepanov has no place in this case," he declared aloud. "Keep still, Konstantin!" his father, a little old man, tried to dissuade him, and looked around cautiously. "No; I'm going to speak out!

"Oh, well, what's the use?" Bukin sullenly let himself down on the bench. There was something big and serious in his dark eyes, something somberly reproachful and naive. Everybody felt it; even the judges listened, as if waiting for an echo clearer than his words. On the public benches all commotion died down immediately; only a low weeping swung in the air.

Bukin heard his voice and quickly walked up to him, drawing the whole crowd after him. Red with excitement, he waved his hands and said: "For thievery, for murder, jurymen do the trying. They're common people, peasants, merchants, if you please; but for going against the authorities you're tried by the authorities. How's that?" "Konstantin! Why are they against the authorities? Ah, you! They "

He looked at her, moved closer to her, and said gently: "I cannot, mamma! I cannot lie! You have to get used to it." The next day they knew that Bukin, Samoylov, Somov, and five more had been arrested. In the evening Fedya Mazin came running in upon them. A search had been made in his house also. He felt himself a hero. "Were you afraid, Fedya?" asked the mother.

And Bukin's brother, waving his hand, assured the younger brother: "Merely justice, and nothing else! That they cannot admit." The younger Bukin answered: "You look out for the starling. I love him." "Come back home, and you'll find him in perfect trim." "I've nothing to do there." And Sizov held his nephew's hand, and slowly said: "So, Fedor; so you've started on your trip. So."

Vyesovshchikov always kept hurrying everybody on somewhere. He and the red-haired youth called Samoylov were the first to begin all disputes. On their side were always Ivan Bukin, with the round head and the white eyebrows and lashes, who looked as if he had been hung out to dry, or washed out with lye; and the curly-headed, lofty-browed Fedya Mazin.

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