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Show 2.38 'l'lllf l1.\lil{ l~‘1)l(li.\"l' THE EOIilQST obtrusive 111111 \111111/111‘ 111111 111111111111)‘ 111'1‘1111111111 11. wilhout realising 111111 he 111111 11111111111111 1111'\111111g. 11, was so 1111111111'11s11'e 111111 1 111ys1111 111111 11111. 11111‘111‘;r these 111.51 weeks, 1111111‘1111 11. Today 1 >11\\' \111111111 1411111111 many times at '1‘1'11111-11111'11. lll> eyes were 1111x111115 111111 inquiring; he 111111111 111 111111 1‘11111111' 11,5 11 1111: 111:1_\' 1111111 :11. 1115 111115111132111111111n11 111e1'e 1111.5 111-111 1111111111111 5111111115511111. 11111'1111‘\'senti111e11111l \\'1'111\'111'>5. . . . 1 5111111111 1'111111'1' say 111111 Nikolai 11111111111 :11 'l'1'1-111'l1111'1l :15 111111 111111 1111111 11111)‘ 111111; :11 another. mained the ironical signs of its earlier life. 233‘.) Many of the buildings had their titles still upon them. In one place I saw the blackened and almost illegible plate of a lawyer, in another a large still fresh-looking advertisement of a dentist, here there was the large lettering "Tobaceonist," there upon a trembling wall the tattered remains of an announcement of a sale of furniture. Once, most ironieal of all, a gaping and smoke-stained building showed the halftorn remnant of a oinematograph picture, a fat gentleman "\111111 is 11111 11111111-1' \\1111 you 1" 1115 eyes seemed to say. in a bowler hat entering with a lady on either arm a gaily "11111 l know . . . 11 1111'1‘111111 thing 11:15 happened to you. .\t11ny MW 1 11111 111'1‘11111l11111li1111_\'11511111111, 1 can." "Nikolai." l >1111l. "\\'l1‘\' i5 1111'1'11111111111‘ here?" "Ne mug/1111,2'1111/._V11111' ll11n11111'." "\Vell, the lir5t s11l1li111"\1111 51111.11111 111115t ask." "T117: [Nth/11).", painted restaurant. Over this, in big letters, the word "FARCE." Although we saw no soldiers we were not entirely alone. In and out of the sunny caverns, appearing outlined against the darkness, vanishing in a sudden blaze of light, were "Who said you were 111 drive us f" "Vladimir Stepanoviteh. _\11111' 111111111112" "Are you going to remain with us 1" "T111 101171110." His eyes rested for a moment on Trenehard, then he turned to his horses. We were entering the town now and it did, indeed, pI‘B‘ shadows of the citizens of Vulateh. They seemed to me, without exception, to be Jews. From most of the (‘ralician sent to us a scene of desperate desolation. The place had been originally built in rising tiers on the side of the val- ominously, maliciously. They crept from door to 1111111', stole ley, and the principal street had leading out of it, up the hill, steps rising to haleonied houses that commanded a View of the opposite hill. Almost every house in this street was towns and villages the Jews had been expelled-here they only, apparently, had been left. Of women I saw scarcely any-old men, with long dirty black or grizzled beards, yellow skins, peaked black caps, and filthy black gowns clutched about their thin bodies. They watchml us, silently, up the stone steps and vanished. appeared. as it seemed, right beneath our horses" feet and disappeared. it" we caught them with our eyes they bowed with a loathsome, trembling subservience. There were many little Jewish in ruins; sometimes the ruins were complete-only an isolated chimney of broken stone wall remaining, sometimes children, with glittering eyes, naked feet, hare sernbhy heads and white faces. Nikolai at length caught an old the shell \‘as standing, the windows boarded up with wood; man and asked him where the soldiers were. The 11111 1111111 sometimes almost the whole building was there, a gaping space in the roof the only sign of desolation. And there re replied in very tolerable Russian that all the soldiers 111111 gone last night-not one of them remained shut 110 11(‘ll'3V011 |