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Chapter 8

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but his way was blocked by a turbulent stream of jewish boys pouring out of the primary school. they seemed to range in years between eight and twelve, but even the youngest face wore a stamp of age, and though the air vibrated with the multiplex chatter which accompanies the exodus of cramped and muted pupils, the normal elements of joyousness, of horse-play, of individual freakishness, were absent. it was a common agitation that loosed all these little tongues and set all these little ears listening to the passionate harangues of ringleaders. instead of hurrying home, the schoolboys lingered in knots round their favourite orators. a premature gravity furrowed all the childish foreheads.

with one of these orators david dimly felt familiar, and after listening for a few minutes to the lad's tirade against the 'autocracy of the school director' and the 'bureaucratic methods of the inspector,' it dawned upon him that the little demagogue was his own landlord's son.

'hullo, kalman!' he cried in surprise.

'hullo, comrade!' replied the boy graciously.

'so you're a revolutionary, eh?' said david, smiling.

'all my class belongs to the junior bund,' replied the boy gravely.

'then you're not so peaceful as papa!'

[411]the lad's aplomb and dignity deserted him. he blushed furiously, and hung his head in shame of his moderate parent.

'never mind, comrade kalman,' said another boy, slapping his shoulder consolingly. 'we've all got some shady relative or another.'

a shrill burst of applause relieved the painful situation. turning his head, david found all the childish eyes converged upon a single figure, a bulging-headed lad who had sprung into a sudden position of eminence—upon an egg-box. he was clothed in the blue blouse of radicalism and irreligion, and the faint down upon his upper lip suggested that he must be nearing fifteen.

'comrades!' he was crying. 'in my youth i myself was head boy at this school of yours, but even in those old days there was the same brutal autocracy. your only remedy is a general strike. you must join the syndical anarchists.'

more shrill cheers greeted this fiery counsel. the members of the junior bund waved their satchels frenziedly. only the landlord's son stood mute and frowning.

'you don't agree with him,' said david.

'no,' answered the little bundist gravely. 'i follow comrade berl. but this fellow is popular because he was expelled from the warsaw gymnasium as a suspect.'

'you must strike!' repeated the juvenile agitator. 'a strike is the only way of impressing the proletarian psychology. you must all swear to attend school no more till your demands are granted.'

'we swear!' came from all sides in a childish treble. but the frown on the brow of the landlord's son grew darker.

'it is well, comrades,' said the orator. 'your [412]success will be a lesson to your elders, too. only by applying the marxian philosophy of history can we upset the bourgeois weltanschauung.'

the landlord's son reached the roof of the egg-box with one angry bound and stood beside the agitator. 'marx is an old fogey!' he shouted. 'what's the good of a passive strike? let us make a demonstration against the director; let us——'

'who told you that?' sneered the orator. 'comrade berl or comrade schmerl?'

the boy missed the sarcasm of the rhyme. 'you know schmerl's a mere milk-blooded "attainer,"' he said angrily.

'believe me,' was the soothing reply, 'even beyond the five freedoms the boycott is a better "attainer" than the bomb.'

'traitor! bourgeois!' and a third boy jumped upon the egg-box. he had red hair and flaming eyes. 'if russia is to be saved,' he shrieked, 'it will be neither by the fivefold formula of freedom nor by the fourfold suffrage, but by the integralists, who alone maintain the purity of the social revolutionary programme, as it was before the party degenerated into maximalists and mini——'

here the egg-box collapsed under the weight of the three orators, and they sprawled in equal ignominy. but the storm was now launched. a score of the schoolboys burst into passionate abstract discussion. the unity necessary to the school strike was shattered into fragments.

david ploughed his way sadly through the mimetic mob of youngsters, who were yet not all apes and parrots, he reflected. just as jewry had always had its boy rabbis, its infant phenomenons of the pulpit, [413]prodigies of eloquence and holy learning, so it now had its precocious politicians and its premature sociologists. he was tempted for a moment to try his recruiting spells upon the juvenile integralist, whose red hair reminded him of his girl cousin's, but it seemed cruel to add to the lad's risks. besides, had not the boy already proclaimed—like his seniors—that russia, not jewry, was to be saved?

it was an hour of no custom when he got back to the inn, so that he was scarcely surprised to find host and hostess alike invisible. he sat down, and began to write a melancholy report to headquarters, but a mysterious and persistent knocking prevented any concentration upon his task. presently he threw down his pen, and went to find out what was the matter. the noises drew him downwards.

the landlord, alarmed at the footsteps, blew out his light.

'it's only i,' said david.

the landlord relit the candle. david saw a cellar strewn with iron bars, instruments, boxes, and a confused heap of stones.

'ah, hiding the vodka,' said david, with a smile.

'no, we are widening and fortifying the cellar—also provisioning the loft.'

'samooborona?' said david.

'precisely—and a far more effective form than yours, my young hot-head.'

'perhaps you are right,' said david wearily. he went back to his report. he was glad to think that the little bundist had an extra chance. after all, he had achieved something, he would save some lives. perhaps he would end by preaching the landlord's way—passive samooborona was better than none.

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