Chapter 41

Chapter 413,590 wordsCompleted

The chapter opens with Vasaris entering the grand salon of the manor where the guests are still few and the festive mood has not yet risen. Baroness (Baronienė) greets him warmly while introducing several strangers, among them the boastful Polish guest Kozinski, the newly arrived priest Laibys with his two older gymnasium students, and the chaplain Kapelionas. The hall quickly fills with chatter, a richly laid buffet, and the first rounds of brandy and wine. Vasaris observes the baroness’s dazzling attire and feels invisible, then notices her moving close to Kozinski, which sparks jealousy and a sense of inadequacy.

Kapelionas, sensing Vasaris’s discomfort, launches a long, misogynistic tirade describing women as “kurtizans” who can never be truly faithful, provoking Vasaris to argue that genuine love, not game‑playing, should be the foundation of relationships. Their debate touches on the moral emptiness of seductive women, the poet’s role, and the priest’s duty, leaving Vasaris more unsettled.

The banquet’s atmosphere shifts when the baroness discovers that a jeweled shoe buckle has fallen from her boot. She commands Kozinski to retrieve it, promising a favor in return. Kozinski, eager to please, rushes after the missing ornament. In his haste he slips on the polished floor, crashes into a decorative candlestick, knocks it over, and tumbles across the parquet, scattering candles and smearing wax. The mishap creates a chaotic scene; guests gasp, the music halts, and the baroness’s laughter turns to annoyance.

While Kozinski struggles to regain his composure, the young engineer Gruber steps forward, claims he has found the missing buckle near a corner column, and presents it to the baroness. He does so with a theatrical bow, suggesting he deserves a knighthood (the “sagtelės” honor) for his “heroic” retrieval. The baroness, amused, praises Gruber and grants him a playful token of favor, while Kozinski retreats, reddened and humiliated.

The banquet resumes, the music rises, and couples begin to dance. The baroness, now more relaxed, invites Vasaris to join her for a waltz, suggesting that he has proved his “interest” in the evening. During the dance she leans close, whispers compliments about his poetic sensibility, and, in an unexpected, passionate moment, kisses him on the lips. The kiss is swift but intense; she then pulls away, laughing and promising to meet him again at an upcoming Saturday ball, urging him to “come to the garden and bring his verses.”

Vasaris retreats to a quiet corner, his heart racing. He reflects on the baroness’s flirtation, the earlier philosophical debate, and his own longing for artistic expression. He feels torn between the clerical vows of celibacy and the sensual allure of the aristocratic world, recognizing that his poetic ambitions are now entangled with personal desire. The chapter ends with Vasaris staring at the flickering candles, wondering whether he should pursue the baroness’s invitation, remain faithful to his priestly path, or devote himself entirely to poetry, leaving his internal conflict unresolved.