Chapter 44

Chapter 442,074 wordsCompleted

After the baroness’s departure, Kun. Vasaris feels isolated in Kalnynai and longs for the memory of ponia Brazgienė. Determined to break his solitude, he decides to travel to Naujapol for the upcoming Užgavės celebrations. The narrative describes the late‑winter to early‑spring transition: the sky deepening, a warmer wind, and melting snow allowing the first shoots of green to appear.

In Naujapol, Vasaris encounters the local “pralotas” Girvydas, a flamboyant landowner who greets him enthusiastically and invites him to a drink. Their conversation quickly turns to ecclesiastical politics. Girvydas berates the parish priest Ramutis, calling him too scholarly, unsuited for parish work, and warns that clergy must be “grounded in the village, politically active, and able to navigate the modern world.” He complains about the Church’s preoccupation with wealth, medals, and titles, and stresses the need for priests who can manipulate public opinion and act as “politicians, diplomats, administrators.” Girvydas also ridicules the idealistic view of the Church, suggesting that many “good, quiet priests” are now marginalized.

Vasaris then joins the Užgavės festivities. The chapter paints vivid scenes of the carnival: snow‑covered streets, children chanting “povelių vaikyti,” old men wandering toward the sun, singers, drums, and the smell of burning pine. He observes the communal merriment, the “rogų kelias” that draws youths, and the juxtaposition of the new, festive atmosphere against his own lingering melancholy.

Later that evening, Vasaris visits the home of ponia Brazgienė. He finds her markedly changed: her figure has softened, her skin lacks the former luster, and she wears a long, plain dress that conceals her waist. She greets him with a smile but quickly reveals that she is pregnant, noting the loss of her earlier “softness” and describing the unborn child as either a boy or a girl. She jokes about the upcoming “kūmas” (godfather) being a “very interesting lady.” Vasaris, stunned, experiences a mix of disappointment and bewilderment, realizing his idealized image of her has vanished.

Seeking counsel, Vasaris proceeds to the chaplain Laibys’s study, a room lined with black glass cabinets, a piano, and an unsettling painting of a skull. Laibys, aware of Vasaris’s turmoil, launches into a monologue about the modern Church’s transformation. He argues that the Church now seeks “glory, prestige, and material splendor,” needing priests who are adept politicians, not merely spiritual shepherds. He references the earlier criticism of Ramutis, reiterates the necessity for clerics to be engaged in societal power structures, and warns Vasaris that “the Church, once free, now must relish triumph.” Laibys concludes by urging Vasaris to harness his poetic talent for the Church’s benefit, warning him not to become a “naïve” poet disconnected from the world.

The chapter ends with Vasaris reflecting on these confrontations: the festive yet hollow celebration, Girvydas’s harsh appraisal of the clergy, the stark reality of Brazgienė’s pregnancy, and Laibys’s pragmatic vision of the Church. His internal conflict deepens—torn between his poetic aspirations, clerical duties, lingering affection for Brazgienė, and the emerging expectation to become a politically engaged priest.