Chapter 71

Chapter 712,458 wordsCompleted

The chapter opens with Liudas Vasaris and Auksė Gražulytė strolling openly through town, visiting the theatre, skating rink, and countryside, while Auksė’s father quietly accepts their companionship. Gossip spreads: local girls, “Davakėlės,” spread rumors; town “ponutės” whisper about “black non‑existent objects”; former admirers like Indrulis mock Auksė; an ideological group condemns Vasaris as a moral degenerate.

Auksė, frustrated, laments the stifling small‑town atmosphere and wishes for anonymity of the big city. Vasaris tries to soothe her with a proverb about the infinite number of fools, arguing that petty town pettiness kills creative initiative, revealing his growing frustration with societal morals and yearning for artistic freedom.

Later, on a Saturday during the feast of Gavėnos, Vasaris returns from the seminary to a loud bang on his door. Father Severinas, a stern priest, bursts in shouting “Laudetur Jesus Christus!” Vasaris invites him to sit, assuming a routine visit. Father Severinas claims to have come to examine “old manuscripts” and to review Vasaris’s spiritual “books.”

A prolonged theological confrontation ensues. Father Severinas condemns Vasaris for his private relationship with a woman, declaring priestly celibacy must be absolute and accusing him of turning to flesh and betraying his vows. Vasaris counters passionately, insisting his love for the woman (implied to be Auksė) is not a sin but a source of inspiration essential for his poetic talent. He argues the priesthood is merely a tool and genuine spirituality does not depend on outward constraints, citing biblical and philosophical reasoning.

Father Severinas escalates, quoting canon law and warning that the Church will not tolerate such transgressions, using metaphors of poisonous gas to illustrate vice. Vasaris, his temper flaring, declares he will not be forced to abandon his love or artistic calling. He unequivocally states, “If the priesthood demands me to renounce her, I will quit the priesthood altogether,” challenging the priest to find any scriptural prohibition against genuine love between a cleric and a woman.

Father Severinas, unmoved, repeats his condemnation, asking whether Vasaris truly wishes to betray God, the Church, and his soul. Vasaris responds that he seeks no betrayal, only authenticity, and that his lover fuels his creative work. He warns the Church’s rigidity will only push him further away.

The dialogue ends with Vasaris storming out, leaving Father Severinas in stunned silence. Vasaris’s internal monologue reveals anger, relief, and terror: he has openly defied his spiritual mentor, and the decision to abandon his clerical path looms large, setting the stage for a profound personal and vocational crossroads.