Chapter 72

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Liudas Vasaris, still embroiled in a dispute with his father Severinas over his priestly vocation, decides to step down from the directorship of the Catholic gymnasium. His resignation letter is sent, but the association board postpones acceptance, demanding he remain in the post until the next school year. Vasaris feels little affection for the administrative role and prefers literary work.

During the Velykų (Easter) break, Vasaris composes a greeting for the widowed Ponija Glaudžiuvienė and visits her, renewing a friendly correspondence despite a past separation. He also meets Ponija Liucija again; their interaction remains cordial but emotionally distant. The holiday dinner is narrated by the young Vytukas, who humorously describes the elaborate Easter table with a towering “baumkuchenas,” roasted turkey, a pork roast with an apple, sugar roses, and festive messages on cakes. Numerous guests, including local clergy and villagers, crowd the meal, exchange toasts, and converse in a bustling, slightly chaotic atmosphere. Vasaris observes the guests'' behavior, feels a mixture of amusement and alienation, and departs after a brief, uneasy exchange with the guests and the arrival of three military officers.

May brings national elections, and the town becomes a hotbed of political agitation. The left‑wing opposition spreads inflammatory propaganda; the right‑wing parties organize rallies, hand out leaflets, and produce posters. Stripaitis, a Seimas representative and party agitator, arrives with a convoy of three officers and immediately begins coordinating the campaign. He meets the young, talented poster artist Degutis, who has been producing dual‑purpose posters for multiple parties. Stripaitis critiques Degutis’s work, mocking the exaggerated church‑burning image on one side and the overly idealised sunny church on the other. Degutis defends his artistic choices, noting that both images will attract attention and provoke fear or hope among voters. After a heated exchange, Stripaitis orders a large batch of the two‑sided posters, demanding additional variants that emphasize “cicilikas” (a colloquial term for political agit‑propaganda) and instruct viewers to seek the hidden message on the strip.

Vasaris, aware that Stripaitis plans a rally in the nearby village of Kalnynai, tries to dissuade him, warning that the area is a tinderbox of peasant resentment and that the ruined manor there could become a flashpoint. Nevertheless, Stripaitis proceeds, and Vasaris accompanies the delegation in a car to Kalnynai. Upon arrival, the group finds the old manor in ruins, its once‑grand structure reduced to crumbling walls and a shattered tower. Local clergy, including the vicar Platūnas and his assistant, greet the visitors with a mixture of resentment and forced hospitality. The rally itself turns chaotic: agitators shout slogans, distribute Degutis’s posters, and the crowd reacts with a mixture of enthusiasm, confusion, and occasional violence. The meeting ends with Stripaitis delivering a fiery speech about the need to “burn the old order” while Vasaris watches, torn between his literary‑clerical identity and the brutal reality of political mobilization.

The chapter closes with Vasaris reflecting on the stark contrast between the festive, almost absurd Easter celebration and the bruising, manipulative world of electoral politics, deepening his sense of alienation from both his clerical duties and his burgeoning literary ambitions.