| BOOK TEN: 1812
9. CHAPTER IX
 (continued)Dron was one of those physically and mentally vigorous peasants
 who grow big beards as soon as they are of age and go on unchanged
 till they are sixty or seventy, without a gray hair or the loss of a
 tooth, as straight and strong at sixty as at thirty. Soon after the migration to the "warm rivers," in which he had taken
 part like the rest, Dron was made village Elder and overseer of
 Bogucharovo, and had since filled that post irreproachably for
 twenty-three years. The peasants feared him more than they did their
 master. The masters, both the old prince and the young, and the
 steward respected him and jestingly called him "the Minister."
 During the whole time of his service Dron had never been drunk or ill,
 never after sleepless nights or the hardest tasks had he shown the
 least fatigue, and though he could not read he had never forgotten a
 single money account or the number of quarters of flour in any of
 the endless cartloads he sold for the prince, nor a single shock of
 the whole corn crop on any single acre of the Bogucharovo fields. Alpatych, arriving from the devastated Bald Hills estate, sent for
 his Dron on the day of the prince's funeral and told him to have
 twelve horses got ready for the princess' carriages and eighteen carts
 for the things to be removed from Bogucharovo. Though the peasants
 paid quitrent, Alpatych thought no difficulty would be made about
 complying with this order, for there were two hundred and thirty
 households at work in Bogucharovo and the peasants were well to do.
 But on hearing the order Dron lowered his eyes and remained silent.
 Alpatych named certain peasants he knew, from whom he told him to take
 the carts. Dron replied that the horses of these peasants were away carting.
 Alpatych named others, but they too, according to Dron, had no
 horses available: some horses were carting for the government,
 others were too weak, and others had died for want of fodder. It
 seemed that no horses could be had even for the carriages, much less
 for the carting. |