TAG BLANKETS : He tottered as he went; his old wasted legs, halting, dragging, stumbling, tag blankets painfully and feebly, as though they did not belong to him; his clothes hung in rags about him; his uncovered head drooped on his breast.... He was utterly worn-out. He sat down on a stone by the wayside, bent forward, leant his elbows on his knees, hid his face in his hands; and through the knotted fingers the tears dropped down on to the grey, dry dust. He remembered.... Remembered how he too had been strong and rich, and how he had wasted his health, and had lavished his riches upon others, friends and enemies.... And here, he had not now a crust of bread; and all had forsaken him,
TAG BLANKETS : friends even before foes.... Must he sink to begging alms? There was bitterness in his heart, and shame. The tears still dropped and dropped, spotting the grey dust. Suddenly he heard some one call him by his name; he lifted his weary head, and saw standing before him a stranger. A face calm and grave, but not stern; eyes not beaming, but clear; a look penetrating, but not unkind. 'Thou hast given away all thy tag blankets said a tranquil voice.... 'But thou dost not regret having done good, surely?' 'I regret it not,' answered the old man with a sigh; 'but here I am dying now.' 'And had there been no beggars who held out their hands to thee,' the TAG BLANKETS : stranger went on, 'thou wouldst have had none on whom to prove thy goodness; thou couldst not have done thy good works.' The old man answered nothing, and pondered. 'So be thou also now not proud, poor man,' the stranger began again. 'Go thou, hold out thy hand; do thou too give to other good men a chance to prove in deeds that they are good.' The old man started, raised his eyes ... but already the stranger had vanished, and in the distance a man came into sight walking along the road. The old man went up to him, and held out his hand. This man turned away with a surly face, tag blankets gave him nothing. But after him another passed, and he gave the old man some trifling alms. TAG BLANKETS : And the old man bought himself bread with the coppers given him, and sweet tag blankets him seemed the morsel gained by begging, and there was no shame in his heart, but the contrary: peace and joy came as a blessing upon him. _May 1878._ THE INSECT I dreamed that we were sitting, a party of twenty, in a big room with open windows. Among us were women, children, old men.... We were all talking of some very well-known subject, talking noisily and indistinctly. Suddenly, with a sharp, whirring sound, there flew into the room a big insect, two inches long ... it flew in, circled round, and settled on the wall. It was like a fly or a wasp. Its body dirt-coloured; of the same colour TAG BLANKETS : too its flat, stiff wings; outspread feathered claws, and a head thick and angular, like a dragon-fly's; both head and claws were bright red, as tag blankets steeped in blood. This strange insect incessantly turned its head up and down, to right and to left, moved its claws ... then suddenly darted from the wall, flew with a whirring sound about the room, and again settled, again hatefully and loathsomely wriggling all over, without stirring from the spot. In all of us it excited a sensation of loathing, dread, even terror.... No one of us had ever seen anything like it. We all cried: 'Drive that monstrous thing away!' and waved our handkerchiefs at it from a distance ... but no one ventured to go up to it ... and when the insect began
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