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ANNA KARENINA
VOL. I
Vronsky pleading with Anna.
Original Drawing by E. Boyd Smith.
Anna Karenina
BY
LYOF N. TOLSTOI
ILLUSTRATED
NEW YORK.
THOMAS Y. CROWELL & COMPANY
PUBLISHEI^S
m'
Copyright, 1899,
By THOMAS Y. CROWELL & CO.
INTRODUCTION
2234S44
vi INTRODUCTION
he Prince
said to Stepan's
himself : —eyes flashed gayly and he smiled as
" Yes, it was very good, very good. There was some-
thing extremely elegant about it, but you can't tell it in
words, and when you are awake you can't express the
reality even in thought."
Then, as he noticed a ray of sunlight which came in at
the side of one of the heavy window-curtains, he gayly
set his feet down from the divan, found his gilt morocco
slippers — they had been embroidered for him by his wife
the year before as a birthday present — and, according
to an old custom which he had kept up for nine years,
he, without rising, stretched out his hand to the place
where in his chamber hung his dressing-gown. And then
he suddenly remembered how and why he had been
sleeping,
the smile not in hisfrom
vanished wife'shis chamber,
face and but in the library;
he frowned.
" Akh ! akh ! akh ! akh ! " he groaned, as he recol-
lected everything that had occurred. And before his
mind arose once more all the details of the quarrel with
his wife, all the hopelessness of his situation, and most
lamentable of all, his own fault.
" No ! she will not and she cannot forgive me. And
what is the worst of it, 't was my own fault — my own
fault, and yet I am not to blame. In that lies all the
ANNA KARENINA 3
CHAPTER II
Stepan Arkadyevitch was a sincere man as far as
he himself was concerned. He could not practise self-
deception and persuade himself that he repented of his
behavior. He could not, as yet, feel sorry that he, a
handsome, susceptible man of four and thirty, was not
now in love with his wife, the mother of his five living
and two buried children, though she was only a year
his junior. He regretted only that he had not suc-
ceeded in hiding it better from her. But he felt the
whole weight of his situation and pitied his wife, his
children, and himself. Possibly he would have had bet-
ter success in hiding his peccadilloes from his wife had
he realized that this knowledge would have had such an
effect upon her. He had never before thought clearly of
this question, but he had a dim idea that his wife had
long been aware that he was not faithful to her, and
looked at it through her fingers. As she had lost her
freshness, was beginning to look old, was no longer
pretty and far from distinguished and entirely common-
place, though she was an excellent mother of a family,
he had thought that she would allow her innate sense
of justice to plead for him. But it had proved to be
quite the contrary.
" Akh, how wretched ! aJ ! ai' ! ai" ! how wretched ! "
said Prince Stepan to himself over and over and could
not find any way out of the difficulty. " And how well
everything was going until this happened ! How de-
lightfully we lived ! She was content, happy with the
children ; I never interfered with her in any way, I
allowed her to do as she pleased with the children and
the household ! To be sure it was bad that she
had been the governess in our own house ; that
was bad. There is something trivial and common in
playing the gallant to one's own governess ! But what
a governess ! "
andHehervividly
smile. recalled Mile. Roland's black roguish eyes
ANNA KARENINA ^
"But then, while she was here in the house with us, I
did not permit myself any liberties. And the worst of
all is that she is already.... All this must needs happen
just to spite me. Al! ail al'l But what, what is to be
done ?"
There was no answer except that common answer
which life gives to all the most complicated and unsolva-
ble questions, — this answer : You must live according
to circumstances, in other words, forget yourself. But
as you cannot forget yourself in sleep — at least till
night, as you cannot return to that music which the
water-bottle woman sang, therefore you must forget
yourself in the dream of life !
"We shall see by and by," said Stepan Arkadyevitch
to himself, and rising he put on his gray dressing-gown
with blue silk lining, tied the tassels into a knot, and
took a full breath into his ample lungs. Then with his
usual firm step, his legs spread somewhat apart and
easily bearing the solid weight of his body, he went
over to the window, lifted the curtain, and loudly rang
the bell. It was instantly answered by his old friend
and valet Matve, who came in bringing his clothes,
boots, and a telegram. Behind Matve came the barber
with the shaving utensils.
" Are there any papers from the court-house } " asked
Stepan Arkadyevitch, taking the telegram and taking
his seat in front of the mirror.
...."On the breakfast-table," replied Matve, looking
inquiringly and with sympathy at his master, and after
an instant's pause, added with a sly smile, " They have
come from the boss of the livery-stable."
Stepan Arkadyevitch made no reply and only looked
at Matve in the mirror. By the look which they inter-
changed it could be seen how they understood each
other. The look of Stepan Arkadyevitch seemed to
ask, " Why did you say that .■* Don't you know.?"
Matve thrust his hands in his jacket pockets, kicked
out his leg, and silently, good-naturedly, almost smiling,
looked back to his master : —
" I ordered him to come on Sunday, and till then that
$ ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
larly,"
hand. said Levin, looking with disgust at Grinevitch's
Stepan Arkadyevitch smiled imperceptibly. " Did n't
you say that you would never again put on European
clothes ? " he asked, examining his friend's new suit,
evidently made by a French tailor. " Indeed, I see ;
'tis a new phase."
Levin suddenly grew red, not as grown men grow
red, without perceiving it, but as boys blush, conscious
that they are ridiculous by reason of their bashfulness,
and therefore ashamed and made to turn still redder till
the tears almost come. It gave his intelligent, manly
face such a strange appearance that Oblonsky turned
away and refrained from looking at him.
"But where can we meet.'' You see it is very,
very
Levin.necessary for me to have a talk with you," said
Oblonsky seemed to reflect.
" How is this .'' We will go and have luncheon at
Gurin's, and we can talk there. At three o'clock I
shall be free."
*' No," answered Levin after a moment's thought;
** I 've got to take a drive."
"Well, then, let us dine together."
" Dine ? But I have nothing very particular to say,
only two words, to ask a question ; afterward we can
gossip."
"In that case, speak your two words now; we will
chat while we are at dinner."
" These two words are .... however, it 's nothing very
important."
His face suddenly assumed a hard expression, due
to his efforts in conquering his timidity. " What are
the Shcherbatskys doing .''— just as they used to .-*"
Stepan Arkadyevitch, who had long known that
Levin was in love with his sister-in-law Kitty, almost
perceptibly smiled, and his eyes flashed gayly. " You
said ' two words ' ; but I cannot answer in two words,
because .... excuse me a moment."
The secretary came in at this juncture with his
26 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
" No, it 's all the same to me," replied Levin, who
could not keep from smiling.
The Tatar disappeared on the trot, with his coat
tails flying out behind him. Five minutes later he came
with a platter of oysters opened and on the shell, and
with a bottle in his hand. Stepan Arkadyevitch crum-
pled up his well-starched napkin, tucked it into his
waistcoat, calmly stretched out his hands, and began
to attack the oysters.
" Not bad at all," he said, as he lifted the succulent
oysters from their shells with a silver fork, and swal-
lowed them one by one. " Not at all bad," he repeated,
looking from Levin to the Tatar, his eyes gleaming
with satisfaction.
Levin also ate his oysters, although he would have
preferred white bread and cheese ; but he could not
help admiring Oblonsky. Even the Tatar, after un-
corking the bottle and pouring the sparkling wine into
wide, delicate glass cups, looked at Stepan Arkadyevitch
with a noticeable smile of satisfaction while he adjusted
his white necktie.
" You are not very fond of oysters, are you .'' " asked
Stepan Arkadyevitch, draining his glass. " Or you are
preoccupied.'* Hey.-'"
He wanted Levin to be in good spirits, but Levin was
anxious, if he was not downcast. His heart being so
full, he found himself out of his element in this restau-
rant, amid the confusion of guests coming and going,
surrounded by the private rooms where men and women
were dining together ; everything was repugnant to his
feelings, — the whole outfit of bronzes and mirrors, the
gas and the Tatars. He feared that the sentiment
that occupied his soul would be defiled.
" I .'' Yes, I am a little absent-minded ; but besides,
everything here confuses me. You can't imagine," he
said, "how strange all these surroundings seem to a
countryman like myself. It 's like the finger-nails of
that gentleman whom I met at your office." ....
" Yes, I noticed that poor Grinevitch's finger-nails inter-
ested you greatly," said Stepan Arkadyevitch, laughing.
ANNA KARENINA 47
are talking about ? " murmured Levin, with his eyes fixed
on his companion. "Do you beHeve that this is possible ? "
" I think it is possible. Why should n't it be .-* "
" No, do you really think that it is possible .-' No !
tell me what you really think. If.... if she should refuse
me.... and I am almost certain that.... "
"Why should you be ? " asked Stepan Arkadyevitch,
smiling at this emotion.
" It is my intuition. It would be terrible for me and
for her."
" Oh ! in any case, I can't see that it would be very
terrible for her ; a young girl is always flattered to be
asked in marriage."
" Young girls in general, perhaps, not she."
Stepan Arkadyevitch smiled ; he perfectly under-
stood Levin's feeling, knew that for him all the young
girls in the universe were divided into two categories :
in the one, all the young girls in existence except her —
and these girls had all the faults common to humanity,
in other words, ordinary girls ; in the other, she alone,
without any faults, and placed above the rest of
humanity.
" Hold on ! take some gravy," said he, stopping
Levin's hand, who was pushing away the gravy.
Levin took the gravy in all humility, but he did not
give Oblonsky a chance to eat.
" No, just wait, wait," said he ; " you understand
this is for me a question of life and death. I have
never spoken to any one else about it, and I cannot
speak to any one else but you. I know we are very
different from each other, have different tastes, views,
everything ; but I know also that you love me, and
that you understand me, and that 's the reason I am so
fond of you. Now, for God's sake, be perfectly sincere
with me."
" I will tell you what I think," said Stepan Arka-
dyevitch, smiHng. " But I will tell you more : my wife
— a most extraordinary woman " — and Stepan Ar-
kadyevitch sighed, as he remembered his relations with
his wife — then after a moment's silence he proceeded
50 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
say this ; but the princess knew well that in this familiar
intercourse her daughter might fall in love, and fall in
love with some one who would not dream of marrying
her, or would not make her a good husband. However
earnestly they suggested to the princess that in our
time young people ought to settle their own destinies,
she found it impossible to agree with them any more
than she could believe in the advisability of allowing the
four-year-old children of our time to have loaded pistols
as their favorite toys. And so the princess felt much
more solicitude about Kitty than she had felt about
either of her other daughters.
She feared now that Vronsky would content himself
with playing the gallant. She saw that Kitty was
already in love with him, but she consoled herself with
the thought that he was a man of honor and would not
do so ; but, at the same time, she knew how easy it was,
with the new freedom allowed in society, to turn a young
girl's head, and how lightly men as a general thing
regarded this.
The week before Kitty had told her mother of a con-
versation which she had held with Vronsky during a
mazurka. This conversation had partially relieved the
princess's mind, though it did not absolutely satisfy her.
Vronsky told Kitty that he and his brother were both so
used to letting their mother decide things for them, that
they never undertook anything of importance without
consulting her.
" And now I am looking for my mother's arrival from
Petersburg as a great piece of good fortune," he had said.
Kitty reported these words without attaching any im-
portance to them, but her mother understood them very
differently. She knew that the old countess was ex-
pected from day to day ; she knew that the old countess
would be satisfied with her son's choice ; and it was
strange to her that he had not offered himself, as if he
feared to offend his mother. However, she herself was
so anxious for this match, and above all for relief from
her anxieties, that she gave a favorable interpretation to
these words. Bitterly as she felt the unhappiness of her
6o ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XIII
CHAPTER XIV
i
even have a chance to rally Levin.
Levin wanted to join in the general conversation, but
was unable. He kept saying to himself, " Now, I '11
go ; " and still he waited as if he expected something.
The conversation turned on table-tipping and spirits ;
and the Countess Nordstone, who was a believer in
spiritism, began to relate the marvels that she had
seen.
68 ANNA KARENINA
And his look replied, " I hate the whole world, — you
and myself." And he took up his hat.
But it was not his fate to go. The guests were just
taking their places around the table, and he was on the
point of starting, when the old prince entered, and, after
greeting the ladies, went straight to Levin.
" Ah! " he cried joyfully. " What a stranger ! I did
not know that you were here. Very glad to see you ! "
In speaking to Levin the prince sometimes used the
familiar tiii, thou, and sometimes the formal vuiy you.
He took him by the arm, and, while conversing with him,
gave no notice to Vronsky, who stood waiting patiently
for the prince to speak to him.
Kitty felt that her father's friendliness must be hard
for Levin after what had happened. She also noticed
how coldly her father at last acknowledged Vronsky's
bow, and how Vronsky looked at her father, with good-
humored perplexity striving in vain to make out what
this icy reception meant, and she blushed.
" Prince, let us have Konstantin Dmitritch," said the
Countess Nordstone. " We want to try an experiment."
"What sort of an experiment.'^ table-tipping.? Well!
excuse me, ladies and gentlemen, but, in my opinion,
grace-hoops^ would be a better game," said the prince,
looking at Vronsky, whom he took to be the originator
of this sport. " At least there's some sense in grace-
hoops."
Vronsky, astonished, turned his steady eyes upon the
old prince, and, slightly smiling, began to talk with the
Countess Nordstone about the arrangements for a great
ball to be given the following week.
" I hope that you will be there," said he, turning to
Kitty.
As soon as the old prince turned from him Levin
made his escape; and the last impression which he bore
away from this reception was Kitty's happy, smiling
face, answering Vronsky's question in regard to the
ball.
1 Kaletchki.
ANNA KARENINA 71
CHAPTER XV
CHAPTER XVI
CHAPTER XVII
CHAPTER XVIII
" That must have been very tiresome to you," said he,
instantly catching on the rebound the ball of coquetry
which she had tossed to him. But she evidently did
not care to continue her conversation in the same tone,
but turned to the old countess : —
" Thank you very much. I don't see where the time
has gone. Good-by, countess."
" Farewell, my dear," replied the countess. " Let
me kiss your pretty little face. I tell you frankly, as it
is permitted an old lady, that I am in love with you."
Hackneyed as this expression was, Madame Karenina
evidently believed thoroughly in its sincerity, and was
pleased with it. She blushed, bowed slightly, and bent
her face down to the old countess's lips. Then, straight-
ening herself up, she gave her hand to Vronsky with
the smile that seemed to belong as much to her eyes as
to her lips. He pressed her little hand, and, as if it
were something unusual, was delighted with the energetic
jfirmness with which she frankly and fearlessly shook his
hand.
Madame Karenina went out with light and rapid
step, carrying her rather plump person with remarkable
elasticity.
" Very charming," said the old lady again.
Her son was of the same opinion; and again his eyes
followed her graceful figure till she was out of sight, and
a smile rested on his face. Through the window he saw
her join her brother, take his arm, and engage him in
lively conversation, evidently about some subject with
which Vronsky had no connection, and this seemed to
him annoying.
" Well ! are you enjoying perfectly good health,
mamaft ? " he asked, turning to his mother.
"Very well, indeed, splendid. Alexandre has been
charming, and Marie has been very good. She is very
interesting."
And again she began to speak of wha.t was especially
interesting to her heart, — the baptism of her grandson,
for which she had come to Moscow, and the special
favor shown her eldest son by the emperor.
ANNA KARENINA 83
CHAPTER XIX
"Why ! have you come already ? " she cried, kissing her.
" Dolly, how glad I am to see you ! "
" And I am glad to see you," replied Dolly, with a
faint smile, and trying to read, by the expression of
Anna's face, how much she knew. " She knows all,"
was her thought, as she saw the look of compassion on
her features. " Well ! let us go up-stairs ; I will show
you to your room," she went on to say, trying to post-
pone, as long as possible, the time for explanations.
" Is this Grisha .-' Heavens ! how he has grown ! "
said Anna, kissing him. Then, not taking her eyes
from Dolly, she added, with a blush, " No, please let us
yet." off her handkerchief and her hat, and when
go took
notShe
it caught in the locks of her dark curly hair she shook
her head and released it.
" How brilliantly happy and healthy you look," said
Dolly, almost enviously.
" I .-^".... exclaimed Anna. "Ah !.... Heavens ! Tania!
is that you, the playmate of my little Serozha ? " said
she, speaking to a little girl who came running in.
She took her by the hand, and kissed her. " What a
charming little girl ! Charming ! But you must show
them all to me."
She recalled not only the name, the year, and the
month of each, but their characteristics and their little
ailments, and Dolly could not help feeling touched.
"Come! let us go and see them," said she; "but
Vasya is having her nap now ; it 's too bad."
After they had seen the children, they came back to
the sitting-room alone for coffee. Anna drew the tray
toward her, and then she pushed it away.
" Dolly," said she, "he has told me."
Dolly looked at Anna coldly. She now expected
some expression of hypocritical sympathy, but Anna
said nothing of the kind.
" Dolly, my dear," she said, " I do not intend to
speak to you in defense of him, nor to console you ; it
is impossible. But, dushenka, dear heart, I am sorry,
sorry for you with all my soul ! "
88 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XX
CHAPTER XXI
CHAPTER XXII
after years had passed, the loving look which she gave
him and which he did not return tore her heart with
cruel shame.
** Pardon ! pardon ! A waltz! a waltz!" cried Kor-
sunsky at the other end of the ball-room, and, seizing
the first young lady at hand, he began once more to
dance.
CHAPTER XXIII
"I heard him invite her for the mazurka," said the
countess, knowing that Kitty would know whom she
meant. "She said, ' What! ai^e n' t you going to dance
ivith the Princess Shchei'batskaya?"
" Akh ! it 's all one to me," said Kitty.
No one besides herself realized her position. No one
knew that she had refused a man whom perhaps she
loved, — refused him because she preferred some one
else.
The Countess Nordstone went in search of Korsun-
sky, who was her partner for the mazurka, and sent him
to invite Kitty.
Kitty danced in the first figure, and fortunately was
not required to talk, because Korsunsky was obliged to
be ubiquitous, making his arrangements in his little king-
dom. Vronsky and Anna were sitting nearly opposite
to her : she saw them sometimes near, sometimes at a
distance, as their turn brought them into the figures ;
and as she watched them, she felt more and more cer-
tain that her unhappiness was complete. She saw that
they felt themselves alone even in the midst of the
crowded ball-room ; and on Vronsky's face, usually so
impassive and calm, she remarked that mingled expies-
sion of humility and fear, which strikes one in an intel-
ligent dog, conscious of having done wrong.
If Anna smiled, his smile replied ; if she became
thoughtful, he looked serious. An almost supernatural
power seemed to attract Kitty's gaze to Anna's face.
She was charming in her simple black velvet ; charming
were her round arms, clasped by bracelets ; charming
her firm neck, encircled with pearls ; charming her dark,
curly locks breaking from restraint ; charming the slow
and graceful movements of her small feet and hands ;
charming her lovely face, full of animation ; but in all
this charm there was something terrible and cruel.
Kitty admired her more than ever, and ever more and
more her pain increased. She felt crushed, and her face
told the story. When Vronsky passed her, in some fig-
ure of the mazurka, he hardly knew her, so much had
she changed.
xo8 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXIV
CHAPTER XXV
CHAPTER XXVI
CHAPTER XXVII
CHAPTER XXVni
agreed
the to be back at seven o'clock to escort his sister to
train.
Kitty did not put in an appearance, but sent word
that she had a headache. Dolly and Anna dined alone
with the children and the English governess. Either
the children were fickle or they were very sensitive and
felt that Anna was not at all as she had been on the
day when they had taken so kindly to her, that she no
longer cared for them, for they suddenly ceased playing
with their aunt, seemed to lose their affection for her,
and cared very little that she was going away.
Anna spent the whole morning in making the prep-
arations for her departure. She wrote a few notes to
her Moscow acquaintances, settled her accounts, and
packed. To Dolly especially it seemed that she was not
in a happy frame of mind, but in that state of mental agi-
tation which Dolly knew from experience arose, not with-
out excellent reason, from dissatisfaction with herself.
After dinner Anna went to her room to dress, and
Dolly followed her.
" How strange you are to-day ! " said Dolly.
" I .'' Do you think so ? I am not strange, but I am
cross. This is common with me. I should like to have
a good cry. It is very silly, but it will pass away," said
Anna, speaking quickly, and hiding her blushing face in
a little bag where she was packing her toilet articles and
her handkerchiefs. Her eyes shone with tears which she
could hardly keep back. " I was so loath to come away
from Petersburg, and now I don't want to go back! "
"You came here and you did a lovely thing," said
Dolly, attentively observing her.
Anna looked at her with eyes wet with tears.
"Don't say that, Dolly. I have done nothing, and
could do nothing. I often ask myself why people say
things to spoil me. What have I done .'' What could I
do ? You found that your heart had enough love left to
forgive." ....
" Without you, God knows what would have been !
How fortunate you are, Anna!" said Dolly. "All is
serene and pure in your soul."
ANNA KARENINA 127
CHAPTER XXIX
" Well ! all is over, and thank the Lord ! " was Anna's
first thought after she had said good-by to her brother,
who had blocked up the entrance to the railway-carriage,
even after the third bell had rung. She sat down on
the divanchik next Annushka, her maid, and began to
examine the feebly lighted compartment. "Thank the
Lord ! to-morrow I shall see Serozha and Alekseif Alek-
sandrovitch, and my good and commonplace life will
begin again as of old."
With the same mental preoccupation that had pos-
sessed her all that day, Anna found a satisfaction in
attending minutely to the arrangements for the journey.
With her skilful little hands she opened her red bag,
and took out a cushion, placed it on her knees, wrapped
her feet warmly, and composed herself comfortably.
A lady, who seemed to be an invalid, had already
gone to sleep. Two other ladies entered into conversa.
tion with Anna ; and a fat, elderly dame, well wrapped
up, expressed her opinion on the temperature. Anna
exchanged a few words with the ladies, but, not taking
any interest in their conversation, asked Annushka for
her traveling-lamp, placed it on the back of her seat,
and took from her bag a paper-cutter and an English
novel. At first she could not read ; the going and com-
ing and the general bustle disturbed her ; when once
the train had started, she could not help listening to
the noises : the snow striking against the window, and
sticking to the glass ; the conductor, as he passed with
the snowflakes melting on his coat ; the remarks about
the terrible storm, — all distracted her attention.
Afterwards it became more monotonous : always the
same jolting and jarring, the same snow on the window,
the same sudden changes from warmth to cold, and back
to warmth again, the same faces in the dim light, and
the same voices. And Anna began to read, and to fol-
low what she was reading.
Annushka was already asleep, holding the little red
ijo ANNA KARENINA
bag on her knees with great, clumsy hands, clad in
gloves, one of which was torn.
Anna read, and understood what she read ; but it
was not pleasant to her to read, in other words to enter
into the lives of other people. She had too keen a
desire to live herself. If she read how the heroine of
her story took care of the sick, she would have liked
to go with noiseless steps into the sick-room. If she
read how a member of Parliament made a speech, she
would have liked to make that speech. If she read how
Lady Mary rode after the hounds, and made sport of
her sister-in-law, and astonished every one by her au-
dacity, she would have liked to do the same. But she
could do nothing ; and with her little hands she clutched
the paper-cutter, and forced herself to read calmly.
The hero of her novel had reached the summit of his
English ambition, — a baronetcy and an estate; and
Anna felt a desire to go with him to this estate, when
suddenly it seemed to her that he ought to feel a sense
of shame, and that she ought to share it. But why should
he feel herself
asked ashamedwith } "astonishment
Why should Iand
feel discontent.
ashamed } " She
she
closed the book, and, leaning back against the chair,
held the paper-cutter tightly in both hands.
There was nothing to be ashamed of : she reviewed
all her memories of her visit to Moscow ; they were all
pleasant and good. She remembered the ball, she
remembered Vronsky and his humble and passionate
face, she recalled all her relations with him ; there was
nothing to be ashamed of. But at the same time in
these reminiscences the sense of shame kept growing
stronger and stronger ; and it seemed to her that in-
ward voice, whenever she thought of Vronsky, seemed
to say, "Warmly, very warmly, passionately."....
"Well! what is this.^" she asked herself resolutely,
as she changed her position in the seat. "What does
this mean .-' Am I afraid to face these memories ^ Well !
what is it."* Is there, can there be, any relationship
between that boy-officer and me beyond what exists
between all acquaintances.-'"
ANNA KARENINA 131
CHAPTER XXX
CHAPTER XXXI
CHAPTER XXXII
thing that did not specially concern herself, had the habit
of sometimes not heeding what did interest her. She
interrupted Anna : —
"Well! This world is full of woes and tribulations,
and I am all worn out to-day."
" What is it ? " asked Anna, striving to repress a
smile.
" I am beginning to weary of the ineffectual attempts
to get at the truth, and sometimes I am utterly discour-
aged. The work of the Little Sisters " — this was a phil-
anthropic and religiously patriotic institution — " used
to get along splendidly, but there is nothing to be done
with these men," added the Countess Lidya Ivanovna,
with an air of ironical resignation to fate. " They got
hold of the idea, they mutilated it, and then they judge
it so meanly, so wretchedly. Two or three men, your
husband among them, understand all the significance of
this work ; but the others only discredit it. Yesterday
I had a letter from Pravdin .... "
Pravdin was a famous Panslavist, who lived abroad,
and the Countess Lidya Ivanovna related what he had
said in his letter.
Then she went on to describe the troubles and snares
that blocked the work of uniting the churches, and
finally departed in haste, because it was the day for her
to be present at the meeting of some society or other,
and at the sitting of the Slavonic Committee.
"All this is just as it has been, but why did I never
notice it before ? " said Anna to herself. " Was she very
irritable to-day .-• But at any rate, it is ridiculous : her
aims are charitable, she is a Christian, and yet she is
angry with every one, and every one is her enemy ; and
yet all h6r enemies are working for Christianity and
charity."
After the departure of the Countess Lidya Ivanovna,
came a friend, the wife of a director, who told her all
the news of the city. At three o'clock she went out,
promising to be back in time for dinner. Alekseif Alek-
sandrovitch was at the meeting of the ministry. The
hour before dinner, which Anna spent alone, she em-
142 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXXIII
CHAPTER XXXIV
CHAPTER I
princess when Kitty had gone from the room. " How-
ever, Ihad finished." ....
And the celebrated doctor explained the young prin-
cess's condition to her mother, treating her as a woman
of remarkable intelligence, and concluded with direc-
tions how to drink those waters which were valueless.
On the question, " Is it best to take her abroad ? " the
doctor pondered deeply, as if he were deciding a diffi-
cult problem. The decision was at last expressed : ' Go,
but put no faith in charlatans, and consult him in every=
thing.'
After the doctor's departure, everybody felt as if
something jolly had happened. The mother, in much
better spirits, rejoined her daughter, and Kitty declared
that she was better already. Often, almost all the time,
of late, she felt obliged to pretend.
" Truly, I am well, viaman, but if you desire it, let us
go," said she ; and in her endeavor to show that she
was interested in the journey, she began to speak of
their preparations.
CHAPTER n
',ous.
wasHer relations
going awaywith ; and life for
Stepan her was not since
Arkadyevitch joy-
the reconciliation had become humiliating ; the union
brought about by Anna had not been of long duration,
and the family concord had broken down in the same
place. There was nothing definite, but Stepan Arka-
dyevitch was scarcely ever at home, there was scarcely
ever any money in the house, and suspicions of his
unfaithfulness constantly tormented Dolly, but she kept
driving them away in terror of the unhappiness which
jealousy caused her. The first explosion of jealousy,
having been lived down, could not indeed be experi-
enced again ; and even the discovery of his unfaithful-
ness could not have such an effect on her as it had the
first time. Such a discovery now would only break up the
family, and she preferred to shut her eyes to his decep-
tion, despising him, and above all herself, because of this
weakness. Moreover, the cares of a numerous family
constantly annoyed her ; first the nursing of her baby
was unsatisfactory, then the nurse went off, and now one
of the children was ill.
"And how are the children .-*" asked the princess.
'Akh , maman ! we have so many tribulations. Lili
is ill in bed, and I am afraid it is the scarlatina. I
came out now to see how you were, for there'll be no
getting out for me after this, if it is scarlatina — which
God forbid ! "
The old prince also, after the doctor's departure, came
out from his library, presented his cheek to Dolly, ex-
changed afew words with her, and then turned to his
wife : —
" What decision have you come to } Shall you go ?
Well ! and what are you going to do with me \ "
" I think, Aleksandr, that you had better stay at
home."
" Just as you please."
" Maman, why does n't papa come with us ? " said
Kitty, " It would be gayer for him and for us."
The old prince got up and smoothed Kitty's hair with
his hand ; she raised her head, and with an effort smiled
158 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER HI
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
much, far more than you can imagine," and she looked
hirh full in the face. " Da svidanya i " ^
She reached him her hand, and, with a quick elastic
step, passed the Swiss, and disappeared in her carriage.
Her look, her pressure of his hand, filled Vronsky
with passion. He kissed the palm on the place which
she had touched, and went home with the happy convic-
tion that that evening had brought him nearer to the
goal of which he dreamed, than all the two months past.
CHAPTER Vni
AlekseV Aleksandrovitch found nothing unusual
or improper in the fact that his wife and Vronsky had
been sitting by themselves and having a rather lively
talk together ; he noticed that to others in the drawing-
room it seemed unusual and improper, and therefore it
seemed to him also improper. He decided that he
ought to speak about it to his wife.
When he reached home, Aleksei Aleksandrovitch, ac-
cording to his usual custom, went to his library, threw
himself into his arm-chair, and opened his book at the
place marked by a paper-cutter, in an article on Papistry,
and read till the clock struck one, as he usually did.
From time to time he passed his hand across his high
forehead, and shook his head, as if to drive away an im-
portunate thought. At his usual hour he arose and he
prepared to go to bed. Anna Arkadyevna had not yet
returned. With his book under his arm, he went up-
stairs but
; that evening, instead of pursuing his usual
train of reflections and thinking over his governmental
duties, his mind was occupied with his wife and the dis-
agreeable impression which her behavior had caused him.
Contrary to his habit, instead of going to bed he walked
up and down the rooms with his arms behind his Back.
He could not go to bed because he felt that first it was
incumbent on him to ponder anew over the exigency
that had arisen.
1 Da svidanya, like au revoir or aufviieder'sehen, has no equivalent in
English.
ANNA KARENINA 185
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
What had been for nearly a whole year the sole de-
sire of Vronsky's life, changing all his former desires —
what Anna had looked upon as an impossible, a terrible,
and, therefore, the more a fascinating, dream of bliss, was
at last realized. Pale, with quivering lower jaw, he
stood over her, begging her to be calm, himself not
knowing how or why.
"Anna! Anna!" he said, with trembling voice.
"Anna! for God's sake!"....
But the more intensely he spoke the lower she hung
her once proud, joyous, but now humiliated head, and
she crouched all down, and dropped from the divan,
where she had been sitting, to the floor at his feet.
She would have fallen on the carpet had he not held her.
"My God! forgive me!"
VOL. I. — 13
she sobbed, pressing his
194 ANNA KARENINA
hands to her breast. She felt that she was such a sinnef
and criminal that nothing remained for her except to
crouch down and beg for forgiveness ; now there was
nothing else for her in life but him, so that to him alone
she turned her prayer for forgiveness. As she looked
at him she felt her humiliation physically, and she could
say no more.
But he felt exactly as a murderer must feel when he
sees the lifeless body of his victim. This lifeless body
was their love — the first epoch of their love. There
was something horrible and repulsive in the recollection
of the terrible price that they had paid for this shame.
The shame in the presence of their spiritual nakedness
oppressed her and took hold of him. But in spite of all
the horror felt by the murderer in presence of the body
of his victim, he must cut it in pieces, must bury it, must
take advantage of his crime.
And, as with fury and passion the murderer throws
himself on the dead body and drags it and cuts it, so he
covered her face and shoulders with kisses. She held
his hand and did not stir.
" Yes, these kisses were what had been bought with
this shame ! Yes, and this hand, which will always be
mine,
She israised
the hand
his of my and
hand accomplice."
kissed it. He fell on his
knees, and tried to look into her face ; but she hid it
and said nothing. At last, as if trying to control her-
self, she made an effort to rise, and pushed him away.
Her face was still as beautiful as ever ; even so much
the more was it pitiful.
"All is ended," said she; "I have nothing but thee,
remember that."
" I cannot help remembering it, since it is my life. A
moment before this happiness .... "
"What happiness.?" she cried, with contempt and
horror. And horror involuntarily seized him also,
" For God's sake, not a word, not a word more."
She quickly got up and moved away from him, and
with a strange expression of hopeless despair, such as he
had never seen before, on her face, she stood aloof from
ANNA KARENINA 195
him. She felt that at that moment she could not ex-
press in words the sense of shame, rapture, and horror
at this entrance into a new life, and she did not wish to
speak about it or vulgarize the feeling with definite words.
But even afterward, on the next day, on the third
day, not only did she fail to find words in which to
express the complication of these feelings, but she
could not even find thoughts by which to formulate to
herself all that was in her soul.
She said to herself: —
" No, I cannot now think about this ; by and by, when
I am calmer."
But this calmness never came. Every time when the
questions arose: "What had she done.? and what would
become of her.? and what ought she to do.?" she was
filled with horror, and she compelled herself not to think
about them.
"By and by, by and by," she repeated, "when I am
calmer."
On the other hand, during sleep, when she had no
control of her thoughts, her situation appeared in its
ugly nakedness. One dream almost every night haunted
her. She dreamed that she was the wife both of Vron-
sky and of Alekseif Aleksandrovitch, and that both lav-
ished their caresses on her, Aleksef Aleksandrovitch
kissed her hands, and said, weeping, " How happy we are
now ! " Aleksei"SheVronsky,
her husband. also, was
was amazed that there, and ever
she had he was
be-
lieved such a thing impossible ; and she laughed as she
explained to them that this was far simpler, that both
would henceforth be satisfied and happy. But this
dream weighed on her like a nightmare, and she always
awoke in fright.
CHAPTER Xn
Even in the first weeks after Levin returned from
Moscow, every time that with flushed cheeks and a
trembling in his limbs he remembered the shame of hi^
rejection, he would say to himself: —
196 ANNA KARENINA
"I blushed and trembled like this, and I felt that all
was lost, when I got one in physics, and had to go into
the second class ; and I thought myself irretrievably
ruined when I bungled in my sister's affairs, which were
confided to me. And now ? Now the years have gone
by, and I look back and wonder how it could disturb
my mind. It will be just the same with my disap-
pointment this time. Time will pass, and I shall grow
callous."
But three months passed away and the callousness
did not come, and it was as painful for him to remember
it as on the first day. He could not reconcile himself
to the fact that, after dreaming so long of family life,
after being, as he thought, so well prepared for it, not
only was he not married, but found himself farther than
ever from marriage. He felt painfully, as all those
around him felt, that it is not good for a man of his age
to live alone. He remembered that before his departure
for Moscow he had once said to his cowherd, Nikolai, a
simple-hearted muzhik with whom he liked to talk : —
" Do you know, Nikolai, I am thinking of getting
married ? " whereupon Nikolai had instantly replied, as
if there could not be the slightest doubt about it : —
"This ought to have been long ago, Konstantin
Dmitritch."
And now marriage was farther off than ever. The
place was taken ; and when, exercising his imagination,
he put into that place some young girl of his acquain-
tance, he felt that it was perfectly impossible. Moreover,
the recollection of how Kitty refused him and of the
part which he played still tormented him with morti-
fication. Itwas idle to say that he was not to blame in
this ; this recollection, taken together with other mortify-
ing experiences of the same sort, made him quiver and
grow red in the face. He had on his conscience, as
every man has, the remembrance of evil deeds for which
he should have repented ; but the remembrance of these
evil deeds did not trouble him nearly so much as the
feeling of his humiliation, slight as it really was. It was
a wound that refused to heal. He could not keep out
ANNA KARENINA 197
CHAPTER XIII
Levin put on his heavy boots, and, for the first time,
his sleeveless cloth coat instead of his fur shuba, and
went out to look over his estate, tramping through the
brooklets which dazzled his eyes as they glanced in the sun,
and stepping, now on a cake of ice, and now in sticky mud.
Spring is the epoch of plans and projects. Levin, as
he went out into his court, no more definitely knew what
he would first take in hand in his beloved farming than
the tree in early spring knows how and why his young
sprouts and branches grow out from their enveloping
buds ; but he felt that he was going to originate the
most charming projects and the most sensible plans.
He went first to see his cattle. The cows had been
let out into the yard, and with their smooth new coats
of hair glistening as they warmed themselves in the
sun, they were lowing as if to beg permission to go out
to pasture. Levin knew them all, even to the minutest
particulars. He contemplated them with satisfaction,
and gave orders to take them to pasture, and to let the
calves out into the yard. The cow-boy gayly started to
drive them out into the field. The milkmaids, gather-
ing up their petticoats, and splashing through the mud
with bare feet, white as yet, and free from tan, chased
the bellowing calves, silly with the rapture of spring, and
with switches kept them from escaping froni the yard.
400 ANNA KARENINA
shall
where. give,'' and which constantly opposed him every-
" If we have time, Konstantin Dmitritch," said the
overseer.
" Why shall we not have time t "
" We absolutely ought to hire fifteen more workmen,
but they can't be had. Some came to-day who asked
seventy rubles for the summer."
Levin did not speak. Again the opposing force !
He knew that, however he might exert himself, he never
could hire more than forty, thirty-seven, or thirty-eight,
laborers at a reasonable price ; he had succeeded in get-
ting forty, never more ; but nevertheless he could not
give up vanquished.
" Send to Suri, to Chefirovka ; if they don't come, we
must go for them."
" I 'm going to go," said Vasili Feodorovitch, gloomily.
"But then the horses are very feeble."
"Buy some more; but then I know," he added, with
a laugh, "that you will do as little and as badly as you
can. However, I warn you that I will not let you do as
you please this year. I shall take the reins in my own
hands."
" Yes ! but even as it is you get too little sleep, it
seems to me. We are very happy to be under our mas-
ter's eyes.... "
" Now, have the clover put in on the Berezof Bottom,
and I shall come myself to inspect it," said he,
mounting his little horse," Kolpik, which the coachman
brought up.
" Don't
cried go across the brooks, Konstantin Dmitritch,"
the coachman.
" Well, then, by the woods."
And on his little, lively, easy-going ambler, which
whinnied as it came to the pools, and which pulled on
the bridle, having been too long in the stable. Levin rode
out of the muddy courtyard, and across the open fields.
Happy as Levin had felt in his cow-yard and cattle-
pen, he felt still happier out in the field. Rhythmically
swaying on his easy-going, gentle pony, drinking in the
204 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XIV
CHAPTER XV
its pole was shining out clear in the dark blue sky, and
he was still waiting.
" Is n't it getting late ? " asked Stepan Arkadyevitch.
All was calm in the forest ; not a bird moved.
" Let us wait a little longer," replied Levin.
"Just as you please."
At this moment they were not fifteen paces apart.
" Stiva," cried Levin, suddenly, "you have not told
me whether your sister-in-law is married yet, or whether
she is to be married soon."
He felt so calm, his mind was so thoroughly made
up, that nothing, he thought, could move him. But
what Stepan Arkadyevitch answered was wholly un-
expected.
" She is not married, and she is not thinking of
marriage. She is very ill, and the doctors have sent
her abroad. They even fear for her life."
"What did you say .^ " cried Levin. "Very ill?
What is the matter .-' How did she.... "
While they were talking thus, Laska, with ears erect,
was gazing at the sky above her head, and looking at
them reproachfully.
"This is not the time to talk," thought Laska. "Ah !
Here comes one — there he goes; they will miss him."
At the same instant a sharp whistle pierced the ears
of the two huntsmen, and both, leveling their guns,
shot at once ; the two reports, the two flashes, were
simultaneous. The snipe, flying high, folded his wings,
drew up his delicate legs, and fell into the thicket.
"Excellent! both together!" cried Levin, running
with Laska in search of the game. " Oh, yes ! What
was it that hurt me so just now.? Ah, yes ! Kitty is
ill," he remembered. " What is to be done about it .-•
It is too bad. — Ah ! she has found it ! Good dog," said
he, taking the bird, still warm, from Laska's mouth, and
putting it into his overflowing game-bag.
" Come on, Stiva I " he cried.
2i6 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XVI
dear ; I shall not make the two ends meet. I beg him
to yield a little."
" But is your bargain made, or is it not ? If it is
made, there is no need of haggling; if it is not," said
Levin, " I am going to buy the wood."
The smile suddenly disappeared from Rabinin's lips.
A rapacious and cruel expression, like that of a bird of
prey, came in its place. With his bony fingers he tore
open his overcoat, bringing into sight his shirt, his waist-
coat with its copper buttons, and his watch-chain ; and
from his breast-pocket he pulled out a huge, well-worn
wallet.
" Excuse me, the wood is mine," he exclaimed, making a
rapid sign of the cross, and he extended his hand. " Take
your money, the wood is mine. This is how Rabinin
ends his transactions. He does not reckon his kopeks,"
said he, knitting his brows and waving his wallet eagerly.
said" IfLevin.
I were in your place, I should not be in haste,"
CHAPTER XVII
CHAPTER XVIII
CHAPTER XIX
CHAPTER XX
CHAPTER XXI
A TEMPORARY Stable, — a balagan, or hut, — made out
of planks, had been built near the race-course ; and here
Vronsky's horse should have been brought the evening
before. He had not as yet seen her. During the last
few days he himself had not been out to drive, but he had
intrusted her to the trainer; and Vronsky did not know
in what condition he should find her. He was just get-
ting out of his carriage when his konyukh, or groom, a
young fellow, saw him from a distance, and immediately
called the trainer. This was an Englishman with with-
ered face and tufted chin, and dressed in short jacket
and top-boots. He came out toward Vronsky in the
mincing step peculiar to jockeys, and with elbows stick-
ing out.
"Well, how is Frou Frou } " said Vronsky, in English.
*' A// right, sir" said the Englishman, in a voice that
came out of the bottom of his throat. " Better not go
in, sir," he added, taking off his hat. " I have put a
muzzle on her, and that excites her. Better not go in,
it excites a horse."
" No, I am going in, I want to see her."
" Come on, then," replied the Englishman, testily ;
and, without ever opening his mouth, and with his dandi-
fied step, he led the way.
They went into a small yard in front of the stable.
An active and alert stable-boy in a clean jacket, with
whip in hand, met them as they entered, and followed
them. Five horses were in the stable, each in its own
stall. Vronsky knew that his most redoubtable rival, —
236 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXII
general, — all this was such a trifle, while for her it was
so painful. To-day this thought, for various reasons,
had been particularly tormenting her.
She asked him about the races. He answered her,
and, seeing that she was in a very excited state, in order
to divert her mind, told her, in the tone most natural,
about the preparation that had been made.
" Shall I, or shall I not, tell him ? " she thought, as
she looked at his calm, affectionate eyes. " He seems
so happy, he is so interested in these races, that he will
not comprehend, probably, the importance of what I
must tell him."
" But you have not told me of what you were think-
ing when I came," said he, suddenly, interrupting the
course of his narration. " Tell me, I beg of you ! "
She did not reply ; but she lifted her head a little,
and looked at him questioningly from her beautiful eyes,
shaded by her long lashes ; her fingers, playing with a
fallen leaf, trembled.
He saw this, and his face immediately showed the
expression of humble adoration, of absolute devotion,
which had so won her,
" I see that something has happened. Can I be easy
for an instant when I know that you feel a grief that I
do not share .-* In the name of Heaven, speak ! " he in-
sisted, in a caressing tone.
"I shall never forgive him if he does not appreciate
the importance of what I have to tell him ; better be
silent than put him to the proof," she thought, continu-
ing to look at him in the same way, and conscious that
her hand, holding the leaf, trembled more and more
violently.
" In the name of Heaven ! " said he, taking her hand
again.
" Shall I tell you ? "
"Yes, yes, yes .... "
"J^e suis enceinte ! " she
voice. said, in a low and deliberate
The leaf that she held in her fingers trembled still
more, but she did not take her eyes from his face, for
ANNA KARENINA 245
she wished to see how he would receive what she
said.
He grew pale, tried to speak, then stopped short,
dropped her hand, and hung his head.
"Yes, he understands the significance of this," she
said to herself, and gratefully pressed his hand.
But she was mistaken in thinking that he appreciated
the significance of what she had told him, as she, a
woman, did. On learning this, he felt that he was
attacked with tenfold force by that strange feeling of
repulsion and horror which he had already experienced.
But at the same time, he realized that the crisis which
he had expected was now at hand, that it was impossible
longer to keep the secret from the husband ; and it was
important to extricate themselves as soon as possible
from the unnatural situation in which they were placed.
Moreover, her anguish communicated itself to him
physically. He looked at her with humbly submissive
eyes, kissed her hand, arose, and began to walk up and
down the terrace without speaking.
At last he approached her, and said in a tone of
decision : —
"Well," said he, "neither you nor I have looked on
our relations as a pastime, and now our fate is decided ;
at last we must put an end to the false situation in
which we live," — and he looked around him.
" Put an end ? How put an end, Aleksel ? " she asked
gently.
She was calm now, and her face beamed with a tender
smile.
"You must leave your husband and unite your life
with mine."
an "But
almost aren't theyvoice.
inaudible already united.-'" she asked, in
CHAPTER XXni
CHAPTER XXIV
stopped him, and told him various items about the last
race, or asked him why he was late.
While they were distributing the prizes at the pavilion,
and every one had gone in this direction, Vronsky was
joined by fiis elder brother. Aleksandr Vronsky was a
colonel and wore epaulets, and, like AlekseY, was a
man of medium stature, and rather thick-set ; but he
was handsomer and ruddier. His nose was red, and
his frank, open face was flushed with wine.
" Did you get my note ? " he asked of his brother.
"You are never to be found."
Aleksandr Vronsky, in spite of his life of dissipation
and his love for drink, which was notorious, was a thor-
oughly courtly man. Knowing that many eyes might
be fixed on them, he preserved, while he talked on a
very painful subject, a smiling face, as if he were jesting
with his brother about some trifling matter.
"I got it," said he, "but I really don't understand
why you interfere."
" I interfere because I noticed you were not to be
found this morning, and because you were seen at
Peterhof Monday."
"There are matters which cannot be judged except
by those who are directly interested, and the matter in
which you concern yourself is such." ....
"Yes ; but when one is not in the service, he...,"
" I beg you to mind your own business, and that is all."
Aleksef Vronsky's frowning face grew pale, and his
rather prominent lower jaw shook. This happened
rarely with him. He was a man of kindly heart, and
rarely got angry ; but when he grew angry, and when
his chin trembled, he became dangerous. Aleksandr
Vronsky knew it, and with a gay laugh replied : —
" I only wanted to give you matushka's letter. An-
swer it, and don't get angry before the race. Bonne
chance,'' he added, with a smile, and left him.
The next moment another friendly greeting surprised
Vronsky.
" Won't you recognize your friends .'* How are you,
mon cher?" said Stepan Arkady evitch, with his rosy
ANNA KARENINA 253
way."
"Very good," replied Vronsky, taking the reins.
" If possible, take the lead, but don't be discouraged
even to the last if you are behind."
The horse did not have time to stir before Vronsky,
with supple and powerful movement, put his foot on the
notched steel stirrup, and gracefully, firmly, took his
seat in the squeaking leather saddle. Having put his
right foot in the stirrup, with his customary care he then
arranged the double reins between his fingers, and
Cord let go the animal's head. Frou Frou, as if not
knowing which foot to put down first, stretched out her
neck, and pulled on the reins, and she started off as if
on springs, balancing her rider on her supple back.
Cord, quickening his pace, followed them. The mare,
excited, jumped to right and left, trying to take her
master off his guard, and pulled at the reins, and Vron-
sky vainly endeavored to calm her with his voice and
with his hand.
They were approaching the diked bank of the river,
where the starting-post was placed. Some of the riders
had gone on ahead, others were riding behind, when
Vronsky suddenly heard on the muddy track the gallop
of a horse ; and Makhotin dashed by on his white-footed,
lop-eared Gladiator. Makhotin smiled, showing his long
teeth, but Vronsky looked at him angrily. He did not
like Makhotin any too well, and now he regarded him
as his most dangerous rival ; and he was exasperated at
the way he galloped up behind him, exciting his mare. '
Frou Frou kicked up her heels and started off at a
gallop, made two bounds, and then, angry at the re-
straint of the curb, changed her gait into a trot which
shook up her rider. Cord was also disgusted, and ran
almost as fast as Vronsky.
256 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXV
but he saw only his horse's ears and neck, the ground
flying under him, and Gladiator's flanks, and white feet
beating the ground in cadence, and always maintaining
the same distance between them. Gladiator flew at the
hurdle, gave a whisk of his well-cropped tail, and, with-
out having touched the hurdle, vanished from Vronsky's
eyes.
" Bravo ! " cried a voice.
At the same instant the planks of the hurdle flashed
before his eyes. Without the least change in her motion,
the horse rose under him. The planks creaked and just
behind him there was the sound of a thump. Frou Frou,
excited by the sight of Gladiator, had leaped too soon,
and had struck the hurdle with one of her hind feet, but
her gait was unchanged ; and Vronsky, his face splashed
with mud, saw that he was still at the same distance
from Gladiator, he saw once more Gladiator's crupper,
his short tail, and his swiftly moving white feet.
At the very instant that Vronsky decided that he
ought now to get ahead of Makhotin, Frou Frou herself
comprehending his thought, and needing no stimulus,
sensibly increased her speed, and gained on Makhotin
by trying to take the inside track next the rope. But
Makhotin did not yield this advantage. Vronsky was
wondering if they could not pass on the outside, when
Frou Frou, as if divining his thought, changed of her
own accord and took this direction. Her shoulder,
darkened with sweat, came up even with Gladiator's
flank, and for several seconds they flew almost side by
side ; but Vronsky, before the obstacle to which they
were now coming, in order not to take the outside of
the great circle, began to ply his reins, and, just on the
declivity, he managed to get the lead. As he drew by
Makhotin he saw his mud-stained face ; it even seemed
to him that he smiled. Vronsky had passed Makhotin,
but he was conscious that he was just behind, he was
still there, within a step ; and Vronsky could hear the
regular rhythm of Gladiator's feet, and his hurried, but
far from winded, breathing.
The next two obstacles, the ditch and the hurdle, were
ANNA KARENINA 2^9
CHAPTER XXVI
The external relations of Aleksel Aleksandrovitch
and his wife were the same as they had been. The
only difference was that he was more absorbed in his
work than he had been. Early in the spring he went
abroad, as was his custom each year, to recuperate at
the water-cure after the fatigues of the winter. He re-
turned in July, as he usually did, and resumed his duties
with new energy. His wife had taken up her summer
quarters as usual in a datc/ta, or summer villa, not far
from Petersburg ; he remained in the city.
Since their conversation after the reception at the
Princess Tverskaya's, he had said nothing more about
262 ANNA KARENINA
the" doctor.
I will do it for the sake of Russia, countess," replied
" Admirable man ! " cried the countess.
The doctor was very much disturbed at Aleksei
Aleksandrovitch's state. His liver was congested, his
digestion was bad ; the waters had done him no good.
He ordered more physical exercise, as little mental
strain as possible, and, above all, freedom from vexation
of spirit ; in other words, he ordered Aleksei' Aleksan-
drovitch to do what was as impossible for him as not to
breathe.
The doctor departed, leaving Alekse'f Aleksandrovitch
with the disagreeable impression that something was
very wrong with him, and that there was no help for it.
On the way out, the doctor met on Karenin's steps
his old acquaintance Sliudin, who was Alekse'f Alek-
sandrovitch's chief secretary. They had been in t'he
university together ; but, though they rarely met, they
were still excellent friends, and therefore to no one else
than Sliudin would the doctor have expressed his opinion
concerning the sick man so frankly.
" How glad I am that you have been to see him ! "
said Sliudin. " He is not well, and it seems to me .....
Well, what is it ? "
" I will tell you," said the doctor, nodding to his
coachman to drive up to the door. "This is what I
say;" and, taking with his white hand the fingers of
his dogskin glove, he stretched it out ; " try to break
a tough cord which is not stretched and it 's hard work ;
266 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXVII
CHAPTER XXVIII
CHAPTER XXIX
She did not hear half of his words ; she felt over-
again."
whelmed with fear ; and she thought only of Vronsky,
and whether he was killed. Was it he who was meant
when they said the rider was safe but the horse had
broken her back .-'
When Aleksei' Aleksandrovitch ceased speaking, she
looked at him with an ironical smile, and answered not
a word, because she had not noticed what he said. At
first he had spoken boldly ; but as he saw clearly what
he was speaking about, the terror which possessed her
seized him also. He noticed that smile of hers, and it
led him into a strange mistake.
" She is amused at my suspicions ! She is going to
tell me now what she once before said, that there is no
foundation for them, that this is absurd."
Now when the discovery of the whole thing hung
over him, he desired nothing so much as that she should
answer derisively as she had done before, that his sus-
picions were ridiculous and had no foundation. What
he now knew was so terrible to him that he was ready
to believe anything that she might say. But the ex'
278 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXX
CHAPTER XXXI
*' Akh ! how unpleasant ! " said the princess. " Well,
how did it end ? "
" Fortunately that .... that girl with a hat like a toad-
stool interfered. A Russian, it seems," said the colonel.
" Mademoiselle Varenka .''" joyously exclaimed Kitty.
" Yes, yes ! She went quicker than any one else, and
took the gentleman by the arm, and led him off."
"There, mamma!" said Kitty, "and you wonder at
my enthusiasm for Varenka ! "
The next morning Kitty, watching her unknown
friend, noticed that Mademoiselle Varenka had the
same relations with Levin and Marya as with her other
proteges: she joined them and talked with them, and
acted as interpreter to the woman, who did not know
any language besides her own.
Kitty again begged her mother even more urgently
to let her become acquainted with Varenka ; and though
it was unpleasant to the princess to seem to be making
advances to the haughty and exclusive Madame Stahl,
she made some inquiries about Varenka, and learning
enough to satisfy herself that there was no possible
harm, though very little that was advantageous, in the
proposed acquaintance, she went first to Varenka and
introduced herself.
Choosing a time when Kitty was at the spring, and
Varenka
to her. was opposite the baker's, the princess went up
CHAPTER XXXII
knew it. There are looks, there are ways .... no, no!
not if I lived a hundred years should I ever forget it."
" Now, what is it ? I don't understand you. The
question is solely
said Varenka, whothisliked
: do toyou
calllove him by
things now their
or not .<'"
right
names.
" I hate him. I cannot forgive myself."
"But what for.?"
"The shame, the insult."
" Akh ! if every one were as sensitive as you ! There
is never a young girl who does not sometimes feel the
same way. It is all such a trifling thing ! "
"But what, then, is important.?" asked Kitty, look-
ing at Varenka with astonishment and curiosity.
" Oha smile.
with ! many things are important," replied Varenka,
CHAPTER XXXIII
CHAPTER XXXIV
tot, and with his Russian wrinkles and his puffy cheeks
standing out above his stiffly starched collar, went in
the very best of spirits with Kitty to the spring.
The morning was beautiful. The neat, gay houses,
with their little gardens, the sight of the German ser-
vants, with their red faces and red arms, happily work-
ing, the brilliant sun, — everything filled the heart with
pleasure. But as they came nearer to the spring they
met more and more invalids, whose lamentable appear-
ance contrasted painfully with the trim and beneficent
German surroundings.
For Kitty the bright sunlight, the vivid green of the
trees, the sounds of the music, all formed a natural
framework for these well-known faces, whose changes
for better or worse she had been watching. But for
the prince there was something cruel in the contrast
between this bright June morning, the orchestra play-
ing the latest waltz, and especially the sight of these
healthy-looking servants, and the miserable invalids,
from all the corners of Europe, dragging themselves
painfully along.
In spite of the return of his youth which the prince
experienced, and the pride that he felt in having his
favorite daughter on his arm, he confessed to a sense
of shame and awkwardness in walking along with his
firm step and his vigorous limbs,
'* Introduce me, introduce me to your new friends,"
said he to his daughter, pressing her arm with his elbow.
" I am beginning to like your abominable Soden for the
good which it has done you. Only it is melancholy for
you. — Who is this ? "
Kitty told the names of the acquaintances and
strangers that they met on their way. At the very
entrance of the garden they met Madame Berthe and
her companion, and the prince was pleased to see the
expression of joy on the old Frenchwoman's face at
the sound of Kitty's voice. With true French exagger-
ation she immediately overwhelmed the prince with
compliments, congratulating him on having such a
charming daughter, whose merits she praised to the
298 ANNA KARENINA
daughter,"
in his hand.said he, taking off his hat, and holding it
"Prince Aleksandr Shcherbatsky ! " said Madame
Stahl, looking at him with her heavenly eyes, in which
Kitty detected a shade of dissatisfaction. " I am very
glad to see you ; I love your daughter so ! "
" Your health is not always good .''"
" Oh ! I am pretty well used to it now," replied
Madame Stahl ; and she presented the prince to the
Swedish count.
" You have changed very little," said the prince to
her, "during the ten or twelve years since I had the
honor of seeing you."
" Yes. God gives the cross, and gives also the power
to carry it. I often ask myself why my life is so pro-
longed Not like that," she said crossly, to Varenka,
who had not succeeded in putting her plaid over her
shoulders to her satisfaction.
" For doing good, without doubt," said the prince,
with laughing eyes.
"It is not for us to judge," replied Madame Stahl,
observing the gleam of irony in the prince's face.
" I pray you send me that book, dear count. I will
thank you a thousand times," said she, turning to the
young Swede.
"Ah!" cried the prince, who had just caught sight
of the Muscovite colonel standing near ; and, bowing to
Madame Stahl, he went away with his daughter and the
Muscovite colonel, who had joined him.
" This is our aristocracy, prince ! " said the colonel,
with sarcastic intent, for he also was piqued because
Madame Stahl refused to be friendly.
" Always the same," replied the prince.
" Did you know her before her illness, prince, — that
is, before she became an invalid ? "
" Yes ; she became an invalid after I knew her."
" They say that she has not walked for ten years. " ....
" She does not walk because one leg is shorter than
the other. She is very badly put together. "....
" Papa, it is impossible," cried Kitty.
ANNA KARENINA
302
" Evil tongues say so, my dear ; and your friend
Varenka ought to see her as she is. Oh, these invalid
ladies ! "
" Oh, no, papa ! I assure you, Varenka adores her,"
cried Kitty, eagerly; "and besides, she does so much
good ! Ask any one you please. Every one knows her
and Aline Stahl."
" Maybe," replied her father, pressing her arm gently ;
" but it would be better when people do such things
that no one should know about it."
Kitty was silent, not because she had nothing to say,
but she was unwilling to reveal her inmost thoughts
even to her father.
There was one strange thing, however : decided though
she was not to unbosom herself to her father, not to
let him penetrate into the sanctuary of her reflections,
she nevertheless was conscious that her ideal of holiness,
as seen in Madame Stahl, which she had for a whole
month carried in her soul, had irrevocably disappeared,
as a face seen in a garment thrown down by chance
disappears when one really sees how the garment is
lying. She retained only the image of a lame woman
who, because she was deformed, stayed in bed, and who
tormented the paftient Varenka because she did not
arrange her plaid to suit her. And it became impossi-
ble for her imagination to bring back to her the remem-
brance of the former Madame Stahl.
CHAPTER XXXV
agreeably. All the rest were gay, but Kitty could not
be gay, and this still more annoyed her. She experi-
enced afeeling analogous to that which she had known
in her childhood, when, as a punishment for some offense,
she was shut up in her room and heard the gay merri-
ment of her sisters.
" Now, why did you purchase this heap of things .■'"
asked the princess, smiling and offering her husband a
cup of coffee.
"You go out for a walk, well! and you come to a
shop, and they address you, and say, ^ ErlaiicJit, Excel-
lenz, Diirchlaiicht!' Well, when they say Diirchlaucht}
I cannot resist any longer, and my ten thalers vanish."
" It was merely because you were bored," said the
princess.
" Certainly I was bored ! It was ennui which one
does not know how to escape from."
" But how can you be bored .'' There are so many
interesting things to see in Germany now," said Marya
Yevgenyevna.
" Yes ! I know all which is interesting just at the
present time : I know soup with prunes, I know pea-
pudding, I know everything."
" Just as you please, prince, but their institutions are
interesting," said the colonel.
" Yes ! but what is there interesting about them .-"
They are as contented as copper kopeks. They have
whipped the world ! Now, why should I find anything
to content me here } I never conquered anybody ; but
I have to take off my boots myself, and, what is worse,
put them out myself in the corridor. In the morning
I get up, and have to dress myself, and go down to the
dining-room and drink execrable tea. 'T is n't like that
at home. There you can get up when you please ; if
you are out of sorts, you can grumble ; you have all the
time you need for remembering things, and you can do
whatever you please without hurrying."
"But time is money; you forget that," said the
colonel.
^ Durcklauchty highness.
ANNA KARENINA 305
But Kitty was thoroughly angry, and did not let her
finish.
" I am not speaking of you, not of you at all. You
are perfection. Yes, yes ; I know that you are all per-
fection. How can I help it.-*,... I am wicked; this
would not have occurred, if I had not been wicked. So
let me be what I am, but I will not be deceitful. What
have I to do with Anna Pavlovna ? Let them live as
they want to, and I will do the same. I can't be some-
body else Besides, everything is different.... "
" What is 'different * .-'" asked Varenka, in perplexity,
" Everything ! I can only live by my heart, but you
live by your principles. I like you all ; but you have
had in view only to save me, to convert me."
"You are not fair," said Varenka.
" I am not speaking for other people. I only speak
for myself."
" Kitty ! " cried her mother's voice, " come here and
show papa your corals."
Kitty, with a haughty face and not making it up with
her friend, took the box with the corals from the table
and carried it to her mother.
"What
asked is theand
her father matter.?
motherwhy
withare
one you
voice.so flushed?"
" Nothing ; I am
ried back to the coming right back ; " and she hur-
house.
"She is still there," she thought; "what shall I tell
her ? Bozhe mof ! what have I done ? what have I said.?
Why did I hurt her feelings ? What have I done ? what
at the I door.
shall say to her .-'" she asked herself, as she hesitated
Varenka, with her hat on and her parasol in her hand,
was sitting by the table, examining the spring, which
Kitty had broken. She raised her head.
"Varenka, forgive me," whispered Kitty, coming up
to her. " Forgive me, I don't know what I said. I .... "
" Truly, I did not mean to cause you pain," said
Varenka, smiling.
Peace was made.
But her father's coming had changed for Kitty the
3o8 ANNA KARENINA
END OF VOL. L
Levin and Kitty,
Original Drawing by E. Boyd Smith,
ANNA KARENINA
VOL. U
ANNA KARENINA
PART THIRD
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
^ The picture by Repin represents Count Tolstoi plowing with the primi-
tive sokha. Levin's peasantry call the plow (^plug) vuidumka pustaya,
" empty invention."
6 ANNA KARENINA
It was the time of the year, the very top of the sum<
mer, when the prospects of harvest may be estimated,
when the labors of the next year's planting begin to be
thought of, and the mowing-time has come ; when the rye
is already eared and sea-green in color, but still not fully
formed ; when the ears of corn swing lightly in the breeze ;
when the green oats, with scattered clumps of yellow
grass, peep irregularly from the late-sown fields; when
the early buckwheat already is up and hides the soil;
when the fallow fields, beaten a^ hard as stone by the
cattle and with paths deserted, on which the sokha, or
primitive plow, has no effect, are half broken up ; when
the odor of the dry manure, heaped in little hillocks over
the fields, mingles at twilight with the perfume of the
" honey-grass," ^ and on the bottom lands, waiting for
the scythe, stand the protected meadows like a bound-
less sea with the darkening clumps of sorrel that has
done blooming.
It was the time when there is a brief breathing-spell
before the harvest, that great event which the muzhik
with eagerness expects each year. The crops promised
to be superb ; and there was a succession of bright, clear
summer days, followed by short, dewy nights.
The two brothers had to go through the woodland to
reach the fields. SergyeT Ivanovitch was all the time
admiring the beauty of the forest with its dense canopy
of leaves, and he pointed out to his brother, as they rode
along, now an old linden almost in flower, dark on its
shady side and variegated with yellow stipules ; now at
the emerald-shining young shoots of that same year;
but Konstantin did not himself like to speak or to hear
about the beauties of nature. Words, he thought, spoiled
the beauty of the thing that Ije saw. He assented to
what his brother said, but allowed his mind to concern
itself with other things. After they left the wood, his
whole attention was absorbed by a fallow field on a
hillock, where in some places the grass was growing
yellow, where in others whole squares of it had been
cut, and in others raked up into haycocks, and where in
1 IJokus mollis, soft-grass.
ANNA KARENINA 7
" Well, all is in- the hand of God. Maybe the weathei
hold."returned to his brother.
willLevin
Though he had caught nothing, Sergyeif Ivanovitch
was .undisturbed, and seemed in the best of spirits.
Levin saw that he was stimulated by his talk with the
doctor, and that he was eager to go on talking. Levin,
on the contrary, was anxious to get back to the house
as soon as possible to give some orders about hiring
mowers for the next day, and to decide the question
about the haymaking which occupied all his thoughts.
"Well," said he, " shall we go ? "
" What is your hurry ,'' Do let us sit down. But how
drenched you are ! .... No, I have had no luck, but I have
enjoyed it all the same. All outdoor sports are beautiful
because you have to do with nature. Now just notice
how charming that steely water is ! " he exclaimed.
"These meadow banks," he went on to say, "always
remind me of an enigma, do you know.? — 'The grass
says to the river, " We have strayed far enough, we have
strayed far enough," ' "
" I don't know that riddle," interrupted Konstantin,
in a melancholy tone.
CHAPTER III
" This is why," said he, warmly. " I think that the
motive power in all our actions is forever personal hap-
piness. Now, I see nothing in our provincial institu-
tions that contributes to my well-being as a nobleman.
The roads are not better, and cannot be made so. My
horses carry me, even on bad roads. The doctor and
the dispensary are no use to me. The justice of the
peace does me no good ; I never went to him, and never
shall go to him. The schools seem to me not only use-
less, but, as I have said, are even harmful ; and these
communal institutions oblige me to pay eighteen kopeks
a desyatin, to go to town, to sleep with bugs, and to
hear all sorts of vulgar and obscene talk, but my
personal interests are not helped."
"Excuse me," said Sergyei Ivanovitch, with a smile.
" Our personal interests did not compel us to work for
the emancipation of the serfs, and yet we worked for it."
" No," replied Konstantin, with still more animation ;
ANNA KARENINA 13
every side, but he felt also that his brother had not
understood what he wished to say. He did not know
exactly whether it was because he did not know how to
express himself clearly, or because his brother did not wish
to understand him, or whether he could not understand
him. He did not try to fathom this question ; but, with-
out replying to his brother, he became absorbed in en-
tirely different thoughts, connected with his own work.
Sergyeif Ivanovitch reeled in his last line, he unhitched
the horse, and they drove away.
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
and chest black and wet, came into the room and joined
him, full of lively talk.
"Well! we mowed the whole meadow. Akh ! How
good, how delightful ! And how has the day passed
with you ? " he asked, completely forgetting the un-
pleasant conversation of the evening before.
"Ye saints! How you look!" exclaimed Sergyei
Tvanovitch, staring at first not over-pleasantly at his
brother. "There, shut the door, shut the door!" he
cried. " You 've certainly let in more than a dozen ! "
Sergyei" Ivanovitch could not endure flies ; and he
never opened his bedroom windows except at night, and
he made it a point to keep his doors always shut.
"Indeed, not a one! If I have, I '11 catch him!....
If you knew what fun I 've had ! And how has it gone
with you .''"
" First-rate. But you don't mean to say that you
have been mowing all day ? You must be hungry as a
wolf. Kuzma has your dinner all ready for you."
" No ; I am not hungry. I ate yonder. But I 'm
going to polish myself up."
" All right, I '11 join you later," said SergyeT Ivano-
vitch, shaking his head and gazing at his brother. "Be
quick about it," he added, with a smile, arranging his
papers and getting ready to follow ; he also suddenly
felt enlivened, and was unwilling to be away from his
brother. "Well, but where were you during the
shower .-*"
" What shower ? Only a drop or two fell. I '11 soon
be back. And did the day go pleasantly with you .''
Well,
And that
Levin 's capital
went to ! " dress.
About five minutes afterwards the brothers met in the
dining-room. Although Levin imagined that he was not
hungry, and he sat down only so as not to hurt Kuzma's
feelings, yet when he once began eating, he found it ex-
cellent. Sergyei Ivanovitch looked at him with a smile.
" Oh, yes, there 's a letter for you," he said. " Kuzma,
go and get it. Be careful and see that you shut the
door."
28 ANNA KARENINA
" Well, I see you are well satisfied with your day,"
replied Sergyef Ivanovitch.
" Very well satisfied. We mowed the whole meadow,
and I made such friends with an old man — the elder.
You can't imagine how he pleased me."
" Well, you are satisfied with your day ! So am I
with mine. In the first place, I solved two chess prob-
lems, and one was a beauty — it opened with a pawn.
I '11 show it to you. And then — I thought of our last
evening's discussion."
" What .-* Our last evening's discussion ? " said Levin,
half closing his eyes, and drawing a long breath with a
sensation of comfort after his dinner, and really unable
to recollect the subject of their discussion.
" I come to the conclusion that you are partly in the
right. The discrepancy in our views lies in the fact
that you assume personal interest as the motive power
of our actions, while I claim that every man who has
reached a certain stage of intellectual development must
have for his motive the public interest. But you are
probably right in saying that materially interested activity
would be more to be desired. Your nature is, as the
French say, prhnesautiere} You want strong, energetic
activity, or nothing."
Levin listened to his brother, but he did not under-
stand him at all, and did not try to understand. His
only fear was that his brother would ask him some
question, by which it would become evident that he was
not listening.
" How is this, my dear boy } " asked Sergyef Ivano-
vitch, touching him on the shoulder.
"Yes, of course. But, then, I don't set much store
on my own opinions," replied Levin, smiling like a
guilty child. His thought was, " What was our discus-
sion about .'' Of course ; I am right, and he is right, and
all is charming. But I must go the office and give my
orders." He arose, stretching himself and smiling.
SergyeY Ivanovitch also smiled.
" If you want to go 1out, let 's go together," he said,
Off-hand.
^o ANNA KARENINA
not wanting to be away from his brother, from whom
emanated such a spirit of freshness and good cheer.
" If you must go the office, I '11 go with you."
" O ye saints ! " exclaimed Levin, so loud that Ser-
geyif Ivanovitch was startled.
"What's the matter.?"
" Agafya Mikhai'lovna's hand," said Levin, striking
his forehead. " I had forgotten all about her."
" She is much better."
" Well, I must go to her, all the same. I '11 be back
before you get on your hat."
And he started down-stairs on the run, his heels
clattering on the steps.
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER Vni
" hit tui ! ain't she lovely, now ? White as sugar ! "
said one, pointing to Tania, and nodding her head.
"But thin...."
" Yes ; because she has been ill."
" Vish tui,'' said still another, pointing to the youngest
child.
" It seems you don't take him into the water, do
you .?"
" No," said Darya Aleksandrovna, proudly. " He is
only three months old."
" You don't say so ! " ^
"And have you any children.'' "
" I 've had four ; two are alive, a boy and a girl. I
weaned the youngest before Lent."
" How old is she .''"
" Well, she is going into her second year."
" Why do you nurse her so long t "
" It 's our way : three springs." ....
And then the woman asked Darya Aleksandrovna
about the birth of her baby : did she have a hard time ?
where was her husband .<* would he come often ?
Darya Aleksandrovna was reluctant to part with the
peasant women, §0 delightful did she find the conversa-
tion with them, so perfectly identical were their interests
and hers. And it was more pleasant to her than any-
thing else to see how evidently all these women were
filled with admiration because she had so many and such
lovely children. The women made Darya Aleksandrovna
laugh, and offended Miss Hull for the very reason that
she was the cause of their unaccountable laughter. One
of the young women gazed with all her eyes at the Eng-
lish governess, who was dressing last ; and, when she
put on the third petticoat, she could not restrain her-
self any longer, but burst out laughing : —
" /s/t tui ! she put on one, and then she put on another,
and she has n't got them all on yet ! " and they all broke
into loud laughter.
40 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
feet. " If you only realized the pain that you cause me !
It is just the same as if you had lost a child, and they
came to you and said, ' He would have been like this,
like this, and he might have lived, and you would
have had so much joy in him But he is dead, dead,
dead.' " ....
" How absurd you are ! " said Darya Aleksandrovna,
with a melancholy smile at the sight of Levin's emotion.
" Well ! I understand it all better and better," she con-
tinued pensively. "Then you won't come to see us
when Kitty is here .''"
" No, I will not. Of course I will not avoid Katerina
Aleksandrovna ; but, when it is possible, I shall en-
deavor to spare her the affliction of my presence."
" You are very, very absurd," said Darya Aleksan-
drovna, looking at him affectionately. "Well, then, let
it be as if we had not said a word about it. — What do
you want, Tania.'' " said she in French to her little girl,
who came running in.
"Where is my little shovel, mamma .-""
" I speak French to you, and you must answer in
French."
The child tried to speak, but could not recall the
French word for lopatka, shovel. Her mother whis-
pered itto her, and then told her, still in French, where
she should go to find it. This made Levin feel un-
pleasant.
Everything now seemed changed in Darya Aleksan-
drovna's
so attractive household;
as before.even the children were not nearly
" And why does she speak French with the children ? "
he thought. " How false and unnatural ! Even the
children feel it. Teach them French, and spoil their
sincerity," he said to himself, not knowing that Darya
Aleksandrovna had twenty times asked the same ques-
tion, and yet, in spite of the harm that it did their
simplicity, had come to the conclusion that this was the
right way to teach them.
" But why are you in a hurry } Sit a little while
longer."
ANNA KARENINA 47
Levin stayed to tea ; but all his gayety was gone, and
he felt uncomfortable.
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XIII
from the mud with which she had spattered him by her
fall, how he would henceforth pursue his own path of
honorable, active, and useful life.
" Must I make myself wretched because a wretched
woman has committed a crime ? All I want is to find
the best way out from this situation to which she has
brought me. And I will find it," he added, getting
more and more indignant. " I am not the first, nor the
last."
And not speaking of the historical examples, begin-
ning with La Belle Helene of Menelaus, which had
recently been brought to all their memories by Offen-
bach's opera, Alekseif Aleksandrovitch went over in his
mind a whole series of contemporary episodes, where
husbands of the highest position had been obliged to
mourn the faithlessness of their wives.
" Daryalof, Poltavsky, Prince Karibanof, Count Pa-
skudin, Dramm, .... yes, even Dramm, honorable, indus-
trious man as he is, .... Semenof, Chagin, Sigonin.
Admit that they cast unjust ridicule on these men ; as
for me, I never saw anything except their misfortune,
and I always pitied them," said Alekseif Aleksandro-
vitch to himself, although this was not so, and he had
never sympathized with misfortune of this sort, and had
only plumed himself the more as he had heard of wives
deceiving their husbands.
" This is a misfortune which is likely to strike any
one, and now it has struck me. The only thing is to
know how to find the best way of settling the difficulty."
And he began to recall the different ways in which
these men, finding themselves in such a position as he
was, had behaved.
" Daryalof fought a duel .... "
Dueling had often been a subject of consideration
to Alekset Aleksandrovitch when he was a young man,
and for the reason that physically he was a timid man
and he knew it. He could not think without a shudder
of having a pistol leveled at him, and never in his life
had he practised with firearms. This instinctive horror
had in early life caused him often to think about duel*
ANNA KARENINA 59
ing and to imagine himself obliged to expose his life to
this danger.
Afterward, when he had attained success and a high
social position, he had got out of the way of such
thoughts; but his habit of mind now reasserted itself,
and his timidity, owing to his cowardice, was so great
that Alekseif Aleksandrovitch long deliberated about
the matter, turning it over on all sides, and questioning
the expediency of a duel, although he knew perfectly
well that in any case he would never fight.
" Undoubtedly the state of our society is still so sav-
age," he said, — "though it is not so in England, —
that very many .... "
And in these many, to whom such a solution was sat-
isfactory, there were some for whose opinions Alekseif
Aleksandrovitch had the very highest regard. " Look-
ing at the duel from its good side, to what result does it
leadAnd .'' Let Aleksef us suppose that I send went
Aleksandrovitch a challenge
on to ! "draw a
vivid picture of the night that he would spend after the
challenge ; and he imagined the pistol aimed at him,
and shuddered, and realized that he could never do
such a thing,
" Let us suppose that I challenge him to a duel ; let us
suppose that I learn how to shoot," he forced himself
to think, " that I am standing, that I pull the trigger,"
he said to himself, shutting his eyes, " and it happens
that
these I absurd
kill himnotions.
; " and he shook his head, to drive away
CHAPTER XIV
CHAPTER XV
did not tell him what had taken place between her hus-
band and herself, although it was needful to tell him, in
order that the affair might be definitely settled.
The next morning, when she awoke, her first memory
was of the words that she had spoken to her husband ;
and they seemed to her so odious, that she could not im-
agine now how she could have brought herself to say
such strange brutal words, and she could not conceive
what the result of them would be. But the words were
irrevocable, and Aleksei' Aleksandrovitch had departed
without replying.
" I have seen Vronsky since, and I did not tell him.
Even at the moment he went away, I wanted to hold
him back and to tell him ; but I postponed it because I
felt how strange it was that I did not tell him at the
first moment. Why did I have the desire, and yet not
"
And, .-* in reply to this question, the hot flush of shame
speak
kindled in her face. She realized that it was shame that
kept her from speaking. Her position, which the even-
ing before had seemed to her so clear, suddenly pre-
sented itself as very far from clear, as inextricable. She
began to fear the dishonor about which she had not
thought before. When she considered what her hus-
band might do to her, the most terrible ideas came to
her mind. It occurred to her that at any instant the
steward ^ might appear to drive her out of house and
home, and that her shame might be proclaimed to all
the world. She asked herself where she could go if
they drove her from home, and she found no answer.
When she thought of Vronsky, she imagined that he
did not love her, and that he was already beginning to
tire of her, and that she could not impose herself on
him, and she felt angry with him. It seemed to her
that the words which she spoke to her husband, and
which she incessantly repeated to herself, were spoken
so that everybody could hear them, and had heard them.
She could not bring herself to look in the faces of those
with whom she lived. She could not bring herself to
^ Upravlyayushchy.
70 ANNA KARENINA
ring for her maid, and still less to go down and meet
her son and his governess.
The maid came, and stood long at the door, listening ;
finally she decided to go to her without a summons. Anna
looked at her questioningly, and in her terror she blushed.
The maid apologized for coming, saying that she thought
she heard the bell. She brought a gown and a note.
The note was from Betsy. Betsy reminded her that
Liza Merkalova and the Baroness Stolz with their
adorers, Kaluzhsky and the old man Stremof , were com-
ing to her house that morning for a game of croquet.
" Come and look on, please, as a study of manners. I
shall expect you," was the conclusion of the note.
Anna read the letter, and sighed profoundly.
" Nothing, nothing, I need nothing," said she to An-
nushka, who was arranging the brushes and toilet articles
on her dressing-table. " Go away. I will dress myself
immediately, and come down. I need nothing."
Annushka went out ; yet Anna did not begin to dress,
but sat in the same attitude, with bent head and folded
hands ; and occasionally she would shiver, and begin to
make some gesture, to say something, and then fall back
into Hstlessness again. She kept saying, '■'■Bozhe moi !
Bozhe moi' /"^ hut the words had no meaning in her
mind. The thought of seeking a refuge from her situa-
tion in religion, although she never doubted the faith in
which she had been trained, seemed to her as strange as
to go and ask help of Aleksei' Aleksandrovitch him-
self. She knew beforehand that the refuge offered by
religion was possible only by the absolute renunciation
of all that constituted for her the meaning of life. She
suffered, and was frightened besides, by a sensation that
was new to her experience hitherto, and which seemed
to her to take possession of her inmost soul. She seemed
to feel double, just as sometimes eyes, when weary, see
double. She knew not what she feared, what she de-
sired. She knew not whether she feared and desired
what had passed or what was to come, and what she
desired she did not know.
1 Literally, « My God."
ANNA KARENINA 71
CHAPTER XVI
CHAPTER XVII
kievitch, " had better go with Maska and try the kroket-
gro-und, which has just been cHpped. You and I will
have time to have a little confidential talk while taking our
tea. We '11 have a cozy chat, won't we ? " she added in
English, addressing Anna with a smile, and taking her
hand, in which she held a sunshade.
" All the more willingly because I cannot stay long.
I must call on old Vrede ; I have been promising for
a hundred years to come and see her," said Anna, to
whom the lie, though contrary to her nature, seemed
not only simple and easy, but even pleasurable. Why
she said a thing which she forgot the second after, she
herself could not have told ; she said it at haphazard,
so that, in case Vronsky were not coming, she might
have a way of escape, and try to find him elsewhere ;
and why she happened to select the name of old
Freilina Vrede rather than any other of her acquain-
tances was likewise inexplicable. But, as events proved,
out of all the possible schemes for meeting Vronsky,
she could not have chosen a better.
" No, I shall not let you go," replied Betsy, scruti-
nizing Anna's face. " Indeed, if I were not so fond of
you, I should be tempted to be vexed with you ; any-
body would think that you were afraid of my company
compromising you. — Tea in the little parlor, if you
please," said she to the lackey, blinking her eyes as
was habitual with her ; and, taking the letter from
him, she began to read it.
"Aleksei" disappoints us,"^ said she in French. "He
writes that he cannot come," she added, in a tone as
simple and unaffected as if it had never entered her
mind that Vronsky was of any more interest to Anna
than as a possible partner in a game of croquet. Anna
knew that Betsy knew all ; but, as she heard Betsy
speak of Vronsky now, she almost brought herself to
believe for a moment that she knew nothing.
" Ah ! " she said indifferently, as if it was a detail
which did not interest her. " How," she continued,
still smiling, "could your society compromise any one.-*"
* Alexis nous fait faux bond.
ANNA KARENINA 8i
CHAPTER XVIII
CHAPTER XIX
CHAPTER XX
CHAPTER XXI
>; T
gone."
" Excuse me ; I don't believe you," said Serpukhov-
skof, smiling.
" No, it is true, true — now — to be frank with you,"
persisted Vronsky.
" Yes, true now, — that is another affair ; this now
will not last forever."
" Maybe."
"You say maybe ; and I tell you certainly not," con-
tinued Serpukhovskoif, as if he divined his thought
" And this is why I wanted to see you. You acted as
you felt was necessary. I understand that ; but it is
not necessary for you to stick to it.^ All I ask of you
is carte blanche for the future. I am not your patron ....
and yet why should I not take you under my protection .''
Have you not often done as much for me ? I hope that
our friendship stands above that. There ! " said he,
smiling at him tenderly, like a woman. " Give me carte
blanche. Come out of your regiment, and I will help
you along so that it won't be known."
" But understand that I want nothing," said Vronsky,
"except that all should be as it has been."
Serpukhovskoif arose, and stood facing him.
" You say that all must be as it has been. I under-
stand what you mean ; but listen to me. We are of the
same age ; maybe you have known more women than
I." His smile and his gesture told Vronsky to have no
fear that he would not touch gently and delicately on
the tender spot. " But I am married ; and, believe me,
as some one or other wrote, he who knows only his wife,
and loves her, understands all women better than if he
had known a thousand."
"We 're coming directly," cried Vronsky to an officer
who looked into the room and said he was sent by the
regimental commander.
^ Per sever irovat.
ANNA KARENINA loi
CHAPTER XXII
with me," she would even have abandoned her son, and
gone with him. But what she told him did not produce
on him at all the impression which she had expected;
he seemed, if anything, vexed and angry.
" It was not hard for me at all. It came of its own
accord," she said, with a touch of irritation ; " and here"
— she drew her husband's letter from her glove.
" I understand, I understand," interrupted Vronsky,
taking the letter, but not reading it, and trying to calm
Anna. "The one thing I wanted, the one thing I
prayed for ....to put an end to this situation, so that I
could devote my whole life to your happiness."
" Why do you say that to me .''" she asked. " Can I
doubt it.? If I doubted...."
" Who are those coming } " asked Vronsky, abruptly,
seeing two ladies coming in their direction. " Perhaps
they know us." And he hastily drew Anna with him
down a side alley.
" Akh ! it is all the same to me," she said.
Her lips trembled, and it seemed to Vronsky that her
eyes looked at him from under her veil with strange
hatred.
" As I said, in all this affair, I cannot doubt you.
But here is what he wrote me. Read it."
And again she halted. Again, as when he first
learned of Anna's rupture with her husband, Vronsky,
beginning to read this letter, involuntarily abandoned
himself to the impression awakened in him by the
thought of his relations to the deceived husband.
Now that he had the letter in his hand, he imagined
the challenge, which he would receive that day or the
next, and the duel itself, at the moment when, with the
same cool and haughty expression which now set his
face, he woul5 stand in front of his adversary, and,
having discharged his weapon in the air, would wait
the outraged husband's shot. And at this very instant
SerpukhovskoY's words and what he himself had felt
that day flashed through his mind, " Better not tie
yourself down ; " and she knew that he could not ex-
press his thought before her.
io6 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXni
all the pity that she had begun to feel for him was driven
away by the aversion that he inspired, and she had only
a feeling of fear, which arose from the fact that she did
not see any light in regard to their relations.
" I cannot be your wife, when I .... " she began.
He laughed with a cold and wicked laugh.
" It must needs be that the manner of life which you
have chosen is reflected in your ideas. I have too much
esteem or contempt.... or rather I esteem your past, and
despise your present.... too much for me to accept the
interpretation which you put on my words."
Anna sighed, and bowed her head.
" Besides, I do not understand how you, having so
much independence," he continued, growing excited,
" and telling your husband up and down of your in-
fidelity, and not finding anything blameworthy in it, as
it seems, how you can find anything blameworthy either
in the fulfilment of a wife's duties to her husband."
" Alekseif Aleksandrovitch ! What do you require of
me" I.? "require that I may never meet this man here, and
that you comport yourself so that neither the world nor
our seri'ants can accuse you .... that you do not see him.
It seems to me that this is little. And in doing this,
you will enjoy the rights of an honorable wife, though
you do not fulfil the obligations. This is all that I have
to say to you. Now it is time for me to go. I shall not
dine at home."
He got up, and went to the door. Anna also arose.
He silently bowed, and allowed her to pass.
CHAPTER XXIV
this year ; and now the reasons for this failure, and this
animosity, were perfectly clear to him. The pleasure
which he found in work itself, the resulting acquaintance
with the muzhiks, the envy which seized him when he
saw them and their lives, the desire to lead such a life
himself, which on that night had been not visionary but
real, now that he had thought over all the details neces-
sary to carry out his desire, — all this taken together had
so changed his views in regard to the management of his
estate, that he could not take the same interest in it as
before, and he could not help seeing how these un-
pleasant relations with the laborers met him at every
new undertaking.
The herd of improved cows, like Pava ; all the fertil-
ized lands plowed with European plows ; nine equal
fields set round with young trees ; the ninety desyatins,
covered with dressing well plowed in ; the deep drills
and other improvements, — all was excellent as far as
it concerned only himself or himself and the people who
were in sympathy with him.
But now he clearly saw — and his work, his treatise
on rural economy, in which the principal element was
found to be the laborer, helped him to this conclusion
— that his present way of carrying on his estate was
only a cruel and wicked struggle between him and the
laborers, in which on one side, on his side, was a con-
stant effort to change everything to what he thought a
better model, while on the other side was the natural
order of things.
In this struggle, he saw that on his side there were
effort and lofty purpose, and on the other no effort or
purpose, and that the result was that the estate went
from bad to worse ; beautiful tools were destroyed,
beautiful cattle and lands ruined. The principal ob-
jection was the energy absolutely wasted in this mat-
ter ; but he could not help thinking now, when his
thought was laid bare, that the aim of his energies
was itself unworthy. In reality, where lay this quar-
rel .'' He insisted on having every penny of his own,
— and he could not help insisting on it, because he was
ANNA KARENINA 113
had been at work all day, fell asleep during his watch.
When accused, he acknowledged his fault and only
said : " Do what you please with me."
Three of the best calves were poisoned. They were
allowed to get into the clover aftermath without giving
them water ; the result was that they were blown out
and died. But the muzhiks would not believe that it
was the clover that did the harm; and they tried to
console Levin by informing him that one of his neigh-
bors had lost one hundred and twelve head within three
days in the same way.
All these mishaps took place, not because any one
wished ill either to Levin or to his estate ; on the con-
trary, he knew that the muzhiks loved him, and called him
" a simple-minded gentleman," — prostoi barin, — which
was the highest praise. But these mishaps happened
simply because the muzhiks liked to work merrily and
carelessly ; and his interests were not only strange and
incomprehensible to them, but even fatally clashed with
what they thought their own true interests.
For a long time Levin had felt that there was some-
thing unsatisfactory in his methods. He saw that his
canoe was leaking, but he could not find the leaks ;
and he did not search for them, perhaps on purpose
to deceive himself. Nothing would be left him if he
should allow his illusions to perish. But now he could
no longer deceive himself. Not only had his system
of management become uninteresting, but had begun
actually to disgust him, and he felt he could no longer
continue it.
Besides all this, Kitty Shcherbatsky was within thirty
versts of hira, and he wanted to see her, and could
not. .Miij.r: :■'
Darya Alek^androvna Oblonskaya, when he called on
her, invited him to come: — to come with the express
purpose of renewing his offer to her sister, who, as she
pretended to think, now cared for him. Levin himself,
after he caught the ghmpse of Kitty Shcherbatsky, felt
that he had not ceased to love her ; but he could not
go to the Oblonskys', because he knew that she was
ANNA KARENINA U5
there. The fact that he had offered himself, and she
had refused him, put an unsurmountable barrier between
them.
" I cannot ask her to be my wife simply because she
himself. be the wife of the man she wanted," he said to
cannot
The thought of this made him cold and hostile toward
her.
" I have not the strength to go and talk with her with-
out a sense of reproach, to look at her without angry
feelings ; and she would feel even more incensed against
me, and justly so. And besides, how can I go there
now, after what Dar)'^a Aleksandrovna told me ? How
can I help showing that I know what she told me ?
That I go with magnanimity, — to pardon her, to be
reconciled to her ! I, in her presence, play the ro/e of a
pardoning and honor-conferring lover to her! — Why
did Darya Aleksandrovna tell me that ? If I had met
her accidentally, then perhaps everything might have
been arranged of itself ; but now it is impossible, impos-
sible!"
Darya Aleksandrovna sent him a note, asking the
loan of a side-saddle for Kitty. "They tell me you
have a saddle," she wrote : " I hope that you will bring
yourself."
it This was too much for him. How could a sensible
woman of any delicacy so lower her sister ? He wrote
ten notes, and tore them all up, and then sent the saddle
without any reply. To write that he would come was
impossible, because he could not come : to write that he
could not come because he was busy, or was going away
somewhere, w-as still worse. So he sent the saddle with-
out any reply ; and, with the consciousness that he was
doing something disgraceful, on the next day, leaving
the now disagreeable charge of the estate to the overseer,
he set off to a distant district where there were magnificent
snipe-marshes to see his friend Sviazhsky, who had
lately invited him to fulfil an old project of making him
a visit. The snipe-marshes in the district of Surof had
long been an attraction to Levin, but on account of his
ii6 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXV
CHAPTER XXVI
CHAPTER XXVII
tires off your wheels and sell them to get drink, and
stick bolts into your vvinnowing-machines so as to render
them useless. Everything that is not done in their
way is nauseous to them. And thus the affairs of our
estates go from bad to worse. The lands are neglected,
and go to weeds, or else are abandoned to the muzhiks.
Instead of producing millions of tchetverts ^ of wheat,
you can raise only a few hundred thousand. The pub-
lic wealth is diminishing. If they were going to free
the serfs, they should have done it gradually." ....
And he developed his own scheme of emancipation
whereby all these difficulties would have been avoided.
This plan did not interest Levin, but when the gen-
tleman had finished he returned to his first proposition,
with the hope of inducing Sviazhsky to tell what he
seriously thought about it. He said, addressing Svia-
zhsky —
:
" It is very true that the level of our agriculture -is
growing lower and lower, and that in our present rela-
tions with the peasantry, it is impossible to carry on our
estates rationally," he said.
" I am not of that opinion," said Sviazhsky, seriously.
" I only see that we are not up to the point of manag-
ing our estates, and that on the contrary, since serfage
was abolished, agriculture has decayed ; I argue that
in those days it was very wretched, and very low. We
never had any machines, or good oxen or decent super-
vision. We did not even know how to make up our
accounts. Ask a proprietor : he could not tell you what
a thing cost, or what it would bring him."
" Italian book-keeping ! " said the old proprietor ironi-
cally. "Reckon all you please, and get things mixed as
much as you please, there will be no profit in it."
"Why get things mixed up.'* Your miserable flail,
your Russian topchachek, will break all to pieces ; my
steam-thresher will not break to pieces. Then your
wretched nags ; how are they .-" A puny breed that
you can pull by the tails, comes to nothing ; but our Per-
cherons are vigorous horses, they are worth something.
1 A tchetvert is 5. 775 English bushels.
ANNA KARENINA 129
CHAPTER XXVIII
kof."
"The mill.... "
" But still I don't know what surprises you about it.
The peasantry stand on such a low plane of develop-
ment, both materially and morally, that it is evident
they '11 oppose everything that is strange to them. In
Europe the ' rational management ' succeeds because
the people are civilized. In the first place, we must
civilize our peasantry, — that 's the point."
" But how will you civilize them .-'"
" To civilize the people, three things are necessary, —
schools, schools, and schools."
" But you yourself say that the peasantry stand on a
low plane of material development. What good will
schools do in that respect .''"
" Do you know, you remind me of a story of the
advice given to a sick man : ' You had better try a
purgative.' He tried it ; he grew worse. ' Apply leeches.'
He applied them; he grew worse. 'Well, then, pray
to God.' He tried it ; he grew worse. So it is with
you. I say political economy ; you say you 're worse
for it. I suggest socialism ; worse still. Education ;
still worse."
" Yes. But how can schools help } "
" They will create other needs."
" But this is just the very thing I could never under-
stand," replied Levin, vehemently. " In what way will
schools help the peasantry to better their material con-
dition .'' You say that schools — education — will create
new needs. So much the worse, because they will not
have the ability to satisfy them ; and I could never see
how a knowledge of addition and subtraction and the
catechism could help them to better themselves materi-
ally. Day before yesterday I met a peasant woman
with a baby at the breast, and I asked her where she
was going. She said she had been 'to the babka's;^
the child had a crying fit, and I took him to be cured.'
^ Babka, a peasant grandmother, a popular name for the midwife. It
is the diminutive of baba, a peasant woman, especially a muzhik's wife.
ANNA KARENINA 135
I asked, ' How did the babka cure the crying fit ? ' ' She
set him on the hen-roost, and muttered something.' "
" Well there ! " cried Sviazhsky, laughing heartily.
"You yourself confess it. In order to teach them that
they can't cure children by setting them on hen-roosts,
you must .... "
" Ah no ! " interrupted Levin, with some vexation.
" Your remedy of schools for the people I only com-
pared to the babka's method of curing. The peasantry
are poor and uncivilized ; this we see as plainly as the
woman saw her child's distress because he was crying.
But that schools can raise them from their wretched-
ness is as inconceivable as the hen-roost cure for sick
children. You must first remedy the cause of the
poverty."
" Well ! In this at least you agree with Spencer,
whom you do not like. He says that civilization can
result from increased happiness and comfort in life,
from frequent ablutions, but not by learning to read
and cipher." ....
" There now ! I am very glad, or rather very sorry,
if I am in accord with Spencer. But this I have felt
for a long time : schools cannot help ; the only help can
come from some economical organization, whereby the
peasantry will be richer, will have more leisure. Then
schools also will come."
" Nevertheless, schools are obligatory now all over
Europe."
" But how would you harmonize this with Spencer's
ideas } " asked Levin.
But into Sviazhsky's eyes again came the troubled ex-
pres ion ;and he said with a smile : —
" No, this story of the crying fit was capital ! Is it
possible
Levin that
saw that you heard
there it
wasyourself }"
no connection between this
man's life and his thoughts. Evidently it was perfectly
indifferent to him where his conclusions led him. Only
the process of reasoning was what appealed to him ;
and it was disagreeable to him When this process of
reasoning led him into some stupid, blind alley. This
136 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXIX
CHAPTER XXX
CHAPTER XXXI
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER HI
" Did you meet him ? " she asked, when they were
seated under the lamp by the drawing-room table.
" That is your punishment for coming so late."
" Yes ; how did it happen .-' Should he not have
been at the council ? "
"He went there, but he came back again, and now
he has gone off somewhere again. But that is no mat-
ter ;let us talk no more about it ; where have you
been
She? knewAll this
the time
most with the details
minute prince of
? " his life.
He wanted to reply that as he had no rest the night
before, he allowed himself to oversleep ; but the sight
of her happy, excited face, made this acknowledgment
difficult, and he excused himself on the plea of hav-
ing been obliged to go and present his report about the
prince's departure.
" It is over now, is it? Has he gone ? "
ANNA KARENINA i6i
" Yes, thank the Lord, it is all done with ! You have
no idea how intolerable this week has seemed to me."
" Why so ? Here you have not been leading the life
customary to young men," she said, frowning, and, with-
out looking at Vronsky, she took up some crocheting
that was lying on the table and pulled out the needle.
" I renounced that Hfe long ago," he repUed, wonder-
ing at the sudden change in her beautiful face, and try-
ing to discover what it portended. " I assure you," he
added, smiling, and showing his white teeth, " that it was
overpoweringly unpleasant to me to look at that old life
again, as it were, in a mirror."
She kept her crocheting in her hand, though she did
not work, but looked at him with strange, brilliant, not
quite friendly eyes.
" Liza came to see me this morning — they are not
yet afraid to come to my house, in spite of the Coun-
tess Lidya Ivanovna " — and here she stood up — " and
told me about your Athenian nights. What an abomi-
nation"!
" I only wanted to tell you that.... "
She interrupted him : —
" That it was Ther^se whom you used to know ? "
" I was going to say .... "
" How odious you men are ! How can you suppose
that a woman forgets .■* " said she, growing more and
more animated, and then disclosing the cause of her
irritation, — " and above all a woman who can know
nothing of your life .-* What do I know ? What can
I know .'*" she kept repeating. " What can I know
except what you wish to tell me ? And how can I
know whether it is the truth ? " ....
" Anna, you insult me ! have you no longer any faith
in me } Have I not told you that I have no thoughts
which I would conceal from you ? "
" Yes, yes," she said, trying to drive away her jealous
fears ; " but if you only knew how I suffer ! I believe
in you, I do believe in you But what did you want to
sayButto me ? "
he could not instantly remember what he wanted
VOL. II. — II
i62 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
he " and
Tell returnedher, then, tothat this isAleksandrovitch.
Aleksef not a cheap shop,"As said
he
returned to his place he caught another moth.
" My reps will be in a fine condition by summer ! "
he said to himself, scowling.
" You were kind enough to say .... "
" I will communicate to you my decision by letter,"
replied Aleksef Aleksandrovitch, standing up and lean-
ing his hand on the table. After standing for a moment
in thought, he said : —
" From your words I conclude that a divorce is possi-
ble. I shall be obliged to you if you will make your
conditions known to me."
" Everything is possible if you will give me entire
freedom of action," said the lawyer, eluding the last
question. " When may I expect a communication from
youhis? " boots.
as asked he, moving to the door with eyes as shiny
" Within a week. You will then have the goodness
to let me know whether you accept the case, and on
what terms } "
" Very good."
The lawyer bowed respectfully, conducted his client
to the door, and when he was left alone, he gave vent
to his feelings of joy ; he felt so gay that, contrary to
his principles, he made a deduction to a lady skilled in
the art of making a bargain, and neglected to catch a
moth, resolving definitely that he would have his furni-
ture upholstered the next winter with velvet, as Sigonin
had.
ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
ing a terribly
worked like a exacting
horse, andman, who gotsimilar
demanded up atzeal
six from
o'clock,
his
subordinates. Moreover, this new nachalnik had the
reputation of being a regular bear in his manners and
was, according to rumor, a man of the opposite party
from that to which his predecessor had belonged, and to
which Stepan Arkadyevitch himself had up to that time
also belonged.
The afternoon before, Stepan Arkadyevitch had ap-
peared at the office in full uniform and the new nachal-
nik had been very cordial and had talked with Oblonsky
as with an old friend. Consequently he thought it his
duty to pay him an unofficial visit. The thought that
the new nachalnik might not receive him cordially was
the second disturbing element. But Stepan Arkadye-
vitch felt instinctively that all would be arranged to per-
fection.
" All people, all men, are transgressors as well as we.
Why
went togetthe
angry
hotel.and quarrel .•' " he said to himself as he
"How are you, Vasili .-•" said he, as he went through
the corridor with his hat cocked on one side, and met a
lackey of his acquaintance ; " have you sacrificed your
whiskers .'' Levin .-' in number seven ? Please show me.
Thankswas! theDonew
This you nachalnik.
know, is Count Anitchkin at home ? "
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
feeling that the joy which flooded his soul was suffocat-
ing him. "How," thought he, "could I have dared to
associate anything but innocence with this fascinating
creature? Yes, Darya Aleksandrovna was right."
Stepan Arkadyevitch came to conduct him to Karenin,
" Allow me to make you acquainted," said he, calling
each by name.
" It is very pleasant to meet you again," said Aleksef
Aleksandrovitch, coolly, as he took Levin's hand.
"What! do you already know each other .-'" asked
Oblonsky, with surprise.
" We traveled together for three hours," said Levin,
smihng, "but we parted as from a masked ball, very
much mystified ; at least, it was the case with me."
" Really ? .... Will you pass into the dining-room } "
said Stepan Arkadyevitch pointing toward the door.
The gentlemen walked into the dining-room, and went
to a table laden with the zakuska, which was composed of
six kinds of vodka, as manyvarieties of cheese with silver
shovels and without, caviare, herring, preserves of differ-
ent kinds, and platefuls of French bread sHced thin.
The men stood around the table ; and, while waiting for
the dinner, the conversation between Sergye'f Ivanovitch
Koznuishef, Karenin, and Pestsof, about the Russifica-
tion of Poland, began to languish. Sergyei Ivanovitch,
who had a faculty peculiar to himself for ending even
the most absorbing and serious dispute, by an unex-
pected infusion of Attic salt and so putting the dis-
putants into a better frame of mind, did this now.
A-lekseif Aleksandrovitch was trying to prove that the
Russification of Poland could be accomplished only by
means of the highest principles, and that these ought to
oe introduced by the Russian administration. Pestsof
maintained that one nation could only assimilate another
by surpassing it in density of population.
Koznuishef, with certain restrictions, shared the opin-
ions of both ; and to close this serious conversation with
a joke, he added as they left the drawing-room, smiling: —
" The most logical way, then, for us to assimilate for-
eigners, itseems to me, is to have as many children as
ANNA KARENINA 195
possible. It is there where my brother and I are in
fault ; while you married gentlemen and especially you,
Stepan Arkadyevitch, are acting the part of good patri-
ots. How many have you .-'" he asked of the host,
handing him a very diminutive glass.
Everybody laughed, and Oblonsky most of all. "Yes,
that is certainly the best means !" said he, taking a bite
of cheese and pouring some special kind of vodka into
the glass that Koznuishef offered him. But the jest
really served to bring the discussion to a close.
the" host.
This cheese is not bad ; what do you say .■'" remarked
CHAPTER X
for us, the study of the natural sciences has been com-
pHcated with false and fatal doctrines, which are the
bane of our time."
Sergyei Ivanovitch was going to reply, but Pestsof
interrupted him in his deep voice. He began heatedly
to demonstrate the incorrectness of this statement. Koz-
nuishef calmly waited his chance to speak, evidently
feeling that it would be a victorious rejoinder.
" But," said he, smiling shrewdly, and addressing
Aleksei Aleksandrovitch, "it cannot be denied that it is
a difficult matter completely to balance all the advan-
tages and disadvantages of the two systems of science, and
that the question which is preferable could not be decided
so quickly and definitely if there were not on the side
of the classical civilization that advantage which you
just called the moral — disons le mot — the anti-nihilistic
influence."
" Undoubtedly."
'* If it were not for this advantage of the anti-nihilistic
influence wielded by classic education, we should rather
hesitate, we should weigh the arguments of both sides,"
said Sergyef Ivanovitch, with his shrewd smile. "We
should give scope to both tendencies. But now we
know that in classical education lies the medical power
of anti-nihihsm and we boldly administer it like a pill
to our patients But are we perfectly sure of the
heahng properties of these pills ? " he said in conclusion,
pouring out his Attic salt.
Sergei Ivanovitch's "pills" made every one laugh,
Turovtsuin more boisterously and heartily than the rest ;
for he had been on the lookout for something amusing
to laugh at ever since the conversation began.
Stepan Arkadyevitch had made no mistake in count-
ing on Pestsof. Pestsof never allowed an intellectual con-
versation toflag for a moment. Koznuishef had hardly
finished with his jest when Pestsof began again : —
"One cannot even agree with this idea," said he,
" that morality has this aim. Morality is evidently con-
trolled bygeneral considerations and remains indiffer-
ent to the influences of the measures which may be
200 ANNA KARENINA
theAlekse'i
education Aleksandrovitch
of women wasexpressed
too muchthe confused
thought with
that
the question of the emancipation of women, and could
be considered dangerous only from that point of view.
" I believe, on the contrary, that these two questions
are intimately connected," said Pestsof. " It is a vicious
circle ! Woman is deprived of rights because she is de-
prived of education, and her lack of education comes
from the absence of rights. Let us not forget that the
bondage of woman is so ancient, so interwoven with
our customs, that we are very often incapable of under-
standing the legal abyss that separates her from us."
"You speak of rights," said SergyeY Ivanovitch, as
soon as he had a chance to put in a word ; " is it a
right to fulfil the functions of juror, of municipal coun-
selor, of president of the tribunal, of public function-
ary, of member of parliament ? " ....
"Without doubt."
" But if women can exceptionally fill these functions,
then it seems to me we make a mistake in using the
word rights. It would be fairer to say duties. Every
one agrees that in fulfilling the functions of a juror, of
town counselor, of telegraph employer, we are fulfilling
a duty. Let us say, then, that women are seeking for
duties, and legitimately enough ; in this case we may
sympathize with their desire to take part in man's work."
"That is perfectly fair," affirmed AlekseT Aleksan-
drovitch"; the question, I suspect, consists in deciding
whether they are capable of fulfilling these duties."
" They will be, certainly, as soon as they have been
generally educated," said Stepan Arkadyevitch. "We
see it .... "
" And the proverb ? " asked the old prince, whose lit-
tle, scornful eyes shone as he listened to this conver-
ANNA KARENINA 201
CHAPTER XI
lb)! :
All took part in the general conversation except
Kitty and Levin.
At first, when they were talking about the influence
of one people over another, Levin recalled what he
had to say on this subject ; but his thoughts, which at
one time had seemed to him very important, simply
flashed through his mind like notions in a dream, and
now had not the least interest for him ; he even thought
it strange that people could trouble themselves about
such useless questions.
Kitty, for her part, ought to have been interested in
what was said about women's rights and education.
How many times had she pondered over these subjects
as she remembered her friend Varenka, whose depend-
ence was so hard to bear ! How many times had she
thought what she herself would do in case she should not
marry ! How often had she disputed with her sister on
the subject ! But now it did not interest her in the least.
She and Levin had their own talk, and yet it was not
a conversation so much as it was a mysterious affinity,
which brought them nearer and nearer to each other,
and filled them with a joyful timidity before the unknown
which they were about to enter.
At first Kitty asked how he happened to see her in
the summer, and Levin told her that he was returning
from the hay-fields by the highway after the mowing : —
" It was very early in the morning. You had proba-
bly just waked. Your maman was asleep in her corner.
It was a marvelous morning. I was walking along,
saying to myself, 'A carriage with four horses! Whose
can it be.-* ' They were four fine horses with bells. And
quick as a flash you passed by. I saw you through
the door ; you were sitting like this, holding the ribbons
of your bonnet in your hands, and you seemed awfully
deep in thought. How I wished I could know," he
added with a smile, " what you were thinking about J
Was it something very important .-' "
ANNA KARENINA aoj
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XIII
the fact that you can never tell exactly what your oppo*
nent is trying to show."
Levin had many times noticed that in discussions
among clever people, after an immense output of energy,
an immense array of logical terms and subtleties, the*
disputants came at last to an acknowledgment that
what they had been so interminably striving to prove
to each other, was a matter of common knowledge from
the very beginning, but that they liked something dif-
ferent and therefore were not willing to acknowledge
what they liked, so as not to be controverted. He had
often met with the experience that in the midst of a
dispute you find what your opponent likes, and sud-
denly you find that you yourself like the same thing,
and you immediately agree, and then all your argu-
ments fall to the ground as useless. But sometimes
he had had the opposite experience : you at last say
what you like and evolve your arguments and if per-
chance you speak well and sincerely, suddenly your
opponent assents and ceases to uphold the other side.
This is exactly what he meant.
She wrinkled her brows, trying to comprehend. But
as soon as he began to explain, her mind grasped his
meaning. " I understand : one must make sure why
he is disputing, what he likes .... if possible .... "
She had fully grasped and expressed his badly
phrased idea.
Levin smiled with rapture ; so striking was the tran-
sition from the complicated prolix discussion between
Pestsof and his brother to this clear, laconic, almost
wordless communication of the most abstruse thoughts !
Shcherbatsky stepped away ; and Kitty, going to a
card-table, sat down, and taking a piece of chalk in
her hand began to draw circles on the green cloth.
They took up the topic which was under discussion at
dinner : as to the emancipation and occupation of women.
Levin was inclined to agree with Darya Aleksandrovna,
that a girl who was not going to marry would find femi-
nine occupations in some family. He urged that not a
single family can get along without some female help;
ANNA KARENINA 211
writing them ere she read them under his hand and her-
self finished the sentence and answered it!
"Yes."
"You are playing secretaire, are you," said the old
prince, coming up to them. "Well, if you are going
to the theater it is time to start."
Levin rose and accompanied Kitty to the door.
This conversation decided everything ; Kitty had
acknowledged her love for him, and had given him per-
mission to come the next morning to speak to her
parents.
CHAPTER XIV
CHAPTER XV
The streets were still deserted. Levin walked to the
Shcherbatskys' house. The principal entrance was still
closed, and every one was asleep.
He returned to the hotel, went to his room, and asked
for coffee. The day watchman, and not Yegor, brought
it to him. Levin wished to enter into conversation
with him ; but some one rang for him, and he went out.
Then Levin tried to take his coffee, and put a piece
of kalatch into his mouth, but his mouth did not know
what to do with the bread ! He eschewed it and put
on his overcoat, and went out to walk again. It was just
ten o'clock when he reached the Shcherbatskys' steps
for the second time. They were beginning to get up ;
the cook was going to market. He would have to wait
at least two hours longer.
Levin had passed the whole night and the morning
completely oblivious of the material conditions of exist-
ence: he had neither eaten nor slept; had been exposed,
with almost no clothing, to the cold for several hours ;
and he not only was fresh and hearty, but he was uncon-
scious of his body; he moved without using his muscles,
and felt capable of doing anything. He was persuaded
that he could fly through the air or jump over the top
of a house if it were necessary. He roamed about the
streets to pass away the time, consulting his watch every
moment or two, and looking about him.
What he saw that day he never saw again. He was
particularly struck by the children on their way to school ;
the dark blue pigeons flying from the roof to the side-
walk ;the sa'ikas or little cakes powdered with flour
that an invisible hand was arranging in a window.
These cakes, these pigeons, and two little lads were
celestial objects. All this happened at once ; one
of the little lads ran toward a pigeon, and looked at
Levin, smiling ; the pigeon flapped its wings, and flew
off glittering in the sunlight through a cloud of fine
snow; and the smell of hot bread came through the
ANNA KARENINA 219
CHAPTER XVI
" Take back these terrible papers, take them back ! "
she said, pushing away the sheets lying on the table.
" Why did you give them to me ? However, perhaps
it was for the best," she added, seized with pity at the
sight of Levin's despairing face. " But it is terrible,
terrible!"
He hung his head, and had nothing to say.
I'f'iYou will not forgive me ! " he murmured.
js.ff Yes, I have forgiven you ; but it is terrible ! "
However, his happiness was so immense that this con-
fession did not diminish it, but only served to add a
shade more to it. She forgave him. From that time
he counted himself still more unworthy of her; morally,
he bowed down still lower before her and treasured the
happiness that he had gained still higher. He under-
stood the worth of it still better after this pardon.
CHAPTER XVn
CHAPTER XVIII
CHAPTER XIX
CHAPTER XX
CHAPTER XXI
Betsy had not left the " hall " when Stepan Arkadye-
vitch appeared on the threshold. He had come from
Eliseyef's, where they had just received fresh oysters.
" Ah, princess !. you here ? What a fortunate meeting !
I have just been at your house."
"The meeting is but for a moment; I am going,"
replied Betsy, smiling, as she buttoned her gloves.
" Wait just a moment, princess ; allow me to kiss your
little hand before you put on your glove. Nothing
pleases me so much, in returning to ancient ways, as
the custom of kissing a lady's hand."
He kissed Betsy's hand.
" When shall we meet again.?"
" You don't deserve to see me," replied Betsy, laughing.
" Oh, yes, I do ! for I have become a very serious man.
I regulate not only my own family affairs, but also other
people's," said he, with a significant expression in his
face.
"Ah! r am delighted to hear it," replied Betsy,
instantly knowing that he referred to Anna.
Going back into the " hall," they stood in a corner.
" He is killing her," she whispered, with conviction.
" It is impossible, impossible...."
" I am very glad that you think so," replied Stepan
Arkadyevitch, shaking his head with sympathetic com-
miseration. "That is why I am in Petersburg."
" The whole town are talking about it," said she ; "this
situation is intolerable. She is fading away before our
very eyes. He does n't understand that she is one of
those women whose feelings cannot be treated lightly.
One of two things, — either he ought to take her away,
and act decidedly, or else be divorced. But this is kill-
ing her."
"Yes, yes.... exactly ...." said Oblonsky, with a sigh.
ANNA KARENINA 249
■' I have come for that ; that is to say, not entirely for
that .... I have just been made chamberlain, so I had to
show my gratitude ; but the main thing was to arrange
this matter."
"Well! may the Lord help you! " said Betsy.
Stepan Arkadyevitch accompanied the Princess Betsy
to the door, once more kissed her wrist just above her
glove, where the pulse beats, and after paying her such an
impudent compliment that she did not know whether
to laugh or take offense, he left her to go to his sister.
He found her in tears.
In spite of the exuberance of his lively spirits, Stepan
Arkadyevitch fell instantly and with perfect genuineness
into the tone of sympathetic and poetical tenderness
which suited his sister's frame of mind. He asked how
she felt, and how she had passed the day.
" Wretchedly, very wretchedly ! Night and day, the
future and the past, all .... wretched," she replied.
" It seems to me, you have yielded to the blues. You
must have courage ; look life in the face. It is hard, I
know, but...."
" I have heard that some women love men for their
very
for his vices," began
virtue. Anna, live
I cannot suddenly; "but Understand
with him. I hate him
me, the sight of him has a physical effect on me which
drives me out of my mind. I cannot, cannot live with
him ! What shall I do .-" I have been unhappy before,
and I thought it impossible to be more so, but this horrible
state of things surpasses all that I could have imagined.
Can you believe that, though I know how good and per-
fect he is, and how unworthy of him I am, still I hate
him ! I hate him for his magnanimity. There is abso-
lutely nothing left for me but to ...."
did not was
She let going to add " die," but Stepan Arkadyevitch
her finish.
" You are ill and nervous, believe me ; you exagger-
ate everything. There is really nothing so very ter-
rible."
And Stepan Arkadyevitch smiled. No one except
Stepan Arkadyevitch, meeting such despair, would have!
250 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXII
CHAPTER XXni
said"We
he. will go to Italy; you will grow strong there,"
" Is it possible that we could be like husband and
wife, alone, by ourselves ? " said she, looking him in the
eye.
" I am only surprised at one thing, — that it has not
always been so."
" Stiva says that lie will consent to everything, but I
will not accept his generosity," said she, looking thought-
fully above Vronsky's head. " I do not wish for a di-
vorce. It is all the same to me now. I only wonder
what he will decide with regard to Serozha."
Vronsky could not understand how, in these first
moments of their reunion, she could think of her son
and of divorce. How could it be all the same to her.?
" Don't speak of that, don't think of it," said he, turn-
ing Anna's hand over and over in his, to draw her atten-
tion to him ; but she did not look at him.
" Oh ! why did I not die ? it would have been so
much better ! " said she ; and though she did not sob,
the tears rolled down her pale cheeks ; she tried, never-
theless, to smile, that she might not give him pain.
Once Vronsky would have thought it impossible and
disgraceful to give up the flattering and perilous mission
to Tashkend, but now he refused it without any hesita-
tion ;then, noticing that his refusal was misinterpreted
by the authorities, he gave in his resignation.
A month later, Aleksei Aleksandrovitch was left alone
with his son, and Anna went abroad with Vronsky, with-
out a divorce, and resolutely refusing to accept one.
PART FIFTH
CHAPTER I
" Yes," replied Levin, blushing for the priest. " Why
girl."
said tohehimself.
does need to ask such questions at confession .■*" he
And, as if replying to his thought, the priest con-
tinued —:
** You are preparing for marriage, and perhaps God
may grant you offspring. Isn't that so.'' Now, what
education will you give to your little children if you do
not conquer the temptations of the devil, who causes
you to doubt ? " he asked with gentle reproach. " If
you love your children as a good father, you will not
only wish for them riches, luxury, and honor, but still
more, their salvation and their spiritual enlightenment
ANNA KARENINA 267
CHAPTER II
I
perfectly ; because she knew that he could love, and that
all he loved was good and beautiful.
ANNA KARENINA 273
CHAPTER III
at last to see the bridal pair. But the door had already
opened more than ten times, and each time it proved
to be some belated guest, or guests, admitted among the
number of the friends on the right, or some spectator
who had been clever enough to deceive or elude the
police officer, and sat down among the strangers on the
left.
The friends and strangers had passed through every
phase of waiting ; at first they supposed that the bride
and bridegroom would be there any minute, and did not
attach any importance to the delay ; then they began
to look around at the door more and more frequently,
wondering what could have happened ; at last the delay
began to be awkward, and the relatives and invited
guests tried to assume an air of indifference, as if they
were absorbed in their conversation.
The archdeacon, as ii. to let people know that his
time was precious, every now and then gave an impa-
tient cough, which made the windows rattle ; in the
choir the singers, tired of waiting, could be heard, now
trying their voices, and now blowing their noses ; the
priest kept sending, now a sacristan, now a deacon, to
find out if the bridegroom was coming, and appeared
himself more and more frequently at the side doors in
his lilac cassock with its embroidered sash.
Finally a lady looked at her watch, and said to the
one sitting next her, " This is very strange ! " And im-
mediately all the invited guests began to express their
surprise and discontent aloud. One of the shafers, or
best men, went to see what had happened.
During ail this time Kitty, in her white dress, long
veil, and wreath of orange blossoms, was standing in the
" hall " of the Shcherbatsky mansion with her sister,
Madame Lvova, and her nuptial godmother,^ looking
out of the window, and had been waiting for half an
hourtheforchurch.
at the shafer to announce the bridegroom's arrival
Levin, meanwhile, in black trousers, but without
either coat or waistcoat, was walking up and down his
1 Posazhonaya maf.
276 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER IV
" You are n't cold, are you ? You look pale. Bend
forward a moment," said Madame Lvova, raising her
beautiful round arms to repair some disarrangement of
her sister's flowers.
Dolly came up, and tried to say something ; but she
could not speak, and burst into tears and laughed un-
naturally.
Kitty looked at those around her as absent-mindedly
as Levin.
ANNA KARENINA 279
brows he knew that she felt his look. She did not raise
her head ; but the high-plaited collar which reached to
her little pink ear trembled a little. He saw that she
was stifling a sigh, and her hand, imprisoned in its long
glove, trembled as it held the candle.
The whole affair of the shirt, his late arrival, his con-
versation with his relatives and friends, their displeas-
ure, his ridiculous position, — everything at once vanished
from his memory, and he was conscious of a mixed feel-
ing of terror and joy.
The archdeacon, a tall, handsome man, his hair curl-
ing all around his head and wearing a stikhar, or sur-
plice, of silver cloth, came briskly forward, and with the
customary gesture raised his stole with two fingers, and
stopped before the priest.
" Bless us, O Lord ! " ^ slowly, one after the other,
rocking the atmosphere into billows of sound, echoed
the solemn syllables.
" May the Lord bless you now and through all ages,"
replied the old priest in a sweet and musical voice, still
turning over the leaves.
And the response, chanted by the invisible choir, filled
the church to the very roof of the vault with a deep, full
sound, which increased, then ceased for a moment, and
softly died away.
They prayed as usual for the eternal repose and wel-
fare of their souls, for the synod, and the emperor, and
then for the servants of God, Konstantin and Yekate-
rina, that day about to wed.
" Let us pray the Lord to send them His love. His
peace,
the voice andof His the aid," the whole church seemed to say in
archdeacon.
Levin listened to these words, and was impressed by
them.
" How did they know that aid was exactly what I
need .-' Yes, aid. What can I know, what can I do,
without
and fears.aid }" he thought, recalling his recent doubts
When the deacon had ended the liturgy, the priest,
1 Bla-go-slo-vi vla-duika I
ANNA KARENINA 281
1
them smiled and whispered; but the tenderly solemn
ANNA KARENINA 283
expression on the faces of the young couple did not
change. On the contrary, even when they were blun-
dering with the rings, they looked more serious and
solemn than before ; and the smile on Stepan Arkadye-
vitch's face died away, as he whispered to them that
they were to put on their own rings. It seemed to him
that a smile might be offensive to them.
" O Thou who, from the beginning of the world, hast
created man, male and female," continued the priest,
after the ceremony of the rings, " and hast given to man
the woman to be his aid and delight, therefore, O Thou,
our Lord God, who hast given Thy blessing to Thy chosen,
to Thy servants, our fathers, to Thine inheritance, do
Thou bless Thy servants Konstantin and Yekaterina, and
confirm their nuptials in faith and concord and truth
and love ! "
Levin's breast heaved; disobedient tears filled his
eyes. He kept feeling more and more that all his
thoughts on marriage, his visions of how he should
dispose his life, had hitherto been infantile, and that
there was something that had never been comprehen-
sible to him ; and now he understood its meaning less
than ever, although he was now wholly in its power.
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER VIII
L
300 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
1
at in such a way, now seemed to him commonplace, a
thousand fold commonplace ! The face which he had
ANNA KARENINA 307
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XIII
CHAPTER XIV
CHAPTER XV
CHAPTER XVI
CHAPTER XVII
rather
to the room. go — go, and send for me," and she turned back
Levin hastened to his brother.
He had never expected to see and experience what
now he saw and experienced. He expected to find him
in that state of illusion so common to consumptives, and
which had so struck him during his visit the preceding
autumn. He expected to find him with the physical indi-
cations of approaching death more distinct than before
— greater feebleness, greater emaciation, but practically
about the same state of things. He expected that he
should have the same feeling of pity for this well-beloved
brother, and of horror at the presence of death, — only
intensified. He was quite prepared for this. But what
he saw was absolutely different.
In a little, close, dirty, ill-smelling room, the paneled
walls of which were covered with red stains of expecto-
ration, separated by a thin partition from another room,
where conversation was going on, he saw lying on a
wretched bed moved out from the wall a body covered
with a counterpane. One hand huge as a rake, and hold-
ing in a strange way by the end a sort of long and slender
bobbin, was on the outside of the counterpane. The
head, resting on the pillow, showed the thin hair glued
to his temples, and a strained, almost transparent brow.
" Can it be that this horrible body is my brother
Nikolai ? " thought Levin ; but as he came near, he saw
his face and the doubt ceased. In spite of the terrible
change that had taken place, it was enough to glance
at the lively eyes turned toward him as he entered, or
the motions of his mouth under the long mustache,
to recognize the frightful truth that this dead body was
indeed his living brother.
Nikolaf's gleaming eyes gazed at his brother with a
stern and reproachful look. His look seemed to bring
living relations between living beings. Konstantin in-
stantly felt the reproach in the eyes fixed on him and
regret for his own happiness.
When Konstantin took his brother's hand, Nikolai
smiled ; but the smile was slight, almost imperceptible,
332 ANNA KARENINA
and in spite of it the stern expression of his eyes did
not change.
"You did not expect to find me so," said he, with
effort.
"Yes.... no," replied Levin, with confusion. "Why
did n't you let me know sooner, before my marriage .'' I
had inquiries made for you everywhere."
He wanted to keep on speaking, so as to avoid a pain-
ful silence ; but he did not know what to say, the more
as his brother looked at him without replying, and seemed
to be weighing each one of his words. Finally he told
him that his wife had come with him, and NikolaY ap-
peared delighted, adding, however, that he was afraid
he should frighten her by his condition. A silence
followed ; suddenly Nikola'f began to speak, and Levin
felt by the expression of his face that he had something
of importance to tell him, but he spoke only of his health.
He blamed his doctor, and regretted that he could not
have consulted a celebrity in Moscow, and Levin per-
ceived that he was still hopeful.
Taking advantage of the first moment of silence, Levin
got up, wishing to escape for a little while at least from
these cruel impressions, and said he would go and fetch
his wife.
" Good ! I will have things put in order here. It is
dirty here and smells bad, I imagine. Masha, you attend
to this," said the sick man, with effort. "Yes! and
when you have put things to rights, go away," he added,
looking at his brother questioningly.
Levin made no reply, but as soon as he had reached
the corridor he paused. He had promised to bring his
wife, but now as he recalled what he himself had suf-
fered, he made up his mind to persuade her that she
had best not make this visit. " Why torment her as I
am tormented .''" he asked himself.
" Well, how is it ? " asked Kitty, with frightened face.
" Oh, it is horrible, horrible ! Why did you come .''"
Kitty looked timidly, compassionately, at her husband
for a few seconds without speaking ; then going to him,
she put both hands on his arm.
ANNA KARENINA 333
CHAPTER XVIII
me," she said to her husband. " You know, in the side
pocket; please bring it, and in the meantime we will
finish arranging him."
When Levin came back with the flask, he found the
invalid lying down in bed, and everything about him
had assumed a different appearance. The oppressive
odor had been exchanged for that of aromatic vinegar
which Kitty, pursing up her lips and puffing out her
rosy cheeks, was scattering about from a glass tube.
The dust was all gone ; a rug was spread under the
bed ; on the table were arranged the medicine vials, a
carafe, the necessary linen, and Kitty's English embroid-
ery. On another table, near the bed, stood a candle,
his medicine, and powders. The sick man, bathed,
with smoothly brushed hair, was lying between clean
sheets, and propped up by several pillows, was dressed
in a clean night-shirt, the white collar of which came
around his unnaturally thin neck. A new expression
of hope shone in his eyes as he looked at Kitty.
The doctor whom Levin went for and found at the
club was not the one who had been treating Nikolaf and
had aroused his indignation. The new doctor brought
his stethoscope and carefully sounded the sick man's
lungs, shook his head, wrote a prescription, and gave
exphcit directions first about the application of his rem-
edies and then about the diet which he wished him to
observe. He ordered fresh eggs, raw, or at least scarcely
cooked, and Seltzer water with milk heated to a certain
temperature. After he was gone, the sick man said a
few words to his brother, but Levin heard only the last
words: "....your Katya." But by the way he looked
at Kitty, Levin knew that he said something in her
praise. Then he called Katya, as he had named her : —
*' I feel much better already," he said to her. " With
you I should have got well long ago ! how good every-
He thing
tookis." her hand and lifted it to his Hps ; but as if
he feared that it might be unpleasant to her, he hesitated,
put it down again and only caressed it. Kitty pressed
his hand affectionately between her own.
ANNA KARENINA 337
" Now turn me over on the left side, and all of you go
bed."
to No one heard what he said ; Kitty alone understood.
She understood because she was ceaselessly on the watch
for what he needed.
" Turn him on the other side," said she to her hus-
band. "He always sleeps on that side. It is not pleas-
ant to call the man. I cannot do it. Can you ? " she
asked of Marya Nikolayevna.
" I am afraid not," she replied.
Levin, terrible as it was to him to put his arms around
this frightful body, to feel what he did not wish to feel
under the coverlid, submitted to his wife's influence, and
assuming that resolute air which she knew so well, and
putting in his arms, took hold of him ; but in spite of all
his strength he was amazed at the strange weight of
these emaciated limbs. While he was, with difficulty,
changing his brother's position, Nikolaf threw his arms
around his neck, and Kitty quickly turned the pillows so
as to m^ke the bed more comfortable, and carefully
arranged his head and his thin hair, which was again
sticking to his temples.
Nikolai' kept one of his brother's hands in his. Levin
felt that the sick man was going to do something with
his hand and was drawing it toward him. His heart
sank within him ! Yes, Nikolaf put it to his lips and
kissed it ! Then, shaken with sobs. Levin hurried from
the room, without being able to utter a word.
CHAPTER XIX
CHAPTER XX
DEATH
she" What
followedmakes you the
him into think so .-'" asked Levin, when
corridor.
" He has begun to pick with his fingers."
" What do you mean ? "
" This way," she said, plucking at the folds of her
woolen dress. Levin himself noticed that all that day
the invalid had been plucking at his bed-clothes as if to
pick off something.
Marya Nikolayevna's prediction came true. Toward
evening Nikolai had not strength enough left to lift his
arms, and his motionless eyes assumed an expression of
concentrated attention. Even when his brother and
Kitty bent over him in order that he might see them,
this look remained unchanged. Kitty had the priest
summoned to say the prayers for the dying.
While the priest was reading the prayer, the dying man
gave no sign of life. His eyes were closed. Levin,
Kitty, and Marya Nikolayevna were standing by his bed-
side. Before the prayers were ended, Nikolalf stretched
himself a Httle, sighed, and opened his eyes. The priest,
having finished the prayer, placed the crucifix on his
icy brow, then put it under his stole, and after he had
stood for a moment or two longer, silently he touched
the huge bloodless hand.
"It is all over," he said at last, and started to go away ;
ANNA KARENINA 349
END OF VOL. n.
The Scene in the Freight-house.
Original Drawing by £. Boyd Smith.
ANNA KARENINA
VOL. m
ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXI
CHAPTER XXII
CHAPTER XXIII
CHAPTER XXIV
CHAPTER XXV
CHAPTER XXVI
CHAPTER XXVII
his heart would swell with love, the tears would come
into his eyes, and he would wait until the lady drew near
him, and raised her veil ; then he would see her face ;
she would kiss him, smile upon him ; he would feel the
sweet caress of her hand, smell the well-known perfume,
and weep with joy, as he did one evening when he lay
at her feet, and she tickled him, and he laughed so heart-
ily, and gently bit her white hand, covered with rings.
Later, when he learned accidentally from the old nurse
that his mother was alive, and that his father and the
countess had told him that she was dead because she
was a wicked woman, this seemed still more impossible
to Serozha, because he loved her ; and he looked for
her, and longed for her.
That very day, in the summer garden, there had been
a lady in a lilac veil, and, with his heart beating violently,
expecting that it was she, he saw her take the same foot-
path where he was walking ; but this lady did not come
up where he was, and she disappeared from sight.
Serozha felt a stronger love than ever for his mother ;
and now, while waiting for his father, he was cutting
his desk with his penknife ; with shining eyes, he was
looking straight ahead, and thinking of her.
" Here comes your papa," said Vasili Lukitch.
Serozha jumped up from the chair, ran to kiss his
because hand,
father's he hadand received
looked for
thesome signof ofAlexander
order pleasure
Nevsky.
" Did you have a good walk } " asked Aleksef Alek-
sandrovitch, as he sat down in an armchair, taking up
the Old Testament and opening it.
Though he had often told Serozha that every Chris-
tian ought to know the sacred history by heart, he had
often to consult the Old Testament for his lessons ; and
Serozha noticed it.
"Yes, papa, I enjoyed it very much," said Serozha,
sitting across his chair, and tipping it, which was for-
bid en. I" saw Nadenka " (Nadenka was the countess's
niece, whom she adopted) " and she told me that they 've
given you a new star. Are you glad, papa ?"
26 ANNA KARENINA
" In the first place^ please don't tip your chair so,"
said Alekser Aleksandrovitch, " and in the second place,
know that what ought to be dear to us is work for itself
and not the reward. I want you to understand that. If
you work and study simply for the sake of receiving the
recompense, the work will seem painful ; but if you love
work,
And your recompense
Aleksei will come ofremembered
Aleksandrovitch itself." that on
this very day he had signed one hundred and eighteen
different papers with no other support in a most unwel-
come task than the feeling of duty.
Serozha's eyes, shining with affection and merriment,
grew gloomy, and dropped as his father looked at him.
It was the same well-remembered way his father had
adopted in his treatment of him, and Serozha had already
schooled himself to be hypocritical toward it.
He felt that his father always spoke as if he were
addressing some imaginary boy, one of those children
found in books, and not in the least like Serozha. And
Serozha, when he was with his father, tried to make
believe that he was that bookish little boy.
"You understand this, I hope."
" Yes, papa," repUed the lad, playing the part of this
imaginary little boy.
The lesson consisted of the recitation of several verses
of the Gospel and the review of the first part of the Old
Testament. The verses from the Gospel Serozha knew
fairly well. But, as he was in the midst of so repeating
them, Serozha was struck by the appearance of his
father's forehead, which made almost a right angle near
the temples, and he stumbled and transferred the end of
one verse to the next verse which began with the same
word. Aleksef Aleksandrovitch concluded that he did
not understand the meaning of what he was reciting,
and he was vexed.
He frowned, and began to explain what Serozha had
heard so many times that he could not help remember-
ing because he understood it too well — just as it was
with the concept of the word vdnig, suddenly, being " a
circumstance of the mode of action." The child, with
ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXVIII
as Vronsky
he alwaysspoke to Annastrangers,
did before with theandformal
treatedvui',
heryou,
as
a mere acquaintance ; but it was perfectly understood
that the brother knew of their relations, and they spoke
freely of Anna's visit to Vronsky's estate.
Notwithstanding his experience in society, Vronsky,
in consequence of this new state of things, fell into a
strange error. It would seem as if he ought to have
understood that society would shut its doors on him
and Anna ; but now he persuaded himself by a strange
freak of imagination that, however it might have been
in former days, now, owing to the rapid progress made
by society, — and he had himself unconsciously become
a strong supporter of progress, — prejudices would have
melted away, and the question whether they would be
received by society would not trouble them.
. " Of course, she would not be received at court," he
thought ; " but our relatives, our friends, will understand
things as they are."
A man may sit for some time with his legs doubled
up in one position, provided he knows that he can
change it at pleasure ; but if he knows that he must sit
in such a constrained position, then he will feel cramped,
and his legs will twitch and stretch out toward the de-
sired freedom. Vronsky experienced this in regard to
society. Though he knew in the bottom of his soul that
society was closed to them, he made experiment whether
it had changed, and whether it would receive them
ANNA KARENINA 31
CHAPTER XXX
itch had let her in, and that she was in the child's room;
they knew, too, that their master was in the habit of
going to Serozha every morning at nine o'clock : each
one felt that the husband and wife ought not to meet,
that it must be prevented.
Kornei, the valet, went down to the Swiss to ask why
Anna had been let in ; and, finding that Kapitonuitch
had taken her up-stairs, he reprimanded him severely.
The Swiss maintained an obstinate silence till the valet
declared that he deserved to lose his place, when the old
man jumped at him, and, shaking his fist in his face,
said: —
" What is that ? you would not let her in ? You 've
served here ten years, and had nothing but kindness
from her, but you would have said, ' Now, go away from
here ! ' You know what policy is, you sly dog. What
you don't forget is to rob your master, and to carry off
his racoon-skin shubas ! "
" Soldier ! " replied Kornei, scornfully, and he turned
toward the nurse, who was coming in just at this mo-
ment. "What do you think, Marya Yefimovna.-* He
has let in Anna Arkadyevna, without saying anything
to anybody, and just when Aleksef Aleksandrovitch, as
soon as he is up, will be going to the nursery."
"What a scrape! what a scrape!" said the nurse.
" But, Kornei Vasilyevitch, find some way to keep
your master, while I run to warn her, and get her out
of .the way. What a scrape ! "
'When the nurse went into the child's room, Serozha
was telling his mother how Nadenka and he had fallen
when sliding down a hill of ice, and turned three somer-
saults. Anna was listening to the sound of her son's
voice, looking at his face, watching the play of his fea-
tures, feeling his little arms, but not hearing a word
tTaat he said. She had to go away, she had to leave
hiin ; this alone she understood and felt. She had
heard Vasili Lukitch's steps, and his little discreet
cough, as he came to the door, and now she heard the
nurse coming in ; but, unable to move or to speak, she
remained as fixed as a statue.
ANNA KARENINA 41-
face express fear and shame ? .... She was not to blame,
but she was afraid of him, and seemed ashamed of some-
thing. He wanted to ask a question which would have
explained this doubt, but he did not dare ; he saw that
she was in sorrow, and he pitied her. He silently clung
close to her, and then he whispered : —
" Don't go yet ! He will not come for some time."
His mother pushed him away from her a little, in or-
der to see if he understood the meaning of what he
had said, and in the frightened expression of his face
she perceived that he not only spoke of his father,
but seemed to ask her how he ought to think about
him.
" Serozha, my dear," she said, " love him ; he is better
and more upright than I am, and I have been wicked
to him. When you have grown up, you will under-
stand."
" Not better than you ! " cried the child, with sobs of
despair ; and, clinging to his mother's shoulders, he
squeezed her with all his might till his arms trembled
with the exertion.
" My darling, my little one ! " ^ exclaimed Anna ;■ and,
bursting into tears, she sobbed like a child, even as he
sobbed.
At this moment the door opened, and Vasili Lukitch
came in. Steps were heard at the other door ; and, in a
frightened whisper, he exclaimed, " He is coming," and
gave Anna her hat.
Serozha threw himself on the bed, sobbing, and cov-
ered his face with his hands. Anna took them away
to kiss yet once again his tear-stained cheeks, and then
with quick steps hurried from the room.
Aleksei Aleksandrovitch met her at the door. When
he saw her, he stopped and bowed his head.
Though she had declared a moment before that he
was better and more upright than she, the swift glance
that she gave him, taking in his whole person, with all
its peculiarities, awoke in her only a feeling of hatred
and scorn for him, and jealousy on account of her son
1 Dushekhk'a, malenki mn.
ANNA KARENINA ^
She hurriedly lowered her veil, and, quickening her
step, almost ran from the room.
She had entirely forgotten in her haste the play-
things which, on the evening before, she had bought
with so much love and sadness; and she took them
back with her to the hotel.
CHAPTER XXXI
CHAPTER XXXII
PART SIXTH
CHAPTER I
59
6o ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER II
" Not all," said Dolly. *' You judge by your husband.
I believe he is even now tormented by the remembrance
of Vronsky ; is n't that so ? "
" He is ! " replied Kitty, with a pensive smile in her eyes.
" Well, I don't know what there is in your past life to
disquiet him," exclaimed the princess, her mother, re-
senting the inference that her maternal vigilance was
called in question. " Is it because Vronsky paid you
some attention.'' That happens to every young girl."
" Yes,
blushing. but we were not talking about that," said Kitty,
CHAPTER III
said" Ihe.
am happy, but I am dissatisfied with myself .... "
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
" Not one," replied Sergyei Ivanovitch. " And you }"
She made no reply, her attention being just then
absorbed by the children who surrounded her.
" Here 's one for you near the twig," and she pointed
out a little agaricus pushing its elastic red cap through
the dry grass, from which it was extricating itself.
Varenka got up, after Masha had plucked the mush-
room, breaking it into two white halves. "That
reminds me of my childhood," she remarked, as she
joined SergyeY Ivanovitch and walked with him away
from the children.
They proceeded a few steps in silence. Varenka saw
that he wanted to speak ; she suspected what he had in
mind, and felt stifled with the emotions of joy and terror.
They had now gone so far from the rest that no one
could have heard them, yet he had not opened his mouth
to speak. Varenka would have done better not to say
a word. After a silence it would have been easier to
ANNA KARENINA 77
say what they wanted to say than after any casual
words. But against her own will, as it were unexpect-
edly, Varenka broke out : —
" And so you did not find any. But there are never
so many mushrooms in the woods as along the edge."
Sergyeif Ivanovitch sighed and made no answer. He
was annoyed because she spoke about mushrooms. He
wanted to bring her back to the first words which she
had spoken about her childhood ; but, as it were, con-
trary to his will, after a brief silence, he made an obser-
vation on what she had said last.
" I have heard that the white mushrooms are found pre-
eminently on the edge of the forest, but I can't tell them."
A few moments more passed ; they had gone still
farther away from the children, and were wholly alone.
Varenka's heart beat so violently that she heard its
throbs, and she was conscious that she was blushing,
turning pale, and then blushing again.
To be the wife of such a man as Koznuishef after her
position with Mme. Stahl seemed to her the height of
happiness. Moreover, she was almost convinced that
she was in love with him. And this was to be decided
immediately ! It was a terrible moment for her ; terrible,
both what he would say, and what he would not say.
Now, or never, it would have to be decided ; Sergyeif
Ivanovitch also felt this. Everything in Varenka's
looks, in her heightened color, in the way she dropped
her eyes, betrayed the most painful expectation.
Sergyeif Ivanovitch saw this and was sorry for her.
He even felt that he should wrong her if he kept silence.
He made an effort to recall his recent arguments in favor
of making the decision. He even repeated to himself
the words in which he was going to couch his declaration ;
but instead of these words, by some combination unex-
pected to himself, he asked : —
" What is the difference between a white mushroom
and a birch mushroom ? "
Varenka's lips trembled as she answered : —
" There is very little difference in the cap, but it lies
in the root."
7$ ANNA KARENINA
And as soon as these words were spoken both of
them felt that this was the end of it, that what should
have been said would never be said, and the emotion
which up to this moment had reached its highest pitch
gradually died away.
" The birch mushroom, or its root, reminds one of a
black beard which has not been shaved for two days,"
said Sergyei Ivanovitch, calmly.
" Quite true," answered Varenka, smiling, and invol-
untarily the direction of their walk changed. They were
going back toward the children. Varenka was puzzled
and hurt, but at the same time she experienced a sense
of relief. Sergyef Ivanovitch mentally reviewed his
arguments in favor of marriage, and found them mis-
taken. He could not be unfaithful to Marie's memory.
aoU
ANNA KARENINA 7^
CHAPTER VI
" And there 's some one with him ! It must be papa ! "
cried Levin, standing at the entrance of the driveway.
" Kitty, don't come down by the steep stairs. Come
round !"
But Levin was mistaken in thinking that the other
man in the carriage was the old prince. When he
came close he saw, sitting next Stepan Arkadyevitch,
not the prince, but a handsome, portly young man, in
a Scotch cap with long floating ribbons. This was
Vasenka Veslovsky, a third cousin of the Shcherbat-
skys, a brilliant young member of Moscow and Pe-
tersburg society — " one of the best fellows that ever
lived, and a devotee of hunting," as Stepan Arkadye-
vitch expressed it in introducing him.
Veslovsky was not in the least disconcerted by the
surprise which his appearance, in place of the old
prince, caused. He gayly greeted Levin, reminding
him of their former acquaintance, and took Grisha into
the carriage, lifting him up over the pointer which
Stepan Arkadyevitch had brought with him.
Levin did not get into the carriage, but followed on
foot. He was somewhat put out by the non-arrival of
the old prince, whom he liked better and better the
more he saw him ; he was still more put out at the
appearance of this Vasenka Veslovsky, a man who was
utterly unknown and superfluous. He seemed to him
still more unknown and superfluous when, as Levin
approached the front door, about which had collected
a lively throng of old and young, he kissed Kitty's hand
with a remarkably flattering and gallant look.
" Your wife and I are cousins, and old friends," said
Vasenka Veslovsky, heartily pressing Levin's hand a
second time.
" Well, how is it, any game .'*" asked Stepan Arka-
dyevitch, addressing Levin almost before he had greeted
ANNA KARENINA 83
the others. "Vasenka and I have the most ferocious
intentions How are you, mainan, since we saw each
other in Moscow ?.... Well, Tania, how goes it? Get
the things from the back of the calash, please," said he,
addressing every one at once. " How well you look,
Dollenka," said he to his wife, again kissing her hand,
holding it in his, and smoothing it.
Levin, who a few moments before had been in the
happiest frame of mind, now looked at them all with
indignant eyes, and everything disgusted him.
"Whom did he kiss yesterday with those same lips .''"
he queried, as he saw how affectionate Stepan Arka-
dyevitch was to his wife. He looked at Dolly, and even
she was displeasing to him. "Of course she cannot
believe in his love for her. How, then, can she seem
so glad.-* Repulsive! " said Levin to himself.
He looked at the princess, who had seemed to him so
charming a moment before, and her manner of receiv-
ing this Veslovsky and his ribbons, as if she were at
home there, displeased him.
Even Sergyef Ivanovitch, who had come out on the
porch with the rest, seemed to him disagreeable by rea-
son of the hypocritical friendliness with which he met
Stepan Arkadyevitch ; for Levin knew that his brother
neither liked nor respected Oblonsky.
And Varenka disgusted him, because she, with her
sainte nitouche look, nevertheless met this stranger as
if she thought only what sort of a husband would he
make for her.
And most displeasing of all was Kitty, as she fell into
conformity with the tone of gayety with which that
gentleman regarded his visit, as if it were a festival for
himself and all the rest ; especially disagreeable was
the peculiar smile with which she responded to his smile.
Noisily talking, they all went into the house, but as
soon as they had sat down, Levin turned on his heel
and started off.
Kitty saw that something was amiss with her husband.
She wanted to take advantage of a favorable moment
and have a little talk with him alone, but he hastened
84 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER VII
sawLevin's
himselfjealousy grew husband,
a deceived still morewhom
intense. Already
his wife he
and her
lover were plotting to get rid of that they might enjoy
each other in peace.
Nevertheless, he asked Veslovsky, with all friendliness
and hospitality, about his hunting-gear, his guns and
boots, and agreed to go the next day.
To Levin's happiness the old princess put an end to
his torture by advising Kitty to go to bed. But even
this was accompanied by new suffering for Levin. On
bidding his hostess " good night," Vasenka tried to kiss
her hand again. But Kitty, blushing and drawing away
her hand, said, with a naive rudeness for which her mother
afterward chided her : —
" That is not the custom with us."
In Levin's eyes she was blameworthy for permitting
such liberties with her, and still more so for being so
awkward in showing her disapprobation.
" Why should you go to bed .-'" said Oblonsky, who
had taken several glasses of wine at dinner, and was. in
his most genial and poetic mood. " Look, Kitty," said he,
pointing to the moon just rising above the lindens,
" how lovely ! Veslovsky, it is just the time for sere-
nading. You know he has a splendid voice ; he and I
tried some on the way down. He has brought two new
ballads with him. He and Varvara might sing to us."
After they had all left, Stepan Arkadyevitch and
Veslovsky still for a long time walked up and down in
the avenue, and their voices could be heard as they
practised singing over the new ballads.
Hearing these voices, Levin sat scowling in an easy-
chair in his wife's room, and obstinately refused to an-
88 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
" Well, what 's our line of march ,-' Give us a good
idea of it," said Stepan Arkadyevitch.
" This is my plan : we will go first to Gvozdevo.
Just this side of Gvozdevo is a snipe marsh, but on the
other side of Gvozdevo extend splendid woodcock
marshes, and there '11 be game there. It 's hot now,
but toward the cool of the day — it 's twenty versts from
here — we will try the field. We will spend the night
there, and then to-morrow we will strike into the great
marshes."
" But is n't there anything on the way ? "
** Yes, but it would delay us, and it is too hot. There
are two splendid little places, but it is hardly worth
while."
It was Levin's intention to attack these places, but
as they were near home, he could go there at any
time, and as they were small he thought that three
hunters were too many. Therefore, he prevaricated
when he said that it was hardly worth while.
When they came up to the little marsh. Levin was
proposing to drive by ; but Stepan Arkadyevitch, with
the experienced eye of a huntsman, immediately saw the
water-soaked ground which was visible from the road.
" Shan't we try that ? " he asked, pointing to the
marsh.
ANNA KARENINA 95
CHAPTER X
" How is it with you ? " asked Levin, But there was
no need of asking, because he could see his overflowing
game-bag.
" Oh, just a trifle." He had fourteen birds. "What
a splendid marsh. Veslovsky must have bothered you.
Two can't hunt well with the same dog," said Stepan
Arkadyevitch, to soften the effect of his triumph.
CHAPTER XI
their host, who had just then come into the loft, mak-
ing the door creak on its hinges, " are n't you asleep
" No, how can one sleep ? But I supposed you
yet?"
gentlemen were asleep — still, I heard talking. I wanted
to get a hook. — Will she bite.-*" he added, carefully
slipping along in his bare feet.
" But where do you sleep ?"
" We are on night duty."
"Oh, what a night," exclaimed Veslovsky, catching
a glimpse of the edge of the izba and the unharnessed
wagons in the faint light of the west through the now
widely opened door. " Just listen to those women's
voices singing ; it is not bad at all. Who is singing,
friend ? " said he, addressing the muzhik.
" Oh, those are the girls from the farm, singing to-
gether."
" Come, let 's go out and take a walk ! We shall
never go to sleep. Come on, Oblonsky."
"What's theuse.-*" said Oblonsky, stretching, "it's
more comfortable here."
" Well, then, I '11 go alone," exclaimed Veslovsky,
jumping up eagerly and putting on his shoes and
stockings. " Good-by — da svidanya — gentlemen. If
there 's any fun, I will come and call you. You have
given me good hunting and I won't forget you."
" He 's a splendid young fellow," said Oblonsky, after
Veslovsky had gone out and the muzhik had shut the
door again.
" Yes, he is," replied Levin, still continuing to think
of what they had been talking about. It seemed to
him that he had clearly, to the best of his ability, uttered
his thoughts and feelings, and yet these men, who were
by no means stupid or insincere, agreed in declaring
that he indulged in sophistries. This confused him.
"This is the way of it, my friend," said Oblonsky.
" One of two things must be : either you must agree that
the present order of society is all right, and then stand up
for your rights, or confess that you enjoy unfair privileges,
as I do, and get all the good out of them that you can."
ANNA KARENINA 109
" No ; if this was unfair, you could not get any enjoy-
ment out of these advantages .... at least I could not.
With me the main thing would be to feel that I was not
to blame."
" After all, why should we not go out," said Stepan
Arkadyevitch, evidently growing tired of this discus-
sion. "You see we are not going to sleep. Come on,
let 's go out."
Levin made no reply. What he had said in their
conversation about his doing right only in a negative
sense occupied his mind. ** Can one be right only in
a negative way .■'" he asked himself.
" How strong the odor of the fresh hay is," said
Stepan Arkadyevitch, as he got up. " It is impossible
to go to sleep. Vasenka is hatching some scheme out
there. Don't you hear them laughing, and his voice.-'
Won't you come ? Come on."
" No, I am not going," said Levin.
" Is this also from principle ?" asked Stepan Arkadye-
vitch, with a smile, as he groped round in the dark-
ness for his cap.
" No, not from principle, but why should I go .-*"
" Do you know you are laying up misfortune for
yourself .-*" said Stepan Arkadyevitch, having found his
cap, and getting up.
" Why so ? "
" Don't I see how you are giving in to your wife ?
I heard how much importance you attached to the ques-
tion whether she approved of your going off for a
couple of days' hunting. That is very well as an idyl,
but it does n't work for a whole lifetime. A man ought
to be independent ; he has his own masculine interests.
A man must be manly," said Oblonsky, opening the
door.
"What does that mean .... going and flirting with the
farm girls .■*" asked Levin.
" Why not go, if there 's fun in it ? Ca ne tire pas d
consequence. My wife would not be any the worse off
for it, and it affords me amusement. The main thing
is the sanctity of the home. There should not be any
tio ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XII
ing Laska, shied, and, lifting his tail, whinnied. The two
other horses were also startled, and dashed through the
water and galloped out of the swamp. As they pulled
their hoofs out of the soft, sticky mud, they made a
noise like smacking. Laska paused, looking with
amused eyes at the horses, and seemed to ask her
master what she should do. Levin caressed her and
gave a whistle as a signal that she might begin her
work. Laska, joyous and full of importance, darted on
over the soil of the marsh, which quaked under her
weight.
As soon as she got fairly into the bog, Laska in-
stantly distinguished amid all the well-known odors of
roots and swamp-grass and the mud and the droppings
of the horses, the scent of the bird perceptible through
the whole place — the penetrating bird odor which
more than anything else excited her. Wherever there
was moss or sage bushes this odor was peculiarly strong,
but it was impossible to make out in which direction it
increased or diminished in strength. In order to get
her bearings, the dog had to bear to the lee of the wind.
Unconscious of any effort in moving her legs, Laska in
an eager gallop, yet so restrained that she was able to
stop at a bound, if anything of consequence presented it-
self, dashed toward the right away from the breeze which
was now beginning to blow freshly from the east. Snuff-
ing the air with her widespread nostrils, she suddenly
became conscious that she was no longer following a
trail, but was on the game itself — not one bird alone,
but many. Laska slackened her speed. The birds
were there, but she could not as yet determine exactly
where. In order to find the exact spot, she began
another circle, when suddenly the voice of her master
called her back.
" Here, Laska," he cried, directing her toward the
other side. She paused as if to ask him if she had not
better keep on as she had begun. But he repeated his
command in a stern voice, sending her to a tussock-
covered place overflowed with water, where there could
not possibly be anything.
VOL. III. — 8
n4 ANNA KARENINA
She heard him, and, pretending to obey him, so as to
satisfy him, ran hastily over the spot indicated, and then
returned to the place which had attracted her before,
and instantly perceived them again. Now that he no
longer bothered her she knew exactly what to do, and
without looking where she was going, stumbling over
tussocks to her great indignation and falling into the
water, but quickly extricating herself with her strong,
agile legs, she began to circle round, so as to get her
exact bearings.
The scent of the birds kept growing stronger and
stronger, more and more distinct, and suddenly it be-
came perfectly evident to her that one of them was there,
just behind a certain tussock not five steps in front of her,
and she stopped and trembled all over. Her legs were
so short that she could not see anything, but she knew
by the scent that the bird was sitting there not five steps
distant from her. She pointed, growing each instant
more certain of her game and full of joy in the anticipa-
tion. Her tail stuck straight out and only the end of it
quivered. Her mouth was open slightly. Her ears were
cocked up. Indeed, one ear had been all the time pricked
up as she ran, and she was panting heavily, but cautiously,
and looking round still more cautiously, rather with her
eyes than with her head, to see if her master was coming.
He was coming, leaping from tussock to tussock, and
more slowly than usual it seemed to her ; his face bore
the expression which she knew so well, and which was
so terrible to her. It seemed to her that he was coming
slowly, and yet he was running !
Remarking Laska's peculiar method of search as she
crouched down close to the ground and took such long
strides that her hind legs seemed to rake the ground,
and noticing her slightly opened mouth. Levin knew
that she was on the track of snipe, and offering a
mental prayer to God that he might not miss especially
his first shot, he followed the dog. As he came up
close to her he looked from his superior height and saw
with his eyes what she perceived only with her nose.
In a nook between two tussocks not more than six feet
ANNA KARENINA ^15
CHAPTER XIII
CHAPTER XIV
CHAPTER XV
" Why, what has she done ? " asked Levin, rather in-
differently, for he was annoyed to find that he had come
at the wrong time when he wished some advice regard-
ing his own affairs.
" She and Grisha went into the raspberry bush, and
there .... but I can't tell you what she did. I 'd a thou-
sand times rather have Miss Elliot. This governess
does n't look after anything .... she 's a machine. Figiirez
voiis, que la petite ...y
And Darya Aleksandrovna related Masha's misdeeds.
"There's nothing very bad in that. That doesn't
signify a bad disposition. It is only a piece of childish
mischief," said Levin, soothingly.
" But what is the matter with you ? You look troubled.
What has happened down-stairs .-* " asked Dolly, and by
the tone of her questions Levin perceived that it would
be easy for him to say what he had in his mind to say.
" I have n't been down-stairs. I have been alone in
the garden with Kitty. We have just had a quarrel ....
the second since.... Stiva came."
Dolly looked at him with her intelligent, penetrating
eyes.
" Now tell me, with your hand on your heart," he
said, "tell me, was the conduct, not of Kitty, but of
this young man, anything else than unpleasant, not
unpleasant, but intolerable, insulting even, to a hus-
band .?"
" What shall I say to you } — Stand, stand in the
corner!'' said she to Masha, who, noticing the scarcely
perceptible smile on her mother's face, started to go
away. " Society would say that he is only behaving as
all young men behave. // fait la coiir d nne j'eune ei
jolie femme, and her husband, as himself a gentleman
of society, should be flattered by it."
"Yes, yes," said Levin, angrily; "but have you
noticed it ? "
" I noticed it, of course, and so did Stiva. Just after
tea he said to me, ^Je crois que Veslovsky fait tin petit
brin de conr a Kitty.' " ^
^ I believe Veslovsky is trying to flirt with Kitty.
ANNA KARENINA 125
CHAPTER XVI
And once more she went over the undying pangs that
weighed down her maternal heart in the cruel remem-
brance of the death of her youngest child, the nursHng
who died of the croup, and his funeral, and the indiffer-
ence of other people as they looked at the little pink
coffin, and her own heartrending grief, which none
could share, as she looked for the last time on the pal-
lid brow with the clinging curls, and the surprised half-
open mouth visible for one instant ere they shut down
the cover with its silver-gilt cross.
" And what is all this for ? What will be the result of
it all ? That I never have a moment of rest, spending my
days now in bearing children, now in nursing them, for-
ever irritable, complaining, self-tormented, and torment-
ing others, repulsive to my husband. I shall live on, and
my children will grow up wretched, ill-educated, and
poor. Even now, if I had not been able to spend the
summer with the Levins, I don't know how we should
have got along. Of course Kostia and Kitty are so
considerate that we can't feel under obligations to them ;
but this cannot go on so. They will be having children
of their own, and then they will not be able to help us
any more ; even now their expenses are very heavy.
What then .'' Papa, who has kept almost nothing for him-
self, won't be able to help us, will he ? One thing is per-
fectly certain, I cannot educate my children unaided ;
and, if I have to have assistance, it will be humiliating.
Well, let us suppose that we have good luck, if no more
of the children die and I can manage to educate them.
Under the most favorable circumstances they will at
least turn out not to be bad. That is all that I can
hope for. And to bring about so much, how much
suffering, how much trouble, I must go through My
whole life is spoiled ! "
Again she recalled what the young peasant woman
had said, and again it was odious to her to remember it;
but she could not help agreeing that there was a grain
of coarse truth in her words.
"Is it much farther, Mikhaila ? " asked Darya Alek-,
sandrovna of the bookkeeper, in order to check tHese
painful thoughts.
ANNA KARENINA 133
CHAPTER XVII
" Well, you understand, you turn to the left and then
you '11 get there," said the muzhik, evidently reluctant to
part with the strangers and anxious to talk.
The coachman touched up his horses, but they had
hardly started ere the muzhik cried : —
"Wait! he! hold on!" cried two voices together
The coachman reined in again. " There they come.
There they are," cried the muzhik. " See what a lot
of them," and he pointed to four persons on horseback
and two in a char a bancs who were coming along the
road.
They were Vronsky and his jockey, Veslovsky and
Anna, on horseback, and the princess Varvara with
Sviazhsky in the char a bancs. They had been out to
ride and to look at the operation of some newly imported
reaping-machines.
When the carriage stopped the riders were all walk
ing their horses. In front Anna rode with Veslovsky.
Anna rode at an easy gait on a little stout English cob
with a cropped mane and docked tail. Her pretty head,
with her dark ringlets escaping from under a tall hat,
her full shoulders, her slender waist in a tightly fitting
amazonka, and her whole easy, graceful horsemanship
surprised Dolly. At first it seemed to her unbecoming
for Anna to be riding horseback. Darya Aleksandrovna
connected the idea of horseback riding for ladies with
the idea of light, youthful coquetry, which seemed to
her did not accord well with Anna's position ; but as she
examined her more closely she immediately became
reconciled to her going on horseback. Notwithstanding
all her elegance, everything about her was so simple,
easy, and appropriate in her pose and in her habit and
in her motions, that nothing could have been more
natural.
Next to Anna, on a gray, fiery cavalry horse, rode
Vasenka Veslovsky, thrusting his fat legs forward, and
evidently very well satisfied with himself. He still
wore his Scotch cap with its floating ribbons, and
Darya Aleksandrovna could hardly restrain a smile of
amusement when she saw him.
ANNA KARENINA 137
CHAPTER XVIII
CHAPTER XIX
CHAPTER XX
Anna's conduct, but the sight of the man for whom she
had taken this step was unpleasant to her. Moreover,
Vronsky was not congenial to her at any time ; she
thought him very haughty, and could see no reason
except his wealth to justify his haughtiness. But in
spite of all her will-power, there in his own establish-
ment he more than ever impressed her with a sense of
his importance and she could not feel at ease with him ;
she felt just as she had felt when the maid took the
nightgown from her valise. Just as before the maid she
had felt, not exactly ashamed, but awkward, on account
of the patches, so now with Vronsky she felt all the
time, not exactly ashamed, but uncomfortable.
Dolly felt confused and cast about in her mind for
something to talk about.
Although she felt sure that he with his pride might
be displeased if she praised his house and park, never-
theless, finding no other topic of conversation, she re-
marked that she liked his house very much.
" Yes, it is a very handsome building, and in good old
style," replied the count.
" I liked the court in front of the steps ; was it
always so."*"
" Oh, no ! " said he, and his face shone with satisfac-
tion. If
" you had only seen it in the spring ! "
And at first coldly, but warming as he went on, he
pointed out to Dolly the many improvements he had
made in the house and park. It was evident that Vron-
sky, having consecrated much labor to the improvement
and beautification of his establishment, really felt the
need of appreciation from some new person, and that he
was not a little gratified at Darya Aleksandrovna's praise.
" If you would like to look into the hospital and are
not tired, we might go that way. It is not far. Come,
let us go ! Shall we, Anna ? "
"Yes-— shall we not?" she said, turning to Svi-
azhsky ; " mats il ne faut pas laisser le fiauvre Veslovsky
et Tiishkievitch se morfondre Id dans le bateau ! ^ We
^ Btit we rimst not leave these gehtlemeti to wait ift vain {ft tos in the
boat.
1^2 ANNA KARENINA
must send word to them. Yes, This is a monument
which he will leave here," said she to Dolly, with the
same shrewd knowing smile on her face as when she
first spoke of the hospital.
" Oh, capital work ! " said Sviazhsky ; and then, not to
seem assenting from mere politeness, he added : —
" I am surprised, count, that you, who are doing so
much for the peasants' sanitary advantage, are so indif-
ferent to schools."
" C'est devenu tellentent commun, les icoles" replied
Vronsky. " You must know I do this to amuse myself.
This is the way to the hospital," said he, addressing
Darya Aleksandrovna, pointing to a side-path which
led from the avenue. The ladies put up their sun-
shades and walked along the side-path.
After making a few turns and passing through a
wicket-gate, Darya Aleksandrovna saw before her on
rising ground a large red building of complicated archi-
tecture not completely finished. The iron roof, not as
yet painted, ghttered in the sun. Near the hospital
itself there was another building going up, in the midst
of the woods, and workmen in aprons stood on scaffold-
ings laying the bricks, taking mortar from buckets and
smoothing it with trowels.
" How rapidly the work is going on," remarked
Sviazhsky. "The last time I was here the roof was
not in position."
" It will be ready by autumn, for the inside is
already nearly finished," said Anna.
" And what is this other new building } "
"A house for the doctor, and a pharmacy," replied
Vronsky ; and, seeing the architect, in a short overcoat,
approaching, he excused himself to the ladies, and went
to meet him.
Going round the mortar-pit, from which the workmen
were getting Hme, he joined the architect and began to
talk angrily with him.
" The pediment will be much too low," he replied
to Anna, who asked him what the discussion was
about.
ANNA KARENINA 153
CHAPTER XXI
right?"
" Yes," said Darya Aleksandrovna, shutting up her
sunshade, " but .... "
" No," he interrupted, and he involuntarily stopped
and obliged her to stop also, though he had no intention
of putting his companion into an awkward situation.
" No one feels more strongly and completely the cruelty
of Anna's position than I do. And you will realize this
if you will do me the honor to believe that I am not
heartless. I am the cause of her being in this position,
and therefore I feel it."
"I understand," said Darya Aleksandrovna, invol-
untarily admiring him for the honest and straight-
forward way in which he said this. " But for the very
reason that you feel yourself the cause I fear you are
inclined tp exaggerate," said she. " Her position in
society is difficult, I admit."
"In society it is hell!" said he, frowning gloomily;
" you can't conceive moral tortures worse than those
which Anna endured at Petersburg during the fortnight
we were there; and I beg you to believe...."
"Yes, but here.-*.... And so far neither she nor you
feel the need of a society life." ....
" Society! why should I need it } " exclaimed Vronsky,
scornfully.
" Up to the present time, and perhaps it will be so
always, you are calm and happy. I see in Anna that
she is happy, perfectly happy, and she has already told
me that she is," said Darya Aleksandrovna, smiling.
And while she spoke the doubt arose in her mind : " Is
Anna really happy ? "
But Vronsky, it seemed, had no doubt on that score : —
" Yes, yes, I know that she has revived after all her
sufferings. She is happy .... she is happy now. But
I .-*" said Vronskv. " I am afraid of what the future
has in store for us .... excuse me, do you want to go .'*"
" No, it is immaterial."
" Well, then, let us sit down here."
Darya Aleksandrovna sat down on a garden bench
ANNA KARENINA 157
in a nook of the walk. He was standing in front of
her.
" I see that she seems happy," he repeated ; and the
doubt whether Anna was happy again rose in Darya
Aleksandrovna's mind more strongly than ever. " But
will it last ? Whether we did right or wrong is a hard
question ; but the die is cast," he said, changing from
Russian to French, " and we are joined for life ; we are
joined by the ties of love. We have one child, and we
may have others. But the law and all the conditions of
our state are such that there are a thousand complica-
tions, which Anna, now that she is resting after her
afflictions and sufferings, does not see and will not see.
It is natural ; but I cannot help seeing. My daughter,
according to the law, is not my daughter, but Karenin's,
and I do not like this falsehood," said he, with an ener-
getic gesture of repulsion, and looking at Darya Aleksan-
drovna with a gloomy, questioning face.
She did not reply, but simply looked at him. He
continued : —
" To-morrow a son may be born — my son — and by
law he would be a Karenin, and could, inherit neither
my name nor my property, and, however happy we were
here at home, and however many children we had, there
would be no legal connection between me and them.
They would be Karenins. You understand the cruelty,
the horror, of this state of things .-* I try to explain this
to Anna. It irritates her — she will not understand me,
and I cannot tell ker all. Now look at the other side.
I am happy in her love, but I must have occupation. I
have taken up my present enterprise, and I am proud
of it, and consider it far more beneficial than the occupa-
tions of my former comrades at the court and in the
service. And certainly I would not change my occupa-
tion for theirs. I work here, on my own place, and I am
happy and contented, and we need nothing more for our
happiness. I love my activity, ce/a n est pas un pis alter;
far from it."
Darya Aleksandrovna noticed that at this point of his
explanation he became entangled, and she did not under
158 ANNA KARENINA
stand very well his sudden pause, but she felt that, having
fairly begun to speak of his intimate affairs concerning
which he could not talk with Anna, he would now make
a full breast of it, and that the question of his activities
in the country belonged to the same category as his
relations to Anna.
"And so I keep on," said he, growing more cheerful
again, " The chief thing is that when one works one
must have the persuasion that what one has done will
not die with him, that he will have heirs .... but I have
none Conceive the feelings of a man who knows that
his children and those of the wife he worships do not
belong to him ; that they belong to a man who hates
them, and would never recognize them. Is n't it hor-
rible "?
He was silent and deeply moved.
"Yes, of course," said Darya Aleksandrovna ; "I
understand this. But what can Anna do .'' "
" Well, that brings me to the purpose of this talk,"
said the count, controlling himself with effort. " Anna
can get a divorce. It depends on her If we are to
petition the emperor to legitimize the children, a divorce
is essential. But that depends on Anna. Her husband
consented to that, and your husband had it all arranged
some time ago, and I know that he now would not
refuse ; all it requires is for Anna to write to him. He
said up and down that he would consent, if Anna would
apply
condition for isit.oneOf ofcourse," he added,cruelties
those Pharisaic frowning, " this
of which
only heartless people are capable. He knows what
torture all remembrance of him has for her, and so he
exacts this letter from her. I understand that it is pain-
ful to her. But the reasons are so imperative that she
must passer pardessus toutes ces finesses de sentiment. II
va dn bonhenr et de V existence d' Antia et de ces enfants.^
I don't speak about myself, though it is painful, very
painful, to me," said he, with a wrathful expression
against whoever was responsible for this state of things.
1 She ought to be above these excessive sensibilities; her happiness is
involved, as well as her children's.
ANNA KARENINA r^
CHAPTER XXII
them are not any trouble to him, but come about spon
taneously.
Darya Aleksandrovna knew that even such a simple
matter as providing kasha for her children's breakfast
does not go of itself, and that all the more in such
an elegant and complicated establishment there had to
be some one in full and complete charge. And by the
glances with which Aleksef Kirillovitch took in the de-
tails of the table, and by the nods which he gave toward
the butler and by the way in which he offered Darya
Aleksandrovna the choice between botvinya and soup,
she understood that everything was done under the direct
superintendence of the master of the house. Anna had
nothing more to do with it than Veslovsky had. She
and Sviazhsky, the princess and Veslovsky, were only
guests, gayly and thoughtlessly taking advantage of
what was done for them.
Anna was khozya'ika, or mistress of the household,
only in the management of the conversation ; and this
conversation was very difficult at a small table among
guests belonging to such different spheres of life as the
superintendent and the architect, who were trying not to
be dazzled by such unwonted splendor, and who were
unused to taking part in a general conversation ; but
Anna went through with her task with her usual tact
and simplicity, and even with pleasure, as Darya Alek-
sandrovna noticed.
The conversation turned first on the way in which
Tushkievitch and Veslovsky had gone down alone to the
boat, and Tushkievitch began to speak of the recent
yacht-race under the auspices of the Petersburg yacht-
club. But Anna, taking advantage of the first pause,
quickly turned to the architect, in order to bring him
out of his silence.
" Nikolai' Ivanuitch was surprised," said she, referring
to Sviazhsky, " to see how the new building had grown
since he was here last. But I myself am here every
day, and every day I am surprised myself to see how
fast it progresses.
" It is VOL.
good to work with his excellency," said the
III. — II
iJ^a ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXIII
place."
" You mean divorce .■'" said Anna. " Do you know,
the only woman who came to see me in Petersburg was
Betsy Tverskaya ! Perhaps you know her. A u fond
cest la femme la plus depravh qui existe. She had a
xyo ANNA KARENINA
liaison with this Tushkievitch, deceiving her husband
in the most outrageous way .... but she told me that she
did not wish to know me, because my position was
illegal ! Don't think that I compare .... I know you.
dear heart.^ But I could not help remembering it.
Well, what did he say to you .-' "
" He said that he suffered both for you and for him-
self ; maybe you will say that it is egoism, but what an
honorable and noble egoism ! He wishes to make his
daughter legitimate, and to be your husband and with a
husband's rights."
"What wife, what slave, could be more of a slave
than I, in my position } " she interrupted angrily.
" The main reason that he wishes it is that you may
not suffer."
" This is impossible. Well ? "
" Well, to make your children legitimate, to give them
a name."
"What children.''" said Anna, not looking at Dolly,
but half-closing her eyes.
" Ani, and those that may come to you."
"Oh, he can be easy ; I shall not have any more."....
" How can you say that you won't have any more.-^"....
" Because I will not have any more ; " and, in spite of
her emotion, Anna smiled at the naive expression of
astonishment, of curiosity, and horror depicted on Dolly's
face. " After my illness the doctor told me...."
CHAPTER XXIV
" These two only I love, and the one excludes the
other. I cannot bring them together, and yet this is
the one thing I want. If this were not so, it would be all
the same, — all, all the same. It will end in .some way ;
but I cannot, I will not, talk about this. So do not
despise me, do not judge me. You in your purity
could never imagine what I suffer ! "
She sat down beside Dolly and, with a guilty expres-
sion in her eyes, took her hand.
" What do you think ? What do you think of me ?
Do not despise me ! I do not deserve that ; I am mis-
erably unhappy. If there is any one unhappy, it is I .... "
said she, and, turning away, she began to weep.
After Anna left her, Dolly said her prayers and went
to bed. She pitied Anna with all her soul while she
was talking with her ; but now she could not bring her-
self to think of her. Memories of home and her children
arose in her imagination with new and wonderful joy.
So dear and precious seemed this little world to her that
she decided that nothing would tempt her to stay longer
away from them, and that she would leave the next day.
Anna, meantime, returning to her dressing-room, took
a glass, and poured into it several drops of a mixture
containing chiefly morphine, and, having swallowed it,
she sat a little while motionless, then went with a calm
and joyous heart to her bedroom.
When she went into her sleeping-room, Vronsky
looked scrutinizingly into her face. He was trying to
discover some trace of the talk which he knew by the
length of her stay in Dolly's room she must have had
with her. But in her expression, which betrayed a cer-
tain repressed excitement, as if she were trying to con-
ceal something, he found nothing except the beauty to
which he was so accustomed, and which always intoxi-
cated him, and the consciousness of it and the desire
that it might still have its usual effect on him.
He did not like to ask her what they had been talk-
ing about, but hoped that she herself would tell him.
But she only said : —
" I am glad you like Dolly ; you do, don't you ? "
176 ANNA KARENINA
" Yes ! I 've known her for a long time. She 's a
very good woman, mais cxcessivcment terre a ten'e. But
still I am well pleased at her visit."
He gave Anna another questioning look, and took
her hand ; but she understood his look in another way,
and smiled.
fl
ANNA KARENINA 177
CHAPTER XXV
man."
CHAPTER XXVI
CHAPTER XXVII
CHAPTER XXVIII
" The devil take the letter of the law ! I insist on its
spirit. According to that they are genuine nobles, be-
lieve me."
" Your excellency, let us come, fine champagne ! "
Another group immediately pressed behind a noble
who was shouting something at the top of his voice ;
this was one of the three drunken nobles.
" I always advised Marya Semyonovna to let it on a
lease because she gets no profit out of it," a proprietor
was saying in a pleasant voice. This man had gray
whiskers and wore the uniform of a colonel on the old
general's staff. It was the same proprietor whom he had
once met at Sviazhsky's house. Levin immediately
recognized him. The proprietor also glanced at Levin,
and they greeted each other.
" This is very pleasant. How are you ? I remember
you very well. We met last year at Nikolaif Ivanovitch's,
at the marshal's."
" Well, how goes your farming ? " ^ asked Levin.
" Everything is going to rack and ruin," said the pro-
prietor, halting near Levin, and looking at him with a
submissive smile, but with an expression of calmness
and confidence that this was the natural order of things.
" But how does it happen that you are in our part of
the world .-*" he asked. " Did you come to take part in
owx coup d'etat f he went on, pronouncing the French
words with confidence, but with a bad accent.
" All Russia is assembled here, — chamberlains, if not
ministers."
He pointed to Stepan Arkadyevitch's imposing figure,
as in white trousers and chamberlain's uniform he strode
along next the general.
" I must confess to you," said Levin, " I don't under-
stand the significance of these noblemen's elections."
The old gentleman looked at him.
" Well ! what is there to understand .'* what signifi-
cance can they have ? It 's a decaying institution which
prolongs itself by the force of inertia. Look at all these
uniforms; they tell you this is an assemblage of justices
^ Khozyaistvo, everything connected with his estate.
ANNA KARENINA 195
down the trees in our parks and make money? " asked
Levin, reverting to the idea which had struck him.
" Just this ! because we guard the sacred fire, as you
say. Besides, that is not the business of the nobles.
And our work as nobles does not lie here, at these elec-
tions, but at home, each in his own place. It is a caste
instinct that tells us what is necessary or not necessary.
The muzhiks have theirs ; a good muzhik will persist
in hiring as much land as he can. No matter how bad
it is, he will work it just the same, — even without
profit."
" We are all alike," said Levin. " I am very glad to
ing. met you ! " he added, seeing Sviazhsky approach-
have
" Here we have met for the first time since we were
together at your house," said the proprietor to Svi-
azhsky. Yes,
" and we have been having a talk."
" And doubtless have been slandering the new order
of things .'' " said Sviazhsky, smiling.
" Something of the sort."
** One must free one's mind."
CHAPTER XXX
CHAPTER XXXI
The child was ill, and she had wished to come herself.
A. sick daughter, and this hostile tone !
Vronsky was impressed by the antithesis between the
jolly, careless company, and the moody, exacting love to
which he was obliged to return. But he was obliged to
go, and he left by the first train that would take him
home that night.
CHAPTER XXXII
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
a
ANNA KARENINA aj,t
friend, the critic, had gone, and there was nothing more
to talk with him about.
Levin and Pestsof spent the intermission in discuss-
ing the merits and defects of the Wagnerian tendencies
in music. Levin maintained that the mistake of Wag-
ner and all his followers consisted in transferring music
to the domain of an alien art, that poetry made the mis-
take when it tried to depict the features of the human
face, which it was the province of painting to do, and as
a concrete example of this kind of a mistake he adduced
the sculptor who should try to express in marble the
shades of poetic imagery rising round the figure of the
poet on the pedestal.
" These shades are so far from being shades in the
case of the sculptor, that they even rest on the steps,"
said Levin. This phrase pleased him, but he had a
lurking suspicion that he had once used this same
phrase before, and to Pestsof himself, and he felt
confused.
Pestsof argued that art is one, and that it can reach its
loftiest manifestations only by combining all its forms.
Levin could not listen to the second number on the
program. Pestsof, who was standing near him, kept
talking to him most of the time, criticizing it for its ex-
cessive, mawkish, affected simplicity, and comparing it
to the simplicity of the Pre-Raphaelites in painting.
On his way out, he met various acquaintances, with
whom he exchanged remarks on politics, music, and
other topics ; among others he saw Count Bohl, and the
call which he should have made on him came to mind.
" Well, go quickly," said Natalie, to whom he confided
this. " Perhaps the countess is not receiving. If so,
you will come and join me at the meeting. You will
have plenty of time."
132 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER VI
the meeting and the new piece and the lawsuit. But
apparently in consequence of his weariness and the
strain which he began to feel, he made a blunder in
speaking of a certain lawsuit, and this blunder he after-
ward remembered with annoyance. Speaking of the
recent punishment of a foreigner who had been tried in
Russia, and that it would have been irregular to punish
him by exile. Levin repeated what he had heard the
evening before in a conversation with a friend of his.
" I think that to send him abroad is just the same as to
punish a fish by throwing it into the water," said Levin.
Too late he remembered that this comparison which
he put forth to express his thought, though he had heard
his friend use it, was really taken from a fable by Krui-
lof , and that his friend had taken it from the feiiilleton
of a newspaper.
Returning home with his sister-in-law, and finding
Kitty well and happy. Levin went to the club.
CHAPTER VII
gone."
"Yes! I went away the same day We have just
been speaking of your trotter. It was a very fast
race."
" Yes, it was. Have n't you race-horses, too .-'"
" I ? No. My father had horses, and I know about
them."
" Where did you dine .-*" asked Stepan Arkadyevitch.
"At the second table, behind the columns."
" He has been loaded down with congratulations. It 's
very pretty .... a second imperial prize. I wish I could
only have the same luck at play as he does with horses.
238 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER Vni
" Here you are, and don't know what that means !
That is our club term. You know how eggs roll. Well,
when any one goes with a gait like that, he becomes a
shliupik. And so when any one of us goes stumbling
through the club, he becomes a shliupik. You laugh,
do you .'' but one has to look out else he finds himself
one. Do you know Prince Chechensky .^ " he asked;
and Levin saw by his face that he was going to tell
some ridiculous yarn.
" No, I don't know him."
"Well, no matter. Prince Chechensky is famous.
Well, that is neither here nor there. He 's always play-
ing billiards. Three years ago he wasn't among the
shliupiks, but was a great galliard ! He himself called
other people shliupiks. Only he came one time .... but
our Swiss — you know Vasili, our tall one.-' — he is a
great bonmotist. Prince Chechensky asks him, * Well,
Vasili, is any one here yet .-* have any shliupiks come } '
And Vasili answers, ' You are the third.' Now, brother !
how is that?"
The two men walked on, chatting, and greeting their
friends, and passed through all the rooms, — the main
room, where men accustomed to one another as partners
were playing cards for small stakes ; the divan-room,
where others were having games of chess, and Sergyef
Ivanovitch was talking with some one ; the billiard-room,
where, in the bay of the room, around a divan, a gay
party, among them Gagin, had gathered and were drink-
ing champagne. They glanced in also at the Infernal-
nay a, where, at the gambling-table, Yashvin, surrounded
by men betting, was already established. With hushed
voices, they entered the reading-room, where, under a
shaded lamp, a young man with a stern face was turn-
ing over the leaves of one journal after another, while
near by was a bald-headed general absorbed in reading.
They passed quietly into a room which the prince called
the Hall of the Wits,^ and there they found three gen-
tlemen talking politics.
" Prince, we 're all ready, if you please," said one
1 Umnaya Komnata, the intellectual room.
24.0 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER IX
" Oblonsky's
tous voice. carriage ! " cried the Swiss, in a porten-
The carriage came up, and the two friends got in.
Only as long as the carriage was still in the courtyard
did Levin continue to experience the feeling of clubbish
comfort, of satisfaction, and of indubitable decorum,
which had surrounded him. But as soon as the car-
riage rolled out on the street, the jolting over the un-
even pavement, the cries of an angry izvoshchik whom
they met, and the sight of the red sign of a low public
house and some shops lighted up, caused this impression
to fade away, and he began to think over what follies he
had committed, and to ask himself if he were doing right
in going to see Anna. What would Kitty say ? Stepan
Arkadyevitch, as if he had divined what was passing in
the mind of his companion, cut short his meditations.
"How glad I am," said he, "that you are going to
know her ! You know Dolly has been wishing it for a
long time. Lvof goes to her house, too. Though she
is my sister," continued Stepan Arkadyevitch, " I am
bold enough to say that she is a remarkable woman.
You will see it. Her position is very hard, especially
just now."
" Why do you say * especially now ' ? "
" We are negotiating with her husband for a divorce,
and he is willing ; but there are difficulties on account
of the son ; and this matter, which ought to have been
settled long ago, is dragging on now these three months.
As soon as the divorce is granted, she will marry Vronsky.
— How stupid it is, this old habit of dizziness, ' Isaiah re-
joice,' inwhich no one beheves, and which destroys the
happiness of people," exclaimed Stepan Arkadyevitch,
interrupting what he was saying. Then he went on,
" and then her position will become as regular as yours
or mine."
" Where does the difficulty lie ? "
" Akh ! it is a long and tiresome story ; everything is
ANNA KARENINA 243
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
■
ANNA KARENINA 251
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XHI
" What 's the matter ? " he asked, still only half awake.
" Kitty, what is it ? "
" Nothing," answered she, coming from behind the
screen with a candle in her hand, and smiling at him
with a peculiarly sweet and significant smile ; " I don't
feel quite well."
" What ! Is this the beginning ? Must we send ? "
exclaimed he in alarm, and he began to dress as quickly
as possible.
" No, no," said she, smiling, and holding his hand ;
" it 's nothing ; I did not feel quite well ; it 's all right
now."
Going back to bed, she put out the light, and lay
down again, keeping perfectly still, although her very
stillness and the way she, as it were, held her breath,
were suspicious, and still more so the expression of pe-
culiar tenderness and alertness with which, as she came
out from behind the screen, she said to him, " it 's noth-
ing "; still, he was so overcome by drowsiness that he
immediately went to sleep again.
It was only afterward that he realized the calmness
of her spirit, and appreciated all that was passing in
her dear, gentle heart as she lay thus motionless near
him, awaiting the most solemn moment of a woman's life.
About seven o'clock he was awakened by her hand
touching his shoulder and her low whisper. She appar-
ently hesitated between the fear of waking him and the
wish to speak to him.
" Kostia, don't be afraid, it's nothing; but I think....
Lizavyeta Petrovna had better be called."
The candle was again lighted. She was sitting on
the bed, holding the knitting on which she had been at
work during the last few days.
" Please don't be alarmed. I 'm not in the least
afraid," said she, seeing her husband's terrified face;
and she pressed his hand to her breast, then to her Ups.
Levin leaped from his bed, and, unconscious of him-
self, without taking his eyes off his wife for a moment,
hurried on his dressing-gown. It was necessary for
him to go, but he could npt tear himself away. Dearly
ANNA KARENINA 259
CHAPTER XIV
telegram
a roll. last evening ? " asked the doctor, biting into
" No ; but I 'm going," said Levin. " Will you come
in a quarter of an hour .''"
" Make it a half."
" On your
When honor
Levin got .-'"home, he found the princess at the
door, and they went to Kitty's room together. The
princess had tears in her eyes, and her hands trembled.
When she saw Levin, she threw her arms round him,
and kissed him.
"How is it, Lizavyeta Petrovna, dearie," ^ said she,
seizing the midwife's
with a radiant hand as
but solicitous face.she came to meet them
" It is going well," said she. " It would be well for
her to lie down. Try to persuade her. She would find
it easier."
Ever since Levin, on waking, had understood the
situation, he had made up his mind, without indulging
in anxious thought, or forebodings, crushing down all
his anxieties and feelings, firmly, without worrying his
wife, but, on the contrary, calming her and sustaining
her courage, that he would endure what was before
him. Not allowing himself even to think of what was
coming or how it might end, judging by answers to
his questions, how long it generally lasted. Levin in his
imagination prepared to have patience and hold his
heart in his hands for five hours, and this seemed to
him within the limit of possibihty. But when he re-
turned after his visit to the doctor's, and found Kitty
still suffering, again he cried more and more frequently,
" Lord, forgive us, and be merciful! " and he was afraid
that he could not endure it, so terrible was it to him ;
thus an hour went by.
And after this another hour passed, and a second, and
a third, and the five which he had set as the very ulti-
mate limit of his endurance ; and the situation was still
the same, and still he was enduring the suspense, because
there was nothing else to do except endure, thinking
^ Duskenka, little soul.
ANNA KARENINA 165
CHAPTER XV
before had not been, and' which with every right and
every responsibility would live, and propagate its kind.
" He lives, he lives ! Yes, it is a boy ! Don't be
worried," Levin heard Lizavyeta's voice saying, while
with a trembling hand she slapped the little one's back.
" Mamma, is it true ? " asked Kitty.
And the princess's sobs answered her.
And amid the silence, Hke an indubitable answer to
the young mother's questions, was heard a voice, abso-
lutely different from the subdued voices speaking in the
room. It was the bold, decided, imperious, almost im-
pertinent cry of the new human being, which had come
whence no one knew.
Just before, if Levin had been told that Kitty was
dead, that he himself had died with her, and that their
children were angels, and that they were all in the pres-
ence of God, he would not have been surprised. And
now that he had come back to reality, it took a prodig-
ious effort of thought to comprehend that his wife was
alive, that she was doing well, and that this desperately
screeching creature was his son. Kitty was saved, her
suffering was passed, and he was inexpressibly happy.
That he could understand, and it made him happy ; but
the child ! Whence.-' Why.? What was it .-'.... He could
not wont himself to the thought of it. It seemed to him
somehow too much, too overwhelming ; and it was long
before he became accustomed to it.
CHAPTER XVI
CHAPTER XVII
CHAPTER XVIII
" Now, I have yet one more thing to talk over with
you ; and you know what it is about, — Anna," said
Stepan Arkadyevitch, after a moment's silence, and
shaking off these disagreeable memories.
When Oblonsky spoke Anna's name, Karenin's face
entirely changed ; in place of its former vivacity it took
on an expression of corpse-like rigidity and weariness.
"What more do you want of me.'"' said he, turning
about on his arm-chair, and shutting his pince-nez.
" A decision .... some sort of a decision, Aleksei Alek-
sandrovitch. I address you, not as.... " he was going to
say " a deceived husband," but fearing it might hurt his
cause he stopped, and substituted with little appropriate-
ness, "not as a statesman, but simply as a man, and a good
man and a Christian. You ought to have pity on her."
1 " Builo dyelo do-ZAida i ya dozhidaAsA."
ANNA KARENINA 279
CHAPTER XX
CHAPTER XXI
CHAPTER XXII
^ The person who came in last .... the one who is questioning .... let him
go away.
2 You will excuse me, but you understand .... come back at ten o'clock,
or, still better, to-morrow.
ANNA KARENINA 297
At the French Theater, which he reached in time for
the last act, and afterward over his champagne at the
the Tartars', Stepan Arkadyevitch gradually began to
breathe more freely in the familiar atmosphere. Never-
theless, all that evening he was very far from being
himself.
When he returned to the house of Piotr Oblonsky,
where he made his home in Petersburg, he found a note
from Betsy. She wrote him that she was very desirous
of finishing their talk, and urged him to call the next
day. He had hardly finished reading this note and
making up a face at it, when heavy shuffling steps were
heard down-stairs as of men lifting some heavy object.
Stepan Arkadyevitch went out to see what it was. It
was the rejuvenated Piotr Oblonsky, who was so tipsy that
he could not walk up-stairs ; but when he caught sight of
Stepan Arkadyevitch, he ordered his attendants to put
him on his feet, and, clinging to Stepan Arkadyevitch's
arm, he managed to reach his room, where he began to
relate how he had spent the evening, till he fell asleep.
Stepan Arkadyevitch himself was in such a weak
state of mind, that, contrary to his custom, he did not
fall asleep quickly. What he had heard and seen dur-
ing the day was disgusting. But more disgusting than
anything else was the recollection of the evening at the
Countess Lidia Ivanovna's.
The next day he received from Aleksei Aleksandro-
vitch a flat refusal in the matter of the divorce, and
knew that this decision was based on the words which
the Frenchman had uttered during his slumber, real or
feigned.
CHAPTER XXni
CHAPTER XXIV
"Well, did you have a gay time .-'" asked Anna, going
to meet him with an apologetic and affectionate look on
her face.
"As such things usually are," answered he, noticing
at once by her face that she was in one of her best
moods. He was already accustomed to such metamor-
phoses, and this time he was particularly glad, because
he himself was in his happiest frame of mind. " What
do I see .'' This is good," he added, pointing to the
trunks in the entry.
" Yes, we must go. I went out to walk to-day, and it
was so good that I longed to get back to the country.
There 's nothing to keep you here, is there ? "
302 ANNA KARENINA
I
ANNA KARENINA 303
pressing the anger which was rising within him ; " and
I am very sorry if you do not respect...."
" Respect ! That was invented to cover up the lack
of love. If you don't love me any more, it would be
better and more honorable to say so."
" No ! this is becoming intolerable," cried the count,
suddenly leaping from his chair ; and, standing in front
of her, speaking in measured tones : " Anna," he asked,
" why do you try my patience so ? " and she could see
how he was holding back the bitter words that were
ready to escape him. " It has its limits."
" What do you mean by that ? " she cried, looking
with terror at the unconcealed expression of hate on his
whole face, and especially in his fierce, cruel eyes.
" I mean...." he began. Then he stopped. "I have
a right to demand what you wish of me."
" What can I wish .-' I can only wish that you do not
abandon me, as you are thinking of doing," she said,
comprehending all that he left unsaid. " Everything
else is secondary. I wish to be loved ; but love is gone.
is over."
AllShe turned toward the door.
" Stop ! sto-op ! " said Vronsky, still darkly frowning,
but holding her by the arm. " What is the trouble .'' I
said that it is necessary to postpone our starting for
three days, and you answer by saying that I lie and am
dishonorable."
" Yes ; and I repeat it that a man who throws it into
my face that he has sacrificed everything for me," said
she, alluding to a former quarrel, " is worse than dis-
honorable he
: is heartless."
" That settles it ; my patience is at an end," cried
Vronsky, quickly dropping her hand.
" He hates me; that is certain," she thought, as she
went from the room in silence with tottering steps.
" He loves some other woman ; that is more certain
still," she said to herself, as she reached her room. " I
wish to be loved, but love is gone. All is over." She
repeated the words that she had said, — "I must put an
end to it."
ANNA KARENINA 305
"But herhow?"
before mirror.she asked herself, sinking into a chair
The most heterogeneous thoughts crowded upon her.
Where should she go .'' To her aunt, who had brought
her up .'' To Dolly .'' or simply go abroad alone by her-
self .'' What was he doing alone in his study ? Would
the rupture be final, or was there a possibility of recon-
ciliation .''How would Alekseif Aleksandrovitch look
upon it ? and what would her former acquaintances in
Petersburg say ? Many other ideas of what would hap-
pen came into her mind, but she could not take any
satisfactory account of them. A vague idea came into
her mind, and awakened some interest, but she could
not express it. Thinking once more of Alekseif Alek-
sandrovitch, she recalled a phrase which she had used
after her illness, and the feeling that clung to her, —
" Why did n't I die .''" and immediately the words awoke
the feeling which they had at that time expressed. Yes,
that was the idea which alone settled everything.
" Death, yes, that is the only way of escape. My
terrible shame, and the dishonor which I have brought
on Aleksei Aleksandrovitch and Serozha, all will be
wiped away by my death. If I die, he will repent for
me then ; he will be sorry, he will love me, he will suffer
for me."
A smile of pity for herself came over her face as she
kept mechanically taking off and putting on the rings
of her left hand, and with vivid imagination she pictured
how he would feel after she was dead.
Approaching steps — his steps — caught her ears.
She affected to be busily engaged in taking off her
rings, and did not turn her head.
He came to her, and, taking her hand, said tenderly :
" Anna, we will go day after to-morrow if you wish. I
am ready for anything Well .''" said he, waiting.
She did not speak.
" What do you say .-'" he asked.
" You yourself know," said she ; and then, unable
to control herself longer, she burst into tears. " Leave
me, leaveVOL.me," III. — 20
she murmured through her sobs. " I
3o6 ANNA KARENINA
am going away to-morrow I will do more. What am
I ? A lost woman, a millstone about your neck. I
don't want to torment you. I will set you free. You
do not love me; you love another."
Vronsky begged her to be calm. He swore there
was not the slightest ground for her jealousy, and that
he had never ceased and never should cease to love her ;
that he loved her more than ever.
" Anna, why torture yourself and me so ? " he asked,
as he kissed her hand. His face expressed the deepest
tenderness ; and it seemed to her that her ears caught
the sound of tears in his voice, and that she felt their
moisture on her hand.
Passing suddenly from jealousy to the most passionate
tenderness, she covered his head, his neck, his hands,
with kisses.
CHAPTER XXV
joining in
smiling the But
face. conversation,
as she metandhislooking
glance ather
Anna's
face
suddenly assumed a set and cold expression, as much
as to say to him : " I have not forgotten. It 's still the
same."
" And have n't you ever been in love .-'" she asked of
Yashvin.
" Oh, Lord ! plenty of times. Only remember, one
may sit down to cards, but must be able to get up when
the time comes for a rendezvous ; but I interest myself
in love-affairs in such a way that I need not be late to
play my hand in the evening. And so I always arrange
matters."
" You misunderstand ; I did not ask about that, but
about actual...." She wanted to say He Isingfors, hut
she did not like to use a word which Vronsky had just
spoken.
Voitof came at this moment to see about a horse
which he had bought ; Anna got up and left the room.
Before he left the house, Vronsky went to her room.
She pretended to look for something on the table, but
then, being ashamed of this dissimulation, she looked
him straight in the face. She asked him coolly in
French, " What do you want .?"
"The certificate for Gambetta; I have sold him," an-
swered Vronsky, in a tone which said louder than words,
" I have not time for explanations, nor would they lead
to anything."
** I 'm not to blame," thought he ; "if she wants to
punish herself, tant pis pour elle ."
However, as he left the room he thought she said
something to him, and his heart was suddenly touched
with compassion for her,
" What is it, Anna .? " he asked.
" I said nothing," she answered coldly and calmly.
"Nothing! tant pis," he said again to himself. On
his way out, as he passed a mirror, he caught sight in
it of her pale face and trembling lips. He was tempted
to go back and say some comforting words to her, but
he was already too far on his way. He passed the
312 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER XXVI
CHAPTER XXVII
he "took
Where
his do
seatyouon wish to go .''" asked Piotr, just before
the box.
"To Znamenko, to the Oblonskys'."
CHAPTER XXVIII
ing. And, seeing two happy young girls going by, she
fell to wondering why they were smiling at each other.
" Probably
and wretchedabout
it is love.The boulevards
They don't andknow how sad !
the children
There are three little boys, playing horse. Serozha !
my little Serozha. I shall lose all. I shall never have
him again Well, if he does not come back, all is
indeed lost. Perhaps he missed the train, and has
already reached home. Do I wish to humiliate myself
still more.-*" she said, reproaching herself for her weak-
ness. "No, I 'm going to Dolly's. I shall say to her,
' I am unhappy, I am suffering ; I deserve it ; but I am
so unhappy, help me ! * Oh, these horses, this calash !
how I hate to use them ! they are his. I will never see
them again ! "
While thinking over what she should say to Dolly, and
deliberately torturing her heart, she reached the house,
and went up the steps.
" Is there any one here } " she asked, in the anteroom.
" Katerina Aleksandrovna Levina," answered the
servant.
** Kitty, the same Kitty with whom Vronsky was once
in love," thought Anna ; " and he thinks of her with
love, and is sorry that he did not marry her; and he
thinks of me with hate, and is sorry that he ever met
me.
When Anna arrived, the two sisters were talking over
the subject of feeding babies. Dolly went alone to the
drawing-room to receive the guest that had come to
disturb their conversation.
" You have n't gone away yet ? I was just going to
your house," said Dolly, " I have a letter from Stiva
to-day."
"We had a despatch," answered Anna, glancing round
to see if Kitty was coming.
"He writes that he does not understand what AlekseK
Aleksandrovitch requires, but that he will not come away
till he has a definite answer."
" I thought you had company. May I read the
"
letter .?VOL. III. — 21
321 ANNA KARENINA
When Kitty heard that Anna was there, she had not
wished to appear ; but Dolly had persuaded her. Con-
trolling her repugnance, she went to the parlor, and,
blushing as she approached Anna, she held out her
hand.
" I am very glad," said she, in a trembling voice.
Kitty was confused by the struggle between her dis-
like of this wicked" woman and her desire to be polite
to her ; but, as soon as she saw Anna's beautiful, attrac-
tive face, all her unfriendliness vanished.
" I should not have been surprised if you had refused
to see me; I am used to everything," said Anna. "You
have been very ill; yes, you have changed."
Kitty felt that Anna looked at her with dislike, and
she attributed her unfriendliness to the awkward position
in which she stood in regard to herself, having once been
her especial favorite. Her heart was filled with com-
passion.
They talked of Kitty's illness, about her baby, and of
Stiva ; but evidently nothing interested Anna.
she" rose.
I came to bid you good-by," she said to Dolly, as
CHAPTER XXIX
CHAPTER XXX
CHAPTER XXXI
man Mikhail, rosy and gay in his elegant blue livery and
watch-chain, immensely proud that he had fulfilled his
commission so well, came to her and handed her a
note.
Anna broke the seal, and her heart stood still even
before she had read the carelessly written lines : —
I am very sorry that your note did not find me in Moscow.
I shall return at ten o'clock.
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
" Then you '11 see my wife. I have written her, but
you '11 see her before she gets my letter. Please tell her
that you met me, and everything is a// rigJit, she will
understand ; and be so good as to tell her, too, that I got
my place as member of the Commission of .... Well, she
knows what that is, you know, les p elites mis^res de la
vie hiimaine,'' said he, turning to the princess, as if in
apology. " Miagkai'a, not Liza, but Bibiche, sends a
thousand guns and twelve hospital nurses. Did I tell
you }"
" Yes ; I heard about it," answered Koznuishef, coldly.
" But what a pity you are going away," replied Ste-
pan Arkadyevitch. " We give a farewell dinner to-mor-
row to two volunteers, — at Dimer's, — Bartnyansky of
Petersburg, and our Veslovsky — Grisha. Both are
going. Veslovsky is just married. He 's a fine lad.
Isn't it so, princess .? " he added, addressing the lady.
The princess did not reply, but looked at Koznuishef.
The fact that the princess and Sergyef Ivanovitch evi-
dently wanted to get rid of him did not in the least dis-
concert Stepan Arkadyevitch. Smiling, he glanced now
at the princess's hat plume, now off to one side or the
other as if searching for a new subject ; and, as he saw
a lady going by with a subscription-box, he beckoned
to her, and handed her a five-ruble note.
" I can't bear to see these subscription-boxes pass by
me, now that I have ready money," he said. "What
splendid news there is ! Hurrah for the Montenegrins ! "
" What 's that you say ? " he cried, when the princess
told him that Vronsky was going by the first train. For
an instant Stepan Arkadyevitch's face grew sad, but the
next moment, slightly limping with both feet, and stroking
his side-whiskers, he went off to the room where Vronsky
was. He had already entirely forgotten the tears he had
shed
hero and over anhisoldsister'sfriend.grave, and saw in Vronsky only a
"One must do him justice, in spite of his faults," said
the princess to Sergyef Ivanovitch, when Oblonsky was
gone. " He has the true Russian, the Slavic, nature.
But I am afraid it will be disagreeable to the count
344 ANNA KARENINA
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
wretched."
" It is not for us to judge her, countess," replied
Sergyeif Ivanovitch, with a sigh. " But I can imagine
what you have suffered."
" Akh ! Don't speak of it ! My son was with me at
my country place. A note was brought him. He an-
swered immediately. We did not know at all that she
was at the station. That evening I had just gone to my
room, and my Mary told me that a lady had thrown her-
self under the train. I felt something like a shock. I
understood instantly what had happened; I knew it was
she. My first words were, ' Let no one tell the count.'
But they had just told him. His coachman was at the
station when it happened, and saw it all. I ran to my
son's room. He was beside himself ; it was terrible to
see him. Without speaking one word, he left the
house ; and what he found, I do not know ; but they
brought him back like one dead. I should never have
known
Then hehim. became ^Prostration complete,'Akh the! What
almost insane doctor cansaid.
be
said .'*" cried the countess, waving her hands. " It was
J
a terrible time. No; let people say what they will,
ANNA KARENINA 349
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
she"Yes,
smiled.Kostia is an unbeliever;" and, as she did so,
" Yes, he is an unbeliever, but I 'd far liefer he should
always be one than a person like Madame Stahl, or as I
wanted to be when I was abroad. At any rate, he will
never be hypocritical." And a recent example of his
goodness recurred vividly to her memory.
Several weeks before, Stepan Arkadyevitch had writ-
ten Dolly a letter of repentance. He begged her to save
his honor by selling her property to pay his debts.
Dolly was in despair. She hated her husband, despised
him ; and at first she made up her mind to refuse his
request, and apply for a divorce ; but afterward she de-
cided to sell a part of her estate. Kitty, with an involun-
tary smile of emotion, recalled her husband's confusion,
his various awkward attempts to find a way of helping
Dolly, and how, at last, he came to the conclusion that
the only way to accompHsh it without wounding her was
to make over to Dolly their part of this estate.
" How can he be without faith, when he has such a
warm heart, and is afraid to grieve even a child.'' He
never thinks of himself — always of others. Sergyef
Ivanovitch finds it perfectly natural to consider him his
business manager; so does his sister. Dolly and her
children have no one else but him to lean upon. He is
always sacrificing his time to the peasants, who come to
consult him every day.
"Yes ; you cannot do better than to try to be like your
father," she murmured, touching her lips to her son's
cheek, before laying him into the nurse's arms.
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
the term " love " for that which this philosopher calls
" will," and this new philosophy consoled him for a few
days while he clung to it. But it also proved unsatis-
factory when he regarded it from the standpoint of
practical life ; then it seemed to be the thin muslin with-
out warmth as a dress.
Sergyef Ivanovitch advised him to read Khomyakof 's ^
theological writings : and though he was at first repelled
by the excessive affectation of the author's style, and his
strong polemic tendency, he was struck by their teach-
ings regarding the Church ; he was struck also by the
development of the following thought : —
" Man when alone cannot attain the knowledge of
theological truths. The true light is kept for a com-
munion of souls who are filled with the same love ; that
is, for the Church."
He was delighted with the thought : How much easier
it is to accept the Church, which united with it all believ-
ing people and was endowed with holiness and infallibil-
ity, since it had God for its head, — to accept its teachings
as to Creation, the Fall, and Redemption, and through
it to reach God, — than to begin with God, a far-off,
mysterious God, the Creation, and the rest of it.
But, as he read, after Khomyakof, a history of the
Church by a Catholic writer, and the history of the
Church by an Orthodox writer, and perceived that
the Orthodox Greek Church and the Roman Catholic
Church, both of them in their very essence infallible,
were antagonistic, he saw that he had been deluded by
Khomyakof 's church-teachings ; and this edifice also
fell into dust, like the constructions of philosophy.
During this whole spring he was not himself, and
passed hours of misery.
" I cannot live without knowing what I am, and why
1 Aleksel Stepanovitch Khomyakof was born in 1804 ; after serving in
the Guard and taking active part in the Turkish campaign, he retired to
private life. He wrote several romantic tragedies in verse, also a number
of poems of Panslavonic tendencies ; he is chiefly remembered as a theo-
logical writer, and some of his works have been translated into French and
even English. In 1858 he was president of the Moscow Society of the
Friends of Russian Literature. He died in i860. — Ed.
362 ANNA KARENINA
I exist. Since I cannot reach this knowledge, Ufe 13
impossible," said Levin to himself.
" In the infinitude of time, in the infinitude of matter,
in the infinitude of space, an organic cell is formed,
exists for a moment, and bursts. That cell is — I."
This was a cruel lie ; but it was the sole, the supreme,
result of the labor of the human mind for centuries.
It was the final creed on which were founded the latest
researches of the scientific spirit ; it was the dominant
conviction ; and Levin, without knowing exactly why,
simply because this theory seemed to him the clearest,
was involuntarily held by it.
But this conclusion was not merely a lie, it was the
cruel jest of some evil spirit, — cruel, inimical, to which
it was impossible to submit.
To get away from it was a duty ; deliverance from it
was in the power of every one, and the one means of
deliverance was — death.
And Levin, the happy father of a family, a man in
perfect health, was sometimes so tempted to commit
suicide, that he hid ropes from sight, lest he should
hang himself, and feared to go out with his gun, lest he
should shoot himself.
But Levin did not hang himself, or shoot himself, but
lived and struggled on.
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
none of us, can live in any other way. But Feodor says,
too, that it is wrong to live for the belly, but that we
should live for truth, for God ; and I know what that
means as well. I, and millions of men, muzhiks, and
sages who have thought and written on the subject, or
in their obscure language have talked about it, in the
past and in the present, — we are in accord on one
point ;• and that is, that we should live for ' the good.'
The only knowledge that I and all men possess that
is clear, indubitable, absolute, is here. We have not
reached it by reason. Reason excludes it, for it has
neither cause nor effect. 'The good,' if it had a cause,
would cease to be the good ; if it had an effect, — a re-
ward, — it would cease to be the good. The good must
be outside of the chain of cause and effect. And I
know this, and we all know it. Can there be greater
miracle than this ?
" Have I really found the solution of my doubts }
Shall I cease to suffer .''" Levin asked himself as he
followed the dusty road, insensible to weariness and
heat, and feeling that his long travail was at an end.
The sensation was so delightful, that he could not be-
lieve that it was true. He choked with emotion ; his
strength failed him ; and he left the highroad, and went
into the woods, and sat down under the shadow of
an aspen on the unmown grass. ' He uncovered his
moist forehead, and stretched himself out on the succu-
lent wood-grass, and leaned his head on his hand.
" Yes, I must reflect and consider," he thought, look-
ing attentively at the untrodden grass in front of him,
and watching the movements of an earth-beetle crawl-
ing up the stalk of couch-grass, and stopped by a leaf.
" What discovery have I made .-' " he said to himself,
removing the leaf from the beetle's way, and bending
down another stalk of couch-grass to help the beetle on.
** What makes me so happy } What discovery have I
made ?
" I have made no discovery. I have only opened my
eyes to what I already know. I have learned to recog-
nize that power which formerly gave me life, and gives
ANNA KARENINA 371
me
I havelife comeagain toto-day. I have
know my freed myself* from error.
master.
" I used to say that there was going on in my body,
in the body of this grass, in the body of this beetle," —
the beetle did not want to go to the other stalk, but
spread its wings, and flew away, — " incessant change
of matter, in conformity to certain physical, chemical,
and physiological laws ; and in all of us, together with
the aspens and the clouds, and the nebulae, there was
evolution. Evolution from what .'' into what ? Endless
evolution and conflict. — But was conflict with the Infi-
nite possible .'' And I was surprised to find nothing
along this line, in spite of my best efforts, which could
reveal to me the meaning of my life, my motives, my
longings. But the consciousness that there is a mean-
ing is, nevertheless, so strong and clear, that it forms
the very foundation of my existence ; and I marveled
and rejoiced when the muzhik said, 'To live for God,
for the soul.'
" Now I can say that I know the meaning of life : it
is to live for God, for my own soul. And this meaning,
in spite of its clearness, is mysterious and miraculous.
And such is the meaning of all existence. Yes, there
is pride," said he to himself, turning over on his stomach
and beginning to tie into a knot the stalks of grass,
while trying not to break them. ** Not only pride of
intellect, but the stupidity of intellect. Yes, it is the
wickedness of intellect," he repeated.
He succinctly went over in memory the course of his
thought for the last two years, from the day when the
idea of death struck him, on seeing his beloved brother
hopelessly sick.
Then he had clearly resolved that, since man had no
other prospect than suffering, death, and eternal oblivion,
he must either commit suicide, or find the explanation
of the problem of existence, and in such manner as to
see in it something more than the cruel irony of a malevo-
lent spirit.
But he had not done either, but continued to live, to
think, and to feel. He had married, and had experienced
372 ANNA KARENINA
new derjoys,
on the wh'ich
meaning madeof him
Hfe. happy when he did not pon-
What did this mean ? It meant that he was thinking
badly, and living well. Without knowing it, he had been
sustained by those spiritual verities which he had sucked
in with his mother's milk, and he indulged in thought,
not only now not recognizing those truths, but even stren-
uously avoiding them. Now it was clear to him that he
could live only through the blessed influence of the faith
in which he had been taught.
" What should I have been, how should I have lived,
if I had not absorbed these behefs.... if I had not known
that I must live for God, and not for the satisfaction of
my desires .-* I should have been a thief, a liar, a mur-
derer. Nothing of what seems the chief joy of my life
would have had any existence for me."
And, though he made the most strenuous efforts of his
imagination, he could not picture to himself what kind
of a wild creature he might have been, if he had not
really known the aim of his existence.
" I was in search of an answer to my question ; thought
could not give it, for the problem was too lofty. Life
itself, with the innate knowledge of good and evil, alone
could give me an answer. And this knowledge I did
not acquire. It was given to me, like all the rest ; given,
I could not know where to get it. Did I get it from
reason } But would reason ever have proved to me that
I ought to love my neighbor, instead of choking him }
I was taught it in my childhood ; but I believed it gladly,
because it was already existent in my soul. Reason dis-
covered the struggle for existence, — that law which
demands the overthrow of every obstacle in the way of
our desires. That is the result of reason ; but reason
has nothing to do with loving our neighbor."
CHAPTER XIII
Levin remembered a recent scene between Dolly and
her children. The children had been left alone, and had
amused themselves by making raspberry jam over a can-
ANNA KARENINA 373
CHAPTER XIV
Levin looked away, and saw the herd, and his one-
horse telyega and his coachman, who approached the
herd of cattle, and began to talk to the herdsman. Then
he heard the sound of wheels and the neighing of the
horse ; but he was so occupied with his thoughts that he
did not think why it was that his coachman was coming
for him.
He only realized it when the coachman, while still
some distance off, cried: —
"The mistress sent for you. Your brother and an-
other barin have come."
Levin got in at once, and took the reins.
As if awakened from sleep, it was long before he
could collect his thoughts. He looked at the well-fed
horse, and at the spot on his neck where the harness
rubbed; and he looked at Ivan, the coachman, sitting
beside him ; and he thought of how he had been expect-
376 ANNA KARENINA
ing his brother, and that his wife was probably troubled
because he was gone so long, and he tried to guess who
the unknown guest who had come with his brother might
be. And his brother and his wife and the unknown guest
now seemed to him different from what they had been
before. He felt that henceforth all his relations with
these friends would be more pleasant than they had been.
" Now there shall be no more of that coldness, such
as there used to be, between my brother and me .... no
more disputes. Nor will Kitty and I quarrel any more ;
and whoever my guest is I shall be polite to him, and
kind to the servants and to Ivan .... all will be dif-
ferent."
And holding in his good horse, which was whinnying
with impatience and pleading for permission to show his
paces, Levin kept looking at Ivan, who was sitting next
him, not knowing what to do with his idle hands, and
constantly pulling down his shirt, which the wind tugged
at ; and in his attempt to find a pretext for beginning a
conversation with the man, he thought of saying that
the horse's girth was buckled up too tightly, but then
this seemed like censuring him, and he wanted to say
something pleasant.
"You had better turn to the right and avoid that
stump,"
reins. said the coachman, taking hold of one of the
CHAPTER XV
CHAPTER XVI
CHAPTER XVII
she smiled timidly from under her hat, which had lost
its shape in the rain.
" There now, are n't you ashamed ? I can't understand
how you could do such a careless thing," he began, in
his vexation scolding his wife.
" Goodness,^ it was not my fault. We were just start-
ing to go when he began to be restless. We had to
change him. We were just ...." Kitty said, trying to
defend herself.
Mitya was safe, dry, and still soundly sleeping.
" Well ! God be thanked ! I don't know what I 'm
saying."
They hastily picked up the wet diapers, the nurse took
the baby, and Levin, ashamed of his vexation, gave his
arm to his wife, and led her away, pressing her hand
gently.
CHAPTER XVIII
They took the baby from the water, wiped him, and,
after he had expressed his disapprobation with a pierc-
ing scream, they gave him to his mother.
" Well, I am very glad to see that you begin to love
him," said Kitty, as she sat down in a comfortable seat,
with the child at her breast. " I am very glad. It
really troubled me when you said you had n't any feel-
ing for him."
" No ! did I say that I had no feeling for him ? I
only said that I was disappointed."
" How were you disappointed .-' "
" I was n't disappointed in him, but in the feeling
that he would arouse. I expected more. I expected .as
a surprise some new and pleasant feeling ; and instead
of that, it was pity, disgust."
She listened to him as she put on her slender fingers
the rings which she had taken off while bathing the
baby.
"And more of fear and pity than of satisfaction. I
never knew until to-day, after the storm, how I loved
him."
Kitty smiled with radiant joy.
so "was
WereI. you
But very much more
it seems afraidterrible
? " sheto asked.
me now "when
And
the danger is all past. I shall go and look at the
oak to-morrow. How nice Katavasof is ! Well, the
whole day has been so pleasant. You are so delightful
with your brother when you want to be Well, go to
them. It is always hot and stifling here after the
bath."
CHAPTER XIX
THE END
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