ANNA KARENINA
PART 25
Chapter 4
The
personal matter that absorbed Levin during his conversation with his brother
was this. Once in a previous year he had gone to look at the mowing, and being
made very angry by the bailiff he had recourse to his favourite means for
regaining his temper,—he took a scythe from a peasant and began mowing.
He liked
the work so much that he had several times tried his hand at mowing since. He
had cut the whole of the meadow in front of his house, and this year ever since
the early spring he had cherished a plan for mowing for whole days together
with the peasants. Ever since his brother’s arrival, he had been in doubt
whether to mow or not. He was loath to leave his brother alone all day long,
and he was afraid his brother would laugh at him about it. But as he drove into
the meadow, and recalled the sensations of mowing, he came near deciding that
he would go mowing. After the irritating discussion with his brother, he
pondered over this intention again.
“I must
have physical exercise, or my temper’ll certainly be ruined,” he thought, and
he determined he would go mowing, however awkward he might feel about it with
his brother or the peasants.
Towards
evening Konstantin Levin went to his counting house, gave directions as to the
work to be done, and sent about the village to summon the mowers for the
morrow, to cut the hay in Kalinov meadow, the largest and best of his grass
lands.
“And send
my scythe, please, to Tit, for him to set it, and bring it round tomorrow. I shall
maybe do some mowing myself too,” he said, trying not to be embarrassed.
The
bailiff smiled and said: “Yes, sir.”
At tea the
same evening Levin said to his brother:
“I fancy
the fine weather will last. Tomorrow I shall start mowing.”
“I’m so fond
of that form of field labour,” said Sergey Ivanovitch.
“I’m
awfully fond of it. I sometimes mow myself with the peasants, and tomorrow I
want to try mowing the whole day.”
Sergey
Ivanovitch lifted his head, and looked with interest at his brother.
“How do
you mean? Just like one of the peasants, all day long?”
“Yes, it’s
very pleasant,” said Levin.
“It’s
splendid as exercise, only you’ll hardly be able to stand it,” said Sergey
Ivanovitch, without a shade of irony.
“I’ve
tried it. It’s hard work at first, but you get into it. I dare say I shall
manage to keep it up....”
“Really!
what an idea! But tell me, how do the peasants look at it? I suppose they laugh
in their sleeves at their master’s being such a queer fish?”
“No, I
don’t think so; but it’s so delightful, and at the same time such hard work,
that one has no time to think about it.”
“But how
will you do about dining with them? To send you a bottle of Lafitte and roast
turkey out there would be a little awkward.”
“No, I’ll
simply come home at the time of their noonday rest.”
Next
morning Konstantin Levin got up earlier than usual, but he was detained giving
directions on the farm, and when he reached the mowing grass the mowers were
already at their second row.
From the
uplands he could get a view of the shaded cut part of the meadow below, with
its grayish ridges of cut grass, and the black heaps of coats, taken off by the
mowers at the place from which they had started cutting.
Gradually,
as he rode towards the meadow, the peasants came into sight, some in coats,
some in their shirts mowing, one behind another in a long string, swinging
their scythes differently. He counted forty-two of them.
They were
mowing slowly over the uneven, low-lying parts of the meadow, where there had
been an old dam. Levin recognized some of his own men. Here was old Yermil in a
very long white smock, bending forward to swing a scythe; there was a young
fellow, Vaska, who had been a coachman of Levin’s, taking every row with a wide
sweep. Here, too, was Tit, Levin’s preceptor in the art of mowing, a thin
little peasant. He was in front of all, and cut his wide row without bending,
as though playing with the scythe.
Levin got
off his mare, and fastening her up by the roadside went to meet Tit, who took a
second scythe out of a bush and gave it to him.
“It’s
ready, sir; it’s like a razor, cuts of itself,” said Tit, taking off his cap
with a smile and giving him the scythe.
Levin took
the scythe, and began trying it. As they finished their rows, the mowers, hot
and good-humoured, came out into the road one after another, and, laughing a
little, greeted the master. They all stared at him, but no one made any remark,
till a tall old man, with a wrinkled, beardless face, wearing a short sheepskin
jacket, came out into the road and accosted him.
“Look’ee
now, master, once take hold of the rope there’s no letting it go!” he said, and
Levin heard smothered laughter among the mowers.
“I’ll try
not to let it go,” he said, taking his stand behind Tit, and waiting for the
time to begin.
“Mind’ee,”
repeated the old man.
Tit made
room, and Levin started behind him. The grass was short close to the road, and
Levin, who had not done any mowing for a long while, and was disconcerted by
the eyes fastened upon him, cut badly for the first moments, though he swung
his scythe vigorously. Behind him he heard voices:
“It’s not
set right; handle’s too high; see how he has to stoop to it,” said one.
“Press
more on the heel,” said another.
“Never
mind, he’ll get on all right,” the old man resumed.
“He’s made
a start.... You swing it too wide, you’ll tire yourself out.... The master,
sure, does his best for himself! But see the grass missed out! For such work us
fellows would catch it!”
The grass
became softer, and Levin, listening without answering, followed Tit, trying to
do the best he could. They moved a hundred paces. Tit kept moving on, without
stopping, not showing the slightest weariness, but Levin was already beginning
to be afraid he would not be able to keep it up: he was so tired.
He felt as
he swung his scythe that he was at the very end of his strength, and was making
up his mind to ask Tit to stop. But at that very moment Tit stopped of his own
accord, and stooping down picked up some grass, rubbed his scythe, and began
whetting it. Levin straightened himself, and drawing a deep breath looked
round. Behind him came a peasant, and he too was evidently tired, for he
stopped at once without waiting to mow up to Levin, and began whetting his
scythe. Tit sharpened his scythe and Levin’s, and they went on. The next time it
was just the same. Tit moved on with sweep after sweep of his scythe, not
stopping nor showing signs of weariness. Levin followed him, trying not to get
left behind, and he found it harder and harder: the moment came when he felt he
had no strength left, but at that very moment Tit stopped and whetted the
scythes.
So they
mowed the first row. And this long row seemed particularly hard work to Levin;
but when the end was reached and Tit, shouldering his scythe, began with
deliberate stride returning on the tracks left by his heels in the cut grass,
and Levin walked back in the same way over the space he had cut, in spite of
the sweat that ran in streams over his face and fell in drops down his nose,
and drenched his back as though he had been soaked in water, he felt very
happy. What delighted him particularly was that now he knew he would be able to
hold out.
His
pleasure was only disturbed by his row not being well cut. “I will swing less
with my arm and more with my whole body,” he thought, comparing Tit’s row,
which looked as if it had been cut with a line, with his own unevenly and
irregularly lying grass.
The first
row, as Levin noticed, Tit had mowed specially quickly, probably wishing to put
his master to the test, and the row happened to be a long one. The next rows
were easier, but still Levin had to strain every nerve not to drop behind the
peasants.
He thought
of nothing, wished for nothing, but not to be left behind the peasants, and to
do his work as well as possible. He heard nothing but the swish of scythes, and
saw before him Tit’s upright figure mowing away, the crescent-shaped curve of
the cut grass, the grass and flower heads slowly and rhythmically falling
before the blade of his scythe, and ahead of him the end of the row, where
would come the rest.
Suddenly,
in the midst of his toil, without understanding what it was or whence it came,
he felt a pleasant sensation of chill on his hot, moist shoulders. He glanced
at the sky in the interval for whetting the scythes. A heavy, lowering storm
cloud had blown up, and big raindrops were falling. Some of the peasants went
to their coats and put them on; others—just like Levin himself—merely shrugged their
shoulders, enjoying the pleasant coolness of it.
Another
row, and yet another row, followed—long rows and short rows, with good grass
and with poor grass. Levin lost all sense of time, and could not have told
whether it was late or early now. A change began to come over his work, which
gave him immense satisfaction. In the midst of his toil there were moments
during which he forgot what he was doing, and it came all easy to him, and at
those same moments his row was almost as smooth and well cut as Tit’s. But so
soon as he recollected what he was doing, and began trying to do better, he was
at once conscious of all the difficulty of his task, and the row was badly
mown.
On
finishing yet another row he would have gone back to the top of the meadow again
to begin the next, but Tit stopped, and going up to the old man said something
in a low voice to him. They both looked at the sun. “What are they talking
about, and why doesn’t he go back?” thought Levin, not guessing that the
peasants had been mowing no less than four hours without stopping, and it was
time for their lunch.
“Lunch,
sir,” said the old man.
“Is it
really time? That’s right; lunch, then.”
Levin gave
his scythe to Tit, and together with the peasants, who were crossing the long
stretch of mown grass, slightly sprinkled with rain, to get their bread from
the heap of coats, he went towards his house. Only then he suddenly awoke to
the fact that he had been wrong about the weather and the rain was drenching
his hay.
“The hay
will be spoiled,” he said.
“Not a bit
of it, sir; mow in the rain, and you’ll rake in fine weather!” said the old
man.
Levin
untied his horse and rode home to his coffee. Sergey Ivanovitch was only just
getting up. When he had drunk his coffee, Levin rode back again to the mowing
before Sergey Ivanovitch had had time to dress and come down to the
dining-room.
Chapter 5
After
lunch Levin was not in the same place in the string of mowers as before, but
stood between the old man who had accosted him jocosely, and now invited him to
be his neighbour, and a young peasant, who had only been married in the autumn,
and who was mowing this summer for the first time.
The old
man, holding himself erect, moved in front, with his feet turned out, taking
long, regular strides, and with a precise and regular action which seemed to
cost him no more effort than swinging one’s arms in walking, as though it were
in play, he laid down the high, even row of grass. It was as though it were not
he but the sharp scythe of itself swishing through the juicy grass.
Behind
Levin came the lad Mishka. His pretty, boyish face, with a twist of fresh grass
bound round his hair, was all working with effort; but whenever anyone looked
at him he smiled. He would clearly have died sooner than own it was hard work
for him.
Levin kept
between them. In the very heat of the day the mowing did not seem such hard
work to him. The perspiration with which he was drenched cooled him, while the
sun, that burned his back, his head, and his arms, bare to the elbow, gave a
vigour and dogged energy to his labour; and more and more often now came those
moments of unconsciousness, when it was possible not to think what one was
doing. The scythe cut of itself. These were happy moments. Still more
delightful were the moments when they reached the stream where the rows ended,
and the old man rubbed his scythe with the wet, thick grass, rinsed its blade
in the fresh water of the stream, ladled out a little in a tin dipper, and
offered Levin a drink.
“What do
you say to my home-brew, eh? Good, eh?” said he, winking.
And truly
Levin had never drunk any liquor so good as this warm water with green bits
floating in it, and a taste of rust from the tin dipper. And immediately after
this came the delicious, slow saunter, with his hand on the scythe, during
which he could wipe away the streaming sweat, take deep breaths of air, and
look about at the long string of mowers and at what was happening around in the
forest and the country.
The longer
Levin mowed, the oftener he felt the moments of unconsciousness in which it
seemed not his hands that swung the scythe, but the scythe mowing of itself, a
body full of life and consciousness of its own, and as though by magic, without
thinking of it, the work turned out regular and well-finished of itself. These
were the most blissful moments.
It was
only hard work when he had to break off the motion, which had become unconscious,
and to think; when he had to mow round a hillock or a tuft of sorrel. The old
man did this easily. When a hillock came he changed his action, and at one time
with the heel, and at another with the tip of his scythe, clipped the hillock
round both sides with short strokes. And while he did this he kept looking
about and watching what came into his view: at one moment he picked a wild
berry and ate it or offered it to Levin, then he flung away a twig with the
blade of the scythe, then he looked at a quail’s nest, from which the bird flew
just under the scythe, or caught a snake that crossed his path, and lifting it
on the scythe as though on a fork showed it to Levin and threw it away.
For both
Levin and the young peasant behind him, such changes of position were
difficult. Both of them, repeating over and over again the same strained
movement, were in a perfect frenzy of toil, and were incapable of shifting
their position and at the same time watching what was before them.
Levin did
not notice how time was passing. If he had been asked how long he had been
working he would have said half an hour—and it was getting on for dinner time.
As they were walking back over the cut grass, the old man called Levin’s
attention to the little girls and boys who were coming from different
directions, hardly visible through the long grass, and along the road towards
the mowers, carrying sacks of bread dragging at their little hands and pitchers
of the sour rye-beer, with cloths wrapped round them.
“Look’ee,
the little emmets crawling!” he said, pointing to them, and he shaded his eyes
with his hand to look at the sun. They mowed two more rows; the old man
stopped.
“Come,
master, dinner time!” he said briskly. And on reaching the stream the mowers
moved off across the lines of cut grass towards their pile of coats, where the
children who had brought their dinners were sitting waiting for them. The
peasants gathered into groups—those further away under a cart, those nearer
under a willow bush.
Levin sat
down by them; he felt disinclined to go away.
All
constraint with the master had disappeared long ago. The peasants got ready for
dinner. Some washed, the young lads bathed in the stream, others made a place
comfortable for a rest, untied their sacks of bread, and uncovered the pitchers
of rye-beer. The old man crumbled up some bread in a cup, stirred it with the
handle of a spoon, poured water on it from the dipper, broke up some more
bread, and having seasoned it with salt, he turned to the east to say his
prayer.
“Come,
master, taste my sop,” said he, kneeling down before the cup.
The sop
was so good that Levin gave up the idea of going home. He dined with the old
man, and talked to him about his family affairs, taking the keenest interest in
them, and told him about his own affairs and all the circumstances that could
be of interest to the old man. He felt much nearer to him than to his brother,
and could not help smiling at the affection he felt for this man. When the old
man got up again, said his prayer, and lay down under a bush, putting some
grass under his head for a pillow, Levin did the same, and in spite of the
clinging flies that were so persistent in the sunshine, and the midges that
tickled his hot face and body, he fell asleep at once and only waked when the
sun had passed to the other side of the bush and reached him. The old man had
been awake a long while, and was sitting up whetting the scythes of the younger
lads.
Levin
looked about him and hardly recognized the place, everything was so changed.
The immense stretch of meadow had been mown and was sparkling with a peculiar
fresh brilliance, with its lines of already sweet-smelling grass in the
slanting rays of the evening sun. And the bushes about the river had been cut
down, and the river itself, not visible before, now gleaming like steel in its
bends, and the moving, ascending, peasants, and the sharp wall of grass of the
unmown part of the meadow, and the hawks hovering over the stripped meadow—all
was perfectly new. Raising himself, Levin began considering how much had been
cut and how much more could still be done that day.
The work
done was exceptionally much for forty-two men. They had cut the whole of the big
meadow, which had, in the years of serf labour, taken thirty scythes two days
to mow. Only the corners remained to do, where the rows were short. But Levin
felt a longing to get as much mowing done that day as possible, and was vexed
with the sun sinking so quickly in the sky. He felt no weariness; all he wanted
was to get his work done more and more quickly and as much done as possible.
“Could you
cut Mashkin Upland too?—what do you think?” he said to the old man.
“As God
wills, the sun’s not high. A little vodka for the lads?”
At the
afternoon rest, when they were sitting down again, and those who smoked had
lighted their pipes, the old man told the men that “Mashkin Upland’s to be
cut—there’ll be some vodka.”
“Why not
cut it? Come on, Tit! We’ll look sharp! We can eat at night. Come on!” cried
voices, and eating up their bread, the mowers went back to work.
“Come,
lads, keep it up!” said Tit, and ran on ahead almost at a trot.
“Get
along, get along!” said the old man, hurrying after him and easily overtaking
him, “I’ll mow you down, look out!”
And young
and old mowed away, as though they were racing with one another. But however
fast they worked, they did not spoil the grass, and the rows were laid just as
neatly and exactly. The little piece left uncut in the corner was mown in five
minutes. The last of the mowers were just ending their rows while the foremost
snatched up their coats onto their shoulders, and crossed the road towards
Mashkin Upland.
The sun
was already sinking into the trees when they went with their jingling dippers
into the wooded ravine of Mashkin Upland. The grass was up to their waists in
the middle of the hollow, soft, tender, and feathery, spotted here and there
among the trees with wild heart’s-ease.
After a
brief consultation—whether to take the rows lengthwise or diagonally—Prohor
Yermilin, also a renowned mower, a huge, black-haired peasant, went on ahead.
He went up to the top, turned back again and started mowing, and they all
proceeded to form in line behind him, going downhill through the hollow and
uphill right up to the edge of the forest. The sun sank behind the forest. The
dew was falling by now; the mowers were in the sun only on the hillside, but
below, where a mist was rising, and on the opposite side, they mowed into the
fresh, dewy shade. The work went rapidly. The grass cut with a juicy sound, and
was at once laid in high, fragrant rows. The mowers from all sides, brought
closer together in the short row, kept urging one another on to the sound of jingling
dippers and clanging scythes, and the hiss of the whetstones sharpening them,
and good-humoured shouts.
Levin
still kept between the young peasant and the old man. The old man, who had put
on his short sheepskin jacket, was just as good-humoured, jocose, and free in
his movements. Among the trees they were continually cutting with their scythes
the so-called “birch mushrooms,” swollen fat in the succulent grass. But the
old man bent down every time he came across a mushroom, picked it up and put it
in his bosom. “Another present for my old woman,” he said as he did so.
Easy as it
was to mow the wet, soft grass, it was hard work going up and down the steep
sides of the ravine. But this did not trouble the old man. Swinging his scythe
just as ever, and moving his feet in their big, plaited shoes with firm, little
steps, he climbed slowly up the steep place, and though his breeches hanging
out below his smock, and his whole frame trembled with effort, he did not miss
one blade of grass or one mushroom on his way, and kept making jokes with the
peasants and Levin. Levin walked after him and often thought he must fall, as
he climbed with a scythe up a steep cliff where it would have been hard work to
clamber without anything. But he climbed up and did what he had to do. He felt
as though some external force were moving him.
Chapter 6
Mashkin
Upland was mown, the last row finished, the peasants had put on their coats and
were gaily trudging home. Levin got on his horse and, parting regretfully from
the peasants, rode homewards. On the hillside he looked back; he could not see
them in the mist that had risen from the valley; he could only hear rough,
good-humoured voices, laughter, and the sound of clanking scythes.
Sergey
Ivanovitch had long ago finished dinner, and was drinking iced lemon and water
in his own room, looking through the reviews and papers which he had only just
received by post, when Levin rushed into the room, talking merrily, with his
wet and matted hair sticking to his forehead, and his back and chest grimed and
moist.
“We mowed
the whole meadow! Oh, it is nice, delicious! And how have you been getting on?”
said Levin, completely forgetting the disagreeable conversation of the previous
day.
“Mercy!
what do you look like!” said Sergey Ivanovitch, for the first moment looking
round with some dissatisfaction. “And the door, do shut the door!” he cried.
“You must have let in a dozen at least.”
Sergey
Ivanovitch could not endure flies, and in his own room he never opened the
window except at night, and carefully kept the door shut.
“Not one,
on my honour. But if I have, I’ll catch them. You wouldn’t believe what a
pleasure it is! How have you spent the day?”
“Very
well. But have you really been mowing the whole day? I expect you’re as hungry
as a wolf. Kouzma has got everything ready for you.”
“No, I
don’t feel hungry even. I had something to eat there. But I’ll go and wash.”
“Yes, go
along, go along, and I’ll come to you directly,” said Sergey Ivanovitch,
shaking his head as he looked at his brother. “Go along, make haste,” he added
smiling, and gathering up his books, he prepared to go too. He, too, felt
suddenly good-humoured and disinclined to leave his brother’s side. “But what
did you do while it was raining?”
“Rain?
Why, there was scarcely a drop. I’ll come directly. So you had a nice day too?
That’s first-rate.” And Levin went off to change his clothes.
Five
minutes later the brothers met in the dining-room. Although it seemed to Levin
that he was not hungry, and he sat down to dinner simply so as not to hurt
Kouzma’s feelings, yet when he began to eat the dinner struck him as
extraordinarily good. Sergey Ivanovitch watched him with a smile.
“Oh, by
the way, there’s a letter for you,” said he. “Kouzma, bring it down, please.
And mind you shut the doors.”
The letter
was from Oblonsky. Levin read it aloud. Oblonsky wrote to him from Petersburg:
“I have had a letter from Dolly; she’s at Ergushovo, and everything seems going
wrong there. Do ride over and see her, please; help her with advice; you know
all about it. She will be so glad to see you. She’s quite alone, poor thing. My
mother-in-law and all of them are still abroad.”
“That’s
capital! I will certainly ride over to her,” said Levin. “Or we’ll go together.
She’s such a splendid woman, isn’t she?”
“They’re
not far from here, then?”
“Twenty-five
miles. Or perhaps it is thirty. But a capital road. Capital, we’ll drive over.”
“I shall
be delighted,” said Sergey Ivanovitch, still smiling. The sight of his younger
brother’s appearance had immediately put him in a good humour.
“Well, you
have an appetite!” he said, looking at his dark-red, sunburnt face and neck
bent over the plate.
“Splendid!
You can’t imagine what an effectual remedy it is for every sort of foolishness.
I want to enrich medicine with a new word: Arbeitskur.”
“Well, but
you don’t need it, I should fancy.”
“No, but
for all sorts of nervous invalids.”
“Yes, it
ought to be tried. I had meant to come to the mowing to look at you, but it was
so unbearably hot that I got no further than the forest. I sat there a little,
and went on by the forest to the village, met your old nurse, and sounded her
as to the peasants’ view of you. As far as I can make out, they don’t approve
of this. She said: ‘It’s not a gentleman’s work.’ Altogether, I fancy that in
the people’s ideas there are very clear and definite notions of certain, as
they call it, ‘gentlemanly’ lines of action. And they don’t sanction the
gentry’s moving outside bounds clearly laid down in their ideas.”
“Maybe so;
but anyway it’s a pleasure such as I have never known in my life. And there’s
no harm in it, you know. Is there?” answered Levin. “I can’t help it if they
don’t like it. Though I do believe it’s all right. Eh?”
“Altogether,”
pursued Sergey Ivanovitch, “you’re satisfied with your day?”
“Quite
satisfied. We cut the whole meadow. And such a splendid old man I made friends
with there! You can’t fancy how delightful he was!”
“Well, so
you’re content with your day. And so am I. First, I solved two chess problems,
and one a very pretty one—a pawn opening. I’ll show it you. And then—I thought
over our conversation yesterday.”
“Eh! our
conversation yesterday?” said Levin, blissfully dropping his eyelids and
drawing deep breaths after finishing his dinner, and absolutely incapable of
recalling what their conversation yesterday was about.
“I think
you are partly right. Our difference of opinion amounts to this, that you make
the mainspring self-interest, while I suppose that interest in the common weal
is bound to exist in every man of a certain degree of advancement. Possibly you
are right too, that action founded on material interest would be more
desirable. You are altogether, as the French say, too primesautière a
nature; you must have intense, energetic action, or nothing.”
Levin
listened to his brother and did not understand a single word, and did not want
to understand. He was only afraid his brother might ask him some question which
would make it evident he had not heard.
“So that’s
what I think it is, my dear boy,” said Sergey Ivanovitch, touching him on the
shoulder.
“Yes, of course.
But, do you know? I won’t stand up for my view,” answered Levin, with a guilty,
childlike smile. “Whatever was it I was disputing about?” he wondered. “Of
course, I’m right, and he’s right, and it’s all first-rate. Only I must go
round to the counting house and see to things.” He got up, stretching and
smiling. Sergey Ivanovitch smiled too.
“If you
want to go out, let’s go together,” he said, disinclined to be parted from his
brother, who seemed positively breathing out freshness and energy. “Come, we’ll
go to the counting house, if you have to go there.”
“Oh,
heavens!” shouted Levin, so loudly that Sergey Ivanovitch was quite frightened.
“What,
what is the matter?”
“How’s
Agafea Mihalovna’s hand?” said Levin, slapping himself on the head. “I’d
positively forgotten her even.”
“It’s much
better.”
“Well,
anyway I’ll run down to her. Before you’ve time to get your hat on, I’ll be
back.”
And he ran
downstairs, clattering with his heels like a spring-rattle.
To be continued