ANNA KARENINA
PART 32
Chapter 22
It was six
o’clock already, and so, in order to be there quickly, and at the same time not
to drive with his own horses, known to everyone, Vronsky got into Yashvin’s
hired fly, and told the driver to drive as quickly as possible. It was a roomy,
old-fashioned fly, with seats for four. He sat in one corner, stretched his
legs out on the front seat, and sank into meditation.
A vague
sense of the order into which his affairs had been brought, a vague
recollection of the friendliness and flattery of Serpuhovskoy, who had
considered him a man that was needed, and most of all, the anticipation of the
interview before him—all blended into a general, joyous sense of life. This
feeling was so strong that he could not help smiling. He dropped his legs,
crossed one leg over the other knee, and taking it in his hand, felt the
springy muscle of the calf, where it had been grazed the day before by his
fall, and leaning back he drew several deep breaths.
“I’m
happy, very happy!” he said to himself. He had often before had this sense of
physical joy in his own body, but he had never felt so fond of himself, of his
own body, as at that moment. He enjoyed the slight ache in his strong leg, he
enjoyed the muscular sensation of movement in his chest as he breathed. The
bright, cold August day, which had made Anna feel so hopeless, seemed to him
keenly stimulating, and refreshed his face and neck that still tingled from the
cold water. The scent of brilliantine on his whiskers struck him as
particularly pleasant in the fresh air. Everything he saw from the carriage
window, everything in that cold pure air, in the pale light of the sunset, was
as fresh, and gay, and strong as he was himself: the roofs of the houses
shining in the rays of the setting sun, the sharp outlines of fences and angles
of buildings, the figures of passers-by, the carriages that met him now and
then, the motionless green of the trees and grass, the fields with evenly drawn
furrows of potatoes, and the slanting shadows that fell from the houses, and
trees, and bushes, and even from the rows of potatoes—everything was bright
like a pretty landscape just finished and freshly varnished.
“Get on,
get on!” he said to the driver, putting his head out of the window, and pulling
a three-rouble note out of his pocket he handed it to the man as he looked
round. The driver’s hand fumbled with something at the lamp, the whip cracked,
and the carriage rolled rapidly along the smooth highroad.
“I want
nothing, nothing but this happiness,” he thought, staring at the bone button of
the bell in the space between the windows, and picturing to himself Anna just
as he had seen her last time. “And as I go on, I love her more and more. Here’s
the garden of the Vrede Villa. Whereabouts will she be? Where? How? Why did she
fix on this place to meet me, and why does she write in Betsy’s letter?” he
thought, wondering now for the first time at it. But there was now no time for
wonder. He called to the driver to stop before reaching the avenue, and opening
the door, jumped out of the carriage as it was moving, and went into the avenue
that led up to the house. There was no one in the avenue; but looking round to
the right he caught sight of her. Her face was hidden by a veil, but he drank
in with glad eyes the special movement in walking, peculiar to her alone, the
slope of the shoulders, and the setting of the head, and at once a sort of
electric shock ran all over him. With fresh force, he felt conscious of himself
from the springy motions of his legs to the movements of his lungs as he
breathed, and something set his lips twitching.
Joining
him, she pressed his hand tightly.
“You’re
not angry that I sent for you? I absolutely had to see you,” she said; and the
serious and set line of her lips, which he saw under the veil, transformed his
mood at once.
“I angry!
But how have you come, where from?”
“Never
mind,” she said, laying her hand on his, “come along, I must talk to you.”
He saw that
something had happened, and that the interview would not be a joyous one. In
her presence he had no will of his own: without knowing the grounds of her
distress, he already felt the same distress unconsciously passing over him.
“What is
it? what?” he asked her, squeezing her hand with his elbow, and trying to read
her thoughts in her face.
She walked
on a few steps in silence, gathering up her courage; then suddenly she stopped.
“I did not
tell you yesterday,” she began, breathing quickly and painfully, “that coming
home with Alexey Alexandrovitch I told him everything ... told him I could not
be his wife, that ... and told him everything.”
He heard
her, unconsciously bending his whole figure down to her as though hoping in
this way to soften the hardness of her position for her. But directly she had
said this he suddenly drew himself up, and a proud and hard expression came
over his face.
“Yes, yes,
that’s better, a thousand times better! I know how painful it was,” he said.
But she was not listening to his words, she was reading his thoughts from the
expression of his face. She could not guess that that expression arose from the
first idea that presented itself to Vronsky—that a duel was now inevitable. The
idea of a duel had never crossed her mind, and so she put a different
interpretation on this passing expression of hardness.
When she
got her husband’s letter, she knew then at the bottom of her heart that
everything would go on in the old way, that she would not have the strength of
will to forego her position, to abandon her son, and to join her lover. The
morning spent at Princess Tverskaya’s had confirmed her still more in this. But
this interview was still of the utmost gravity for her. She hoped that this
interview would transform her position, and save her. If on hearing this news
he were to say to her resolutely, passionately, without an instant’s wavering:
“Throw up everything and come with me!” she would give up her son and go away
with him. But this news had not produced what she had expected in him; he
simply seemed as though he were resenting some affront.
“It was
not in the least painful to me. It happened of itself,” she said irritably;
“and see....” she pulled her husband’s letter out of her glove.
“I
understand, I understand,” he interrupted her, taking the letter, but not
reading it, and trying to soothe her. “The one thing I longed for, the one
thing I prayed for, was to cut short this position, so as to devote my life to
your happiness.”
“Why do
you tell me that?” she said. “Do you suppose I can doubt it? If I doubted....”
“Who’s
that coming?” said Vronsky suddenly, pointing to two ladies walking towards
them. “Perhaps they know us!” and he hurriedly turned off, drawing her after
him into a side path.
“Oh, I don’t
care!” she said. Her lips were quivering. And he fancied that her eyes looked
with strange fury at him from under the veil. “I tell you that’s not the
point—I can’t doubt that; but see what he writes to me. Read it.” She stood
still again.
Again, just
as at the first moment of hearing of her rupture with her husband, Vronsky, on
reading the letter, was unconsciously carried away by the natural sensation
aroused in him by his own relation to the betrayed husband. Now while he held
his letter in his hands, he could not help picturing the challenge, which he
would most likely find at home today or tomorrow, and the duel itself, in
which, with the same cold and haughty expression that his face was assuming at
this moment he would await the injured husband’s shot, after having himself
fired into the air. And at that instant there flashed across his mind the
thought of what Serpuhovskoy had just said to him, and what he had himself been
thinking in the morning—that it was better not to bind himself—and he knew that
this thought he could not tell her.
Having
read the letter, he raised his eyes to her, and there was no determination in
them. She saw at once that he had been thinking about it before by himself. She
knew that whatever he might say to her, he would not say all he thought. And
she knew that her last hope had failed her. This was not what she had been
reckoning on.
“You see
the sort of man he is,” she said, with a shaking voice; “he....”
“Forgive
me, but I rejoice at it,” Vronsky interrupted. “For God’s sake, let me finish!”
he added, his eyes imploring her to give him time to explain his words. “I
rejoice, because things cannot, cannot possibly remain as he supposes.”
“Why can’t
they?” Anna said, restraining her tears, and obviously attaching no sort of
consequence to what he said. She felt that her fate was sealed.
Vronsky
meant that after the duel—inevitable, he thought—things could not go on as
before, but he said something different.
“It can’t
go on. I hope that now you will leave him. I hope”—he was confused, and
reddened—“that you will let me arrange and plan our life. Tomorrow....” he was
beginning.
She did
not let him go on.
“But my
child!” she shrieked. “You see what he writes! I should have to leave him, and
I can’t and won’t do that.”
“But, for
God’s sake, which is better?—leave your child, or keep up this degrading
position?”
“To whom
is it degrading?”
“To all,
and most of all to you.”
“You say
degrading ... don’t say that. Those words have no meaning for me,” she said in
a shaking voice. She did not want him now to say what was untrue. She had
nothing left her but his love, and she wanted to love him. “Don’t you
understand that from the day I loved you everything has changed for me? For me
there is one thing, and one thing only—your love. If that’s mine, I feel so
exalted, so strong, that nothing can be humiliating to me. I am proud of my
position, because ... proud of being ... proud....” She could not say what she
was proud of. Tears of shame and despair choked her utterance. She stood still
and sobbed.
He felt,
too, something swelling in his throat and twitching in his nose, and for the
first time in his life he felt on the point of weeping. He could not have said
exactly what it was touched him so. He felt sorry for her, and he felt he could
not help her, and with that he knew that he was to blame for her wretchedness,
and that he had done something wrong.
“Is not a
divorce possible?” he said feebly. She shook her head, not answering. “Couldn’t
you take your son, and still leave him?”
“Yes; but
it all depends on him. Now I must go to him,” she said shortly. Her
presentiment that all would again go on in the old way had not deceived her.
“On
Tuesday I shall be in Petersburg, and everything can be settled.”
“Yes,” she
said. “But don’t let us talk any more of it.”
Anna’s
carriage, which she had sent away, and ordered to come back to the little gate
of the Vrede garden, drove up. Anna said good-bye to Vronsky, and drove home.
Chapter 23
On Monday
there was the usual sitting of the Commission of the 2nd of June. Alexey
Alexandrovitch walked into the hall where the sitting was held, greeted the
members and the president, as usual, and sat down in his place, putting his
hand on the papers laid ready before him. Among these papers lay the necessary
evidence and a rough outline of the speech he intended to make. But he did not
really need these documents. He remembered every point, and did not think it
necessary to go over in his memory what he would say. He knew that when the
time came, and when he saw his enemy facing him, and studiously endeavouring to
assume an expression of indifference, his speech would flow of itself better
than he could prepare it now. He felt that the import of his speech was of such
magnitude that every word of it would have weight. Meantime, as he listened to
the usual report, he had the most innocent and inoffensive air. No one, looking
at his white hands, with their swollen veins and long fingers, so softly
stroking the edges of the white paper that lay before him, and at the air of
weariness with which his head drooped on one side, would have suspected that in
a few minutes a torrent of words would flow from his lips that would arouse a
fearful storm, set the members shouting and attacking one another, and force
the president to call for order. When the report was over, Alexey
Alexandrovitch announced in his subdued, delicate voice that he had several points
to bring before the meeting in regard to the Commission for the Reorganization
of the Native Tribes. All attention was turned upon him. Alexey Alexandrovitch
cleared his throat, and not looking at his opponent, but selecting, as he
always did while he was delivering his speeches, the first person sitting
opposite him, an inoffensive little old man, who never had an opinion of any
sort in the Commission, began to expound his views. When he reached the point
about the fundamental and radical law, his opponent jumped up and began to
protest. Stremov, who was also a member of the Commission, and also stung to
the quick, began defending himself, and altogether a stormy sitting followed;
but Alexey Alexandrovitch triumphed, and his motion was carried, three new commissions
were appointed, and the next day in a certain Petersburg circle nothing else
was talked of but this sitting. Alexey Alexandrovitch’s success had been even
greater than he had anticipated.
Next
morning, Tuesday, Alexey Alexandrovitch, on waking up, recollected with
pleasure his triumph of the previous day, and he could not help smiling, though
he tried to appear indifferent, when the chief secretary of his department,
anxious to flatter him, informed him of the rumours that had reached him concerning
what had happened in the Commission.
Absorbed
in business with the chief secretary, Alexey Alexandrovitch had completely
forgotten that it was Tuesday, the day fixed by him for the return of Anna
Arkadyevna, and he was surprised and received a shock of annoyance when a
servant came in to inform him of her arrival.
Anna had
arrived in Petersburg early in the morning; the carriage had been sent to meet
her in accordance with her telegram, and so Alexey Alexandrovitch might have
known of her arrival. But when she arrived, he did not meet her. She was told
that he had not yet gone out, but was busy with his secretary. She sent word to
her husband that she had come, went to her own room, and occupied herself in
sorting out her things, expecting he would come to her. But an hour passed; he
did not come. She went into the dining-room on the pretext of giving some
directions, and spoke loudly on purpose, expecting him to come out there; but
he did not come, though she heard him go to the door of his study as he parted
from the chief secretary. She knew that he usually went out quickly to his
office, and she wanted to see him before that, so that their attitude to one
another might be defined.
She walked
across the drawing-room and went resolutely to him. When she went into his
study he was in official uniform, obviously ready to go out, sitting at a
little table on which he rested his elbows, looking dejectedly before him. She
saw him before he saw her, and she saw that he was thinking of her.
On seeing her,
he would have risen, but changed his mind, then his face flushed hotly—a thing
Anna had never seen before, and he got up quickly and went to meet her, looking
not at her eyes, but above them at her forehead and hair. He went up to her,
took her by the hand, and asked her to sit down.
“I am very
glad you have come,” he said, sitting down beside her, and obviously wishing to
say something, he stuttered. Several times he tried to begin to speak, but
stopped. In spite of the fact that, preparing herself for meeting him, she had
schooled herself to despise and reproach him, she did not know what to say to
him, and she felt sorry for him. And so the silence lasted for some time. “Is
Seryozha quite well?” he said, and not waiting for an answer, he added: “I shan’t
be dining at home today, and I have got to go out directly.”
“I had
thought of going to Moscow,” she said.
“No, you
did quite, quite right to come,” he said, and was silent again.
Seeing
that he was powerless to begin the conversation, she began herself.
“Alexey
Alexandrovitch,” she said, looking at him and not dropping her eyes under his
persistent gaze at her hair, “I’m a guilty woman, I’m a bad woman, but I am the
same as I was, as I told you then, and I have come to tell you that I can change
nothing.”
“I have
asked you no question about that,” he said, all at once, resolutely and with
hatred looking her straight in the face; “that was as I had supposed.” Under
the influence of anger he apparently regained complete possession of all his
faculties. “But as I told you then, and have written to you,” he said in a
thin, shrill voice, “I repeat now, that I am not bound to know this. I ignore
it. Not all wives are so kind as you, to be in such a hurry to communicate such
agreeable news to their husbands.” He laid special emphasis on the word
“agreeable.” “I shall ignore it so long as the world knows nothing of it, so
long as my name is not disgraced. And so I simply inform you that our relations
must be just as they have always been, and that only in the event of your
compromising me I shall be obliged to take steps to secure my honour.”
“But our
relations cannot be the same as always,” Anna began in a timid voice, looking
at him with dismay.
When she
saw once more those composed gestures, heard that shrill, childish, and
sarcastic voice, her aversion for him extinguished her pity for him, and she
felt only afraid, but at all costs she wanted to make clear her position.
“I cannot
be your wife while I....” she began.
He laughed
a cold and malignant laugh.
“The
manner of life you have chosen is reflected, I suppose, in your ideas. I have
too much respect or contempt, or both ... I respect your past and despise your
present ... that I was far from the interpretation you put on my words.”
Anna
sighed and bowed her head.
“Though
indeed I fail to comprehend how, with the independence you show,” he went on,
getting hot, “—announcing your infidelity to your husband and seeing nothing
reprehensible in it, apparently—you can see anything reprehensible in performing
a wife’s duties in relation to your husband.”
“Alexey
Alexandrovitch! What is it you want of me?”
“I want
you not to meet that man here, and to conduct yourself so that neither the
world nor the servants can reproach you ... not to see him. That’s not much, I
think. And in return you will enjoy all the privileges of a faithful wife
without fulfilling her duties. That’s all I have to say to you. Now it’s time
for me to go. I’m not dining at home.” He got up and moved towards the door.
Anna got
up too. Bowing in silence, he let her pass before him.
Chapter 24
The night
spent by Levin on the haycock did not pass without result for him. The way in
which he had been managing his land revolted him and had lost all attraction
for him. In spite of the magnificent harvest, never had there been, or, at
least, never it seemed to him, had there been so many hindrances and so many
quarrels between him and the peasants as that year, and the origin of these
failures and this hostility was now perfectly comprehensible to him. The
delight he had experienced in the work itself, and the consequent greater
intimacy with the peasants, the envy he felt of them, of their life, the desire
to adopt that life, which had been to him that night not a dream but an
intention, the execution of which he had thought out in detail—all this had so
transformed his view of the farming of the land as he had managed it, that he
could not take his former interest in it, and could not help seeing that
unpleasant relation between him and the workpeople which was the foundation of
it all. The herd of improved cows such as Pava, the whole land ploughed over
and enriched, the nine level fields surrounded with hedges, the two hundred and
forty acres heavily manured, the seed sown in drills, and all the rest of it—it
was all splendid if only the work had been done for themselves, or for
themselves and comrades—people in sympathy with them. But he saw clearly now
(his work on a book of agriculture, in which the chief element in husbandry was
to have been the labourer, greatly assisted him in this) that the sort of
farming he was carrying on was nothing but a cruel and stubborn struggle
between him and the labourers, in which there was on one side—his side—a
continual intense effort to change everything to a pattern he considered
better; on the other side, the natural order of things. And in this struggle he
saw that with immense expenditure of force on his side, and with no effort or
even intention on the other side, all that was attained was that the work did
not go to the liking of either side, and that splendid tools, splendid cattle
and land were spoiled with no good to anyone. Worst of all, the energy expended
on this work was not simply wasted. He could not help feeling now, since the
meaning of this system had become clear to him, that the aim of his energy was
a most unworthy one. In reality, what was the struggle about? He was struggling
for every farthing of his share (and he could not help it, for he had only to
relax his efforts, and he would not have had the money to pay his labourers’
wages), while they were only struggling to be able to do their work easily and
agreeably, that is to say, as they were used to doing it. It was for his
interests that every labourer should work as hard as possible, and that while
doing so he should keep his wits about him, so as to try not to break the
winnowing machines, the horse rakes, the thrashing machines, that he should
attend to what he was doing. What the labourer wanted was to work as pleasantly
as possible, with rests, and above all, carelessly and heedlessly, without
thinking. That summer Levin saw this at every step. He sent the men to mow some
clover for hay, picking out the worst patches where the clover was overgrown
with grass and weeds and of no use for seed; again and again they mowed the
best acres of clover, justifying themselves by the pretense that the bailiff
had told them to, and trying to pacify him with the assurance that it would be
splendid hay; but he knew that it was owing to those acres being so much easier
to mow. He sent out a hay machine for pitching the hay—it was broken at the
first row because it was dull work for a peasant to sit on the seat in front
with the great wings waving above him. And he was told, “Don’t trouble, your honour,
sure, the womenfolks will pitch it quick enough.” The ploughs were practically
useless, because it never occurred to the labourer to raise the share when he turned
the plough, and forcing it round, he strained the horses and tore up the
ground, and Levin was begged not to mind about it. The horses were allowed to
stray into the wheat because not a single labourer would consent to be
night-watchman, and in spite of orders to the contrary, the labourers insisted
on taking turns for night duty, and Ivan, after working all day long, fell
asleep, and was very penitent for his fault, saying, “Do what you will to me,
your honour.”
They
killed three of the best calves by letting them into the clover aftermath
without care as to their drinking, and nothing would make the men believe that
they had been blown out by the clover, but they told him, by way of
consolation, that one of his neighbours had lost a hundred and twelve head of
cattle in three days. All this happened, not because anyone felt ill-will to
Levin or his farm; on the contrary, he knew that they liked him, thought him a
simple gentleman (their highest praise); but it happened simply because all
they wanted was to work merrily and carelessly, and his interests were not only
remote and incomprehensible to them, but fatally opposed to their most just
claims. Long before, Levin had felt dissatisfaction with his own position in
regard to the land. He saw where his boat leaked, but he did not look for the
leak, perhaps purposely deceiving himself. (Nothing would be left him if he
lost faith in it.) But now he could deceive himself no longer. The farming of
the land, as he was managing it, had become not merely unattractive but
revolting to him, and he could take no further interest in it.
To this
now was joined the presence, only twenty-five miles off, of Kitty
Shtcherbatskaya, whom he longed to see and could not see. Darya Alexandrovna
Oblonskaya had invited him, when he was over there, to come; to come with the
object of renewing his offer to her sister, who would, so she gave him to
understand, accept him now. Levin himself had felt on seeing Kitty
Shtcherbatskaya that he had never ceased to love her; but he could not go over
to the Oblonskys’, knowing she was there. The fact that he had made her an
offer, and she had refused him, had placed an insuperable barrier between her
and him. “I can’t ask her to be my wife merely because she can’t be the wife of
the man she wanted to marry,” he said to himself. The thought of this made him
cold and hostile to her. “I should not be able to speak to her without a
feeling of reproach; I could not look at her without resentment; and she will
only hate me all the more, as she’s bound to. And besides, how can I now, after
what Darya Alexandrovna told me, go to see them? Can I help showing that I know
what she told me? And me to go magnanimously to forgive her, and have pity on
her! Me go through a performance before her of forgiving, and deigning to
bestow my love on her!... What induced Darya Alexandrovna to tell me that? By
chance I might have seen her, then everything would have happened of itself;
but, as it is, it’s out of the question, out of the question!”
Darya
Alexandrovna sent him a letter, asking him for a side-saddle for Kitty’s use.
“I’m told you have a side-saddle,” she wrote to him; “I hope you will bring it
over yourself.”
This was
more than he could stand. How could a woman of any intelligence, of any
delicacy, put her sister in such a humiliating position! He wrote ten notes,
and tore them all up, and sent the saddle without any reply. To write that he
would go was impossible, because he could not go; to write that he could not
come because something prevented him, or that he would be away, that was still
worse. He sent the saddle without an answer, and with a sense of having done
something shameful; he handed over all the now revolting business of the estate
to the bailiff, and set off next day to a remote district to see his friend
Sviazhsky, who had splendid marshes for grouse in his neighbourhood, and had
lately written to ask him to keep a long-standing promise to stay with him. The
grouse-marsh, in the Surovsky district, had long tempted Levin, but he had
continually put off this visit on account of his work on the estate. Now he was
glad to get away from the neighbourhood of the Shtcherbatskys, and still more
from his farm work, especially on a shooting expedition, which always in
trouble served as the best consolation.
To be continued