ANNA KARENINA
PART 56
Chapter 30
Sviazhsky
took Levin’s arm, and went with him to his own friends.
This time
there was no avoiding Vronsky. He was standing with Stepan Arkadyevitch and
Sergey Ivanovitch, and looking straight at Levin as he drew near.
“Delighted!
I believe I’ve had the pleasure of meeting you ... at Princess
Shtcherbatskaya’s,” he said, giving Levin his hand.
“Yes, I
quite remember our meeting,” said Levin, and blushing crimson, he turned away
immediately, and began talking to his brother.
With a
slight smile Vronsky went on talking to Sviazhsky, obviously without the
slightest inclination to enter into conversation with Levin. But Levin, as he
talked to his brother, was continually looking round at Vronsky, trying to
think of something to say to him to gloss over his rudeness.
“What are
we waiting for now?” asked Levin, looking at Sviazhsky and Vronsky.
“For
Snetkov. He has to refuse or to consent to stand,” answered Sviazhsky.
“Well, and
what has he done, consented or not?”
“That’s
the point, that he’s done neither,” said Vronsky.
“And if he
refuses, who will stand then?” asked Levin, looking at Vronsky.
“Whoever
chooses to,” said Sviazhsky.
“Shall
you?” asked Levin.
“Certainly
not I,” said Sviazhsky, looking confused, and turning an alarmed glance at the
malignant gentleman, who was standing beside Sergey Ivanovitch.
“Who then?
Nevyedovsky?” said Levin, feeling he was putting his foot into it.
But this
was worse still. Nevyedovsky and Sviazhsky were the two candidates.
“I
certainly shall not, under any circumstances,” answered the malignant
gentleman.
This was
Nevyedovsky himself. Sviazhsky introduced him to Levin.
“Well, you
find it exciting too?” said Stepan Arkadyevitch, winking at Vronsky. “It’s
something like a race. One might bet on it.”
“Yes, it
is keenly exciting,” said Vronsky. “And once taking the thing up, one’s eager
to see it through. It’s a fight!” he said, scowling and setting his powerful
jaws.
“What a
capable fellow Sviazhsky is! Sees it all so clearly.”
“Oh, yes!”
Vronsky assented indifferently.
A silence
followed, during which Vronsky—since he had to look at something—looked at
Levin, at his feet, at his uniform, then at his face, and noticing his gloomy
eyes fixed upon him, he said, in order to say something:
“How is it
that you, living constantly in the country, are not a justice of the peace? You
are not in the uniform of one.”
“It’s
because I consider that the justice of the peace is a silly institution,” Levin
answered gloomily. He had been all the time looking for an opportunity to enter
into conversation with Vronsky, so as to smooth over his rudeness at their
first meeting.
“I don’t
think so, quite the contrary,” Vronsky said, with quiet surprise.
“It’s a
plaything,” Levin cut him short. “We don’t want justices of the peace. I’ve
never had a single thing to do with them during eight years. And what I have
had was decided wrongly by them. The justice of the peace is over thirty miles
from me. For some matter of two roubles I should have to send a lawyer, who
costs me fifteen.”
And he
related how a peasant had stolen some flour from the miller, and when the
miller told him of it, had lodged a complaint for slander. All this was utterly
uncalled for and stupid, and Levin felt it himself as he said it.
“Oh, this
is such an original fellow!” said Stepan Arkadyevitch with his most soothing,
almond-oil smile. “But come along; I think they’re voting....”
And they
separated.
“I can’t
understand,” said Sergey Ivanovitch, who had observed his brother’s clumsiness,
“I can’t understand how anyone can be so absolutely devoid of political tact.
That’s where we Russians are so deficient. The marshal of the province is our
opponent, and with him you’re ami cochon, and you beg him to stand.
Count Vronsky, now ... I’m not making a friend of him; he’s asked me to dinner,
and I’m not going; but he’s one of our side—why make an enemy of him? Then you
ask Nevyedovsky if he’s going to stand. That’s not a thing to do.”
“Oh, I
don’t understand it at all! And it’s all such nonsense,” Levin answered
gloomily.
“You say
it’s all such nonsense, but as soon as you have anything to do with it, you
make a muddle.”
Levin did
not answer, and they walked together into the big room.
The
marshal of the province, though he was vaguely conscious in the air of some
trap being prepared for him, and though he had not been called upon by all to
stand, had still made up his mind to stand. All was silence in the room. The
secretary announced in a loud voice that the captain of the guards, Mihail
Stepanovitch Snetkov, would now be balloted for as marshal of the province.
The
district marshals walked carrying plates, on which were balls, from their
tables to the high table, and the election began.
“Put it in
the right side,” whispered Stepan Arkadyevitch, as with his brother Levin
followed the marshal of his district to the table. But Levin had forgotten by
now the calculations that had been explained to him, and was afraid Stepan
Arkadyevitch might be mistaken in saying “the right side.” Surely Snetkov was
the enemy. As he went up, he held the ball in his right hand, but thinking he
was wrong, just at the box he changed to the left hand, and undoubtedly put the
ball to the left. An adept in the business, standing at the box and seeing by
the mere action of the elbow where each put his ball, scowled with annoyance.
It was no good for him to use his insight.
Everything
was still, and the counting of the balls was heard. Then a single voice rose
and proclaimed the numbers for and against. The marshal had been voted for by a
considerable majority. All was noise and eager movement towards the doors.
Snetkov came in, and the nobles thronged round him, congratulating him.
“Well, now
is it over?” Levin asked Sergey Ivanovitch.
“It’s only
just beginning,” Sviazhsky said, replying for Sergey Ivanovitch with a smile.
“Some other candidate may receive more votes than the marshal.”
Levin had
quite forgotten about that. Now he could only remember that there was some sort
of trickery in it, but he was too bored to think what it was exactly. He felt
depressed, and longed to get out of the crowd.
As no one
was paying any attention to him, and no one apparently needed him, he quietly
slipped away into the little room where the refreshments were, and again had a
great sense of comfort when he saw the waiters. The little old waiter pressed
him to have something, and Levin agreed. After eating a cutlet with beans and
talking to the waiters of their former masters, Levin, not wishing to go back
to the hall, where it was all so distasteful to him, proceeded to walk through
the galleries. The galleries were full of fashionably dressed ladies, leaning
over the balustrade and trying not to lose a single word of what was being said
below. With the ladies were sitting and standing smart lawyers, high school
teachers in spectacles, and officers. Everywhere they were talking of the
election, and of how worried the marshal was, and how splendid the discussions
had been. In one group Levin heard his brother’s praises. One lady was telling
a lawyer:
“How glad
I am I heard Koznishev! It’s worth losing one’s dinner. He’s exquisite! So
clear and distinct all of it! There’s not one of you in the law courts that
speaks like that. The only one is Meidel, and he’s not so eloquent by a long
way.”
Finding a
free place, Levin leaned over the balustrade and began looking and listening.
All the
noblemen were sitting railed off behind barriers according to their districts.
In the middle of the room stood a man in a uniform, who shouted in a loud, high
voice:
“As a
candidate for the marshalship of the nobility of the province we call upon
staff-captain Yevgeney Ivanovitch Apuhtin!” A dead silence followed, and then a
weak old voice was heard: “Declined!”
“We call
upon the privy councillor Pyotr Petrovitch Bol,” the voice began again.
“Declined!”
a high boyish voice replied.
Again it
began, and again “Declined.” And so it went on for about an hour. Levin, with
his elbows on the balustrade, looked and listened. At first he wondered and
wanted to know what it meant; then feeling sure that he could not make it out
he began to be bored. Then recalling all the excitement and vindictiveness he
had seen on all the faces, he felt sad; he made up his mind to go, and went
downstairs. As he passed through the entry to the galleries he met a dejected
high school boy walking up and down with tired-looking eyes. On the stairs he
met a couple—a lady running quickly on her high heels and the jaunty deputy
prosecutor.
“I told
you you weren’t late,” the deputy prosecutor was saying at the moment when
Levin moved aside to let the lady pass.
Levin was
on the stairs to the way out, and was just feeling in his waistcoat pocket for
the number of his overcoat, when the secretary overtook him.
“This way,
please, Konstantin Dmitrievitch; they are voting.”
The
candidate who was being voted on was Nevyedovsky, who had so stoutly denied all
idea of standing. Levin went up to the door of the room; it was locked. The
secretary knocked, the door opened, and Levin was met by two red-faced
gentlemen, who darted out.
“I can’t
stand any more of it,” said one red-faced gentleman.
After them
the face of the marshal of the province was poked out. His face was
dreadful-looking from exhaustion and dismay.
“I told
you not to let anyone out!” he cried to the doorkeeper.
“I let
someone in, your excellency!”
“Mercy on
us!” and with a heavy sigh the marshal of the province walked with downcast
head to the high table in the middle of the room, his legs staggering in his
white trousers.
Nevyedovsky
had scored a higher majority, as they had planned, and he was the new marshal
of the province. Many people were amused, many were pleased and happy, many
were in ecstasies, many were disgusted and unhappy. The former marshal of the
province was in a state of despair, which he could not conceal. When
Nevyedovsky went out of the room, the crowd thronged round him and followed him
enthusiastically, just as they had followed the governor who had opened the
meetings, and just as they had followed Snetkov when he was elected.
Chapter 31
The newly
elected marshal and many of the successful party dined that day with Vronsky.
Vronsky
had come to the elections partly because he was bored in the country and wanted
to show Anna his right to independence, and also to repay Sviazhsky by his
support at the election for all the trouble he had taken for Vronsky at the
district council election, but chiefly in order strictly to perform all those
duties of a nobleman and landowner which he had taken upon himself. But he had
not in the least expected that the election would so interest him, so keenly
excite him, and that he would be so good at this kind of thing. He was quite a
new man in the circle of the nobility of the province, but his success was
unmistakable, and he was not wrong in supposing that he had already obtained a
certain influence. This influence was due to his wealth and reputation, the
capital house in the town lent him by his old friend Shirkov, who had a post in
the department of finances and was director of a flourishing bank in Kashin;
the excellent cook Vronsky had brought from the country, and his friendship
with the governor, who was a schoolfellow of Vronsky’s—a schoolfellow he had
patronized and protected indeed. But what contributed more than all to his
success was his direct, equable manner with everyone, which very quickly made
the majority of the noblemen reverse the current opinion of his supposed
haughtiness. He was himself conscious that, except that whimsical gentleman
married to Kitty Shtcherbatskaya, who had à propos de bottes poured out
a stream of irrelevant absurdities with such spiteful fury, every nobleman with
whom he had made acquaintance had become his adherent. He saw clearly, and
other people recognized it, too, that he had done a great deal to secure the
success of Nevyedovsky. And now at his own table, celebrating Nevyedovsky’s
election, he was experiencing an agreeable sense of triumph over the success of
his candidate. The election itself had so fascinated him that, if he could
succeed in getting married during the next three years, he began to think of
standing himself—much as after winning a race ridden by a jockey, he had longed
to ride a race himself.
Today he
was celebrating the success of his jockey. Vronsky sat at the head of the
table, on his right hand sat the young governor, a general of high rank. To all
the rest he was the chief man in the province, who had solemnly opened the
elections with his speech, and aroused a feeling of respect and even of awe in
many people, as Vronsky saw; to Vronsky he was little Katka Maslov—that had
been his nickname in the Pages’ Corps—whom he felt to be shy and tried to mettre
à son aise. On the left hand sat Nevyedovsky with his youthful, stubborn,
and malignant face. With him Vronsky was simple and deferential.
Sviazhsky
took his failure very light-heartedly. It was indeed no failure in his eyes, as
he said himself, turning, glass in hand, to Nevyedovsky; they could not have
found a better representative of the new movement, which the nobility ought to
follow. And so every honest person, as he said, was on the side of today’s
success and was rejoicing over it.
Stepan
Arkadyevitch was glad, too, that he was having a good time, and that everyone
was pleased. The episode of the elections served as a good occasion for a capital
dinner. Sviazhsky comically imitated the tearful discourse of the marshal, and
observed, addressing Nevyedovsky, that his excellency would have to select
another more complicated method of auditing the accounts than tears. Another
nobleman jocosely described how footmen in stockings had been ordered for the
marshal’s ball, and how now they would have to be sent back unless the new
marshal would give a ball with footmen in stockings.
Continually
during dinner they said of Nevyedovsky: “our marshal,” and “your excellency.”
This was
said with the same pleasure with which a bride is called “Madame” and her
husband’s name. Nevyedovsky affected to be not merely indifferent but scornful
of this appellation, but it was obvious that he was highly delighted, and had
to keep a curb on himself not to betray the triumph which was unsuitable to
their new liberal tone.
After
dinner several telegrams were sent to people interested in the result of the
election. And Stepan Arkadyevitch, who was in high good humour, sent Darya
Alexandrovna a telegram: “Nevyedovsky elected by twenty votes. Congratulations.
Tell people.” He dictated it aloud, saying: “We must let them share our
rejoicing.” Darya Alexandrovna, getting the message, simply sighed over the
rouble wasted on it, and understood that it was an after-dinner affair. She
knew Stiva had a weakness after dining for faire jouer le télégraphe.
Everything,
together with the excellent dinner and the wine, not from Russian merchants,
but imported direct from abroad, was extremely dignified, simple, and
enjoyable. The party—some twenty—had been selected by Sviazhsky from among the
more active new liberals, all of the same way of thinking, who were at the same
time clever and well bred. They drank, also half in jest, to the health of the
new marshal of the province, of the governor, of the bank director, and of “our
amiable host.”
Vronsky
was satisfied. He had never expected to find so pleasant a tone in the
provinces.
Towards
the end of dinner it was still more lively. The governor asked Vronsky to come
to a concert for the benefit of the Servians which his wife, who was anxious to
make his acquaintance, had been getting up.
“There’ll
be a ball, and you’ll see the belle of the province. Worth seeing, really.”
“Not in my
line,” Vronsky answered. He liked that English phrase. But he smiled, and
promised to come.
Before
they rose from the table, when all of them were smoking, Vronsky’s valet went
up to him with a letter on a tray.
“From
Vozdvizhenskoe by special messenger,” he said with a significant expression.
“Astonishing!
how like he is to the deputy prosecutor Sventitsky,” said one of the guests in
French of the valet, while Vronsky, frowning, read the letter.
The letter
was from Anna. Before he read the letter, he knew its contents. Expecting the
elections to be over in five days, he had promised to be back on Friday. Today
was Saturday, and he knew that the letter contained reproaches for not being
back at the time fixed. The letter he had sent the previous evening had
probably not reached her yet.
The letter
was what he had expected, but the form of it was unexpected, and particularly
disagreeable to him. “Annie is very ill, the doctor says it may be
inflammation. I am losing my head all alone. Princess Varvara is no help, but a
hindrance. I expected you the day before yesterday, and yesterday, and now I am
sending to find out where you are and what you are doing. I wanted to come
myself, but thought better of it, knowing you would dislike it. Send some answer,
that I may know what to do.”
The child
ill, yet she had thought of coming herself. Their daughter ill, and this
hostile tone.
The
innocent festivities over the election, and this gloomy, burdensome love to
which he had to return struck Vronsky by their contrast. But he had to go, and
by the first train that night he set off home.
Chapter 32
Before
Vronsky’s departure for the elections, Anna had reflected that the scenes
constantly repeated between them each time he left home, might only make him
cold to her instead of attaching him to her, and resolved to do all she could
to control herself so as to bear the parting with composure. But the cold,
severe glance with which he had looked at her when he came to tell her he was
going had wounded her, and before he had started her peace of mind was
destroyed.
In
solitude afterwards, thinking over that glance which had expressed his right to
freedom, she came, as she always did, to the same point—the sense of her own
humiliation. “He has the right to go away when and where he chooses. Not simply
to go away, but to leave me. He has every right, and I have none. But knowing
that, he ought not to do it. What has he done, though?... He looked at me with
a cold, severe expression. Of course that is something indefinable, impalpable,
but it has never been so before, and that glance means a great deal,” she
thought. “That glance shows the beginning of indifference.”
And though
she felt sure that a coldness was beginning, there was nothing she could do,
she could not in any way alter her relations to him. Just as before, only by
love and by charm could she keep him. And so, just as before, only by
occupation in the day, by morphine at night, could she stifle the fearful
thought of what would be if he ceased to love her. It is true there was still
one means; not to keep him—for that she wanted nothing more than his love—but to
be nearer to him, to be in such a position that he would not leave her. That
means was divorce and marriage. And she began to long for that, and made up her
mind to agree to it the first time he or Stiva approached her on the subject.
Absorbed
in such thoughts, she passed five days without him, the five days that he was
to be at the elections.
Walks,
conversation with Princess Varvara, visits to the hospital, and, most of all,
reading—reading of one book after another—filled up her time. But on the sixth
day, when the coachman came back without him, she felt that now she was utterly
incapable of stifling the thought of him and of what he was doing there, just
at that time her little girl was taken ill. Anna began to look after her, but
even that did not distract her mind, especially as the illness was not serious.
However hard she tried, she could not love this little child, and to feign love
was beyond her powers. Towards the evening of that day, still alone, Anna was
in such a panic about him that she decided to start for the town, but on second
thoughts wrote him the contradictory letter that Vronsky received, and without
reading it through, sent it off by a special messenger. The next morning she
received his letter and regretted her own. She dreaded a repetition of the
severe look he had flung at her at parting, especially when he knew that the
baby was not dangerously ill. But still she was glad she had written to him. At
this moment Anna was positively admitting to herself that she was a burden to him,
that he would relinquish his freedom regretfully to return to her, and in spite
of that she was glad he was coming. Let him weary of her, but he would be here
with her, so that she would see him, would know of every action he took.
She was
sitting in the drawing-room near a lamp, with a new volume of Taine, and as she
read, listening to the sound of the wind outside, and every minute expecting
the carriage to arrive. Several times she had fancied she heard the sound of
wheels, but she had been mistaken. At last she heard not the sound of wheels,
but the coachman’s shout and the dull rumble in the covered entry. Even
Princess Varvara, playing patience, confirmed this, and Anna, flushing hotly,
got up; but instead of going down, as she had done twice before, she stood
still. She suddenly felt ashamed of her duplicity, but even more she dreaded
how he might meet her. All feeling of wounded pride had passed now; she was
only afraid of the expression of his displeasure. She remembered that her child
had been perfectly well again for the last two days. She felt positively vexed
with her for getting better from the very moment her letter was sent off. Then
she thought of him, that he was here, all of him, with his hands, his eyes. She
heard his voice. And forgetting everything, she ran joyfully to meet him.
“Well, how
is Annie?” he said timidly from below, looking up to Anna as she ran down to
him.
He was
sitting on a chair, and a footman was pulling off his warm over-boot.
“Oh, she
is better.”
“And you?”
he said, shaking himself.
She took
his hand in both of hers, and drew it to her waist, never taking her eyes off
him.
“Well, I’m
glad,” he said, coldly scanning her, her hair, her dress, which he knew she had
put on for him. All was charming, but how many times it had charmed him! And
the stern, stony expression that she so dreaded settled upon his face.
“Well, I’m
glad. And are you well?” he said, wiping his damp beard with his handkerchief
and kissing her hand.
“Never
mind,” she thought, “only let him be here, and so long as he’s here he cannot,
he dare not, cease to love me.”
The
evening was spent happily and gaily in the presence of Princess Varvara, who
complained to him that Anna had been taking morphine in his absence.
“What am I
to do? I couldn’t sleep.... My thoughts prevented me. When he’s here I never
take it—hardly ever.”
He told
her about the election, and Anna knew how by adroit questions to bring him to
what gave him most pleasure—his own success. She told him of everything that
interested him at home; and all that she told him was of the most cheerful
description.
But late
in the evening, when they were alone, Anna, seeing that she had regained
complete possession of him, wanted to erase the painful impression of the
glance he had given her for her letter. She said:
“Tell me
frankly, you were vexed at getting my letter, and you didn’t believe me?”
As soon as
she had said it, she felt that however warm his feelings were to her, he had
not forgiven her for that.
“Yes,” he
said, “the letter was so strange. First, Annie ill, and then you thought of
coming yourself.”
“It was
all the truth.”
“Oh, I
don’t doubt it.”
“Yes, you
do doubt it. You are vexed, I see.”
“Not for
one moment. I’m only vexed, that’s true, that you seem somehow unwilling to
admit that there are duties....”
“The duty
of going to a concert....”
“But we
won’t talk about it,” he said.
“Why not
talk about it?” she said.
“I only
meant to say that matters of real importance may turn up. Now, for instance, I
shall have to go to Moscow to arrange about the house.... Oh, Anna, why are you
so irritable? Don’t you know that I can’t live without you?”
“If so,”
said Anna, her voice suddenly changing, “it means that you are sick of this
life.... Yes, you will come for a day and go away, as men do....”
“Anna,
that’s cruel. I am ready to give up my whole life.”
But she
did not hear him.
“If you go
to Moscow, I will go too. I will not stay here. Either we must separate or else
live together.”
“Why, you
know, that’s my one desire. But for that....”
“We must
get a divorce. I will write to him. I see I cannot go on like this.... But I
will come with you to Moscow.”
“You talk as
if you were threatening me. But I desire nothing so much as never to be parted
from you,” said Vronsky, smiling.
But as he
said these words there gleamed in his eyes not merely a cold look, but the
vindictive look of a man persecuted and made cruel.
She saw
the look and correctly divined its meaning.
“If so,
it’s a calamity!” that glance told her. It was a moment’s impression, but she
never forgot it.
Anna wrote
to her husband asking him about a divorce, and towards the end of November,
taking leave of Princess Varvara, who wanted to go to Petersburg, she went with
Vronsky to Moscow. Expecting every day an answer from Alexey Alexandrovitch,
and after that the divorce, they now established themselves together like
married people.
To be continued