Chapter IX
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It was past five, and several guests had
already arrived, before the host himself got home. He went in
together with Sergey Ivanovitch Koznishev and Pestsov, who had
reached the street door at the same moment. These were the two
leading representatives of the Moscow intellectuals, as Oblonsky
had called them. Both were men respected for their character and
their intelligence. They respected each other, but were in complete
and hopeless disagreement upon almost every subject, not because
they belonged to opposite parties, but precisely because they were
of the same party (their enemies refused to see any distinction
between their views); but, in that party, each had his own special
shade of opinion. And since no difference is less easily overcome
than the difference of opinion about semi-abstract questions, they
never agreed in any opinion, and had long, indeed, been accustomed
to jeer without anger, each at the other’s incorrigible
aberrations.
They were just going in at the door, talking of the
weather, when Stepan Arkadyevitch overtook them. In the
drawing-room there were already sitting Prince Alexander
Dmitrievitch Shtcherbatsky, young Shtcherbatsky, Turovtsin, Kitty,
and Karenin.
Stepan Arkadyevitch saw immediately that things
were not going well in the drawing-room without him. Darya
Alexandrovna, in her best gray silk gown, obviously worried about
the children, who were to have their dinner by themselves in the
nursery, and by her husband’s absence, was not equal to the task of
making the party mix without him. All were sitting like so many
priests’ wives on a visit (so the old prince expressed it),
obviously wondering why they were there, and pumping up remarks
simply to avoid being silent. Turovtsin—good, simple man—felt
unmistakably a fish out of water, and the smile with which his
thick lips greeted Stepan Arkadyevitch said, as plainly as words:
“Well, old boy, you have popped me down in a learned set! A
drinking-party now, or the Chateau des Fleurs, would be more in my
line!” The old prince sat in silence, his bright little eyes
watching Karenin from one side, and Stepan Arkadyevitch saw that he
had already formed a phrase to sum up that politician of whom
guests were invited to partake as though he were a sturgeon. Kitty
was looking at the door, calling up all her energies to keep her
from blushing at the entrance of Konstantin Levin. Young
Shtcherbatsky, who had not been introduced to Karenin, was trying
to look as though he were not in the least conscious of it. Karenin
himself had followed the Petersburg fashion for a dinner with
ladies and was wearing evening dress and a white tie. Stepan
Arkadyevitch saw by his face that he had come simply to keep his
promise, and was performing a disagreeable duty in being present at
this gathering. He was indeed the person chiefly responsible for
the chill benumbing all the guests before Stepan Arkadyevitch came
in.
On entering the drawing-room Stepan Arkadyevitch
apologized, explaining that he had been detained by that prince,
who was always the scapegoat for all his absences and
unpunctualities, and in one moment he had made all the guests
acquainted with each other, and, bringing together Alexey
Alexandrovitch and Sergey Koznishev, started them on a discussion
of the Russification of Poland, into which they immediately plunged
with Pestsov. Slapping Turovtsin on the shoulder, he whispered
something comic in his ear, and set him down by his wife and the
old prince. Then he told Kitty she was looking very pretty that
evening, and presented Shtcherbatsky to Karenin. In a moment he had
so kneaded together the social dough that the drawing-room became
very lively, and there was a merry buzz of voices. Konstantin Levin
was the only person who had not arrived. But this was so much the
better, as going into the dining-room, Stepan Arkadyevitch found to
his horror that the port and sherry had been procured from Depré,
and not from Levy, and, directing that the coachman should be sent
off as speedily as possible to Levy’s, he was going back to the
drawing-room.
In the dining-room he was met by Konstantin
Levin.
“I’m not late?”
“You can never help being late!” said Stepan
Arkadyevitch, taking his arm.
“Have you a lot of people? Who’s here?” asked
Levin, unable to help blushing, as he knocked the snow off his cap
with his glove.
“All our own set. Kitty’s here. Come along, I’ll
introduce you to Karenin.”
Stepan Arkadyevitch, for all his liberal views, was
well aware that to meet Karenin was sure to be felt a flattering
distinction, and so treated his best friends to this honor. But at
that instant Konstantin Levin was not in a condition to feel all
the gratification of making such an acquaintance. He had not seen
Kitty since that memorable evening when he met Vronsky, not
counting, that is, the moment when he had had a glimpse of her on
the highroad. He had known at the bottom of his heart that he would
see her here to-day. But to keep his thoughts free, he had tried to
persuade himself that he did not know it. Now when he heard that
she was here, he was suddenly conscious of such delight, and at the
same time of such dread, that his breath failed him and he could
not utter what he wanted to say.
“What is she like, what is she like? Like what she
used to be, or like what she was in the carriage? What if Darya
Alexandrovna told the truth? Why shouldn’t it be the truth?” he
thought.
“Oh, please, introduce me to Karenin,” he brought
out with an effort, and with a desperately determined step he
walked into the drawing-room and beheld her.
She was not the same as she used to be, nor was she
as she had been in the carriage; she was quite different.
She was scared, shy, shame-faced, and still more
charming from it. She saw him the very instant he walked into the
room. She had been expecting him. She was delighted, and so
confused at her own delight that there was a moment, the moment
when he went up to her sister and glanced again at her, when she,
and he, and Dolly, who saw it all, thought she would break down and
would begin to cry. She crimsoned, turned white, crimsoned again,
and grew faint, waiting with quivering lips for him to come to her.
He went up to her, bowed, and held out his hand without speaking.
Except for the slight quiver of her lips and the moisture in her
eyes that made them brighter, her smile was almost calm as she
said:
“How long it is since we’ve seen each other!” and
with desperate determination she pressed his hand with her cold
hand.
“You’ve not seen me, but I’ve seen you,” said
Levin, with a radiant smile of happiness. “I saw you when you were
driving from the railway station to Ergushovo.”
“When?” she asked, wondering.
“You were driving to Ergushovo,” said Levin,
feeling as if he would sob with the rapture that was flooding his
heart. “And how dared I associate a thought of anything not
innocent with this touching creature? And, yes, I do believe it’s
true what Darya Alexandrovna told me,” he thought.
Stepan Arkadyevitch took him by the arm and led him
away to Karenin.
“Let me introduce you.” He mentioned their
names.
“Very glad to meet you again,” said Alexey
Alexandrovitch coldly, shaking hands with Levin.
“You are acquainted?” Stepan Arkadyevitch asked in
surprise.
“We spent three hours together in the train,” said
Levin smiling, “but got out, just as in a masquerade, quite
mystified—at least I was.”
“Nonsense! Come along, please,” said Stepan
Arkadyevitch, pointing in the direction of the dining-room.
The men went into the dining-room and went up to a
table, laid with six sorts of spirits and as many kinds of cheese,
some with little silver spades and some without, caviar herrings,
preserves of various kinds, and plates with slices of French
bread.
The men stood round the strong-smelling spirits and
salt delicacies, and the discussion of the Russification of
Poland1 between
Koznishev, Karenin, and Pestsov died down in anticipation of
dinner.
Sergey Ivanovitch was unequaled in his skill in
winding up the most heated and serious argument by some unexpected
pinch of Attic salt2 that
changed the disposition of his opponent. He did this now.
Alexey Alexandrovitch had been maintaining that the
Russification of Poland could only be accomplished as a result of
larger measures which ought to be introduced by the Russian
government.
Pestsov insisted that one country can only absorb
another when it is the more densely populated.
Koznishev admitted both points, but with
limitations. As they were going out of the drawing-room to conclude
the argument, Koznishev said, smiling:
“So, then, for the Russification of our foreign
populations there is but one method—to bring up as many children as
one can. My brother and I are terribly in fault, I see. You married
men, especially you, Stepan Arkadyevitch, are the real patriots:
what number have you reached?” he said, smiling genially at their
host and holding out a tiny wine-glass to him.
Every one laughed, and Stepan Arkadyevitch with
particular good-humor.
“Oh, yes, that’s the best method!” he said,
munching cheese and filling the wine-glass with a special sort of
spirit. The conversation dropped at the jest.
“This cheese is not bad. Shall I give you some?”
said the master of the house. “Why, have you been going in for
gymnastics again?” he asked Levin, pinching his muscle with his
left hand. Levin smiled, bent his arm, and under Stepan
Arkadyevitch’s fingers the muscles swelled up like a sound cheese,
hard as a knob of iron, through the fine cloth of the coat.
“What biceps! A perfect Samson!”3
“I imagine great strength is needed for hunting
bears,” observed Alexey Alexandrovitch, who had the mistiest
notions about the chase. He cut off and spread with cheese a wafer
of bread fine as a spider-web.
Levin smiled.
“Not at all. Quite the contrary; a child can kill a
bear,” he said, with a slight bow moving aside for the ladies, who
were approaching the table.
“You have killed a bear, I’ve been told!” said
Kitty, trying assiduously to catch with her fork a perverse
mushroom that would slip away, and setting the lace quivering over
her white arm. “Are there bears on your place?” she added, turning
her charming little head to him and smiling.
There was apparently nothing extraordinary in what
she said, but what unutterable meaning there was for him in every
sound, in every turn of her lips, her eyes, her hand as she said
it! There was entreaty for forgiveness, and trust in him, and
tenderness—soft, timid tenderness—and promise and hope and love for
him, which he could not but believe in and which choked him with
happiness.
“No, we’ve been hunting in the Tver province. It
was coming back from there that I met your beau-frèrebf
in the train, or your beau-frère’s brother-in-law,” he said
with a smile. “It was an amusing meeting.”
And he began telling with droll good-humor how,
after not sleeping all night, he had, wearing an old fur-lined,
full-skirted coat,4 got
into Alexey Alexandrovitch’s compartment.
“The conductor, forgetting the proverb, would have
chucked me out on account of my attire; but thereupon I began
expressing my feelings in elevated language, and . . . you, too,”
he said, addressing Karenin and forgetting his name, “at first
would have ejected me on the ground of the old coat, but afterwards
you took my part, for which I am extremely grateful.”
“The rights of passengers generally to choose their
seats are too ill-defined,” said Alexey Alexandrovitch, rubbing the
tips of his fingers on his handkerchief.
“I saw you were in uncertainty about me,” said
Levin, smiling good-naturedly, “but I made haste to plunge into
intellectual conversation to smooth over the defects of my
attire.”
Sergey Ivanovitch, while he kept up a conversation
with their hostess, had one ear for his brother, and he glanced
askance at him. “What is the matter with him to-day? Why such a
conquering hero?” he thought. He did not know that Levin was
feeling as though he had grown wings. Levin knew she was listening
to his words and that she was glad to listen to him. And this was
the only thing that interested him. Not in that room only, but in
the whole world, there existed for him only himself, with
enormously increased importance and dignity in his own eyes, and
she. He felt himself on a pinnacle that made him giddy, and far
away down below were all those nice excellent Karenins, Oblonskys,
and all the world.
Quite without attracting notice, without glancing
at them, as though there were no other places left, Stepan
Arkadyevitch put Levin and Kitty side by side.
“Oh, you may as well sit there,” he said to
Levin.
The dinner was as choice as the china, in which
Stepan Arkadyevitch was a connoisseur. The soupe
Marie-Louise was a splendid success; the tiny pies eaten with
it melted in the mouth and were irreproachable. The two footmen and
Matvey, in white cravats, did their duty with the dishes and wines
unobtrusively, quietly, and swiftly. On the material side the
dinner was a success; it was no less so on the immaterial. The
conversation, at times general and at times between individuals,
never paused, and towards the end the company was so lively that
the men rose from the table, without stopping speaking, and even
Alexey Alexandrovitch thawed.