Chapter XVI
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Darya Alexandrovna carried out her
intention and went to see Anna. She was sorry to annoy her sister
and to do anything Levin disliked. She quite understood how right
the Levins were in not wishing to have anything to do with Vronsky.
But she felt she must go and see Anna, and show her that her
feelings could not be changed, in spite of the change in her
position. That she might be independent of the Levins in this
expedition, Darya Alexandrovna sent to the village to hire horses
for the drive; but Levin learning of it went to her to
protest.
“What makes you suppose that I dislike your going?
But, even if I did dislike it, I should still more dislike your not
taking my horses,” he said. “You never told me that you were going
for certain. Hiring horses in the village is disagreeable to me,
and, what’s of more importance, they’ll undertake the job and never
get you there. I have horses. And if you don’t want to wound me,
you’ll take mine.”
Darya Alexandrovna had to consent, and on the day
fixed Levin had ready for his sister-in-law a set of four horses
and relays, getting them together from the farm- and
saddle-horses-not at all a smart-looking set, but capable of taking
Darya Alexandrovna the whole distance in a single day. At that
moment, when horses were wanted for the princess, who was going,
and for the midwife, it was a difficult matter for Levin to make up
the number, but the duties of hospitality would not let him allow
Darya Alexandrovna to hire horses when staying in his house.
Moreover, he was well aware that the twenty roubles that would be
asked for the journey were a serious matter for her; Darya
Alexandrovna’s pecuniary affairs, which were in a very
unsatisfactory state, were taken to heart by the Levins as if they
were their own.
Darya Alexandrovna, by Levin’s advice, started
before daybreak. The road was good, the carriage comfortable, the
horses trotted along merrily, and on the box, besides the coachman,
sat the counting-house clerk, whom Levin was sending instead of a
groom for greater security. Darya Alexandrovna dozed and waked up
only on reaching the inn where the horses were to be changed.
After drinking tea at the same well-to-do peasant’s
with whom Levin had stayed on the way to Sviazhsky‘s, and chatting
with the women about their children, and with the old man about
Count Vronsky, whom the latter praised very highly, Darya
Alexandrovna, at ten o’clock, went on again. At home, looking after
her children, she had no time to think. So now, after this journey
of four hours, all the thoughts she had suppressed before rushed
swarming into her brain, and she thought over all her life as she
never had before, and from the most different points of view. Her
thoughts seemed strange even to herself. At first she thought about
the children, about whom she was uneasy, although the princess and
Kitty (she reckoned more upon her) had promised to look after them.
“If only Masha does not begin her naughty tricks, if Grisha isn’t
kicked by a horse, and Lily’s stomach isn’t upset again!” she
thought. But these questions of the present were succeeded by
questions of the immediate future. She began thinking how she had
to get a new flat in Moscow for the coming winter, to renew the
drawing-room furniture, and to make her elder girl a cloak. Then
questions of the more remote future occurred to her: how she was to
place her children in the world. “The girls are all right,” she
thought; “but the boys?”
“It’s very well that I’m teaching Grisha, but of
course that’s only because I am free myself now, I’m not with
child. Stiva, of course, there’s no counting on. And with the help
of good-natured friends I can bring them up; but if there’s another
baby coming? . . .” And the thought struck her how untruly it was
said that the curse laid on woman was that in sorrow she should
bring forth children.1
“The birth itself, that’s nothing; but the months
of carrying the child—that’s what’s so intolerable,” she thought,
picturing to herself her last pregnancy, and the death of the last
baby. And she recalled the conversation she had just had with the
young woman at the inn. On being asked whether she had any
children, the handsome young woman had answered cheerfully:
“I had a girl baby, but God set me free; I buried
her last Lent.”
“Well, did you grieve very much for her?” asked
Darya Alexandrovna.
“Why grieve? The old man has grandchildren enough
as it is. It was only a trouble. No working, nor nothing. Only a
tie.”
This answer had struck Darya Alexandrovna as
revolting in spite of the good-natured and pleasing face of the
young woman; but now she could not help recalling these words. In
those cynical words there was indeed a grain of truth.
“Yes, altogether,” thought Darya Alexandrovna,
looking back over her whole existence during those fifteen years of
her married life, “pregnancy, sickness, mental incapacity,
indifference to everything, and most of all—hideousness. Kitty,
young and pretty as she is, even Kitty has lost her looks; and I
when I’m with child become hideous, I know it. The birth, the
agony, the hideous agonies, that last moment . . . then the
nursing, the sleepless nights, the fearful pains....”
Darya Alexandrovna shuddered at the mere
recollection of the pain from sore breasts which she had suffered
with almost every child. “Then the children’s illnesses, that
everlasting apprehension; then bringing them up; evil propensities”
(she thought of little Masha’s crime among the raspberries),
“education, Latin—it’s all so incomprehensible and difficult. And
on the top of it all, the death of these children.” And there rose
again before her imagination the cruel memory, that always tore her
mother’s heart, of the death of her last little baby, who had died
of croup; his funeral, the callous indifference of all at the
little pink coffin, and her own torn heart, and her lonely anguish
at the sight of the pale little brow with its projecting temples,
and the open, wondering little mouth seen in the coffin at the
moment when it was being covered with the little pink lid with a
cross braided on it.
“And all this, what’s it for? What is to come of it
all? That I’m wasting my life, never having a moment’s peace,
either with child, or nursing a child, forever irritable, peevish,
wretched myself and worrying others, repulsive to my husband, while
the children are growing up unhappy, badly educated, and penniless.
Even now, if it weren’t for spending the summer at the Levins’, I
don’t know how we should be managing to live. Of course Kostya and
Kitty have so much tact that we don’t feel it; but it can’t go on.
They’ll have children, they won’t be able to keep us; it’s a drag
on them as it is. How is papa, who has hardly anything left for
himself, to help us? So that I can’t even bring the children up by
myself, and may find it hard with the help of other people, at the
cost of humiliation. Why, even if we suppose the greatest good
luck, that the children don’t die, and I bring them up somehow. At
the very best they’ll simply be decent people. That’s all I can
hope for. And to gain simply that—what agonies, what toil! ...
One’s whole life ruined!” Again she recalled what the young peasant
woman had said, and again she was revolted at the thought; but she
could not help admitting that there was a grain of brutal truth in
the words.
“Is it far now, Mihail?” Darya Alexandrovna asked
the counting-house clerk, to turn her mind from thoughts that were
frightening her.
“From this village, they say, it’s five miles.” The
carriage drove along the village street and onto a bridge. On the
bridge was a crowd of peasant women with coils of ties for the
sheaves on their shoulders, gaily and noisily chattering. They
stood still on the bridge, staring inquisitively at the carriage.
All the faces turned to Darya Alexandrovna looked to her healthy
and happy, making her envious of their enjoyment of life. “They’re
all living, they’re all enjoying life,” Darya Alexandrovna still
mused when she had passed the peasant women and was driving uphill
again at a trot, seated comfortably on the soft springs of the old
carriage, “while I, let out, as it were from prison, from the world
of worries that fret me to death, am only looking about me now for
an instant. They all live; those peasant women and my sister
Natalia and Varenka and Anna, whom I am going to see—all, but not
I.
“And they attack Anna. What for? am I any better? I
have, anyway, a husband I love—not as I should like to love him,
still I do love him, while Anna never loved hers. How is she to
blame? She wants to live. God has put that in our hearts. Very
likely I should have done the same. Even to this day I don’t feel
sure I did right in listening to her at that terrible time when she
came to me in Moscow. I ought then to have cast off my husband and
have begun my life fresh. I might have loved and have been loved in
reality. And is it any better as it is? I don’t respect him. He’s
necessary to me,” she thought about her husband, “and I put up with
him. Is that any better? At that time I could still have been
admired, I had beauty left me still,” Darya Alexandrovna pursued
her thoughts, and she would have liked to look at herself in the
looking-glass. She had a traveling looking-glass in her hand-bag,
and she wanted to take it out; but looking at the backs of the
coachman and the swaying counting-house clerk, she felt that she
would be ashamed if either of them were to look round, and she did
not take out the glass.
But without looking in the glass, she thought that
even now it was not too late; and she thought of Sergey Ivanovitch,
who was always particularly attentive to her, of Stiva’s
good-hearted friend, Turovtsin, who had helped her nurse her
children through the scarlatina, and was in love with her. And
there was some one else, a quite young man, who—her husband had
told her it as a joke—thought her more beautiful than either of her
sisters. And the most passionate and impossible romances rose
before Darya Alexandrovna’s imagination. “Anna did quite right, and
certainly I shall never reproach her for it. She is happy, she
makes another person happy, and she’s not broken down as I am, but
most likely just as she always was, bright, clever, open to every
impression,” thought Darya Alexandrovna,—and a sly smile curved her
lips, for, as she pondered on Anna’s love-affair, Darya
Alexandrovna constructed on parallel lines an almost identical
love-affair for herself, with an imaginary composite figure, the
ideal man who was in love with her. She, like Anna, confessed the
whole affair to her husband. And the amazement and perplexity of
Stepan Arkadyevitch at this avowal made her smile.
In such day-dreams she reached the turning of the
highroad that led to Vozdvizhenskoe.