<h3>Chapter 28</h3>
<p>On arriving in Petersburg, Vronsky and Anna stayed at one of the best hotels;
Vronsky apart in a lower story, Anna above with her child, its nurse, and her
maid, in a large suite of four rooms.</p>
<p>On the day of his arrival Vronsky went to his brother’s. There he found
his mother, who had come from Moscow on business. His mother and sister-in-law
greeted him as usual: they asked him about his stay abroad, and talked of their
common acquaintances, but did not let drop a single word in allusion to his
connection with Anna. His brother came the next morning to see Vronsky, and of
his own accord asked him about her, and Alexey Vronsky told him directly that
he looked upon his connection with Madame Karenina as marriage; that he hoped
to arrange a divorce, and then to marry her, and until then he considered her
as much a wife as any other wife, and he begged him to tell their mother and
his wife so.</p>
<p>“If the world disapproves, I don’t care,” said Vronsky;
“but if my relations want to be on terms of relationship with me, they
will have to be on the same terms with my wife.”</p>
<p>The elder brother, who had always a respect for his younger brother’s
judgment, could not well tell whether he was right or not till the world had
decided the question; for his part he had nothing against it, and with Alexey
he went up to see Anna.</p>
<p>Before his brother, as before everyone, Vronsky addressed Anna with a certain
formality, treating her as he might a very intimate friend, but it was
understood that his brother knew their real relations, and they talked about
Anna’s going to Vronsky’s estate.</p>
<p>In spite of all his social experience Vronsky was, in consequence of the new
position in which he was placed, laboring under a strange misapprehension. One
would have thought he must have understood that society was closed for him and
Anna; but now some vague ideas had sprung up in his brain that this was only
the case in old-fashioned days, and that now with the rapidity of modern
progress (he had unconsciously become by now a partisan of every sort of
progress) the views of society had changed, and that the question whether they
would be received in society was not a foregone conclusion. “Of
course,” he thought, “she would not be received at court, but
intimate friends can and must look at it in the proper light.” One may
sit for several hours at a stretch with one’s legs crossed in the same
position, if one knows that there’s nothing to prevent one’s
changing one’s position; but if a man knows that he must remain sitting
so with crossed legs, then cramps come on, the legs begin to twitch and to
strain towards the spot to which one would like to draw them. This was what
Vronsky was experiencing in regard to the world. Though at the bottom of his
heart he knew that the world was shut on them, he put it to the test whether
the world had not changed by now and would not receive them. But he very
quickly perceived that though the world was open for him personally, it was
closed for Anna. Just as in the game of cat and mouse, the hands raised for him
were dropped to bar the way for Anna.</p>
<p>One of the first ladies of Petersburg society whom Vronsky saw was his cousin
Betsy.</p>
<p>“At last!” she greeted him joyfully. “And Anna? How glad I
am! Where are you stopping? I can fancy after your delightful travels you must
find our poor Petersburg horrid. I can fancy your honeymoon in Rome. How about
the divorce? Is that all over?”</p>
<p>Vronsky noticed that Betsy’s enthusiasm waned when she learned that no
divorce had as yet taken place.</p>
<p>“People will throw stones at me, I know,” she said, “but I
shall come and see Anna; yes, I shall certainly come. You won’t be here
long, I suppose?”</p>
<p>And she did certainly come to see Anna the same day, but her tone was not at
all the same as in former days. She unmistakably prided herself on her courage,
and wished Anna to appreciate the fidelity of her friendship. She only stayed
ten minutes, talking of society gossip, and on leaving she said:</p>
<p>“You’ve never told me when the divorce is to be? Supposing
I’m ready to fling my cap over the mill, other starchy people will give
you the cold shoulder until you’re married. And that’s so simple
nowadays. <i>Ça se fait</i>. So you’re going on Friday? Sorry we
shan’t see each other again.”</p>
<p>From Betsy’s tone Vronsky might have grasped what he had to expect from
the world; but he made another effort in his own family. His mother he did not
reckon upon. He knew that his mother, who had been so enthusiastic over Anna at
their first acquaintance, would have no mercy on her now for having ruined her
son’s career. But he had more hope of Varya, his brother’s wife. He
fancied she would not throw stones, and would go simply and directly to see
Anna, and would receive her in her own house.</p>
<p>The day after his arrival Vronsky went to her, and finding her alone, expressed
his wishes directly.</p>
<p>“You know, Alexey,” she said after hearing him, “how fond I
am of you, and how ready I am to do anything for you; but I have not spoken,
because I knew I could be of no use to you and to Anna Arkadyevna,” she
said, articulating the name “Anna Arkadyevna” with particular care.
“Don’t suppose, please, that I judge her. Never; perhaps in her
place I should have done the same. I don’t and can’t enter into
that,” she said, glancing timidly at his gloomy face. “But one must
call things by their names. You want me to go and see her, to ask her here, and
to rehabilitate her in society; but do understand that <i>I cannot</i> do so. I
have daughters growing up, and I must live in the world for my husband’s
sake. Well, I’m ready to come and see Anna Arkadyevna: she will
understand that I can’t ask her here, or I should have to do so in such a
way that she would not meet people who look at things differently; that would
offend her. I can’t raise her....”</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t regard her as fallen more than hundreds of women you
do receive!” Vronsky interrupted her still more gloomily, and he got up
in silence, understanding that his sister-in-law’s decision was not to be
shaken.</p>
<p>“Alexey! don’t be angry with me. Please understand that I’m
not to blame,” began Varya, looking at him with a timid smile.</p>
<p>“I’m not angry with you,” he said still as gloomily;
“but I’m sorry in two ways. I’m sorry, too, that this means
breaking up our friendship—if not breaking up, at least weakening it. You
will understand that for me, too, it cannot be otherwise.”</p>
<p>And with that he left her.</p>
<p>Vronsky knew that further efforts were useless, and that he had to spend these
few days in Petersburg as though in a strange town, avoiding every sort of
relation with his own old circle in order not to be exposed to the annoyances
and humiliations which were so intolerable to him. One of the most unpleasant
features of his position in Petersburg was that Alexey Alexandrovitch and his
name seemed to meet him everywhere. He could not begin to talk of anything
without the conversation turning on Alexey Alexandrovitch; he could not go
anywhere without risk of meeting him. So at least it seemed to Vronsky, just as
it seems to a man with a sore finger that he is continually, as though on
purpose, grazing his sore finger on everything.</p>
<p>Their stay in Petersburg was the more painful to Vronsky that he perceived all
the time a sort of new mood that he could not understand in Anna. At one time
she would seem in love with him, and then she would become cold, irritable, and
impenetrable. She was worrying over something, and keeping something back from
him, and did not seem to notice the humiliations which poisoned his existence,
and for her, with her delicate intuition, must have been still more unbearable.</p>
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