<h3>Chapter 17</h3>
<p>The coachman pulled up his four horses and looked round to the right, to a
field of rye, where some peasants were sitting on a cart. The counting-house
clerk was just going to jump down, but on second thoughts he shouted
peremptorily to the peasants instead, and beckoned to them to come up. The
wind, that seemed to blow as they drove, dropped when the carriage stood still;
gadflies settled on the steaming horses that angrily shook them off. The
metallic clank of a whetstone against a scythe, that came to them from the
cart, ceased. One of the peasants got up and came towards the carriage.</p>
<p>“Well, you are slow!” the counting-house clerk shouted angrily to
the peasant who was stepping slowly with his bare feet over the ruts of the
rough dry road. “Come along, do!”</p>
<p>A curly-headed old man with a bit of bast tied round his hair, and his bent
back dark with perspiration, came towards the carriage, quickening his steps,
and took hold of the mud-guard with his sunburnt hand.</p>
<p>“Vozdvizhenskoe, the manor house? the count’s?” he repeated;
“go on to the end of this track. Then turn to the left. Straight along
the avenue and you’ll come right upon it. But whom do you want? The count
himself?”</p>
<p>“Well, are they at home, my good man?” Darya Alexandrovna said
vaguely, not knowing how to ask about Anna, even of this peasant.</p>
<p>“At home for sure,” said the peasant, shifting from one bare foot
to the other, and leaving a distinct print of five toes and a heel in the dust.
“Sure to be at home,” he repeated, evidently eager to talk.
“Only yesterday visitors arrived. There’s a sight of visitors come.
What do you want?” He turned round and called to a lad, who was shouting
something to him from the cart. “Oh! They all rode by here not long
since, to look at a reaping machine. They’ll be home by now. And who will
you be belonging to?...”</p>
<p>“We’ve come a long way,” said the coachman, climbing onto the
box. “So it’s not far?”</p>
<p>“I tell you, it’s just here. As soon as you get out....” he
said, keeping hold all the while of the carriage.</p>
<p>A healthy-looking, broad-shouldered young fellow came up too.</p>
<p>“What, is it laborers they want for the harvest?” he asked.</p>
<p>“I don’t know, my boy.”</p>
<p>“So you keep to the left, and you’ll come right on it,” said
the peasant, unmistakably loth to let the travelers go, and eager to converse.</p>
<p>The coachman started the horses, but they were only just turning off when the
peasant shouted: “Stop! Hi, friend! Stop!” called the two voices.
The coachman stopped.</p>
<p>“They’re coming! They’re yonder!” shouted the peasant.
“See what a turn-out!” he said, pointing to four persons on
horseback, and two in a <i>char-à-banc</i>, coming along the road.</p>
<p>They were Vronsky with a jockey, Veslovsky and Anna on horseback, and Princess
Varvara and Sviazhsky in the <i>char-à-banc</i>. They had gone out to look at
the working of a new reaping machine.</p>
<p>When the carriage stopped, the party on horseback were coming at a walking
pace. Anna was in front beside Veslovsky. Anna, quietly walking her horse, a
sturdy English cob with cropped mane and short tail, her beautiful head with
her black hair straying loose under her high hat, her full shoulders, her
slender waist in her black riding habit, and all the ease and grace of her
deportment, impressed Dolly.</p>
<p>For the first minute it seemed to her unsuitable for Anna to be on horseback.
The conception of riding on horseback for a lady was, in Darya
Alexandrovna’s mind, associated with ideas of youthful flirtation and
frivolity, which, in her opinion, was unbecoming in Anna’s position. But
when she had scrutinized her, seeing her closer, she was at once reconciled to
her riding. In spite of her elegance, everything was so simple, quiet, and
dignified in the attitude, the dress and the movements of Anna, that nothing
could have been more natural.</p>
<p>Beside Anna, on a hot-looking gray cavalry horse, was Vassenka Veslovsky in his
Scotch cap with floating ribbons, his stout legs stretched out in front,
obviously pleased with his own appearance. Darya Alexandrovna could not
suppress a good-humored smile as she recognized him. Behind rode Vronsky on a
dark bay mare, obviously heated from galloping. He was holding her in, pulling
at the reins.</p>
<p>After him rode a little man in the dress of a jockey. Sviazhsky and Princess
Varvara in a new <i>char-à-banc</i> with a big, raven-black trotting horse,
overtook the party on horseback.</p>
<p>Anna’s face suddenly beamed with a joyful smile at the instant when, in
the little figure huddled in a corner of the old carriage, she recognized
Dolly. She uttered a cry, started in the saddle, and set her horse into a
gallop. On reaching the carriage she jumped off without assistance, and holding
up her riding habit, she ran up to greet Dolly.</p>
<p>“I thought it was you and dared not think it. How delightful! You
can’t fancy how glad I am!” she said, at one moment pressing her
face against Dolly and kissing her, and at the next holding her off and
examining her with a smile.</p>
<p>“Here’s a delightful surprise, Alexey!” she said, looking
round at Vronsky, who had dismounted, and was walking towards them.</p>
<p>Vronsky, taking off his tall gray hat, went up to Dolly.</p>
<p>“You wouldn’t believe how glad we are to see you,” he said,
giving peculiar significance to the words, and showing his strong white teeth
in a smile.</p>
<p>Vassenka Veslovsky, without getting off his horse, took off his cap and greeted
the visitor by gleefully waving the ribbons over his head.</p>
<p>“That’s Princess Varvara,” Anna said in reply to a glance of
inquiry from Dolly as the <i>char-à-banc</i> drove up.</p>
<p>“Ah!” said Darya Alexandrovna, and unconsciously her face betrayed
her dissatisfaction.</p>
<p>Princess Varvara was her husband’s aunt, and she had long known her, and
did not respect her. She knew that Princess Varvara had passed her whole life
toadying on her rich relations, but that she should now be sponging on Vronsky,
a man who was nothing to her, mortified Dolly on account of her kinship with
her husband. Anna noticed Dolly’s expression, and was disconcerted by it.
She blushed, dropped her riding habit, and stumbled over it.</p>
<p>Darya Alexandrovna went up to the <i>char-à-banc</i> and coldly greeted
Princess Varvara. Sviazhsky too she knew. He inquired how his queer friend with
the young wife was, and running his eyes over the ill-matched horses and the
carriage with its patched mud-guards, proposed to the ladies that they should
get into the <i>char-à-banc</i>.</p>
<p>“And I’ll get into this vehicle,” he said. “The horse
is quiet, and the princess drives capitally.”</p>
<p>“No, stay as you were,” said Anna, coming up, “and
we’ll go in the carriage,” and taking Dolly’s arm, she drew
her away.</p>
<p>Darya Alexandrovna’s eyes were fairly dazzled by the elegant carriage of
a pattern she had never seen before, the splendid horses, and the elegant and
gorgeous people surrounding her. But what struck her most of all was the change
that had taken place in Anna, whom she knew so well and loved. Any other woman,
a less close observer, not knowing Anna before, or not having thought as Darya
Alexandrovna had been thinking on the road, would not have noticed anything
special in Anna. But now Dolly was struck by that temporary beauty, which is
only found in women during the moments of love, and which she saw now in
Anna’s face. Everything in her face, the clearly marked dimples in her
cheeks and chin, the line of her lips, the smile which, as it were, fluttered
about her face, the brilliance of her eyes, the grace and rapidity of her
movements, the fulness of the notes of her voice, even the manner in which,
with a sort of angry friendliness, she answered Veslovsky when he asked
permission to get on her cob, so as to teach it to gallop with the right leg
foremost—it was all peculiarly fascinating, and it seemed as if she were
herself aware of it, and rejoicing in it.</p>
<p>When both the women were seated in the carriage, a sudden embarrassment came
over both of them. Anna was disconcerted by the intent look of inquiry Dolly
fixed upon her. Dolly was embarrassed because after Sviazhsky’s phrase
about “this vehicle,” she could not help feeling ashamed of the
dirty old carriage in which Anna was sitting with her. The coachman Philip and
the counting-house clerk were experiencing the same sensation. The
counting-house clerk, to conceal his confusion, busied himself settling the
ladies, but Philip the coachman became sullen, and was bracing himself not to
be overawed in future by this external superiority. He smiled ironically,
looking at the raven horse, and was already deciding in his own mind that this
smart trotter in the <i>char-à-banc</i> was only good for <i>promenage</i>, and
wouldn’t do thirty miles straight off in the heat.</p>
<p>The peasants had all got up from the cart and were inquisitively and mirthfully
staring at the meeting of the friends, making their comments on it.</p>
<p>“They’re pleased, too; haven’t seen each other for a long
while,” said the curly-headed old man with the bast round his hair.</p>
<p>“I say, Uncle Gerasim, if we could take that raven horse now, to cart the
corn, that ’ud be quick work!”</p>
<p>“Look-ee! Is that a woman in breeches?” said one of them, pointing
to Vassenka Veslovsky sitting in a side saddle.</p>
<p>“Nay, a man! See how smartly he’s going it!”</p>
<p>“Eh, lads! seems we’re not going to sleep, then?”</p>
<p>“What chance of sleep today!” said the old man, with a sidelong
look at the sun. “Midday’s past, look-ee! Get your hooks, and come
along!”</p>
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