<h3>Chapter 3</h3>
<p>Levin had on this visit to town seen a great deal of his old friend at the
university, Professor Katavasov, whom he had not seen since his marriage. He
liked in Katavasov the clearness and simplicity of his conception of life.
Levin thought that the clearness of Katavasov’s conception of life was
due to the poverty of his nature; Katavasov thought that the disconnectedness
of Levin’s ideas was due to his lack of intellectual discipline; but
Levin enjoyed Katavasov’s clearness, and Katavasov enjoyed the abundance
of Levin’s untrained ideas, and they liked to meet and to discuss.</p>
<p>Levin had read Katavasov some parts of his book, and he had liked them. On the
previous day Katavasov had met Levin at a public lecture and told him that the
celebrated Metrov, whose article Levin had so much liked, was in Moscow, that
he had been much interested by what Katavasov had told him about Levin’s
work, and that he was coming to see him tomorrow at eleven, and would be very
glad to make Levin’s acquaintance.</p>
<p>“You’re positively a reformed character, I’m glad to
see,” said Katavasov, meeting Levin in the little drawing-room. “I
heard the bell and thought: Impossible that it can be he at the exact time!...
Well, what do you say to the Montenegrins now? They’re a race of
warriors.”</p>
<p>“Why, what’s happened?” asked Levin.</p>
<p>Katavasov in a few words told him the last piece of news from the war, and
going into his study, introduced Levin to a short, thick-set man of pleasant
appearance. This was Metrov. The conversation touched for a brief space on
politics and on how recent events were looked at in the higher spheres in
Petersburg. Metrov repeated a saying that had reached him through a most
trustworthy source, reported as having been uttered on this subject by the Tsar
and one of the ministers. Katavasov had heard also on excellent authority that
the Tsar had said something quite different. Levin tried to imagine
circumstances in which both sayings might have been uttered, and the
conversation on that topic dropped.</p>
<p>“Yes, here he’s written almost a book on the natural conditions of
the laborer in relation to the land,” said Katavasov; “I’m
not a specialist, but I, as a natural science man, was pleased at his not
taking mankind as something outside biological laws; but, on the contrary,
seeing his dependence on his surroundings, and in that dependence seeking the
laws of his development.”</p>
<p>“That’s very interesting,” said Metrov.</p>
<p>“What I began precisely was to write a book on agriculture; but studying
the chief instrument of agriculture, the laborer,” said Levin, reddening,
“I could not help coming to quite unexpected results.”</p>
<p>And Levin began carefully, as it were, feeling his ground, to expound his
views. He knew Metrov had written an article against the generally accepted
theory of political economy, but to what extent he could reckon on his sympathy
with his own new views he did not know and could not guess from the clever and
serene face of the learned man.</p>
<p>“But in what do you see the special characteristics of the Russian
laborer?” said Metrov; “in his biological characteristics, so to
speak, or in the condition in which he is placed?”</p>
<p>Levin saw that there was an idea underlying this question with which he did not
agree. But he went on explaining his own idea that the Russian laborer has a
quite special view of the land, different from that of other people; and to
support this proposition he made haste to add that in his opinion this attitude
of the Russian peasant was due to the consciousness of his vocation to people
vast unoccupied expanses in the East.</p>
<p>“One may easily be led into error in basing any conclusion on the general
vocation of a people,” said Metrov, interrupting Levin. “The
condition of the laborer will always depend on his relation to the land and to
capital.”</p>
<p>And without letting Levin finish explaining his idea, Metrov began expounding
to him the special point of his own theory.</p>
<p>In what the point of his theory lay, Levin did not understand, because he did
not take the trouble to understand. He saw that Metrov, like other people, in
spite of his own article, in which he had attacked the current theory of
political economy, looked at the position of the Russian peasant simply from
the point of view of capital, wages, and rent. He would indeed have been
obliged to admit that in the eastern—much the larger—part of Russia
rent was as yet nil, that for nine-tenths of the eighty millions of the Russian
peasants wages took the form simply of food provided for themselves, and that
capital does not so far exist except in the form of the most primitive tools.
Yet it was only from that point of view that he considered every laborer,
though in many points he differed from the economists and had his own theory of
the wage-fund, which he expounded to Levin.</p>
<p>Levin listened reluctantly, and at first made objections. He would have liked
to interrupt Metrov, to explain his own thought, which in his opinion would
have rendered further exposition of Metrov’s theories superfluous. But
later on, feeling convinced that they looked at the matter so differently, that
they could never understand one another, he did not even oppose his statements,
but simply listened. Although what Metrov was saying was by now utterly devoid
of interest for him, he yet experienced a certain satisfaction in listening to
him. It flattered his vanity that such a learned man should explain his ideas
to him so eagerly, with such intensity and confidence in Levin’s
understanding of the subject, sometimes with a mere hint referring him to a
whole aspect of the subject. He put this down to his own credit, unaware that
Metrov, who had already discussed his theory over and over again with all his
intimate friends, talked of it with special eagerness to every new person, and
in general was eager to talk to anyone of any subject that interested him, even
if still obscure to himself.</p>
<p>“We are late though,” said Katavasov, looking at his watch directly
Metrov had finished his discourse.</p>
<p>“Yes, there’s a meeting of the Society of Amateurs today in
commemoration of the jubilee of Svintitch,” said Katavasov in answer to
Levin’s inquiry. “Pyotr Ivanovitch and I were going. I’ve
promised to deliver an address on his labors in zoology. Come along with us,
it’s very interesting.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and indeed it’s time to start,” said Metrov.
“Come with us, and from there, if you care to, come to my place. I should
very much like to hear your work.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no! It’s no good yet, it’s unfinished. But I shall be
very glad to go to the meeting.”</p>
<p>“I say, friends, have you heard? He has handed in the separate
report,” Katavasov called from the other room, where he was putting on
his frock coat.</p>
<p>And a conversation sprang up upon the university question, which was a very
important event that winter in Moscow. Three old professors in the council had
not accepted the opinion of the younger professors. The young ones had
registered a separate resolution. This, in the judgment of some people, was
monstrous, in the judgment of others it was the simplest and most just thing to
do, and the professors were split up into two parties.</p>
<p>One party, to which Katavasov belonged, saw in the opposite party a scoundrelly
betrayal and treachery, while the opposite party saw in them childishness and
lack of respect for the authorities. Levin, though he did not belong to the
university, had several times already during his stay in Moscow heard and
talked about this matter, and had his own opinion on the subject. He took part
in the conversation that was continued in the street, as they all three walked
to the buildings of the old university.</p>
<p>The meeting had already begun. Round the cloth-covered table, at which
Katavasov and Metrov seated themselves, there were some half-dozen persons, and
one of these was bending close over a manuscript, reading something aloud.
Levin sat down in one of the empty chairs that were standing round the table,
and in a whisper asked a student sitting near what was being read. The student,
eyeing Levin with displeasure, said:</p>
<p>“Biography.”</p>
<p>Though Levin was not interested in the biography, he could not help listening,
and learned some new and interesting facts about the life of the distinguished
man of science.</p>
<p>When the reader had finished, the chairman thanked him and read some verses of
the poet Ment sent him on the jubilee, and said a few words by way of thanks to
the poet. Then Katavasov in his loud, ringing voice read his address on the
scientific labors of the man whose jubilee was being kept.</p>
<p>When Katavasov had finished, Levin looked at his watch, saw it was past one,
and thought that there would not be time before the concert to read Metrov his
book, and indeed, he did not now care to do so. During the reading he had
thought over their conversation. He saw distinctly now that though
Metrov’s ideas might perhaps have value, his own ideas had a value too,
and their ideas could only be made clear and lead to something if each worked
separately in his chosen path, and that nothing would be gained by putting
their ideas together. And having made up his mind to refuse Metrov’s
invitation, Levin went up to him at the end of the meeting. Metrov introduced
Levin to the chairman, with whom he was talking of the political news. Metrov
told the chairman what he had already told Levin, and Levin made the same
remarks on his news that he had already made that morning, but for the sake of
variety he expressed also a new opinion which had only just struck him. After
that the conversation turned again on the university question. As Levin had
already heard it all, he made haste to tell Metrov that he was sorry he could
not take advantage of his invitation, took leave, and drove to Lvov’s.</p>
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