<h3>Chapter 11</h3>
<p>“What a marvelous, sweet and unhappy woman!” he was thinking, as he
stepped out into the frosty air with Stepan Arkadyevitch.</p>
<p>“Well, didn’t I tell you?” said Stepan Arkadyevitch, seeing
that Levin had been completely won over.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Levin dreamily, “an extraordinary woman!
It’s not her cleverness, but she has such wonderful depth of feeling.
I’m awfully sorry for her!”</p>
<p>“Now, please God, everything will soon be settled. Well, well,
don’t be hard on people in future,” said Stepan Arkadyevitch,
opening the carriage door. “Good-bye; we don’t go the same
way.”</p>
<p>Still thinking of Anna, of everything, even the simplest phrase in their
conversation with her, and recalling the minutest changes in her expression,
entering more and more into her position, and feeling sympathy for her, Levin
reached home.</p>
<p class="p2">
At home Kouzma told Levin that Katerina Alexandrovna was quite well, and that
her sisters had not long been gone, and he handed him two letters. Levin read
them at once in the hall, that he might not overlook them later. One was from
Sokolov, his bailiff. Sokolov wrote that the corn could not be sold, that it
was fetching only five and a half roubles, and that more than that could not be
got for it. The other letter was from his sister. She scolded him for her
business being still unsettled.</p>
<p>“Well, we must sell it at five and a half if we can’t get
more,” Levin decided the first question, which had always before seemed
such a weighty one, with extraordinary facility on the spot. “It’s
extraordinary how all one’s time is taken up here,” he thought,
considering the second letter. He felt himself to blame for not having got done
what his sister had asked him to do for her. “Today, again, I’ve
not been to the court, but today I’ve certainly not had time.” And
resolving that he would not fail to do it next day, he went up to his wife. As
he went in, Levin rapidly ran through mentally the day he had spent. All the
events of the day were conversations, conversations he had heard and taken part
in. All the conversations were upon subjects which, if he had been alone at
home, he would never have taken up, but here they were very interesting. And
all these conversations were right enough, only in two places there was
something not quite right. One was what he had said about the carp, the other
was something not “quite the thing” in the tender sympathy he was
feeling for Anna.</p>
<p>Levin found his wife low-spirited and dull. The dinner of the three sisters had
gone off very well, but then they had waited and waited for him, all of them
had felt dull, the sisters had departed, and she had been left alone.</p>
<p>“Well, and what have you been doing?” she asked him, looking
straight into his eyes, which shone with rather a suspicious brightness. But
that she might not prevent his telling her everything, she concealed her close
scrutiny of him, and with an approving smile listened to his account of how he
had spent the evening.</p>
<p>“Well, I’m very glad I met Vronsky. I felt quite at ease and
natural with him. You understand, I shall try not to see him, but I’m
glad that this awkwardness is all over,” he said, and remembering that by
way of trying not to see him, he had immediately gone to call on Anna, he
blushed. “We talk about the peasants drinking; I don’t know which
drinks most, the peasantry or our own class; the peasants do on holidays,
but....”</p>
<p>But Kitty took not the slightest interest in discussing the drinking habits of
the peasants. She saw that he blushed, and she wanted to know why.</p>
<p>“Well, and then where did you go?”</p>
<p>“Stiva urged me awfully to go and see Anna Arkadyevna.”</p>
<p>And as he said this, Levin blushed even more, and his doubts as to whether he
had done right in going to see Anna were settled once for all. He knew now that
he ought not to have done so.</p>
<p>Kitty’s eyes opened in a curious way and gleamed at Anna’s name,
but controlling herself with an effort, she concealed her emotion and deceived
him.</p>
<p>“Oh!” was all she said.</p>
<p>“I’m sure you won’t be angry at my going. Stiva begged me to,
and Dolly wished it,” Levin went on.</p>
<p>“Oh, no!” she said, but he saw in her eyes a constraint that boded
him no good.</p>
<p>“She is a very sweet, very, very unhappy, good woman,” he said,
telling her about Anna, her occupations, and what she had told him to say to
her.</p>
<p>“Yes, of course, she is very much to be pitied,” said Kitty, when
he had finished. “Whom was your letter from?”</p>
<p>He told her, and believing in her calm tone, he went to change his coat.</p>
<p>Coming back, he found Kitty in the same easy chair. When he went up to her, she
glanced at him and broke into sobs.</p>
<p>“What? what is it?” he asked, knowing beforehand what.</p>
<p>“You’re in love with that hateful woman; she has bewitched you! I
saw it in your eyes. Yes, yes! What can it all lead to? You were drinking at
the club, drinking and gambling, and then you went ... to her of all people!
No, we must go away.... I shall go away tomorrow.”</p>
<p>It was a long while before Levin could soothe his wife. At last he succeeded in
calming her, only by confessing that a feeling of pity, in conjunction with the
wine he had drunk, had been too much for him, that he had succumbed to
Anna’s artful influence, and that he would avoid her. One thing he did
with more sincerity confess to was that living so long in Moscow, a life of
nothing but conversation, eating and drinking, he was degenerating. They talked
till three o’clock in the morning. Only at three o’clock were they
sufficiently reconciled to be able to go to sleep.</p>
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