<h3>Chapter 12</h3>
<p>The load was tied on. Ivan jumped down and took the quiet, sleek horse by the
bridle. The young wife flung the rake up on the load, and with a bold step,
swinging her arms, she went to join the women, who were forming a ring for the
haymakers’ dance. Ivan drove off to the road and fell into line with the
other loaded carts. The peasant women, with their rakes on their shoulders, gay
with bright flowers, and chattering with ringing, merry voices, walked behind
the hay cart. One wild untrained female voice broke into a song, and sang it
alone through a verse, and then the same verse was taken up and repeated by
half a hundred strong healthy voices, of all sorts, coarse and fine, singing in
unison.</p>
<p>The women, all singing, began to come close to Levin, and he felt as though a
storm were swooping down upon him with a thunder of merriment. The storm
swooped down, enveloped him and the haycock on which he was lying, and the
other haycocks, and the wagon-loads, and the whole meadow and distant fields
all seemed to be shaking and singing to the measures of this wild merry song
with its shouts and whistles and clapping. Levin felt envious of this health
and mirthfulness; he longed to take part in the expression of this joy of life.
But he could do nothing, and had to lie and look on and listen. When the
peasants, with their singing, had vanished out of sight and hearing, a weary
feeling of despondency at his own isolation, his physical inactivity, his
alienation from this world, came over Levin.</p>
<p>Some of the very peasants who had been most active in wrangling with him over
the hay, some whom he had treated with contumely, and who had tried to cheat
him, those very peasants had greeted him good-humoredly, and evidently had not,
were incapable of having any feeling of rancor against him, any regret, any
recollection even of having tried to deceive him. All that was drowned in a sea
of merry common labor. God gave the day, God gave the strength. And the day and
the strength were consecrated to labor, and that labor was its own reward. For
whom the labor? What would be its fruits? These were idle
considerations—beside the point.</p>
<p>Often Levin had admired this life, often he had a sense of envy of the men who
led this life; but today for the first time, especially under the influence of
what he had seen in the attitude of Ivan Parmenov to his young wife, the idea
presented itself definitely to his mind that it was in his power to exchange
the dreary, artificial, idle, and individualistic life he was leading for this
laborious, pure, and socially delightful life.</p>
<p>The old man who had been sitting beside him had long ago gone home; the people
had all separated. Those who lived near had gone home, while those who came
from far were gathered into a group for supper, and to spend the night in the
meadow. Levin, unobserved by the peasants, still lay on the haycock, and still
looked on and listened and mused. The peasants who remained for the night in
the meadow scarcely slept all the short summer night. At first there was the
sound of merry talk and laughing all together over the supper, then singing
again and laughter.</p>
<p>All the long day of toil had left no trace in them but lightness of heart.
Before the early dawn all was hushed. Nothing was to be heard but the night
sounds of the frogs that never ceased in the marsh, and the horses snorting in
the mist that rose over the meadow before the morning. Rousing himself, Levin
got up from the haycock, and looking at the stars, he saw that the night was
over.</p>
<p>“Well, what am I going to do? How am I to set about it?” he said to
himself, trying to express to himself all the thoughts and feelings he had
passed through in that brief night. All the thoughts and feelings he had passed
through fell into three separate trains of thought. One was the renunciation of
his old life, of his utterly useless education. This renunciation gave him
satisfaction, and was easy and simple. Another series of thoughts and mental
images related to the life he longed to live now. The simplicity, the purity,
the sanity of this life he felt clearly, and he was convinced he would find in
it the content, the peace, and the dignity, of the lack of which he was so
miserably conscious. But a third series of ideas turned upon the question how
to effect this transition from the old life to the new. And there nothing took
clear shape for him. “Have a wife? Have work and the necessity of work?
Leave Pokrovskoe? Buy land? Become a member of a peasant community? Marry a
peasant girl? How am I to set about it?” he asked himself again, and
could not find an answer. “I haven’t slept all night, though, and I
can’t think it out clearly,” he said to himself. “I’ll
work it out later. One thing’s certain, this night has decided my fate.
All my old dreams of home life were absurd, not the real thing,” he told
himself. “It’s all ever so much simpler and better....”</p>
<p>“How beautiful!” he thought, looking at the strange, as it were,
mother-of-pearl shell of white fleecy cloudlets resting right over his head in
the middle of the sky. “How exquisite it all is in this exquisite night!
And when was there time for that cloud-shell to form? Just now I looked at the
sky, and there was nothing in it—only two white streaks. Yes, and so
imperceptibly too my views of life changed!”</p>
<p>He went out of the meadow and walked along the highroad towards the village. A
slight wind arose, and the sky looked gray and sullen. The gloomy moment had
come that usually precedes the dawn, the full triumph of light over darkness.</p>
<p>Shrinking from the cold, Levin walked rapidly, looking at the ground.
“What’s that? Someone coming,” he thought, catching the
tinkle of bells, and lifting his head. Forty paces from him a carriage with
four horses harnessed abreast was driving towards him along the grassy road on
which he was walking. The shaft-horses were tilted against the shafts by the
ruts, but the dexterous driver sitting on the box held the shaft over the ruts,
so that the wheels ran on the smooth part of the road.</p>
<p>This was all Levin noticed, and without wondering who it could be, he gazed
absently at the coach.</p>
<p>In the coach was an old lady dozing in one corner, and at the window, evidently
only just awake, sat a young girl holding in both hands the ribbons of a white
cap. With a face full of light and thought, full of a subtle, complex inner
life, that was remote from Levin, she was gazing beyond him at the glow of the
sunrise.</p>
<p>At the very instant when this apparition was vanishing, the truthful eyes
glanced at him. She recognized him, and her face lighted up with wondering
delight.</p>
<p>He could not be mistaken. There were no other eyes like those in the world.
There was only one creature in the world that could concentrate for him all the
brightness and meaning of life. It was she. It was Kitty. He understood that
she was driving to Ergushovo from the railway station. And everything that had
been stirring Levin during that sleepless night, all the resolutions he had
made, all vanished at once. He recalled with horror his dreams of marrying a
peasant girl. There only, in the carriage that had crossed over to the other
side of the road, and was rapidly disappearing, there only could he find the
solution of the riddle of his life, which had weighed so agonizingly upon him
of late.</p>
<p>She did not look out again. The sound of the carriage-springs was no longer
audible, the bells could scarcely be heard. The barking of dogs showed the
carriage had reached the village, and all that was left was the empty fields
all round, the village in front, and he himself isolated and apart from it all,
wandering lonely along the deserted highroad.</p>
<p>He glanced at the sky, expecting to find there the cloud shell he had been
admiring and taking as the symbol of the ideas and feelings of that night.
There was nothing in the sky in the least like a shell. There, in the remote
heights above, a mysterious change had been accomplished. There was no trace of
shell, and there was stretched over fully half the sky an even cover of tiny
and ever tinier cloudlets. The sky had grown blue and bright; and with the same
softness, but with the same remoteness, it met his questioning gaze.</p>
<p>“No,” he said to himself, “however good that life of
simplicity and toil may be, I cannot go back to it. I love <i>her</i>.”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />