<h3>Chapter 18</h3>
<p>After the conversation with Alexey Alexandrovitch, Vronsky went out onto the
steps of the Karenins’ house and stood still, with difficulty remembering
where he was, and where he ought to walk or drive. He felt disgraced,
humiliated, guilty, and deprived of all possibility of washing away his
humiliation. He felt thrust out of the beaten track along which he had so
proudly and lightly walked till then. All the habits and rules of his life that
had seemed so firm, had turned out suddenly false and inapplicable. The
betrayed husband, who had figured till that time as a pitiful creature, an
incidental and somewhat ludicrous obstacle to his happiness, had suddenly been
summoned by her herself, elevated to an awe-inspiring pinnacle, and on the
pinnacle that husband had shown himself, not malignant, not false, not
ludicrous, but kind and straightforward and large. Vronsky could not but feel
this, and the parts were suddenly reversed. Vronsky felt his elevation and his
own abasement, his truth and his own falsehood. He felt that the husband was
magnanimous even in his sorrow, while he had been base and petty in his deceit.
But this sense of his own humiliation before the man he had unjustly despised
made up only a small part of his misery. He felt unutterably wretched now, for
his passion for Anna, which had seemed to him of late to be growing cooler, now
that he knew he had lost her forever, was stronger than ever it had been. He
had seen all of her in her illness, had come to know her very soul, and it
seemed to him that he had never loved her till then. And now when he had
learned to know her, to love her as she should be loved, he had been humiliated
before her, and had lost her forever, leaving with her nothing of himself but a
shameful memory. Most terrible of all had been his ludicrous, shameful position
when Alexey Alexandrovitch had pulled his hands away from his humiliated face.
He stood on the steps of the Karenins’ house like one distraught, and did
not know what to do.</p>
<p>“A sledge, sir?” asked the porter.</p>
<p>“Yes, a sledge.”</p>
<p>On getting home, after three sleepless nights, Vronsky, without undressing, lay
down flat on the sofa, clasping his hands and laying his head on them. His head
was heavy. Images, memories, and ideas of the strangest description followed
one another with extraordinary rapidity and vividness. First it was the
medicine he had poured out for the patient and spilt over the spoon, then the
midwife’s white hands, then the queer posture of Alexey Alexandrovitch on
the floor beside the bed.</p>
<p>“To sleep! To forget!” he said to himself with the serene
confidence of a healthy man that if he is tired and sleepy, he will go to sleep
at once. And the same instant his head did begin to feel drowsy and he began to
drop off into forgetfulness. The waves of the sea of unconsciousness had begun
to meet over his head, when all at once—it was as though a violent shock
of electricity had passed over him. He started so that he leaped up on the
springs of the sofa, and leaning on his arms got in a panic onto his knees. His
eyes were wide open as though he had never been asleep. The heaviness in his
head and the weariness in his limbs that he had felt a minute before had
suddenly gone.</p>
<p>“You may trample me in the mud,” he heard Alexey
Alexandrovitch’s words and saw him standing before him, and saw
Anna’s face with its burning flush and glittering eyes, gazing with love
and tenderness not at him but at Alexey Alexandrovitch; he saw his own, as he
fancied, foolish and ludicrous figure when Alexey Alexandrovitch took his hands
away from his face. He stretched out his legs again and flung himself on the
sofa in the same position and shut his eyes.</p>
<p>“To sleep! To forget!” he repeated to himself. But with his eyes
shut he saw more distinctly than ever Anna’s face as it had been on the
memorable evening before the races.</p>
<p>“That is not and will not be, and she wants to wipe it out of her memory.
But I cannot live without it. How can we be reconciled? how can we be
reconciled?” he said aloud, and unconsciously began to repeat these
words. This repetition checked the rising up of fresh images and memories,
which he felt were thronging in his brain. But repeating words did not check
his imagination for long. Again in extraordinarily rapid succession his best
moments rose before his mind, and then his recent humiliation. “Take away
his hands,” Anna’s voice says. He takes away his hands and feels
the shamestruck and idiotic expression of his face.</p>
<p>He still lay down, trying to sleep, though he felt there was not the smallest
hope of it, and kept repeating stray words from some chain of thought, trying
by this to check the rising flood of fresh images. He listened, and heard in a
strange, mad whisper words repeated: “I did not appreciate it, did not
make enough of it. I did not appreciate it, did not make enough of it.”</p>
<p>“What’s this? Am I going out of my mind?” he said to himself.
“Perhaps. What makes men go out of their minds; what makes men shoot
themselves?” he answered himself, and opening his eyes, he saw with
wonder an embroidered cushion beside him, worked by Varya, his brother’s
wife. He touched the tassel of the cushion, and tried to think of Varya, of
when he had seen her last. But to think of anything extraneous was an agonizing
effort. “No, I must sleep!” He moved the cushion up, and pressed
his head into it, but he had to make an effort to keep his eyes shut. He jumped
up and sat down. “That’s all over for me,” he said to
himself. “I must think what to do. What is left?” His mind rapidly
ran through his life apart from his love of Anna.</p>
<p>“Ambition? Serpuhovskoy? Society? The court?” He could not come to
a pause anywhere. All of it had had meaning before, but now there was no
reality in it. He got up from the sofa, took off his coat, undid his belt, and
uncovering his hairy chest to breathe more freely, walked up and down the room.
“This is how people go mad,” he repeated, “and how they shoot
themselves ... to escape humiliation,” he added slowly.</p>
<p>He went to the door and closed it, then with fixed eyes and clenched teeth he
went up to the table, took a revolver, looked round him, turned it to a loaded
barrel, and sank into thought. For two minutes, his head bent forward with an
expression of an intense effort of thought, he stood with the revolver in his
hand, motionless, thinking.</p>
<p>“Of course,” he said to himself, as though a logical, continuous,
and clear chain of reasoning had brought him to an indubitable conclusion. In
reality this “of course,” that seemed convincing to him, was simply
the result of exactly the same circle of memories and images through which he
had passed ten times already during the last hour—memories of happiness
lost forever. There was the same conception of the senselessness of everything
to come in life, the same consciousness of humiliation. Even the sequence of
these images and emotions was the same.</p>
<p>“Of course,” he repeated, when for the third time his thought
passed again round the same spellbound circle of memories and images, and
pulling the revolver to the left side of his chest, and clutching it vigorously
with his whole hand, as it were, squeezing it in his fist, he pulled the
trigger. He did not hear the sound of the shot, but a violent blow on his chest
sent him reeling. He tried to clutch at the edge of the table, dropped the
revolver, staggered, and sat down on the ground, looking about him in
astonishment. He did not recognize his room, looking up from the ground, at the
bent legs of the table, at the wastepaper basket, and the tiger-skin rug. The
hurried, creaking steps of his servant coming through the drawing-room brought
him to his senses. He made an effort at thought, and was aware that he was on
the floor; and seeing blood on the tiger-skin rug and on his arm, he knew he
had shot himself.</p>
<p>“Idiotic! Missed!” he said, fumbling after the revolver. The
revolver was close beside him—he sought further off. Still feeling for
it, he stretched out to the other side, and not being strong enough to keep his
balance, fell over, streaming with blood.</p>
<p>The elegant, whiskered manservant, who used to be continually complaining to
his acquaintances of the delicacy of his nerves, was so panic-stricken on
seeing his master lying on the floor, that he left him losing blood while he
ran for assistance. An hour later Varya, his brother’s wife, had arrived,
and with the assistance of three doctors, whom she had sent for in all
directions, and who all appeared at the same moment, she got the wounded man to
bed, and remained to nurse him.</p>
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