<h3>Chapter 22</h3>
<p>Stepan Arkadyevitch, with the same somewhat solemn expression with which he
used to take his presidential chair at his board, walked into Alexey
Alexandrovitch’s room. Alexey Alexandrovitch was walking about his room
with his hands behind his back, thinking of just what Stepan Arkadyevitch had
been discussing with his wife.</p>
<p>“I’m not interrupting you?” said Stepan Arkadyevitch, on the
sight of his brother-in-law becoming suddenly aware of a sense of embarrassment
unusual with him. To conceal this embarrassment he took out a cigarette case he
had just bought that opened in a new way, and sniffing the leather, took a
cigarette out of it.</p>
<p>“No. Do you want anything?” Alexey Alexandrovitch asked without
eagerness.</p>
<p>“Yes, I wished ... I wanted ... yes, I wanted to talk to you,” said
Stepan Arkadyevitch, with surprise aware of an unaccustomed timidity.</p>
<p>This feeling was so unexpected and so strange that he did not believe it was
the voice of conscience telling him that what he was meaning to do was wrong.</p>
<p>Stepan Arkadyevitch made an effort and struggled with the timidity that had
come over him.</p>
<p>“I hope you believe in my love for my sister and my sincere affection and
respect for you,” he said, reddening.</p>
<p>Alexey Alexandrovitch stood still and said nothing, but his face struck Stepan
Arkadyevitch by its expression of an unresisting sacrifice.</p>
<p>“I intended ... I wanted to have a little talk with you about my sister
and your mutual position,” he said, still struggling with an unaccustomed
constraint.</p>
<p>Alexey Alexandrovitch smiled mournfully, looked at his brother-in-law, and
without answering went up to the table, took from it an unfinished letter, and
handed it to his brother-in-law.</p>
<p>“I think unceasingly of the same thing. And here is what I had begun
writing, thinking I could say it better by letter, and that my presence
irritates her,” he said, as he gave him the letter.</p>
<p>Stepan Arkadyevitch took the letter, looked with incredulous surprise at the
lusterless eyes fixed so immovably on him, and began to read.</p>
<p>“I see that my presence is irksome to you. Painful as it is to me to
believe it, I see that it is so, and cannot be otherwise. I don’t blame
you, and God is my witness that on seeing you at the time of your illness I
resolved with my whole heart to forget all that had passed between us and to
begin a new life. I do not regret, and shall never regret, what I have done;
but I have desired one thing—your good, the good of your soul—and
now I see I have not attained that. Tell me yourself what will give you true
happiness and peace to your soul. I put myself entirely in your hands, and
trust to your feeling of what’s right.”</p>
<p>Stepan Arkadyevitch handed back the letter, and with the same surprise
continued looking at his brother-in-law, not knowing what to say. This silence
was so awkward for both of them that Stepan Arkadyevitch’s lips began
twitching nervously, while he still gazed without speaking at Karenin’s
face.</p>
<p>“That’s what I wanted to say to her,” said Alexey
Alexandrovitch, turning away.</p>
<p>“Yes, yes....” said Stepan Arkadyevitch, not able to answer for the
tears that were choking him.</p>
<p>“Yes, yes, I understand you,” he brought out at last.</p>
<p>“I want to know what she would like,” said Alexey Alexandrovitch.</p>
<p>“I am afraid she does not understand her own position. She is not a
judge,” said Stepan Arkadyevitch, recovering himself. “She is
crushed, simply crushed by your generosity. If she were to read this letter,
she would be incapable of saying anything, she would only hang her head lower
than ever.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but what’s to be done in that case? how explain, how find out
her wishes?”</p>
<p>“If you will allow me to give my opinion, I think that it lies with you
to point out directly the steps you consider necessary to end the
position.”</p>
<p>“So you consider it must be ended?” Alexey Alexandrovitch
interrupted him. “But how?” he added, with a gesture of his hands
before his eyes not usual with him. “I see no possible way out of
it.”</p>
<p>“There is some way of getting out of every position,” said Stepan
Arkadyevitch, standing up and becoming more cheerful. “There was a time
when you thought of breaking off.... If you are convinced now that you cannot
make each other happy....”</p>
<p>“Happiness may be variously understood. But suppose that I agree to
everything, that I want nothing: what way is there of getting out of our
position?”</p>
<p>“If you care to know my opinion,” said Stepan Arkadyevitch with the
same smile of softening, almond-oil tenderness with which he had been talking
to Anna. His kindly smile was so winning that Alexey Alexandrovitch, feeling
his own weakness and unconsciously swayed by it, was ready to believe what
Stepan Arkadyevitch was saying.</p>
<p>“She will never speak out about it. But one thing is possible, one thing
she might desire,” he went on, “that is the cessation of your
relations and all memories associated with them. To my thinking, in your
position what’s essential is the formation of a new attitude to one
another. And that can only rest on a basis of freedom on both sides.”</p>
<p>“Divorce,” Alexey Alexandrovitch interrupted, in a tone of
aversion.</p>
<p>“Yes, I imagine that divorce—yes, divorce,” Stepan
Arkadyevitch repeated, reddening. “That is from every point of view the
most rational course for married people who find themselves in the position you
are in. What can be done if married people find that life is impossible for
them together? That may always happen.”</p>
<p>Alexey Alexandrovitch sighed heavily and closed his eyes.</p>
<p>“There’s only one point to be considered: is either of the parties
desirous of forming new ties? If not, it is very simple,” said Stepan
Arkadyevitch, feeling more and more free from constraint.</p>
<p>Alexey Alexandrovitch, scowling with emotion, muttered something to himself,
and made no answer. All that seemed so simple to Stepan Arkadyevitch, Alexey
Alexandrovitch had thought over thousands of times. And, so far from being
simple, it all seemed to him utterly impossible. Divorce, the details of which
he knew by this time, seemed to him now out of the question, because the sense
of his own dignity and respect for religion forbade his taking upon himself a
fictitious charge of adultery, and still more suffering his wife, pardoned and
beloved by him, to be caught in the fact and put to public shame. Divorce
appeared to him impossible also on other still more weighty grounds.</p>
<p>What would become of his son in case of a divorce? To leave him with his mother
was out of the question. The divorced mother would have her own illegitimate
family, in which his position as a stepson and his education would not be good.
Keep him with him? He knew that would be an act of vengeance on his part, and
that he did not want. But apart from this, what more than all made divorce seem
impossible to Alexey Alexandrovitch was, that by consenting to a divorce he
would be completely ruining Anna. The saying of Darya Alexandrovna at Moscow,
that in deciding on a divorce he was thinking of himself, and not considering
that by this he would be ruining her irrevocably, had sunk into his heart. And
connecting this saying with his forgiveness of her, with his devotion to the
children, he understood it now in his own way. To consent to a divorce, to give
her her freedom, meant in his thoughts to take from himself the last tie that
bound him to life—the children whom he loved; and to take from her the
last prop that stayed her on the path of right, to thrust her down to her ruin.
If she were divorced, he knew she would join her life to Vronsky’s, and
their tie would be an illegitimate and criminal one, since a wife, by the
interpretation of the ecclesiastical law, could not marry while her husband was
living. “She will join him, and in a year or two he will throw her over,
or she will form a new tie,” thought Alexey Alexandrovitch. “And I,
by agreeing to an unlawful divorce, shall be to blame for her ruin.” He
had thought it all over hundreds of times, and was convinced that a divorce was
not at all simple, as Stepan Arkadyevitch had said, but was utterly impossible.
He did not believe a single word Stepan Arkadyevitch said to him; to every word
he had a thousand objections to make, but he listened to him, feeling that his
words were the expression of that mighty brutal force which controlled his life
and to which he would have to submit.</p>
<p>“The only question is on what terms you agree to give her a divorce. She
does not want anything, does not dare ask you for anything, she leaves it all
to your generosity.”</p>
<p>“My God, my God! what for?” thought Alexey Alexandrovitch,
remembering the details of divorce proceedings in which the husband took the
blame on himself, and with just the same gesture with which Vronsky had done
the same, he hid his face for shame in his hands.</p>
<p>“You are distressed, I understand that. But if you think it
over....”</p>
<p>“Whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other
also; and if any man take away thy coat, let him have thy cloak also,”
thought Alexey Alexandrovitch.</p>
<p>“Yes, yes!” he cried in a shrill voice. “I will take the
disgrace on myself, I will give up even my son, but ... but wouldn’t it
be better to let it alone? Still you may do as you like....”</p>
<p>And turning away so that his brother-in-law could not see him, he sat down on a
chair at the window. There was bitterness, there was shame in his heart, but
with bitterness and shame he felt joy and emotion at the height of his own
meekness.</p>
<p>Stepan Arkadyevitch was touched. He was silent for a space.</p>
<p>“Alexey Alexandrovitch, believe me, she appreciates your
generosity,” he said. “But it seems it was the will of God,”
he added, and as he said it felt how foolish a remark it was, and with
difficulty repressed a smile at his own foolishness.</p>
<p>Alexey Alexandrovitch would have made some reply, but tears stopped him.</p>
<p>“This is an unhappy fatality, and one must accept it as such. I accept
the calamity as an accomplished fact, and am doing my best to help both her and
you,” said Stepan Arkadyevitch.</p>
<p>When he went out of his brother-in-law’s room he was touched, but that
did not prevent him from being glad he had successfully brought the matter to a
conclusion, for he felt certain Alexey Alexandrovitch would not go back on his
words. To this satisfaction was added the fact that an idea had just struck him
for a riddle turning on his successful achievement, that when the affair was
over he would ask his wife and most intimate friends. He put this riddle into
two or three different ways. “But I’ll work it out better than
that,” he said to himself with a smile.</p>
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