<h3>Chapter 14</h3>
<p>Levin had been married three months. He was happy, but not at all in the way he
had expected to be. At every step he found his former dreams disappointed, and
new, unexpected surprises of happiness. He was happy; but on entering upon
family life he saw at every step that it was utterly different from what he had
imagined. At every step he experienced what a man would experience who, after
admiring the smooth, happy course of a little boat on a lake, should get
himself into that little boat. He saw that it was not all sitting still,
floating smoothly; that one had to think too, not for an instant to forget
where one was floating; and that there was water under one, and that one must
row; and that his unaccustomed hands would be sore; and that it was only to
look at it that was easy; but that doing it, though very delightful, was very
difficult.</p>
<p>As a bachelor, when he had watched other people’s married life, seen the
petty cares, the squabbles, the jealousy, he had only smiled contemptuously in
his heart. In his future married life there could be, he was convinced, nothing
of that sort; even the external forms, indeed, he fancied, must be utterly
unlike the life of others in everything. And all of a sudden, instead of his
life with his wife being made on an individual pattern, it was, on the
contrary, entirely made up of the pettiest details, which he had so despised
before, but which now, by no will of his own, had gained an extraordinary
importance that it was useless to contend against. And Levin saw that the
organization of all these details was by no means so easy as he had fancied
before. Although Levin believed himself to have the most exact conceptions of
domestic life, unconsciously, like all men, he pictured domestic life as the
happiest enjoyment of love, with nothing to hinder and no petty cares to
distract. He ought, as he conceived the position, to do his work, and to find
repose from it in the happiness of love. She ought to be beloved, and nothing
more. But, like all men, he forgot that she too would want work. And he was
surprised that she, his poetic, exquisite Kitty, could, not merely in the first
weeks, but even in the first days of their married life, think, remember, and
busy herself about tablecloths, and furniture, about mattresses for visitors,
about a tray, about the cook, and the dinner, and so on. While they were still
engaged, he had been struck by the definiteness with which she had declined the
tour abroad and decided to go into the country, as though she knew of something
she wanted, and could still think of something outside her love. This had
jarred upon him then, and now her trivial cares and anxieties jarred upon him
several times. But he saw that this was essential for her. And, loving her as
he did, though he did not understand the reason of them, and jeered at these
domestic pursuits, he could not help admiring them. He jeered at the way in
which she arranged the furniture they had brought from Moscow; rearranged their
room; hung up curtains; prepared rooms for visitors; a room for Dolly; saw
after an abode for her new maid; ordered dinner of the old cook; came into
collision with Agafea Mihalovna, taking from her the charge of the stores. He
saw how the old cook smiled, admiring her, and listening to her inexperienced,
impossible orders, how mournfully and tenderly Agafea Mihalovna shook her head
over the young mistress’s new arrangements. He saw that Kitty was
extraordinarily sweet when, laughing and crying, she came to tell him that her
maid, Masha, was used to looking upon her as her young lady, and so no one
obeyed her. It seemed to him sweet, but strange, and he thought it would have
been better without this.</p>
<p>He did not know how great a sense of change she was experiencing; she, who at
home had sometimes wanted some favorite dish, or sweets, without the
possibility of getting either, now could order what she liked, buy pounds of
sweets, spend as much money as she liked, and order any puddings she pleased.</p>
<p>She was dreaming with delight now of Dolly’s coming to them with her
children, especially because she would order for the children their favorite
puddings and Dolly would appreciate all her new housekeeping. She did not know
herself why and wherefore, but the arranging of her house had an irresistible
attraction for her. Instinctively feeling the approach of spring, and knowing
that there would be days of rough weather too, she built her nest as best she
could, and was in haste at the same time to build it and to learn how to do it.</p>
<p>This care for domestic details in Kitty, so opposed to Levin’s ideal of
exalted happiness, was at first one of the disappointments; and this sweet care
of her household, the aim of which he did not understand, but could not help
loving, was one of the new happy surprises.</p>
<p>Another disappointment and happy surprise came in their quarrels. Levin could
never have conceived that between him and his wife any relations could arise
other than tender, respectful and loving, and all at once in the very early
days they quarreled, so that she said he did not care for her, that he cared
for no one but himself, burst into tears, and wrung her arms.</p>
<p>This first quarrel arose from Levin’s having gone out to a new farmhouse
and having been away half an hour too long, because he had tried to get home by
a short cut and had lost his way. He drove home thinking of nothing but her, of
her love, of his own happiness, and the nearer he drew to home, the warmer was
his tenderness for her. He ran into the room with the same feeling, with an
even stronger feeling than he had had when he reached the Shtcherbatskys’
house to make his offer. And suddenly he was met by a lowering expression he
had never seen in her. He would have kissed her; she pushed him away.</p>
<p>“What is it?”</p>
<p>“You’ve been enjoying yourself,” she began, trying to be calm
and spiteful. But as soon as she opened her mouth, a stream of reproach, of
senseless jealousy, of all that had been torturing her during that half hour
which she had spent sitting motionless at the window, burst from her. It was
only then, for the first time, that he clearly understood what he had not
understood when he led her out of the church after the wedding. He felt now
that he was not simply close to her, but that he did not know where he ended
and she began. He felt this from the agonizing sensation of division that he
experienced at that instant. He was offended for the first instant, but the
very same second he felt that he could not be offended by her, that she was
himself. He felt for the first moment as a man feels when, having suddenly
received a violent blow from behind, he turns round, angry and eager to avenge
himself, to look for his antagonist, and finds that it is he himself who has
accidentally struck himself, that there is no one to be angry with, and that he
must put up with and try to soothe the pain.</p>
<p>Never afterwards did he feel it with such intensity, but this first time he
could not for a long while get over it. His natural feeling urged him to defend
himself, to prove to her she was wrong; but to prove her wrong would mean
irritating her still more and making the rupture greater that was the cause of
all his suffering. One habitual feeling impelled him to get rid of the blame
and to pass it on to her. Another feeling, even stronger, impelled him as
quickly as possible to smooth over the rupture without letting it grow greater.
To remain under such undeserved reproach was wretched, but to make her suffer
by justifying himself was worse still. Like a man half-awake in an agony of
pain, he wanted to tear out, to fling away the aching place, and coming to his
senses, he felt that the aching place was himself. He could do nothing but try
to help the aching place to bear it, and this he tried to do.</p>
<p>They made peace. She, recognizing that she was wrong, though she did not say
so, became tenderer to him, and they experienced new, redoubled happiness in
their love. But that did not prevent such quarrels from happening again, and
exceedingly often too, on the most unexpected and trivial grounds. These
quarrels frequently arose from the fact that they did not yet know what was of
importance to each other and that all this early period they were both often in
a bad temper. When one was in a good temper, and the other in a bad temper, the
peace was not broken; but when both happened to be in an ill-humor, quarrels
sprang up from such incomprehensibly trifling causes, that they could never
remember afterwards what they had quarreled about. It is true that when they
were both in a good temper their enjoyment of life was redoubled. But still
this first period of their married life was a difficult time for them.</p>
<p>During all this early time they had a peculiarly vivid sense of tension, as it
were, a tugging in opposite directions of the chain by which they were bound.
Altogether their honeymoon—that is to say, the month after their
wedding—from which from tradition Levin expected so much, was not merely
not a time of sweetness, but remained in the memories of both as the bitterest
and most humiliating period in their lives. They both alike tried in later life
to blot out from their memories all the monstrous, shameful incidents of that
morbid period, when both were rarely in a normal frame of mind, both were
rarely quite themselves.</p>
<p>It was only in the third month of their married life, after their return from
Moscow, where they had been staying for a month, that their life began to go
more smoothly.</p>
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