<h3>Chapter 33</h3>
<p>Vronsky for the first time experienced a feeling of anger against Anna, almost
a hatred for her willfully refusing to understand her own position. This
feeling was aggravated by his being unable to tell her plainly the cause of his
anger. If he had told her directly what he was thinking, he would have said:</p>
<p>“In that dress, with a princess only too well known to everyone, to show
yourself at the theater is equivalent not merely to acknowledging your position
as a fallen woman, but is flinging down a challenge to society, that is to say,
cutting yourself off from it forever.”</p>
<p>He could not say that to her. “But how can she fail to see it, and what
is going on in her?” he said to himself. He felt at the same time that
his respect for her was diminished while his sense of her beauty was
intensified.</p>
<p>He went back scowling to his rooms, and sitting down beside Yashvin, who, with
his long legs stretched out on a chair, was drinking brandy and seltzer water,
he ordered a glass of the same for himself.</p>
<p>“You were talking of Lankovsky’s Powerful. That’s a fine
horse, and I would advise you to buy him,” said Yashvin, glancing at his
comrade’s gloomy face. “His hind-quarters aren’t quite
first-rate, but the legs and head—one couldn’t wish for anything
better.”</p>
<p>“I think I will take him,” answered Vronsky.</p>
<p>Their conversation about horses interested him, but he did not for an instant
forget Anna, and could not help listening to the sound of steps in the corridor
and looking at the clock on the chimney piece.</p>
<p>“Anna Arkadyevna gave orders to announce that she has gone to the
theater.”</p>
<p>Yashvin, tipping another glass of brandy into the bubbling water, drank it and
got up, buttoning his coat.</p>
<p>“Well, let’s go,” he said, faintly smiling under his
mustache, and showing by this smile that he knew the cause of Vronsky’s
gloominess, and did not attach any significance to it.</p>
<p>“I’m not going,” Vronsky answered gloomily.</p>
<p>“Well, I must, I promised to. Good-bye, then. If you do, come to the
stalls; you can take Kruzin’s stall,” added Yashvin as he went out.</p>
<p>“No, I’m busy.”</p>
<p>“A wife is a care, but it’s worse when she’s not a
wife,” thought Yashvin, as he walked out of the hotel.</p>
<p>Vronsky, left alone, got up from his chair and began pacing up and down the
room.</p>
<p>“And what’s today? The fourth night.... Yegor and his wife are
there, and my mother, most likely. Of course all Petersburg’s there. Now
she’s gone in, taken off her cloak and come into the light. Tushkevitch,
Yashvin, Princess Varvara,” he pictured them to himself.... “What
about me? Either that I’m frightened or have given up to Tushkevitch the
right to protect her? From every point of view—stupid, stupid!... And why
is she putting me in such a position?” he said with a gesture of despair.</p>
<p>With that gesture he knocked against the table, on which there was standing the
seltzer water and the decanter of brandy, and almost upset it. He tried to
catch it, let it slip, and angrily kicked the table over and rang.</p>
<p>“If you care to be in my service,” he said to the valet who came
in, “you had better remember your duties. This shouldn’t be here.
You ought to have cleared away.”</p>
<p>The valet, conscious of his own innocence, would have defended himself, but
glancing at his master, he saw from his face that the only thing to do was to
be silent, and hurriedly threading his way in and out, dropped down on the
carpet and began gathering up the whole and broken glasses and bottles.</p>
<p>“That’s not your duty; send the waiter to clear away, and get my
dress coat out.”</p>
<p>Vronsky went into the theater at half-past eight. The performance was in full
swing. The little old box-keeper, recognizing Vronsky as he helped him off with
his fur coat, called him “Your Excellency,” and suggested he should
not take a number but should simply call Fyodor. In the brightly lighted
corridor there was no one but the box-opener and two attendants with fur cloaks
on their arms listening at the doors. Through the closed doors came the sounds
of the discreet <i>staccato</i> accompaniment of the orchestra, and a single
female voice rendering distinctly a musical phrase. The door opened to let the
box-opener slip through, and the phrase drawing to the end reached
Vronsky’s hearing clearly. But the doors were closed again at once, and
Vronsky did not hear the end of the phrase and the cadence of the
accompaniment, though he knew from the thunder of applause that it was over.
When he entered the hall, brilliantly lighted with chandeliers and gas jets,
the noise was still going on. On the stage the singer, bowing and smiling, with
bare shoulders flashing with diamonds, was, with the help of the tenor who had
given her his arm, gathering up the bouquets that were flying awkwardly over
the footlights. Then she went up to a gentleman with glossy pomaded hair parted
down the center, who was stretching across the footlights holding out something
to her, and all the public in the stalls as well as in the boxes was in
excitement, craning forward, shouting and clapping. The conductor in his high
chair assisted in passing the offering, and straightened his white tie. Vronsky
walked into the middle of the stalls, and, standing still, began looking about
him. That day less than ever was his attention turned upon the familiar,
habitual surroundings, the stage, the noise, all the familiar, uninteresting,
particolored herd of spectators in the packed theater.</p>
<p>There were, as always, the same ladies of some sort with officers of some sort
in the back of the boxes; the same gaily dressed women—God knows
who—and uniforms and black coats; the same dirty crowd in the upper
gallery; and among the crowd, in the boxes and in the front rows, were some
forty of the <i>real</i> people. And to those oases Vronsky at once directed
his attention, and with them he entered at once into relation.</p>
<p>The act was over when he went in, and so he did not go straight to his
brother’s box, but going up to the first row of stalls stopped at the
footlights with Serpuhovskoy, who, standing with one knee raised and his heel
on the footlights, caught sight of him in the distance and beckoned to him,
smiling.</p>
<p>Vronsky had not yet seen Anna. He purposely avoided looking in her direction.
But he knew by the direction of people’s eyes where she was. He looked
round discreetly, but he was not seeking her; expecting the worst, his eyes
sought for Alexey Alexandrovitch. To his relief Alexey Alexandrovitch was not
in the theater that evening.</p>
<p>“How little of the military man there is left in you!” Serpuhovskoy
was saying to him. “A diplomat, an artist, something of that sort, one
would say.”</p>
<p>“Yes, it was like going back home when I put on a black coat,”
answered Vronsky, smiling and slowly taking out his opera-glass.</p>
<p>“Well, I’ll own I envy you there. When I come back from abroad and
put on this,” he touched his epaulets, “I regret my freedom.”</p>
<p>Serpuhovskoy had long given up all hope of Vronsky’s career, but he liked
him as before, and was now particularly cordial to him.</p>
<p>“What a pity you were not in time for the first act!”</p>
<p>Vronsky, listening with one ear, moved his opera-glass from the stalls and
scanned the boxes. Near a lady in a turban and a bald old man, who seemed to
wave angrily in the moving opera-glass, Vronsky suddenly caught sight of
Anna’s head, proud, strikingly beautiful, and smiling in the frame of
lace. She was in the fifth box, twenty paces from him. She was sitting in
front, and slightly turning, was saying something to Yashvin. The setting of
her head on her handsome, broad shoulders, and the restrained excitement and
brilliance of her eyes and her whole face reminded him of her just as he had
seen her at the ball in Moscow. But he felt utterly different towards her
beauty now. In his feeling for her now there was no element of mystery, and so
her beauty, though it attracted him even more intensely than before, gave him
now a sense of injury. She was not looking in his direction, but Vronsky felt
that she had seen him already.</p>
<p>When Vronsky turned the opera-glass again in that direction, he noticed that
Princess Varvara was particularly red, and kept laughing unnaturally and
looking round at the next box. Anna, folding her fan and tapping it on the red
velvet, was gazing away and did not see, and obviously did not wish to see,
what was taking place in the next box. Yashvin’s face wore the expression
which was common when he was losing at cards. Scowling, he sucked the left end
of his mustache further and further into his mouth, and cast sidelong glances
at the next box.</p>
<p>In that box on the left were the Kartasovs. Vronsky knew them, and knew that
Anna was acquainted with them. Madame Kartasova, a thin little woman, was
standing up in her box, and, her back turned upon Anna, she was putting on a
mantle that her husband was holding for her. Her face was pale and angry, and
she was talking excitedly. Kartasov, a fat, bald man, was continually looking
round at Anna, while he attempted to soothe his wife. When the wife had gone
out, the husband lingered a long while, and tried to catch Anna’s eye,
obviously anxious to bow to her. But Anna, with unmistakable intention, avoided
noticing him, and talked to Yashvin, whose cropped head was bent down to her.
Kartasov went out without making his salutation, and the box was left empty.</p>
<p>Vronsky could not understand exactly what had passed between the Kartasovs and
Anna, but he saw that something humiliating for Anna had happened. He knew this
both from what he had seen, and most of all from the face of Anna, who, he
could see, was taxing every nerve to carry through the part she had taken up.
And in maintaining this attitude of external composure she was completely
successful. Anyone who did not know her and her circle, who had not heard all
the utterances of the women expressive of commiseration, indignation, and
amazement, that she should show herself in society, and show herself so
conspicuously with her lace and her beauty, would have admired the serenity and
loveliness of this woman without a suspicion that she was undergoing the
sensations of a man in the stocks.</p>
<p>Knowing that something had happened, but not knowing precisely what, Vronsky
felt a thrill of agonizing anxiety, and hoping to find out something, he went
towards his brother’s box. Purposely choosing the way round furthest from
Anna’s box, he jostled as he came out against the colonel of his old
regiment talking to two acquaintances. Vronsky heard the name of Madame
Karenina, and noticed how the colonel hastened to address Vronsky loudly by
name, with a meaning glance at his companions.</p>
<p>“Ah, Vronsky! When are you coming to the regiment? We can’t let you
off without a supper. You’re one of the old set,” said the colonel
of his regiment.</p>
<p>“I can’t stop, awfully sorry, another time,” said Vronsky,
and he ran upstairs towards his brother’s box.</p>
<p>The old countess, Vronsky’s mother, with her steel-gray curls, was in his
brother’s box. Varya with the young Princess Sorokina met him in the
corridor.</p>
<p>Leaving the Princess Sorokina with her mother, Varya held out her hand to her
brother-in-law, and began immediately to speak of what interested him. She was
more excited than he had ever seen her.</p>
<p>“I think it’s mean and hateful, and Madame Kartasova had no right
to do it. Madame Karenina....” she began.</p>
<p>“But what is it? I don’t know.”</p>
<p>“What? you’ve not heard?”</p>
<p>“You know I should be the last person to hear of it.”</p>
<p>“There isn’t a more spiteful creature than that Madame
Kartasova!”</p>
<p>“But what did she do?”</p>
<p>“My husband told me.... She has insulted Madame Karenina. Her husband
began talking to her across the box, and Madame Kartasova made a scene. She
said something aloud, he says, something insulting, and went away.”</p>
<p>“Count, your maman is asking for you,” said the young Princess
Sorokina, peeping out of the door of the box.</p>
<p>“I’ve been expecting you all the while,” said his mother,
smiling sarcastically. “You were nowhere to be seen.”</p>
<p>Her son saw that she could not suppress a smile of delight.</p>
<p>“Good evening, maman. I have come to you,” he said coldly.</p>
<p>“Why aren’t you going to <i>faire la cour à Madame
Karenina?</i>” she went on, when Princess Sorokina had moved away.
“<i>Elle fait sensation. On oublie la Patti pour elle</i>.”</p>
<p>“Maman, I have asked you not to say anything to me of that,” he
answered, scowling.</p>
<p>“I’m only saying what everyone’s saying.”</p>
<p>Vronsky made no reply, and saying a few words to Princess Sorokina, he went
away. At the door he met his brother.</p>
<p>“Ah, Alexey!” said his brother. “How disgusting! Idiot of a
woman, nothing else.... I wanted to go straight to her. Let’s go
together.”</p>
<p>Vronsky did not hear him. With rapid steps he went downstairs; he felt that he
must do something, but he did not know what. Anger with her for having put
herself and him in such a false position, together with pity for her suffering,
filled his heart. He went down, and made straight for Anna’s box. At her
box stood Stremov, talking to her.</p>
<p>“There are no more tenors. <i>Le moule en est brisé!</i>”</p>
<p>Vronsky bowed to her and stopped to greet Stremov.</p>
<p>“You came in late, I think, and have missed the best song,” Anna
said to Vronsky, glancing ironically, he thought, at him.</p>
<p>“I am a poor judge of music,” he said, looking sternly at her.</p>
<p>“Like Prince Yashvin,” she said smiling, “who considers that
Patti sings too loud.”</p>
<p>“Thank you,” she said, her little hand in its long glove taking the
playbill Vronsky picked up, and suddenly at that instant her lovely face
quivered. She got up and went into the interior of the box.</p>
<p>Noticing in the next act that her box was empty, Vronsky, rousing indignant
“hushes” in the silent audience, went out in the middle of a solo
and drove home.</p>
<p>Anna was already at home. When Vronsky went up to her, she was in the same
dress as she had worn at the theater. She was sitting in the first armchair
against the wall, looking straight before her. She looked at him, and at once
resumed her former position.</p>
<p>“Anna,” he said.</p>
<p>“You, you are to blame for everything!” she cried, with tears of
despair and hatred in her voice, getting up.</p>
<p>“I begged, I implored you not to go, I knew it would be
unpleasant....”</p>
<p>“Unpleasant!” she cried—“hideous! As long as I live I
shall never forget it. She said it was a disgrace to sit beside me.”</p>
<p>“A silly woman’s chatter,” he said: “but why risk it,
why provoke?...”</p>
<p>“I hate your calm. You ought not to have brought me to this. If you had
loved me....”</p>
<p>“Anna! How does the question of my love come in?”</p>
<p>“Oh, if you loved me, as I love, if you were tortured as I am!...”
she said, looking at him with an expression of terror.</p>
<p>He was sorry for her, and angry notwithstanding. He assured her of his love
because he saw that this was the only means of soothing her, and he did not
reproach her in words, but in his heart he reproached her.</p>
<p>And the asseverations of his love, which seemed to him so vulgar that he was
ashamed to utter them, she drank in eagerly, and gradually became calmer. The
next day, completely reconciled, they left for the country.</p>
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