<h3>Chapter 27</h3>
<p>The sixth day was fixed for the election of the marshal of the province.</p>
<p>The rooms, large and small, were full of noblemen in all sorts of uniforms.
Many had come only for that day. Men who had not seen each other for years,
some from the Crimea, some from Petersburg, some from abroad, met in the rooms
of the Hall of Nobility. There was much discussion around the governor’s
table under the portrait of the Tsar.</p>
<p>The nobles, both in the larger and the smaller rooms, grouped themselves in
camps, and from their hostile and suspicious glances, from the silence that
fell upon them when outsiders approached a group, and from the way that some,
whispering together, retreated to the farther corridor, it was evident that
each side had secrets from the other. In appearance the noblemen were sharply
divided into two classes: the old and the new. The old were for the most part
either in old uniforms of the nobility, buttoned up closely, with spurs and
hats, or in their own special naval, cavalry, infantry, or official uniforms.
The uniforms of the older men were embroidered in the old-fashioned way with
epaulets on their shoulders; they were unmistakably tight and short in the
waist, as though their wearers had grown out of them. The younger men wore the
uniform of the nobility with long waists and broad shoulders, unbuttoned over
white waistcoats, or uniforms with black collars and with the embroidered
badges of justices of the peace. To the younger men belonged the court uniforms
that here and there brightened up the crowd.</p>
<p>But the division into young and old did not correspond with the division of
parties. Some of the young men, as Levin observed, belonged to the old party;
and some of the very oldest noblemen, on the contrary, were whispering with
Sviazhsky, and were evidently ardent partisans of the new party.</p>
<p>Levin stood in the smaller room, where they were smoking and taking light
refreshments, close to his own friends, and listening to what they were saying,
he conscientiously exerted all his intelligence trying to understand what was
said. Sergey Ivanovitch was the center round which the others grouped
themselves. He was listening at that moment to Sviazhsky and Hliustov, the
marshal of another district, who belonged to their party. Hliustov would not
agree to go with his district to ask Snetkov to stand, while Sviazhsky was
persuading him to do so, and Sergey Ivanovitch was approving of the plan. Levin
could not make out why the opposition was to ask the marshal to stand whom they
wanted to supersede.</p>
<p>Stepan Arkadyevitch, who had just been drinking and taking some lunch, came up
to them in his uniform of a gentleman of the bedchamber, wiping his lips with a
perfumed handkerchief of bordered batiste.</p>
<p>“We are placing our forces,” he said, pulling out his whiskers,
“Sergey Ivanovitch!”</p>
<p>And listening to the conversation, he supported Sviazhsky’s contention.</p>
<p>“One district’s enough, and Sviazhsky’s obviously of the
opposition,” he said, words evidently intelligible to all except Levin.</p>
<p>“Why, Kostya, you here too! I suppose you’re converted, eh?”
he added, turning to Levin and drawing his arm through his. Levin would have
been glad indeed to be converted, but could not make out what the point was,
and retreating a few steps from the speakers, he explained to Stepan
Arkadyevitch his inability to understand why the marshal of the province should
be asked to stand.</p>
<p><i>“O sancta simplicitas!”</i> said Stepan Arkadyevitch, and
briefly and clearly he explained it to Levin. If, as at previous elections, all
the districts asked the marshal of the province to stand, then he would be
elected without a ballot. That must not be. Now eight districts had agreed to
call upon him: if two refused to do so, Snetkov might decline to stand at all;
and then the old party might choose another of their party, which would throw
them completely out in their reckoning. But if only one district,
Sviazhsky’s, did not call upon him to stand, Snetkov would let himself be
balloted for. They were even, some of them, going to vote for him, and
purposely to let him get a good many votes, so that the enemy might be thrown
off the scent, and when a candidate of the other side was put up, they too
might give him some votes. Levin understood to some extent, but not fully, and
would have put a few more questions, when suddenly everyone began talking and
making a noise and they moved towards the big room.</p>
<p>“What is it? eh? whom?” “No guarantee? whose? what?”
“They won’t pass him?” “No guarantee?”
“They won’t let Flerov in?” “Eh, because of the charge
against him?” “Why, at this rate, they won’t admit anyone.
It’s a swindle!” “The law!” Levin heard exclamations on
all sides, and he moved into the big room together with the others, all
hurrying somewhere and afraid of missing something. Squeezed by the crowding
noblemen, he drew near the high table where the marshal of the province,
Sviazhsky, and the other leaders were hotly disputing about something.</p>
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