PART 3
Chapter 13
 (continued)
"There's no doubt our society is still so barbarous (it's not the
 same in England) that very many"--and among these were those
 whose opinion Alexey Alexandrovitch particularly valued--"look
 favorably on the duel; but what result is attained by it? Suppose
 I call him out," Alexey Alexandrovitch went on to himself, and
 vividly picturing the night he would spend after the challenge,
 and the pistol aimed at him, he shuddered, and knew that he never
 would do it--"suppose I call him out.  Suppose I am taught," he
 went on musing, "to shoot; I press the trigger," he said to
 himself, closing his eyes, "and it turns out I have killed him,"
 Alexey Alexandrovitch said to himself, and he shook his head as
 though to dispel such silly ideas.  "What sense is there in
 murdering a man in order to define one's relation to a guilty
 wife and son?  I should still just as much have to decide what I
 ought to do with her.  But what is more probable and what would
 doubtless occur--I should be killed or wounded.  I, the
 innocent person, should be the victim--killed or wounded.  It's
 even more senseless.  But apart from that, a challenge to fight
 would be an act hardly honest on my side.  Don't I know perfectly
 well that my friends would never allow me to fight a duel--would
 never allow the life of a statesman, needed by Russia, to be
 exposed to danger?  Knowing perfectly well beforehand that the
 matter would never come to real danger, it would amount to my
 simply trying to gain a certain sham reputation by such a
 challenge.  That would be dishonest, that would be false, that
 would be deceiving myself and others.  A duel is quite
 irrational, and no one expects it of me.  My aim is simply to
 safeguard my reputation, which is essential for the uninterrupted
 pursuit of my public duties."  Official duties, which had always
 been of great consequence in Alexey Alexandrovitch's eyes, seemed
 of special importance to his mind at this moment.  Considering
 and rejecting the duel, Alexey Alexandrovitch turned to
 divorce--another solution selected by several of the husbands he
 remembered.  Passing in mental review all the instances he knew
 of divorces (there were plenty of them in the very highest
 society with which he was very familiar), Alexey Alexandrovitch
 could not find a single example in which the object of divorce
 was that which he had in view.  In all these instances the
 husband had practically ceded or sold his unfaithful wife, and
 the very party which, being in fault, had not the right to
 contract a fresh marriage, had formed counterfeit,
 pseudo-matrimonial ties with a self-styled husband.  In his own
 case, Alexey Alexandrovitch saw that a legal divorce, that is to
 say, one in which only the guilty wife would be repudiated, was
 impossible of attainment.  He saw that the complex conditions of
 the life they led made the coarse proofs of his wife's guilt,
 required by the law, out of the question; he saw that a certain
 refinement in that life would not admit of such proofs being
 brought forward, even if he had them, and that to bring forward
 such proofs would damage him in the public estimation more than
 it would her. 
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