| PART 4
Chapter 18
 After the conversation with Alexey Alexandrovitch, Vronsky went
 out onto the steps of the Karenins' house and stood still, with
 difficulty remembering where he was, and where he ought to walk
 or drive.  He felt disgraced, humiliated, guilty, and deprived of
 all possibility of washing away his humiliation.  He felt thrust
 out of the beaten track along which he had so proudly and lightly
 walked till then.  All the habits and rules of his life that had
 seemed so firm, had turned out suddenly false and inapplicable.
 The betrayed husband, who had figured till that time as a
 pitiful creature, an incidental and somewhat ludicrous obstacle
 to his happiness, had suddenly been summoned by her herself,
 elevated to an awe-inspiring pinnacle, and on the pinnacle that
 husband had shown himself, not malignant, not false, not
 ludicrous, but kind and straightforward and large.  Vronsky could
 not but feel this, and the parts were suddenly reversed.  Vronsky
 felt his elevation and his own abasement, his truth and his own
 falsehood.  He felt that the husband was magnanimous even in his
 sorrow, while he had been base and petty in his deceit.  But this
 sense of his own humiliation before the man he had unjustly
 despised made up only a small part of his misery.  He felt
 unutterably wretched now, for his passion for Anna, which had
 seemed to him of late to be growing cooler, now that he knew he
 had lost her forever, was stronger than ever it had been.  He had
 seen all of her in her illness, had come to know her very soul,
 and it seemed to him that he had never loved her till then.  And
 now when he had learned to know her, to love her as she should be
 loved, he had been humiliated before her, and had lost her
 forever, leaving with her nothing of himself but a shameful
 memory.  Most terrible of all had been his ludicrous, shameful
 position when Alexey Alexandrovitch had pulled his hands away
 from his humiliated face.  He stood on the steps of the Karenins'
 house like one distraught, and did not know what to do. "A sledge, sir?" asked the porter. "Yes, a sledge." On getting home, after three sleepless nights, Vronsky, without
 undressing, lay down fiat on the sofa, clasping his hands and
 laying his head on them.  His head was heavy.  Images, memories,
 and ideas of the strangest description followed one another with
 extraordinary rapidity and vividness.  First it was the medicine
 he had poured out for the patient and spilt over the spoon, then
 the midwife's white hands, then the queer posture of Alexey
 Alexandrovitch on the floor beside the bed. |