| PART 4
Chapter 19
 The mistake made by Alexey Alexandrovitch in that, when preparing
 for seeing his wife, he had overlooked the possibility that her
 repentance might be sincere, and he might forgive her, and she
 might not die--this mistake was two months after his return from
 Moscow brought home to him in all its significance.  But the
 mistake made by him had arisen not simply from his having
 overlooked that contingency, but also from the fact that until
 that day of his interview with his dying wife, he had not known
 his own heart.  At his sick wife's bedside he had for the first
 time in his life given way to that feeling of sympathetic
 suffering always roused in him by the sufferings of others, and
 hitherto looked on by him with shame as a harmful weakness.  And
 pity for her, and remorse for having desired her death, and most
 of all, the joy of forgiveness, made him at once conscious, not
 simply of the relief of his own sufferings, but of a spiritual
 peace he had never experienced before.  He suddenly felt that the
 very thing that was the source of his sufferings had become the
 source of his spiritual joy; that what had seemed insoluble while
 he was judging, blaming, and hating, had become clear and simple
 when he forgave and loved. He forgave his wife and pitied her for her sufferings and her
 remorse.  He forgave Vronsky, and pitied him, especially after
 reports reached him of his despairing action.  He felt more for
 his son than before.  And he blamed himself now for having taken
 too little interest in him.  But for the little newborn baby he
 felt a quite peculiar sentiment, not of pity, only, but of
 tenderness.  At first, from a feeling of compassion alone, he had
 been interested in the delicate little creature, who was not his
 child, and who was cast on one side during her mother's illness,
 and would certainly have died if he had not troubled about her,
 and he did not himself observe how fond he became of her.  He
 would go into the nursery several times a day, and sit there for
 a long while, so that the nurses, who were at first afraid of
 him, got quite used to his presence.  Sometimes for half an hour
 at a stretch he would sit silently gazing at the saffron-red,
 downy, wrinkled face of the sleeping baby, watching the movements
 of the frowning brows, and the fat little hands, with clenched
 fingers, that rubbed the little eyes and nose.  At such moments
 particularly, Alexey Alexandrovitch had a sense of perfect peace
 and inward harmony, and saw nothing extraordinary in his
 position, nothing that ought to be changed. |