| PART 5
Chapter 1
 Princess Shtcherbatskaya considered that it was out of the
 question for the wedding to take place before Lent, just five
 weeks off, since not half the trousseau could possibly be ready
 by that time.  But she could not but agree with Levin that to fix
 it for after Lent would be putting it off too late, as an old
 aunt of Prince Shtcherbatsky's was seriously ill and might die,
 and then the mourning would delay the wedding still longer.  And
 therefore, deciding to divide the trousseau into two parts--a
 larger and smaller trousseau--the princess consented to have the
 wedding before Lent.  She determined that she would get the
 smaller part of the trousseau all ready now, and the larger part
 should be made later, and she was much vexed with Levin because
 he was incapable of giving her a serious answer to the question
 whether he agreed to this arrangement or not.  The arrangement
 was the more suitable as, immediately after the wedding, the
 young people were to go to the country, where the more important
 part of the trousseau would not be wanted. Levin still continued in the same delirious condition in which it
 seemed to him that he and his happiness constituted the chief and
 sole aim of all existence, and that he need not now think or care
 about anything, that everything was being done and would be done
 for him by others.  He had not even plans and aims for the
 future, he left its arrangement to others, knowing that
 everything would be delightful.  His brother Sergey Ivanovitch,
 Stepan Arkadyevitch, and the princess guided him in doing what he
 had to do.  All he did was to agree entirely with everything
 suggested to him.  His brother raised money for him, the princess
 advised him to leave Moscow after the wedding.  Stepan
 Arkadyevitch advised him to go abroad.  He agreed to everything.
 "Do what you choose, if it amuses you.  I'm happy, and my
 happiness can be no greater and no less for anything you do," he
 thought.  When he told Kitty of Stepan Arkadyevitch's advice that
 they should go abroad, he was much surprised that she did not
 agree to this, and had some definite requirements of her own in
 regard to their future.  She knew Levin had work he loved in the
 country.  She did not, as he saw, understand this work, she did
 not even care to understand it.  But that did not prevent her
 from regarding it as a matter of great importance.  And then she
 knew their home would be in the country, and she wanted to go,
 not abroad where she was not going to live, but to the place
 where their home would be.  This definitely expressed purpose
 astonished Levin.  But since he did not care either way, he
 immediately asked Stepan Arkadyevitch, as though it were his
 duty, to go down to the country and to arrange everything there
 to the best of his ability with the taste of which he had so
 much. |