| PART 5
Chapter 21
 From the moment when Alexey Alexandrovitch understood from his
 interviews with Betsy and with Stepan Arkadyevitch that all that
 was expected of him was to leave his wife in peace, without
 burdening her with his presence, and that his wife herself
 desired this, he felt so distraught that he could come to no
 decision of himself; he did not know himself what he wanted now,
 and putting himself in the hands of those who were so pleased to
 interest themselves in his affairs, he met everything with
 unqualified assent.  It was only when Anna had left his house,
 and the English governess sent to ask him whether she should dine
 with him or separately, that for the first time he clearly
 comprehended his position, and was appalled by it.  Most
 difficult of all in this position was the fact that he could not
 in any way connect and reconcile his past with what was now.  It
 was not the past when he had lived happily with his wife that
 troubled him.  The transition from that past to a knowledge of
 his wife's unfaithfulness he had lived through miserably already;
 that state was painful, but he could understand it.  If his wife
 had then, on declaring to him her unfaithfulness, left him, he
 would have been wounded, unhappy, but he would not have been in
 the hopeless position--incomprehensible to himself--in which he
 felt himself now.  He could not now reconcile his immediate past,
 his tenderness, his love for his sick wife, and for the other
 man's child with what was now the case, that is with the fact
 that, as it were, in return for all this he now found himself
 alone, put to shame, a laughing-stock, needed by no one, and
 despised by everyone. For the first two days after his wife's departure Alexey
 Alexandrovitch received applicants for assistance and his chief
 secretary, drove to the committee, and went down to dinner in the
 dining room as usual.  Without giving himself a reason for what
 he was doing, he strained every nerve of his being for those two
 days, simply to preserve an appearance of composure, and even of
 indifference.  Answering inquiries about the disposition of Anna
 Arkadyevna's rooms and belongings, he had exercised immense
 self-control to appear like a man in whose eyes what had occurred
 was not unforeseen nor out of the ordinary course of events, and
 he attained his aim: no one could have detected in him signs of
 despair.  But on the second day after her departure, when Korney
 gave him a bill from a fashionable draper's shop, which Anna had
 forgotten to pay, and announced that the clerk from the shop was
 waiting, Alexey Alexandrovitch told him to show the clerk up. |