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Anna Karenina Readalong, 2023

958 replies

StColumbofNavron · 28/12/2022 21:30

Following the success of W&P in 2022, we’ve decided to stick with Tolstoy for 2023 and read Anna Karenina, one chapter per day.

For newbies: we simply read one chapter a day and discussion is allowed with a broader chat at the end of each section. Tolstoy’s chapters are nice and short, flicking through average length is about 4 pages.

I have used the Penguin Classics (2001, 2003) trans. by Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky for the breakdown below. More on editions below.

There are 249 chapters in this edition and the book is in 8 parts taking us to 14 September with a break of a day between each book. Hopefully, irrespective of the edition you pick the finishing of each ‘book’ will hopefully align.

Book 1, ch. 1-34 (1 Jan-3 Feb)
BREAK, 4 Feb
Book 2, ch. 1-35 (5 Feb-11 Mar)
BREAK, 12 March
Book 3, ch. 1-32 (13 Mar-13 Apr)
BREAK, 14 Apr
Book 4, ch. 1-23 (15 Apr-7 May)
BREAK, 8 May
Book 5, ch. 1-33 (9 May-10 Jun)
BREAK, 11 Jun
Book 6, ch. 1-32 (12 Jun-14 Jul)
BREAK, 15 Jul
Book 7, ch. 1-31 (16 Jul-15 Aug)
BREAK, 16 Aug
Book 8, ch. 1-29 (17 Aug-14 Sept)

Some info on different translations and editions in the links below. Maud, Aylmer and Pevear and Volonkhonsky all present once again.

Wikipedia here
Tolstoy Therapy
New York Times
Some thoughts on Pevear and Volonkhonsky contenting the Russian Lit market

For reasons best known to me (largely foolish) I decided look up and work it all out on my phone instead of laptop, so apologies for any inaccuracies, typos etc. I am certain I have forgotten something, got my numbering wrong somewhere, but hopefully broadly correct.

All that remains is to say welcome back to those who are remaining committed to Tolstoy, thank you to those who organised and helped the last read run smoothly and welcome, do come in to those joining.

p.s. I would love to see the covers of your books.

OP posts:
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32
cassandre · 07/03/2023 21:11

Thanks from me too Desdamona for your ongoing efforts!

I'm also finding the book really gripping. The horse race scene told from multiple perspectives was amazing, as you said, Fuzzy.

I found Anna's increasing discomfort and unwillingness to lie very plausible: how she got to a point where she just couldn't keep pretending any longer. I wonder how Vronsky will feel about her confession though! As a cad / rake / bounder he's unlikely to have the same ethical compunctions as Anna. 😁

cassandre · 08/03/2023 09:28

Actually, axe those thoughts about Vronsky. I just looked back at chs 21-22, and he was encouraging Anna to leave her husband. I also forgot about Anna being pregnant! Sheesh. I must have been really tired when I was reading those chapters as I seem to have next to no recollection of them. Either perimenopause or the exhaustion of uni term time or both I guess!

It's clever the way Tolstoy interweaves stories about different characters but I've looked ahead and it seems we get chapters about kitty and then Levin and it's ages before we get back to Anna / Karenin / Vronsky again. Damn! Such a cliffhanger.

JamesGiantPledge1 · 08/03/2023 13:35

I am also on edge as to what happens next to Anna and Vronsky.

I have Vronsky down as a man ‘who likes the chase’ and not a man who will relish the domesticity of life with a wife and baby. Will he be interested once he has Anna? I am now sure she has thought this through.

IsFuzzyBeagMise · 08/03/2023 13:48

I'm enjoying the Anna and Vronsky storyline and am looking forward to seeing what will happen next. I don't have any faith in Vronsky either. In fact, I utterlly dislike him since he kicked his horse during the race.

I'm up to chapter 35. I'm not enjoying Kitty's stay at the spa. It's all very odd. The descriptions of people are sarcastic and rather cutting. I wonder if Tolstoy is trying to be humorous. Kitty's new vocation of holiness reminds me of Princess Marya from W+P.

I think it happens when you're reading a book in slow motion that you can forget details, cassandre!

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 08/03/2023 15:40

8/3/23

Part 2, Chapter 32

•	We get an overview of Madame Stahl and Varenka in this chapter.
•	

Madame Stahl was always a sickly woman. After she gave birth to a stillborn baby, her relatives were afraid that the news would kill her, and replaced the dead baby with Varenka, who was born on the same night to a baker.

Madame Stahl eventually found out that Varenka was not her daughter, but brought her up anyway.

Madame Stahl is involved in religion—she's friends with all the important people in various denominations of Christianity.

Madame Stahl and Varenka live abroad. Varenka is well-educated and speaks English and French.

Kitty's admiration of Varenka becomes increasingly intense as she discovers more of Varenka's interesting qualities.

For instance, Varenka can sing well. But It's not just that she can sing well that Kitty admires, it's the fact that Varenka doesn't really care that she can sing well that really seems unusual.

At one point, Kitty accompanies Varenka on piano.

Varenka hesitates before singing this one Italian song.

Kitty questions her about her hesitation later.

It turns out Varenka used to sing that song to her lover. The two of them adored each other and were going to get married, but his mother didn't want him to marry Varenka.

Kitty asks how she would have reacted to the humiliation if, instead of it being his mother who called off the wedding, he simply did not love her back.

Kitty is obviously asking about her own situation, which Varenka realizes.

She tells Kitty that there are more important things in life, and that Kitty is being pointlessly sensitive. After all, Kitty never confessed her one-sided love to the man himself. Varenka says that the point now is whether Kitty still loves him or not.

Kitty doesn't get it. To her, all that matters is the shame: she can't forgive herself and she hates Vronsky (though she never mentions him by name).

She looks at Varenka, trying to figure out what could be the most important thing to Varenka that gives her calmness and serenity.

Kitty's mother calls for Kitty to come inside.

Varenka goes to visit and have tea with her mother.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 09/03/2023 09:33

9/3/23

Part 2, Chapter 33

•	With Madame Stahl and Varenka as role models, Kitty embarks on letting loose her spiritual side.
•	

It's good for her because she is launching a new beginning that has nothing to do with Moscow and her former life.

Even though Madame Stahl is Christian, Kitty feels vaguely uneasy about Madame Stahl's sincerity.

But Kitty has no doubts whatsoever about Varenka's genuineness.

Kitty begins to imitate everything that Varenka does, including the way that she blinks.

• Kitty begins to harbor secret dreams about being a good person who helps the unfortunate and needy. She doesn't tell anyone about her secret dreams.

She starts spending all her time with sick people, particularly a poor and ailing painter, Petrov, and his family.

Kitty's mother likes that her daughter is being a good person, but dislikes the extremes to which Kitty is going.

Kitty refuses to confide her secret dreams in her mother.

Kitty and the Petrov family have been getting along fabulously. One day, however, Kitty's mother notes that the Petrov family has not been frequenting the house as much as before.

Kitty claims to have no idea why the Petrov family has suddenly stopped visiting.

Kitty thinks over her relationship with the Petrov family. Kitty and Petrov's wife, Anna Pavlovna, have been considering ways for the painter to improve his health. Their son calls her "my Kitty."

But now, the problem is that the painter has fallen for Kitty, and in his excitement at seeing her has communicated his feelings to his wife. Kitty's reception in the Petrov household is awkward: Anna Pavlovna is too cold and Petrov is too warm.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 10/03/2023 10:47

10/3/23

Part 2, Chapter 34

•	Kitty's father, the elder Prince Shcherbatsky, comes to visit.

•	He and his wife have opposite views on how to act when abroad. He thinks that Continental life (i.e., European life) is oppressive and tries to downplay all his European habits, while his wife practically considers herself to be a Continental lady.

•	Although the Prince is upset about Kitty's newfound friendships (he seems to be jealous), his good humor takes over and he spends time happily with his family.

•	He and Kitty are walking along when they encounter Madame Berthe, who compliments Kitty excessively.
•	
•	Then Kitty introduces the Prince to Varenka. The Prince likes her, and so he refrains from making fun of her.

•	They go to greet Madame Stahl. The Prince was acquainted both her and her husband from back in the day.

•	On the way, they pass by Petrov, the ailing painter.

•	The Prince comments that Petrov looked like he wanted to speak with Kitty.

•	They turn around, and the Prince introduces himself.

•	Petrov says that they were expecting Kitty yesterday.

•	Kitty says that his wife sent word that they weren't going.

•	Petrov yells for his wife and questions her in a conspicuous stage whisper.

•	As the couple argues, Kitty and her father move on to speak with Madame Stahl.

•	Prince Shcherbatsky claims that Madame Stahl isn't sick at all: she just sits all the time because she has a bad figure and doesn't want to show it off. And as for her acts of charity, he points out that it's more virtuous to do good without making sure that everybody knows about it.

•	Suddenly, all Kitty can see of Madame Stahl is a dumpy woman with a bad figure who bullies Varenka. No matter how she tries, Kitty can't recall her idealized vision of Madame Stahl again.
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 11/03/2023 13:31

11/3/23

Part 2, Chapter 35

•	Everyone eats breakfast, and the Prince infects everyone with his good humor and jokes.

•	Kitty doesn't feel happy though, because of the cynical view her father has taken of her new friends and new life, and because of the trouble with the Petrovs.

•	Varenka gets up to leave. When she goes into the house to get her hat, Kitty follows her.

•	It turns out Varenka is going to help the Petrovs pack for their departure. Kitty wants to help too.
•	
•	Varenka says Kitty should stay at home and spend time with her papa.
•	

Kitty presses the issue, but it's a bad idea to continue talking about the situation. It's clear that Kitty's presence has caused a rift in the Petrov household.

Kitty has a fit. She says that it serves herself right because her interactions with Petrov didn't come from the heart, that she was just playing the role of a generous person.

Varenka asks what the purpose of such a pretence might be.

Kitty exclaims that she just wanted to seem like a better person to everyone around her, but now she's realized that it's better to be bad than to be a liar.

Varenka seems to feel that Kitty is also reproaching her as a deceiver, but Kitty exclaims that no, Varenka is honest and perfect, but that she, Kitty, is not. It would be better to leave Anna Pavlovna to do her own thing.
• Kitty continues to freak out, saying that she can only live by her heart, honestly, that she loves Varenka wholeheartedly while Varenka probably only loves Kitty with a mind to teach her better ways.

• Varenka protests that she's being unfair, and Kitty pseudo-apologizes by saying that she's not talking about anyone but Kitty herself. Kitty is called away mid-argument by her mother, but she rushes back in a fit of remorse and asks for Varenka's forgiveness.

The two women make up, but Kitty is forever changed. Having seen her new world through the eyes of her worldly father, she realizes that she has been deceiving herself about who she is. Her efforts to force herself to love everyone oppress her, and she now yearns to return to her home and get back to herself.

Before she leaves, Kitty tries to get Varenka to join them in Moscow.

Instead, Varenka promises to visit Kitty after Kitty is married. Kitty says she'll never marry, and Varenka says, in that case, she'll never come. Kitty offers to marry just to bring Varenka to visit.

Kitty returns to Russia cured. She may not be as carefree as before, but at peace with her memories of her previous visit to Moscow.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 11/03/2023 13:36

And from Gradesaver summary & analysis of Part 2:

Part Two Summary:
Kitty Shcherbatskayaa_ remains shattered at the beginning of this section; her heartbreak has made itself known in a number of physical symptoms. Her entire family, especially her mother, feels distressed and guilty over their roles in forcing proposals from the two men. Kitty is particularly emotional during the early pages of Part Two. Irritable, distraught, and free to say what she likes under the cloak of illness, she vents her feelings to Dolly. She feels, Kitty says, coarse and vulgar, and she also claims that she will never do as Dolly has done: to continue to live in the same house as a man who has been dishonest. Kitty almost immediately regrets the cruelty of this last statement, coming as it does at a time when Dolly is already feeling insecure about Oblonsky's past and future infidelities. The two sisters have an emotional reconciliation and Kitty returns home with her sister to nurse the Oblonsky children through an outbreak of scarlet fever. But Kitty's own health does not improve, and her family decides to take her to a spa in Germany.
Chapter Four opens with a detailed description of the three different social circles Anna has at her disposal. The first is the business circle of her husband's associates, the second is a small group of learned and pious men and women, nicknamed "the conscience of Petersburg society." And the third is the largest circle of grand society: balls, dinners, playing at cards, etc. Previous to her Moscow trip, Anna had typically consorted with the second circle, but upon her return, she begins circulating more frequently in the third circle, where she is sure to meet Vronsky. They share a mutual friend, Princess Betsyy_ Tverskoy, who is also Vronsky's cousin and takes great delight in watching their passion progress. Anna at first believes that she is merely allowing Vronsky to pursue her, but soon she admits to herself that his feelings constitute the whole passion of her present existence.
Their behavior quickly escalates into the realm of the Socially Unacceptable. This is clear one evening at Princess Betsy's house. While the other guests amuse themselves in conversation and the Princess Myagkaya holds court with her wit and her blunt sense of humor, Anna and Vronsky withdraw to their own table and engage in a lengthy, private conversation. This would not be unusual, but they do so in the presence of Karenin, Anna's husband, and so others take notice. Eyebrows begin raising all over St. Petersburg.
With his typical disinterest and naivete, Karenin does not believe there is anything wrong with Anna's behavior, but he notices the effect of her conversation on others. Karenin is a man vitally concerned with external appearances, and it is for this reason that he confronts Anna about the incident. She arrives home very late, much to his displeasure, and then proceeds to cheerfully disregard his concern. Frustrated by his inability to communicate with his wife, Karenin withdraws from Anna, and she from him. From this point on, Anna's primary attachment is to Vronsky.
Vronsky and Anna consummate their love in heavily coded language (which was shocking for the timeand the censors) and Anna, with more clarity than she has ever had about the affair before, says, "Everything is finished. I have nothing but you now. Remember that." She leaves immediately, and when she goes to bed that night, she dreams of being married to both Vronsky and Karenin, and being ravished by them at the same time. She is horrified by this dream.
Meanwhile, Levin prepares his estate for the arrival of spring. Unlike many estate owners, Levin delights in doing heavy labor on his estate; Tolstoy gives many descriptions of Levin's physicality and his deeds during this section. Levin does the work not only because it gives him pleasure, but also because it distracts him from thoughts of Kitty. A visitor arrives at his estate: fearing that it is his brother Nicholas, Levin is delighted when it turns out to be Oblonsky. With characteristic aplomb, Oblonsky announces his three intentions: to visit, to shoot and to sell one of his forests to a local dealer named Ryabinin. The deal goes through and Ryabinin takes advantage of Oblonsky by paying far less than the forest is worth. Levin is furious at Oblonsky and takes advantage of the opportunity to lecture Oblonsky on his financial affairs. Oblonsky laughs him off. Before he leaves, Oblonsky tells Levin that Kitty is ill and that Vronsky has left Moscow in pursuit of Anna.
In Petersburg, Vronsky and Anna's affair is rapidly becoming common knowledge. Though the affair is condoned because they remain discreet, the women of Petersburg Society are waiting eagerly for Anna to make a mistake, and Vronsky's family is becoming concerned that this affair is distracting him from progressing in his career. In the midst of all this concern, Vronsky is preparing to ride in the annual horse race for officers of his regiment. Right before the race, Vronsky visits Anna in the garden of her house. He pauses to admire her, looking beautiful and tragic on the terrace, but she tells him a piece of startling news: she is pregnant. He does not sense the import of this announcement, but rashly proposes that they elope. Anna refuses, claiming that she cannot bear to unleash the forces of civic, political and religious society upon her and her son. They make plans to meet later, and Vronsky then hurries to the race. He meets his brother, who makes several insinuating comments about his affair with Anna. Anna and her husband both attend the race, but sit separately in the stands. Vronsky begins the race in the lead, but he fails to remain in motion with his nervous mare, Frou-Frou during a hurdle. The horse falls and breaks her back; Vronsky, in anger, kicks the dying mare, though he himself is unhurt.
Karenin, who has been conducting relations with his wife much as before, sees a doctor before the race about his health. The doctor prescribes cures that are impossible for Kareninno worrying, little intellectual activity and a great deal of physical laborand then leaves, disturbing Karenin. At the race, he watches Anna's reactions from across the stands. He is furious to see her openly fawn over Vronsky as he is riding and then to see her react physically when he falls. With great difficultyfor Anna does not know if Vronsky is hurt or nothe manages to force her to come home with him. In the carriage, he confronts her about her affair, with more strength this time. Not only does Anna confess her feelings for Vronsky, but she lashes out at Karenin, saying that she hates him. Karenin demands that she observe "external conditions of propriety" until he can protect himself, presumably through a divorce.
At the German spa, Kitty makes the acquaintance of Varenkaa, a young woman who cares for Madame Stahll, her adoptive mother. Stahl is a mysterious figure, a member of the highest society who is too ill, and, the old Princess Shcherbatsky claims, too proud, to consort with other Russians. Varenka is pious, with a deep sense of morality, and she devotes much of her time looking out for the less fortunate. Kitty is taken with Varenka and tries to imitate her sense of deep spirituality. Nicholas Levinn and his female companion, Mashaa, are also at the same resort. He is poorly dressed and has no social graces. Kitty is repulsed, not just because he is unpleasant but also because he reminds her of Levin.
Varenka assures Kitty that there are far more important things in the world than marriage. Thus shamed, Kitty aspires to be charitable and begins looking after Petrov, a sickly painter. This backfires when Petrov falls in love with Kitty and his wife gets angry at the girl's attentions. At first Kitty is sad that she cannot be like Varenka, but then she meets the mysterious Madame Stahl and discovers that Stahl, who claims to be pious, is actually hypocritical and rather cruel towards Varenka. Her father makes fun of Stahl and does a great deal to restore Kitty's spirits. Thus assured, Kitty prepares to return to Moscow with a greater understanding of herself. She retains her love for Varenka, begging her to come visit. Varenka promises she will as soon as Kitty is married.
Part Two Analysis:
Part Two helps readers to understand the seriousness of Anna and Vronsky's affair. The theme of family relations is strong in this portion of the book. Not only are the stakes raised with Anna's pregnancy, but Tolstoy's portrayal of the complicated emotional networks between families shows how Anna and Vronsky's behavior will hurt the people around them in addition to themselves.
In order to understand the depth of these networks, it is important to understand a few legalities, de juro and de facto, of Russian society. At this time, divorce was granted only for the most serious conditions of adultery or abuse. A divorce was only obtainable by the innocent party, and the guilty party was neither allowed custody of any children nor the right to marry again. For Anna, then, a divorce would mean losing access to her beloved son. It would also mean living as Vronsky's mistress. As a mistress, not only would she be a permanent social outcast, but she would lack legal power in all of her social relationships. Vronsky's children would not have legitimacy, and therefore they would be unable to inherit any of his property or titles.
In addition to this legality, Russian society had its own rules. Although affairs were common and perfectly acceptable for both men and women, they were condoned only so long as what Karenin called "external conditions" were maintained. Neglect of one's spouse in public in order to pay attention to one's lover was considered a breach of those conditions, as was outward disrespect for the wronged husband or wife. If those conditions were breached, especially by a woman, Russian society would turn upon the offender with full force. Anna risks not only her own social humiliation and ruination but that of her son as well.
Under such dire circumstances, it is understandable that Anna hesitates at Vronsky's rash suggestion. Vronsky, whether from ignorance or naivete, fails to understand what these two powerful rules will mean for himself and Anna, and he goes off to the race barely disturbed beyond a serious feeling of "disgust" at the entire situation.
The most powerful figure in this equation, then, is Anna's husband Karenin. Though critics have demonized Karenin for his coldness towards Anna and his preoccupation with "external conditions" rather than "internal conditions"for his hypocrisyhe is one of the more complicated figures in the book. He may be cold, but he is willing to suffer public humiliation if Anna will simply behave herself. This is truly generous of him and speaks well of his selflessness. Anna senses the greatness of his gesture, and this is one reason why she hates him. Indeed, her dream of having both men as husbands reflects on her own wish to have not both men but both sets of personalitiesVronsky's passion and Karenin's generosityat her disposal. Of course, they cannot merge in the same man, and this is part of Anna's tragedy.
Vronsky, meanwhile, showcases some of his less flattering aspects during the race. He rushes off to the race after Anna's pronouncement with barely a concern beyond the condition of his horse. And when, due to his own mistake, the horse, fails him, his cruelty is startling. Despite his later regret, Vronsky is shown to be a man of great passions but limited emotional depth.
While Anna and Vronsky begin their descent into chaos, Kitty gradually grows in maturity and independence. Through the figure of Varenka, she comes to understand another vision of life that does not center around marriage, but good deeds, as the purpose of a woman's life. Though she does not chose this route, her exposure to it lessens her concerns about Vronsky's humiliation and allows her to envision a new life for herself. The role of her family, especially her father, in supporting Kitty forms an alternative portrayal of familial relations to the debacle in St. Petersburg.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 11/03/2023 14:37

Thank you for posting the summary Desdamona. It's always good to put things in perspective, particularly the 'rules' around having an affair and how divorce was undertaken. There was good character development in this part and I think I know them all a bit better now. I'm wondering if Varenka will make another appearance in the book or did she only serve to help Kitty in her recovery.

goodthinking99 · 12/03/2023 09:19

I'm also finding the book and the character's inner turmoils and workings gripping. I thought it would all be a bit drier and long winded but it's been a real page turner. How each person's inner thoughts (and the lies they tell themselves) drive the action is brilliant. And I love the extra details that say so much, like how Kitty was excited at the thought of reading piously to prisoners!

CornishLizard · 13/03/2023 08:04

I’d got behind and thought I was going to struggle to catch up, but read 50 pages yesterday on the edge of my seat! The threat of separation from their children really does keep women powerless doesn’t it? The way Tolstoy works the meeting of Anna and Vronsky before the races with the disclosure of the pregnancy, then the race from Vronsky’s perspective, then we watch Anna watching it and Karenina watching her, knowing what is coming- makes the declaration in the carriage on the way home completely believable.

good to see Kitty again- never trust a do-gooder - her father has been a good judge of character so far hasn’t he?

CornishLizard · 13/03/2023 08:33

I enjoyed that line about reading gospels to criminals too goodthinking!

Tarahumara · 13/03/2023 08:47

Yes, I smiled at that line too! I think it shows Tolstoy's understanding of human nature.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 13/03/2023 10:28

13/03/23

Part 3, Chapter 1

•	Koznyshev decides to spend time with his brother, Levin, in the country as a break from his intellectual pursuits.
•	

Levin feels vaguely uncomfortable about this because, while he loves his brother, he hates seeing his brother's attitude towards the countryside.

For Levin, the countryside is great because it's a place for work that is unquestionably useful. It's where he lives, it's "a place of life," of joy and of suffering.

• Also complex is Levin's view of the peasants "as a people." He feels himself to be a part of the peasantry as he is a part of all mankind, and he observes in them many traits he hates, including drunkenness and carelessness.

Yet, he cannot say that he either hates or loves the peasantry, because he has a common goal with them. Sometimes they work together effectively and sometimes they don't. He was nursed from a peasant woman and feels, in spite of the fact that he is master of the estate, that he is not separate or apart from the peasants as a class.

Koznyshev, on the other hand, loves the countryside because there you "could and should do nothing" (3.1.1). He doesn't think of it as a productive space at all, because he believes that real life takes place in the cities.

Similarly, he says he loves the peasants, that he's good at talking to muzhiks and getting to know their real concerns. But for all of his talk about loving peasants, he talks about them only in contrast to the people he knows and does not love. Koznyshev has created a set, unchanging idea of what a peasant is, as distinct from what city folk are, and he won't allow his observations of real peasants to change his mind. Levin is much more flexible.

• To Koznyshev, Levin's a good kid with his heart in the right place, but his thought is filled with contradictions and irrationalities.

To Levin, Koznyshev is a smart guy with great education, but he lacks heart. He may talk big about social reforms, but all of his plans are like a chess game for the "common good"—without anyone's specific needs in mind.

Koznyshev is sitting back in "rustic idleness" (3.1.6), and Levin is beginning to find his company boring and distracting. All he can think is that, while he's sitting with his brother, he could be monitoring how his tenants are carting manure to the fields. He's sure that, without his presence, they'll be falling back on inefficient ways. He excuses himself to dash down to the fields and have a look.

IsFuzzyBeagMise · 13/03/2023 10:53

Levin should get his brother to help out on the farm and pull his weight ;)

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 14/03/2023 17:58

14/03/23

Part 3, Chapter 2

•	In the beginning of June, Miss Agatha (that's Levin's old nurse and current housekeeper) sprains her wrist.
•	

The district doctor stays to dinner and is awed by Koznyshev, who is delighted to have a new audience for his ideas.

For his part, the doctor tells Koznyshev all the district gossip, and complains about the bad state of the District Council (remember, that's the administrative unit that Levin quit because he thought it was a waste of time).

Afterwards, Koznyshev is in a stellar mood and wants to go off and fish. (Koznyshev likes to make a point of the fact that he enjoys fishing.)

• Levin offers to drive his brother there in a cabriolet (which is a light, two-wheeled, one-horse carriage that can sit two people).

Levin chats with an old peasant about the best time to mow the grass.

Koznyshev doesn't want to go home yet. He hasn't caught anything, and he wants an intellectual chat.

Levin, in contrast, wants to go home and make plans for mowing and harvesting.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 15/03/2023 15:23

15/03/23

Part 3, Chapter 3

•	Levin and his brother have an extended discussion about Levin's failure to stay on the District Council and try to improve living conditions (i.e., schools, health care) for those in the district.
•	

Koznyshev points out that Levin's district is in bad shape: they contribute taxes that pay local council salaries, but there are still no public schools, medical care, midwives, or pharmacies ("dispensaries," as he calls them). How can Levin turn his back on the peasants he claims to love?

Levin thinks to himself that he never said he loved the peasants. What's more, these issues don't concern him directly. He's half-listening and thinking more about the plowing in his fields, which seems to have stopped prematurely.

• Koznyshev continues. Either Levin can't see all the good that he could do, or else he's unwilling to give up his time to do it.

Levin's feeling unable to defend himself and offended by his brother's questions. He knows he's about to be pushed into admitting that he doesn't care about "the common cause." Levin replies that the kinds of reforms Koznyshev is talking about seem impossible in a district of three thousand square miles, with its bad weather and seasonal work. What's more, Levin doesn't see the point of either medicine or schools.

Koznyshev asks how there can be any doubt about the usefulness of education? If it's good for Levin himself, why wouldn't it be good for the peasants?

Levin gives his main reason for not caring about "the common cause." Why should he build schools that neither he nor his children will ever use, and that the peasants don't want to attend? Not only do the peasants not want to bother with education, but schooling makes them useless for their actual jobs.

Levin asks Koznyshev to prove to him philosophically that education is good when it comes to the peasantry. When Koznyshev says that he doesn't see what philosophy's got to do with it, Levin gets upset.

Levin furiously argues that the motive of all actions is personal happiness. As a nobleman, he sees nothing in the zemstvo District Councils that contributes to his personal well-being.

The roads are still bad, and won't improve. He has no personal need of a justice of a peace or a doctor. Finally, he thinks that schools are bad for accomplishing his agricultural goals. It's all a giant waste of his time and money, since he has to pay for the privilege to participate in these councils.

• Koznyshev thinks he has Levin at this point. The emancipation of the serfs was not motivated by self-interest, and yet we still did it.

(By the way: Russian serfs were functionally slaves of their feudal, aristocratic masters. Strongly influenced by anti-slavery sentiment from Europe and the United States, the reformist Czar Alexander II freed the serfs in 1861, sixteen years before the final publication of Anna Karenina in 1877.

Levin's getting worked up: he says that freeing the serfs was a matter of throwing off the yoke oppressing noblemen and all good people. But working on the council and arguing about pipe installation in a town he doesn't even live in is a different thing.

Koznyshev asks if Levin were put on trial tomorrow, would he rather be tried by the criminal courts or trial by jury (introduced to Russia in 1864 by the same Alexander II who liberated the serfs).

Levin says that Koznyshev's arguments are illogical because he's not going to go on trial tomorrow. All this zemstvo stuff is a sham taken from current institutions in Europe. None of it's motivated by real personal investment.

Koznyshev thinks Levin's being a hypocrite, since he too has a philosophy of his own that fits his own desires. He adds that philosophy is about finding precisely that connection between personal and general interests. What's more, the only nations that have a future are the ones that carefully look after their institutions.

• Levin now feels totally left out of the argument: he can't argue with Koznyshev's greater intellectual and philosophical skill, but he still feels that his brother just doesn't get what Levin has been trying to say.

Instead of restarting the argument, though, Levin just retreats into thinking about his own concerns (elaborated in the next chapter), and they untie the horse and drive away from the fishing hole.

Sadik · 16/03/2023 09:18

I'm finding this section really interesting. We're set up to sympathise with Levin, who sees the peasants as individual people with strengths & weaknesses, rather than an undifferentiated mass. But then in the next chapter, he's completely against education & advancement for these same people, & we see that he doesn't actually consider them to be on the same level as him.

On a more frivolous note, I couldn't help thinking that if he provided his workers with a bit more education, he might find that they were more competent at doing their jobs & didn't need so much oversight!

Tarahumara · 16/03/2023 09:28

Yes, I agree, Sadik. The nuances of the characters in this novel is what makes it interesting.

Magentax · 16/03/2023 09:42

I love this section - Levin is so interesting. Much more nuance than it first seems.

IsFuzzyBeagMise · 16/03/2023 09:47

Yes! That was an interesting chapter. I thought Levin came across as rather small-minded and hypocritical. I'm with Koznyshev on this. Contributing to his community would have benefits for him too. I think he should step up as he is in a position of influence in his locality. Where is his sense of civic duty :)

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 16/03/2023 12:26

16/03/23

Part 3, Chapter 4

•	What distracts Levin from his brother is the memory that, last summer, Levin mowed the grass alongside his peasants. He's debating whether he should do the same this year.
•	

He's not keen on leaving his brother alone for such a long period of time, but he has found mowing to be incredible physical exercise.

His other concern is that his brothers and the peasants will make fun of him.

• He decides to go mowing, and has his scythe sent to be sharpened by Titus.

At first everyone makes fun of his mowing, but everyone eventually settles down into the rhythm of hard work.

Levin feels wonderful.

Before lunch, they mow through the rain.

Levin goes home for coffee and then rejoins the peasants.

cassandre · 16/03/2023 17:56

I couldn't help thinking that if he provided his workers with a bit more education, he might find that they were more competent at doing their jobs & didn't need so much oversight!

Ha ha, great point Sadik!

And like you IzFuzzy, I didn't think Levin came off very well in the chapter where he was debating his brother. I'm getting the sense that Tolstoy is no political radical.

However, the way he juxtaposes the viewpoints of the two brothers, one an academic and more of an idealist, the other a farmer and more of a pragmatist, is quite interesting. Maybe the truth lies somewhere in the middle of their two perspectives?

But yeah, 'uneducated peasants are better workers' is not an argument I'm willing to entertain!

CornishLizard · 16/03/2023 21:22

I like the brother’s armchair idealism as he puts his feet up while Levin and the peasants work.