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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:
Thread gallery
32
IsFuzzyBeagMise · 07/04/2023 13:33

I know! The Dilemma of The Trapezoidal Neckline 😅

To look or not to look? Where to look?!
That is the question.

Piggywaspushed · 07/04/2023 13:56

The solution is to wander off somewhere else and have a manly conversation about cows, or serfs, or some such.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 08/04/2023 00:20

07/04/23

Part 3, Chapter 26

•	Sviyazhsky is five years older than Levin and has been married for a long time. Part of Levin's reason for not visiting sooner is that Sviyazhsky's wife has a sister whom Sviyazhsky and his wife would like Levin to marry.
•	On one hand, Levin has no interest in this girl. But on the other hand, he thinks it might be good to test out his feelings for her.

•	In any case, the Sviyazhsky family life is pleasant and amiable.

•	For Levin, Sviyazhsky is an interesting person because he has a number of opinions that seem to contradict the way he lives his life.

•	For example, at the same time that he looks down on the peasants, his interactions with them are heartfelt, sincere, and respectful. Levin considers Sviyazhsky to be a living enigma.

•	Levin also looks forward to seeing some neighboring landowners and discussing farming with them.

•	The day's shooting is not very good.

•	During tea, Levin is sitting with his hostess and her sister. Levin is uncomfortable and distracted because the sister is wearing a revealing dress.

•	Levin blushes and finally escapes to the other side of the room where Sviyazhsky is talking with two other landowners.
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 08/04/2023 00:24

08/04/23

Part 3, Chapter 27

•	This chapter is largely taken up with the conversation between Sviyazhsky, Levin, the older landowner, and Mikhail Petrovich, the second landowner.

•	The older landowner comments that he lives at home, doesn't buy anything, and doesn't rent anything. He thinks that the peasants are running wild into drunkenness because everything is individually owned. The old feudal system, in which village ploughing and farming was for the good of the group (under the authority of the nobility) is gone. When his peasants run wild and he turns them in to the new-fangled justice of the peace, they just get acquitted. It's all seems useless. (He's teasing Sviyazhsky, and Sviyazhsky takes the joke.)
•	
•	Mikhail Petrovich says, that some of the peasants are shameless, but for the most part, he's got a rational system going: he loans them enough money to pay the first third of their taxes, and gets them to work for him in exchange, sowing oats, making hay, and so on.

•	Levin's disappointed with this patriarchal method, and asks the old landowner how he gets his work done.

•	The landowner replies that everything has gone to the dogs since the emancipation of the serfs (in 1861, under Czar Alexander II). Before then, landowners were able to carry on their own improvements to farming tools and methods. Now, without that authority over the peasants, everything is sinking into a primitive condition. Without a feudal relationship, you can't make the hired help do anything right.

&bull;	Levin's not so interested in the landowner's proposal for how to liberate himself from this decline in farming (and the novel doesn't go into detail on that point) but he <span class="italic">definitely</span> agrees that the quality of farming is dying down.

&bull;	Sviyazhsky finally gets serious, saying that the quality of farming when the serfs were around was actually low because they didn't have machinery or good accounting systems. Now that there are banks and, more money can be invested into farming.

&bull;	Levin disagrees adamantly. He's spent tons of money improving farming and has gotten nowhere. The new livestock were lost, his new tools have been lost. What's more, says Levin, all wealthy farmers who conduct their business on rational principles operates on a loss.
&bull;	
&bull;	Sviyazhsky replies that his (Levin's) farm might not be profitable, but that isn't necessarily due to agricultural methods. It could just be because Levin is a bad manager.

&bull;	Sviyazhsky blocks Levin from probing his mind too deeply, and heads out of the room before he gets caught up too much in the discussion.

&bull;	Levin and the old landowner get into a discussion about the appropriate relationship with peasants. Levin wants to know why true partnership between the nobility and peasantry is impossible. The landowner replies that such a thing would be impossible with the Russian <span class="italic">muzhik</span>, who needs the stick of authority to make him do anything.

&bull;	Sviyazhsky returns, having smoked a cigarette, and says, serfdom is a barbaric institution. What we need now are new forms of community that have been defined and accepted in Europe.

&bull;	Levin wonders why there can't be a uniquely Russian form. What if these newly invented European ways don't suit the Russian context? This brings the argument to a standstill, because Sviyazhsky can't answer, and starts fumbling with terms he doesn't explain. The two landowners take their leave, and Sviyazhsky uses this as a pretext to end his discussion with Levin.
IsFuzzyBeagMise · 09/04/2023 10:23

I thought this was an interesting debate. I'm inclined to think that Levin isn't the best manager either. He's too lenient. That fellow Sviyazhsky seems like a slippery character. All talk but no follow through.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 09/04/2023 14:11

09/04/23

Part 3, Chapter 28

&bull;	The conversation of the last chapter worries Levin. He realizes that the dissatisfaction he's been feeling with farming isn't just about him&mdash;it's something Russian farmers all over the country are feeling.
&bull;	Levin has a long conversation with Sviyazhsky, in which he gets confused by what seems to be a series of contradictions.
&bull;	Sviyazhsky tells Levin he doesn't know why Levin's so surprised at the peasants' resistance to new techniques and methods. After all, they are at such a low level of financial and moral development that anything foreign to them must seem scary.
&bull;	
&bull;	Levin wants to know how they can educate the peasantry.
&bull;	Schools, says Sviyazhsky. Schools may not make things better, they may in fact make the lives of the peasants worse. But at least schools will give the peasants <span class="italic">different</span> needs from the ones they have now.
&bull;	Levin doesn't understand this point. How does it make any sense that new needs would be better than what they have now? Trying to educate the peasantry won't make them less irrational and superstitious, because the real cause of that irrationality is <span class="italic">poverty</span>. That's the root thing that must be eradicated first before people's lives can be made better.
&bull;	Sviyazhsky replies pretty lamely that schools are compulsory all over Europe, so, implicitly, education should be done in Russia as well. He's afraid of Levin's arguments, and so he distracts him by changing the topic, laughing at an anecdote Levin has told to illustrate his point.
&bull;	Levin realizes that Sviyazhsky has no interest in putting into practice any of the rationalist ideas he's thought up. All Sviyazhsky cares about is the process of reasoning, and he hates getting into conversational dead ends such as when Levin cornered him on education.
&bull;	Sviyazhsky's thoughts on peasants and the way he treats them don't match up at all. After all, Sviyazhsky is great pals with a guy who believes that freeing the serfs is the worst thing that's ever happened to Russia.
&bull;	Levin spends the night at Sviyazhsky's but can't sleep. He continues thinking about all the conversations he has had that day, starting with the rich peasant. He decides that farming works with these improvements <span class="italic">only when the worker acts according to his habits</span>. You've got to give the workers themselves an interest in what comes out of the farm. Levin's proposing an incentive system for agriculture.
&bull;	
&bull;	At the end of much deliberation, Levin decides to return home early the next morning and propose a new scheme to the peasants.
&bull;	He wants to revolutionize his entire system of farming.
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 10/04/2023 10:51

10/04/23

Part 3, Chapter 29

&bull;	Carrying out his plan is hard, but Levin keeps trying. He explains to everyone that he plans to give them leases for his land with new conditions that allow them a share of the profits of their specific work. So, a farmer who works the orchard would get a share of apple profits, or Ivan the Cowherd would get part of milk sales. This portion of the profits would presumably be enough incentive for them all to work more efficiently, and to adopt Levin's improvements to increase yields.

&bull;	The chief difficulty is that the peasants are already so busy with their current season&mdash;and so worried about getting cheated out of profits&mdash;that they don't listen to what Levin has to say.

&bull;	Levin is so focused on his project that it takes up practically his entire summer.

&bull;	He reads a lot: theory, socialism, politics, and so on. The more he tries to grapple with John Stuart Mill, the less he feels convinced that European rules apply to specifically Russian social conditions.

&bull;	Levin tries to understand how to make his land more profitable. He believes that Russia has great land and great laborers, and he wants to understand how to be more productive.

&bull;	To this aim, he reads widely and plans to go abroad to explore the question in greater depth.

&bull;	Levin believes that the chief problem is the ingrained habits and stubbornness of the laboring class. He seeks to prove this theoretically in his book and practically on his farm.
CornishLizard · 10/04/2023 21:05

I’m behind again, trying to catch up! I like the idea in ch. 26 of ‘the reception rooms’ of people’s minds, and how Sviyazsky is resistant to anyone trying to get any further.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 11/04/2023 11:29

11/04/23

Part 3, Chapter 30

&bull;	By the end of September it's clear that Levin's project might work out as long as he continues working stubbornly for this goal. He daydreams of his idea taking root all across Russia and then the world.

&bull;	He's packed to go abroad, but the weather does not cooperate.

&bull;	He sits down to work on his book, and after some time, thinks suddenly of Kitty.

&bull;	He chats with Miss Agatha, who winds up suggesting that he needs to get married.

&bull;	Levin is irritated that she brought up what he's been thinking.

&bull;	At nine o'clock they receive a visitor. Levin is excited, because he's feeling frustrated with his work and he wants someone to take his mind off of it.
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 12/04/2023 17:09

12/04/23
Part 3, Chapter 31

&bull;	On his way downstairs, Levin hears coughing. He really hopes he misheard and that it's not his brother Nicholas.
&bull;	It is.
&bull;	Levin is disappointed&mdash;this is not the kind of visitor he wants.
&bull;	When Levin sees Nicholas up close, however, disappointment turns into compassion. Nicholas is skinnier and weaker than the last time Levin saw him.
&bull;	
&bull;	Nicolas says that his health has been much improved.
&bull;	That night, Nicholas is in a cheerful mood. He's no longer with Masha.
&bull;	Levin tells Nicholas about the farm improvements.
&bull;	The two brothers are actually so close to each other that just being in the same room speaks volumes. They understand each other perfectly from gestures and tone of voice. What's unsaid between them is the obvious fact that Nicholas is dying.
&bull;	Levin has never spent such a false evening.
&bull;	That night, Levin can't sleep as Nicholas is coughing painfully.
&bull;	Levin's mind is filled with thoughts of the inevitability of death. He doesn't know how to help his brother.
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 13/04/2023 08:12

13/04/23

Part 3, Chapter 32

&bull;	The next morning Nicholas is irritable and picks fights with Levin.
&bull;	

Levin wishes the two of them could have a heart to heart about Nicholas's upcoming death.

On Nicholas's third day in the house he challenges Levin on the new system of farming, deliberately comparing it to communism.

&bull;	Levin has never been a communist.
&bull;	The two brothers wind up arguing.
&bull;	

Nicholas says he regrets coming. He packs his things, and no matter what Levin says, he's made up his mind to leave.

Before he leaves, he asks Levin not to think too badly of him. Levin kisses his brother. This was the only sincere interaction between the two of them throughout Nicholas's entire visit.

Three days after Nicholas leaves, Levin runs into Kitty's cousin. Shcherbatsky asks him what the matter is, and Levin answers that all the joy in life is gone. Levin has begun to see death in everything.

Levin's only comfort is his work; he devotes himself wholeheartedly to the farm.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 14/04/2023 20:00

Grace Saver Part 3 summary & analysis:

In the summer, Levin's half-brother Koznyshevv_ decides to take a break from his intellectual labors in order to visit Levin in the country. Levin is happy to see his brother, though their differences regarding the purpose of a country estate annoy him. Levin is actively involved in everything regarding his farm, while Koznyshev regards the country as an opportunity for rest and idleness, "a useful antidote to depravity." There are also differences between the two brothers regarding the peasants. Koznyshev likes "the people," even to the point of idealizing their simplicity and good attitude, while Levin is more familiar with their weaknesses as well as their strengths and therefore cannot idealize them or their role in the labor market. Koznyshev also wants Levin to assume a position of responsibility in the area and criticizes him for abandoning the district council. Levin gets rid of some of his annoyance by mowing his fields with the peasants.
The physical activity is invigorating and puts Levin in a good humor; relations between himself and Koznyshev improve as a result.
Meanwhile, Oblonsky has gone to Petersburg for necessary bureaucratic functions, sending Dolly and the children to their country estate in Yergushovo to save money. While Oblonsky attends the horse races and lives like a bachelor in Petersburg, his family has a difficult time adjusting to the hardships of country life. After a week, the country house is in working order and Dolly has a moment of matriarchal triumph at her children's excellent behavior at Mass. Levin visits after Communion, and Dolly suggests that he propose to Kitty again. The suggestion embarrasses Levin, and they argue for a bit. Their bad humor seems to affect the children, whose good behavior earlier in the day disintegrates. Levin, inwardly scoffing at Dolly's mothering skills, leaves quickly. He goes next to deal with the sale of his sister's hay-harvest in a village some fifteen miles from Pokrovsk. After he has settled the business accounts, he observes a cheerful peasant family working hard at their labor. Their seeming happiness affects him greatly, and he returns to his questions about economics and spiritual happiness. As he leaves the fields, he glimpses Kitty passing in a carriage, and he realizes that he still loves her.
Karenin struggles with Anna's revelation about Vronsky by pondering his options. He does this in a very clinical, bureaucratic way. The traditional response would be to challenge Vronsky to a duel, but he considers duels dishonest and foolish besides. The most important thing to him is to "safeguard my reputation, which I need in order to continue my career unhindered." In order to gain a divorce, he would have to provide "proof" of Anna's infidelity, and he considers such things coarse. Plus, the divorce would be disruptive and publicly humiliating for him. So he decides that the only option is to force Anna to break off relations with Vronsky and stay with him. Outwardly at least, this will preserve the status quo. Inwardly, he also recognizes this as punishment for her. He writes to tell her of his decision and throws himself into his bureaucratic duties with relish.
Anna wakes up the morning after her outburst in the carriage seized by fear. Frightened that Karenin will throw her out of the house, she hatches a desperate plan to flee with her son, without Vronsky. She writes Karenin a letter to this effect. Then she receives Karenin's letter, and is chilled by both his generosity and his coldness. She leaves for a croquet match at Princess Betsyy_'s. Betsy has arranged for a number of high-society women with lovers to attend, in order that Anna might "learn" from their example. The women show up with both their lovers and husbands in tow. The match temporarily distracts Anna, but she remembers what awaits her at home and leaves.
The same morning, Vronsky spends the morning putting his financial affairs in order. His calculations reveal that he has many debts and a limited income. A visit from his friend Serpukhovskoy sparks Vronsky's jealousy, Serpukhovskoy is a general expecting an even higher appointment, while Vronsky's career has stagnated.
But when Serpukhovskoy offers him the chance to jump-start his career by leaving the regiment, Vronsky refuses because it will take him away from Anna.
After his meeting, he finds Anna. She tells him about Karenin, and Vronsky is excited, but Anna suggests that everything will remain the same. Vronsky believes a duel is inevitable, but she knows better.
Sure enough, Karenin does not challenge Vronsky to a duel. He is absorbed in his work, and a temporary triumph over a political enemy distracts him from family matters. When Anna comes to him in emotional despair, his manner is chilling and vindictive. He tells her in no uncertain terms that she will remain with him and break off relations with Vronsky.
Levin spends the rest of the summer contemplating economic and agricultural strategies while he attempts to avoid thoughts of Kitty, who is staying with Dolly less than twenty miles away. He visits Sviyazhskyy_, the owner of a nearby estate, to go shooting, and they engage in an involved discussion of peasant labor. Though he disagrees with Sviyazhsky, who wishes to reintroduce serfdom (abolished in 1861), the conversation sparks Levin's thinking about the peasants. Levin believes the best way to inspire them is not to force them to work, but to give them a stake in their work through ownership. He develops a "theory" of economic labor that involves cooperative labor and ownership. He attempts to implement this theory on his farm, but the peasants respond with far less enthusiasm than Levin does.
At the end of September, Levin receives a surprise visit from his brother Nicholas. Nicholas is emaciated and obviously very sick; his death is imminent. Though Levin is horrified by his brother's appearance and concerned about his future, Nicholas' fate is not a topic for discussion. Nicholas even claims that his health is improving. Instead, they fight about Levin's economic theory. Nicholas scoffs at his brother's beliefs, calling them a distorted form of communism. This disillusions Levin about the potential of his idea. Nicholas leaves, and Levin sinks into moroseness. He begins seeing death everywhere and is depressed about his own soul.
Part Three Analysis:

It is here, in part three, that Tolstoy develops his remarkable secondary story of Russia's changing economic society in addition to the story of relationships within Russia's High Society. Many critics have argued that Tolstoy's work here is what makes Anna Kareninaa such a lasting piece of literature; there is no doubt that his descriptions of agricultural life and his complex understanding of economic and historical forces, rendered in lucid prose, deepen and richen the novel. At the same time, some critics believe that Tolstoy's in-depth look at economics and agriculturehe relates every speech and every theoryis monotonous and distracts us from the "real" action. Regardless of critical debate, Tolstoy's goal in writing Anna Kareninaa was not just to tell a story but to provide "a slice of life." The agricultural focus which certainly would have been a large topic in 1870s Russiais a part of that.
Part Three is where, as one critic claims, Tolstoy has "images of life overthrowing theories." Or, to be more specific, "mowing wheat" overthrows theories. The simultaneous stories of Anna and Vronsky and Levin and Kitty are subordinated to Tolstoy's look at the Russian economic order. But in doing so, Tolstoy also provides us with valuable character development. We cannot take Koznyshev and Nicholas' theories about economics and peasants seriously because they do not, like Levin, have the experience of tilling the earth. The theme of the earth runs strongly through this part, and we are meant to judge characters by how they respond to the earth. Only characters who have a sensuous relationship to the earth, Levin, Dolly - are considered sympathetic in this section. Characters who do not have a relationship to the earth - Koznyshev, Nicholas, Oblonsky, seem misinformed and depraved. Indeed, it has been argued that some of Anna's depravity stems from her lack of a relationship to the earth; her inability to leave large urban centers is partially responsible for bringing her down.
The problems of the landowner's station are of prime importance in this section, and much of what happens is a reflection of Tolstoy's own reactionary beliefs. Though he did not favor a return to the slave-like conditions of serfdom, Tolstoy believed in the primacy of the landowner's patriarchal relationship to his peasants and his lands. At least some of the failure of Levin's theory is based on Tolstoy's own rebuke of communism. Nonetheless, Levin is a deeply conflicted man of ethics and human understanding (he does not make the mistake of idealizing the peasants, nor does he consider them inferior), and this creates difficulties in his vision of economics. How can he, Levin, make his living off the labor of others?
This question and a serious obsession with death tortures Levin throughout the novel. It is very important to keep these two matters in mind, particularly the latter, as they form the crux of Levin's development as a spiritual being later in the novel.
Karenin's behavior in this part of the novel shows both his cruelty and his bizarre sense of morality. It is true that he does the most generous thing by inviting Anna to come back into the fold rather than throwing her to the wolves, but it is also true that in doing so, he inflicts on her a punishment that is psychologically far more terrifying. Anna sought her relationship with Vronsky in order to liberate some of the repressed "animation" that, as we saw in Chapter 18 of Part One, is her natural state. Karenin's solution is to stifle that animation completely. Karenin knows that his generosity will punish Anna further, and he takes great vindictive delight in "doing the right thing." The irony of this situation also works to Karenin's self-interest. He coldly calculates pros and cons in a scene that is terrifying for the lack of emotion Karenin brings to an essentially emotional affair. If he gets a divorce from Anna or challenges Vronsky to a duel, the disruptive outcome may affect his career. And his career, as we see from his manner, is the most important thing.
Betsy's party is an amazing "slice of life," and frequently undiscussed part of the novel. Betsy brings two women, both placed high in society, with their lovers and husbands, to a croquet match. Her intention is to show Anna how women can conduct affairs in a non-damaging way. But although both women have retained their positions and their lovers, neither of them are positive models for Anna. One woman suffers from insomnia and boredom; the other is whorish. Juxtaposed against such examples, Anna's passionate, all-or-nothing manner is positively refreshing.
It is no accident that Levin spots Kitty just as he is feeling invigorated by the lives of the peasants. Just as their simple life inspires him, Kitty represents something child-like and innocent to him. But in Part Three, they are still not ready to meet for the purposes of love and marriage. An important theme in Anna Karenina is that of making choices just as Anna follows through with her destructive love affair to the bitter end, Levin and Kitty must be ready to commit themselves to a life together. This will take a bit more growth for both persons.

CornishLizard · 14/04/2023 20:00

End of block 3! These last couple of chapters about the technicalities of land ownership/employment were admittedly a bit of a slog but I enjoyed this section. I like how Anna and Karenin are drawn and the way we have access to both their thoughts. As someone said much more eloquently before, he’s not terrible, just very dry and dull, and we can sympathise with both. Not so much with Vronsky though, I nodded along to the posts on him - he probably genuinely believes he’s up for a life with Anna but hasn’t thought through the implications. I did like the way his rivalry with his high-achieving peer was drawn.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 15/04/2023 10:26

Thank you for posting the analysis, Desdamona. I seem to have glossed over the detail about Betty's* *party being an example to Anna on how to live with a husband and a lover. Not that she has any control over it! It's in Karenin's hands. He seems to have a cruel streak in him, disguised with a thin veneer of virtuosity.

The idea of having a positive relationship to the earth is interesting. It makes sense for some of the characters mentioned, but I'm trying to understand the relevance of it to Anna.

A good section. I'm looking forward to reading on.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 16/04/2023 11:26

You're welcome Fuzzy, I agree the significance of the various women at the party having two men in tow passed me by too! I just thought it was all a bit odd.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 16/04/2023 11:28

16/04/23

Anna Karenina Part 4, Chapter 1

&bull;	The Karenins continue to live together, but it's a sham marriage. Anna keeps on seeing Vronsky. No one likes the situation, but they all think it's temporary.

&bull;	Karenin feels that Anna's thing for Vronsky will pass, and they will return to the life they once led.

&bull;	Anna feels that it will all get better on its own. She doesn't know <span class="italic">how</span> the situation will improve, but she is sure that it'll be okay in the end.

&bull;	Vronsky also thinks something's going to happen outside of himself that'll solve their issues.

&bull;	In the middle of winter, in his capacity as a military officer, Vronsky escorts a foreign prince around all the sights of St. Petersburg. The prince is a great lover of pleasure, so one of Vronsky's duties is to introduce the guy to all the great nightlife Russia has to offer.

&bull;	The prince is psyched, but Vronsky notices a change in himself. Where once, all he would have wanted to do would be to eat caviar and sleep with ballerinas, he now sees the Prince's activities as pointless and boring.

&bull;	What's even worse is that Vronsky sees <span class="italic">his own</span> arrogance and snobby behavior in the Prince, and that disturbs him. And because he's the Prince's social inferior, the guest's arrogance is directed <span class="italic">at Vronsky</span>.

&bull;	Vronsky experiences first hand what it's like to be treated the way Vronsky himself treats his social inferiors. Vronsky is both ashamed of himself and humiliated by the Prince's behavior towards him. He's glad to see the Prince leave.
IsFuzzyBeagMise · 16/04/2023 11:54

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 16/04/2023 11:26

You're welcome Fuzzy, I agree the significance of the various women at the party having two men in tow passed me by too! I just thought it was all a bit odd.

Yes, same! That's why it's good to read the analysis, to fill in the gaps :)

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 17/04/2023 09:49

17/04/23

Anna Karenina Part 4, Chapter 2

&bull;	Vronsky gets a note from Anna asking him to see her at home while her husband has a Council meeting.

&bull;	Vronsky falls asleep and dreams about a peasant with a matted beard who speaks bad French. He wakes up in the middle of the night from fear, but can't figure out why he was so worried.

&bull;	He's late to meet Anna, so in her front hallway he runs into Karenin. Vronsky feels bewildered and trapped in his position as a cheat. He wishes Karenin would simply challenge him to a duel. Then they could settle the situation once and for all.

&bull;	Vronsky's opinions have changed since his conversation with Anna in the Vrede garden. He no longer believes that his relationship with her will come to an end. He has given himself over completely to Anna, in the same way that she has given herself up completely to him.

&bull;	Anna meets him in the drawing room. She says she refuses to quarrel with him. She then puts her hands on his shoulders and looks at him, comparing the real person with the ideal that she carries around in her mind.
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 18/04/2023 09:27

18/04/23

Anna Karenina Part 4, Chapter 3

&bull;	Anna and Vronsky catch up on each others' lives, but Anna gets angry at the idea of a certain actress, Th&eacute;r&egrave;se, being at a party that Vronsky gave.

&bull;	Anna's attacks of jealousy have been increasing, and it makes Vronsky feel colder towards her.
&bull;	

She has changed for the worse from the time they first met, both morally and physically.

&bull;	He compares her to a beautiful flower that he has plucked and destroyed so that now he is unable to recognize in the current faded object the beauty of his prior affection.

&bull;	At the same time, Vronsky knows that the two of them have a bond that can't be broken.

&bull;	The two chat briefly about Karenin. Anna can imitate him exactly. She does so out of anger, and calls Karenin a machine instead of a human being.

&bull;	Vronsky asks when she is going to have the baby.

&bull;	Anna says it will be soon. She says that everyone will be at peace soon. She is referring to her death, which she says is imminent.

&bull;	She describes a dream she had a long time ago, where she ran into her bedroom and found an ugly old peasant with a matted beard in the corner. He fumbled in a sack and spoke in French. (Just like Vronsky's dream in the previous chapter.) When Anna woke up she was still in a dream, and a servant told her that she would die in childbirth.

&bull;	The French she hears, while the meaning is not immediately clear, goes like this: &quot;<span class="italic">il faut le batter le fer, le broyer, le p&eacute;trir &hellip;</span>&quot; In other words, &quot;You must beat the iron, pound it, knead it&quot; (4.3.60).
&bull;	

Vronsky tries to alleviate her fears, but he lacks conviction.

Anna rings for tea, and as she does so the expression on her face changes from horror to bliss.

She feels the baby (new life) move inside her.

Piggywaspushed · 18/04/2023 16:19

Des, are you a day behind, or am I a day ahead?

ChessieFL · 18/04/2023 17:32

I’m on the same chapter as Desdemona

Piggywaspushed · 18/04/2023 21:15

Ohhh.

Piggywaspushed · 18/04/2023 21:18

I just looked at the OP and Chapter 1 of part 4 was on the 15th, so today was Chapter 4? Oh well.. chapter 3, Chapter 4. All the men are being arses either way!

Buttalapasta · 18/04/2023 21:35

ChessieFL · 18/04/2023 17:32

I’m on the same chapter as Desdemona

Me too although I'm usually wrong so it's not necessarily a good sign!

StColumbofNavron · 18/04/2023 21:49

it wouldn’t surprise me if my OP was wrong to be honest. I’m still on Levin flouncing about lamenting the future of farming. I think he is going abroad, but I can’t remember and Anna, Vronsky and Karenin are in a BAU sort of situation.

OP posts: