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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
Piggywaspushed · 28/04/2023 15:22

Awww... Levin's all loved up!

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 29/04/2023 11:43

29/04/23
Anna Karenina Part 4, Chapter 15

•	It's ridiculously early in the day. The streets are still empty.

•	Levin feels ecstatic.

•	Finally, he's let into the Shcherbatsky house.

•	Kitty runs up to him and they kiss.

•	They tell each other how happy they are and how much they love each other .

•	They go to see Kitty's mother.

•	The Princess runs up to Levin and kisses him. She's so glad that Kitty is finally getting married, and is relieved that she can finally get her mind off the subject.

•	The Prince tells Levin that this is what he has wanted for a long time.

•	Levin feels affection for the Prince when he sees what a special place he holds in Kitty's heart.
CornishLizard · 29/04/2023 13:31

I thought that Levin’s state of mind that night before he went to Kitty, when he just couldn’t settle to anything and was on top of the world, was brilliantly conveyed.

goodthinking99 · 29/04/2023 15:29

Yes his high as a kite demeanour was brilliantly captured, along with his overflow of love and kindness for his fellow man, whatever their station. Rose tinted specs or what?! I'm happy for him and Kitty...but anxious about the inevitable descent from his loved up mania and what that will mean for her.

And I can't believe we're half way through, I'm really enjoying this readalong-a-karenina. Thanks to @DesdamonasHandkerchief for the chapter summaries, their really helpful to mark the place and muse over.

Iwantacampervan · 30/04/2023 07:47

I am enjoying reading this in short parts and thank you for the summaries. If anyone's interested there's a 3 part (?) serialisation starting Radio 4 today at 3pm.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 30/04/2023 10:55

30/04/23

Anna Karenina Part 4, Chapter 16

•	Princess Shcherbatsky begins voicing all the pragmatic questions of the logistics of Kitty and Levin's wedding (i.e., when should they get married, etc.), which seems somehow out of keeping with the ecstasy Levin's been feeling.

•	Levin thinks the betrothal should be today and the wedding tomorrow, but that's out of the question for the Princess Shcherbatsky.

•	Everyone begins preparing for the wedding.

•	Levin has decided that before marrying Kitty, he must tell her two vital things. After asking her father's permission, he gives Kitty a diary with his confessions: one, he is not a virgin, and two, he is not a believer.

•	Kitty isn't so bothered about Levin lacking faith, but she really doesn't like the fact he's been intimate with other women. Still, she forgives him. Levin feels even more unworthy of her love now.
CornishLizard · 01/05/2023 08:24

Viv Groskop says in The Anna Karenina Fix that this diary incident was taken from life - Tolstoy had given his own wife his diary to read before their wedding, detailing his history of sex with prostitutes, his staff and serfs, and the VD that resulted. She wrote in her own diary decades later that she never got over it. Tolstoy is hard to like sometimes isn’t he?

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 01/05/2023 12:04

And I doubt there was much option to back out of what seemed to society to be an advantageous match for the woman once betrothed so revealing his history of sleeping around and STD's just before the wedding wasn't much of a self sacrifice.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 01/05/2023 12:08

01/05/23

Anna Karenina Part 4, Chapter 17

•	Leaving the young lovers for a while, we return to Karenin and his life.

•	He is still irritated after that dinner and his conversation with Dolly about his imminent divorce. During that dinner, he recalls that Turovtsyn applauded a betrayed husband who "acted like a real man; challenged [his rival] to a duel and killed him" (4.17.1). This recollection embarrasses Karenin, who decides that it's too late, so there's no point thinking about it.

•	He is thinking about an upcoming trip when his valet brings in two telegrams. The first tells him that Stremov got the promotion that Karenin wanted. The second is from Anna. She writes that she is dying and begs him to go to her bedside and forgive her.
•	
&bull;	At first Karenin thinks Anna&#039;s letter is a hoax, that Anna just wants him on hand to legitimize the child, but upon further reflection decides that he doesn&#039;t want to take the chance if she <span class="italic">does</span> actually die.

&bull;	He goes to Petersburg to see Anna instead of heading out on his planned excursion.
&bull;	When he arrives at the house a servant tells him that Anna delivered a baby girl yesterday. Anna is still alive, but severely ill.

&bull;	Upon hearing this news, Karenin realizes how much he had wanted Anna to die, and feels guilty.

&bull;	Vronsky is in the inner room, weeping. He begs Karenin to let him stay, even though his presence is the one thing Karenin hadn&#039;t wanted.

&bull;	As always when he is presented with signs of other people&#039;s emotions, Karenin turns away from Vronsky&#039;s tears and goes into Anna&#039;s bedroom.

&bull;	She is delirious but her voice is very clear and precise.

&bull;	She doesn&#039;t realize that Karenin is already in the room, but talks about his kindness, and how Seryozha has his eyes. She says that she fears death.

&bull;	All the while Karenin is sitting at her bedside.

&bull;	Anna begs him to forgive her. He feels a sudden bliss in the idea of forgiveness.
&bull;	
&bull;	Anna calls Vronsky into the room. He sits by her bed and covers his face out of shame.

&bull;	Anna tells Karenin to uncover Vronsky&#039;s face.

&bull;	She asks Karenin to forgive them both. He does so.

&bull;	Anna is delirious. She begins asking for morphine and the doctor.

&bull;	She has puerperal fever, with a one percent chance of survival.

&bull;	On the third day, the doctor said there was some hope. On that day, Vronsky and Karenin have a chat in Karenin&#039;s study. Vronsky asks Karenin to pity him.

&bull;	Karenin explains to Vronsky that he had wanted a divorce, had wanted revenge, and had even wanted Anna to die. But he has since forgiven Anna, and now he is filled with the joy of forgiveness. Karenin has resolved to stay with Anna. Karenin suggests that Vronsky leave, saying that if she asks for Vronsky, he will let Karenin know.

&bull;	Vronsky gets up, but his posture is stooped and bent over, and he looks up at Karenin from beneath his brow. He does not understand Karenin&#039;s feelings, but he does see him as lofty and somehow unapproachable now.
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 02/05/2023 11:02

02/05/23

Anna Karenina Part 4, Chapter 18

&bull;	Vronsky feels ashamed and humiliated.

&bull;	According to Vronsky&#039;s guide to life, husbands are foolish creatures that stand in the way of happiness. This view is turned upside down by Karenin&#039;s noble and selfless actions.

&bull;	Vronsky regrets that Anna&#039;s last memory of him is the shameful one of him weeping helplessly before Karenin. The love between Anna and Vronsky that Vronsky thought was fading has suddenly come back in full force, and he feels doubly ashamed by his own behavior.

&bull;	He thinks of all this while standing on Karenin&#039;s front steps, and finally the hall porter asks if he would like a cab.

&bull;	Vronsky goes home and tries to sleep, but he has a hard time. (Note: in his life before Anna, he always fell asleep quickly and easily.)

&bull;	He thinks of Anna, of his shame, and believes that he is going mad. He thinks about life apart from Anna, and decides that none of it matters. All he has is Anna. And now that he has humiliated himself before her, he can think of nothing but their lost happiness.

&bull;	He takes out his revolver, presses it to the left side of his chest, and pulls his trigger.

&bull;	He sees blood and realizes he shot himself. He chastises himself for not killing himself.

&bull;	A servant finds him and runs for help. Vronsky&#039;s sister-in-law, Varya, arrives soon afterward to nurse him.
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 04/05/2023 00:35

03/05/23

Anna Karenina Part 4, Chapter 19

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 04/05/2023 00:36

• Karenin failed to consider that Anna might not die, yet his discovery of spiritual joy that accompanies forgiveness is extremely powerful.
• He forgives Anna, Vronsky, his son, and even the newly born little girl.
• Actually, Karenin develops a strong sense of affection and fondness for the little girl. He makes a habit of visiting her in the nursery and looking at her.
• During those moments of looking at the little baby, Karenin feels that his position is perfectly ordinary, and he feels peace.
• But although Karenin feels that his position is one of great spiritual joy, he knows that others will not think so, and that he will not be allowed to continue as he is. He especially feels a strain in his relations with Anna.

• Anna is afraid of Karenin. She refuses to look him straight in the eye, and it seems as though she can't work up the courage to say something to him.
• Towards the end of February, Anna's daughter (also called Anna) falls ill. Karenin orders the doctor to come, and then goes off to work.
• When he gets back home, Princess Betsy is visiting. This disturbs Karenin, who feels that the women in society have taken an unnatural interest in his life after Anna's affair.
• He also feels like people are gleeful around him, that they're taking pleasure in his misfortunes. Instead of going to see Anna, then, Karenin goes straight to the children's rooms. He inquires about the health of the baby. The governess speculates that the baby is simply hungry because the wet nurse doesn't have any milk.
• He orders a servant to again fetch the doctor, this time to examine the wet nurse.
• He is annoyed at his wife for not being more concerned about her baby.
• On his way to see his wife, he overhears her conversation with Betsy. It concerns Vronsky and whether Anna should see him before he leaves.
• Karenin stops, turns around, coughs, and then enters the room.
• He checks up on Anna's health. Betsy prepares to leave. Anna asks her to stay for a moment.

• Addressing herself to Karenin, Anna says that Vronsky, through Betsy, has asked to call on the Karenins before leaving for Tashkent. Anna says that her answer was no.
• Karenin cannot speak easily in front of Betsy, who he feels embodies the power forcing him not to yield to his feelings of compassion and forgiveness.
• Before she leaves, Betsy recommends that Karenin receive Vronsky, calling Vronsky the "soul of honor."
• Karenin thanks Betsy for her input but says that the question of whom Anna will receive is a choice to be made by Anna alone.
• Out of habit, Karenin raises his eyebrows in a dignified manner, and then realizes that he must look ridiculous.
• Betsy smirks at him as she leaves.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 04/05/2023 19:42

04/05/23

Anna Karenina Part 4, Chapter 20

&bull;	Karenin sees Betsy out to the hall, and when he goes back to his wife he sees that she&#039;s been crying.

&bull;	Karenin appreciates Anna&#039;s decision not to receive Vronsky.

&bull;	Anna learns about the doctor coming to examine the wet nurse, and gets angry that she wasn&#039;t allowed to nurse the baby herself.

&bull;	Anna wonders why she didn&#039;t die, then tells Karenin to go away because she is upset and being unfair. She&#039;s behaving fretfully, weeping and lashing out.

&bull;	Karenin feels utterly helpless. He feels that society is forcing him in a direction contrary to his own inner desires, a direction that he doesn&#039;t fully understand.
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 06/05/2023 00:56

05/05/23

Anna Karenina Part 4, Chapter 21

&bull;	Princess Betsy is on her way out of Karenin&#039;s home when she bumps into Oblonsky, who has come to visit Anna and Karenin. He flirts shamelessly and they gossip a bit about Anna. Oblonsky and Princess Betsy agree that the Karenins can&#039;t go on as they have been, that Anna is wasting away and Karenin doesn&#039;t understand her. They feel that Karenin must either divorce Anna or else take her away from Petersburg. They part, and Oblonsky goes to visit Anna.
&bull;	
&bull;	Oblonsky finds his sister in tears. Although he&#039;s in a great mood, he hides it out of compassion for her unhappiness.
&bull;	Anna explains that she hates Karenin for his virtuousness and generosity.
&bull;	Anna becomes morbid and keeps insisting that her death is the only solution, but Oblonsky keeps interrupting her.
&bull;	He goes deeper into her opinion of the problem, starting with the fact that she married a man almost twenty years older whom she didn&#039;t love. He poses the central question: can Anna can continue living with her husband?
&bull;	Anna says she feels like she is heading towards destruction.
&bull;	Oblonsky says that a divorce would solve everything, and judging by her reaction, Anna has simply thought of divorce as an impossible happiness.
&bull;	Oblonsky leaves her to think about it while he goes to speak to Karenin.
DesdamonasHandkerchief · 06/05/2023 00:58

06/05/23

Anna Karenina Part 4, Chapter 22

&bull;	Oblonsky feels awkward and shy going in to talk to Karenin.
&bull;	Oblonsky begins broaching the subject of Anna.
&bull;	Karenin pulls out a letter that says everything he&#039;s wanted to say to Anna. It asks her what she wants to do. The letter says that the ball&#039;s in her court.
&bull;	Oblonsky is speechless and choked with tears. Finally, he points out that Karenin&#039;s generosity has crushed Anna.
&bull;	
&bull;	Karenin asks what then is supposed to be done in such a situation.
&bull;	Oblonsky suggests that divorce is the only option that would make Anna happy.
&bull;	Karenin has already thought about this and rejected it as an option. He can&#039;t contemplate either lowering his own reputation or going against the teachings of the church.
&bull;	What&#039;s more, he worries about what would happen to Seryozha if he joined Anna in an illegitimate family with Vronsky. Beyond any of this, divorce would ruin Anna, which Karenin doesn&#039;t want. According to Church law, a woman who has been divorced cannot remarry while her husband is alive, so she would have to live out a criminal marriage with Vronsky.
&bull;	Oblonsky presses the point, and finally Karenin tells him to do whatever. At the same time that he feels shame at his powerlessness, he also feels exalted by his own humility.
&bull;	
&bull;	Oblonsky leaves the room feeling satisfied. He begins thinking up jokes to tell about his role in achieving a fair solution for all parties.
Buttalapasta · 07/05/2023 09:38

I hate the expression but Anna really has the "ick" doesn't she? When you can't even stand the sight of your husband's hands things are bad.

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 07/05/2023 09:40

07/05/23

Anna Karenina Part 4, Chapter 23

&bull;	Even though Vronsky&#039;s bullet misses his heart, he&#039;s still dangerously injured. For several days, Vronsky hovers between life and death.
&bull;	When he regains consciousness, he no longer feels the shame and humiliation that led him to pull the trigger. He feels that he can look people in the eye again.
&bull;	However, he despairs that he has lost Anna forever. He knows he will not stand in the way of her being with her husband.
&bull;	
&bull;	Serpukhovskoy had arranged a post for him in Tashkent (a.k.a. the middle of nowhere in Russia), which he accepts. He begins making preparations for his departure.
&bull;	As he departure date draws closer, he wishes he could see Anna one last time, hence Betsy&#039;s request. He believes he is turned down.
&bull;	The next morning, Betsy comes to tell him that Karenin is giving Anna a divorce. Vronsky can go see her.
&bull;	Vronsky dashes out and goes straight to the Karenin house. He goes straight to Anna without noticing anything else and begins covering her in passionate kisses.
&bull;	Anna is overcome. Later, she says that there&#039;s something horrible in their happiness.
&bull;	Vronsky says it will only make their love stronger.
&bull;	At the end of their conversation, Anna returns to the idea that her death would have been the best outcome.
&bull;	
&bull;	Much to the dismay of his superiors, Vronsky refuses the post in Tashkent. Seeing his superiors&#039; dismay, Vronsky resigns from the military.
&bull;	A month later, Anna and Vronsky decide that Anna shouldn&#039;t press for the divorce. Instead, they go abroad to Italy to find a rest cure for Anna (who is still weak). Karenin is left alone in the house.
FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 07/05/2023 10:19

That's the end of part four. I thought it was a brilliant series of chapters that reached a climax in the book with Levin and Kitty's impending marriage and the marriage between Anna and Karenin falling asunder. And also Anna nearly dying in childbirth.

I felt sorry for the three of them in this section. Anna, Vronsky and especially Karenin. He seems to have gone through all the emotions of the human condition in a very short time.

I didn't realise Vronsky retired from the army. He acted immaturely trying to shoot himself. I was wondering how he didn't fatally injure himself pointing a gun to his chest and shooting himself. Lucky man. Also, Karenin is at home with his son, so isn't quite alone.

I was thinking back to the opening lines of the book about the unhappy families and how it's relevant here. I wonder if they will continue to be a family officially and in appearance, but lead separate lives.

StColumbofNavron · 07/05/2023 10:21

Any sympathies for Vronsky and his attempt? I was thinking that it almost seems misplaced in the narrative, because I think if there is one flaw in this book it’s that I don’t think Vronsky is fleshed out enough. Maybe that’s deliberate but it just doesn’t seem believable that he would do this.

OP posts:
FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 07/05/2023 10:43

It seemed half-hearted to me, StColomb.
A bit 'woe is me!'. * *
I agree. We're half-way through the book now and my opinion of him hasn't changed much since the start; he's young, dashing, arrogant, immature. No personal growth.

goodthinking99 · 07/05/2023 13:52

I agree @FuzzyCaoraDhubh, he knew society might have expected this course of action but subconsciously he's not able/doesn't want to see it through. He's performative in all things, wreaking havoc as he goes, with no self awareness.

FuzzyCaoraDhubh · 07/05/2023 14:06

goodthinking99 · 07/05/2023 13:52

I agree @FuzzyCaoraDhubh, he knew society might have expected this course of action but subconsciously he's not able/doesn't want to see it through. He's performative in all things, wreaking havoc as he goes, with no self awareness.

Well said, goodthinking!

DesdamonasHandkerchief · 07/05/2023 15:55

Anna Karenina Summary and Analysis of Part Four

Part Four Summary:
As this portion of the book opens, the Karenins are living together in a state of tension. They are "utter strangers" and Anna continues to see Vronsky outside the house. Karenin is aware of this and does nothing. One night, Anna can barely stand her loneliness, and asks him to come at seven, when Karenin has a council meeting. Vronsky appears and literally runs into Karenin in the doorway. Karenin, who looks like a death's head, storms past him. Somewhat abashed, Vronsky goes into Anna, but he is forced to recognize that her jealous fits and pregnancy make her less attractive to him. Anna takes joy in mocking her husband to Vronsky and tells him of a nightmare she had concerning a dirty old peasant muttering about how "it must be beaten, the iron, pounded, kneaded." Vronsky had the same nightmare shortly before coming to see Anna and is terrified.
While Vronsky was in his house, Karenin went to the opera as he had planned, and sat through the first two acts as social propriety recommended. But he cannot rest for his fury, and he leaves for home. The next morning, he confronts Anna again. Faced with her implacable resolve, he tells her that he intends to begin divorce proceedings. She begs him to leave her Seryozha. Karening goes to see a famous Petersburg lawyer about divorces, and learns that he will still have to provide physical evidence of Anna's infidelity. He decides to consider this carefully. At the same time, faced with resistance with colleagues at work, he leaves for the provinces on official business.
On his way to the provinces, Karenin stops in Moscow for meetings. By chance he runs into Oblonsky and Dolly, and reluctantly accepts an invitation to dinner. Oblonsky delights in giving dinner parties and goes about the preparations with glee, including the invitations for Kitty and Levin. When he goes to remind Karenin about the invitation, however, Karenin bluntly tells Oblonsky that he is seeking a divorce with Anna, Oblonsky's sister. Oblonsky encourages Karenin against hasty decisions and urges him to come to dinner and discuss the matter with Dolly.
At the dinner, the guests mingle amiably, thanks to Oblonsky's excellent host techniques. Karenin, Koznyshevv_, and a man named Pestsov discuss politics while Levin and Kitty enjoy a happy reunion. Levin marvels that Kitty seems completely differentmore fragileand they tune the others out, forming their own little enclave of conversation. As their feelings deepen, Dolly unsuccessfully tries to talk Karenin out of divorcing Anna. Meanwhile, Kitty and Levin play a word game in which Levin discovers that Kitty will marry him if he asks again. For two nights he does not sleep and the material concerns of the world seem frivolous. Then he visits the Shcherbatskayas to ask for, and receive, Kitty's hand in marriage. But Levin is tortured that Kitty does not know two things about him: that he is not a virgin, and that he does not believe in God. In the interest of full disclosure, he gives her his diaries. Though she is horrified, she accepts him anyway.
After Oblonsky's party, Karenin receives a telegram from Anna: "Dying, beg, implore you come. With your forgiveness will die more tranquilly." He weighs the pros and cons and finally decides to go back to Petersburg that night. There, he rushes in to find Anna very ill from giving birth to Vronsky's daughter. The doctors claim she may be dying. Vronsky is in an outer room, weeping. Seeing Anna in her agitated state stirs Karenin to forgiveness. Weeping freely, he forgives both her and Vronsky in a state of great joy and happiness. Then Anna spends three days alternating between comatose and writhing in pain. As she suffers, Karenin shames Vronsky by saying that no matter how the two of them humiliate him, Karenin will not leave Anna. Devastated by Karenin's nobility, Vronsky goes home and attempts suicide by shooting himself with a revolver. The bullet misses his heart, and he recuperates with the help of his sister-in-law.
Anna recovers from her illness slowly. Karenin become the parent to both childrenespecially the daughter, also named Anna, for whom he feels a special affection. Anna remains awed by her husband's generous feelings, but she still feels stifled, especially once she hears news that Vronsky has been offered a prestigious military post in Tashkent. Oblonsky, sensing the torture of the situation, visits Karenin and encourages him to begin divorce proceedings againbut by accepting blame himself, so that Anna has the moral authority in the settlement. In an emotional moment, Karenin agrees. Upon hearing this news, Vronsky immediately abandons his military duties and rushes to the Karenins' house. But though Anna is elated to see him, and though she agrees to leave for Italy, she says that "nothing matters now," and that she will not accept Karenin's offer of a divorce.

Part Four Analysis:
If Part Three was perhaps slow and loaded with economic and social affairs, Tolstoy makes up for this lapse with Part Four. Things begin to move tremendously fast now, as the relationship between Anna and Vronsky reaches a climax, Kitty and Levin reunite and discover that they have a future together, and Karenin comes forth as a powerful character in the action.

This is the section wherein Anna and Levin divurge. No longer will they both hold the status of frustrated romantics; Levin begins to flourish in a happy and healthy relationship. Throughout the novel, these two act as "doubles" for each other. Only Levin has the resources of passion that Anna can claim, but his are not destructive for a number of reasons. He certainly has more outlets for his passion. One of those outlets is his land, as shown in part three. But he also has a greater idea of the humility and compromise it takes for a relationship to grow in a healthy, socially acceptable way, as his persistent wooing of Kitty shows. Although Levin eventually finds peace and happiness in the novel and Anna is consumed by her passion, they are two sides of the same coin. Their tales contain a great deal of simultaneous convergence, albeit with different outcomes. Levin's story is merely Anna's story with a morally acceptable ending.
The emergence of the twain is underlined by Anna's assumption of Levin's death obsession. This is a portion of the book overwhelmed with portents, dreams and death imagery. Vronsky stumbles on Karenin in the doorway looking like a death's head: "bloodless, worn facemotionless, dull eyes." Anna's dream foreshadows her death in Part Seven; the "iron" the peasant discusses is the iron of the railroad tracks, and the "pounding" he is talking about is her body on the rails. This dream is brought out by Anna's actual death scene: the last thing she sees is a peasant on the railroad tracks. Finally, both Anna and Vronsky brush with death in this part: although they recover, these brushes with death foreshadow their ruin later in the book.
Critics are conflicted about Karenin's emotional scene of forgiveness. It is certainly out of character: for the first four hundred pages of the book, he has proven himself a cold and calculating bureaucrat, far from evil, but far from loving as well. Some critics hold that the entire scene is merely Tolstoy lapsing into melodrama; others believe that it proves the authenticity of Karenin's humility and good heart. At any rate, it inspires the appropriate shame and awe in Anna (who spends the next three days writhing in bed, as much out of her mental turmoil as out of her physical anguish) and Vronsky (who, confronted with the greatness of his rival, makes a cowardly attempt at suicide). It also proves to be Karenin's undoing: from this point on, he is considered a cuckolded laughingstock in society, while Vronsky regains some of his honor from the suicide attempt. After Anna leaves with Vronsky, without even giving Karenin the closure of a divorce, he sinks even lower in public opinion.
Though Anna leaves with Vronsky for Italy, readers are meant to hold the idea of a lasting union in doubt. Vronsky is clearly too egotistical for the great sacrifices that such a relationship will require; Anna, because of her ruined social position, is completely at Vronsky's mercy. Their obvious counterpart is Kitty and Levin, whose slow and maturing love and commitment is the model for a relationship that can go the distance. Although both of them still have a great deal to learnespecially Levintheir humility is admirable.
One of the things that Levin has to change is his vision of Kitty. He idolizes her as child-like and the embodiment of a perfection that he cannot attain; as if to prove this, he gives her his diaries. As expected, her horrified reaction makes him feel even more base and unworthy of her love. When Levin comes to accept God later on in the book, his relationship with Kitty become all that much stronger, for he stops seeing her as a heavenly figure.

CornishLizard · 08/05/2023 09:15

Thanks for the summaries and comments, I’m nodding along. This section really has been exciting, I’m hoping the rest of the book doesn’t feel like an anticlimax, I felt that a bit with W&P. I liked the way the dynamic developed between Karenin, Anna and Vronsky with Karenin rising to the moment of crisis and Vronsky crumbling. Agree Vronsky’s not as fleshed out, I like the way we sympathise both with Anna and Karenin and that’s not achieved to the same degree with Vronsky.

Tarahumara · 09/05/2023 20:32

Yes, I'm now feeling a lot more sympathetic towards Karenin than I was earlier. I agree with Vronsky's attempt seeming half hearted. Surely if he'd been serious about it he would have put the revolver next to his head rather than the side of his body?