<h3>Chapter 20</h3>
<p>“Here’s Dolly for you, princess, you were so anxious to see
her,” said Anna, coming out with Darya Alexandrovna onto the stone
terrace where Princess Varvara was sitting in the shade at an embroidery frame,
working at a cover for Count Alexey Kirillovitch’s easy chair. “She
says she doesn’t want anything before dinner, but please order some lunch
for her, and I’ll go and look for Alexey and bring them all in.”</p>
<p>Princess Varvara gave Dolly a cordial and rather patronizing reception, and
began at once explaining to her that she was living with Anna because she had
always cared more for her than her sister Katerina Pavlovna, the aunt that had
brought Anna up, and that now, when everyone had abandoned Anna, she thought it
her duty to help her in this most difficult period of transition.</p>
<p>“Her husband will give her a divorce, and then I shall go back to my
solitude; but now I can be of use, and I am doing my duty, however difficult it
may be for me—not like some other people. And how sweet it is of you, how
right of you to have come! They live like the best of married couples;
it’s for God to judge them, not for us. And didn’t Biryuzovsky and
Madame Avenieva ... and Sam Nikandrov, and Vassiliev and Madame Mamonova, and
Liza Neptunova.... Did no one say anything about them? And it has ended by their
being received by everyone. And then, <i>c’est un intérieur si joli, si
comme il faut. Tout-à-fait à l’anglaise. On se réunit le matin au
breakfast, et puis on se sépare.</i> Everyone does as he pleases till
dinner time. Dinner at seven o’clock. Stiva did very rightly to send you.
He needs their support. You know that through his mother and brother he can do
anything. And then they do so much good. He didn’t tell you about his
hospital? <i>Ce sera admirable</i>—everything from Paris.”</p>
<p>Their conversation was interrupted by Anna, who had found the men of the party
in the billiard room, and returned with them to the terrace. There was still a
long time before the dinner-hour, it was exquisite weather, and so several
different methods of spending the next two hours were proposed. There were very
many methods of passing the time at Vozdvizhenskoe, and these were all unlike
those in use at Pokrovskoe.</p>
<p>“<i>Une partie de lawn-tennis,</i>” Veslovsky proposed, with his
handsome smile. “We’ll be partners again, Anna Arkadyevna.”</p>
<p>“No, it’s too hot; better stroll about the garden and have a row in
the boat, show Darya Alexandrovna the river banks.” Vronsky proposed.</p>
<p>“I agree to anything,” said Sviazhsky.</p>
<p>“I imagine that what Dolly would like best would be a
stroll—wouldn’t you? And then the boat, perhaps,” said Anna.</p>
<p>So it was decided. Veslovsky and Tushkevitch went off to the bathing place,
promising to get the boat ready and to wait there for them.</p>
<p>They walked along the path in two couples, Anna with Sviazhsky, and Dolly with
Vronsky. Dolly was a little embarrassed and anxious in the new surroundings in
which she found herself. Abstractly, theoretically, she did not merely justify,
she positively approved of Anna’s conduct. As is indeed not unfrequent
with women of unimpeachable virtue, weary of the monotony of respectable
existence, at a distance she not only excused illicit love, she positively
envied it. Besides, she loved Anna with all her heart. But seeing Anna in
actual life among these strangers, with this fashionable tone that was so new
to Darya Alexandrovna, she felt ill at ease. What she disliked particularly was
seeing Princess Varvara ready to overlook everything for the sake of the
comforts she enjoyed.</p>
<p>As a general principle, abstractly, Dolly approved of Anna’s action; but
to see the man for whose sake her action had been taken was disagreeable to
her. Moreover, she had never liked Vronsky. She thought him very proud, and saw
nothing in him of which he could be proud except his wealth. But against her
own will, here in his own house, he overawed her more than ever, and she could
not be at ease with him. She felt with him the same feeling she had had with
the maid about her dressing jacket. Just as with the maid she had felt not
exactly ashamed, but embarrassed at her darns, so she felt with him not exactly
ashamed, but embarrassed at herself.</p>
<p>Dolly was ill at ease, and tried to find a subject of conversation. Even though
she supposed that, through his pride, praise of his house and garden would be
sure to be disagreeable to him, she did all the same tell him how much she
liked his house.</p>
<p>“Yes, it’s a very fine building, and in the good old-fashioned
style,” he said.</p>
<p>“I like so much the court in front of the steps. Was that always
so?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no!” he said, and his face beamed with pleasure. “If you
could only have seen that court last spring!”</p>
<p>And he began, at first rather diffidently, but more and more carried away by
the subject as he went on, to draw her attention to the various details of the
decoration of his house and garden. It was evident that, having devoted a great
deal of trouble to improve and beautify his home, Vronsky felt a need to show
off the improvements to a new person, and was genuinely delighted at Darya
Alexandrovna’s praise.</p>
<p>“If you would care to look at the hospital, and are not tired, indeed,
it’s not far. Shall we go?” he said, glancing into her face to
convince himself that she was not bored. “Are you coming, Anna?” he
turned to her.</p>
<p>“We will come, won’t we?” she said, addressing Sviazhsky.
“<i>Mais il ne faut pas laisser le pauvre Veslovsky et Tushkevitch se
morfondre là dans le bateau.</i> We must send and tell them.”</p>
<p>“Yes, this is a monument he is setting up here,” said Anna, turning
to Dolly with that sly smile of comprehension with which she had previously
talked about the hospital.</p>
<p>“Oh, it’s a work of real importance!” said Sviazhsky. But to
show he was not trying to ingratiate himself with Vronsky, he promptly added
some slightly critical remarks.</p>
<p>“I wonder, though, count,” he said, “that while you do so
much for the health of the peasants, you take so little interest in the
schools.”</p>
<p>“<i>C’est devenu tellement commun les écoles,</i>” said
Vronsky. “You understand it’s not on that account, but it just
happens so, my interest has been diverted elsewhere. This way then to the
hospital,” he said to Darya Alexandrovna, pointing to a turning out of
the avenue.</p>
<p>The ladies put up their parasols and turned into the side path. After going
down several turnings, and going through a little gate, Darya Alexandrovna saw
standing on rising ground before her a large pretentious-looking red building,
almost finished. The iron roof, which was not yet painted, shone with dazzling
brightness in the sunshine. Beside the finished building another had been
begun, surrounded by scaffolding. Workmen in aprons, standing on scaffolds,
were laying bricks, pouring mortar out of vats, and smoothing it with trowels.</p>
<p>“How quickly work gets done with you!” said Sviazhsky. “When
I was here last time the roof was not on.”</p>
<p>“By the autumn it will all be ready. Inside almost everything is
done,” said Anna.</p>
<p>“And what’s this new building?”</p>
<p>“That’s the house for the doctor and the dispensary,”
answered Vronsky, seeing the architect in a short jacket coming towards him;
and excusing himself to the ladies, he went to meet him.</p>
<p>Going round a hole where the workmen were slaking lime, he stood still with the
architect and began talking rather warmly.</p>
<p>“The front is still too low,” he said to Anna, who had asked what
was the matter.</p>
<p>“I said the foundation ought to be raised,” said Anna.</p>
<p>“Yes, of course it would have been much better, Anna Arkadyevna,”
said the architect, “but now it’s too late.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I take a great interest in it,” Anna answered Sviazhsky, who
was expressing his surprise at her knowledge of architecture. “This new
building ought to have been in harmony with the hospital. It was an
afterthought, and was begun without a plan.”</p>
<p>Vronsky, having finished his talk with the architect, joined the ladies, and
led them inside the hospital.</p>
<p>Although they were still at work on the cornices outside and were painting on
the ground floor, upstairs almost all the rooms were finished. Going up the
broad cast-iron staircase to the landing, they walked into the first large
room. The walls were stuccoed to look like marble, the huge plate-glass windows
were already in, only the parquet floor was not yet finished, and the
carpenters, who were planing a block of it, left their work, taking off the
bands that fastened their hair, to greet the gentry.</p>
<p>“This is the reception room,” said Vronsky. “Here there will
be a desk, tables, and benches, and nothing more.”</p>
<p>“This way; let us go in here. Don’t go near the window,” said
Anna, trying the paint to see if it were dry. “Alexey, the paint’s
dry already,” she added.</p>
<p>From the reception room they went into the corridor. Here Vronsky showed them
the mechanism for ventilation on a novel system. Then he showed them marble
baths, and beds with extraordinary springs. Then he showed them the wards one
after another, the storeroom, the linen room, then the heating stove of a new
pattern, then the trolleys, which would make no noise as they carried
everything needed along the corridors, and many other things. Sviazhsky, as a
connoisseur in the latest mechanical improvements, appreciated everything
fully. Dolly simply wondered at all she had not seen before, and, anxious to
understand it all, made minute inquiries about everything, which gave Vronsky
great satisfaction.</p>
<p>“Yes, I imagine that this will be the solitary example of a properly
fitted hospital in Russia,” said Sviazhsky.</p>
<p>“And won’t you have a lying-in ward?” asked Dolly.
“That’s so much needed in the country. I have often....”</p>
<p>In spite of his usual courtesy, Vronsky interrupted her.</p>
<p>“This is not a lying-in home, but a hospital for the sick, and is
intended for all diseases, except infectious complaints,” he said.
“Ah! look at this,” and he rolled up to Darya Alexandrovna an
invalid chair that had just been ordered for the convalescents.
“Look.” He sat down in the chair and began moving it. “The
patient can’t walk—still too weak, perhaps, or something wrong with
his legs, but he must have air, and he moves, rolls himself along....”</p>
<p>Darya Alexandrovna was interested by everything. She liked everything very
much, but most of all she liked Vronsky himself with his natural,
simple-hearted eagerness. “Yes, he’s a very nice, good man,”
she thought several times, not hearing what he said, but looking at him and
penetrating into his expression, while she mentally put herself in Anna’s
place. She liked him so much just now with his eager interest that she saw how
Anna could be in love with him.</p>
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