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Funtestiq!
Opening
Lines
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Anna Karenina
Leo Tolstoy |
Chapter 1 Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.
Everything was in confusion in the Oblonsky's house. The wife had discovered
that the husband was carrying on an intrigue with a French girl, who had been a
governess in their family, and she had announced to her husband that she could
not go on living in the same house with him. This position of affairs had now
lasted two days, and not only the husband and wife themselves, but all the
members of their family and the household, were painfully conscious of it. All
the members of the family and the household felt that there was no sense in
their living together, and that even stray people brought together by chance in
any inn had more in common with one another than they, the members of the family
and the household of the Oblonskys. The wife did not leave her own apartments;
the husband had not been home for two days. The children ran wild all over the
house; the English governess quarreled with the housekeeper, and wrote to a
friend asking her to look out for a new employ for her; the man cook had walked
off the day before just at dinnertime; the kitchenmaid and the coachman had
given warning.
Two days after the quarrel, Prince Stepan Arkadyevich Oblonsky - Stiva, as he
was called in the fashionable world - woke up at his usual hour, that is, at
eight o'clock in the morning, not in his wife's bedroom, but on the
leather-covered sofa in his study. He turned over his stout, well-cared-for
person on the springy sofa, as though he would sink into a long sleep again; he
vigorously embraced the pillow on its other side and buried his face in it; but
all at once he jumped up, sat up on the sofa, and opened his eyes.
`Yes, yes, how was it now?' he thought, going over his dream. `Yes, how was
it? Yes! Alabin was giving a dinner at Darmstadt; no, not Darmstadt, but
something American. Yes, but then, Darmstadt was in America. Yes, Alabin was
giving a dinner on glass tables, and the tables sang, Il mio tesoro - no, not Il
mio tesoro, but something better, and there were some sort of little decanters
on the table, and, at the same time, these decanters were women,' he recalled.
Stepan Arkadyevich's eyes twinkled gaily, and he pondered with a smile. `Yes,
it was jolly, very jolly. There was a great deal more that was delightful, only
there's no putting it into words, or even expressing it in one's waking
thoughts.' And noticing a gleam of light peeping in beside one of the
woolen-cloth curtains, he cheerfully dropped his feet over the edge of the sofa
and felt about with them for his slippers, a present on his last birthday,
worked for him by his wife on gold-colored morocco. And, as he used to do for
the last nine years, he stretched out his hand, without getting up, toward the
place where his dressing gown always hung in the bedroom. And thereupon he
suddenly remembered that he was not sleeping in his wife's room, but in his
study, as well as the reason; the smile vanished from his face and he knit his
brows.
`Ah, ah, ah! Oo!...' he muttered, recalling everything that had happened. And
again every detail of his quarrel with his wife was present to his imagination,
all the hopelessness of his position, and, worst of all, his own fault.
`Yes, she won't forgive me, and she can't forgive me. And the most awful
thing about it is that it's all my fault - all my fault, though I'm not to
blame. That's the point of the whole tragedy,' he reflected. `Oh, oh, oh!' he
kept repeating in despair, as he remembered the acutely painful sensations
caused him by this quarrel.
Most unpleasant of all was the first minute when, on coming from the theater,
good-humored and lighthearted, with a huge pear in his hand for his wife, he had
not found his wife in the drawing room, to his surprise, nor in the study, but
saw her at last in her bedroom, clutching the unlucky letter that revealed
everything.
She, his Dolly, forever fussing and worrying over household details, and
limited in her ideas, as he considered, was sitting motionless with the letter
in her hand, looking at him with an expression of horror, despair and
indignation.
`What is this? This?' she asked, pointing to the letter.
And at this recollection, Stepan Arkadyevich, as is so often the case, was
not so much annoyed at the fact itself as at the way in which he had met his
wife's words.
There happened to him at that instant that which happens to people when they
are unexpectedly caught in something very disgraceful. He did not succeed in
adapting his face to the situation in which he was placed toward his wife by the
discovery of his fault. Instead of being hurt, denying, defending himself,
begging forgiveness; instead of remaining indifferent even - anything would have
been better than what he did do - his face utterly without his volition
(`cerebral reflexes,' mused Stepan Arkadyevich, who was fond of physiology) had
assumed its habitual good-humored, and therefore stupid, smile.
This stupid smile he could not forgive himself. Catching sight of that smile
Dolly shuddered as though from physical pain, broke out with her characteristic
heat into a flood of cruel words, and rushed out of the room. Since then she had
refused to see her husband.
`It's all the fault of that stupid smile,' Stepan Arkadyevich was thinking.
`But what's to be done? What's to be done?' he kept saying to himself in
despair - and found no answer.
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