Anna Karenina (Penguin) - Leo Tolstoy [357]
XX
‘Well, here’s Dolly for you, Princess, you wanted so much to see her,’ said Anna, coming out with Darya Alexandrovna to the big stone terrace, where Princess Varvara was sitting in the shade over her embroidery frame, making a chair seat for Count Alexei Kirillovich. ‘She says she wants nothing before dinner, but you order lunch to be served and I’ll go and find Alexei and bring them all here.’
Princess Varvara received Dolly benignly and somewhat condescendingly, and at once began explaining to her that she was living with Anna because she had always loved Anna more than had her sister Katerina Pavlovna, the one who had brought Anna up, and now, when everyone had abandoned Anna, she considered it her duty to help her in this most difficult transitional period.
‘Her husband will give her a divorce, and then I shall go back into my seclusion, but now I can be of use and, however hard it is for me, I shall fulfil my duty — not like some others. And how nice of you, what a good thing you’ve done, to come! They live just like the best of couples. It’s for God to judge them, not us. Aren’t Biriuzovsky and Mme Avenyev ... And Nikandrov himself, and Vassilyev and Mme Mamonov, and Liza Neptunov ... And has anyone ever said anything? And it ended with everyone receiving them. And then, c‘est un interieur si joli, si comme il faut. Tout-à- fait à l’anglaise.On se réunit le matin au breakfast et puis on se sépare. by Everyone does what he likes till dinner. Dinner is at seven. Stiva did very well to send you. He must stick by them. You know, through his mother and brother he can do anything. And then they do so much good. Hasn’t he told you about his hospital? Ce sera admirablebz - everything comes from Paris.’
Their conversation was interrupted by Anna, who had found the men gathered in the billiard room and returned with them to the terrace. There was still a long time till dinner and, as the weather was fine, several ways were suggested for passing the remaining two hours. There were a great many ways of passing the time in Vozdvizhenskoe, and they were all different from what was done at Pokrovskoe.
‘Une partie de lawn tennis,’ca Veslovsky suggested, smiling his handsome smile. ‘We can be partners again, Anna Arkadyevna.’
‘No, it’s too hot. Better to stroll in the garden and go for a boat ride, to show Darya Alexandrovna the banks,’ suggested Vronsky.
‘I’m agreeable to everything,’ said Sviyazhsky.
‘I think Dolly would like most to take a stroll, isn’t that right? And then go for a boat ride,’ said Anna.
So it was decided. Veslovsky