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Anna Karenina - LimpidSoft

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PART FIVE CHAPTER 24<br />

That they laughed at him he was well aware, but he did not expect anything but<br />

hostility from them; he was used to that by now.<br />

Catching sight of the yellow shoulders of Lidia Ivanovna jutting out above her<br />

corset, and her fine pensive eyes bidding him to her, Alexey Alexandrovitch smiled,<br />

revealing untarnished white teeth, and went towards her.<br />

Lidia Ivanovna’s dress had cost her great pains, as indeed all her dresses had done<br />

of late. Her aim in dress was now quite the reverse of that she had pursued thirty<br />

years before. Then her desire had been to adorn herself with something, and the<br />

more adorned the better. Now, on the contrary, she was perforce decked out in a<br />

way so inconsistent with her age and her figure, that her one anxiety was to contrive<br />

that the contrast between these adornments and her own exterior should not be too<br />

appalling. And as far as Alexey Alexandrovitch was concerned she succeeded, and<br />

was in his eyes attractive. For him she was the one island not only of goodwill to<br />

him, but of love in the midst of the sea of hostility and jeering that surrounded him.<br />

Passing through rows of ironical eyes, he was drawn as naturally to her loving<br />

glance as a plant to the sun.<br />

“I congratulate you,” she said to him, her eyes on his ribbon.<br />

Suppressing a smile of pleasure, he shrugged his shoulders, closing his eyes, as<br />

though to say that that could not be a source of joy to him. Countess Lidia Ivanovna<br />

was very well aware that it was one of his chief sources of satisfaction, though he<br />

never admitted it.<br />

“How is our angel?” said Countess Lidia Ivanovna, meaning Seryozha.<br />

“I can’t say I was quite pleased with him,” said Alexey Alexandrovitch, raising<br />

his eyebrows and opening his eyes. “And Sitnikov is not satisfied with him.” (Sitnikov<br />

was the tutor to whom Seryozha’s secular education had been intrusted.) “As I<br />

have mentioned to you, there’s a sort of coldness in him towards the most important<br />

questions which ought to touch the heart of every man and every child....” Alexey<br />

Alexandrovitch began expounding his views on the sole question that interested him<br />

besides the service–the education of his son.<br />

When Alexey Alexandrovitch with Lidia Ivanovna’s help had been brought back<br />

anew to life and activity, he felt it his duty to undertake the education of the son<br />

left on his hands. Having never before taken any interest in educational questions,<br />

Alexey Alexandrovitch devoted some time to the theoretical study of the subject. After<br />

reading several books on anthropology, education, and didactics, Alexey Alexandrovitch<br />

drew up a plan of education, and engaging the best tutor in Petersburg to<br />

superintend it, he set to work, and the subject continually absorbed him.<br />

“Yes, but the heart. I see in him his father’s heart, and with such a heart a child<br />

cannot go far wrong,” said Lidia Ivanovna with enthusiasm.<br />

“Yes, perhaps.... As for me, I do my duty. It’s all I can do.”<br />

“You’re coming to me,” said Countess Lidia Ivanovna, after a pause; “we have to<br />

speak of a subject painful for you. I would give anything to have spared you certain<br />

memories, but others are not of the same mind. I have received a letter from her. She<br />

is here in Petersburg.”<br />

478

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