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Anna Karenina - LimpidSoft

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PART SEVEN CHAPTER 4<br />

“On the contrary, you can’t imagine how, when I look at you, I’m always learning<br />

the task that lies before me, that is the education of one’s children.”<br />

“Well, there’s nothing for you to learn,” said Lvov.<br />

“All I know,” said Levin, “is that I have never seen better brought-up children<br />

than yours, and I wouldn’t wish for children better than yours.”<br />

Lvov visibly tried to restrain the expression of his delight, but he was positively<br />

radiant with smiles.<br />

“If only they’re better than I! That’s all I desire. You don’t know yet all the work,”<br />

he said, “with boys who’ve been left like mine to run wild abroad.”<br />

“You’ll catch all that up. They’re such clever children. The great thing is the education<br />

of character. That’s what I learn when I look at your children.”<br />

“You talk of the education of character. You can’t imagine how difficult that is!<br />

You have hardly succeeded in combating one tendency when others crop up, and the<br />

struggle begins again. If one had not a support in religion–you remember we talked<br />

about that–no father could bring children up relying on his own strength alone without<br />

that help.”<br />

This subject, which always interested Levin, was cut short by the entrance of the<br />

beauty Natalia Alexandrovna, dressed to go out.<br />

“I didn’t know you were here,” she said, unmistakably feeling no regret, but a<br />

positive pleasure, in interrupting this conversation on a topic she had heard so much<br />

of that she was by now weary of it. “Well, how is Kitty? I am dining with you today.<br />

I tell you what, Arseny,” she turned to her husband, “you take the carriage.”<br />

And the husband and wife began to discuss their arrangements for the day. As<br />

the husband had to drive to meet someone on official business, while the wife had to<br />

go to the concert and some public meeting of a committee on the Eastern Question,<br />

there was a great deal to consider and settle. Levin had to take part in their plans<br />

as one of themselves. It was settled that Levin should go with Natalia to the concert<br />

and the meeting, and that from there they should send the carriage to the office for<br />

Arseny, and he should call for her and take her to Kitty’s; or that, if he had not<br />

finished his work, he should send the carriage back and Levin would go with her.<br />

“He’s spoiling me,” Lvov said to his wife; “he assures me that our children are<br />

splendid, when I know how much that’s bad there is in them.”<br />

“Arseny goes to extremes, I always say,” said his wife. “If you look for perfection,<br />

you will never be satisfied. And it’s true, as papa says,–that when we were brought<br />

up there was one extreme–we were kept in the basement, while our parents lived in<br />

the best rooms; now it’s just the other way–the parents are in the wash house, while<br />

the children are in the best rooms. Parents now are not expected to live at all, but to<br />

exist altogether for their children.”<br />

“Well, what if they like it better?” Lvov said, with his beautiful smile, touching<br />

her hand. “Anyone who didn’t know you would think you were a stepmother, not<br />

a true mother.”<br />

“No, extremes are not good in anything,” Natalia said serenely, putting his paper<br />

knife straight in its proper place on the table.<br />

627

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