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Anna Karenina - LimpidSoft

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PART SEVEN CHAPTER 17<br />

Chapter 17<br />

STEPAN Arkadyevitch’s affairs were in a very bad way.<br />

The money for two-thirds of the forest had all been spent already, and he had borrowed<br />

from the merchant in advance at ten per cent discount, almost all the remaining<br />

third. The merchant would not give more, especially as Darya Alexandrovna, for<br />

the first time that winter insisting on her right to her own property, had refused to<br />

sign the receipt for the payment of the last third of the forest. All his salary went on<br />

household expenses and in payment of petty debts that could not be put off. There<br />

was positively no money.<br />

This was unpleasant and awkward, and in Stepan Arkadyevitch’s opinion things<br />

could not go on like this. The explanation of the position was, in his view, to be found<br />

in the fact that his salary was too small. The post he filled had been unmistakably<br />

very good five years ago, but it was so no longer.<br />

Petrov, the bank director, had twelve thousand; Sventitsky, a company director,<br />

had seventeen thousand; Mitin, who had founded a bank, received fifty thousand.<br />

“Clearly I’ve been napping, and they’ve overlooked me,” Stepan Arkadyevitch<br />

thought about himself. And he began keeping his eyes and ears open, and towards<br />

the end of the winter he had discovered a very good berth and had formed a plan<br />

of attack upon it, at first from Moscow through aunts, uncles, and friends, and then,<br />

when the matter was well advanced, in the spring, he went himself to Petersburg. It<br />

was one of those snug, lucrative berths of which there are so many more nowadays<br />

than there used to be, with incomes ranging from one thousand to fifty thousand<br />

roubles. It was the post of secretary of the committee of the amalgamated agency<br />

of the southern railways, and of certain banking companies. This position, like all<br />

such appointments, called for such immense energy and such varied qualifications,<br />

that it was difficult for them to be found united in any one man. And since a man<br />

combining all the qualifications was not to be found, it was at least better that the<br />

post be filled by an honest than by a dishonest man. And Stepan Arkadyevitch was<br />

not merely an honest man–unemphatically–in the common acceptation of the words,<br />

he was an honest man–emphatically–in that special sense which the word has in<br />

Moscow, when they talk of an “honest” politician, an “honest” writer, an “honest”<br />

newspaper, an “honest” institution, an “honest” tendency, meaning not simply that<br />

the man or the institution is not dishonest, but that they are capable on occasion of<br />

taking a line of their own in opposition to the authorities.<br />

Stepan Arkadyevitch moved in those circles in Moscow in which that expression<br />

had come into use, was regarded there as an honest man, and so had more right to<br />

this appointment than others.<br />

The appointment yielded an income of from seven to ten thousand a year, and<br />

Oblonsky could fill it without giving up his government position. It was in the<br />

hands of two ministers, one lady, and two Jews, and all these people, though the<br />

way had been paved already with them, Stepan Arkadyevitch had to see in Petersburg.<br />

Besides this business, Stepan Arkadyevitch had promised his sister <strong>Anna</strong> to<br />

obtain from Karenin a definite answer on the question of divorce. And begging fifty<br />

roubles from Dolly, he set off for Petersburg.<br />

660

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