| PART 2
Chapter 24
 When Vronsky looked at his watch on the Karenins' balcony, he was
 so greatly agitated and lost in his thoughts that he saw the
 figures on the watch's face, but could not take in what time it
 was.  He came out on to the highroad and walked, picking his way
 carefully through the mud, to his carriage.  He was so completely
 absorbed in his feeling for Anna, that he did not even think what
 o'clock it was, and whether he had time to go to Bryansky's.  He
 had left him, as often happens, only the external faculty of
 memory, that points out each step one has to take, one after the
 other.  He went up to his coachman, who was dozing on the box in
 the shadow, already lengthening, of a thick limetree; he admired
 the shifting clouds of midges circling over the hot horses, and,
 waking the coachman, he jumped into the carriage, and told him to
 drive to Bryansky's.  It was only after driving nearly five miles
 that he had sufficiently recovered himself to look at his watch,
 and realize that it was half-past five, and he was late. There were several races fixed for that day: the Mounted Guards'
 race, then the officers' mile-and-a-half race, then the
 three-mile race, and then the race~for which he was entered.  He
 could still be in time for his race, but if he went to Bryansky's
 he could only just be in time, and he would arrive when the whole
 of the court would be in their places.  That would be a pity. 
 But he had promised Bryansky to come, and so he decided to drive
 on, telling the coachman not to spare the horses. He reached Bryansky's, spent five minutes there, and galloped
 back.  This rapid drive calmed him.  All that was painful in his
 relations with Anna, all the feeling of indefiniteness left by
 their conversation, had slipped out of his mind.  He was thinking
 now with pleasure and excitement of the race, of his being
 anyhow, in time, and now and then the thought of the blissful
 interview awaiting him that night flashed across his imagination
 like a flaming light. The excitement of the approaching race gained upon him as he
 drove further and further into the atmosphere of the races,
 overtaking carriages driving up from the summer villas or out of
 Petersburg. |