| PART 2
Chapter 30
 In the little German watering-place to which the Shtcherbatskys
 had betaken themselves, as in all places indeed where people are
 gathered together, the usual process, as it were, of the
 crystallization of society went on, assigning to each member of
 that society a definite and unalterable place.  Just as the
 particle of water in frost, definitely and unalterably, takes the
 special form of the crystal of snow, so each new person that
 arrived at the springs was at once placed in his special place. Fuerst Shtcherbatsky, sammt Gemahlin und Tochter, by the
 apartments they took, and from their name and from the friends
 they made, were immediately crystallized into a definite place
 marked out for them. There was visiting the watering-place that year a real German
 Fuerstin, in consequence of which the crystallizing process went
 on more vigorously than ever.  Princess Shtcherbatskaya wished,
 above everything, to present her daughter to this German
 princess, and the day after their arrival she duly performed this
 rite.  Kitty made a low and graceful curtsey in the very simple,
 that is to say, very elegant frock that had been ordered her from
 Paris.  The German princess said, "I hope the roses will soon
 come back to this pretty little face," and for the Shtcherbatskys
 certain definite lines of existence were at once laid down from
 which there was no departing.  The Shtcherbatskys made the
 acquaintance too of the family of an English Lady Somebody, and
 of a German countess and her son, wounded in the last war, and of
 a learned Swede, and of M. Canut and his sister.  But yet
 inevitably the Shtcherbatskys were thrown most into the society
 of a Moscow lady, Marya Yevgenyevna Rtishtcheva and her daughter,
 whom Kitty disliked, because she had fallen ill, like herself,
 over a love affair, and a Moscow colonel, whom Kitty had known
 from childhood, and always seen in uniform and epaulets, and who
 now, with his little eyes and his open neck and flowered cravat,
 was uncommonly ridiculous and tedious, because there was no
 getting rid of him.  When all this was so firmly established,
 Kitty began to be very much bored, especially as the prince went
 away to Carlsbad and she was left alone with her mother.  She
 took no interest in the people she knew, feeling that nothing
 fresh would come of them.  Her chief mental interest in the
 watering-place consisted in watching and making theories about
 the people she did not know.  It was characteristic of Kitty that
 she always imagined everything in people in the most favorable
 light possible, especially so in those she did not know.  And now
 as she made surmises as to who people were, what were their
 relations to one another, and what they were like, Kitty endowed
 them with the most marvelous and noble characters, and found
 confirmation of her idea in her observations. |