| PART 2
Chapter 34
 Before the end of the course of drinking the waters, Prince
 Shtcherbatsky, who had gone on from Carlsbad to Baden and
 Kissingen to Russian friends--to get a breath of Russian air, as
 he said--came back to his wife and daughter. The views of the prince and of the princess on life abroad were
 completely opposed.  The princess thought everything delightful,
 and in spite of her established position in Russian society, she
 tried abroad to be like a European fashionable lady, which she
 was not--for the simple reason that she was a typical Russian
 gentlewoman; and so she was affected, which did not altogether
 suit her.  The prince, on the contrary, thought everything
 foreign detestable, got sick of European life, kept to his
 Russian habits, and purposely tried to show himself abroad less
 European than he was in reality. The prince returned thinner, with the skin hanging in loose bags
 on his cheeks, but in the most cheerful frame of mind.  His
 good humor was even greater when he saw Kitty completely
 recovered.  The news of Kitty's friendship with Madame Stahl and
 Varenka, and the reports the princess gave him of some kind of
 change she had noticed in Kitty, troubled the prince and aroused
 his habitual feeling of jealousy of everything that drew his
 daughter away from him, and a dread that his daughter might have
 got out of the reach of his influence into regions inaccessible
 to him.  But these unpleasant matters were all drowned in the sea
 of kindliness and good humor which was always within him, and
 more so than ever since his course of Carlsbad waters. The day after his arrival the prince, in his long overcoat, with
 his Russian wrinkles and baggy cheeks propped up by a starched
 collar, set off with his daughter to the spring in the greatest
 good humor. |