| PART 2
Chapter 35
 The prince communicated his good humor to his own family and his
 friends, and even to the German landlord in whose rooms the
 Shtcherbatskys were staying. On coming back with Kitty from the springs, the prince, who had
 asked the colonel, and Marya Yevgenyevna, and Varenka all to come
 and have coffee with them, gave orders for a table and chairs to
 be taken into the garden under the chestnut tree, and lunch to be
 laid there.  The landlord and the servants, too, grew brisker
 under the influence of his good spirits.  They knew his
 open-handedness; and half an hour later the invalid doctor from
 Hamburg, who lived on the top floor, looked enviously out of the
 window at the merry party of healthy Russians assembled under the
 chestnut tree.  In the trembling circles of shadow cast by the
 leaves, at a table, covered with a white cloth, and set with
 coffeepot, bread-and-butter, cheese, and cold game, sat the
 princess in a high cap with lilac ribbons, distributing cups and
 bread-and-butter.  At the other end sat the prince, eating
 heartily, and talking loudly and merrily.  The prince had spread
 out near him his purchases, carved boxes, and knick-knacks,
 paper-knives of all sorts, of which he bought a heap at every
 watering-place, and bestowed them upon everyone, including
 Lieschen, the servant girl, and the landlord, with whom he jested
 in his comically bad German, assuring him that it was not the
 water had cured Kitty, but his splendid cookery, especially his
 plum soup.  The princess laughed at her husband for his Russian
 ways, but she was more lively and good-humored than she had been
 all the while she had been at the waters.  The colonel smiled, as
 he always did, at the prince's jokes, but as far as regards
 Europe, of which he believed himself to be making a careful
 study, he took the princess's side.  The simple-hearted Marya
 Yevgenyevna simply roared with laughter at everything absurd the
 prince said, and his jokes made Varenka helpless with feeble but
 infectious laughter, which was something Kitty had never seen
 before. Kitty was glad of all this, but she could not be light-hearted.
 she could not solve the problem her father had unconsciously set
 her by his goodhumored view of her friends, and of the life that
 had so attracted her.  To this doubt there was joined the change
 in her relations with the Petrovs, which had been so
 conspicuously and unpleasantly marked that morning.  Everyone was
 good humored, but Kitty could not feel good humored, and this
 increased her distress.  She felt a feeling such as she had known
 in childhood, when she had been shut in her room as a punishment,
 and had heard her sisters' merry laughter outside. |