| PART 5
Chapter 14
 (continued)They made peace.  She, recognizing that she was wrong, though she
 did not say so, became tenderer to him, and they experienced new,
 redoubled happiness in their love.  But that did not prevent such
 quarrels from happening again, and exceedingly often too, on the
 most unexpected and trivial grounds.  These quarrels frequently
 arose from the fact that they did not yet know what was of
 importance to each other and that all this early period they were
 both often in a bad temper.  When one was in a good temper, and
 the other in a bad temper, the peace was not broken; but when
 both happened to be in an ill-humor, quarrels sprang up from such
 incomprehensibly trifling causes, that they could never remember
 afterwards what they had quarreled about.  It is true that when
 they were both in a good temper their enjoyment of life was
 redoubled.  But still this first period of their married life was
 a difficult time for them. During all this early time they had a peculiarly vivid sense of
 tension, as it were, a tugging in opposite directions of the
 chain by which they were bound.  Altogether their honeymoon--that
 is to say, the month after their wedding--from which from
 tradition Levin expected so much, was not merely not a time of
 sweetness, but remained in the memories of both as the bitterest
 and most humiliating period in their lives.  They both alike
 tried in later life to blot out from their memories all the
 monstrous, shameful incidents of that morbid period, when both
 were rarely in a normal frame of mind, both were rarely quite
 themselves. It was only in the third month of their married life, after their
 return from Moscow, where they had been staying for a month, that
 their life began to go more smoothly. |