| PART 5
Chapter 29
 One of Anna's objects in coming back to Russia had been to see
 her son.  From the day she left Italy the thought of it had never
 ceased to agitate her.  And as she got nearer to Petersburg, the
 delight and importance of this meeting grew ever greater in her
 imagination.  She did not even put to herself the question how to
 arrange it.  It seemed to her natural and simple to see her son
 when she should be in the same town with him.  But on her arrival
 in Petersburg she was suddenly made distinctly aware of her
 present position in society, and she grasped the fact that to
 arrange this meeting was no easy matter. She had now been two days in Petersburg.  The thought of her son
 never left her for a single instant, but she had not yet seen
 him.  To go straight to the house, where she might meet Alexey
 Alexandrovitch, that she felt she had no right to do.  She might
 be refused admittance and insulted.  To write and so enter into
 relations with her husband--that it made her miserable to think
 of doing; she could only be at peace when she did not think of
 her husband.  To get a glimpse of her son out walking, finding
 out where and when he went out, was not enough for her; she had
 so looked forward to this meeting, she had so much she must say
 to him, she so longed to embrace him, to kiss him.  Seryozha's
 old nurse might be a help to her and show her what to do.  But
 the nurse was not now living in Alexey Alexandrovitch's house. 
 In this uncertainty, and in efforts to find the nurse, two days
 had slipped by. Hearing of the close intimacy between Alexey Alexandrovitch and
 Countess Lidia Ivanovna, Anna decided on the third day to write
 to her a letter, which cost her great pains, and in which she
 intentionally said that permission to see her son must depend on
 her husband's generosity.  She knew that if the letter were shown
 to her husband, he would keep up his character of magnanimity,
 and would not refuse her request. |