| PART 6
Chapter 27
 The sixth day was fixed for the election of the marshal of the
 province. The rooms, large and small, were full of noblemen in all sorts of
 uniforms.  Many had come only for that day.  Men who had not seen
 each other for years, some from the Crimea, some from Petersburg,
 some from abroad, met in the rooms of the Hall of Nobility. 
 There was much discussion around the governor's table under the
 portrait of the Tsar. The nobles, both in the larger and the smaller rooms, grouped
 themselves in camps, and from their hostile and suspicious
 glances, from the silence that fell upon them when outsiders
 approached a group, and from the way that some, whispering
 together, retreated to the farther corridor, it was evident that
 each side had secrets from the other.  In appearance the noblemen
 were sharply divided into two classes: the old and the new.  The
 old were for the most part either in old uniforms of the
 nobility, buttoned up closely, with spurs and hats, or in their
 own special naval, cavalry, infantry, or official uniforms.  The
 uniforms of the older men were embroidered in the old-fashioned
 way with epaulets on their shoulders; they were unmistakably
 tight and short in the waist, as though their wearers had grown
 out of them.  The younger men wore the uniform of the nobility
 with long waists and broad shoulders, unbuttoned over white
 waistcoats, or uniforms with black collars and with the
 embroidered badges of justices of the peace.  To the younger men
 belonged the court uniforms that here and there brightened up the
 crowd. But the division into young and old did not correspond with the
 division of parties.  Some of the young men, as Levin observed,
 belonged to the old party; and some of the very oldest noblemen,
 on the contrary, were whispering with Sviazhsky, and were
 evidently ardent partisans of the new party. Levin stood in the smaller room, where they were smoking and
 taking light refreshments, close to his own friends, and
 listening to what they were saying, he conscientiously exerted
 all his intelligence trying to understand what was said.  Sergey
 Ivanovitch was the center round which the others grouped
 themselves.  He was listening at that moment to Sviazhsky and
 Hliustov, the marshal of another district, who belonged to their
 party.  Hliustov would not agree to go with his district to ask
 Snetkov to stand, while Sviazhsky was persuading him to do so,
 and Sergey Ivanovitch was approving of the plan.  Levin could not
 make out why the opposition was to ask the marshal to stand whom
 they wanted to supersede. |