| PART 1
Chapter 31
 Vronsky had not even tried to sleep all that night.  He sat in
 his armchair, looking straight before him or scanning the people
 who got in and out.  If he had indeed on previous occasions
 struck and impressed people who did not know him by his air of
 unhesitating composure, he seemed now more haughty and
 self-possessed than ever.  He looked at people as if they were
 things.  A nervous young man, a clerk in a law court, sitting
 opposite him, hated him for that look.  The young man asked him
 for a light, and entered into conversation with him, and even
 pushed against him, to make him feel that he was not a thing, but
 a person.  But Vronsky gazed at him exactly as he did at the
 lamp, and the young man made a wry face, feeling that he was
 losing his self-possession under the oppression of this refusal
 to recognize him as a person. Vronsky saw nothing and no one.  He felt himself a king, not
 because he believed that he had made an impression on Anna--he
 did not yet believe that,--but because the impression she had
 made on him gave him happiness and pride. What would come if it all he did not know, he did not even think.
 He felt that all his forces, hitherto dissipated, wasted, were
 centered on one thing, and bent with fearful energy on one
 blissful goal.  And he was happy at it.  He knew only that he had
 told her the truth, that he had come where she was, that all the
 happiness of his life, the only meaning in life for him, now lay
 in seeing and hearing her.  And when he got out of the carriage
 at Bologova to get some seltzer water, and caught sight of Anna,
 involuntarily his first word had told her just what he thought.
 And he was glad he had told her it, that she knew it now and was
 thinking of it.  He did not sleep all night.  When he was back in
 the carriage, he kept unceasingly going over every position in
 which he had seen her, every word she had uttered, and before his
 fancy, making his heart faint with emotion, floated pictures of a
 possible future. |