| PART 3
Chapter 12
 (continued)Often Levin had admired this life, often he had a sense of envy
 of the men who led this life; but today for the first time,
 especially under the influence of what he had seen in the
 attitude of Ivan Parmenov to his young wife, the idea presented
 itself definitely to his mind that it was in his power to
 exchange the dreary, artificial, idle, and individualistic life
 he was leading for this laborious, pure, and socially delightful
 life. The old man who had been sitting beside him had long ago gone
 home; the people had all separated.  Those who lived near had
 gone home, while those who came from far were gathered into a
 group for supper, and to spend the night in the meadow.  Levin,
 unobserved by the peasants, still lay on the haycock, and still
 looked on and listened and mused.  The peasants who remained for
 the night in the meadow scarcely slept all the short summer
 night.  At first there was the sound of merry talk and laughing
 all together over the supper, then singing again and laughter. All the long day of toil had left no trace in them but lightness
 of heart.  Before the early dawn all was hushed.  Nothing was to
 be heard but the night sounds of the frogs that never ceased in
 the marsh, and the horses snorting in the mist that rose over the
 meadow before the morning.  Rousing himself, Levin got up from
 the haycock, and looking at the stars, he saw that the night was
 over. "Well, what am I going to do? How am I to set about it?" he
 said to himself, trying to express to himself all the thoughts
 and feelings he had passed through in that brief night.  All the
 thoughts and feelings he had passed through fell into three
 separate trains of thought.  One was the renunciation of his old
 life, of his utterly useless education.  This renunciation gave
 him satisfaction, and was easy and simple.  Another series of
 thoughts and mental images related to the life he longed to live
 now.  The simplicity, the purity, the sanity of this life he felt
 clearly, and he was convinced he would find in it the content,
 the peace, and the dignity, of the lack of which he was so
 miserably conscious.  But a third series of ideas turned upon the
 question how to effect this transition from the old life to the
 new.  And there nothing took clear shape for him.  "Have a wife?
 Have work and the necessity of work?  Leave Pokrovskoe?  Buy
 land?  Become a member of a peasant community?  Marry a peasant
 girl?  How am I to set about it?" he asked himself again, and
 could not find an answer.  "I haven't slept all night, though,
 and I can't think it out clearly," he said to himself.  "I'll
 work it out later.  One thing's certain, this night has decided
 my fate.  All my old dreams of home life were absurd, not the
 real thing," he told himself.  "It's all ever so much simpler and
 better..." |