| PART 5
Chapter 7
 (continued)"Ah! I did not know" (though he did know), Golenishtchev answered
 carelessly.  "Have you been here long?" he added. "Four days," Vronsky answered, once more scrutinizing his
 friend's face intently. "Yes, he's a decent fellow, and will look at the thing properly,"
 Vronsky said to himself, catching the significance of
 Golenishtchev's face and the change of subject.  "I can introduce
 him to Anna, he looks at it properly." During those three months that Vronsky had spent abroad with
 Anna, he had always on meeting new people asked himself how the
 new person would look at his relations with Anna, and for the
 most part, in men, he had met with the "proper" way of looking at
 it.  But if he had been asked, and those who looked at it
 "properly" had been asked, exactly how they did look at it, both
 he and they would have been greatly puzzled to answer. In reality, those who in Vronsky's opinion had the "proper" view
 had no sort of view at all, but behaved in general as well-bred
 persons do behave in regard to all the complex and insoluble
 problems with which life is encompassed on all sides; they
 behaved with propriety, avoiding allusions and unpleasant
 questions.  They assumed an air of fully comprehending the import
 and force of the situation, of accepting and even approving of
 it, but of considering it superfluous and uncalled for to put all
 this into words. Vronsky at once divined that Golenishtchev was of this class, and
 therefore was doubly pleased to see him.  And in fact,
 Golenishtchev's manner to Madame Karenina, when he was taken to
 call on her, was all that Vronsky could have desired.  Obviously
 without the slightest effort he steered clear of all subjects
 which might lead to embarrassment. |