PART 5
Chapter 8
 
Anna, in that first period of her emancipation and rapid return
 to  health, felt herself unpardonably happy and full of the joy
 of life.  The thought of her husband's unhappiness did not poison
 her happiness.  On one side that memory was too awful to be
 thought of.  On the other side her husband's unhappiness had
 given her too much happiness to be regretted.  The memory of all
 that had happened after her illness: her reconciliation with her
 husband, its breakdown, the news of Vronsky's wound, his visit,
 the preparations for divorce, the departure from her husband's
 house, the parting from her son--all that seemed to her like a
 delirious dream, from which she had waked up alone with Vronsky
 abroad.  The thought of the harm caused to her husband aroused in
 her a feeling like repulsion, and akin to what a drowning man
 might feel who has shaken off another man clinging to him.  That
 man did drown.  It was an evil action, of course, but it was the
 sole means of escape, and better not to brood over these fearful
 facts. 
One consolatory reflection upon her conduct had occurred to her
 at the first moment of the final rupture, and when now she
 recalled all the past, she remembered that one reflection.  "I
 have inevitably made that man wretched," she thought; "but I
 don't want to profit by his misery.  I too am suffering, and
 shall suffer; I am losing what I prized above everything--I am
 losing my good name and my son.  I have done wrong, and so I
 don't want happiness, I don't want a divorce, and shall suffer
 from my shame and the separation from my child."  But, however
 sincerely Anna had meant to suffer, she was not suffering.  Shame
 there was not.  With the tact of which both had such a large
 share, they had succeeded in avoiding Russian ladies abroad, and
 so had never placed themselves in a false position, and
 everywhere they had met people who pretended that they perfectly
 understood their position, far better indeed than they did
 themselves.  Separation from the son she loved--even that did not
 cause her anguish in these early days.  The baby girl--HIS
 child--was so sweet, and had so won Anna's heart, since she was
 all that was left her, that Anna rarely thought of her son. 
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