Anna begins as a confident, intelligent, empathetic beauty – a paragon of all things good. Eve before ‘The Fall’. The only blemish in her life is the millstone of an older and unresponsive husband, married to his government job. Handsome Vronsky assiduously seduces her and - like brother, like sister - she is ensnared in marital infidelity. Stiva indulges with gay whimsy, whereas, Anna cuckolds cold Karenin after much heartache and soul searching, making a considered and enduring commitment to Vronsky.
Though a disgraced woman, Anna long retains her grace and integrity, and is blest with a devoted lover in Vronsky. Increasingly, jealousy and suspicion begin to erode her poise because the guilt she feels, over her lost son and husband, is heightened by her social isolation. She is cool towards her young daughter. By the time she suicides under a train, Anna the opium addict, is a shadow of the woman, who rescued Stiva and Dolly’s marriage. The wages of sin is death. Less spectacularly, Stiva’s marriage has sustained lasting wounds from his random infidelities, although, considering the extenuating circumstances around Anna’s unfaithfulness, divine retribution seems tempered for the male adulterer.
Levin and Kitty, by contrast, will be faithful unto death…surely so, now that the despairing Vronsky - heading to death in battle - has removed himself from Kitty’s reach for the second time. Ensconced in marital bliss, honest Levin is blessed with a vision of the sacred.
Have I understood the novel?


Reply With Quote




