"Anna Karenina" kokkuvõte
Yet Anna contends the whole thing
really wasn't her fault. Dolly makes an important note at this point: Anna denies blame in the same way
Stiva does. This makes Anna, quite frankly, a liar.
"'Yes,' Anna went on. 'Do you know why Kitty didn't come to dinner? She's jealous of me.... I've been the
cause of that ball being a torture to her instead of a pleasure. But truly, truly it's not my fault, or only my
fault a little bit,' she said, daintily drawling the words 'a little bit.'"
Anna leaves, laden with shame and guilt. She knows she's running from Vronsky, but she also knows she
doesn't want to return to her husband. This haunts her. At one of the train stops, she needs to step outside
for air to clear her head of guilt. Instead of a clean conscience, her head is filled with the sharp sounds of
a worker hammering on the metal tracks. When Anna arrives at the St. Petersburg station she immediately
sees her husband