"Anna Karenina" kokkuvõte
emphasizes the need to emancipate serfs. Levin says freedom for farmers is just as important to farming
as is soil/vegetation. Stiva, suffering from financial problems, comes again to visit Levin on the farm.
Stiva made a deal there with a dealer named Ryabinin to sell a forest owned by Dolly. Levin doesn't like
the dealer or the deal--he thinks the price is too low and tells Stiva to raise it. But Stiva says it's too late to
change the terms of the deal. Internally, Levin scoffs at city people, who come to the country with little
knowledge of the land and therefore contribute to its destruction. Stiva also comes to the country bearing
news of Kitty, about whom Levin has been trying not to think. Stiva informs the countryman that the love
of his life never ended up with the count. Levin and Stiva continue on to argue over Vronsky's place in
society, and what, in general, is the aristocracy. The two male characters have extremely dissenting