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Anna Karenina - Chapter 135

Leo Tolstoy

Anna Karenina

Chapter 135

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Summary

Chapter 135

Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy

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Entering the studio, Mihailov scans his visitors, notes Vronsky's expression and jaws. His artistic sense unceasingly collects materials. He rapidly forms mental images of these three. Golenishtchev - a Russian living here. Mihailov doesn't remember his surname but remembers his face: 'one of the faces laid by in his memory in the immense class of the falsely consequential and poor in expression.' Vronsky and Madame Karenina 'must be distinguished and wealthy Russians, knowing nothing about art, like all those wealthy Russians, but posing as amateurs and connoisseurs.' He expects them to have seen antiques and other studios, coming to him 'to make the point of view complete.' He knows how dilettanti look at contemporary art 'with the sole object of being in a position to say that art is a thing of the past.' He saw it in their careless indifference. But despite this, he liked Vronsky, 'and still more Anna.' 'Here, if you please,' moving aside with nimble gait, pointing to his picture. 'It's the exhortation to Pilate. Matthew, chapter xxvii.' His lips trembling with emotion. During seconds of their silence, Mihailov gazes 'with the indifferent eye of an outsider.' He's sure they'll utter 'a higher, juster criticism.' Golenishtchev makes a remark about 'the fidelity of the expression of Pilate as an official.' Though trifling, Mihailov is 'in an ecstasy of delight.' He'd thought the same thing. This reflection was one of millions that would be true. Golenishtchev's remark doesn't diminish its significance. 'His heart warmed' and 'from a state of depression he suddenly passed to ecstasy.' Discussion follows about whether Christ should be 'brought down to the level of an historical character.' Golenishtchev argues about 'the unity of the impression being essential to art.' Mihailov greatly perturbed 'but he could say nothing in defense of his own idea.'

Coming Up in Chapter 136

As Levin returns home with his new understanding, he faces the immediate test of putting his revelation into practice with his family. The gap between spiritual insight and daily reality proves challenging in ways he didn't expect.

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n entering the studio, Mihailov once more scanned his visitors and noted down in his imagination Vronsky’s expression too, and especially his jaws. Although his artistic sense was unceasingly at work collecting materials, although he felt a continually increasing excitement as the moment of criticizing his work drew nearer, he rapidly and subtly formed, from imperceptible signs, a mental image of these three persons.

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Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Recognizing Internal Wisdom

This chapter teaches how to distinguish between genuine confusion and the habit of overcomplicating what we already know.

Practice This Today

This week, notice when you're researching solutions to problems your gut has already answered—pause and ask what you already know is right.

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"To live not for one's needs but for God, for the soul."

— The peasant

Context: Casually explaining the difference between people who live selfishly versus those who live morally

This simple phrase unlocks everything for Levin. The peasant isn't trying to be profound - he's just stating what seems obvious to him. This shows how the most important truths are often the simplest ones.

In Today's Words:

Live for something bigger than just yourself and what you want.

"I have discovered nothing. I have simply recognized what I knew."

— Levin

Context: His realization that the spiritual truth he'd been seeking was already within him

Levin understands that his breakthrough isn't about learning something new, but about accepting what his heart already knew. This is why all his book-reading and philosophical debates never helped - the answer was already there.

In Today's Words:

I didn't learn anything new - I just finally listened to what I already knew deep down.

"The meaning of my life and of all men's lives was not hidden from me. I knew it, I knew it as surely as I knew that I must die."

— Levin

Context: His moment of complete clarity about life's purpose

Levin realizes that knowing life has meaning is as fundamental and certain as knowing he's mortal. This isn't intellectual knowledge but bone-deep certainty that comes from recognizing his natural goodness.

In Today's Words:

I always knew what life was about - I just kept ignoring what was obvious.

Thematic Threads

Spiritual Growth

In This Chapter

Levin finds peace through simple moral understanding rather than intellectual proof of God's existence

Development

Culmination of his spiritual searching throughout the novel

In Your Life:

You might find meaning in small acts of kindness rather than grand philosophical answers

Class Understanding

In This Chapter

A peasant's simple wisdom provides what years of aristocratic education could not

Development

Reverses earlier patterns where Levin struggled to connect with peasants

In Your Life:

You might discover that people you initially dismiss have insights you desperately need

Personal Growth

In This Chapter

Levin stops torturing himself with unanswerable questions and embraces what he knows to be true

Development

Completes his character arc from confusion to clarity

In Your Life:

You might find peace by accepting what you know rather than demanding perfect understanding

Human Relationships

In This Chapter

His spiritual breakthrough immediately improves his capacity to love Kitty and be present for his family

Development

Shows how internal peace enables better external connections

In Your Life:

You might find that solving your inner conflicts helps you show up better for people you care about

Social Expectations

In This Chapter

Levin rejects society's demand for intellectual justification of faith and morality

Development

Final break from aristocratic need to rationalize everything

In Your Life:

You might discover freedom in trusting your own moral sense rather than seeking external validation

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You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.

Discussion Questions

  1. 1

    What simple truth does the peasant Fyodor share with Levin that changes everything?

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    Why couldn't all of Levin's reading and philosophical debates give him the peace that one conversation with a peasant did?

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    Think about a time when you overcomplicated a decision that your gut already knew the answer to. What made you ignore your instincts?

    application • medium
  4. 4

    When someone you know is stuck in analysis paralysis, how could you help them find their way back to what they already know is right?

    application • deep
  5. 5

    What does Levin's breakthrough teach us about the difference between knowledge and wisdom?

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

The Gut Check Audit

Think of a current situation where you've been overthinking or seeking endless advice. Write down what your gut instinct tells you to do, then list all the complex reasons you've been avoiding that simple answer. Notice how much mental energy you've spent circling around what you already know.

Consider:

  • •Your first instinct is often right, even when it's uncomfortable
  • •Fear of the simple solution usually means it requires courage to execute
  • •The 'right' answer doesn't always feel easy or safe

Journaling Prompt

Write about a time when you followed your gut despite having no logical proof it was right. What happened? How did that experience teach you to trust your inner compass?

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Coming Up Next...

Chapter 136

As Levin returns home with his new understanding, he faces the immediate test of putting his revelation into practice with his family. The gap between spiritual insight and daily reality proves challenging in ways he didn't expect.

Continue to Chapter 136
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