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Chapter 4 — Anna Karenina

Anna Karenina - Chapter 4

Leo Tolstoy

Anna Karenina

Chapter 4

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Analysis by the Wide Reads editorial team·Reviewed against the source text·Updated November 30, 2025

Summary

Chapter 4

Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy

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Dolly stands at an open bureau in a wrecked bedroom, hair pinned thin on her neck, pretending for the tenth time in three days that she will pack the children and go to her mother. She wants to punish Stiva, but she still loves him, and five children cannot survive on her alone: the baby is sick from bad soup, yesterday they nearly missed dinner. Leaving feels like justice; staying feels like the only way they eat.

Stiva walks in radiant and fresh. Dolly asks what he wants in a voice that sounds nothing like her own. He mentions Anna is coming; she tells him to go away. He sobs, begs forgiveness, and offers the line that detonates everything: cannot nine years of marriage atone for an instant of passion? She hears pity where she needs love, calls him loathsome, and says the word that terrifies her most: stranger. A child cries; her face softens for a second, then she threatens to call the servants, calls him a scoundrel, and slams the door.

Stiva wipes his tears, hears the German watchmaker winding the clock, smiles at his old joke about a man wound up for life to wind watches, and tells himself Matvey is right: she will come round. Dolly, alone again, replays the fight and repeats that even under one roof they are strangers forever. Then Matrona needs an answer about milk and a new cook, and she drowns her grief in dinner plans because the household cannot wait for her pain to finish.

In this chapter: Terms Characters Key Quotes Themes Modern Story

Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Testing Apologies

A tearful sorry can still center the person who hurt you if it skips the harm and asks for quick forgiveness. Dolly rejects Stiva's plea that nine years should atone for an instant of passion, calls him a stranger, and slams the door even though a child's cry still softens her face. Before you accept an apology, ask whether it names what broke and what would need to change, or mainly tries to end your anger.

Coming Up in Chapter 5

While Dolly drowns her grief in household duties, Stiva walks into his Moscow office radiant as ever. An old friend arrives with country rage and a question about Kitty that Stiva would rather dodge until dinner.

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Original text
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Chapter 04

Dolly stands at an open bureau in a wrecked bedroom, hair pinned th...

Darya Alexandrovna, in a dressing jacket, and with her now scanty, once luxuriant and beautiful hair fastened up with hairpins on the nape of her neck, with a sunken, thin face and large, startled eyes, which looked prominent from the thinness of her face, was standing among a litter of all sorts of things scattered all over the room, before an open bureau, from which she was taking something. Hearing her husband’s steps, she stopped, looking towards the door, and trying assiduously to give her features a severe and contemptuous expression. She felt she was afraid of him, and afraid…

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"What do you want?"

— Dolly

Context: Stiva has entered the bedroom and Dolly tries to hold a severe expression that her face cannot sustain

The question sounds cold, but it is armor. Dolly is terrified of the interview and of her own love for him. She needs distance because closeness now feels like self-betrayal.

In Today's Words:

When trust is broken, even a flat question can be a wall. A spouse at the bureau might ask what you want because an honest answer would hurt too much. The tone says keep your distance while you still share the house and the children.

"—instant of passion?"

— Stiva

Context: Stiva tries to finish his plea that nine years of marriage should atone for one lapse

He frames the affair as a math problem: years of marriage against one mistake. That logic erases what the instant actually broke: trust, dignity, and the sense that her home was safe.

In Today's Words:

People who cause harm often bargain with time: ten good years should cancel one affair, as if duration disinfects betrayal. The plea sounds reasonable until you notice it converts your pain into an unfair equation and never names what actually broke in your home together.

"a stranger—yes, a complete stranger!"

— Dolly

Context: Dolly's fury peaks as she tells Stiva his tears mean nothing and that she no longer recognizes him

She names the specific rupture: not anger alone, but the death of intimacy. The word stranger terrifies her because she still loves him and still shares his house.

In Today's Words:

There is a moment in betrayal when the person you love becomes unrecognizable. You can call them a stranger while still sharing a bed, a bank account, and a last name with them. The word marks a boundary that love alone cannot undo after the affair.

"strangers—strangers forever!"

— Dolly

Context: Alone after Stiva leaves, Dolly replays the conversation and confronts what reconciliation would really mean

This is the chapter's closing truth. Dolly still loves Stiva, yet the word stranger marks a boundary that shared walls cannot erase. She will keep managing the household, but the marriage as she knew it is already over in her mind.

In Today's Words:

You can share an address and still be done. A couple may stay for the kids or the lease while treating each other like unfamiliar roommates every day. Strangers forever is what it sounds like when trust dies but logistics keep you under the same roof.

Thematic Threads

Economic Trap

In This Chapter

Dolly rehearses leaving but knows she cannot feed five children alone; bad soup and missed dinners prove the household already fails without her

Development

Introduced here as the practical lock on her rage

In Your Life:

You may stay in a bad situation because leaving would cost housing, income, or stability your children depend on.

Children as Leverage

In This Chapter

Stiva invokes the children when he sobs; Dolly's face softens at a cry in the next room, but she also names their ruin if she stays with a vicious father

Development

Building from Chapter 3's chaotic nursery

In Your Life:

In family fights, both sides may claim to act for the kids while using them as emotional proof or pressure.

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

Discussion Questions

This is not a test. Five prompts guide you through the chapter, from how it opens to how it closes, so you notice context and rhythm rather than facts to memorize. Sit with each question in your own words. When you see "One way to read it," treat it as a starting point, not the only answer.

  1. 1

    Why does Dolly keep sorting the children's things at the bureau even though she tells herself she must leave?

    ▶One way to read it

    She wants to punish Stiva and believes things cannot go on, but she still loves him and knows she cannot properly care for five children away from the household.

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    Why does Stiva's argument about nine years atoning for an instant of passion make Dolly more furious instead of less?

    ▶One way to read it

    He treats betrayal like a math problem and asks forgiveness before facing what he did with the children's governess under their own roof.

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    When have you seen someone use tears or an apology to shift focus from the harm they caused to their need to feel forgiven?

    ▶One way to read it

    One parallel is a coworker or partner who cries or says sorry quickly so the conversation becomes about calming them down instead of fixing what they broke.

    application • medium
  4. 4

    What does Dolly mean when she calls Stiva a stranger, and why does that word horrify her?

    ▶One way to read it

    She is naming that intimacy is gone even if they stay in the same house; the word marks a boundary love alone cannot undo after the affair.

    application • deep
  5. 5

    After Stiva leaves joking about the watchmaker and coming round, what do you think Dolly takes away from sitting alone with her grief?

    ▶One way to read it

    She concludes reconciliation is impossible and repeats that they are strangers forever, yet she still returns to household duties because the children cannot wait for her pain to finish.

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

Audit the Apology

Recall a time someone hurt you and apologized. List what they said, what specific harm they named, and what they asked you to do next. Then write what you would have needed to hear for the apology to feel like repair instead of pressure to forgive.

Consider:

  • •Did they bargain with time (years of good behavior vs one mistake)?
  • •Did tears or emotion shift the conversation toward managing their feelings?
  • •Did they name what would need to change, or mainly ask you to move on?

Journaling Prompt

Write about a moment when you stayed under the same roof with someone after trust broke. What did strangers forever mean to you, and what kept you there?

Coming Up Next...

Chapter 5

While Dolly drowns her grief in household duties, Stiva walks into his Moscow office radiant as ever. An old friend arrives with country rage and a question about Kitty that Stiva would rather dodge until dinner.

Continue to Chapter 5
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Study guides, teaching tools, themes, and the full library.More ways to read Anna Karenina: study guides, teaching tools, and the wider library.

  • Anna Karenina Study Guide
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  • Essential Life Index
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Life-skill deep dives in Anna Karenina

  • Finding Authentic MeaningDiscover purpose through honest work and genuine connection through Levin
  • Managing JealousyLearn how jealousy can poison love and lead to self-destruction through Anna
  • Recognizing Consuming PassionLearn to identify when love becomes an all-consuming force that clouds judgment and destroys lives through Anna
  • Understanding Social Double StandardsLearn how society judges the same behavior differently based on gender and status through Anna
Love & RelationshipsSocial Class & StatusMoral Dilemmas & Ethics

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