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- Анна Каренина
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- Стр. 138/828
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“
What
a
pity
you
can
’
t
be
with
me
!
”
“
Oh
,
yes
,
I
’
m
coming
.
I
’
ve
had
scarlatina
,
and
I
’
ll
persuade
mamma
to
let
me
.
”
Kitty
insisted
on
having
her
way
,
and
went
to
stay
at
her
sister
’
s
and
nursed
the
children
all
through
the
scarlatina
,
for
scarlatina
it
turned
out
to
be
.
The
two
sisters
brought
all
the
six
children
successfully
through
it
,
but
Kitty
was
no
better
in
health
,
and
in
Lent
the
Shtcherbatskys
went
abroad
.
The
highest
Petersburg
society
is
essentially
one
:
in
it
everyone
knows
everyone
else
,
everyone
even
visits
everyone
else
.
But
this
great
set
has
its
subdivisions
.
Anna
Arkadyevna
Karenina
had
friends
and
close
ties
in
three
different
circles
of
this
highest
society
.
One
circle
was
her
husband
’
s
government
official
set
,
consisting
of
his
colleagues
and
subordinates
,
brought
together
in
the
most
various
and
capricious
manner
,
and
belonging
to
different
social
strata
.
Anna
found
it
difficult
now
to
recall
the
feeling
of
almost
awe
-
stricken
reverence
which
she
had
at
first
entertained
for
these
persons
.
Now
she
knew
all
of
them
as
people
know
one
another
in
a
country
town
;
she
knew
their
habits
and
weaknesses
,
and
where
the
shoe
pinched
each
one
of
them
.
She
knew
their
relations
with
one
another
and
with
the
head
authorities
,
knew
who
was
for
whom
,
and
how
each
one
maintained
his
position
,
and
where
they
agreed
and
disagreed
.
But
the
circle
of
political
,
masculine
interests
had
never
interested
her
,
in
spite
of
countess
Lidia
Ivanovna
’
s
influence
,
and
she
avoided
it
.
Another
little
set
with
which
Anna
was
in
close
relations
was
the
one
by
means
of
which
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
had
made
his
career
.
The
center
of
this
circle
was
the
Countess
Lidia
Ivanovna
.
It
was
a
set
made
up
of
elderly
,
ugly
,
benevolent
,
and
godly
women
,
and
clever
,
learned
,
and
ambitious
men
.
One
of
the
clever
people
belonging
to
the
set
had
called
it
“
the
conscience
of
Petersburg
society
.
”
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
had
the
highest
esteem
for
this
circle
,
and
Anna
with
her
special
gift
for
getting
on
with
everyone
,
had
in
the
early
days
of
her
life
in
Petersburg
made
friends
in
this
circle
also
.
Now
,
since
her
return
from
Moscow
,
she
had
come
to
feel
this
set
insufferable
.
It
seemed
to
her
that
both
she
and
all
of
them
were
insincere
,
and
she
felt
so
bored
and
ill
at
ease
in
that
world
that
she
went
to
see
the
Countess
Lidia
Ivanovna
as
little
as
possible
.
The
third
circle
with
which
Anna
had
ties
was
preeminently
the
fashionable
world
—
the
world
of
balls
,
of
dinners
,
of
sumptuous
dresses
,
the
world
that
hung
on
to
the
court
with
one
hand
,
so
as
to
avoid
sinking
to
the
level
of
the
demi
-
monde
.
For
the
demi
-
monde
the
members
of
that
fashionable
world
believed
that
they
despised
,
though
their
tastes
were
not
merely
similar
,
but
in
fact
identical
.
Her
connection
with
this
circle
was
kept
up
through
Princess
Betsy
Tverskaya
,
her
cousin
’
s
wife
,
who
had
an
income
of
a
hundred
and
twenty
thousand
roubles
,
and
who
had
taken
a
great
fancy
to
Anna
ever
since
she
first
came
out
,
showed
her
much
attention
,
and
drew
her
into
her
set
,
making
fun
of
Countess
Lidia
Ivanovna
’
s
coterie
.
“
When
I
’
m
old
and
ugly
I
’
ll
be
the
same
,
”
Betsy
used
to
say
;
“
but
for
a
pretty
young
woman
like
you
it
’
s
early
days
for
that
house
of
charity
.
”
Anna
had
at
first
avoided
as
far
as
she
could
Princess
Tverskaya
’
s
world
,
because
it
necessitated
an
expenditure
beyond
her
means
,
and
besides
in
her
heart
she
preferred
the
first
circle
.
But
since
her
visit
to
Moscow
she
had
done
quite
the
contrary
.
She
avoided
her
serious
-
minded
friends
,
and
went
out
into
the
fashionable
world
.
There
she
met
Vronsky
,
and
experienced
an
agitating
joy
at
those
meetings
.
She
met
Vronsky
specially
often
at
Betsy
’
s
for
Betsy
was
a
Vronsky
by
birth
and
his
cousin
.
Vronsky
was
everywhere
where
he
had
any
chance
of
meeting
Anna
,
and
speaking
to
her
,
when
he
could
,
of
his
love
.
She
gave
him
no
encouragement
,
but
every
time
she
met
him
there
surged
up
in
her
heart
that
same
feeling
of
quickened
life
that
had
come
upon
her
that
day
in
the
railway
carriage
when
she
saw
him
for
the
first
time
.
She
was
conscious
herself
that
her
delight
sparkled
in
her
eyes
and
curved
her
lips
into
a
smile
,
and
she
could
not
quench
the
expression
of
this
delight
.