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- Лев Толстой
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- Анна Каренина
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“
You
have
a
great
deal
to
complain
of
,
haven
’
t
you
,
Stepan
Arkadyevitch
?
”
“
Ah
,
yes
,
I
’
m
in
a
poor
way
,
a
bad
way
,
”
said
Stepan
Arkadyevitch
with
a
heavy
sigh
.
When
Oblonsky
asked
Levin
what
had
brought
him
to
town
,
Levin
blushed
,
and
was
furious
with
himself
for
blushing
,
because
he
could
not
answer
,
“
I
have
come
to
make
your
sister
-
in
-
law
an
offer
,
”
though
that
was
precisely
what
he
had
come
for
.
The
families
of
the
Levins
and
the
Shtcherbatskys
were
old
,
noble
Moscow
families
,
and
had
always
been
on
intimate
and
friendly
terms
.
This
intimacy
had
grown
still
closer
during
Levin
’
s
student
days
.
He
had
both
prepared
for
the
university
with
the
young
Prince
Shtcherbatsky
,
the
brother
of
Kitty
and
Dolly
,
and
had
entered
at
the
same
time
with
him
.
In
those
days
Levin
used
often
to
be
in
the
Shtcherbatskys
’
house
,
and
he
was
in
love
with
the
Shtcherbatsky
household
.
Strange
as
it
may
appear
,
it
was
with
the
household
,
the
family
,
that
Konstantin
Levin
was
in
love
,
especially
with
the
feminine
half
of
the
household
.
Levin
did
not
remember
his
own
mother
,
and
his
only
sister
was
older
than
he
was
,
so
that
it
was
in
the
Shtcherbatskys
’
house
that
he
saw
for
the
first
time
that
inner
life
of
an
old
,
noble
,
cultivated
,
and
honorable
family
of
which
he
had
been
deprived
by
the
death
of
his
father
and
mother
.
All
the
members
of
that
family
,
especially
the
feminine
half
,
were
pictured
by
him
,
as
it
were
,
wrapped
about
with
a
mysterious
poetical
veil
,
and
he
not
only
perceived
no
defects
whatever
in
them
,
but
under
the
poetical
veil
that
shrouded
them
he
assumed
the
existence
of
the
loftiest
sentiments
and
every
possible
perfection
.
Why
it
was
the
three
young
ladies
had
one
day
to
speak
French
,
and
the
next
English
;
why
it
was
that
at
certain
hours
they
played
by
turns
on
the
piano
,
the
sounds
of
which
were
audible
in
their
brother
’
s
room
above
,
where
the
students
used
to
work
;
why
they
were
visited
by
those
professors
of
French
literature
,
of
music
,
of
drawing
,
of
dancing
;
why
at
certain
hours
all
the
three
young
ladies
,
with
Mademoiselle
Linon
,
drove
in
the
coach
to
the
Tversky
boulevard
,
dressed
in
their
satin
cloaks
,
Dolly
in
a
long
one
,
Natalia
in
a
half
-
long
one
,
and
Kitty
in
one
so
short
that
her
shapely
legs
in
tightly
-
drawn
red
stockings
were
visible
to
all
beholders
;
why
it
was
they
had
to
walk
about
the
Tversky
boulevard
escorted
by
a
footman
with
a
gold
cockade
in
his
hat
—
all
this
and
much
more
that
was
done
in
their
mysterious
world
he
did
not
understand
,
but
he
was
sure
that
everything
that
was
done
there
was
very
good
,
and
he
was
in
love
precisely
with
the
mystery
of
the
proceedings
.
In
his
student
days
he
had
all
but
been
in
love
with
the
eldest
,
Dolly
,
but
she
was
soon
married
to
Oblonsky
.
Then
he
began
being
in
love
with
the
second
.
He
felt
,
as
it
were
,
that
he
had
to
be
in
love
with
one
of
the
sisters
,
only
he
could
not
quite
make
out
which
.
But
Natalia
,
too
,
had
hardly
made
her
appearance
in
the
world
when
she
married
the
diplomat
Lvov
.
Kitty
was
still
a
child
when
Levin
left
the
university
.
Young
Shtcherbatsky
went
into
the
navy
,
was
drowned
in
the
Baltic
,
and
Levin
’
s
relations
with
the
Shtcherbatskys
,
in
spite
of
his
friendship
with
Oblonsky
,
became
less
intimate
.
But
when
early
in
the
winter
of
this
year
Levin
came
to
Moscow
,
after
a
year
in
the
country
,
and
saw
the
Shtcherbatskys
,
he
realized
which
of
the
three
sisters
he
was
indeed
destined
to
love
.
One
would
have
thought
that
nothing
could
be
simpler
than
for
him
,
a
man
of
good
family
,
rather
rich
than
poor
,
and
thirty
-
two
years
old
,
to
make
the
young
Princess
Shtcherbatskaya
an
offer
of
marriage
;
in
all
likelihood
he
would
at
once
have
been
looked
upon
as
a
good
match
.
But
Levin
was
in
love
,
and
so
it
seemed
to
him
that
Kitty
was
so
perfect
in
every
respect
that
she
was
a
creature
far
above
everything
earthly
;
and
that
he
was
a
creature
so
low
and
so
earthly
that
it
could
not
even
be
conceived
that
other
people
and
she
herself
could
regard
him
as
worthy
of
her
.
After
spending
two
months
in
Moscow
in
a
state
of
enchantment
,
seeing
Kitty
almost
every
day
in
society
,
into
which
he
went
so
as
to
meet
her
,
he
abruptly
decided
that
it
could
not
be
,
and
went
back
to
the
country
.
Levin
’
s
conviction
that
it
could
not
be
was
founded
on
the
idea
that
in
the
eyes
of
her
family
he
was
a
disadvantageous
and
worthless
match
for
the
charming
Kitty
,
and
that
Kitty
herself
could
not
love
him
.
In
her
family
’
s
eyes
he
had
no
ordinary
,
definite
career
and
position
in
society
,
while
his
contemporaries
by
this
time
,
when
he
was
thirty
-
two
,
were
already
,
one
a
colonel
,
and
another
a
professor
,
another
director
of
a
bank
and
railways
,
or
president
of
a
board
like
Oblonsky
.