Понятно
Понятно
Для того чтобы воспользоваться закладками, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
Отмена
231
But
he
(
he
knew
very
well
how
he
must
appear
to
others
)
was
a
country
gentleman
,
occupied
in
breeding
cattle
,
shooting
game
,
and
building
barns
;
in
other
words
,
a
fellow
of
no
ability
,
who
had
not
turned
out
well
,
and
who
was
doing
just
what
,
according
to
the
ideas
of
the
world
,
is
done
by
people
fit
for
nothing
else
.
232
The
mysterious
,
enchanting
Kitty
herself
could
not
love
such
an
ugly
person
as
he
conceived
himself
to
be
,
and
,
above
all
,
such
an
ordinary
,
in
no
way
striking
person
.
Moreover
,
his
attitude
to
Kitty
in
the
past
the
attitude
of
a
grown
-
up
person
to
a
child
,
arising
from
his
friendship
with
her
brother
seemed
to
him
yet
another
obstacle
to
love
.
An
ugly
,
good
-
natured
man
,
as
he
considered
himself
,
might
,
he
supposed
,
be
liked
as
a
friend
;
but
to
be
loved
with
such
a
love
as
that
with
which
he
loved
Kitty
,
one
would
need
to
be
a
handsome
and
,
still
more
,
a
distinguished
man
.
233
He
had
heard
that
women
often
did
care
for
ugly
and
ordinary
men
,
but
he
did
not
believe
it
,
for
he
judged
by
himself
,
and
he
could
not
himself
have
loved
any
but
beautiful
,
mysterious
,
and
exceptional
women
.
Отключить рекламу
234
But
after
spending
two
months
alone
in
the
country
,
he
was
convinced
that
this
was
not
one
of
those
passions
of
which
he
had
had
experience
in
his
early
youth
;
that
this
feeling
gave
him
not
an
instant
s
rest
;
that
he
could
not
live
without
deciding
the
question
,
would
she
or
would
she
not
be
his
wife
,
and
that
his
despair
had
arisen
only
from
his
own
imaginings
,
that
he
had
no
sort
of
proof
that
he
would
be
rejected
.
And
he
had
now
come
to
Moscow
with
a
firm
determination
to
make
an
offer
,
and
get
married
if
he
were
accepted
235
Or
.
.
.
he
could
not
conceive
what
would
become
of
him
if
he
were
rejected
.
236
On
arriving
in
Moscow
by
a
morning
train
,
Levin
had
put
up
at
the
house
of
his
elder
half
-
brother
,
Koznishev
.
After
changing
his
clothes
he
went
down
to
his
brother
s
study
,
intending
to
talk
to
him
at
once
about
the
object
of
his
visit
,
and
to
ask
his
advice
;
but
his
brother
was
not
alone
.
With
him
there
was
a
well
-
known
professor
of
philosophy
,
who
had
come
from
Harkov
expressly
to
clear
up
a
difference
that
had
arisen
between
them
on
a
very
important
philosophical
question
.
The
professor
was
carrying
on
a
hot
crusade
against
materialists
.
Sergey
Koznishev
had
been
following
this
crusade
with
interest
,
and
after
reading
the
professor
s
last
article
,
he
had
written
him
a
letter
stating
his
objections
.
He
accused
the
professor
of
making
too
great
concessions
to
the
materialists
.
And
the
professor
had
promptly
appeared
to
argue
the
matter
out
.
The
point
in
discussion
was
the
question
then
in
vogue
:
Is
there
a
line
to
be
drawn
between
psychological
and
physiological
phenomena
in
man
?
and
if
so
,
where
?
237
Sergey
Ivanovitch
met
his
brother
with
the
smile
of
chilly
friendliness
he
always
had
for
everyone
,
and
introducing
him
to
the
professor
,
went
on
with
the
conversation
.
Отключить рекламу
238
A
little
man
in
spectacles
,
with
a
narrow
forehead
,
tore
himself
from
the
discussion
for
an
instant
to
greet
Levin
,
and
then
went
on
talking
without
paying
any
further
attention
to
him
.
Levin
sat
down
to
wait
till
the
professor
should
go
,
but
he
soon
began
to
get
interested
in
the
subject
under
discussion
.
239
Levin
had
come
across
the
magazine
articles
about
which
they
were
disputing
,
and
had
read
them
,
interested
in
them
as
a
development
of
the
first
principles
of
science
,
familiar
to
him
as
a
natural
science
student
at
the
university
.
But
he
had
never
connected
these
scientific
deductions
as
to
the
origin
of
man
as
an
animal
,
as
to
reflex
action
,
biology
,
and
sociology
,
with
those
questions
as
to
the
meaning
of
life
and
death
to
himself
,
which
had
of
late
been
more
and
more
often
in
his
mind
.
240
As
he
listened
to
his
brother
s
argument
with
the
professor
,
he
noticed
that
they
connected
these
scientific
questions
with
those
spiritual
problems
,
that
at
times
they
almost
touched
on
the
latter
;
but
every
time
they
were
close
upon
what
seemed
to
him
the
chief
point
,
they
promptly
beat
a
hasty
retreat
,
and
plunged
again
into
a
sea
of
subtle
distinctions
,
reservations
,
quotations
,
allusions
,
and
appeals
to
authorities
,
and
it
was
with
difficulty
that
he
understood
what
they
were
talking
about
.