-
Главная
-
- Книги
-
- Авторы
-
- Лев Толстой
-
- Анна Каренина
-
- Стр. 295/828
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
After
tea
he
went
out
into
the
hall
to
order
his
horses
to
be
put
in
,
and
,
when
he
came
back
,
he
found
Darya
Alexandrovna
greatly
disturbed
,
with
a
troubled
face
,
and
tears
in
her
eyes
.
While
Levin
had
been
outside
,
an
incident
had
occurred
which
had
utterly
shattered
all
the
happiness
she
had
been
feeling
that
day
,
and
her
pride
in
her
children
.
Grisha
and
Tanya
had
been
fighting
over
a
ball
.
Darya
Alexandrovna
,
hearing
a
scream
in
the
nursery
,
ran
in
and
saw
a
terrible
sight
.
Tanya
was
pulling
Grisha
’
s
hair
,
while
he
,
with
a
face
hideous
with
rage
,
was
beating
her
with
his
fists
wherever
he
could
get
at
her
.
Something
snapped
in
Darya
Alexandrovna
’
s
heart
when
she
saw
this
It
was
as
if
darkness
had
swooped
down
upon
her
life
;
she
felt
that
these
children
of
hers
,
that
she
was
so
proud
of
,
were
not
merely
most
ordinary
,
but
positively
bad
,
ill
-
bred
children
,
with
coarse
,
brutal
propensities
—
wicked
children
.
She
could
not
talk
or
think
of
anything
else
,
and
she
could
not
speak
to
Levin
of
her
misery
.
Levin
saw
she
was
unhappy
and
tried
to
comfort
her
,
saying
that
it
showed
nothing
bad
,
that
all
children
fight
;
but
,
even
as
he
said
it
,
he
was
thinking
in
his
heart
:
“
No
,
I
won
’
t
be
artificial
and
talk
French
with
my
children
;
but
my
children
won
’
t
be
like
that
.
All
one
has
to
do
is
not
spoil
children
,
not
to
distort
their
nature
,
and
they
’
ll
be
delightful
.
No
,
my
children
won
’
t
be
like
that
.
”
He
said
good
-
bye
and
drove
away
,
and
she
did
not
try
to
keep
him
.
In
the
middle
of
July
the
elder
of
the
village
on
Levin
’
s
sister
’
s
estate
,
about
fifteen
miles
from
Pokrovskoe
,
came
to
Levin
to
report
on
how
things
were
going
there
and
on
the
hay
.
The
chief
source
of
income
on
his
sister
’
s
estate
was
from
the
riverside
meadows
.
In
former
years
the
hay
had
been
bought
by
the
peasants
for
twenty
roubles
the
three
acres
.
When
Levin
took
over
the
management
of
the
estate
,
he
thought
on
examining
the
grasslands
that
they
were
worth
more
,
and
he
fixed
the
price
at
twenty
-
five
roubles
the
three
acres
.
The
peasants
would
not
give
that
price
,
and
,
as
Levin
suspected
,
kept
off
other
purchasers
.
Then
Levin
had
driven
over
himself
,
and
arranged
to
have
the
grass
cut
,
partly
by
hired
labor
,
partly
at
a
payment
of
a
certain
proportion
of
the
crop
.
His
own
peasants
put
every
hindrance
they
could
in
the
way
of
this
new
arrangement
,
but
it
was
carried
out
,
and
the
first
year
the
meadows
had
yielded
a
profit
almost
double
.
The
previous
year
—
which
was
the
third
year
—
the
peasants
had
maintained
the
same
opposition
to
the
arrangement
,
and
the
hay
had
been
cut
on
the
same
system
.
This
year
the
peasants
were
doing
all
the
mowing
for
a
third
of
the
hay
crop
,
and
the
village
elder
had
come
now
to
announce
that
the
hay
had
been
cut
,
and
that
,
fearing
rain
,
they
had
invited
the
counting
-
house
clerk
over
,
had
divided
the
crop
in
his
presence
,
and
had
raked
together
eleven
stacks
as
the
owner
’
s
share
.
From
the
vague
answers
to
his
question
how
much
hay
had
been
cut
on
the
principal
meadow
,
from
the
hurry
of
the
village
elder
who
had
made
the
division
,
not
asking
leave
,
from
the
whole
tone
of
the
peasant
,
Levin
perceived
that
there
was
something
wrong
in
the
division
of
the
hay
,
and
made
up
his
mind
to
drive
over
himself
to
look
into
the
matter
.
Arriving
for
dinner
at
the
village
,
and
leaving
his
horse
at
the
cottage
of
an
old
friend
of
his
,
the
husband
of
his
brother
’
s
wet
-
nurse
,
Levin
went
to
see
the
old
man
in
his
bee
-
house
,
wanting
to
find
out
from
him
the
truth
about
the
hay
.
Parmenitch
,
a
talkative
,
comely
old
man
,
gave
Levin
a
very
warm
welcome
,
showed
him
all
he
was
doing
,
told
him
everything
about
his
bees
and
the
swarms
of
that
year
;
but
gave
vague
and
unwilling
answers
to
Levin
’
s
inquiries
about
the
mowing
.
This
confirmed
Levin
still
more
in
his
suspicions
.
He
went
to
the
hay
fields
and
examined
the
stacks
.
The
haystacks
could
not
possibly
contain
fifty
wagon
-
loads
each
,
and
to
convict
the
peasants
Levin
ordered
the
wagons
that
had
carried
the
hay
to
be
brought
up
directly
,
to
lift
one
stack
,
and
carry
it
into
the
barn
.
There
turned
out
to
be
only
thirty
-
two
loads
in
the
stack
.
In
spite
of
the
village
elder
’
s
assertions
about
the
compressibility
of
hay
,
and
its
having
settled
down
in
the
stacks
,
and
his
swearing
that
everything
had
been
done
in
the
fear
of
God
,
Levin
stuck
to
his
point
that
the
hay
had
been
divided
without
his
orders
,
and
that
,
therefore
,
he
would
not
accept
that
hay
as
fifty
loads
to
a
stack
.
After
a
prolonged
dispute
the
matter
was
decided
by
the
peasants
taking
these
eleven
stacks
,
reckoning
them
as
fifty
loads
each
.
The
arguments
and
the
division
of
the
haycocks
lasted
the
whole
afternoon
.
When
the
last
of
the
hay
had
been
divided
,
Levin
,
intrusting
the
superintendence
of
the
rest
to
the
counting
-
house
clerk
,
sat
down
on
a
haycock
marked
off
by
a
stake
of
willow
,
and
looked
admiringly
at
the
meadow
swarming
with
peasants
.
In
front
of
him
,
in
the
bend
of
the
river
beyond
the
marsh
,
moved
a
bright
-
colored
line
of
peasant
women
,
and
the
scattered
hay
was
being
rapidly
formed
into
gray
winding
rows
over
the
pale
green
stubble
.
After
the
women
came
the
men
with
pitchforks
,
and
from
the
gray
rows
there
were
growing
up
broad
,
high
,
soft
haycocks
.
To
the
left
,
carts
were
rumbling
over
the
meadow
that
had
been
already
cleared
,
and
one
after
another
the
haycocks
vanished
,
flung
up
in
huge
forkfuls
,
and
in
their
place
there
were
rising
heavy
cartloads
of
fragrant
hay
hanging
over
the
horses
’
hind
-
quarters
.