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“
To
sleep
well
one
ought
to
work
,
and
to
enjoy
oneself
one
ought
to
work
too
.
”
“
What
am
I
to
work
for
when
my
work
is
no
use
to
anybody
?
And
I
can
’
t
and
won
’
t
knowingly
make
a
pretense
about
it
.
”
“
You
’
re
incorrigible
,
”
said
Stremov
,
not
looking
at
her
,
and
he
spoke
again
to
Anna
.
As
he
rarely
met
Anna
,
he
could
say
nothing
but
commonplaces
to
her
,
but
he
said
those
commonplaces
as
to
when
she
was
returning
to
Petersburg
,
and
how
fond
Countess
Lidia
Ivanovna
was
of
her
,
with
an
expression
which
suggested
that
he
longed
with
his
whole
soul
to
please
her
and
show
his
regard
for
her
and
even
more
than
that
.
Tushkevitch
came
in
,
announcing
that
the
party
were
awaiting
the
other
players
to
begin
croquet
.
“
No
,
don
’
t
go
away
,
please
don
’
t
,
”
pleaded
Liza
Merkalova
,
hearing
that
Anna
was
going
.
Stremov
joined
in
her
entreaties
.
“
It
’
s
too
violent
a
transition
,
”
he
said
,
“
to
go
from
such
company
to
old
Madame
Vrede
.
And
besides
,
you
will
only
give
her
a
chance
for
talking
scandal
,
while
here
you
arouse
none
but
such
different
feelings
of
the
highest
and
most
opposite
kind
,
”
he
said
to
her
Anna
pondered
for
an
instant
in
uncertainty
.
This
shrewd
man
’
s
flattering
words
,
the
naïve
,
childlike
affection
shown
her
by
Liza
Merkalova
,
and
all
the
social
atmosphere
she
was
used
to
,
—
it
was
all
so
easy
,
and
what
was
in
store
for
her
was
so
difficult
,
that
she
was
for
a
minute
in
uncertainty
whether
to
remain
,
whether
to
put
off
a
little
longer
the
painful
moment
of
explanation
.
But
remembering
what
was
in
store
for
her
alone
at
home
,
if
she
did
not
come
to
some
decision
,
remembering
that
gesture
—
terrible
even
in
memory
—
when
she
had
clutched
her
hair
in
both
hands
—
she
said
good
-
bye
and
went
away
.
In
spite
of
Vronsky
’
s
apparently
frivolous
life
in
society
,
he
was
a
man
who
hated
irregularity
.
In
early
youth
in
the
Corps
of
Pages
,
he
had
experienced
the
humiliation
of
a
refusal
,
when
he
had
tried
,
being
in
difficulties
,
to
borrow
money
,
and
since
then
he
had
never
once
put
himself
in
the
same
position
again
.
In
order
to
keep
his
affairs
in
some
sort
of
order
,
he
used
about
five
times
a
year
(
more
or
less
frequently
,
according
to
circumstances
)
to
shut
himself
up
alone
and
put
all
his
affairs
into
definite
shape
.
This
he
used
to
call
his
day
of
reckoning
or
faire
la
lessive
.
On
waking
up
the
day
after
the
races
,
Vronsky
put
on
a
white
linen
coat
,
and
without
shaving
or
taking
his
bath
,
he
distributed
about
the
table
moneys
,
bills
,
and
letters
,
and
set
to
work
.
Petritsky
,
who
knew
he
was
ill
-
tempered
on
such
occasions
,
on
waking
up
and
seeing
his
comrade
at
the
writing
-
table
,
quietly
dressed
and
went
out
without
getting
in
his
way
.