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- Лев Толстой
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- Анна Каренина
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- Стр. 334/828
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Darya
Alexandrovna
sent
him
a
letter
,
asking
him
for
a
side
-
saddle
for
Kitty
’
s
use
.
“
I
’
m
told
you
have
a
side
-
saddle
,
”
she
wrote
to
him
;
“
I
hope
you
will
bring
it
over
yourself
.
”
This
was
more
than
he
could
stand
.
How
could
a
woman
of
any
intelligence
,
of
any
delicacy
,
put
her
sister
in
such
a
humiliating
position
!
He
wrote
ten
notes
,
and
tore
them
all
up
,
and
sent
the
saddle
without
any
reply
.
To
write
that
he
would
go
was
impossible
,
because
he
could
not
go
;
to
write
that
he
could
not
come
because
something
prevented
him
,
or
that
he
would
be
away
,
that
was
still
worse
He
sent
the
saddle
without
an
answer
,
and
with
a
sense
of
having
done
something
shameful
;
he
handed
over
all
the
now
revolting
business
of
the
estate
to
the
bailiff
,
and
set
off
next
day
to
a
remote
district
to
see
his
friend
Sviazhsky
,
who
had
splendid
marshes
for
grouse
in
his
neighborhood
,
and
had
lately
written
to
ask
him
to
keep
a
long
-
standing
promise
to
stay
with
him
.
The
grouse
-
marsh
,
in
the
Surovsky
district
,
had
long
tempted
Levin
,
but
he
had
continually
put
off
this
visit
on
account
of
his
work
on
the
estate
.
Now
he
was
glad
to
get
away
from
the
neighborhood
of
the
Shtcherbatskys
,
and
still
more
from
his
farm
work
,
especially
on
a
shooting
expedition
,
which
always
in
trouble
served
as
the
best
consolation
.
In
the
Surovsky
district
there
was
no
railway
nor
service
of
post
horses
,
and
Levin
drove
there
with
his
own
horses
in
his
big
,
old
-
fashioned
carriage
.
He
stopped
halfway
at
a
well
-
to
-
do
peasant
’
s
to
feed
his
horses
.
A
bald
,
well
-
preserved
old
man
,
with
a
broad
,
red
beard
,
gray
on
his
cheeks
,
opened
the
gate
,
squeezing
against
the
gatepost
to
let
the
three
horses
pass
.
Directing
the
coachman
to
a
place
under
the
shed
in
the
big
,
clean
,
tidy
yard
,
with
charred
,
old
-
fashioned
ploughs
in
it
,
the
old
man
asked
Levin
to
come
into
the
parlor
.
A
cleanly
dressed
young
woman
,
with
clogs
on
her
bare
feet
,
was
scrubbing
the
floor
in
the
new
outer
room
.
She
was
frightened
of
the
dog
,
that
ran
in
after
Levin
,
and
uttered
a
shriek
,
but
began
laughing
at
her
own
fright
at
once
when
she
was
told
the
dog
would
not
hurt
her
.
Pointing
Levin
with
her
bare
arm
to
the
door
into
the
parlor
,
she
bent
down
again
,
hiding
her
handsome
face
,
and
went
on
scrubbing
.
“
Would
you
like
the
samovar
?
”
she
asked
.
“
Yes
,
please
.
”
The
parlor
was
a
big
room
,
with
a
Dutch
stove
,
and
a
screen
dividing
it
into
two
.
Under
the
holy
pictures
stood
a
table
painted
in
patterns
,
a
bench
,
and
two
chairs
.
Near
the
entrance
was
a
dresser
full
of
crockery
.
The
shutters
were
closed
,
there
were
few
flies
,
and
it
was
so
clean
that
Levin
was
anxious
that
Laska
,
who
had
been
running
along
the
road
and
bathing
in
puddles
,
should
not
muddy
the
floor
,
and
ordered
her
to
a
place
in
the
corner
by
the
door
.
After
looking
round
the
parlor
,
Levin
went
out
in
the
back
yard
.
The
good
-
looking
young
woman
in
clogs
,
swinging
the
empty
pails
on
the
yoke
,
ran
on
before
him
to
the
well
for
water
.
“
Look
sharp
,
my
girl
!
”
the
old
man
shouted
after
her
,
good
-
humoredly
,
and
he
went
up
to
Levin
.
“
Well
,
sir
,
are
you
going
to
Nikolay
Ivanovitch
Sviazhsky
?
His
honor
comes
to
us
too
,
”
he
began
,
chatting
,
leaning
his
elbows
on
the
railing
of
the
steps
.
In
the
middle
of
the
old
man
’
s
account
of
his
acquaintance
with
Sviazhsky
,
the
gates
creaked
again
,
and
laborers
came
into
the
yard
from
the
fields
,
with
wooden
ploughs
and
harrows
.
The
horses
harnessed
to
the
ploughs
and
harrows
were
sleek
and
fat
.
The
laborers
were
obviously
of
the
household
:
two
were
young
men
in
cotton
shirts
and
caps
,
the
two
others
were
hired
laborers
in
homespun
shirts
,
one
an
old
man
,
the
other
a
young
fellow
.
Moving
off
from
the
steps
,
the
old
man
went
up
to
the
horses
and
began
unharnessing
them
.