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Отмена
Sviazhsky
went
up
to
Levin
and
invited
him
to
come
round
to
tea
with
him
.
Levin
was
utterly
at
a
loss
to
comprehend
or
recall
what
it
was
he
had
disliked
in
Sviazhsky
,
what
he
had
failed
to
find
in
him
.
He
was
a
clever
and
wonderfully
good
-
hearted
man
.
Most
delighted
,
he
said
,
and
asked
after
his
wife
and
sister
-
in
-
law
.
And
from
a
queer
association
of
ideas
,
because
in
his
imagination
the
idea
of
Sviazhsky
s
sister
-
in
-
law
was
connected
with
marriage
,
it
occurred
to
him
that
there
was
no
one
to
whom
he
could
more
suitably
speak
of
his
happiness
,
and
he
was
very
glad
to
go
and
see
them
.
Отключить рекламу
Sviazhsky
questioned
him
about
his
improvements
on
his
estate
,
presupposing
,
as
he
always
did
,
that
there
was
no
possibility
of
doing
anything
not
done
already
in
Europe
,
and
now
this
did
not
in
the
least
annoy
Levin
.
On
the
contrary
,
he
felt
that
Sviazhsky
was
right
,
that
the
whole
business
was
of
little
value
,
and
he
saw
the
wonderful
softness
and
consideration
with
which
Sviazhsky
avoided
fully
expressing
his
correct
view
.
The
ladies
of
the
Sviazhsky
household
were
particularly
delightful
.
It
seemed
to
Levin
that
they
knew
all
about
it
already
and
sympathized
with
him
,
saying
nothing
merely
from
delicacy
.
He
stayed
with
them
one
hour
,
two
,
three
,
talking
of
all
sorts
of
subjects
but
the
one
thing
that
filled
his
heart
,
and
did
not
observe
that
he
was
boring
them
dreadfully
,
and
that
it
was
long
past
their
bedtime
.
Sviazhsky
went
with
him
into
the
hall
,
yawning
and
wondering
at
the
strange
humor
his
friend
was
in
.
It
was
past
one
o
clock
.
Levin
went
back
to
his
hotel
,
and
was
dismayed
at
the
thought
that
all
alone
now
with
his
impatience
he
had
ten
hours
still
left
to
get
through
.
The
servant
,
whose
turn
it
was
to
be
up
all
night
,
lighted
his
candles
,
and
would
have
gone
away
,
but
Levin
stopped
him
.
This
servant
,
Yegor
,
whom
Levin
had
noticed
before
,
struck
him
as
a
very
intelligent
,
excellent
,
and
,
above
all
,
good
-
hearted
man
.
Well
,
Yegor
,
it
s
hard
work
not
sleeping
,
isn
t
it
?
One
s
got
to
put
up
with
it
!
It
s
part
of
our
work
,
you
see
.
In
a
gentleman
s
house
it
s
easier
;
but
then
here
one
makes
more
.
Отключить рекламу
It
appeared
that
Yegor
had
a
family
,
three
boys
and
a
daughter
,
a
sempstress
,
whom
he
wanted
to
marry
to
a
cashier
in
a
saddler
s
shop
.
Levin
,
on
hearing
this
,
informed
Yegor
that
,
in
his
opinion
,
in
marriage
the
great
thing
was
love
,
and
that
with
love
one
would
always
be
happy
,
for
happiness
rests
only
on
oneself
.
Yegor
listened
attentively
,
and
obviously
quite
took
in
Levin
s
idea
,
but
by
way
of
assent
to
it
he
enunciated
,
greatly
to
Levin
s
surprise
,
the
observation
that
when
he
had
lived
with
good
masters
he
had
always
been
satisfied
with
his
masters
,
and
now
was
perfectly
satisfied
with
his
employer
,
though
he
was
a
Frenchman
.