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Their
conversation
was
interrupted
by
Mademoiselle
Linon
,
who
with
an
affected
but
tender
smile
came
to
congratulate
her
favorite
pupil
.
Before
she
had
gone
,
the
servants
came
in
with
their
congratulations
.
Then
relations
arrived
,
and
there
began
that
state
of
blissful
absurdity
from
which
Levin
did
not
emerge
till
the
day
after
his
wedding
.
Levin
was
in
a
continual
state
of
awkwardness
and
discomfort
,
but
the
intensity
of
his
happiness
went
on
all
the
while
increasing
.
He
felt
continually
that
a
great
deal
was
being
expected
of
him
what
,
he
did
not
know
;
and
he
did
everything
he
was
told
,
and
it
all
gave
him
happiness
.
He
had
thought
his
engagement
would
have
nothing
about
it
like
others
,
that
the
ordinary
conditions
of
engaged
couples
would
spoil
his
special
happiness
;
but
it
ended
in
his
doing
exactly
as
other
people
did
,
and
his
happiness
being
only
increased
thereby
and
becoming
more
and
more
special
,
more
and
more
unlike
anything
that
had
ever
happened
.
Now
we
shall
have
sweetmeats
to
eat
,
said
Mademoiselle
Linon
and
Levin
drove
off
to
buy
sweetmeats
.
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Well
,
I
m
very
glad
,
said
Sviazhsky
.
I
advise
you
to
get
the
bouquets
from
Fomin
s
.
Oh
,
are
they
wanted
?
And
he
drove
to
Fomin
s
.
His
brother
offered
to
lend
him
money
,
as
he
would
have
so
many
expenses
,
presents
to
give
.
.
.
.
Oh
,
are
presents
wanted
?
And
he
galloped
to
Foulde
s
.
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And
at
the
confectioner
s
,
and
at
Fomin
s
,
and
at
Foulde
s
he
saw
that
he
was
expected
;
that
they
were
pleased
to
see
him
,
and
prided
themselves
on
his
happiness
,
just
as
everyone
whom
he
had
to
do
with
during
those
days
.
What
was
extraordinary
was
that
everyone
not
only
liked
him
,
but
even
people
previously
unsympathetic
,
cold
,
and
callous
,
were
enthusiastic
over
him
,
gave
way
to
him
in
everything
,
treated
his
feeling
with
tenderness
and
delicacy
,
and
shared
his
conviction
that
he
was
the
happiest
man
in
the
world
because
his
betrothed
was
beyond
perfection
.
Kitty
too
felt
the
same
thing
.
When
Countess
Nordston
ventured
to
hint
that
she
had
hoped
for
something
better
,
Kitty
was
so
angry
and
proved
so
conclusively
that
nothing
in
the
world
could
be
better
than
Levin
,
that
Countess
Nordston
had
to
admit
it
,
and
in
Kitty
s
presence
never
met
Levin
without
a
smile
of
ecstatic
admiration
.
The
confession
he
had
promised
was
the
one
painful
incident
of
this
time
.
He
consulted
the
old
prince
,
and
with
his
sanction
gave
Kitty
his
diary
,
in
which
there
was
written
the
confession
that
tortured
him
.
He
had
written
this
diary
at
the
time
with
a
view
to
his
future
wife
.
Two
things
caused
him
anguish
:
his
lack
of
purity
and
his
lack
of
faith
.
His
confession
of
unbelief
passed
unnoticed
.
She
was
religious
,
had
never
doubted
the
truths
of
religion
,
but
his
external
unbelief
did
not
affect
her
in
the
least
.
Through
love
she
knew
all
his
soul
,
and
in
his
soul
she
saw
what
she
wanted
,
and
that
such
a
state
of
soul
should
be
called
unbelieving
was
to
her
a
matter
of
no
account
.
The
other
confession
set
her
weeping
bitterly
.