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- Лев Толстой
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- Анна Каренина
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- Стр. 451/828
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“
You
’
re
a
pretty
fellow
!
”
said
Stepan
Arkadyevitch
laughing
,
“
and
you
call
me
a
Nihilist
!
But
this
won
’
t
do
,
you
know
.
You
must
take
the
sacrament
.
”
“
When
?
There
are
four
days
left
now
.
”
Stepan
Arkadyevitch
arranged
this
also
,
and
Levin
had
to
go
to
confession
.
To
Levin
,
as
to
any
unbeliever
who
respects
the
beliefs
of
others
,
it
was
exceedingly
disagreeable
to
be
present
at
and
take
part
in
church
ceremonies
.
At
this
moment
,
in
his
present
softened
state
of
feeling
,
sensitive
to
everything
,
this
inevitable
act
of
hypocrisy
was
not
merely
painful
to
Levin
,
it
seemed
to
him
utterly
impossible
.
Now
,
in
the
heyday
of
his
highest
glory
,
his
fullest
flower
,
he
would
have
to
be
a
liar
or
a
scoffer
.
He
felt
incapable
of
being
either
.
But
though
he
repeatedly
plied
Stepan
Arkadyevitch
with
questions
as
to
the
possibility
of
obtaining
a
certificate
without
actually
communicating
,
Stepan
Arkadyevitch
maintained
that
it
was
out
of
the
question
.
“
Besides
,
what
is
it
to
you
—
two
days
?
And
he
’
s
an
awfully
nice
clever
old
fellow
.
He
’
ll
pull
the
tooth
out
for
you
so
gently
,
you
won
’
t
notice
it
.
”
Standing
at
the
first
litany
,
Levin
attempted
to
revive
in
himself
his
youthful
recollections
of
the
intense
religious
emotion
he
had
passed
through
between
the
ages
of
sixteen
and
seventeen
.
But
he
was
at
once
convinced
that
it
was
utterly
impossible
to
him
.
He
attempted
to
look
at
it
all
as
an
empty
custom
,
having
no
sort
of
meaning
,
like
the
custom
of
paying
calls
.
But
he
felt
that
he
could
not
do
that
either
.
Levin
found
himself
,
like
the
majority
of
his
contemporaries
,
in
the
vaguest
position
in
regard
to
religion
.
Believe
he
could
not
,
and
at
the
same
time
he
had
no
firm
conviction
that
it
was
all
wrong
.
And
consequently
,
not
being
able
to
believe
in
the
significance
of
what
he
was
doing
nor
to
regard
it
with
indifference
as
an
empty
formality
,
during
the
whole
period
of
preparing
for
the
sacrament
he
was
conscious
of
a
feeling
of
discomfort
and
shame
at
doing
what
he
did
not
himself
understand
,
and
what
,
as
an
inner
voice
told
him
,
was
therefore
false
and
wrong
.
During
the
service
he
would
first
listen
to
the
prayers
,
trying
to
attach
some
meaning
to
them
not
discordant
with
his
own
views
;
then
feeling
that
he
could
not
understand
and
must
condemn
them
,
he
tried
not
to
listen
to
them
,
but
to
attend
to
the
thoughts
,
observations
,
and
memories
which
floated
through
his
brain
with
extreme
vividness
during
this
idle
time
of
standing
in
church
.
He
had
stood
through
the
litany
,
the
evening
service
and
the
midnight
service
,
and
the
next
day
he
got
up
earlier
than
usual
,
and
without
having
tea
went
at
eight
o
’
clock
in
the
morning
to
the
church
for
the
morning
service
and
the
confession
.
There
was
no
one
in
the
church
but
a
beggar
soldier
,
two
old
women
,
and
the
church
officials
.
A
young
deacon
,
whose
long
back
showed
in
two
distinct
halves
through
his
thin
undercassock
,
met
him
,
and
at
once
going
to
a
little
table
at
the
wall
read
the
exhortation
.