Понятно
Понятно
Для того чтобы воспользоваться закладками, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
Отмена
The
wreath
wants
setting
straight
,
she
answered
,
not
hearing
him
.
What
a
pity
she
s
lost
her
looks
so
,
Countess
Nordston
said
to
Madame
Lvova
.
Still
he
s
not
worth
her
little
finger
,
is
he
?
Oh
,
I
like
him
so
not
because
he
s
my
future
beau
-
frère
,
answered
Madame
Lvova
.
And
how
well
he
s
behaving
!
It
s
so
difficult
,
too
,
to
look
well
in
such
a
position
,
not
to
be
ridiculous
.
And
he
s
not
ridiculous
,
and
not
affected
;
one
can
see
he
s
moved
.
Отключить рекламу
You
expected
it
,
I
suppose
?
Almost
.
She
always
cared
for
him
.
Well
,
we
shall
see
which
of
them
will
step
on
the
rug
first
.
I
warned
Kitty
.
It
will
make
no
difference
,
said
Madame
Lvova
;
we
re
all
obedient
wives
;
it
s
in
our
family
.
Отключить рекламу
Oh
,
I
stepped
on
the
rug
before
Vassily
on
purpose
.
And
you
,
Dolly
?
Dolly
stood
beside
them
;
she
heard
them
,
but
she
did
not
answer
.
She
was
deeply
moved
.
The
tears
stood
in
her
eyes
,
and
she
could
not
have
spoken
without
crying
.
She
was
rejoicing
over
Kitty
and
Levin
;
going
back
in
thought
to
her
own
wedding
,
she
glanced
at
the
radiant
figure
of
Stepan
Arkadyevitch
,
forgot
all
the
present
,
and
remembered
only
her
own
innocent
love
.
She
recalled
not
herself
only
,
but
all
her
women
-
friends
and
acquaintances
.
She
thought
of
them
on
the
one
day
of
their
triumph
,
when
they
had
stood
like
Kitty
under
the
wedding
crown
,
with
love
and
hope
and
dread
in
their
hearts
,
renouncing
the
past
,
and
stepping
forward
into
the
mysterious
future
.
Among
the
brides
that
came
back
to
her
memory
,
she
thought
too
of
her
darling
Anna
,
of
whose
proposed
divorce
she
had
just
been
hearing
.
And
she
had
stood
just
as
innocent
in
orange
flowers
and
bridal
veil
.
And
now
?
It
s
terribly
strange
,
she
said
to
herself
.
It
was
not
merely
the
sisters
,
the
women
-
friends
and
female
relations
of
the
bride
who
were
following
every
detail
of
the
ceremony
.
Women
who
were
quite
strangers
,
mere
spectators
,
were
watching
it
excitedly
,
holding
their
breath
,
in
fear
of
losing
a
single
movement
or
expression
of
the
bride
and
bridegroom
,
and
angrily
not
answering
,
often
not
hearing
,
the
remarks
of
the
callous
men
,
who
kept
making
joking
or
irrelevant
observations
.