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
doctor
confirmed
his
suppositions
in
regard
to
Kitty
.
Her
indisposition
was
a
symptom
that
she
was
with
child
.
From
the
moment
when
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
understood
from
his
interviews
with
Betsy
and
with
Stepan
Arkadyevitch
that
all
that
was
expected
of
him
was
to
leave
his
wife
in
peace
,
without
burdening
her
with
his
presence
,
and
that
his
wife
herself
desired
this
,
he
felt
so
distraught
that
he
could
come
to
no
decision
of
himself
;
he
did
not
know
himself
what
he
wanted
now
,
and
putting
himself
in
the
hands
of
those
who
were
so
pleased
to
interest
themselves
in
his
affairs
,
he
met
everything
with
unqualified
assent
.
It
was
only
when
Anna
had
left
his
house
,
and
the
English
governess
sent
to
ask
him
whether
she
should
dine
with
him
or
separately
,
that
for
the
first
time
he
clearly
comprehended
his
position
,
and
was
appalled
by
it
.
Most
difficult
of
all
in
this
position
was
the
fact
that
he
could
not
in
any
way
connect
and
reconcile
his
past
with
what
was
now
.
It
was
not
the
past
when
he
had
lived
happily
with
his
wife
that
troubled
him
.
The
transition
from
that
past
to
a
knowledge
of
his
wife
s
unfaithfulness
he
had
lived
through
miserably
already
;
that
state
was
painful
,
but
he
could
understand
it
.
If
his
wife
had
then
,
on
declaring
to
him
her
unfaithfulness
,
left
him
,
he
would
have
been
wounded
,
unhappy
,
but
he
would
not
have
been
in
the
hopeless
position
incomprehensible
to
himself
in
which
he
felt
himself
now
.
He
could
not
now
reconcile
his
immediate
past
,
his
tenderness
,
his
love
for
his
sick
wife
,
and
for
the
other
man
s
child
with
what
was
now
the
case
,
that
is
with
the
fact
that
,
as
it
were
,
in
return
for
all
this
he
now
found
himself
alone
,
put
to
shame
,
a
laughing
-
stock
,
needed
by
no
one
,
and
despised
by
everyone
.
Отключить рекламу
For
the
first
two
days
after
his
wife
s
departure
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
received
applicants
for
assistance
and
his
chief
secretary
,
drove
to
the
committee
,
and
went
down
to
dinner
in
the
dining
-
room
as
usual
.
Without
giving
himself
a
reason
for
what
he
was
doing
,
he
strained
every
nerve
of
his
being
for
those
two
days
,
simply
to
preserve
an
appearance
of
composure
,
and
even
of
indifference
.
Answering
inquiries
about
the
disposition
of
Anna
Arkadyevna
s
rooms
and
belongings
,
he
had
exercised
immense
self
-
control
to
appear
like
a
man
in
whose
eyes
what
had
occurred
was
not
unforeseen
nor
out
of
the
ordinary
course
of
events
,
and
he
attained
his
aim
:
no
one
could
have
detected
in
him
signs
of
despair
.
But
on
the
second
day
after
her
departure
,
when
Korney
gave
him
a
bill
from
a
fashionable
draper
s
shop
,
which
Anna
had
forgotten
to
pay
,
and
announced
that
the
clerk
from
the
shop
was
waiting
,
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
told
him
to
show
the
clerk
up
.
Excuse
me
,
your
excellency
,
for
venturing
to
trouble
you
.
But
if
you
direct
us
to
apply
to
her
excellency
,
would
you
graciously
oblige
us
with
her
address
?
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
pondered
,
as
it
seemed
to
the
clerk
,
and
all
at
once
,
turning
round
,
he
sat
down
at
the
table
.
Letting
his
head
sink
into
his
hands
,
he
sat
for
a
long
while
in
that
position
,
several
times
attempted
to
speak
and
stopped
short
.
Korney
,
perceiving
his
master
s
emotion
,
asked
the
clerk
to
call
another
time
.
Left
alone
,
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
recognized
that
he
had
not
the
strength
to
keep
up
the
line
of
firmness
and
composure
any
longer
.
He
gave
orders
for
the
carriage
that
was
awaiting
him
to
be
taken
back
,
and
for
no
one
to
be
admitted
,
and
he
did
not
go
down
to
dinner
.
Отключить рекламу
He
felt
that
he
could
not
endure
the
weight
of
universal
contempt
and
exasperation
,
which
he
had
distinctly
seen
in
the
face
of
the
clerk
and
of
Korney
,
and
of
everyone
,
without
exception
,
whom
he
had
met
during
those
two
days
.
He
felt
that
he
could
not
turn
aside
from
himself
the
hatred
of
men
,
because
that
hatred
did
not
come
from
his
being
bad
(
in
that
case
he
could
have
tried
to
be
better
)
,
but
from
his
being
shamefully
and
repulsively
unhappy
.
He
knew
that
for
this
,
for
the
very
fact
that
his
heart
was
torn
with
grief
,
they
would
be
merciless
to
him
.
He
felt
that
men
would
crush
him
as
dogs
strangle
a
torn
dog
yelping
with
pain
.
He
knew
that
his
sole
means
of
security
against
people
was
to
hide
his
wounds
from
them
,
and
instinctively
he
tried
to
do
this
for
two
days
,
but
now
he
felt
incapable
of
keeping
up
the
unequal
struggle
.
His
despair
was
even
intensified
by
the
consciousness
that
he
was
utterly
alone
in
his
sorrow
.
In
all
Petersburg
there
was
not
a
human
being
to
whom
he
could
express
what
he
was
feeling
,
who
would
feel
for
him
,
not
as
a
high
official
,
not
as
a
member
of
society
,
but
simply
as
a
suffering
man
;
indeed
he
had
not
such
a
one
in
the
whole
world
.