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It
is
true
that
the
erroneousness
and
shallowness
of
this
conception
of
his
faith
was
dimly
perceptible
to
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
,
and
he
knew
that
when
,
without
the
slightest
idea
that
his
forgiveness
was
the
action
of
a
higher
power
,
he
had
surrendered
directly
to
the
feeling
of
forgiveness
,
he
had
felt
more
happiness
than
now
when
he
was
thinking
every
instant
that
Christ
was
in
his
heart
,
and
that
in
signing
official
papers
he
was
doing
His
will
.
But
for
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
it
was
a
necessity
to
think
in
that
way
;
it
was
such
a
necessity
for
him
in
his
humiliation
to
have
some
elevated
standpoint
,
however
imaginary
,
from
which
,
looked
down
upon
by
all
,
he
could
look
down
on
others
,
that
he
clung
,
as
to
his
one
salvation
,
to
his
delusion
of
salvation
.
The
Countess
Lidia
Ivanovna
had
,
as
a
very
young
and
sentimental
girl
,
been
married
to
a
wealthy
man
of
high
rank
,
an
extremely
good
-
natured
,
jovial
,
and
extremely
dissipated
rake
.
Two
months
after
marriage
her
husband
abandoned
her
,
and
her
impassioned
protestations
of
affection
he
met
with
a
sarcasm
and
even
hostility
that
people
knowing
the
count
s
good
heart
,
and
seeing
no
defects
in
the
sentimental
Lidia
,
were
at
a
loss
to
explain
.
Though
they
were
divorced
and
lived
apart
,
yet
whenever
the
husband
met
the
wife
,
he
invariably
behaved
to
her
with
the
same
malignant
irony
,
the
cause
of
which
was
incomprehensible
.
Countess
Lidia
Ivanovna
had
long
given
up
being
in
love
with
her
husband
,
but
from
that
time
she
had
never
given
up
being
in
love
with
someone
.
She
was
in
love
with
several
people
at
once
,
both
men
and
women
;
she
had
been
in
love
with
almost
everyone
who
had
been
particularly
distinguished
in
any
way
.
She
was
in
love
with
all
the
new
princes
and
princesses
who
married
into
the
imperial
family
;
she
had
been
in
love
with
a
high
dignitary
of
the
Church
,
a
vicar
,
and
a
parish
priest
;
she
had
been
in
love
with
a
journalist
,
three
Slavophiles
,
with
Komissarov
,
with
a
minister
,
a
doctor
,
an
English
missionary
and
Karenin
.
All
these
passions
constantly
waning
or
growing
more
ardent
,
did
not
prevent
her
from
keeping
up
the
most
extended
and
complicated
relations
with
the
court
and
fashionable
society
.
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But
from
the
time
that
after
Karenin
s
trouble
she
took
him
under
her
special
protection
,
from
the
time
that
she
set
to
work
in
Karenin
s
household
looking
after
his
welfare
,
she
felt
that
all
her
other
attachments
were
not
the
real
thing
,
and
that
she
was
now
genuinely
in
love
,
and
with
no
one
but
Karenin
.
The
feeling
she
now
experienced
for
him
seemed
to
her
stronger
than
any
of
her
former
feelings
.
Analyzing
her
feeling
,
and
comparing
it
with
former
passions
,
she
distinctly
perceived
that
she
would
not
have
been
in
love
with
Komissarov
if
he
had
not
saved
the
life
of
the
Tsar
,
that
she
would
not
have
been
in
love
with
Ristitch
-
Kudzhitsky
if
there
had
been
no
Slavonic
question
,
but
that
she
loved
Karenin
for
himself
,
for
his
lofty
,
uncomprehended
soul
,
for
the
sweet
to
her
high
notes
of
his
voice
,
for
his
drawling
intonation
,
his
weary
eyes
,
his
character
,
and
his
soft
white
hands
with
their
swollen
veins
.
She
was
not
simply
overjoyed
at
meeting
him
,
but
she
sought
in
his
face
signs
of
the
impression
she
was
making
on
him
.
She
tried
to
please
him
,
not
by
her
words
only
,
but
in
her
whole
person
.
For
his
sake
it
was
that
she
now
lavished
more
care
on
her
dress
than
before
.
She
caught
herself
in
reveries
on
what
might
have
been
,
if
she
had
not
been
married
and
he
had
been
free
.
She
blushed
with
emotion
when
he
came
into
the
room
,
she
could
not
repress
a
smile
of
rapture
when
he
said
anything
amiable
to
her
.
For
several
days
now
Countess
Lidia
Ivanovna
had
been
in
a
state
of
intense
excitement
.
She
had
learned
that
Anna
and
Vronsky
were
in
Petersburg
.
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
must
be
saved
from
seeing
her
,
he
must
be
saved
even
from
the
torturing
knowledge
that
that
awful
woman
was
in
the
same
town
with
him
,
and
that
he
might
meet
her
any
minute
.
Lidia
Ivanovna
made
inquiries
through
her
friends
as
to
what
those
infamous
people
,
as
she
called
Anna
and
Vronsky
,
intended
doing
,
and
she
endeavored
so
to
guide
every
movement
of
her
friend
during
those
days
that
he
could
not
come
across
them
.
The
young
adjutant
,
an
acquaintance
of
Vronsky
,
through
whom
she
obtained
her
information
,
and
who
hoped
through
Countess
Lidia
Ivanovna
to
obtain
a
concession
,
told
her
that
they
had
finished
their
business
and
were
going
away
next
day
.
Lidia
Ivanovna
had
already
begun
to
calm
down
,
when
the
next
morning
a
note
was
brought
her
,
the
handwriting
of
which
she
recognized
with
horror
.
It
was
the
handwriting
of
Anna
Karenina
.
The
envelope
was
of
paper
as
thick
as
bark
;
on
the
oblong
yellow
paper
there
was
a
huge
monogram
,
and
the
letter
smelt
of
agreeable
scent
.
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Who
brought
it
?
A
commissionaire
from
the
hotel
.
It
was
some
time
before
Countess
Lidia
Ivanovna
could
sit
down
to
read
the
letter
.
Her
excitement
brought
on
an
attack
of
asthma
,
to
which
she
was
subject
.
When
she
had
recovered
her
composure
,
she
read
the
following
letter
in
French
: