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- Лев Толстой
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- Анна Каренина
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“
Did
you
have
a
nice
walk
?
”
said
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
,
sitting
down
in
his
easy
chair
,
pulling
the
volume
of
the
Old
Testament
to
him
and
opening
it
.
Although
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
had
more
than
once
told
Seryozha
that
every
Christian
ought
to
know
Scripture
history
thoroughly
,
he
often
referred
to
the
Bible
himself
during
the
lesson
,
and
Seryozha
observed
this
.
“
Yes
,
it
was
very
nice
indeed
,
papa
,
”
said
Seryozha
,
sitting
sideways
on
his
chair
and
rocking
it
,
which
was
forbidden
.
“
I
saw
Nadinka
”
(
Nadinka
was
a
niece
of
Lidia
Ivanovna
’
s
who
was
being
brought
up
in
her
house
)
.
“
She
told
me
you
’
d
been
given
a
new
star
.
Are
you
glad
,
papa
?
”
“
First
of
all
,
don
’
t
rock
your
chair
,
please
,
”
said
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
.
“
And
secondly
,
it
’
s
not
the
reward
that
’
s
precious
,
but
the
work
itself
.
And
I
could
have
wished
you
understood
that
.
If
you
now
are
going
to
work
,
to
study
in
order
to
win
a
reward
,
then
the
work
will
seem
hard
to
you
;
but
when
you
work
”
(
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
,
as
he
spoke
,
thought
of
how
he
had
been
sustained
by
a
sense
of
duty
through
the
wearisome
labor
of
the
morning
,
consisting
of
signing
one
hundred
and
eighty
papers
)
,
“
loving
your
work
,
you
will
find
your
reward
in
it
.
”
Seryozha
’
s
eyes
,
that
had
been
shining
with
gaiety
and
tenderness
,
grew
dull
and
dropped
before
his
father
’
s
gaze
.
This
was
the
same
long
-
familiar
tone
his
father
always
took
with
him
,
and
Seryozha
had
learned
by
now
to
fall
in
with
it
.
His
father
always
talked
to
him
—
so
Seryozha
felt
—
as
though
he
were
addressing
some
boy
of
his
own
imagination
,
one
of
those
boys
that
exist
in
books
,
utterly
unlike
himself
.
And
Seryozha
always
tried
with
his
father
to
act
being
the
story
-
book
boy
.
“
You
understand
that
,
I
hope
?
”
said
his
father
.
“
Yes
,
papa
,
”
answered
Seryozha
,
acting
the
part
of
the
imaginary
boy
.
The
lesson
consisted
of
learning
by
heart
several
verses
out
of
the
Gospel
and
the
repetition
of
the
beginning
of
the
Old
Testament
.
The
verses
from
the
Gospel
Seryozha
knew
fairly
well
,
but
at
the
moment
when
he
was
saying
them
he
became
so
absorbed
in
watching
the
sharply
protruding
,
bony
knobbiness
of
his
father
’
s
forehead
,
that
he
lost
the
thread
,
and
he
transposed
the
end
of
one
verse
and
the
beginning
of
another
.
So
it
was
evident
to
Alexey
Alexandrovitch
that
he
did
not
understand
what
he
was
saying
,
and
that
irritated
him
.
He
frowned
,
and
began
explaining
what
Seryozha
had
heard
many
times
before
and
never
could
remember
,
because
he
understood
it
too
well
,
just
as
that
“
suddenly
”
is
an
adverb
of
manner
of
action
.
Seryozha
looked
with
scared
eyes
at
his
father
,
and
could
think
of
nothing
but
whether
his
father
would
make
him
repeat
what
he
had
said
,
as
he
sometimes
did
.
And
this
thought
so
alarmed
Seryozha
that
he
now
understood
nothing
.
But
his
father
did
not
make
him
repeat
it
,
and
passed
on
to
the
lesson
out
of
the
Old
Testament
.
Seryozha
recounted
the
events
themselves
well
enough
,
but
when
he
had
to
answer
questions
as
to
what
certain
events
prefigured
,
he
knew
nothing
,
though
he
had
already
been
punished
over
this
lesson
.
The
passage
at
which
he
was
utterly
unable
to
say
anything
,
and
began
fidgeting
and
cutting
the
table
and
swinging
his
chair
,
was
where
he
had
to
repeat
the
patriarchs
before
the
Flood
.
He
did
not
know
one
of
them
,
except
Enoch
,
who
had
been
taken
up
alive
to
heaven
.
Last
time
he
had
remembered
their
names
,
but
now
he
had
forgotten
them
utterly
,
chiefly
because
Enoch
was
the
personage
he
liked
best
in
the
whole
of
the
Old
Testament
,
and
Enoch
’
s
translation
to
heaven
was
connected
in
his
mind
with
a
whole
long
train
of
thought
,
in
which
he
became
absorbed
now
while
he
gazed
with
fascinated
eyes
at
his
father
’
s
watch
-
chain
and
a
half
-
unbuttoned
button
on
his
waistcoat
.
In
death
,
of
which
they
talked
to
him
so
often
,
Seryozha
disbelieved
entirely
.
He
did
not
believe
that
those
he
loved
could
die
,
above
all
that
he
himself
would
die
.
That
was
to
him
something
utterly
inconceivable
and
impossible
.