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- Лев Толстой
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- Анна Каренина
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- Стр. 609/828
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“
What
will
you
take
,
tea
or
coffee
?
”
“
Neither
.
I
’
ll
wait
till
lunch
.
I
’
m
really
ashamed
.
I
suppose
the
ladies
are
down
?
A
walk
now
would
be
capital
.
You
show
me
your
horses
.
”
After
walking
about
the
garden
,
visiting
the
stable
,
and
even
doing
some
gymnastic
exercises
together
on
the
parallel
bars
,
Levin
returned
to
the
house
with
his
guest
,
and
went
with
him
into
the
drawing
-
room
.
“
We
had
splendid
shooting
,
and
so
many
delightful
experiences
!
”
said
Veslovsky
,
going
up
to
Kitty
,
who
was
sitting
at
the
samovar
.
“
What
a
pity
ladies
are
cut
off
from
these
delights
!
”
“
Well
,
I
suppose
he
must
say
something
to
the
lady
of
the
house
,
”
Levin
said
to
himself
.
Again
he
fancied
something
in
the
smile
,
in
the
all
-
conquering
air
with
which
their
guest
addressed
Kitty
.
.
.
.
The
princess
,
sitting
on
the
other
side
of
the
table
with
Marya
Vlasyevna
and
Stepan
Arkadyevitch
,
called
Levin
to
her
side
,
and
began
to
talk
to
him
about
moving
to
Moscow
for
Kitty
’
s
confinement
,
and
getting
ready
rooms
for
them
.
Just
as
Levin
had
disliked
all
the
trivial
preparations
for
his
wedding
,
as
derogatory
to
the
grandeur
of
the
event
,
now
he
felt
still
more
offensive
the
preparations
for
the
approaching
birth
,
the
date
of
which
they
reckoned
,
it
seemed
,
on
their
fingers
.
He
tried
to
turn
a
deaf
ear
to
these
discussions
of
the
best
patterns
of
long
clothes
for
the
coming
baby
;
tried
to
turn
away
and
avoid
seeing
the
mysterious
,
endless
strips
of
knitting
,
the
triangles
of
linen
,
and
so
on
,
to
which
Dolly
attached
special
importance
.
The
birth
of
a
son
(
he
was
certain
it
would
be
a
son
)
which
was
promised
him
,
but
which
he
still
could
not
believe
in
—
so
marvelous
it
seemed
—
presented
itself
to
his
mind
,
on
one
hand
,
as
a
happiness
so
immense
,
and
therefore
so
incredible
;
on
the
other
,
as
an
event
so
mysterious
,
that
this
assumption
of
a
definite
knowledge
of
what
would
be
,
and
consequent
preparation
for
it
,
as
for
something
ordinary
that
did
happen
to
people
,
jarred
on
him
as
confusing
and
humiliating
.
But
the
princess
did
not
understand
his
feelings
,
and
put
down
his
reluctance
to
think
and
talk
about
it
to
carelessness
and
indifference
,
and
so
she
gave
him
no
peace
.
She
had
commissioned
Stepan
Arkadyevitch
to
look
at
a
flat
,
and
now
she
called
Levin
up
.
“
I
know
nothing
about
it
,
princess
.
Do
as
you
think
fit
,
”
he
said
.
“
You
must
decide
when
you
will
move
.
”