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But
the
place
where
Levin
had
been
stung
was
evidently
still
sore
,
for
he
turned
pale
again
,
when
Stepan
Arkadyevitch
would
have
enlarged
on
the
reason
,
and
he
himself
cut
him
short
.
Please
don
t
go
into
it
!
I
can
t
help
it
.
I
feel
ashamed
of
how
I
m
treating
you
and
him
.
But
it
won
t
be
,
I
imagine
,
a
great
grief
to
him
to
go
,
and
his
presence
was
distasteful
to
me
and
to
my
wife
.
But
it
s
insulting
to
him
!
Et
puis
c
est
ridicule
.
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And
to
me
it
s
both
insulting
and
distressing
!
And
I
m
not
at
fault
in
any
way
,
and
there
s
no
need
for
me
to
suffer
.
Well
,
this
I
didn
t
expect
of
you
!
On
peut
être
jaloux
,
mais
à
ce
point
,
c
est
du
dernier
ridicule
!
Levin
turned
quickly
,
and
walked
away
from
him
into
the
depths
of
the
avenue
,
and
he
went
on
walking
up
and
down
alone
.
Soon
he
heard
the
rumble
of
the
trap
,
and
saw
from
behind
the
trees
how
Vassenka
,
sitting
in
the
hay
(
unluckily
there
was
no
seat
in
the
trap
)
in
his
Scotch
cap
,
was
driven
along
the
avenue
,
jolting
up
and
down
over
the
ruts
.
What
s
this
?
Levin
thought
,
when
a
footman
ran
out
of
the
house
and
stopped
the
trap
.
It
was
the
mechanician
,
whom
Levin
had
totally
forgotten
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The
mechanician
,
bowing
low
,
said
something
to
Veslovsky
,
then
clambered
into
the
trap
,
and
they
drove
off
together
.
Stepan
Arkadyevitch
and
the
princess
were
much
upset
by
Levin
s
action
.
And
he
himself
felt
not
only
in
the
highest
degree
ridicule
,
but
also
utterly
guilty
and
disgraced
.
But
remembering
what
sufferings
he
and
his
wife
had
been
through
,
when
he
asked
himself
how
he
should
act
another
time
,
he
answered
that
he
should
do
just
the
same
again
.
In
spite
of
all
this
,
towards
the
end
of
that
day
,
everyone
except
the
princess
,
who
could
not
pardon
Levin
s
action
,
became
extraordinarily
lively
and
good
-
humored
,
like
children
after
a
punishment
or
grown
-
up
people
after
a
dreary
,
ceremonious
reception
,
so
that
by
the
evening
Vassenka
s
dismissal
was
spoken
of
,
in
the
absence
of
the
princess
,
as
though
it
were
some
remote
event
.
And
Dolly
,
who
had
inherited
her
father
s
gift
of
humorous
storytelling
,
made
Varenka
helpless
with
laughter
as
she
related
for
the
third
and
fourth
time
,
always
with
fresh
humorous
additions
,
how
she
had
only
just
put
on
her
new
shoes
for
the
benefit
of
the
visitor
,
and
on
going
into
the
drawing
-
room
,
heard
suddenly
the
rumble
of
the
trap
.
And
who
should
be
in
the
trap
but
Vassenka
himself
,
with
his
Scotch
cap
,
and
his
songs
and
his
gaiters
,
and
all
,
sitting
in
the
hay
.