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- Лев Толстой
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- Анна Каренина
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- Стр. 659/828
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“
I
hope
not
,
”
said
Anna
.
“
I
got
a
box
of
books
yesterday
from
Gautier
’
s
.
No
,
I
shan
’
t
be
dull
.
”
“
She
’
s
trying
to
take
that
tone
,
and
so
much
the
better
,
”
he
thought
,
“
or
else
it
would
be
the
same
thing
over
and
over
again
.
”
And
he
set
off
for
the
elections
without
appealing
to
her
for
a
candid
explanation
.
It
was
the
first
time
since
the
beginning
of
their
intimacy
that
he
had
parted
from
her
without
a
full
explanation
.
From
one
point
of
view
this
troubled
him
,
but
on
the
other
side
he
felt
that
it
was
better
so
.
“
At
first
there
will
be
,
as
this
time
,
something
undefined
kept
back
,
and
then
she
will
get
used
to
it
.
In
any
case
I
can
give
up
anything
for
her
,
but
not
my
masculine
independence
,
”
he
thought
.
In
September
Levin
moved
to
Moscow
for
Kitty
’
s
confinement
.
He
had
spent
a
whole
month
in
Moscow
with
nothing
to
do
,
when
Sergey
Ivanovitch
,
who
had
property
in
the
Kashinsky
province
,
and
took
great
interest
in
the
question
of
the
approaching
elections
,
made
ready
to
set
off
to
the
elections
.
He
invited
his
brother
,
who
had
a
vote
in
the
Seleznevsky
district
,
to
come
with
him
.
Levin
had
,
moreover
,
to
transact
in
Kashin
some
extremely
important
business
relating
to
the
wardship
of
land
and
to
the
receiving
of
certain
redemption
money
for
his
sister
,
who
was
abroad
.
Levin
still
hesitated
,
but
Kitty
,
who
saw
that
he
was
bored
in
Moscow
,
and
urged
him
to
go
,
on
her
own
authority
ordered
him
the
proper
nobleman
’
s
uniform
,
costing
seven
pounds
.
And
that
seven
pounds
paid
for
the
uniform
was
the
chief
cause
that
finally
decided
Levin
to
go
.
He
went
to
Kashin
.
.
.
.
Levin
had
been
six
days
in
Kashin
,
visiting
the
assembly
each
day
,
and
busily
engaged
about
his
sister
’
s
business
,
which
still
dragged
on
.
The
district
marshals
of
nobility
were
all
occupied
with
the
elections
,
and
it
was
impossible
to
get
the
simplest
thing
done
that
depended
upon
the
court
of
wardship
.
The
other
matter
,
the
payment
of
the
sums
due
,
was
met
too
by
difficulties
.
After
long
negotiations
over
the
legal
details
,
the
money
was
at
last
ready
to
be
paid
;
but
the
notary
,
a
most
obliging
person
,
could
not
hand
over
the
order
,
because
it
must
have
the
signature
of
the
president
,
and
the
president
,
though
he
had
not
given
over
his
duties
to
a
deputy
,
was
at
the
elections
.
All
these
worrying
negotiations
,
this
endless
going
from
place
to
place
,
and
talking
with
pleasant
and
excellent
people
,
who
quite
saw
the
unpleasantness
of
the
petitioner
’
s
position
,
but
were
powerless
to
assist
him
—
all
these
efforts
that
yielded
no
result
,
led
to
a
feeling
of
misery
in
Levin
akin
to
the
mortifying
helplessness
one
experiences
in
dreams
when
one
tries
to
use
physical
force
.
He
felt
this
frequently
as
he
talked
to
his
most
good
-
natured
solicitor
.
This
solicitor
did
,
it
seemed
,
everything
possible
,
and
strained
every
nerve
to
get
him
out
of
his
difficulties
.
“
I
tell
you
what
you
might
try
,
”
he
said
more
than
once
;
“
go
to
so
-
and
-
so
and
so
-
and
-
so
,
”
and
the
solicitor
drew
up
a
regular
plan
for
getting
round
the
fatal
point
that
hindered
everything
.
But
he
would
add
immediately
,
“
It
’
ll
mean
some
delay
,
anyway
,
but
you
might
try
it
.
”
And
Levin
did
try
,
and
did
go
.
Everyone
was
kind
and
civil
,
but
the
point
evaded
seemed
to
crop
up
again
in
the
end
,
and
again
to
bar
the
way
.
What
was
particularly
trying
,
was
that
Levin
could
not
make
out
with
whom
he
was
struggling
,
to
whose
interest
it
was
that
his
business
should
not
be
done
.
That
no
one
seemed
to
know
;
the
solicitor
certainly
did
not
know
.
If
Levin
could
have
understood
why
,
just
as
he
saw
why
one
can
only
approach
the
booking
office
of
a
railway
station
in
single
file
,
it
would
not
have
been
so
vexatious
and
tiresome
to
him
.
But
with
the
hindrances
that
confronted
him
in
his
business
,
no
one
could
explain
why
they
existed
.
But
Levin
had
changed
a
good
deal
since
his
marriage
;
he
was
patient
,
and
if
he
could
not
see
why
it
was
all
arranged
like
this
,
he
told
himself
that
he
could
not
judge
without
knowing
all
about
it
,
and
that
most
likely
it
must
be
so
,
and
he
tried
not
to
fret
.
In
attending
the
elections
,
too
,
and
taking
part
in
them
,
he
tried
now
not
to
judge
,
not
to
fall
foul
of
them
,
but
to
comprehend
as
fully
as
he
could
the
question
which
was
so
earnestly
and
ardently
absorbing
honest
and
excellent
men
whom
he
respected
.
Since
his
marriage
there
had
been
revealed
to
Levin
so
many
new
and
serious
aspects
of
life
that
had
previously
,
through
his
frivolous
attitude
to
them
,
seemed
of
no
importance
,
that
in
the
question
of
the
elections
too
he
assumed
and
tried
to
find
some
serious
significance
.
Sergey
Ivanovitch
explained
to
him
the
meaning
and
object
of
the
proposed
revolution
at
the
elections
.
The
marshal
of
the
province
in
whose
hands
the
law
had
placed
the
control
of
so
many
important
public
functions
—
the
guardianship
of
wards
(
the
very
department
which
was
giving
Levin
so
much
trouble
just
now
)
,
the
disposal
of
large
sums
subscribed
by
the
nobility
of
the
province
,
the
high
schools
,
female
,
male
,
and
military
,
and
popular
instruction
on
the
new
model
,
and
finally
,
the
district
council
—
the
marshal
of
the
province
,
Snetkov
,
was
a
nobleman
of
the
old
school
,
—
dissipating
an
immense
fortune
,
a
good
-
hearted
man
,
honest
after
his
own
fashion
,
but
utterly
without
any
comprehension
of
the
needs
of
modern
days
.