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- Анна Каренина
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- Стр. 675/828
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“
I
told
you
not
to
let
anyone
out
!
”
he
cried
to
the
doorkeeper
.
“
I
let
someone
in
,
your
excellency
!
”
“
Mercy
on
us
!
”
and
with
a
heavy
sigh
the
marshal
of
the
province
walked
with
downcast
head
to
the
high
table
in
the
middle
of
the
room
,
his
legs
staggering
in
his
white
trousers
.
Nevyedovsky
had
scored
a
higher
majority
,
as
they
had
planned
,
and
he
was
the
new
marshal
of
the
province
.
Many
people
were
amused
,
many
were
pleased
and
happy
,
many
were
in
ecstasies
,
many
were
disgusted
and
unhappy
.
The
former
marshal
of
the
province
was
in
a
state
of
despair
,
which
he
could
not
conceal
.
When
Nevyedovsky
went
out
of
the
room
,
the
crowd
thronged
round
him
and
followed
him
enthusiastically
,
just
as
they
had
followed
the
governor
who
had
opened
the
meetings
,
and
just
as
they
had
followed
Snetkov
when
he
was
elected
.
The
newly
elected
marshal
and
many
of
the
successful
party
dined
that
day
with
Vronsky
.
Vronsky
had
come
to
the
elections
partly
because
he
was
bored
in
the
country
and
wanted
to
show
Anna
his
right
to
independence
,
and
also
to
repay
Sviazhsky
by
his
support
at
the
election
for
all
the
trouble
he
had
taken
for
Vronsky
at
the
district
council
election
,
but
chiefly
in
order
strictly
to
perform
all
those
duties
of
a
nobleman
and
landowner
which
he
had
taken
upon
himself
.
But
he
had
not
in
the
least
expected
that
the
election
would
so
interest
him
,
so
keenly
excite
him
,
and
that
he
would
be
so
good
at
this
kind
of
thing
.
He
was
quite
a
new
man
in
the
circle
of
the
nobility
of
the
province
,
but
his
success
was
unmistakable
,
and
he
was
not
wrong
in
supposing
that
he
had
already
obtained
a
certain
influence
.
This
influence
was
due
to
his
wealth
and
reputation
,
the
capital
house
in
the
town
lent
him
by
his
old
friend
Shirkov
,
who
had
a
post
in
the
department
of
finances
and
was
director
of
a
flourishing
bank
in
Kashin
;
the
excellent
cook
Vronsky
had
brought
from
the
country
,
and
his
friendship
with
the
governor
,
who
was
a
schoolfellow
of
Vronsky
’
s
—
a
schoolfellow
he
had
patronized
and
protected
indeed
.
But
what
contributed
more
than
all
to
his
success
was
his
direct
,
equable
manner
with
everyone
,
which
very
quickly
made
the
majority
of
the
noblemen
reverse
the
current
opinion
of
his
supposed
haughtiness
.
He
was
himself
conscious
that
,
except
that
whimsical
gentleman
married
to
Kitty
Shtcherbatskaya
,
who
had
à
propos
de
bottes
poured
out
a
stream
of
irrelevant
absurdities
with
such
spiteful
fury
,
every
nobleman
with
whom
he
had
made
acquaintance
had
become
his
adherent
.
He
saw
clearly
,
and
other
people
recognized
it
,
too
,
that
he
had
done
a
great
deal
to
secure
the
success
of
Nevyedovsky
.
And
now
at
his
own
table
,
celebrating
Nevyedovsky
’
s
election
,
he
was
experiencing
an
agreeable
sense
of
triumph
over
the
success
of
his
candidate
.
The
election
itself
had
so
fascinated
him
that
,
if
he
could
succeed
in
getting
married
during
the
next
three
years
,
he
began
to
think
of
standing
himself
—
much
as
after
winning
a
race
ridden
by
a
jockey
,
he
had
longed
to
ride
a
race
himself
.
Today
he
was
celebrating
the
success
of
his
jockey
.
Vronsky
sat
at
the
head
of
the
table
,
on
his
right
hand
sat
the
young
governor
,
a
general
of
high
rank
.
To
all
the
rest
he
was
the
chief
man
in
the
province
,
who
had
solemnly
opened
the
elections
with
his
speech
,
and
aroused
a
feeling
of
respect
and
even
of
awe
in
many
people
,
as
Vronsky
saw
;
to
Vronsky
he
was
little
Katka
Maslov
—
that
had
been
his
nickname
in
the
Pages
’
Corps
—
whom
he
felt
to
be
shy
and
tried
to
mettre
à
son
aise
.
On
the
left
hand
sat
Nevyedovsky
with
his
youthful
,
stubborn
,
and
malignant
face
.
With
him
Vronsky
was
simple
and
deferential
.
Sviazhsky
took
his
failure
very
light
-
heartedly
.
It
was
indeed
no
failure
in
his
eyes
,
as
he
said
himself
,
turning
,
glass
in
hand
,
to
Nevyedovsky
;
they
could
not
have
found
a
better
representative
of
the
new
movement
,
which
the
nobility
ought
to
follow
.
And
so
every
honest
person
,
as
he
said
,
was
on
the
side
of
today
’
s
success
and
was
rejoicing
over
it
.