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And
so
,
simply
and
easily
,
thanks
to
the
facilities
of
town
life
,
Levin
settled
a
question
which
,
in
the
country
,
would
have
called
for
so
much
personal
trouble
and
exertion
,
and
going
out
onto
the
steps
,
he
called
a
sledge
,
sat
down
,
and
drove
to
Nikitsky
.
On
the
way
he
thought
no
more
of
money
,
but
mused
on
the
introduction
that
awaited
him
to
the
Petersburg
savant
,
a
writer
on
sociology
,
and
what
he
would
say
to
him
about
his
book
.
Only
during
the
first
days
of
his
stay
in
Moscow
Levin
had
been
struck
by
the
expenditure
,
strange
to
one
living
in
the
country
,
unproductive
but
inevitable
,
that
was
expected
of
him
on
every
side
.
But
by
now
he
had
grown
used
to
it
.
That
had
happened
to
him
in
this
matter
which
is
said
to
happen
to
drunkards
the
first
glass
sticks
in
the
throat
,
the
second
flies
down
like
a
hawk
,
but
after
the
third
they
re
like
tiny
little
birds
.
When
Levin
had
changed
his
first
hundred
-
rouble
note
to
pay
for
liveries
for
his
footmen
and
hall
-
porter
he
could
not
help
reflecting
that
these
liveries
were
of
no
use
to
anyone
but
they
were
indubitably
necessary
,
to
judge
by
the
amazement
of
the
princess
and
Kitty
when
he
suggested
that
they
might
do
without
liveries
,
that
these
liveries
would
cost
the
wages
of
two
laborers
for
the
summer
,
that
is
,
would
pay
for
about
three
hundred
working
days
from
Easter
to
Ash
Wednesday
,
and
each
a
day
of
hard
work
from
early
morning
to
late
evening
and
that
hundred
-
rouble
note
did
stick
in
his
throat
.
But
the
next
note
,
changed
to
pay
for
providing
a
dinner
for
their
relations
,
that
cost
twenty
-
eight
roubles
,
though
it
did
excite
in
Levin
the
reflection
that
twenty
-
eight
roubles
meant
nine
measures
of
oats
,
which
men
would
with
groans
and
sweat
have
reaped
and
bound
and
thrashed
and
winnowed
and
sifted
and
sown
,
this
next
one
he
parted
with
more
easily
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And
now
the
notes
he
changed
no
longer
aroused
such
reflections
,
and
they
flew
off
like
little
birds
.
Whether
the
labor
devoted
to
obtaining
the
money
corresponded
to
the
pleasure
given
by
what
was
bought
with
it
,
was
a
consideration
he
had
long
ago
dismissed
.
His
business
calculation
that
there
was
a
certain
price
below
which
he
could
not
sell
certain
grain
was
forgotten
too
.
The
rye
,
for
the
price
of
which
he
had
so
long
held
out
,
had
been
sold
for
fifty
kopecks
a
measure
cheaper
than
it
had
been
fetching
a
month
ago
.
Even
the
consideration
that
with
such
an
expenditure
he
could
not
go
on
living
for
a
year
without
debt
,
that
even
had
no
force
.
Only
one
thing
was
essential
:
to
have
money
in
the
bank
,
without
inquiring
where
it
came
from
,
so
as
to
know
that
one
had
the
wherewithal
to
buy
meat
for
tomorrow
.
And
this
condition
had
hitherto
been
fulfilled
;
he
had
always
had
the
money
in
the
bank
.
But
now
the
money
in
the
bank
had
gone
,
and
he
could
not
quite
tell
where
to
get
the
next
installment
.
And
this
it
was
which
,
at
the
moment
when
Kitty
had
mentioned
money
,
had
disturbed
him
;
but
he
had
no
time
to
think
about
it
.
He
drove
off
,
thinking
of
Katavasov
and
the
meeting
with
Metrov
that
was
before
him
.
Levin
had
on
this
visit
to
town
seen
a
great
deal
of
his
old
friend
at
the
university
,
Professor
Katavasov
,
whom
he
had
not
seen
since
his
marriage
.
He
liked
in
Katavasov
the
clearness
and
simplicity
of
his
conception
of
life
.
Levin
thought
that
the
clearness
of
Katavasov
s
conception
of
life
was
due
to
the
poverty
of
his
nature
;
Katavasov
thought
that
the
disconnectedness
of
Levin
s
ideas
was
due
to
his
lack
of
intellectual
discipline
;
but
Levin
enjoyed
Katavasov
s
clearness
,
and
Katavasov
enjoyed
the
abundance
of
Levin
s
untrained
ideas
,
and
they
liked
to
meet
and
to
discuss
.
Levin
had
read
Katavasov
some
parts
of
his
book
,
and
he
had
liked
them
.
On
the
previous
day
Katavasov
had
met
Levin
at
a
public
lecture
and
told
him
that
the
celebrated
Metrov
,
whose
article
Levin
had
so
much
liked
,
was
in
Moscow
,
that
he
had
been
much
interested
by
what
Katavasov
had
told
him
about
Levin
s
work
,
and
that
he
was
coming
to
see
him
tomorrow
at
eleven
,
and
would
be
very
glad
to
make
Levin
s
acquaintance
.
You
re
positively
a
reformed
character
,
I
m
glad
to
see
,
said
Katavasov
,
meeting
Levin
in
the
little
drawing
-
room
.
I
heard
the
bell
and
thought
:
Impossible
that
it
can
be
he
at
the
exact
time
!
.
.
.
Well
,
what
do
you
say
to
the
Montenegrins
now
?
They
re
a
race
of
warriors
.
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Why
,
what
s
happened
?
asked
Levin
.
Katavasov
in
a
few
words
told
him
the
last
piece
of
news
from
the
war
,
and
going
into
his
study
,
introduced
Levin
to
a
short
,
thick
-
set
man
of
pleasant
appearance
.
This
was
Metrov
.
The
conversation
touched
for
a
brief
space
on
politics
and
on
how
recent
events
were
looked
at
in
the
higher
spheres
in
Petersburg
.
Metrov
repeated
a
saying
that
had
reached
him
through
a
most
trustworthy
source
,
reported
as
having
been
uttered
on
this
subject
by
the
Tsar
and
one
of
the
ministers
.
Katavasov
had
heard
also
on
excellent
authority
that
the
Tsar
had
said
something
quite
different
.
Levin
tried
to
imagine
circumstances
in
which
both
sayings
might
have
been
uttered
,
and
the
conversation
on
that
topic
dropped
.