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911
This
is
one
of
my
most
faithful
supporters
,
said
Korsunsky
,
bowing
to
Anna
Arkadyevna
,
whom
he
had
not
yet
seen
.
The
princess
helps
to
make
balls
happy
and
successful
.
Anna
Arkadyevna
,
a
waltz
?
he
said
,
bending
down
to
her
.
912
Why
,
have
you
met
?
inquired
their
host
.
913
Is
there
anyone
we
have
not
met
?
My
wife
and
I
are
like
white
wolves
everyone
knows
us
,
answered
Korsunsky
.
A
waltz
,
Anna
Arkadyevna
?
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914
I
don
t
dance
when
it
s
possible
not
to
dance
,
she
said
.
915
But
tonight
it
s
impossible
,
answered
Korsunsky
.
916
At
that
instant
Vronsky
came
up
917
Well
,
since
it
s
impossible
tonight
,
let
us
start
,
she
said
,
not
noticing
Vronsky
s
bow
,
and
she
hastily
put
her
hand
on
Korsunsky
s
shoulder
.
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918
What
is
she
vexed
with
him
about
?
thought
Kitty
,
discerning
that
Anna
had
intentionally
not
responded
to
Vronsky
s
bow
.
Vronsky
went
up
to
Kitty
reminding
her
of
the
first
quadrille
,
and
expressing
his
regret
that
he
had
not
seen
her
all
this
time
.
Kitty
gazed
in
admiration
at
Anna
waltzing
,
and
listened
to
him
.
She
expected
him
to
ask
her
for
a
waltz
,
but
he
did
not
,
and
she
glanced
wonderingly
at
him
.
He
flushed
slightly
,
and
hurriedly
asked
her
to
waltz
,
but
he
had
only
just
put
his
arm
round
her
waist
and
taken
the
first
step
when
the
music
suddenly
stopped
.
Kitty
looked
into
his
face
,
which
was
so
close
to
her
own
,
and
long
afterwards
for
several
years
after
that
look
,
full
of
love
,
to
which
he
made
no
response
,
cut
her
to
the
heart
with
an
agony
of
shame
.
919
Pardon
!
pardon
!
Waltz
!
waltz
!
shouted
Korsunsky
from
the
other
side
of
the
room
,
and
seizing
the
first
young
lady
he
came
across
he
began
dancing
himself
.
920
Vronsky
and
Kitty
waltzed
several
times
round
the
room
.
After
the
first
waltz
Kitty
went
to
her
mother
,
and
she
had
hardly
time
to
say
a
few
words
to
Countess
Nordston
when
Vronsky
came
up
again
for
the
first
quadrille
.
During
the
quadrille
nothing
of
any
significance
was
said
:
there
was
disjointed
talk
between
them
of
the
Korsunskys
,
husband
and
wife
,
whom
he
described
very
amusingly
,
as
delightful
children
at
forty
,
and
of
the
future
town
theater
;
and
only
once
the
conversation
touched
her
to
the
quick
,
when
he
asked
her
about
Levin
,
whether
he
was
here
,
and
added
that
he
liked
him
so
much
.
But
Kitty
did
not
expect
much
from
the
quadrille
.
She
looked
forward
with
a
thrill
at
her
heart
to
the
mazurka
.
She
fancied
that
in
the
mazurka
everything
must
be
decided
.
The
fact
that
he
did
not
during
the
quadrille
ask
her
for
the
mazurka
did
not
trouble
her
.
She
felt
sure
she
would
dance
the
mazurka
with
him
as
she
had
done
at
former
balls
,
and
refused
five
young
men
,
saying
she
was
engaged
for
the
mazurka
.
The
whole
ball
up
to
the
last
quadrille
was
for
Kitty
an
enchanted
vision
of
delightful
colors
,
sounds
,
and
motions
.
She
only
sat
down
when
she
felt
too
tired
and
begged
for
a
rest
.
But
as
she
was
dancing
the
last
quadrille
with
one
of
the
tiresome
young
men
whom
she
could
not
refuse
,
she
chanced
to
be
vis
-
à
-
vis
with
Vronsky
and
Anna
.
She
had
not
been
near
Anna
again
since
the
beginning
of
the
evening
,
and
now
again
she
saw
her
suddenly
quite
new
and
surprising
.
She
saw
in
her
the
signs
of
that
excitement
of
success
she
knew
so
well
in
herself
;
she
saw
that
she
was
intoxicated
with
the
delighted
admiration
she
was
exciting
.