1 I heard today that my brother Nikolay.
2 Nikolay Levin looked round angrily at her.
3 This sigh seemed to exasperate Nikolay still more.
4 Nikolay Dmitrievitch drinks a great deal, she said.
5 Kritsky had hardly gone out when Nikolay Levin smiled and winked.
6 And he recalled his brother Nikolay, and dwelt with pleasure on the thought of him.
7 "So you see," pursued Nikolay Levin, painfully wrinkling his forehead and twitching.
8 "Yes," she said, looking timidly towards the doorway, where Nikolay Levin had reappeared.
9 "Nikolay Dmitrievitch, Nikolay Dmitrievitch," whispered Marya Nikolaevna, again going up to him.
10 And immediately he recollected his brother Nikolay and how hateful he was to have been able to forget him.
11 And this woman," Nikolay Levin interrupted him, pointing to her, "is the partner of my life, Marya Nikolaevna.
12 I have come to look very differently and more charitably on what is called infamous since brother Nikolay has become what he is.
13 He remembered his brother Nikolay, and felt ashamed and sore, and he scowled; but Oblonsky began speaking of a subject which at once drew his attention.
14 Levin felt that, in spite of all the ugliness of his life, his brother Nikolay, in his soul, in the very depths of his soul, was no more in the wrong than the people who despised him.
15 It was all horribly disgusting, yet to Levin it appeared not at all in the same disgusting light as it inevitably would to those who did not know Nikolay, did not know all his story, did not know his heart.
16 This brother Nikolay was the elder brother of Konstantin Levin, and half-brother of Sergey Ivanovitch; a man utterly ruined, who had dissipated the greater part of his fortune, was living in the strangest and lowest company, and had quarreled with his brothers.
17 Levin remembered that when Nikolay had been in the devout stage, the period of fasts and monks and church services, when he was seeking in religion a support and a curb for his passionate temperament, everyone, far from encouraging him, had jeered at him, and he, too, with the others.
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