1 I could not bear the way my son looked at me.
2 Her suffering was the more poignant that she had to bear it in solitude.
3 These pinpricks have stabbed me to the heart, and I have not the strength to bear it.
4 He could do nothing but try to help the aching place to bear it, and this he tried to do.
5 "Arhip was here today; he said there were a lot of elks in Prudno, and two bears," said Tchirikov.
6 He did not ask me the meaning of it all, but he wanted to ask, and I could not bear the look in his eyes.
7 He lays the cross, but He gives the strength to bear it, she added, so as to give him some slight preparation.
8 Going into the hall he saw a handsome groom, in a braided livery and a bear fur cape, holding a white fur cloak.
9 Quite the contrary; a child can kill a bear, he said, with a slight bow moving aside for the ladies, who were approaching the table.
10 The picture of his wife not letting him go was so pleasant that he was ready to renounce the delights of looking upon bears forever.
11 "I imagine great strength is needed for hunting bears," observed Alexey Alexandrovitch, who had the mistiest notions about the chase.
12 He said good-bye to him at the station on their return from a bear hunt, at which they had had a display of Russian prowess kept up all night.
13 They had race horses, and Russian pancakes and bear hunts and three-horse sledges, and gypsies and drinking feasts, with the Russian accompaniment of broken crockery.
14 Levin, in his heart, censured this, and did not as yet understand that she was preparing for that period of activity which was to come for her when she would at once be the wife of her husband and mistress of the house, and would bear, and nurse, and bring up children.
15 Moreover, this new head had the further reputation of being a bear in his manners, and was, according to all reports, a man of a class in all respects the opposite of that to which his predecessor had belonged, and to which Stepan Arkadyevitch had hitherto belonged himself.
16 After having some lunch, he lay down on the sofa immediately, and in five minutes memories of the hideous scenes he had witnessed during the last few days were confused together and joined on to a mental image of Anna and of the peasant who had played an important part in the bear hunt, and Vronsky fell asleep.