1 "Give it to me, Anna Arkadyevna," said Vorkuev, indicating the book.
2 Levin had read Katavasov some parts of his book, and he had liked them.
3 And finding the book, and sitting down again in her place, she opened it.
4 In the press, too, for a whole month there was not a word about his book.
5 The critic had undoubtedly put an interpretation upon the book which could not possibly be put on it.
6 The rest of his acquaintances, not interested in a book on a learned subject, did not talk of it at all.
7 He threw himself heart and soul into the service of this great cause, and forgot to think about his book.
8 After the most conscientious revision the book had last year been published, and had been distributed among the booksellers.
9 "Yes," she said, putting her finger in the place in the book, and gazing before her with her fine pensive eyes, "that is how true faith acts."
10 And besides, he complained that he had talked too much about his book here, and that consequently all his ideas about it were muddled and had lost their interest for him.
11 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.
12 When Katavasov had finished, Levin looked at his watch, saw it was past one, and thought that there would not be time before the concert to read Metrov his book, and indeed, he did not now care to do so.
13 Trying not to make a noise, they walked into the dark reading room, where under the shaded lamps there sat a young man with a wrathful countenance, turning over one journal after another, and a bald general buried in a book.
14 And the light by which she had read the book filled with troubles, falsehoods, sorrow, and evil, flared up more brightly than ever before, lighted up for her all that had been in darkness, flickered, began to grow dim, and was quenched forever.
15 But still Sergey Ivanovitch had expected that on its appearance his book would be sure to make a serious impression on society, and if it did not cause a revolution in social science it would, at any rate, make a great stir in the scientific world.
16 Several sections of this book and its introduction had appeared in periodical publications, and other parts had been read by Sergey Ivanovitch to persons of his circle, so that the leading ideas of the work could not be completely novel to the public.
17 Lvov, in a house coat with a belt and in chamois leather shoes, was sitting in an armchair, and with a pince-nez with blue glasses he was reading a book that stood on a reading desk, while in his beautiful hand he held a half-burned cigarette daintily away from him.
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