1 With a book under his arm he went upstairs.
2 The next song in the book was an Italian one.
3 He looked at the book and thought of something else.
4 He made haste to sit down in his easy chair and opened the book.
5 He chose a moment when the teacher was looking in silence at the book.
6 And he wanted to prove this theoretically in his book and practically on his land.
7 He listened, and read his book, and recalled the whole train of ideas suggested by his reading.
8 He was only looking at the book to avoid conversation with the officers coming in and out; he was thinking.
9 She laid down the book and sank against the back of the chair, tightly gripping the paper cutter in both hands.
10 Vronsky glanced at them, frowned, and looking down at his book as though he had not noticed them, he proceeded to eat and read at the same time.
11 And he went on teaching Grisha, not in his own way, but by the book, and so took little interest in it, and often forgot the hour of the lesson.
12 Reckoning up his money and his bank book, he found that he had left one thousand eight hundred roubles, and nothing coming in before the New Year.
13 Today all the significance of his book rose before him with special distinctness, and whole periods ranged themselves in his mind in illustration of his theories.
14 After dinner Levin was sitting, as he usually did, in an easy chair with a book, and as he read he went on thinking of the journey before him in connection with his book.
15 These matters, together with the management of the land still left on his hands, and the indoor work over his book, so engrossed Levin the whole summer that he scarcely ever went out shooting.
16 He was reading a book, and thinking of what he was reading, and stopping to listen to Agafea Mihalovna, who gossiped away without flagging, and yet with all that, all sorts of pictures of family life and work in the future rose disconnectedly before his imagination.
17 And now he poured out upon Stepan Arkadyevitch his poetic joy in the spring, and his failures and plans for the land, and his thoughts and criticisms on the books he had been reading, and the idea of his own book, the basis of which really was, though he was unaware of it himself, a criticism of all the old books on agriculture.
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