1 Your brother may feel proud of himself.
2 My brother and I are terribly in fault, I see.
3 The glittering eyes looked sternly and reproachfully at his brother as he drew near.
4 Levin said good-bye to them, but, not to be left alone, he attached himself to his brother.
5 His brother offered to lend him money, as he would have so many expenses, presents to give.
6 His brother raised money for him, the princess advised him to leave Moscow after the wedding.
7 His brother Sergey Ivanovitch, Stepan Arkadyevitch, and the princess guided him in doing what he had to do.
8 In Petersburg Vronsky intended to arrange a partition of the land with his brother, while Anna meant to see her son.
9 Sergey Ivanovitch, while he kept up a conversation with their hostess, had one ear for his brother, and he glanced askance at him.
10 His brother, Darya Alexandrovna, and Stepan Arkadyevitch, all in full dress, were waiting for him to bless him with the holy picture.
11 Levin did not agree with Pestsov, nor with his brother, who had a special attitude of his own, both admitting and not admitting the significance of the Russian commune.
12 He had expected himself to feel the same distress at the loss of the brother he loved and the same horror in face of death as he had felt then, only in a greater degree.
13 Alexey Alexandrovitch had thought to pass at once into those frigid relations in which he ought to stand with the brother of a wife against whom he was beginning a suit for divorce.
14 Levin smiled joyfully; he was struck by this transition from the confused, verbose discussion with Pestsov and his brother to this laconic, clear, almost wordless communication of the most complex ideas.
15 Even greater was the feeling of disagreement at the bottom of his heart as to her not needing to consider the woman who was with his brother, and he thought with horror of all the contingencies they might meet with.
16 In spite of the terrible change in the face, Levin had only to glance at those eager eyes raised at his approach, only to catch the faint movement of the mouth under the sticky mustache, to realize the terrible truth that this death-like body was his living brother.
17 Feeling angry with his wife because what he had expected had come to pass, which was that at the moment of arrival, when his heart throbbed with emotion and anxiety to know how his brother was getting on, he should have to be seeing after her, instead of rushing straight to his brother, Levin conducted her to the room assigned them.
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