1 And she blushed for her father.
2 It was the world in which his father and mother had lived and died.
3 "Nothing, father," answered Dolly, understanding that her husband was meant.
4 They threw down the box, that represented a train, and came in to their father.
5 His father he scarcely remembered, and he had been educated in the Corps of Pages.
6 Kitty saw that her father had meant to make fun of Varenka, but that he could not do it because he liked her.
7 While her mother was attacking her father, she tried to restrain her mother, so far as filial reverence would allow.
8 What her father said seemed simple enough, yet at these words Kitty became confused and overcome like a detected criminal.
9 Kitty did not answer, not because she had nothing to say, but because she did not care to reveal her secret thoughts even to her father.
10 "Of course I know you; I know you very well," the prince said to her with a smile, in which Kitty detected with joy that her father liked her friend.
11 She could not solve the problem her father had unconsciously set her by his goodhumored view of her friends, and of the life that had so attracted her.
12 When Anna went into the room, Dolly was sitting in the little drawing-room with a white-headed fat little boy, already like his father, giving him a lesson in French reading.
13 He who had been such a careful father, had from the end of that winter become peculiarly frigid to his son, and adopted to him just the same bantering tone he used with his wife.
14 If Alexey Alexandrovitch had allowed himself to observe he would have noticed the timid and bewildered eyes with which Seryozha glanced first at his father and then at his mother.
15 At last the little girl kissed his face, which was flushed from his stooping posture and beaming with tenderness, loosed her hands, and was about to run away again; but her father held her back.
16 The little girl knew that there was a quarrel between her father and mother, and that her mother could not be cheerful, and that her father must be aware of this, and that he was pretending when he asked about it so lightly.
17 Seryozha had been shy of his father before, and now, ever since Alexey Alexandrovitch had taken to calling him young man, and since that insoluble question had occurred to him whether Vronsky were a friend or a foe, he avoided his father.
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