1 This guilty air confirmed all his suspicions.
2 Levin, guilty and shamefaced, but pacified, went back to his hotel.
3 Stepan Arkadyevitch started with dismay, feeling guilty and caught.
4 At last the guilty Kouzma flew panting into the room with the shirt.
5 And he himself felt not only in the highest degree ridicule, but also utterly guilty and disgraced.
6 She went up, sat down beside Dolly, and with a guilty look, peeped into her face and took her hand.
7 "Excuse me, you seem to put me in the position of the guilty party," observed Alexey Alexandrovitch.
8 He felt disgraced, humiliated, guilty, and deprived of all possibility of washing away his humiliation.
9 With a dismayed and guilty expression, Alexey Alexandrovitch stopped and would have gone back unobserved.
10 She thought of that other; she pictured him, and felt how her heart was flooded with emotion and guilty delight at the thought of him.
11 In his own case, Alexey Alexandrovitch saw that a legal divorce, that is to say, one in which only the guilty wife would be repudiated, was impossible of attainment.
12 She tried to say something, but her voice refused to utter any sound; with a guilty and imploring glance at the old man she went with light, swift steps up the stairs.
13 She felt so sinful, so guilty, that nothing was left her but to humiliate herself and beg forgiveness; and as now there was no one in her life but him, to him she addressed her prayer for forgiveness.
14 She would never know freedom in love, but would remain forever a guilty wife, with the menace of detection hanging over her at every instant; deceiving her husband for the sake of a shameful connection with a man living apart and away from her, whose life she could never share.