1 On finishing his work, he returned home at four.
2 When he got home, Vronsky found there a note from Anna.
3 It was past five, and several guests had already arrived, before the host himself got home.
4 Vronsky, Anna, and Golenishtchev, on their way home, were particularly lively and cheerful.
5 At last, as it were regretfully tearing himself away, he dropped the cloth, and, exhausted but happy, went home.
6 Spending the whole day at home she considered ways of seeing her son, and had reached a decision to write to her husband.
7 On getting home he flew into a rage with his wife for not having managed to put off the landlady, who had been asking for money.
8 Darya Alexandrovna had to drive home again to fetch her curled and pomaded son, who was to carry the holy pictures after the bride.
9 He drove home thinking of nothing but her, of her love, of his own happiness, and the nearer he drew to home, the warmer was his tenderness for her.
10 On getting home, after three sleepless nights, Vronsky, without undressing, lay down flat on the sofa, clasping his hands and laying his head on them.
11 Alexey Alexandrovitch made it a rule to see his wife every day, so that the servants might have no grounds for suppositions, but avoided dining at home.
12 On returning home, he carefully scrutinized the hat stand, and noticing that there was not a military overcoat there, he went, as usual, to his own room.
13 On getting home that day, Levin had a delightful sense of relief at the awkward position being over and having been got through without his having to tell a lie.
14 And then she knew their home would be in the country, and she wanted to go, not abroad where she was not going to live, but to the place where their home would be.
15 The feeling of furious anger with his wife, who would not observe the proprieties and keep to the one stipulation he had laid on her, not to receive her lover in her own home, gave him no peace.
16 The fact that he had not dined at home yesterday, and the fact that he had insisted on their taking separate sets of rooms in Petersburg, and that even now he was not coming to her alone, as though he were trying to avoid meeting her face to face.
17 He did not know how great a sense of change she was experiencing; she, who at home had sometimes wanted some favorite dish, or sweets, without the possibility of getting either, now could order what she liked, buy pounds of sweets, spend as much money as she liked, and order any puddings she pleased.
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