1 His horses and trap were sent home.
2 All that day the hounds remained at home.
3 Things were not cheerful in the Rostovs' home.
4 Nicholas was spending the last of his leave at home.
5 After reaching home Nicholas was at first serious and even dull.
6 In Moscow he felt at peace, at home, warm and dirty as in an old dressing gown.
7 The right thing now was, if not to retire from the service, at any rate to go home on leave.
8 "Uncle" asked his visitors to sit down and make themselves at home, and then went out of the room.
9 On coming home, while his valets were still taking off his things, he picked up a book and began to read.
10 When halfway home Nicholas handed the reins to the coachman and ran for a moment to Natasha's sleigh and stood on its wing.
11 The old count went home, and Natasha and Petya promised to return very soon, but as it was still early the hunt went farther.
12 He was worried by the impending necessity of interfering in the stupid business matters for which his mother had called him home.
13 At the last post station before Otradnoe he gave the driver a three-ruble tip, and on arriving he ran breathlessly, like a boy, up the steps of his home.
14 Toward evening Ilagin took leave of Nicholas, who found that they were so far from home that he accepted "Uncle's" offer that the hunting party should spend the night in his little village of Mikhaylovna.
15 Yes, first I thought that we are driving along and imagining that we are going home, but that heaven knows where we are really going in the darkness, and that we shall arrive and suddenly find that we are not in Otradnoe, but in Fairyland.
16 Such were Dimmler the musician and his wife, Vogel the dancing master and his family, Belova, an old maiden lady, an inmate of the house, and many others such as Petya's tutors, the girls' former governess, and other people who simply found it preferable and more advantageous to live in the count's house than at home.
17 They called him in to decide family disputes, chose him as executor, confided secrets to him, elected him to be a justice and to other posts; but he always persistently refused public appointments, passing the autumn and spring in the fields on his bay gelding, sitting at home in winter, and lying in his overgrown garden in summer.
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