1 There she met Vronsky, and experienced an agitating joy at those meetings.
2 Now in the solitude of the country, she began to be more and more frequently aware of those joys.
3 Would you believe it, I was teaching Grisha just now: once this was a joy to me, now it is a torture.
4 Not only he knew all about it, but he was unmistakably delighted and making efforts to conceal his joy.
5 At first, marriage, with the new joys and duties bound up with it, had completely crowded out these thoughts.
6 Levin felt envious of this health and mirthfulness; he longed to take part in the expression of this joy of life.
7 In old days to go anywhere in a ball dress was a simple joy to me, I admired myself; now I feel ashamed and awkward.
8 He had often before had this sense of physical joy in his own body, but he had never felt so fond of himself, of his own body, as at that moment.
9 "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.
10 At the moment when he was approaching Anna Arkadyevna he noticed too with joy that she was conscious of his being near, and looked round, and seeing him, turned again to her husband.
11 Princess Tverskaya was walking with Tushkevitch and a young lady, a relation, who, to the great joy of her parents in the provinces, was spending the summer with the fashionable princess.
12 But he felt ashamed of the feeling, and at once he opened, as it were, the arms of his soul, and with a softened feeling of joy and expectation, now he hoped with all his heart that it was his brother.
13 But he had not done either, but had gone on living, thinking, and feeling, and had even at that very time married, and had had many joys and had been happy, when he was not thinking of the meaning of his life.
14 Those joys were so small that they passed unnoticed, like gold in sand, and at bad moments she could see nothing but the pain, nothing but sand; but there were good moments too when she saw nothing but the joy, nothing but gold.
15 Those joys were so small that they passed unnoticed, like gold in sand, and at bad moments she could see nothing but the pain, nothing but sand; but there were good moments too when she saw nothing but the joy, nothing but gold.
16 That familiar gesture brought back into her soul a whole series of girlish and childish memories, and suddenly the darkness that had covered everything for her was torn apart, and life rose up before her for an instant with all its bright past joys.
17 And now he poured out upon Stepan Arkadyevitch his poetic joy in the spring, and his failures and plans for the land, and his thoughts and criticisms on the books he had been reading, and the idea of his own book, the basis of which really was, though he was unaware of it himself, a criticism of all the old books on agriculture.
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