1 My life, too, has been a wonderful one.
2 You must rouse yourself, you must look life in the face.
3 She was listening to the stirring of the new life within her.
4 Besides, he got back again into the beaten track of his life.
5 You are entering upon a time of life," pursued the priest, "when you must choose your path and keep to it.
6 All the habits and rules of his life that had seemed so firm, had turned out suddenly false and inapplicable.
7 "I gave that life up long ago," said he, wondering at the change in her face, and trying to divine its meaning.
8 There was the same conception of the senselessness of everything to come in life, the same consciousness of humiliation.
9 All that night and morning Levin lived perfectly unconsciously, and felt perfectly lifted out of the conditions of material life.
10 She could not frame a thought, not a wish apart from life with this man; but this new life was not yet, and she could not even picture it clearly to herself.
11 He did not think that the Christian law that he had been all his life trying to follow, enjoined on him to forgive and love his enemies; but a glad feeling of love and forgiveness for his enemies filled his heart.
12 This new life could not but have terrors for her inexperience; but, terrible or not, the change had been wrought six weeks before in her soul, and this was merely the final sanction of what had long been completed in her heart.
13 He felt that besides the blessed spiritual force controlling his soul, there was another, a brutal force, as powerful, or more powerful, which controlled his life, and that this force would not allow him that humble peace he longed for.
14 His whole life had been spent in administrative work, and consequently, when he did not approve of anything, his disapproval was softened by the recognition of the inevitability of mistakes and the possibility of reform in every department.
15 He did not believe a single word Stepan Arkadyevitch said to him; to every word he had a thousand objections to make, but he listened to him, feeling that his words were the expression of that mighty brutal force which controlled his life and to which he would have to submit.
16 All her life, all her desires and hopes were concentrated on this one man, still uncomprehended by her, to whom she was bound by a feeling of alternate attraction and repulsion, even less comprehended than the man himself, and all the while she was going on living in the outward conditions of her old life.
17 he said, feeling with confusion and annoyance that what he could decide easily and clearly by himself, he could not discuss before Princess Tverskaya, who to him stood for the incarnation of that brute force which would inevitably control him in the life he led in the eyes of the world, and hinder him from giving way to his feeling of love and forgiveness.
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