1 He liked in Katavasov the clearness and simplicity of his conception of life.
2 He ought to understand all the bitterness of this life for me here in Moscow.
3 He did not even wish for her life now, all he longed for was the end of this awful anguish.
4 One advantage in this town life was that quarrels hardly ever happened between them here in town.
5 He was not by now altogether a part of herself, but sometimes lived his own life independently of her.
6 He listened and talked, and all the while he was thinking of her inner life, trying to divine her feelings.
7 "The life of Anna Arkadyevna can have no interest for me," Alexey Alexandrovitch put in, lifting his eyebrows.
8 All the ordinary conditions of life, without which one can form no conception of anything, had ceased to exist for Levin.
9 The only thing that spoiled the charm of this manner of life was that her husband was not here as she loved him to be, and as he was in the country.
10 One thing he did with more sincerity confess to was that living so long in Moscow, a life of nothing but conversation, eating and drinking, he was degenerating.
11 Though Levin was not interested in the biography, he could not help listening, and learned some new and interesting facts about the life of the distinguished man of science.
12 Sometimes she inwardly reproached him for his inability to live in the town; sometimes she recognized that it was really hard for him to order his life here so that he could be satisfied with it.
13 Yet that grief and this joy were alike outside all the ordinary conditions of life; they were loop-holes, as it were, in that ordinary life through which there came glimpses of something sublime.
14 And so, simply and easily, thanks to the facilities of town life, Levin settled a question which, in the country, would have called for so much personal trouble and exertion, and going out onto the steps, he called a sledge, sat down, and drove to Nikitsky.
15 All the people she loved were with her, and all were so good to her, so attentively caring for her, so entirely pleasant was everything presented to her, that if she had not known and felt that it must all soon be over, she could not have wished for a better and pleasanter life.
16 And meanwhile, there at the foot of the bed, in the deft hands of Lizaveta Petrovna, like a flickering light in a lamp, lay the life of a human creature, which had never existed before, and which would now with the same right, with the same importance to itself, live and create in its own image.
17 Whether he was uncomfortable that he, a descendant of Rurik, Prince Oblonsky, had been kept for two hours waiting to see a Jew, or that for the first time in his life he was not following the example of his ancestors in serving the government, but was turning off into a new career, anyway he was very uncomfortable.
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