1 A fine rain had been falling all the morning, and now it had not long cleared up.
2 Levin was enjoying a delightful sense of repose after the mental fatigue of the morning.
3 Feeling that the reconciliation was complete, Anna set eagerly to work in the morning preparing for their departure.
4 Levin sat down and listened, but recalling all the conversation of the morning he felt all of a sudden fearfully bored.
5 Levin talked now not at all with that purely businesslike attitude to the subject with which he had been talking all the morning.
6 In the morning she was waked by a horrible nightmare, which had recurred several times in her dreams, even before her connection with Vronsky.
7 Without waking him, she went back, and after a second dose of opium she fell towards morning into a heavy, incomplete sleep, during which she never quite lost consciousness.
8 Levin heard them, and unconsciously, as they talked, going over the past, over what had been up to that morning, he thought of himself as he had been yesterday till that point.
9 Metrov told the chairman what he had already told Levin, and Levin made the same remarks on his news that he had already made that morning, but for the sake of variety he expressed also a new opinion which had only just struck him.
10 And all the theories of the significance of the Slav element in the history of the world seemed to him so trivial compared with what was passing in his own soul, that he instantly forgot it all and dropped back into the same frame of mind that he had been in that morning.
11 In the early morning he rode over to the first sowing of the rye, and to the oats, which were being carried to the stacks, and returning home at the time his wife and sister-in-law were getting up, he drank coffee with them and walked to the farm, where a new thrashing machine was to be set working to get ready the seed-corn.