1 The nurse brought the baby to his mother.
2 The mother once more exchanged glances with a daughter.
3 A year had passed since the last time Seryozha had seen his mother.
4 Going onto the platform, Vronsky left his mother and disappeared into a compartment.
5 She was not asleep, she was talking gently with her mother, making plans about the christening.
6 He disliked seeing his uncle, so like his mother, for it called up those memories of which he was ashamed.
7 "He was very ill after that interview with his mother, which we had not foreseen," said Alexey Alexandrovitch.
8 The dreams and memories of his mother, which had made him ill after seeing her, did not occupy his thoughts now.
9 She pictured him to herself as talking calmly to his mother and Princess Sorokina and rejoicing at her sufferings.
10 "I repeat my request that you will not speak disrespectfully of my mother, whom I respect," he said, raising his voice and looking sternly at her.
11 He knew that his father and mother were separated by some quarrel, he knew that he had to remain with his father, and he tried to get used to that idea.
12 Alexey Alexandrovitch reminded his brother-in-law that they never spoke to the boy of his mother, and he begged him not to mention a single word about her.
13 The little girl sitting at the table was obstinately and violently battering on it with a cork, and staring aimlessly at her mother with her pitch-black eyes.
14 The doctor, the monthly nurse, and Dolly and her mother, and most of all Levin, who could not think of the approaching event without terror, began to be impatient and uneasy.
15 In the service of religion, humanity, and our brothers," the gentleman said, his voice growing louder and louder; "to this great cause mother Moscow dedicates you with her blessing.
16 He disliked it all the more as from some words he had caught as he waited at the study door, and still more from the faces of his father and uncle, he guessed that they must have been talking of his mother.
17 And this last form of jealousy tortured her most of all, especially as he had unwarily told her, in a moment of frankness, that his mother knew him so little that she had had the audacity to try and persuade him to marry the young Princess Sorokina.
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