1 After supper, the same night, the young people left for the country.
2 She too had not slept all night, and had been expecting him all the morning.
3 He had not slept the previous night, but was incapable of thinking of sleep either.
4 In the evening they went shooting again, and Veslovsky had several successful shots, and in the night they drove home.
5 The servant, whose turn it was to be up all night, lighted his candles, and would have gone away, but Levin stopped him.
6 On getting back from the sick-room to their own two rooms for the night, Levin sat with hanging head not knowing what to do.
7 All that night and morning Levin lived perfectly unconsciously, and felt perfectly lifted out of the conditions of material life.
8 He was going to say that he had been up all night and had dropped asleep, but looking at her thrilled and rapturous face, he was ashamed.
9 The sense of death, which had been evoked in all by his taking leave of life on the night when he had sent for his brother, was broken up.
10 He said good-bye to him at the station on their return from a bear hunt, at which they had had a display of Russian prowess kept up all night.
11 He did not sleep the whole night, and his fury, growing in a sort of vast, arithmetical progression, reached its highest limits in the morning.
12 Towards night the sick man was not able to lift his hands, and could only gaze before him with the same intensely concentrated expression in his eyes.
13 At the edge of the marsh and the road, peasant boys and men, who had been herding for the night, were lying, and in the dawn all were asleep under their coats.
14 He had forgotten all the agonies and the ecstasies he had lived through with that picture when for several months it had been the one thought haunting him day and night.
15 With a sense of weariness and uncleanness from the night spent in the train, in the early fog of Petersburg Alexey Alexandrovitch drove through the deserted Nevsky and stared straight before him, not thinking of what was awaiting him.
16 The long white ridge of his spine, with the huge, prominent shoulder blades and jutting ribs and vertebrae, was bare, and Marya Nikolaevna and the waiter were struggling with the sleeve of the night shirt, and could not get the long, limp arm into it.
17 He heard the horses munching hay, then he heard the peasant and his elder boy getting ready for the night, and going off for the night watch with the beasts, then he heard the soldier arranging his bed on the other side of the barn, with his nephew, the younger son of their peasant host.
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