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1 Levin found himself, like the majority of his contemporaries, in the vaguest position in regard to religion.
Anna Karenina 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In PART 5: Chapter 1
2 She was religious, had never doubted the truths of religion, but his external unbelief did not affect her in the least.
Anna Karenina 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In PART 4: Chapter 16
3 "Anything is possible," she added with that peculiar, rather sly expression that was always in her face when she spoke of religion.
Anna Karenina 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In PART 5: Chapter 19
4 He was a believer, who was interested in religion primarily in its political aspect, and the new doctrine which ventured upon several new interpretations, just because it paved the way to discussion and analysis, was in principle disagreeable to him.
Anna Karenina 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In PART 5: Chapter 22
5 Levin felt more than ever now that there was something not clear and not clean in his soul, and that, in regard to religion, he was in the same position which he perceived so clearly and disliked in others, and for which he blamed his friend Sviazhsky.
Anna Karenina 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In PART 5: Chapter 1
6 Since their conversation about religion when they were engaged neither of them had ever started a discussion of the subject, but she performed all the ceremonies of going to church, saying her prayers, and so on, always with the unvarying conviction that this ought to be so.
Anna Karenina 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In PART 5: Chapter 19
7 Divorce, the details of which he knew by this time, seemed to him now out of the question, because the sense of his own dignity and respect for religion forbade his taking upon himself a fictitious charge of adultery, and still more suffering his wife, pardoned and beloved by him, to be caught in the fact and put to public shame.
Anna Karenina 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In PART 4: Chapter 22