1 But, however sincerely Anna had meant to suffer, she was not suffering.
2 Kitty admired her more than ever, and more and more acute was her suffering.
3 All his life was merged in the one feeling of suffering and desire to be rid of it.
4 He experienced the sensations of a man who has had a tooth out after suffering long from toothache.
5 Alexey Alexandrovitch sat down, and with a despondent and suffering face watched the nurse walking to and fro.
6 But her face, to which she tried to give a severe and resolute expression, betrayed bewilderment and suffering.
7 But now no physical craving or suffering received relief, and the effort to relieve them only caused fresh suffering.
8 She felt for him with her whole heart, the more because she was pitying him for suffering of which she was herself the cause.
9 He was pleased that there was still hope, and still more pleased that she should be suffering who had made him suffer so much.
10 The reality of his suffering crushed all hopes in Levin and Kitty and in the sick man himself, leaving no doubt, no memory even of past hopes.
11 Hitherto each individual desire, aroused by suffering or privation, such as hunger, fatigue, thirst, had been satisfied by some bodily function giving pleasure.
12 His natural feeling urged him to defend himself, to prove to her she was wrong; but to prove her wrong would mean irritating her still more and making the rupture greater that was the cause of all his suffering.
13 In all Petersburg there was not a human being to whom he could express what he was feeling, who would feel for him, not as a high official, not as a member of society, but simply as a suffering man; indeed he had not such a one in the whole world.
14 But the same second he looked round at the young man, and gave the nervous jerk of his head and neck that Konstantin knew so well, as if his neckband hurt him; and a quite different expression, wild, suffering, and cruel, rested on his emaciated face.
15 The sick man was suffering more and more, especially from bedsores, which it was impossible now to remedy, and grew more and more angry with everyone about him, blaming them for everything, and especially for not having brought him a doctor from Moscow.
16 It was only when the same evening he came to their house before the theater, went into her room and saw her tear-stained, pitiful, sweet face, miserable with suffering he had caused and nothing could undo, he felt the abyss that separated his shameful past from her dovelike purity, and was appalled at what he had done.
17 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.
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