1 Now, too, he shook it off and continued the thread of his thoughts.
2 Her heart throbbed violently, and her thoughts would not rest on anything.
3 His thoughts, like his body, went round a complete circle, without coming upon anything new.
4 At once thoughts of home, of husband and of son, and the details of that day and the following came upon her.
5 But in dreams, when she had no control over her thoughts, her position presented itself to her in all its hideous nakedness.
6 There, looking at her table, with the malachite blotting case lying at the top and an unfinished letter, his thoughts suddenly changed.
7 Kitty did not answer, not because she had nothing to say, but because she did not care to reveal her secret thoughts even to her father.
8 This trick, a bad habit, the cracking of his fingers, always soothed him, and gave precision to his thoughts, so needful to him at this juncture.
9 With his habitual control over his thoughts, though he thought all this about his wife, he did not let his thoughts stray further in regard to her.
10 Levin counted the carts, and was pleased that all that were wanted had been brought, and at the sight of the meadows his thoughts passed to the mowing.
11 But this evening, instead of his usual thoughts and meditations upon official details, his thoughts were absorbed by his wife and something disagreeable connected with her.
12 This was a lofty, mysterious religion connected with a whole series of noble thoughts and feelings, which one could do more than merely believe because one was told to, which one could love.
13 But this calm for thought never came; every time the thought rose of what she had done and what would happen to her, and what she ought to do, a horror came over her and she drove those thoughts away.
14 But later too, and the next day and the third day, she still found no words in which she could express the complexity of her feelings; indeed, she could not even find thoughts in which she could clearly think out all that was in her soul.
15 But he was not aware that he sought work for himself that year, that this was one of the means for keeping shut that secret place where lay hid his feelings towards his wife and son and his thoughts about them, which became more terrible the longer they lay there.
16 At the very moment when Vronsky thought that now was the time to overtake Mahotin, Frou-Frou herself, understanding his thoughts, without any incitement on his part, gained ground considerably, and began getting alongside of Mahotin on the most favorable side, close to the inner cord.
17 And now he poured out upon Stepan Arkadyevitch his poetic joy in the spring, and his failures and plans for the land, and his thoughts and criticisms on the books he had been reading, and the idea of his own book, the basis of which really was, though he was unaware of it himself, a criticism of all the old books on agriculture.
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