单词:vronsky
单词:vronsky 相关文章
SEVEN Chapter 15 AFTER the guests had gone Kitty told her mother of her conversation with Levin, and in spite of all her pity for him she was pleased by the thought that she had had a proposal. She did not doubt that she had acted rightly, yet for a
SIX And now she was afraid that Vronsky might content himself with merely flirting with her daughter. She saw that Kitty was in love with him, but consoled herself with the thought that Vronsky was an honest man and therefore would not act in such a
TWENTY-THREE There remained the most difficult obstacle; if he crossed it ahead of the others, he would come in first. He was galloping up to the Irish bank. He and Frou-Frou both saw the bank while still some way off and to both of them came a momen
THIRTY-FOUR Chapter 18 SOUNDS of footsteps and a mans voice, then that of a woman followed by laughter, reached them, and the expected visitors entered the room, Sappho Stolz and a young man, shining with a super-abundance of health, known as Vaska.
THIRTY-FIVE Chapter 21 I HAVE come for you; your washing has taken a long time! said Petritsky. Well, is it done? Yes, its done, said Vronsky, smiling with his eyes and twirling the ends of his moustache as carefully as if, after the order he had est
FIFTY-THREE Chapter 11 ON entering his studio the artist again cast a glance at his visitors and took note of Vronskys face, especially his jaw. Although his artistic perceptions never slept, and although he was growing more and more excited as the m
FIFTY-TWO Well, and so you have settled down here? said Vronsky in order to begin a conversation. You are still busy at the same thing? he went on, recollecting that he had heard the other was writing something. Yes, I am writing the second part of T
Chapter 32 WHEN Vronsky returned Anna had not yet come home. He was told that, soon after he left, a lady came to see her and they went away together. Her departure without mentioning where she was going, her prolonged absence, and the fact that she
FIFTY-NINE Chapter 27 AFTER the teachers lesson Serezha had a lesson from his father. Before his father came Serezha sat at the table playing with a pocket-knife and thinking. Among his favourite occupations was keeping a look out for his mother when
SIXTY Having spent all that day at the hotel considering how she might see her son, she resolved to write to her husband. She had already composed the letter when she received Lydia Ivanovnas reply. The Countesss silence had made her feel humble, but
SEVENTY-THREE The most solemn moment had arrived. The elections were about to begin. The leaders of both parties were making estimates and calculating on their fingers the white and black balls they could reckon on. The debate about Flerov had given
SEVENTY-SIX Chapter 5 AT the Matine Concert there were two very interesting items. One was King Lear on the Heath, a fantasia, and the other was a quartet dedicated to the memory of Bach. Both pieces were new and in the new style, and Levin wished to
SEVENTY-FOUR Chapter 31 THE newly-elected Marshal of the Province and many of the victorious new party dined that evening at Vronskys. Vronsky had come to the elections because he felt dull in the country, in order to proclaim to Anna his right to fr
SEVENTY As you have come to see us and you are the only one of Annas former friends who has (I do not count the Princess Barbara) I feel you have done so not because you consider our position normal, but because, realizing all the hardship of that po
SIXTY-NINE Chapter 19 LEFT alone, Dolly surveyed the room with a housewifes eye. All she saw when driving up to the house and passing through it, and now in her room, gave her the impression of abundance and elegance and of that novel European luxury
SIXTY-EIGHT Is it much further, Michael? she asked the clerk, to dispel the thoughts that frightened her. They say its seven versts from this village. The calche was descending the village street to a small bridge. A crowd of merry peasant women, wit
EIGHTY-FIVE Chapter 30 THERE, again it is that girl! Again I understand it all, Anna said to herself as soon as the carriage started and, rocking slightly, rattled over the stones; and again different impressions succeeded one another in her brain. W
EIGHTY-FOUR Chapter 27 GONE! Is it finished? said Anna to herself as she stood by the window; and in answer to that question, the impressions left by the darkness when her candle went out and by the terrible dream, merging into one, filled her heart
EIGHTY-SEVEN Chapter 5 IN the slanting shadow of a pile of sacks heaped up on the platform, Vronsky, in a long overcoat, his hat pulled down low and his hands in his pockets, was walking up and down like an animal in a cage, turning sharply every twe
EIGHTY-SIX That review was followed by dead silence both in print and in conversation concerning the book, and Koznyshev saw that his six years work, carried out with so much devotion and labour, was entirely thrown away. His position was the more pa