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    Part 1 - Chapter 6

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    Chapter 6

    When Oblonsky asked Levin what had brought him to town, Levin
    blushed, and was furious with himself for blushing, because he
    could not answer, "I have come to make your sister-in-law an
    offer," though that was precisely what he had come for.

    The families of the Levins and the Shtcherbatskys were old, noble
    Moscow families, and had always been on intimate and friendly
    terms. This intimacy had grown still closer during Levin's
    student days. He had both prepared for the university with the
    young Prince Shtcherbatsky, the brother of Kitty and Dolly, and
    had entered at the same time with him. In those days Levin used
    often to be in the Shtcherbatskys' house, and he was in love with
    the Shtcherbatsky household. Strange as it may appear, it was
    with the household, the family, that Konstantin Levin was in
    love, especially with the feminine half of the household. Levin
    did not remember his own mother, and his only sister was older
    than he was, so that it was in the Shtcherbatskys' house that he
    saw for the first time that inner life of an old, noble,
    cultivated, and honorable family of which he had been deprived by
    the death of his father and mother. All the members of that
    family, especially the feminine half, were pictured by him, as
    it were, wrapped about with a mysterious poetical veil, and he
    not only perceived no defects whatever in them, but under the
    poetical veil that shrouded them he assumed the existence of the
    loftiest sentiments and every possible perfection. Why it was
    the three young ladies had one day to speak French, and the next
    English; why it was that at certain hours they played by turns on
    the piano, the sounds of which were audible in their brother's
    room above, where the students used to work; why they were
    visited by those professors of French literature, of music, of
    drawing, of dancing; why at certain hours all the three young
    ladies, with Mademoiselle Linon, drove in the coach to the
    Tversky boulevard, dressed in their satin cloaks, Dolly in a long
    one, Natalia in a half-long one, and Kitty in one so short that
    her shapely legs in tightly-drawn red stockings were visible to
    all beholders; why it was they had to walk about the Tversky
    boulevard escorted by a footman with a gold cockade in his

    hat--all this and much more that was done in their mysterious
    world he did not understand, but he was sure that everything that
    was done there was very good, and he was in love precisely with
    the mystery of the proceedings.

    In his student days he had all but been in love with the eldest,
    Dolly, but she was soon married to Oblonsky. Then he began being
    in love with the second. He felt, as it were, that he had to be
    in love with one of the sisters, only he
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