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    Part 1 - Chapter 6 - Page 2

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    could not quite make out
    which. But Natalia, too, had hardly made her appearance in the
    world when she married the diplomat Lvov. Kitty was still a
    child when Levin left the university. Young Shtcherbatsky went
    into the navy, was drowned in the Baltic, and Levin's relations
    with the Shtcherbatskys, in spite of his friendship with
    Oblonsky, became less intimate. But when early in the winter of
    this year Levin came to Moscow, after a year in the country, and
    saw the Shtcherbatskys, he realized which of the three sisters he
    was indeed destined to love.

    One would have thought that nothing could be simpler than for
    him, a man of good family, rather rich than poor, and thirty-two
    years old, to make the young Princess Shtcherbatskaya an offer of
    marriage; in all likelihood he would at once have been looked
    upon as a good match. But Levin was in love, and so it seemed to
    him that Kitty was so perfect in every respect that she was a
    creature far above everything earthly; and that he was a creature
    so low and so earthly that it could not even be conceived that
    other people and she herself could regard him as worthy of her.

    After spending two months in Moscow in a state of enchantment,
    seeing Kitty almost every day in society, into which he went so
    as to meet her, he abruptly decided that it could not be, and
    went back to the country.

    Levin's conviction that it could not be was founded on the idea
    that in the eyes of her family he was a disadvantageous and
    worthless match for the charming Kitty, and that Kitty herself
    could not love him. In her family's eyes he had no ordinary,
    definite career and position in society, while his contemporaries
    by this time, when he was thirty-two, were already, one a
    colonel, and another a professor, another director of a bank and
    railways, or president of a board like Oblonsky. But he (he knew
    very well how he must appear to others) was a country gentleman,
    occupied in breeding cattle, shooting game, and building barns;
    in other words, a fellow of no ability, who had not turned out
    well, and who was doing just what, according to the ideas of the
    world, is done by people fit for nothing else.

    The mysterious, enchanting Kitty herself could not love such an
    ugly person as he conceived himself to be, and, above all, such
    an ordinary, in no way striking person. Moreover, his attitude
    to Kitty in the past--the attitude of a grown-up person to a
    child, arising from his friendship with her brother--seemed to
    him yet another obstacle to love. An ugly, good-natured man, as
    he considered himself, might, he supposed, be liked as a friend;
    but to be loved with such a love as that with which he loved
    Kitty, one would need to be a handsome and, still more, a
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