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    Part 1 - Chapter 26

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    Chapter 26

    In the morning Konstantin Levin left Moscow, and towards evening
    he reached home. On the journey in the train he talked to his
    neighbors about politics and the new railways, and, just as in
    Moscow, he was overcome by a sense of confusion of ideas,
    dissatisfaction with himself, shame of something or other. But
    when he got out at his own station, when he saw his one-eyed
    coachman, Ignat, with the collar of his coat turned up; when, in
    the dim light reflected by the station fires, he saw his own
    sledge, his own horses with their tails tied up, in their harness
    trimmed with rings and tassels; when the coachman Ignat, as he
    put in his luggage, told him the village news, that the
    contractor had arrived, and that Pava had calved,--he felt that
    little by little the confusion was clearing up, and the shame and
    self-dissatisfaction were passing away. He felt this at the mere
    sight of Ignat and the horses; but when he had put on the
    sheepskin brought for him, had sat down wrapped in the sledge,
    and had driven off pondering on the work that lay before him in
    the village, and staring at the side-horse, that had been his
    saddle-horse, past his prime now, but a spirited beast from the
    Don, he began to see what had happened to him in quite a
    different light. He felt himself, and did not want to be any one
    else. All he wanted now was to be better than before. In the
    first place he resolved that from that day he would give up
    hoping for any extraordinary happiness, such as marriage must
    have given him, and consequently he would not so disdain what he
    really had. Secondly, he would never again let himself give way
    to low passion, the memory of which had so tortured him when he
    had been making up his mind to make an offer. Then remembering
    his brother Nikolay, he resolved to himself that he would never
    allow himself to forget him, that he would follow him up, and not
    lose sight of him, so as to be ready to help when things should
    go ill with him. And that would be soon, he felt. Then, too,
    his brother's talk of communism, which he had treated so lightly
    at the time, now made him think. He considered a revolution in
    economic conditions nonsense. But he always felt the injustice
    of his own abundance in comparison with the poverty of the

    peasants, and now he determined that so as to feel quite in the
    right, though he had worked hard and lived by no means
    luxuriously before, he would now work still harder, and would
    allow himself even less luxury. And all this seemed to him so
    easy a conquest over himself that he spent the whole drive in the
    pleasantest daydreams. With a resolute feeling of hope in a new,
    better life, he reached home before nine o'clock at night.

    The snow of the little
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