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    Part 2 - Chapter 5 - Page 2

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    "Why, where was the difficulty?"

    "Ah, you shall hear.... We apologize in due form: we are in
    despair, we entreat forgiveness for the unfortunate
    misunderstanding. The government clerk with the sausages begins
    to melt, but he, too, desires to express his sentiments, and as
    soon as ever he begins to express them, he begins to get hot and
    say nasty things, and again I'm obliged to trot out all my
    diplomatic talents. I allowed that their conduct was bad, but I
    urged him to take into consideration their heedlessness, their
    youth; then, too, the young men had only just been lunching
    together. 'You understand. They regret it deeply, and beg you
    to overlook their misbehavior.' The government clerk was
    softened once more. 'I consent, count, and am ready to overlook
    it; but you perceive that my wife--my wife's a respectable woman
    --his been exposed to the persecution, and insults, and
    effrontery of young upstarts, scoundrels....' And you must
    understand, the young upstarts are present all the while, and I
    have to keep the peace between them. Again I call out all my
    diplomacy, and again as soon as the thing was about at an end,
    our friend the government clerk gets hot and red, and his
    sausages stand on end with wrath, and once more I launch out into
    diplomatic wiles."

    "Ah, he must tell you this story!" said Betsy, laughing, to a
    lady to came into her box. "He has been making me laugh so."

    "Well, bonne chance!" she added, giving Vronsky one finger of the
    hand in which she held her fan, and with a shrug of her shoulders
    she twitched down the bodice of her gown that had worked up, so
    as to be duly naked as she moved forward towards the footlights
    into the light of the gas, and the sight of all eyes.

    Vronsky drove to the French theater, where he really had to see
    the colonel of his regiment, who never missed a single
    performance there. He wanted to see him, to report on the result
    of his mediation, which had occupied and amused him for the last
    three days. Petritsky, whom he liked, was implicated in the
    affair, and the other culprit was a capital fellow and first-rate
    comrade, who had lately joined the regiment, the young Prince
    Kedrov. And what was most important, the interests of the

    regiment were involved in it too.

    Both the young men were in Vronsky's company. The colonel of the
    regiment was waited upon by the government clerk, Venden, with a
    complaint against his officers, who had insulted his wife. His
    young wife, so Venden told the story--he had been married half a
    year--was at church with her mother, and suddenly overcome by
    indisposition, arising from her interesting condition, she could
    not remain standing, she drove home in the first sledge, a
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