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    Part 3 - Chapter 7

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    Chapter 7

    Stephan Arkadyevitch had gone to Petersburg to perform the most
    natural and essential official duty--so familiar to everyone in
    the government service, though incomprehensible to outsiders--
    that duty, but for which one could hardly be in government
    service, of reminding the ministry of his existence--and having,
    for the due performance of this rite, taken all the available
    cash from home, was gaily and agreeably spending his days at the
    races and in the summer villas. Meanwhile Dolly and the children
    had moved into the country, to cut down expenses as much as
    possible. She had gone to Ergushovo, the estate that had been
    her dowry, and the one where in spring the forest had been sold.
    It was nearly forty miles from Levin's Pokrovskoe. The big, old
    house at Ergushovo had been pulled down long ago, and the old
    prince had had the lodge done up and built on to. Twenty years
    before, when Dolly was a child, the lodge had been roomy and
    comfortable, though, like all lodges, it stood sideways to the
    entrance avenue, and faced the south. But by now this lodge was
    old and dilapidated. When Stepan Arkadyevitch had gone down in
    the spring to sell the forest, Dolly had begged him to look over
    the house and order what repairs might be needed. Stepan
    Arkadyevitch, like all unfaithful husbands indeed, was very
    solicitous for his wife's comfort, and he had himself looked over
    the house, and given instructions about everything that he
    considered necessary. What he considered necessary was to cover
    all the furniture with cretonne, to put up curtains, to weed the
    garden, to make a little bridge on the pond, and to plant
    flowers. But he forgot many other essential matters, the want of
    which greatly distressed Darya Alexandrovna later on.

    In spite of Stepan Arkadyevitch's efforts to be an attentive
    father and husband, he never could keep in his mind that he had a
    wife and children. He had bachelor tastes, and it was in
    accordance with them that he shaped his life. On his return to
    Moscow he informed his wife with pride that everything was ready,
    that the house would be a little paradise, and that he advised
    her most certainly to go. His wife's staying away in the country

    was very agreeable to Stepan Arkadyevitch from every point of
    view: it did the children good, it decreased expenses, and it
    left him more at liberty. Darya Alexandrovna regarded staying in
    the country for the summer as essential for the children,
    especially for the little girl, who had not succeeded in
    regaining her strength after the scarlatina, and also as a means
    of escaping the petty humiliations, the little bills owing to the
    wood-merchant, the fishmonger, the shoemaker, which made her
    miserable. Besides this, she
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