1 As soon as Levin approached the bath, the experiment was tried, and it was completely successful.
2 But he had no experience of lack of confidence, because he had confidence in her, and told himself that he ought to have it.
3 Besides that, he had that feeling of concentrated excitement that every sportsman experiences as he approaches the scene of action.
4 Clover, as he knew, both from books and from his own experience, never did well except when it was sown as early as possible, almost in the snow.
5 In spite of all his social experience Vronsky was, in consequence of the new position in which he was placed, laboring under a strange misapprehension.
6 He recalled his own criticisms of Tyndall of his complacent satisfaction in the cleverness of his experiments, and for his lack of philosophic insight.
7 At every step he experienced what a man would experience who, after admiring the smooth, happy course of a little boat on a lake, should get himself into that little boat.
8 He had often had the experience of suddenly in a discussion grasping what it was his opponent liked and at once liking it too, and immediately he found himself agreeing, and then all arguments fell away as useless.
9 The same experience befell him as Golenishtchev, who felt that he had nothing to say, and continually deceived himself with the theory that his idea was not yet mature, that he was working it out and collecting materials.
10 But knowing by experience that in the present condition of the public temper it was dangerous to express an opinion opposed to the general one, and especially to criticize the volunteers unfavorably, he too watched Katavasov without committing himself.