1 I could not look at him without feeling sorry for him.
2 Every one was waiting for him to finish, and he felt it.
3 And she felt so sorry for him that tears came into her eyes.
4 "Oh, well, so much the better for him," said Vronsky smiling.
5 It was obviously difficult for him to think of what to say and do.
6 I felt sorry for him, but after talking to you, I see it, as a woman, quite differently.
7 But recollecting that his mother was waiting for him, he went back again into the carriage.
8 She felt for him with her whole heart, the more because she was pitying him for suffering of which she was herself the cause.
9 I have worked for him, and all I had has gone in his service, and now of course any fresh, vulgar creature has more charm for him.
10 He knew only that he had told her the truth, that he had come where she was, that all the happiness of his life, the only meaning in life for him, now lay in seeing and hearing her.
11 "Yes, the countess and I have been talking all the time, I of my son and she of hers," said Madame Karenina, and again a smile lighted up her face, a caressing smile intended for him.
12 He looked into his sickly, consumptive face, and he was more and more sorry for him, and he could not force himself to listen to what his brother was telling him about the association.
13 In Moscow he had for the first time felt, after his luxurious and coarse life at Petersburg, all the charm of intimacy with a sweet and innocent girl of his own rank, who cared for him.
14 His conception of her was for him a sacred memory, and his future wife was bound to be in his imagination a repetition of that exquisite, holy ideal of a woman that his mother had been.
15 Awkward as it was for Levin to withdraw now, it would still have been easier for him to perpetrate this awkwardness than to remain all the evening and see Kitty, who glanced at him now and then and avoided his eyes.
16 And noticing a gleam of light peeping in beside one of the serge curtains, he cheerfully dropped his feet over the edge of the sofa, and felt about with them for his slippers, a present on his last birthday, worked for him by his wife on gold-colored morocco.
17 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.
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