1 I suffer for my own sins, and he wept bitter tears.
2 She suffered more now than during her first days in Moscow.
3 He has not a character like us women who, when we suffer, can weep away our sorrows.
4 He has suffered so many disappointments and is so sensitive, said she to the mother.
5 I agreed," Natasha now said to herself, "that it would be dreadful if he always continued to suffer.
6 Marya Dmitrievna came back to dinner taciturn and serious, having evidently suffered a defeat at the old prince's.
7 Yesterday I tormented myself and suffered, but I would not exchange even that torment for anything in the world, I have not lived till now.
8 And Nicholas, who had vainly suffered all the dread that precedes a battle and had spent that happy day in inactivity, was all the more depressed.
9 She adopted the tone of one who has suffered a great disappointment, like a girl who has either lost the man she loved or been cruelly deceived by him.
10 Though nothing of the kind had happened to her she was regarded in that light, and had even herself come to believe that she had suffered much in life.
11 He is so pure and poetic that my relations with him, transient as they were, have been one of the sweetest comforts to my poor heart, which has already suffered so much.
12 And they all struggled and suffered and tormented one another and injured their souls, their eternal souls, for the attainment of benefits which endure but for an instant.
13 The duel between Pierre and Dolokhov was hushed up and, in spite of the Emperor's severity regarding duels at that time, neither the principals nor their seconds suffered for it.
14 This spite increased still more when, on calling over the roll of prisoners, it was found that in the bustle of leaving Moscow one Russian soldier, who had pretended to suffer from colic, had escaped.
15 Pierre no longer suffered moments of despair, hypochondria, and disgust with life, but the malady that had formerly found expression in such acute attacks was driven inwards and never left him for a moment.
16 To Boris, Julie was particularly gracious: she regretted his early disillusionment with life, offered him such consolation of friendship as she who had herself suffered so much could render, and showed him her album.
17 He had suffered so painfully three years before from the mortification to which his wife had subjected him that he now protected himself from the danger of its repetition, first by not being a husband to his wife, and secondly by not allowing himself to suspect.
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