| PART 4
Chapter 14
 (continued)"Well, did you like it?" Sergey Ivanovitch asked him. "Very much.  I never supposed it was so interesting!  Capital!
 Splendid!" Sviazhsky went up to Levin and invited him to come round to tea
 with him.  Levin was utterly at a loss to comprehend or recall
 what it was he had disliked in Sviazhsky, what he had failed to
 find in him.  He was a clever and wonderfully good-hearted man. "Most delighted," he said, and asked after his wife and
 sister-in-law.  And from a queer association of ideas, because in
 his imagination the idea of Sviazhsky's sister-in-law was
 connected with marriage, it occurred to him that there was no one
 to whom he could more suitably speak of his happiness, and he was
 very glad to go and see them. Sviazhsky questioned him about his improvements on his estate,
 presupposing, as he always did, that there was no possibility of
 doing anything not done already in Europe, and now this did not
 in the least annoy Levin.  On the contrary, he felt that
 Sviazhsky was right, that the whole business was of little value,
 and he saw the wonderful softness and consideration with which
 Sviazhsky avoided fully expressing his correct view.  The ladies
 of the Sviazhsky household were particularly delightful.  It
 seemed to Levin that they knew all about it already and
 sympathized with him, saying nothing merely from delicacy.  He
 stayed with them one hour, two, three, talking of all sorts of
 subjects but the one thing that filled his heart, and did not
 observe that he was boring them dreadfully, and that it was long
 past their bedtime. Sviazhsky went with him into the hall, yawning and wondering at
 the strange humor his friend was in.  It was past one o'clock.
 Levin went back to his hotel, and was dismayed at the thought
 that all alone now with his impatience he had ten hours still
 left to get through.  The servant, whose turn it was to be up all
 night, lighted his candles, and would have gone away, but Levin
 stopped him.  This servant, Yegor, whom Levin had noticed before,
 struck him as a very intelligent, excellent, and, above all,
 good-hearted man. |