PART 4
Chapter 8
 
Alexey Alexandrovitch, on coming back from church service, had 
 spent the whole morning indoors.  He had two pieces of business
 before him that morning; first, to receive and send on a
 deputation from the native tribes which was on its way to
 Petersburg, and now at Moscow; secondly, to write the promised
 letter to the lawyer.  The deputation, though it had been
 summoned at Alexey Alexandrovitch's instigation, was not without
 its discomforting and even dangerous aspect, and he was glad he
 had found it in Moscow.  The members of this deputation had not
 the slightest conception of their duty and the part they were to
 play.  They naively believed that it was their business to lay
 before the commission their needs and the actual condition of
 things, and to ask assistance of the government, and utterly
 failed to grasp that some of their statements and requests
 supported the contention of the enemy's side, and so spoiled the
 whole business.  Alexey Alexandrovitch was busily engaged with
 them for a long while, drew up a program for them from which they
 were not to depart, and on dismissing them wrote a letter to
 Petersburg for the guidance of the deputation.  He had his chief
 support in this affair in the Countess Lidia Ivanovna.  She was a
 specialist in the matter of deputations, and no one knew better
 than she how to manage them, and put them in the way they should
 go.  Having completed this task, Alexey Alexandrovitch wrote the
 letter to the lawyer.  Without the slightest hesitation he gave
 him permission to act as he might judge best.  In the letter he
 enclosed three of Vronsky's notes to Anna, which were in the
 portfolio he had taken away. 
Since Alexey Alexandrovitch had left home with the intention of
 not returning to his family again, and since he had been at the
 lawyer's and had spoken, though only to one man, of his
 intention, since especially he had translated the matter from the
 world of real life to the world of ink and paper, he had grown
 more and more used to his own intention, and by now distinctly
 perceived the feasibility of its execution. 
He was sealing the envelope to the lawyer, when he heard the loud
 tones of Stepan Arkadyevitch's voice.  Stepan Arkadyevitch was
 disputing with Alexey Alexandrovitch's servant, and insisting on
 being announced. 
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