| PART 2
Chapter 3
 (continued)The silence lasted for two minutes: Dolly was thinking of
 herself.  That humiliation of which she was always conscious came
 back to her with a peculiar bitterness when her sister reminded
 her of it.  She had not looked for such cruelty in her sister,
 and she was angry with her.  But suddenly she heard the rustle of
 a skirt, and with it the sound of heart-rending, smothered
 sobbing, and felt arms about her neck.  Kitty was on her knees
 before her. "Dolinka, I am so, so wretched!" she whispered penitently.  And
 the sweet face covered with tears hid itself in Darya
 Alexandrovna's skirt. As though tears were the indispensable oil, without which the
 machinery of mutual confidence could not run smoothly between the
 two sisters, the sisters after their tears talked, not of what
 was uppermost in their minds, but, though they talked of outside
 matters, they understood each other.  Kitty knew that the words
 she had uttered in anger about her husband's infidelity and her
 humiliating position had cut her poor sister to the heart, but
 that she had forgiven her.  Dolly for her part knew all she had
 wanted to find out.  She felt certain that her surmises were
 correct; that Kitty's misery, her inconsolable misery, was due
 precisely to the fact that Levin had made her an offer and she
 had refused him, and Vronsky had deceived her, and that she was
 fully prepared to love Levin and to detest Vronsky.  Kitty said
 not a word of that; she talked of nothing but her spiritual
 condition. "I have nothing to make me miserable," she said, getting calmer;
 "but can you understand that everything has become hateful,
 loathsome, coarse to me, and I myself most of all?  You can't
 imagine what loathsome thoughts I have about everything." "Why, whatever loathsome thoughts can you have?" asked Dolly,
 smiling. |