PART 2
Chapter 33
 
Kitty made the acquaintance of Madame Stahl too, and this
 acquaintance, together with her friendship with Varenka, did not
 merely exercise a great influence on her, it also comforted her
 in her mental distress.  She found this comfort through a
 completely new world being opened to her by means of this
 acquaintance, a world having nothing in common with her past, an
 exalted, noble world, from the height of which she could
 contemplate her past calmly.  It was revealed to her that besides
 the instinctive life to which Kitty had given herself up hitherto
 there was a spiritual life.  This life was disclosed in religion,
 but a religion having nothing in common with that one which Kitty
 had known from childhood, and which found expression in litanies
 and all-night services at the Widow's Home, where one might meet
 one's friends, and in learning by heart Slavonic texts with the
 priest.  This was a lofty, mysterious religion connected with a
 whole series of noble thoughts and feelings, which one could do
 more than merely believe because one was told to, which one could
 love. 
Kitty found all this out not from words.  Madame Stahl talked to
 Kitty as to a charming child that one looks on with pleasure as
 on the memory of one's youth, and only once she said in passing
 that in all human sorrows nothing gives comfort but love and
 faith, and that in the sight of Christ's compassion for us no
 sorrow is trifling--and immediately talked of other things.  But
 in every gesture of Madame Stahl, in every word, in every
 heavenly--as Kitty called it--look, and above all in the whole
 story of her life, which she heard from Varenka, Kitty recognized
 that something "that was important," of which, till then, she had
 known nothing. 
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