PART 6
Chapter 4
 
Varenka, with her white kerchief on her black hair, surrounded
 by the children, gaily and good-humoredly looking after them, and
 at the same time visibly excited at the possibility of receiving
 a declaration from the man she cared for, was very attractive.
 Sergey Ivanovitch walked beside her, and never left off admiring
 her.  Looking at her, he recalled all the delightful things he
 had heard from her lips, all the good he knew about her, and
 became more and more conscious that the feeling he had for her
 was something special that he had felt long, long ago, and only
 once, in his early youth.  The feeling of happiness in being near
 her continually grew, and at last reached such a point that, as
 he put a huge, slender-stalked agaric fungus in her basket, he
 looked straight into her face, and noticing the flush of glad and
 alarmed excitement that overspread her face, he was confused
 himself, and smiled to her in silence a smile that said too much. 
"If so," he said to himself, "I ought to think it over and make
 up my mind, and not give way like a boy to the impulse of a
 moment." 
"I'm going to pick by myself apart from all the rest, or else my
 efforts will make no show," he said, and he left the edge of the
 forest where they were walking on low silky grass between old
 birch trees standing far apart, and went more into the heart of
 the wood, where between the white birch trunks there were gray
 trunks of aspen and dark bushes of hazel.  Walking some forty
 paces away, Sergey Ivanovitch, knowing he was out of sight, stood
 still behind a bushy spindle-tree in full flower with its rosy
 red catkins.  It was perfectly still all round him.  Only
 overhead in the birches under which he stood, the flies, like a
 swarm of bees, buzzed unceasingly, and from time to time the
 children's voices were floated across to him.  All at once he
 heard, not far from the edge of the wood, the sound of Varenka's
 contralto voice, calling Grisha, and a smile of delight passed
 over Sergey Ivanovitch's face.  Conscious of this smile, he shook
 his head disapprovingly at his own condition, and taking out a
 cigar, he began lighting it.  For a long while he could not get a
 match to light against the trunk of a birch tree.  The soft
 scales of the white bark rubbed off the phosphorus, and the light
 went out.  At last one of the matches burned, and the fragrant
 cigar smoke, hovering uncertainly in flat, wide coils, stretched
 away forwards and upwards over a bush under the overhanging
 branches of a birch tree.  Watching the streak of smoke, Sergey
 Ivanovitch walked gently on, deliberating on his position. 
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