The two girls used to meet several times a day, and every time

they met, Kitty's eyes said: "Who are you? What are you? Are

you really the exquisite creature I imagine you to be? But for

goodness' sake don't suppose," her eyes added, "that I would

force my acquaintance on you, I simply admire you and like you."

"I like you too, and you're very, very sweet. And I should like

you better still, if I had time," answered the eyes of the

unknown girl. Kitty saw indeed, that she was always busy.

Either she was taking the children of a Russian family home from

the springs, or fetching a shawl for a sick lady, and wrapping

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her up in it, or trying to interest an irritable invalid, or

selecting and buying cakes for tea for someone.

Soon after the arrival of the Shtcherbatskys there appeared in

the morning crowd at the springs two persons who attracted

universal and unfavorable attention. These were a tall man with

a stooping figure, and huge hands, in an old coat too short for

him, with black, simple, and yet terrible eyes, and a pockmarked,

kind-looking woman, very badly and tastelessly dressed.

Recognizing these persons as Russians, Kitty had already in her

imagination begun constructing a delightful and touching romance

about them. But the princess, having ascertained from the

visitors' list that this was Nikolay Levin and Marya Nikolaevna,

explained to Kitty what a bad man this Levin was, and all her

fancies about these two people vanished. Not so much from what

her mother told her, as from the fact that it was Konstantin's

brother, this pair suddenly seemed to Kitty intensely unpleasant.

This Levin, with his continual twitching of his head, aroused in

her now an irrepressible feeling of disgust.

It seemed to her that his big, terrible eyes, which persistently

pursued her, expressed a feeling of hatred and contempt, and she

tried to avoid meeting him.




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