[The Kreutzer Sonata and Other Stories by Leo Tolstoi]@TWC D-Link bookThe Kreutzer Sonata and Other Stories CHAPTER XXIII 2/12
He bore himself with ease.
To all questions he responded promptly, with a smile of contentment and understanding, and that peculiar expression which was intended to mean: 'All that you may do and say will be exactly what I expected.' Everything about him that was not correct I now noticed with especial pleasure, for it all tended to tranquillize me, and prove to me that to my wife he stood in such a degree of inferiority that, as she had told me, she could not stoop to his level.
Less because of my wife's assurances than because of the atrocious sufferings which I felt in jealousy, I no longer allowed myself to be jealous. "In spite of that, I was not at ease with the musician or with her during dinner-time and the time that elapsed before the beginning of the music.
Involuntarily I followed each of their gestures and looks. The dinner, like all dinners, was tiresome and conventional.
Not long afterward the music began.
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