![]() ![]() (There were a hundred thousand of them, I suppose. "They deported all members of the nobility from Leningrad. Where can people read about us? Us? Only in a hundred years? So why should I read Anna Karenina again? Maybe it's enough-what I've experienced. With ribbon in her hair, your daughter sits down at the piano for the last time to play Mozart. You open your doors, call in the passers-by from the streets and ask them to buy things from you, or to throw you a few pennies to buy bread with. But what if during peacetime a lot of greatcoats and peaked caps burst into the house where you were born and live, and ordered the whole family to leave house and town in twenty-four hours, with only what your feeble hands can carry?. But was Anna really unhappy? She chose passion and she paid for her passion-that's happiness! She was a free, proud human being. ![]() “Children write essays in school about the unhappy, tragic, doomed life of Anna Karenina. ![]()
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