PART 3
Chapter 29
 (continued)
These matters, together with the management of the land still
 left on his hands, and the indoor work over his book, so
 engrossed Levin the whole summer that he scarcely ever went out
 shooting.  At the end of August he heard that the Oblonskys had
 gone away to Moscow, from their servant who brought back the
 side-saddle.  He felt that in not answering Darya Alexandrovna's
 letter he had by his rudeness, of which he could not think
 without a flush of shame, burned his ships, and that he would
 never go and see them again.  He had been just as rude with the
 Sviazhskys, leaving them without saying good-bye.  But he would
 never go to see them again either.  He did not care about that
 now.  The business of reorganizing the farming of his land
 absorbed him as completely as though there would never be
 anything else in his life.  He read the books lent him by
 Sviazhsky, and copying out what he had not got, he read both the
 economic and socialistic books on the subject, but, as he had
 anticipated, found nothing bearing on the scheme he had
 undertaken.  In the books on political economy--in Mill, for
 instance, whom he studied first with great ardor, hoping every
 minute to find an answer to the questions that were engrossing
 him--he found laws deduced from the condition of land culture in
 Europe; but he did not see why these laws, which did not apply in
 Russia, must be general.  He saw just the same thing in the
 socialistic books: either they were the beautiful but
 impracticable fantasies which had fascinated him when he was a
 student, or they were attempts at improving, rectifying the
 economic position in which Europe was placed, with which the
 system of land tenure in Russia had nothing in common.  Political
 economy told him that the laws by which the wealth of Europe had
 been developed, and was developing, were universal and unvarying.
 Socialism told him that development along these lines leads to
 ruin.  And neither of them gave an answer, or even a hint, in
 reply to the question what he, Levin, and all the Russian
 peasants and landowners, were to do with their millions of hands
 and millions of acres, to make them as productive as possible for
 the common weal. 
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