| PART 5
Chapter 17
 The hotel of the provincial town where Nikolay Levin was lying
 ill was one of those provincial hotels which are constructed on
 the newest model of modern improvements, with the best intentions
 of cleanliness, comfort, and even elegance, but owing to the
 public that patronizes them, are with astounding rapidity
 transformed into filthy taverns with a pretension of modern
 improvement that only makes them worse than the old-fashioned,
 honestly filthy hotels.  This hotel had already reached that
 stage, and the soldier in a filthy uniform smoking in the entry,
 supposed to stand for a hall-porter, and the cast-iron, slippery,
 dark, and disagreeable staircase, and the free and easy waiter in
 a filthy frock coat, and the common dining room with a dusty
 bouquet of wax flowers adorning the table, and filth, dust, and
 disorder everywhere, and at the same time the sort of modern
 up-to-date self-complacent railway uneasiness of this hotel,
 aroused a most painful feeling in Levin after their fresh young
 life, especially because the impression of falsity made by the
 hotel was so out of keeping with what awaited them. As is invariably the case, after they had been asked at what
 price they wanted rooms, it appeared that there was not one
 decent room for them; one decent room had been taken by the
 inspector of railroads, another by a lawyer from Moscow, a third
 by Princess Astafieva from the country.  There remained only one
 filthy room, next to which they promised that another should be
 empty by the evening.  Feeling angry with his wife because what
 he had expected had come to pass, which was that at the moment of
 arrival, when his heart throbbed with emotion and anxiety to know
 how his brother was getting on, he should have to be seeing after
 her, instead of rushing straight to his brother, Levin conducted
 her to the room assigned them. "Go, do go!" she said, looking at him with timid and guilty eyes. He went out of the door without a word, and at once stumbled over
 Marya Nikolaevna, who had heard of his arrival and had not dared
 to go in to see him.  She was just the same as when he saw her in
 Moscow; the same woolen gown, and bare arms and neck, and the
 same good-naturedly stupid, pockmarked face, only a little
 plumper. |