PART 5
Chapter 21
 (continued)
On completing his high school and university courses with medals,
 Alexey Alexandrovitch had, with his uncle's aid, immediately
 started in a prominent position in the service, and from that
 time forward he had devoted himself exclusively to political
 ambition.  In the high school and the university, and afterwards
 in the service, Alexey Alexandrovitch had never formed a close
 friendship with anyone.  His brother had been the person nearest
 to his heart, but he had a post in the Ministry of Foreign
 Affairs, and was always abroad, where he had died shortly after
 Alexey Alexandrovitch's marriage. 
While he was governor of a province, Anna's aunt, a wealthy
 provincial lady, had thrown him--middle-aged as he was, though
 young for a governor--with her niece, and had succeeded in
 putting him in such a position that he had either to declare
 himself or to leave the town.  Alexey Alexandrovitch was not long
 in hesitation.  There were at the time as many reasons for the
 step as against it, and there was no overbalancing consideration
 to outweigh his invariable rule of abstaining when in doubt.  But
 Anna's aunt had through a common acquaintance insinuated that he
 had already compromised the girl, and that he was in honor bound
 to make her an offer.  He made the offer, and concentrated on his
 betrothed and his wife all the feeling of which he was capable. 
The attachment he felt to Anna precluded in his heart every need
 of intimate relations with others.  And now among all his
 acquaintances he had not one friend.  He had plenty of so-called
 connections, but no friendships.  Alexey Alexandrovitch had
 plenty of people whom he could invite to dinner, to whose
 sympathy he could appeal in any public affair he was concerned
 about, whose interest he could reckon upon for anyone he wished
 to help, with whom he could candidly discuss other people's
 business and affairs of state.  But his relations with these
 people were confined to one clearly defined channel, and had a
 certain routine from which it was impossible to depart.  There
 was one man, a comrade of his at the university, with whom he had
 made friends later, and with whom he could have spoken of a
 personal sorrow; but this friend had a post in the Department of
 Education in a remote part of Russia.  Of the people in
 Petersburg the most intimate and most possible were his chief
 secretary and his doctor. 
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