| PART 6
Chapter 22
 (continued)"It's a pity it doesn't bind too.  I saw one at the Vienna
 exhibition, which binds with a wire," said Sviazhsky.  "They
 would be more profitable in use." "Es kommt drauf an....  Der Preis vom Draht muss ausgerechnet
 werden."  And the German, roused from his taciturnity, turned to
 Vronsky.  "Das laesst sich ausrechnen, Erlaucht."  The German was
 just feeling in the pocket where were his pencil and the
 notebook he always wrote in, but recollecting that he was at a
 dinner, and observing Vronsky's chilly glance, he checked
 himself.  "Zu compliziert, macht zu viel Klopot," he concluded. "Wuenscht man Dochots, so hat man auch Klopots," said Vassenka
 Veslovsky, mimicking the German.  "J'adore l'allemand," he
 addressed Anna again with the same smile. "Cessez," she said with playful severity. "We expected to find you in the fields, Vassily Semyonitch," she
 said to the doctor, a sickly-looking man; "have you been there?" "I went there, but I had taken flight," the doctor answered
 with gloomy jocoseness. "Then you've taken a good constitutional?" "Splendid!" "Well, and how was the old woman?  I hope it's not typhus?" "Typhus it is not, but it's taking a bad turn." "What a pity!" said Anna, and having thus paid the dues of
 civility to her domestic circle, she turned to her own friends. "It would be a hard task, though, to construct a machine from
 your description, Anna Arkadyevna," Sviazhsky said jestingly. "Oh, no, why so?" said Anna with a smile that betrayed that she
 knew there was something charming in her disquisitions upon the
 machine that had been noticed by Sviazhsky.  This new trait of
 girlish coquettishness made an unpleasant impression on Dolly. |