PART 6
Chapter 11
 (continued)
"Yes, you feel it, but you don't give him your property," said
 Stepan Arkadyevitch, intentionally, as it seemed, provoking
 Levin. 
There had arisen of late something like a secret antagonism
 between the two brothers-in-law; as though, since they had
 married sisters, a kind of rivalry had sprung up between them as
 to which was ordering his life best, and now this hostility
 showed itself in the conversation, as it began to take a personal
 note. 
"I don't give it away, because no one demands that from me, and
 if I wanted to, I could not give it away," answered Levin, "and
 have no one to give it to." 
"Give it to this peasant, he would not refuse it." 
"Yes, but how am I to give it up?  Am I to go to him and make a
 deed of conveyance?" 
"I don't know; but if you are convinced that you have no
 right..." 
"I'm not at all convinced.  On the contrary, I feel I have no
 right to give it up, that I have duties both to the land and to
 my family." 
"No, excuse me, but if you consider this inequality is unjust,
 why is it you don't act accordingly?..." 
"Well, I do act negatively on that idea, so far as not trying to
 increase the difference of position existing between him and me." 
"No, excuse me, that's a paradox." 
"Yes, there's something of a sophistry about that," Veslovsky
 agreed.  "Ah! our host; so you're not asleep yet?" he said to the
 peasant who came into the barn, opening the creaking door.  "How
 is it you're not asleep?" 
"No, how's one to sleep!  I thought our gentlemen would be
 asleep, but I heard them chattering.  I want to get a hook from
 here.  She won't bite?" he added, stepping cautiously with his
 bare feet. 
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