Having just gotten back from a very long car trip, I thought I'd propose a few fun things to do to pass the time.



After being a long time in Moscow without a change, he reached a point when he positively began to be worrying himself over his wife's ill-humor and reproaches, over his children's health and education, and the petty details of his official work; even the fact of being in debt worried him.

But he had only to go and stay a little while in Petersburg, in the circle there in which he moved, where people lived--really lived--instead of vegetating as in Moscow, and all such ideas vanished and melted away at once, like wax before the fire.

His wife?... Only that day he had been talking to Prince Tchetchensky.

Prince Tchetchensky had a wife and family, grown-up pages in the corps,...and he had another illegitimate family of children also.

Though the first family was very nice too, Prince Tchetchensky felt happier in his second family; and he used to take his eldest son with him to his second family, and told Stepan Arkadyevitch that he thought it good for his son, enlarging his ideas.

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