[A House of Gentlefolk by Ivan Turgenev]@TWC D-Link book
A House of Gentlefolk

CHAPTER XIX
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Having looked over the house, Lavretsky went into the garden and was very much pleased with it.

It was all overgrown with high grass, and burdock, and gooseberry and raspberry bushes, but there was plenty of shade, and many old lime-trees, which were remarkable for their immense size and the peculiar growth of their branches; they had been planted too close and at some time or other--a hundred years before--they had been lopped.

At the end of the garden was a small clear pool bordered with high reddish rushes.

The traces of human life very quickly! pass away; Glafira Petrovna's estate had not had time to become quite wild, but already it seemed plunged in that quiet slumber in which everything reposes on earth where there is not the infection of man's restlessness.

Fedor Ivanitch walked also through the village; the peasant-women stared at him from the doorways of their huts, their cheeks resting on their hands; the peasants saluted him from a distance, the children ran out, and the dogs barked indifferently.


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