Levin trusts sensations and scientific facts of earth rather than believing in fates and spirits. Although Levin has been cut out of the party by Kitty’s refusal, he is still an invited guest and therefore awkwardly remains, glumly comparing himself to Vronsky. Need help with Part 1, Chapter 14 in Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina? Check out our
Leo Tolstoy Biography. Leo Nicolaevich Tolstoy (1828-1910) was the next to youngest of five children, descending from one of the oldest and best families in Russia. His youthful surroundings were of the upper class gentry of the last period of serfdom. Though his life spanned the westernization of Russia, his early intellectual and cultural