War and Peace by graf Leo Tolstoy (latest ebook reader .TXT) ๐
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- Author: graf Leo Tolstoy
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He entered the dining room. The whole company were standing between two windows at a small table laid with hors-dโoeuvres. Sperรกnski, wearing a gray swallow-tail coat with a star on the breast, and evidently still the same waistcoat and high white stock he had worn at the meeting of the Council of State, stood at the table with a beaming countenance. His guests surrounded him. Magnรญtski, addressing himself to Sperรกnski, was relating an anecdote, and Sperรกnski was laughing in advance at what Magnรญtski was going to say. When Prince Andrew entered the room Magnรญtskiโs words were again crowned by laughter. Stolรฝpin gave a deep bass guffaw as he munched a piece of bread and cheese. Gervais laughed softly with a hissing chuckle, and Sperรกnski in a high-pitched staccato manner.
Still laughing, Sperรกnski held out his soft white hand to Prince Andrew.
โVery pleased to see you, Prince,โ he said. โOne moment...โ he went on, turning to Magnรญtski and interrupting his story. โWe have agreed that this is a dinner for recreation, with not a word about business!โ and turning again to the narrator he began to laugh afresh.
Prince Andrew looked at the laughing Sperรกnski with astonishment, regret, and disillusionment. It seemed to him that this was not Sperรกnski but someone else. Everything that had formerly appeared mysterious and fascinating in Sperรกnski suddenly became plain and unattractive.
At dinner the conversation did not cease for a moment and seemed to consist of the contents of a book of funny anecdotes. Before Magnรญtski had finished his story someone else was anxious to relate something still funnier. Most of the anecdotes, if not relating to the state service, related to people in the service. It seemed that in this company the insignificance of those people was so definitely accepted that the only possible attitude toward them was one of good humored ridicule. Sperรกnski related how at the Council that morning a deaf dignitary, when asked his opinion, replied that he thought so too. Gervais gave a long account of an official revision, remarkable for the stupidity of everybody concerned. Stolรฝpin, stuttering, broke into the conversation and began excitedly talking of the abuses that existed under the former order of thingsโthreatening to give a serious turn to the conversation. Magnรญtski starting quizzing Stolรฝpin about his vehemence. Gervais intervened with a joke, and the talk reverted to its former lively tone.
Evidently Sperรกnski liked to rest after his labors and find amusement in a circle of friends, and his guests, understanding his wish, tried to enliven him and amuse themselves. But their gaiety seemed to Prince Andrew mirthless and tiresome. Sperรกnskiโs high-pitched voice struck him unpleasantly, and the incessant laughter grated on him like a false note. Prince Andrew did not laugh and feared that he would be a damper on the spirits of the company, but no one took any notice of his being out of harmony with the general mood. They all seemed very gay.
He tried several times to join in the conversation, but his remarks were tossed aside each time like a cork thrown out of the water, and he could not jest with them.
There was nothing wrong or unseemly in what they said, it was witty and might have been funny, but it lacked just that something which is the salt of mirth, and they were not even aware that such a thing existed.
After dinner Sperรกnskiโs daughter and her governess rose. He patted the little girl with his white hand and kissed her. And that gesture, too, seemed unnatural to Prince Andrew.
The men remained at table over their portโEnglish fashion. In the midst of a conversation that was started about Napoleonโs Spanish affairs, which they all agreed in approving, Prince Andrew began to express a contrary opinion. Sperรกnski smiled and, with an evident wish to prevent the conversation from taking an unpleasant course, told a story that had no connection with the previous conversation. For a few moments all were silent.
Having sat some time at table, Sperรกnski corked a bottle of wine and, remarking, โNowadays good wine rides in a carriage and pair,โ passed it to the servant and got up. All rose and continuing to talk loudly went into the drawing room. Two letters brought by a courier were handed to Sperรกnski and he took them to his study. As soon as he had left the room the general merriment stopped and the guests began to converse sensibly and quietly with one another.
โNow for the recitation!โ said Sperรกnski on returning from his study. โA wonderful talent!โ he said to Prince Andrew, and Magnรญtski immediately assumed a pose and began reciting some humorous verses in French which he had composed about various well-known Petersburg people. He was interrupted several times by applause. When the verses were finished Prince Andrew went up to Sperรกnski and took his leave.
โWhere are you off to so early?โ asked Sperรกnski.
โI promised to go to a reception.โ
They said no more. Prince Andrew looked closely into those mirrorlike, impenetrable eyes, and felt that it had been ridiculous of him to have expected anything from Sperรกnski and from any of his own activities connected with him, or ever to have attributed importance to what Sperรกnski was doing. That precise, mirthless laughter rang in Prince Andrewโs ears long after he had left the house.
When he reached home Prince Andrew began thinking of his life in Petersburg during those last four months as if it were something new. He recalled his exertions and solicitations, and the history of his project of army reform, which had been accepted for consideration and which they were trying to pass over in silence simply because another, a very poor one, had already been prepared and submitted to the Emperor. He thought of the meetings of a committee of which Berg was a member. He remembered how carefully and at what length everything relating to form and procedure was discussed at those meetings, and how sedulously and promptly all that related to the gist of the business was evaded. He recalled his labors on the Legal Code, and how painstakingly he had translated the articles of the Roman and French codes into Russian, and he felt ashamed of himself. Then he vividly pictured to himself Boguchรกrovo, his occupations in the country, his journey to Ryazรกn; he remembered the peasants and Dron the village elder, and mentally applying to them the Personal Rights he had divided into paragraphs, he felt astonished that he could have spent so much time on such useless work.
Next day Prince Andrew called at a few houses he had not visited before, and among them at the Rostรณvsโ with whom he had renewed acquaintance at the ball. Apart from considerations of politeness which demanded the call, he wanted to see that original,
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