War and Peace by graf Leo Tolstoy (latest ebook reader .TXT) π
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- Author: graf Leo Tolstoy
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βSo you have never noticed before how beautiful I am?β HΓ©lΓ¨ne seemed to say. βYou had not noticed that I am a woman? Yes, I am a woman who may belong to anyoneβto you too,β said her glance. And at that moment Pierre felt that HΓ©lΓ¨ne not only could, but must, be his wife, and that it could not be otherwise.
He knew this at that moment as surely as if he had been standing at the altar with her. How and when this would be he did not know, he did not even know if it would be a good thing (he even felt, he knew not why, that it would be a bad thing), but he knew it would happen.
Pierre dropped his eyes, lifted them again, and wished once more to see her as a distant beauty far removed from him, as he had seen her every day until then, but he could no longer do it. He could not, any more than a man who has been looking at a tuft of steppe grass through the mist and taking it for a tree can again take it for a tree after he has once recognized it to be a tuft of grass. She was terribly close to him. She already had power over him, and between them there was no longer any barrier except the barrier of his own will.
βWell, I will leave you in your little corner,β came Anna PΓ‘vlovnaβs voice, βI see you are all right there.β
And Pierre, anxiously trying to remember whether he had done anything reprehensible, looked round with a blush. It seemed to him that everyone knew what had happened to him as he knew it himself.
A little later when he went up to the large circle, Anna PΓ‘vlovna said to him: βI hear you are refitting your Petersburg house?β
This was true. The architect had told him that it was necessary, and Pierre, without knowing why, was having his enormous Petersburg house done up.
βThatβs a good thing, but donβt move from Prince VasΓliβs. It is good to have a friend like the prince,β she said, smiling at Prince VasΓli. βI know something about that. Donβt I? And you are still so young. You need advice. Donβt be angry with me for exercising an old womanβs privilege.β
She paused, as women always do, expecting something after they have mentioned their age. βIf you marry it will be a different thing,β she continued, uniting them both in one glance. Pierre did not look at HΓ©lΓ¨ne nor she at him. But she was just as terribly close to him. He muttered something and colored.
When he got home he could not sleep for a long time for thinking of what had happened. What had happened? Nothing. He had merely understood that the woman he had known as a child, of whom when her beauty was mentioned he had said absent-mindedly: βYes, sheβs good looking,β he had understood that this woman might belong to him.
βBut sheβs stupid. I have myself said she is stupid,β he thought. βThere is something nasty, something wrong, in the feeling she excites in me. I have been told that her brother Anatole was in love with her and she with him, that there was quite a scandal and that thatβs why he was sent away. Hippolyte is her brother... Prince VasΓli is her father... Itβs bad....β he reflected, but while he was thinking this (the reflection was still incomplete), he caught himself smiling and was conscious that another line of thought had sprung up, and while thinking of her worthlessness he was also dreaming of how she would be his wife, how she would love him become quite different, and how all he had thought and heard of her might be false. And he again saw her not as the daughter of Prince VasΓli, but visualized her whole body only veiled by its gray dress. βBut no! Why did this thought never occur to me before?β and again he told himself that it was impossible, that there would be something unnatural, and as it seemed to him dishonorable, in this marriage. He recalled her former words and looks and the words and looks of those who had seen them together. He recalled Anna PΓ‘vlovnaβs words and looks when she spoke to him about his house, recalled thousands of such hints from Prince VasΓli and others, and was seized by terror lest he had already, in some way, bound himself to do something that was evidently wrong and that he ought not to do. But at the very time he was expressing this conviction to himself, in another part of his mind her image rose in all its womanly beauty.
In November, 1805, Prince VasΓli had to go on a tour of inspection in four different provinces. He had arranged this for himself so as to visit his neglected estates at the same time and pick up his son Anatole where his regiment was stationed, and take him to visit Prince Nicholas BolkΓ³nski in order to arrange a match for him with the daughter of that rich old man. But before leaving home and undertaking these new affairs, Prince VasΓli had to settle matters with Pierre, who, it is true, had latterly spent whole days at home, that is, in Prince VasΓliβs house where he was staying, and had been absurd, excited, and foolish in HΓ©lΓ¨neβs presence (as a lover should be), but had not yet proposed to her.
βThis is all very fine, but things must be settled,β said Prince VasΓli to himself, with a sorrowful sigh, one morning, feeling that Pierre who was under such obligations to him (βBut never mind thatβ) was not behaving very well in this matter. βYouth, frivolity... well, God be with him,β thought he, relishing his own goodness of heart, βbut it must be brought to a head. The day after tomorrow will be LΓ«lyaβs name day. I will invite two or three people, and if he does not understand what he ought to do then it will be my affairβyes, my affair. I am her father.β
Six weeks after Anna PΓ‘vlovnaβs βAt Homeβ and after the sleepless night when he had decided that to marry HΓ©lΓ¨ne would be a calamity and that he ought to avoid her and go away, Pierre, despite that decision, had not left Prince VasΓliβs and felt with terror that in peopleβs eyes he was every day more and more connected with her, that it was impossible for him to return to his former conception of her, that he could not break away from her, and that though it would be a terrible thing he would have to unite his fate with hers. He might perhaps have been able to free himself but that Prince VasΓli (who had rarely before given receptions) now hardly let a day go by without having an evening party at which Pierre had to be present unless he wished to spoil the general pleasure and disappoint
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