chapter 14
“His
excellency wants to be turned over on the other side,” whispered the servant,
and he got up to turn the heavy body of the count facing the wall.
While the count was being turned over, one
of his arms dragged helplessly behind, and he made a vain effort to pull it
after him. Whether the count noticed the face of horror with which Pierre
looked at that lifeless arm, or whether some other idea passed through his
dying brain, he looked at the refractory arm, at the expression of horror on
Pierre’s face, again at his arm, and a smile came on his face, strangely out of
keeping with its features; a weak, suffering smile, which seemed mocking at his
own helplessness. Suddenly, at the sight of that smile, Pierre felt a lump in his throat and a
tickling in his nose, and tears dimmed his eyes. The sick man was turned
towards the wall. He sighed.
“He has fallen
into a doze,” said Anna Mihalovna, noticing the princess coming to take her
turn by the bedside. “Let us go.”
Chapter 21
THERE WAS by now no one in the
reception-room except Prince Vassily and the eldest princess, who were in eager
conversation together, sitting under the portrait of Catherine. They were mute
at once on seeing Pierre and his companion, and the princess concealed
something as Pierre
fancied and murmured: “I can’t stand the sight of that woman.”
“Katish has
had tea served in the little drawing-room,” Prince Vassily said to Anna
Mihalovna. “Go, my poor Anna Mihalovna, take something or you will not hold
out.”
To Pierre
he said nothing; he simply pressed his arm sympathetically. Pierre and Anna
Mihalovna went on into the little drawing-room.
“There is
nothing so reviving as a cup of this excellent Russian tea, after a sleepless
night,” said Lorrain with an air of restrained briskness, sipping it out of a
delicate china cup without a handle, as he stood in the little circular
drawing-room close to a table laid with tea-things and cold supper-dishes. All
who were in Count Bezuhov’s house on that night had, with a view to fortifying
themselves, gathered around the table. Pierre
remembered well that little circular drawing-room with its mirrors and little
tables. When there had been balls in the count’s house, Pierre, who could not
dance, had liked sitting in that little room full of mirrors, watching the
ladies in ball-dresses with pearls and diamonds on their bare shoulders, as
they crossed that room and looked at themselves in the brightly lighted mirrors
that repeated their reflections several times. Now the same room was dimly
lighted with two candles, and in the middle of the night the tea-set and
supper-dishes stood in disorder on one of the little tables, and heterogeneous,
plainly dressed persons were sitting at it, whispering together, and showing in
every word that no one could forget what was passing at that moment and what
was still to come in the bedroom. Pierre
did not eat anything, though he felt very much inclined to. He looked round
inquiringly towards his monitress, and perceived that she had gone out again on
tiptoe into the reception-room where Prince Vassily had remained with the
eldest princess. Pierre
supposed that this too was an inevitable part of the proceedings, and, after a
little delay, he followed her. Anna Mihalovna was standing beside the princess,
and they were both talking at once in excited tones.
“Allow me, madam, to know
what is and what is not to be done,” said the princess, who was apparently in
the same exasperated temper as she had been when she slammed the door of her
room.
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