“How
delightful this little princess is!” said Prince Vassily in an undertone to
Anna Pavlovna.
Soon after the little princess, there
walked in a massively built, stout young man in spectacles, with a cropped
head, light breeches in the mode of the day, with a high lace ruffle and a
ginger-coloured coat. This stout young man was the illegitimate son of a
celebrated dandy of the days of Catherine, Count Bezuhov, who was now dying at Moscow . He had not yet
entered any branch of the service; he had only just returned from abroad, where
he had been educated, and this was his first appearance in society. Anna
Pavlovna greeted him with a nod reserved for persons of the very lowest
hierarchy in her drawing-room. But, in spite of this greeting, Anna Pavlovna’s
countenance showed signs on seeing Pierre
of uneasiness and alarm, such as is shown at the sight of something too big and
out of place. Though Pierre certainly was somewhat bigger than any of the other
men in the room, this expression could only have reference to the clever,
though shy, observant and natural look that distinguished him from every one
else in the drawing-room.
“It is very
kind of you, M. Pierre ,
to have come to see a poor invalid,” Anna Pavlovna said to him, exchanging
anxious glances with her aunt, to whom she was conducting him.
“Yes, I have
heard of his scheme for perpetual peace, and it’s very interesting, but hardly
possible …”
“You think
so?” said Anna Pavlovna in order to say something and to get away again to her
duties as hostess, but Pierre committed the opposite incivility. Just now he
had walked off without listening to the lady who was addressing him; now he
detained by his talk a lady who wanted to get away from him. With head bent and
legs planted wide apart, he began explaining to Anna Pavlovna why he considered
the abbé’s scheme chimerical.
“We will talk
of it later,” said Anna Pavlovna, smiling.
And getting rid of this unmannerly young
man she returned to her duties, keeping her eyes and ears open, ready to fly to
the assistance at any point where the conversation was flagging. Just as the
foreman of a spinning-mill settles the work-people in their places, walks up
and down the works, and noting any stoppage or unusual creaking or too loud a
whir in the spindles, goes up hurriedly, slackens the machinery and sets it
going properly, so Anna Pavlovna, walking about her drawing-room, went up to
any circle that was pausing or too loud in conversation and by a single word or
change of position set the conversational machine going again in its regular,
decorous way. But in the midst of these cares a special anxiety on Pierre ’s account could
still be discerned in her. She kept an anxious watch on him as he went up to
listen to what was being said near Mortemart, and walked away to another group
where the abbé was talking. Pierre had been
educated abroad, and this party at Anna Pavlovna’s was the first at which he
had been present in Russia .
He knew all the intellectual lights of Petersburg
gathered together here, and his eyes strayed about like a child’s in a
toy-shop. He was afraid at every moment of missing some intellectual
conversation which he might have heard. Gazing at the self-confident and
refined expressions of the personages assembled here, he was continually
expecting something exceptionally clever. At last he moved up to Abbé Morio.
The conversation seemed interesting, and he stood still waiting for an
opportunity of expressing his own ideas, as young people are fond of doing.
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