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- Стр. 1017/1273
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When
a
pause
occurred
during
his
short
visit
,
Nicholas
,
as
is
usual
when
there
are
children
,
turned
to
Prince
Andrew
's
little
son
,
caressing
him
and
asking
whether
he
would
like
to
be
an
hussar
.
He
took
the
boy
on
his
knee
,
played
with
him
,
and
looked
round
at
Princess
Mary
.
With
a
softened
,
happy
,
timid
look
she
watched
the
boy
she
loved
in
the
arms
of
the
man
she
loved
.
Nicholas
also
noticed
that
look
and
,
as
if
understanding
it
,
flushed
with
pleasure
and
began
to
kiss
the
boy
with
good
natured
playfulness
.
As
she
was
in
mourning
Princess
Mary
did
not
go
out
into
society
,
and
Nicholas
did
not
think
it
the
proper
thing
to
visit
her
again
;
but
all
the
same
the
governor
's
wife
went
on
with
her
matchmaking
,
passing
on
to
Nicholas
the
flattering
things
Princess
Mary
said
of
him
and
vice
versa
,
and
insisting
on
his
declaring
himself
to
Princess
Mary
.
For
this
purpose
she
arranged
a
meeting
between
the
young
people
at
the
bishop
's
house
before
Mass.
.
Though
Rostóv
told
the
governor
's
wife
that
he
would
not
make
any
declaration
to
Princess
Mary
,
he
promised
to
go
.
As
at
Tilsit
Rostóv
had
not
allowed
himself
to
doubt
that
what
everybody
considered
right
was
right
,
so
now
,
after
a
short
but
sincere
struggle
between
his
effort
to
arrange
his
life
by
his
own
sense
of
justice
,
and
in
obedient
submission
to
circumstances
,
he
chose
the
latter
and
yielded
to
the
power
he
felt
irresistibly
carrying
him
he
knew
not
where
.
He
knew
that
after
his
promise
to
Sónya
it
would
be
what
he
deemed
base
to
declare
his
feelings
to
Princess
Mary
.
And
he
knew
that
he
would
never
act
basely
.
But
he
also
knew
(
or
rather
felt
at
the
bottom
of
his
heart
)
that
by
resigning
himself
now
to
the
force
of
circumstances
and
to
those
who
were
guiding
him
,
he
was
not
only
doing
nothing
wrong
,
but
was
doing
something
very
important
--
more
important
than
anything
he
had
ever
done
in
his
life
.
After
meeting
Princess
Mary
,
though
the
course
of
his
life
went
on
externally
as
before
,
all
his
former
amusements
lost
their
charm
for
him
and
he
often
thought
about
her
.
But
he
never
thought
about
her
as
he
had
thought
of
all
the
young
ladies
without
exception
whom
he
had
met
in
society
,
nor
as
he
had
for
a
long
time
,
and
at
one
time
rapturously
,
thought
about
Sónya
.
He
had
pictured
each
of
those
young
ladies
as
almost
all
honest-hearted
young
men
do
,
that
is
,
as
a
possible
wife
,
adapting
her
in
his
imagination
to
all
the
conditions
of
married
life
:
a
white
dressing
gown
,
his
wife
at
the
tea
table
,
his
wife
's
carriage
,
little
ones
,
Mamma
and
Papa
,
their
relations
to
her
,
and
so
on
--
and
these
pictures
of
the
future
had
given
him
pleasure
But
with
Princess
Mary
,
to
whom
they
were
trying
to
get
him
engaged
,
he
could
never
picture
anything
of
future
married
life
.
If
he
tried
,
his
pictures
seemed
incongruous
and
false
.
It
made
him
afraid
.
The
dreadful
news
of
the
battle
of
Borodinó
,
of
our
losses
in
killed
and
wounded
,
and
the
still
more
terrible
news
of
the
loss
of
Moscow
reached
Vorónezh
in
the
middle
of
September
.
Princess
Mary
,
having
learned
of
her
brother
's
wound
only
from
the
Gazette
and
having
no
definite
news
of
him
,
prepared
(
so
Nicholas
heard
,
he
had
not
seen
her
again
himself
)
to
set
off
in
search
of
Prince
Andrew
.
When
he
received
the
news
of
the
battle
of
Borodinó
and
the
abandonment
of
Moscow
,
Rostóv
was
not
seized
with
despair
,
anger
,
the
desire
for
vengeance
,
or
any
feeling
of
that
kind
,
but
everything
in
Vorónezh
suddenly
seemed
to
him
dull
and
tiresome
,
and
he
experienced
an
indefinite
feeling
of
shame
and
awkwardness
.
The
conversations
he
heard
seemed
to
him
insincere
;
he
did
not
know
how
to
judge
all
these
affairs
and
felt
that
only
in
the
regiment
would
everything
again
become
clear
to
him
.
He
made
haste
to
finish
buying
the
horses
,
and
often
became
unreasonably
angry
with
his
servant
and
squadron
quartermaster
.
A
few
days
before
his
departure
a
special
thanksgiving
,
at
which
Nicholas
was
present
,
was
held
in
the
cathedral
for
the
Russian
victory
.
He
stood
a
little
behind
the
governor
and
held
himself
with
military
decorum
through
the
service
,
meditating
on
a
great
variety
of
subjects
.
When
the
service
was
over
the
governor
's
wife
beckoned
him
to
her
.
"
Have
you
seen
the
princess
?
"
she
asked
,
indicating
with
a
movement
of
her
head
a
lady
standing
on
the
opposite
side
,
beyond
the
choir
.