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"
You
are
letting
yourself
go
,
my
dear
fellow
,
"
he
said
.
But
for
all
that
Willarski
found
it
pleasanter
now
than
it
had
been
formerly
to
be
with
Pierre
,
and
came
to
see
him
every
day
.
To
Pierre
as
he
looked
at
and
listened
to
Willarski
,
it
seemed
strange
to
think
that
he
had
been
like
that
himself
but
a
short
time
before
.
Willarski
was
a
married
man
with
a
family
,
busy
with
his
family
affairs
,
his
wife
's
affairs
,
and
his
official
duties
.
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He
regarded
all
these
occupations
as
hindrances
to
life
,
and
considered
that
they
were
all
contemptible
because
their
aim
was
the
welfare
of
himself
and
his
family
.
Military
,
administrative
,
political
,
and
Masonic
interests
continually
absorbed
his
attention
.
And
Pierre
,
without
trying
to
change
the
other
's
views
and
without
condemning
him
,
but
with
the
quiet
,
joyful
,
and
amused
smile
now
habitual
to
him
,
was
interested
in
this
strange
though
very
familiar
phenomenon
.
There
was
a
new
feature
in
Pierre
's
relations
with
Willarski
,
with
the
princess
,
with
the
doctor
,
and
with
all
the
people
he
now
met
,
which
gained
for
him
the
general
good
will
.
This
was
his
acknowledgment
of
the
impossibility
of
changing
a
man
's
convictions
by
words
,
and
his
recognition
of
the
possibility
of
everyone
thinking
,
feeling
,
and
seeing
things
each
from
his
own
point
of
view
.
This
legitimate
peculiarity
of
each
individual
which
used
to
excite
and
irritate
Pierre
now
became
a
basis
of
the
sympathy
he
felt
for
,
and
the
interest
he
took
in
,
other
people
.
The
difference
,
and
sometimes
complete
contradiction
,
between
men
's
opinions
and
their
lives
,
and
between
one
man
and
another
,
pleased
him
and
drew
from
him
an
amused
and
gentle
smile
.
In
practical
matters
Pierre
unexpectedly
felt
within
himself
a
center
of
gravity
he
had
previously
lacked
.
Formerly
all
pecuniary
questions
,
especially
requests
for
money
to
which
,
as
an
extremely
wealthy
man
,
he
was
very
exposed
,
produced
in
him
a
state
of
hopeless
agitation
and
perplexity
.
"
To
give
or
not
to
give
?
"
he
had
asked
himself
.
"
I
have
it
and
he
needs
it
.
But
someone
else
needs
it
still
more
.
Who
needs
it
most
?
And
perhaps
they
are
both
impostors
?
"
In
the
old
days
he
had
been
unable
to
find
a
way
out
of
all
these
surmises
and
had
given
to
all
who
asked
as
long
as
he
had
anything
to
give
.
Formerly
he
had
been
in
a
similar
state
of
perplexity
with
regard
to
every
question
concerning
his
property
,
when
one
person
advised
one
thing
and
another
something
else
.
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Now
to
his
surprise
he
found
that
he
no
longer
felt
either
doubt
or
perplexity
about
these
questions
.
There
was
now
within
him
a
judge
who
by
some
rule
unknown
to
him
decided
what
should
or
should
not
be
done
.
He
was
as
indifferent
as
heretofore
to
money
matters
,
but
now
he
felt
certain
of
what
ought
and
what
ought
not
to
be
done
.
The
first
time
he
had
recourse
to
his
new
judge
was
when
a
French
prisoner
,
a
colonel
,
came
to
him
and
,
after
talking
a
great
deal
about
his
exploits
,
concluded
by
making
what
amounted
to
a
demand
that
Pierre
should
give
him
four
thousand
francs
to
send
to
his
wife
and
children
.
Pierre
refused
without
the
least
difficulty
or
effort
,
and
was
afterwards
surprised
how
simple
and
easy
had
been
what
used
to
appear
so
insurmountably
difficult
.
At
the
same
time
that
he
refused
the
colonel
's
demand
he
made
up
his
mind
that
he
must
have
recourse
to
artifice
when
leaving
Orël
,
to
induce
the
Italian
officer
to
accept
some
money
of
which
he
was
evidently
in
need
.
A
further
proof
to
Pierre
of
his
own
more
settled
outlook
on
practical
matters
was
furnished
by
his
decision
with
regard
to
his
wife
's
debts
and
to
the
rebuilding
of
his
houses
in
and
near
Moscow
.
His
head
steward
came
to
him
at
Orël
and
Pierre
reckoned
up
with
him
his
diminished
income
.
The
burning
of
Moscow
had
cost
him
,
according
to
the
head
steward
's
calculation
,
about
two
million
rubles
.