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"
What
's
the
matter
with
you
?
Are
you
ill
?
"
"
Go
!
"
the
quivering
voice
repeated
.
And
Prince
Vasíli
had
to
go
without
receiving
any
explanation
.
A
week
later
,
Pierre
,
having
taken
leave
of
his
new
friends
,
the
Masons
,
and
leaving
large
sums
of
money
with
them
for
alms
,
went
away
to
his
estates
.
His
new
brethren
gave
him
letters
to
the
Kiev
and
Odessa
Masons
and
promised
to
write
to
him
and
guide
him
in
his
new
activity
.
The
duel
between
Pierre
and
Dólokhov
was
hushed
up
and
,
in
spite
of
the
Emperor
's
severity
regarding
duels
at
that
time
,
neither
the
principals
nor
their
seconds
suffered
for
it
.
But
the
story
of
the
duel
,
confirmed
by
Pierre
's
rupture
with
his
wife
,
was
the
talk
of
society
.
Pierre
who
had
been
regarded
with
patronizing
condescension
when
he
was
an
illegitimate
son
,
and
petted
and
extolled
when
he
was
the
best
match
in
Russia
,
had
sunk
greatly
in
the
esteem
of
society
after
his
marriage
--
when
the
marriageable
daughters
and
their
mothers
had
nothing
to
hope
from
him
--
especially
as
he
did
not
know
how
,
and
did
not
wish
,
to
court
society
's
favor
.
Now
he
alone
was
blamed
for
what
had
happened
,
he
was
said
to
be
insanely
jealous
and
subject
like
his
father
to
fits
of
bloodthirsty
rage
.
And
when
after
Pierre
's
departure
Hélène
returned
to
Petersburg
,
she
was
received
by
all
her
acquaintances
not
only
cordially
,
but
even
with
a
shade
of
deference
due
to
her
misfortune
.
When
conversation
turned
on
her
husband
Hélène
assumed
a
dignified
expression
,
which
with
characteristic
tact
she
had
acquired
though
she
did
not
understand
its
significance
.
This
expression
suggested
that
she
had
resolved
to
endure
her
troubles
uncomplainingly
and
that
her
husband
was
a
cross
laid
upon
her
by
God
.
Prince
Vasíli
expressed
his
opinion
more
openly
.
He
shrugged
his
shoulders
when
Pierre
was
mentioned
and
,
pointing
to
his
forehead
,
remarked
:
"
A
bit
touched
--
I
always
said
so
.
"
"
I
said
from
the
first
,
"
declared
Anna
Pávlovna
referring
to
Pierre
,
"
I
said
at
the
time
and
before
anyone
else
"
(
she
insisted
on
her
priority
)
"
that
that
senseless
young
man
was
spoiled
by
the
depraved
ideas
of
these
days
.
I
said
so
even
at
the
time
when
everybody
was
in
raptures
about
him
,
when
he
had
just
returned
from
abroad
,
and
when
,
if
you
remember
,
he
posed
as
a
sort
of
Marat
at
one
of
my
soirees
.
And
how
has
it
ended
?
I
was
against
this
marriage
even
then
and
foretold
all
that
has
happened
.
"
Anna
Pávlovna
continued
to
give
on
free
evenings
the
same
kind
of
soirees
as
before
--
such
as
she
alone
had
the
gift
of
arranging
--
at
which
was
to
be
found
"
the
cream
of
really
good
society
,
the
bloom
of
the
intellectual
essence
of
Petersburg
,
"
as
she
herself
put
it
.
Besides
this
refined
selection
of
society
Anna
Pávlovna
's
receptions
were
also
distinguished
by
the
fact
that
she
always
presented
some
new
and
interesting
person
to
the
visitors
and
that
nowhere
else
was
the
state
of
the
political
thermometer
of
legitimate
Petersburg
court
society
so
dearly
and
distinctly
indicated
.
Toward
the
end
of
1806
,
when
all
the
sad
details
of
Napoleon
's
destruction
of
the
Prussian
army
at
Jena
and
Auerstädt
and
the
surrender
of
most
of
the
Prussian
fortresses
had
been
received
,
when
our
troops
had
already
entered
Prussia
and
our
second
war
with
Napoleon
was
beginning
,
Anna
Pávlovna
gave
one
of
her
soirees
.
The
"
cream
of
really
good
society
"
consisted
of
the
fascinating
Hélène
,
forsaken
by
her
husband
,
Mortemart
,
the
delightful
Prince
Hippolyte
who
had
just
returned
from
Vienna
,
two
diplomatists
,
the
old
aunt
,
a
young
man
referred
to
in
that
drawing
room
as
"
a
man
of
great
merit
"
(
un
homme
de
beaucoup
de
mérite
)
,
a
newly
appointed
maid
of
honor
and
her
mother
,
and
several
other
less
noteworthy
persons
.