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He
quickly
entered
the
small
reception
room
with
its
still-unplastered
wooden
walls
redolent
of
pine
,
and
would
have
gone
farther
,
but
Antón
ran
ahead
on
tiptoe
and
knocked
at
a
door
.
"
Well
,
what
is
it
?
"
came
a
sharp
,
unpleasant
voice
.
"
A
visitor
,
"
answered
Antón
.
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"
Ask
him
to
wait
,
"
and
the
sound
was
heard
of
a
chair
being
pushed
back
.
Pierre
went
with
rapid
steps
to
the
door
and
suddenly
came
face
to
face
with
Prince
Andrew
,
who
came
out
frowning
and
looking
old
.
Pierre
embraced
him
and
lifting
his
spectacles
kissed
his
friend
on
the
cheek
and
looked
at
him
closely
.
"
Well
,
I
did
not
expect
you
,
I
am
very
glad
,
"
said
Prince
Andrew
.
Pierre
said
nothing
;
he
looked
fixedly
at
his
friend
with
surprise
.
He
was
struck
by
the
change
in
him
.
His
words
were
kindly
and
there
was
a
smile
on
his
lips
and
face
,
but
his
eyes
were
dull
and
lifeless
and
in
spite
of
his
evident
wish
to
do
so
he
could
not
give
them
a
joyous
and
glad
sparkle
.
Prince
Andrew
had
grown
thinner
,
paler
,
and
more
manly-looking
,
but
what
amazed
and
estranged
Pierre
till
he
got
used
to
it
were
his
inertia
and
a
wrinkle
on
his
brow
indicating
prolonged
concentration
on
some
one
thought
.
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As
is
usually
the
case
with
people
meeting
after
a
prolonged
separation
,
it
was
long
before
their
conversation
could
settle
on
anything
.
They
put
questions
and
gave
brief
replies
about
things
they
knew
ought
to
be
talked
over
at
length
.
At
last
the
conversation
gradually
settled
on
some
of
the
topics
at
first
lightly
touched
on
:
their
past
life
,
plans
for
the
future
,
Pierre
's
journeys
and
occupations
,
the
war
,
and
so
on
.
The
preoccupation
and
despondency
which
Pierre
had
noticed
in
his
friend
's
look
was
now
still
more
clearly
expressed
in
the
smile
with
which
he
listened
to
Pierre
,
especially
when
he
spoke
with
joyful
animation
of
the
past
or
the
future
.
It
was
as
if
Prince
Andrew
would
have
liked
to
sympathize
with
what
Pierre
was
saying
,
but
could
not
.
The
latter
began
to
feel
that
it
was
in
bad
taste
to
speak
of
his
enthusiasms
,
dreams
,
and
hopes
of
happiness
or
goodness
,
in
Prince
Andrew
's
presence
.
He
was
ashamed
to
express
his
new
Masonic
views
,
which
had
been
particularly
revived
and
strengthened
by
his
late
tour
.
He
checked
himself
,
fearing
to
seem
naïve
,
yet
he
felt
an
irresistible
desire
to
show
his
friend
as
soon
as
possible
that
he
was
now
a
quite
different
,
and
better
,
Pierre
than
he
had
been
in
Petersburg
.
"
I
ca
n't
tell
you
how
much
I
have
lived
through
since
then
.
I
hardly
know
myself
again
.
"