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"
No
,
"
said
Natásha
,
though
she
had
in
reality
been
thinking
about
Prince
Andrew
at
the
same
time
as
of
the
rest
,
and
of
how
he
would
have
liked
"
Uncle
.
"
"
And
then
I
was
saying
to
myself
all
the
way
,
'
How
well
Anísya
carried
herself
,
how
well
!
"'
And
Nicholas
heard
her
spontaneous
,
happy
,
ringing
laughter
.
"
And
do
you
know
,
"
she
suddenly
said
,
"
I
know
that
I
shall
never
again
be
as
happy
and
tranquil
as
I
am
now
.
"
"
Rubbish
,
nonsense
,
humbug
!
"
exclaimed
Nicholas
,
and
he
thought
:
"
How
charming
this
Natásha
of
mine
is
!
I
have
no
other
friend
like
her
and
never
shall
have
.
Why
should
she
marry
?
We
might
always
drive
about
together
!
"
"
What
a
darling
this
Nicholas
of
mine
is
!
"
thought
Natásha
.
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"
Ah
,
there
are
still
lights
in
the
drawing
room
!
"
she
said
,
pointing
to
the
windows
of
the
house
that
gleamed
invitingly
in
the
moist
velvety
darkness
of
the
night
.
Count
Ilyá
Rostóv
had
resigned
the
position
of
Marshal
of
the
Nobility
because
it
involved
him
in
too
much
expense
,
but
still
his
affairs
did
not
improve
.
Natásha
and
Nicholas
often
noticed
their
parents
conferring
together
anxiously
and
privately
and
heard
suggestions
of
selling
the
fine
ancestral
Rostóv
house
and
estate
near
Moscow
.
It
was
not
necessary
to
entertain
so
freely
as
when
the
count
had
been
Marshal
,
and
life
at
Otrádnoe
was
quieter
than
in
former
years
,
but
still
the
enormous
house
and
its
lodges
were
full
of
people
and
more
than
twenty
sat
down
to
table
every
day
.
These
were
all
their
own
people
who
had
settled
down
in
the
house
almost
as
members
of
the
family
,
or
persons
who
were
,
it
seemed
,
obliged
to
live
in
the
count
's
house
.
Such
were
Dimmler
the
musician
and
his
wife
,
Vogel
the
dancing
master
and
his
family
,
Belóva
,
an
old
maiden
lady
,
an
inmate
of
the
house
,
and
many
others
such
as
Pétya
's
tutors
,
the
girls
'
former
governess
,
and
other
people
who
simply
found
it
preferable
and
more
advantageous
to
live
in
the
count
's
house
than
at
home
.
They
had
not
as
many
visitors
as
before
,
but
the
old
habits
of
life
without
which
the
count
and
countess
could
not
conceive
of
existence
remained
unchanged
.
There
was
still
the
hunting
establishment
which
Nicholas
had
even
enlarged
,
the
same
fifty
horses
and
fifteen
grooms
in
the
stables
,
the
same
expensive
presents
and
dinner
parties
to
the
whole
district
on
name
days
;
there
were
still
the
count
's
games
of
whist
and
boston
,
at
which
--
spreading
out
his
cards
so
that
everybody
could
see
them
--
he
let
himself
be
plundered
of
hundreds
of
rubles
every
day
by
his
neighbors
,
who
looked
upon
an
opportunity
to
play
a
rubber
with
Count
Rostóv
as
a
most
profitable
source
of
income
.
The
count
moved
in
his
affairs
as
in
a
huge
net
,
trying
not
to
believe
that
he
was
entangled
but
becoming
more
and
more
so
at
every
step
,
and
feeling
too
feeble
to
break
the
meshes
or
to
set
to
work
carefully
and
patiently
to
disentangle
them
.
The
countess
,
with
her
loving
heart
,
felt
that
her
children
were
being
ruined
,
that
it
was
not
the
count
's
fault
for
he
could
not
help
being
what
he
was
--
that
(
though
he
tried
to
hide
it
)
he
himself
suffered
from
the
consciousness
of
his
own
and
his
children
's
ruin
,
and
she
tried
to
find
means
of
remedying
the
position
.
From
her
feminine
point
of
view
she
could
see
only
one
solution
,
namely
,
for
Nicholas
to
marry
a
rich
heiress
.
She
felt
this
to
be
their
last
hope
and
that
if
Nicholas
refused
the
match
she
had
found
for
him
,
she
would
have
to
abandon
the
hope
of
ever
getting
matters
right
.
This
match
was
with
Julie
Karágina
,
the
daughter
of
excellent
and
virtuous
parents
,
a
girl
the
Rostóvs
had
known
from
childhood
,
and
who
had
now
become
a
wealthy
heiress
through
the
death
of
the
last
of
her
brothers
.
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The
countess
had
written
direct
to
Julie
's
mother
in
Moscow
suggesting
a
marriage
between
their
children
and
had
received
a
favorable
answer
from
her
.
Karágina
had
replied
that
for
her
part
she
was
agreeable
,
and
everything
depend
on
her
daughter
's
inclination
.
She
invited
Nicholas
to
come
to
Moscow
.
Several
times
the
countess
,
with
tears
in
her
eyes
,
told
her
son
that
now
both
her
daughters
were
settled
,
her
only
wish
was
to
see
him
married
.
She
said
she
could
lie
down
in
her
grave
peacefully
if
that
were
accomplished
.
Then
she
told
him
that
she
knew
of
a
splendid
girl
and
tried
to
discover
what
he
thought
about
marriage
.
At
other
times
she
praised
Julie
to
him
and
advised
him
to
go
to
Moscow
during
the
holidays
to
amuse
himself
.
Nicholas
guessed
what
his
mother
's
remarks
were
leading
to
and
during
one
of
these
conversations
induced
her
to
speak
quite
frankly
.
She
told
him
that
her
only
hope
of
getting
their
affairs
disentangled
now
lay
in
his
marrying
Julie
Karágina
.