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Nicholas
,
who
,
as
the
roads
were
in
splendid
condition
,
wanted
to
take
them
all
for
a
drive
in
his
troyka
,
proposed
to
take
with
them
about
a
dozen
of
the
serf
mummers
and
drive
to
"
Uncle
's
.
"
"
No
,
why
disturb
the
old
fellow
?
"
said
the
countess
.
"
Besides
,
you
would
n't
have
room
to
turn
round
there
.
If
you
must
go
,
go
to
the
Melyukóvs
'
.
"
Melyukóva
was
a
widow
,
who
,
with
her
family
and
their
tutors
and
governesses
,
lived
three
miles
from
the
Rostóvs
.
"
That
's
right
,
my
dear
,
"
chimed
in
the
old
count
,
thoroughly
aroused
.
"
I
'll
dress
up
at
once
and
go
with
them
.
I
'll
make
Pashette
open
her
eyes
.
"
But
the
countess
would
not
agree
to
his
going
;
he
had
had
a
bad
leg
all
these
last
days
.
It
was
decided
that
the
count
must
not
go
,
but
that
if
Louisa
Ivánovna
(
Madame
Schoss
)
would
go
with
them
,
the
young
ladies
might
go
to
the
Melyukóvs
'
,
Sónya
,
generally
so
timid
and
shy
,
more
urgently
than
anyone
begging
Louisa
Ivánovna
not
to
refuse
.
Sónya
's
costume
was
the
best
of
all
.
Her
mustache
and
eyebrows
were
extraordinarily
becoming
.
Everyone
told
her
she
looked
very
handsome
,
and
she
was
in
a
spirited
and
energetic
mood
unusual
with
her
.
Some
inner
voice
told
her
that
now
or
never
her
fate
would
be
decided
,
and
in
her
male
attire
she
seemed
quite
a
different
person
.
Louisa
Ivánovna
consented
to
go
,
and
in
half
an
hour
four
troyka
sleighs
with
large
and
small
bells
,
their
runners
squeaking
and
whistling
over
the
frozen
snow
,
drove
up
to
the
porch
.
Natásha
was
foremost
in
setting
a
merry
holiday
tone
,
which
,
passing
from
one
to
another
,
grew
stronger
and
reached
its
climax
when
they
all
came
out
into
the
frost
and
got
into
the
sleighs
,
talking
,
calling
to
one
another
,
laughing
,
and
shouting
.
Two
of
the
troykas
were
the
usual
household
sleighs
,
the
third
was
the
old
count
's
with
a
trotter
from
the
Orlóv
stud
as
shaft
horse
,
the
fourth
was
Nicholas
'
own
with
a
short
shaggy
black
shaft
horse
.
Nicholas
,
in
his
old
lady
's
dress
over
which
he
had
belted
his
hussar
overcoat
,
stood
in
the
middle
of
the
sleigh
,
reins
in
hand
.
It
was
so
light
that
he
could
see
the
moonlight
reflected
from
the
metal
harness
disks
and
from
the
eyes
of
the
horses
,
who
looked
round
in
alarm
at
the
noisy
party
under
the
shadow
of
the
porch
roof
.