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On
the
eve
of
the
Sunday
when
the
special
prayer
was
read
,
Pierre
had
promised
the
Rostóvs
to
bring
them
,
from
Count
Rostopchín
whom
he
knew
well
,
both
the
appeal
to
the
people
and
the
news
from
the
army
.
In
the
morning
,
when
he
went
to
call
at
Rostopchín
's
he
met
there
a
courier
fresh
from
the
army
,
an
acquaintance
of
his
own
,
who
often
danced
at
Moscow
balls
.
"
Do
,
please
,
for
heaven
's
sake
,
relieve
me
of
something
!
"
said
the
courier
.
"
I
have
a
sackful
of
letters
to
parents
.
"
Among
these
letters
was
one
from
Nicholas
Rostóv
to
his
father
.
Pierre
took
that
letter
,
and
Rostopchín
also
gave
him
the
Emperor
's
appeal
to
Moscow
,
which
had
just
been
printed
,
the
last
army
orders
,
and
his
own
most
recent
bulletin
.
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Glancing
through
the
army
orders
,
Pierre
found
in
one
of
them
,
in
the
lists
of
killed
,
wounded
,
and
rewarded
,
the
name
of
Nicholas
Rostóv
,
awarded
a
St.
George
's
Cross
of
the
Fourth
Class
for
courage
shown
in
the
Ostróvna
affair
,
and
in
the
same
order
the
name
of
Prince
Andrew
Bolkónski
,
appointed
to
the
command
of
a
regiment
of
Chasseurs
.
Though
he
did
not
want
to
remind
the
Rostóvs
of
Bolkónski
,
Pierre
could
not
refrain
from
making
them
happy
by
the
news
of
their
son
's
having
received
a
decoration
,
so
he
sent
that
printed
army
order
and
Nicholas
'
letter
to
the
Rostóvs
,
keeping
the
appeal
,
the
bulletin
,
and
the
other
orders
to
take
with
him
when
he
went
to
dinner
.
His
conversation
with
Count
Rostopchín
and
the
latter
's
tone
of
anxious
hurry
,
the
meeting
with
the
courier
who
talked
casually
of
how
badly
things
were
going
in
the
army
,
the
rumors
of
the
discovery
of
spies
in
Moscow
and
of
a
leaflet
in
circulation
stating
that
Napoleon
promised
to
be
in
both
the
Russian
capitals
by
the
autumn
,
and
the
talk
of
the
Emperor
's
being
expected
to
arrive
next
day
--
all
aroused
with
fresh
force
that
feeling
of
agitation
and
expectation
in
Pierre
which
he
had
been
conscious
of
ever
since
the
appearance
of
the
comet
,
and
especially
since
the
beginning
of
the
war
He
had
long
been
thinking
of
entering
the
army
and
would
have
done
so
had
he
not
been
hindered
,
first
,
by
his
membership
of
the
Society
of
Freemasons
to
which
he
was
bound
by
oath
and
which
preached
perpetual
peace
and
the
abolition
of
war
,
and
secondly
,
by
the
fact
that
when
he
saw
the
great
mass
of
Muscovites
who
had
donned
uniform
and
were
talking
patriotism
,
he
somehow
felt
ashamed
to
take
the
step
.
But
the
chief
reason
for
not
carrying
out
his
intention
to
enter
the
army
lay
in
the
vague
idea
that
he
was
L'russe
Besuhof
who
had
the
number
of
the
beast
,
666
;
that
his
part
in
the
great
affair
of
setting
a
limit
to
the
power
of
the
beast
that
spoke
great
and
blasphemous
things
had
been
predestined
from
eternity
,
and
that
therefore
he
ought
not
to
undertake
anything
,
but
wait
for
what
was
bound
to
come
to
pass
.
A
few
intimate
friends
were
dining
with
the
Rostóvs
that
day
,
as
usual
on
Sundays
.
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Pierre
came
early
so
as
to
find
them
alone
.
He
had
grown
so
stout
this
year
that
he
would
have
been
abnormal
had
he
not
been
so
tall
,
so
broad
of
limb
,
and
so
strong
that
he
carried
his
bulk
with
evident
ease
.
He
went
up
the
stairs
,
puffing
and
muttering
something
.
His
coachman
did
not
even
ask
whether
he
was
to
wait
.
He
knew
that
when
his
master
was
at
the
Rostóvs
'
he
stayed
till
midnight
.
The
Rostóvs
'
footman
rushed
eagerly
forward
to
help
him
off
with
his
cloak
and
take
his
hat
and
stick
.
Pierre
,
from
club
habit
,
always
left
both
hat
and
stick
in
the
anteroom
.