-
Главная
-
- Книги
-
- Авторы
-
- Лев Толстой
-
- Война и мир
-
- Стр. 737/1273
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
At
the
end
of
the
week
the
prince
reappeared
and
resumed
his
former
way
of
life
,
devoting
himself
with
special
activity
to
building
operations
and
the
arrangement
of
the
gardens
and
completely
breaking
off
his
relations
with
Mademoiselle
Bourienne
.
His
looks
and
cold
tone
to
his
daughter
seemed
to
say
:
"
There
,
you
see
?
You
plotted
against
me
,
you
lied
to
Prince
Andrew
about
my
relations
with
that
Frenchwoman
and
made
me
quarrel
with
him
,
but
you
see
I
need
neither
her
nor
you
!
"
Princess
Mary
spent
half
of
every
day
with
little
Nicholas
,
watching
his
lessons
,
teaching
him
Russian
and
music
herself
,
and
talking
to
Dessalles
;
the
rest
of
the
day
she
spent
over
her
books
,
with
her
old
nurse
,
or
with
"
God
's
folk
"
who
sometimes
came
by
the
back
door
to
see
her
.
Of
the
war
Princess
Mary
thought
as
women
do
think
about
wars
.
She
feared
for
her
brother
who
was
in
it
,
was
horrified
by
and
amazed
at
the
strange
cruelty
that
impels
men
to
kill
one
another
,
but
she
did
not
understand
the
significance
of
this
war
,
which
seemed
to
her
like
all
previous
wars
.
She
did
not
realize
the
significance
of
this
war
,
though
Dessalles
with
whom
she
constantly
conversed
was
passionately
interested
in
its
progress
and
tried
to
explain
his
own
conception
of
it
to
her
,
and
though
the
"
God
's
folk
"
who
came
to
see
her
reported
,
in
their
own
way
,
the
rumors
current
among
the
people
of
an
invasion
by
Antichrist
,
and
though
Julie
(
now
Princess
Drubetskáya
)
,
who
had
resumed
correspondence
with
her
,
wrote
patriotic
letters
from
Moscow
.
"
I
write
you
in
Russian
,
my
good
friend
,
"
wrote
Julie
in
her
Frenchified
Russian
,
"
because
I
have
a
detestation
for
all
the
French
,
and
the
same
for
their
language
which
I
can
not
support
to
hear
spoken
...
We
in
Moscow
are
elated
by
enthusiasm
for
our
adored
Emperor
.
"
My
poor
husband
is
enduring
pains
and
hunger
in
Jewish
taverns
,
but
the
news
which
I
have
inspires
me
yet
more
.
"
You
heard
probably
of
the
heroic
exploit
of
Raévski
,
embracing
his
two
sons
and
saying
:
'
I
will
perish
with
them
but
we
will
not
be
shaken
!
'
And
truly
though
the
enemy
was
twice
stronger
than
we
,
we
were
unshakable
.
We
pass
the
time
as
we
can
,
but
in
war
as
in
war
!
The
princesses
Aline
and
Sophie
sit
whole
days
with
me
,
and
we
,
unhappy
widows
of
live
men
,
make
beautiful
conversations
over
our
charpie
,
only
you
,
my
friend
,
are
missing
...
"
and
so
on
.
The
chief
reason
Princess
Mary
did
not
realize
the
full
significance
of
this
war
was
that
the
old
prince
never
spoke
of
it
,
did
not
recognize
it
,
and
laughed
at
Dessalles
when
he
mentioned
it
at
dinner
.
The
prince
's
tone
was
so
calm
and
confident
that
Princess
Mary
unhesitatingly
believed
him
.
All
that
July
the
old
prince
was
exceedingly
active
and
even
animated
.
He
planned
another
garden
and
began
a
new
building
for
the
domestic
serfs
.
The
only
thing
that
made
Princess
Mary
anxious
about
him
was
that
he
slept
very
little
and
,
instead
of
sleeping
in
his
study
as
usual
,
changed
his
sleeping
place
every
day
.
One
day
he
would
order
his
camp
bed
to
be
set
up
in
the
glass
gallery
,
another
day
he
remained
on
the
couch
or
on
the
lounge
chair
in
the
drawing
room
and
dozed
there
without
undressing
,
while
--
instead
of
Mademoiselle
Bourienne
--
a
serf
boy
read
to
him
.
Then
again
he
would
spend
a
night
in
the
dining
room
.
On
August
1
,
a
second
letter
was
received
from
Prince
Andrew
.
In
his
first
letter
which
came
soon
after
he
had
left
home
,
Prince
Andrew
had
dutifully
asked
his
father
's
forgiveness
for
what
he
had
allowed
himself
to
say
and
begged
to
be
restored
to
his
favor
.
To
this
letter
the
old
prince
had
replied
affectionately
,
and
from
that
time
had
kept
the
Frenchwoman
at
a
distance
.
Prince
Andrew
's
second
letter
,
written
near
Vítebsk
after
the
French
had
occupied
that
town
,
gave
a
brief
account
of
the
whole
campaign
,
enclosed
for
them
a
plan
he
had
drawn
and
forecasts
as
to
the
further
progress
of
the
war
.