登陆注册
15259000000274

第274章

TO GET MARRIED his father’s consent was wanted, and to obtain this Prince Andrey set off to see his father.

The father received his son’s communication with external composure but with inward wrath. He could not comprehend how any one could want to alter his life, to introduce any new element into it, when life was for him so near its end. “If they would only let me live my life out as I want to, and then do as they like!” the old man said to himself. With his son, however, he made use of that diplomacy to which he always had resort in case of gravity. Assuming a calm tone, he went into the whole question judicially.

In the first place, the marriage was not a brilliant one from the point of view of birth, fortune, or distinction. Secondly, Prince Andrey was not in his first youth, and was delicate in health (the old man laid special stress on this), and the girl was very young. Thirdly, there was his son, whom it would be a pity to entrust to a mere girl. “Fourthly, and finally,” said the father, looking ironically at his son, “I beg you to defer the matter for a year; go abroad, and get well; find a German, as you want to do so, for Prince Nikolay, and then, if your love, your passion, your obstinacy—what you choose—are so great, then get married. And that’s my last word on the subject; you know, the last …” the old prince concluded, in a tone that showed that nothing would compel him to alter his decision.

Prince Andrey saw clearly that the old man hoped that either his feeling or that of his betrothed would not stand the test of a year or that he, the old prince, would die himself in the course of it, and he decided to act in accordance with his father’s wish; to make an offer and to defer the marriage for a year.

Three weeks after his last visit to the Rostovs, Prince Andrey returned to Petersburg.

The day after her conversation with her mother, Natasha spent the whole day expecting Bolkonsky but he did not come. The next day, and the third, it was just the same. Pierre too stayed away, and Natasha, not knowing Prince Andrey had gone away to see his father, did not know how to interpret his absence.

So passed the three weeks. Natasha would not go out anywhere, and wandered like a shadow about the house, idle and listless, wept at night in secret, and did not go in to her mother in the evenings. She was continually flushing and very irritable. It seemed to her that every one knew of her disappointment, was laughing at her, and pitying her. In spite of all the intensity of her inward grief, the wound to her vanity aggravated her misery.

She came in to the countess one day, tried to say something, and all at once burst into tears. Her tears were the tears of an offended child, who does not know why it is being punished. The countess tried to comfort Natasha. At first she listened to her mother’s words, but suddenly she interrupted her:

“Stop, mamma, I don’t think of him or want to think of him! Why, he kept coming, and he has left off, and he has left off …” Her voice quivered, she almost began to cry, but recovered herself, and went on calmly:

“And I don’t want to be married at all. And I’m afraid of him; I have quite, quite got over it now…”

The day after this conversation, Natasha put on the old dress she specially associated with the fun she had often had when wearing it in the mornings, and began from early morning to take up her old manner of life, which she had given up ever since the ball. After morning tea, she went into the big hall, which she particularly liked on account of the loud resonance in it, and began singing her sol-fa exercises. When she had finished the first exercise she stood still in the middle of the room and repeated a single musical phrase which particularly pleased her. She listened with delight, as though it were new to her, to the charm of these notes ringing out, filling the empty space of the great room and dying slowly away, and she felt all at once cheerful. “Why think so much about it; things are nice even as it is,” she said to herself; and she began walking up and down the room, not putting her feet simply down on the resounding parquet, but at each step bending her foot from the heel to the toe (she had on some new shoes she particularly liked), and listening to the regular tap of the heel and creak of the toe with the same pleasure with which she had listened to the sound of her own voice. Passing by the looking-glass, she glanced into it. “Yes, that’s me!” the expression of her face seemed to say at the sight of herself. “Well, and very nice too. And I need nobody.”

A footman would have come in to clear away something in the room, but she would not let him come in. She shut the door after him, and continued her promenade about the room. She had come back that morning to her favourite mood of loving herself and being ecstatic over herself. “What a charming creature that Natasha is!” she said again of herself, speaking as some third person, a generic, masculine person.

“Pretty, a voice, young, and she’s in nobody’s way, only leave her in peace.” But, however much she might be left in peace, she could not now be at peace, and she felt that immediately.

In the vestibule the hall-door opened; someone was asking, “At home?” and steps were audible. Natasha was looking at herself in the glass, but she did not see herself. She heard sounds in the vestibule. When she saw herself, her face was pale. It was he. She knew it for certain, though she herself caught the sound of his voice at the opened door.

Natasha, pale and panic-stricken, flew into the drawing-room.

“Mamma, Bolkonsky has come,” she said. “Mamma, this is awful, unbearable! … I don’t want … to be tortured! What am I to do?”

The countess had not time to answer her before Prince Andrey with a troubled and serious face walked into the drawing-room. As soon as he saw Natasha his face beamed with delight. He kissed the countess’s hand and Natasha’s, and sat down beside the sofa.

同类推荐
  • 道神足无极变化经

    道神足无极变化经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 华阳巾

    华阳巾

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 赠别

    赠别

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 修真十书黄庭外景玉经注卷

    修真十书黄庭外景玉经注卷

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 皇黎一统志

    皇黎一统志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 邀君宠·美人怜

    邀君宠·美人怜

    他冷冷地盯着她,阴戾的脸上没有一丝表情。“记住,你虽不是我命中等待的女人,但你休想逃离!若是让我在你眼中看到其他男子的身影,别怪我毁了他……”他捏着她的下巴,毫无怜惜地咬上朱唇……他是冷酷无情的魔君,俊美的面庞里带着前所未有的邪恶,轻蔑愤怒的眼神,将这名叛逆的女子握于掌中。
  • 倾城不如你深情

    倾城不如你深情

    前世她失去了所有她在乎的一切,最终因为失去,她变得疯狂,极端,最终一次次的伤害了最爱她的人。为了和她在一起,他整整等了她二十年,一直等她发现,可是她却没有发现,最终他们之间的爱情,以她的死亡结束了!因缘巧合下,她重生了,回到了十二年前,他还是和以前一样,爱护她,然而这一次她绝不会放手,幸福都是自己去追求的,他爱她爱到牺牲自己,也要成全她!他爱她,不惜等待多年,只为让她幸福!
  • 重生九零有点甜

    重生九零有点甜

    上辈子,生性懦弱的秦婉舟只在坚持读书上面硬气了一回,可是家徒四壁,身无分文,为了逃出那个小山沟,她不惜与家里人反目,成为了被人戳脊梁骨的不孝女。重活一世,面对穷得揭不开锅的家,秦婉舟撸起袖子,还是赚钱要紧,赚钱要紧。
  • 校草老公是班长

    校草老公是班长

    何宸希是学校公认的校草,成绩优异,并且阳光开朗的性格征服了万千迷妹。夏笙笙是一个普通农民的孩子,有这天使和恶魔的两副面孔,夏笙笙的经典座右铭就是“你对我好我就对你好,你要是对我不义,那我就弄死你!”“老婆是要拿来宠的啊”“看到有关于你的一切,小声嘀咕一句,我的。”“你看着我的眼睛,你看见了什么?满满的占有欲。”“见什么世面啊,见见你就好了。”全世界七十多亿人,我的故事里,只有你的名字。--何宸希
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 我的富士康日记

    我的富士康日记

    又是一年的年末,我闲下来,整理一下尘封书柜的日记,发现当年的一段富士康工作经历,回忆进厂的前因后果,里面的每一个人,每一件事,都在我的日记上,演了一遍电影。年轻轻的生命,活生生地装进罐头瓶,每天重复着枯燥的工作,找不到存在的价值;没有物质的基础,找不到感情的寄托。每个人的努力,每一声的呼救,都在时时提醒着我,不要忘记他们。我想把那段日记整理出来,和大家分享,也希望今天还奋斗在各个工厂里的朋友们,立足当下,着眼未来。只是文中人物,不可对号入座。
  • 浪荡小子混都市

    浪荡小子混都市

    偷看女人洗澡?我敢过眼瘾。睡相中的女人?你想,你行吗?,随便结识大领导,你没有这个本事,我身边美女不断,我有本事赚大钱,你别嫉妒,也别羡慕,知道这一切为啥吗?创建了一个作者和读者的互动群【256227796】,力求以文会友。吸收,借鉴,参考,力求写出更加优秀的小说。欢迎你们的到来。
  • 影子与你和我

    影子与你和我

    因为一个影子,后来又连续梦见他,遇见一个人,后来告诉我一些事情。后来我能够通过做梦去找到她,而她也可以找到我,而是我们两个穿越到对方的世界,都有一个缺点,最后我因为爱去到了她的世界,最终我们在一起了,过程甜蜜而又虐。但幸运的是,兜兜转转,命运还是将我们连在了一起。共度余生。
  • 旧时光

    旧时光

    她期待爱情,然而生活竟跟他开了个大玩笑,爱情在她不经意间却离她而去。她外表不羁,其实内心深处柔软不已,只是用看似离经叛道的形象一直在伪装自己而已。其实,她只是一个寂寞的小孩。当青春风暴来临,他们有会有着怎样的一段故事呢?
  • 太公阴谋

    太公阴谋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。