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<h2> CHAPTER XVI </h2>
<p>Suddenly everybody stirred, began talking, and pressed forward and then
back, and between the two rows, which separated, the Emperor entered to
the sounds of music that had immediately struck up. Behind him walked his
host and hostess. He walked in rapidly, bowing to right and left as if
anxious to get the first moments of the reception over. The band played
the polonaise in vogue at that time on account of the words that had been
set to it, beginning: "Alexander, Elisaveta, all our hearts you ravish
quite..." The Emperor passed on to the drawing room, the crowd made a rush
for the doors, and several persons with excited faces hurried there and
back again. Then the crowd hastily retired from the drawing-room door, at
which the Emperor reappeared talking to the hostess. A young man, looking
distraught, pounced down on the ladies, asking them to move aside. Some
ladies, with faces betraying complete forgetfulness of all the rules of
decorum, pushed forward to the detriment of their toilets. The men began
to choose partners and take their places for the polonaise.</p>
<p>Everyone moved back, and the Emperor came smiling out of the drawing room
leading his hostess by the hand but not keeping time to the music. The
host followed with Marya Antonovna Naryshkina; then came ambassadors,
ministers, and various generals, whom Peronskaya diligently named. More
than half the ladies already had partners and were taking up, or preparing
to take up, their positions for the polonaise. Natasha felt that she would
be left with her mother and Sonya among a minority of women who crowded
near the wall, not having been invited to dance. She stood with her
slender arms hanging down, her scarcely defined bosom rising and falling
regularly, and with bated breath and glittering, frightened eyes gazed
straight before her, evidently prepared for the height of joy or misery.
She was not concerned about the Emperor or any of those great people whom
Peronskaya was pointing out—she had but one thought: "Is it possible
no one will ask me, that I shall not be among the first to dance? Is it
possible that not one of all these men will notice me? They do not even
seem to see me, or if they do they look as if they were saying, 'Ah, she's
not the one I'm after, so it's not worth looking at her!' No, it's
impossible," she thought. "They must know how I long to dance, how
splendidly I dance, and how they would enjoy dancing with me."</p>
<p>The strains of the polonaise, which had continued for a considerable time,
had begun to sound like a sad reminiscence to Natasha's ears. She wanted
to cry. Peronskaya had left them. The count was at the other end of the
room. She and the countess and Sonya were standing by themselves as in the
depths of a forest amid that crowd of strangers, with no one interested in
them and not wanted by anyone. Prince Andrew with a lady passed by,
evidently not recognizing them. The handsome Anatole was smilingly talking
to a partner on his arm and looked at Natasha as one looks at a wall.
Boris passed them twice and each time turned away. Berg and his wife, who
were not dancing, came up to them.</p>
<p>This family gathering seemed humiliating to Natasha—as if there were
nowhere else for the family to talk but here at the ball. She did not
listen to or look at Vera, who was telling her something about her own
green dress.</p>
<p>At last the Emperor stopped beside his last partner (he had danced with
three) and the music ceased. A worried aide-de-camp ran up to the Rostovs
requesting them to stand farther back, though as it was they were already
close to the wall, and from the gallery resounded the distinct, precise,
enticingly rhythmical strains of a waltz. The Emperor looked smilingly
down the room. A minute passed but no one had yet begun dancing. An
aide-de-camp, the Master of Ceremonies, went up to Countess Bezukhova and
asked her to dance. She smilingly raised her hand and laid it on his
shoulder without looking at him. The aide-de-camp, an adept in his art,
grasping his partner firmly round her waist, with confident deliberation
started smoothly, gliding first round the edge of the circle, then at the
corner of the room he caught Helene's left hand and turned her, the only
sound audible, apart from the ever-quickening music, being the rhythmic
click of the spurs on his rapid, agile feet, while at every third beat his
partner's velvet dress spread out and seemed to flash as she whirled
round. Natasha gazed at them and was ready to cry because it was not she
who was dancing that first turn of the waltz.</p>
<p>Prince Andrew, in the white uniform of a cavalry colonel, wearing
stockings and dancing shoes, stood looking animated and bright in the
front row of the circle not far from the Rostovs. Baron Firhoff was
talking to him about the first sitting of the Council of State to be held
next day. Prince Andrew, as one closely connected with Speranski and
participating in the work of the legislative commission, could give
reliable information about that sitting, concerning which various rumors
were current. But not listening to what Firhoff was saying, he was gazing
now at the sovereign and now at the men intending to dance who had not yet
gathered courage to enter the circle.</p>
<p>Prince Andrew was watching these men abashed by the Emperor's presence,
and the women who were breathlessly longing to be asked to dance.</p>
<p>Pierre came up to him and caught him by the arm.</p>
<p>"You always dance. I have a protegee, the young Rostova, here. Ask her,"
he said.</p>
<p>"Where is she?" asked Bolkonski. "Excuse me!" he added, turning to the
baron, "we will finish this conversation elsewhere—at a ball one
must dance." He stepped forward in the direction Pierre indicated. The
despairing, dejected expression of Natasha's face caught his eye. He
recognized her, guessed her feelings, saw that it was her debut,
remembered her conversation at the window, and with an expression of
pleasure on his face approached Countess Rostova.</p>
<p>"Allow me to introduce you to my daughter," said the countess, with
heightened color.</p>
<p>"I have the pleasure of being already acquainted, if the countess
remembers me," said Prince Andrew with a low and courteous bow quite
belying Peronskaya's remarks about his rudeness, and approaching Natasha
he held out his arm to grasp her waist before he had completed his
invitation. He asked her to waltz. That tremulous expression on Natasha's
face, prepared either for despair or rapture, suddenly brightened into a
happy, grateful, childlike smile.</p>
<p>"I have long been waiting for you," that frightened happy little girl
seemed to say by the smile that replaced the threatened tears, as she
raised her hand to Prince Andrew's shoulder. They were the second couple
to enter the circle. Prince Andrew was one of the best dancers of his day
and Natasha danced exquisitely. Her little feet in their white satin
dancing shoes did their work swiftly, lightly, and independently of
herself, while her face beamed with ecstatic happiness. Her slender bare
arms and neck were not beautiful—compared to Helene's her shoulders
looked thin and her bosom undeveloped. But Helene seemed, as it were,
hardened by a varnish left by the thousands of looks that had scanned her
person, while Natasha was like a girl exposed for the first time, who
would have felt very much ashamed had she not been assured that this was
absolutely necessary.</p>
<p>Prince Andrew liked dancing, and wishing to escape as quickly as possible
from the political and clever talk which everyone addressed to him,
wishing also to break up the circle of restraint he disliked, caused by
the Emperor's presence, he danced, and had chosen Natasha because Pierre
pointed her out to him and because she was the first pretty girl who
caught his eye; but scarcely had he embraced that slender supple figure
and felt her stirring so close to him and smiling so near him than the
wine of her charm rose to his head, and he felt himself revived and
rejuvenated when after leaving her he stood breathing deeply and watching
the other dancers.</p>
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