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<h2> CHAPTER XXII </h2>
<p>Next day, having been invited by the count, Prince Andrew dined with the
Rostovs and spent the rest of the day there.</p>
<p>Everyone in the house realized for whose sake Prince Andrew came, and
without concealing it he tried to be with Natasha all day. Not only in the
soul of the frightened yet happy and enraptured Natasha, but in the whole
house, there was a feeling of awe at something important that was bound to
happen. The countess looked with sad and sternly serious eyes at Prince
Andrew when he talked to Natasha and timidly started some artificial
conversation about trifles as soon as he looked her way. Sonya was afraid
to leave Natasha and afraid of being in the way when she was with them.
Natasha grew pale, in a panic of expectation, when she remained alone with
him for a moment. Prince Andrew surprised her by his timidity. She felt
that he wanted to say something to her but could not bring himself to do
so.</p>
<p>In the evening, when Prince Andrew had left, the countess went up to
Natasha and whispered: "Well, what?"</p>
<p>"Mamma! For heaven's sake don't ask me anything now! One can't talk about
that," said Natasha.</p>
<p>But all the same that night Natasha, now agitated and now frightened, lay
a long time in her mother's bed gazing straight before her. She told her
how he had complimented her, how he told her he was going abroad, asked
her where they were going to spend the summer, and then how he had asked
her about Boris.</p>
<p>"But such a... such a... never happened to me before!" she said. "Only I
feel afraid in his presence. I am always afraid when I'm with him. What
does that mean? Does it mean that it's the real thing? Yes? Mamma, are you
asleep?"</p>
<p>"No, my love; I am frightened myself," answered her mother. "Now go!"</p>
<p>"All the same I shan't sleep. What silliness, to sleep! Mummy! Mummy! such
a thing never happened to me before," she said, surprised and alarmed at
the feeling she was aware of in herself. "And could we ever have
thought!..."</p>
<p>It seemed to Natasha that even at the time she first saw Prince Andrew at
Otradnoe she had fallen in love with him. It was as if she feared this
strange, unexpected happiness of meeting again the very man she had then
chosen (she was firmly convinced she had done so) and of finding him, as
it seemed, not indifferent to her.</p>
<p>"And it had to happen that he should come specially to Petersburg while we
are here. And it had to happen that we should meet at that ball. It is
fate. Clearly it is fate that everything led up to this! Already then,
directly I saw him I felt something peculiar."</p>
<p>"What else did he say to you? What are those verses? Read them..." said
her mother, thoughtfully, referring to some verses Prince Andrew had
written in Natasha's album.</p>
<p>"Mamma, one need not be ashamed of his being a widower?"</p>
<p>"Don't, Natasha! Pray to God. 'Marriages are made in heaven,'" said her
mother.</p>
<p>"Darling Mummy, how I love you! How happy I am!" cried Natasha, shedding
tears of joy and excitement and embracing her mother.</p>
<p>At that very time Prince Andrew was sitting with Pierre and telling him of
his love for Natasha and his firm resolve to make her his wife.</p>
<p>That day Countess Helene had a reception at her house. The French
ambassador was there, and a foreign prince of the blood who had of late
become a frequent visitor of hers, and many brilliant ladies and
gentlemen. Pierre, who had come downstairs, walked through the rooms and
struck everyone by his preoccupied, absent-minded, and morose air.</p>
<p>Since the ball he had felt the approach of a fit of nervous depression and
had made desperate efforts to combat it. Since the intimacy of his wife
with the royal prince, Pierre had unexpectedly been made a gentleman of
the bedchamber, and from that time he had begun to feel oppressed and
ashamed in court society, and dark thoughts of the vanity of all things
human came to him oftener than before. At the same time the feeling he had
noticed between his protegee Natasha and Prince Andrew accentuated his
gloom by the contrast between his own position and his friend's. He tried
equally to avoid thinking about his wife, and about Natasha and Prince
Andrew; and again everything seemed to him insignificant in comparison
with eternity; again the question: for what? presented itself; and he
forced himself to work day and night at Masonic labors, hoping to drive
away the evil spirit that threatened him. Toward midnight, after he had
left the countess' apartments, he was sitting upstairs in a shabby
dressing gown, copying out the original transaction of the Scottish lodge
of Freemasons at a table in his low room cloudy with tobacco smoke, when
someone came in. It was Prince Andrew.</p>
<p>"Ah, it's you!" said Pierre with a preoccupied, dissatisfied air. "And I,
you see, am hard at it." He pointed to his manuscript book with that air
of escaping from the ills of life with which unhappy people look at their
work.</p>
<p>Prince Andrew, with a beaming, ecstatic expression of renewed life on his
face, paused in front of Pierre and, not noticing his sad look, smiled at
him with the egotism of joy.</p>
<p>"Well, dear heart," said he, "I wanted to tell you about it yesterday and
I have come to do so today. I never experienced anything like it before. I
am in love, my friend!"</p>
<p>Suddenly Pierre heaved a deep sigh and dumped his heavy person down on the
sofa beside Prince Andrew.</p>
<p>"With Natasha Rostova, yes?" said he.</p>
<p>"Yes, yes! Who else should it be? I should never have believed it, but the
feeling is stronger than I. Yesterday I tormented myself and suffered, but
I would not exchange even that torment for anything in the world, I have
not lived till now. At last I live, but I can't live without her! But can
she love me?... I am too old for her.... Why don't you speak?"</p>
<p>"I? I? What did I tell you?" said Pierre suddenly, rising and beginning to
pace up and down the room. "I always thought it.... That girl is such a
treasure... she is a rare girl.... My dear friend, I entreat you, don't
philosophize, don't doubt, marry, marry, marry.... And I am sure there
will not be a happier man than you."</p>
<p>"But what of her?"</p>
<p>"She loves you."</p>
<p>"Don't talk rubbish..." said Prince Andrew, smiling and looking into
Pierre's eyes.</p>
<p>"She does, I know," Pierre cried fiercely.</p>
<p>"But do listen," returned Prince Andrew, holding him by the arm. "Do you
know the condition I am in? I must talk about it to someone."</p>
<p>"Well, go on, go on. I am very glad," said Pierre, and his face really
changed, his brow became smooth, and he listened gladly to Prince Andrew.
Prince Andrew seemed, and really was, quite a different, quite a new man.
Where was his spleen, his contempt for life, his disillusionment? Pierre
was the only person to whom he made up his mind to speak openly; and to
him he told all that was in his soul. Now he boldly and lightly made plans
for an extended future, said he could not sacrifice his own happiness to
his father's caprice, and spoke of how he would either make his father
consent to this marriage and love her, or would do without his consent;
then he marveled at the feeling that had mastered him as at something
strange, apart from and independent of himself.</p>
<p>"I should not have believed anyone who told me that I was capable of such
love," said Prince Andrew. "It is not at all the same feeling that I knew
in the past. The whole world is now for me divided into two halves: one
half is she, and there all is joy, hope, light: the other half is
everything where she is not, and there is all gloom and darkness...."</p>
<p>"Darkness and gloom," reiterated Pierre: "yes, yes, I understand that."</p>
<p>"I cannot help loving the light, it is not my fault. And I am very happy!
You understand me? I know you are glad for my sake."</p>
<p>"Yes, yes," Pierre assented, looking at his friend with a touched and sad
expression in his eyes. The brighter Prince Andrew's lot appeared to him,
the gloomier seemed his own.</p>
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