<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0347" id="link2HCH0347"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER X </h2>
<p>Natasha had married in the early spring of 1813, and in 1820 already had
three daughters besides a son for whom she had longed and whom she was now
nursing. She had grown stouter and broader, so that it was difficult to
recognize in this robust, motherly woman the slim, lively Natasha of
former days. Her features were more defined and had a calm, soft, and
serene expression. In her face there was none of the ever-glowing
animation that had formerly burned there and constituted its charm. Now
her face and body were often all that one saw, and her soul was not
visible at all. All that struck the eye was a strong, handsome, and
fertile woman. The old fire very rarely kindled in her face now. That
happened only when, as was the case that day, her husband returned home,
or a sick child was convalescent, or when she and Countess Mary spoke of
Prince Andrew (she never mentioned him to her husband, who she imagined
was jealous of Prince Andrew's memory), or on the rare occasions when
something happened to induce her to sing, a practice she had quite
abandoned since her marriage. At the rare moments when the old fire did
kindle in her handsome, fully developed body she was even more attractive
than in former days.</p>
<p>Since their marriage Natasha and her husband had lived in Moscow, in
Petersburg, on their estate near Moscow, or with her mother, that is to
say, in Nicholas' house. The young Countess Bezukhova was not often seen
in society, and those who met her there were not pleased with her and
found her neither attractive nor amiable. Not that Natasha liked solitude—she
did not know whether she liked it or not, she even thought that she did
not—but with her pregnancies, her confinements, the nursing of her
children, and sharing every moment of her husband's life, she had demands
on her time which could be satisfied only by renouncing society. All who
had known Natasha before her marriage wondered at the change in her as at
something extraordinary. Only the old countess with her maternal instinct
had realized that all Natasha's outbursts had been due to her need of
children and a husband—as she herself had once exclaimed at Otradnoe
not so much in fun as in earnest—and her mother was now surprised at
the surprise expressed by those who had never understood Natasha, and she
kept saying that she had always known that Natasha would make an exemplary
wife and mother.</p>
<p>"Only she lets her love of her husband and children overflow all bounds,"
said the countess, "so that it even becomes absurd."</p>
<p>Natasha did not follow the golden rule advocated by clever folk,
especially by the French, which says that a girl should not let herself go
when she marries, should not neglect her accomplishments, should be even
more careful of her appearance than when she was unmarried, and should
fascinate her husband as much as she did before he became her husband.
Natasha on the contrary had at once abandoned all her witchery, of which
her singing had been an unusually powerful part. She gave it up just
because it was so powerfully seductive. She took no pains with her manners
or with delicacy of speech, or with her toilet, or to show herself to her
husband in her most becoming attitudes, or to avoid inconveniencing him by
being too exacting. She acted in contradiction to all those rules. She
felt that the allurements instinct had formerly taught her to use would
now be merely ridiculous in the eyes of her husband, to whom she had from
the first moment given herself up entirely—that is, with her whole
soul, leaving no corner of it hidden from him. She felt that her unity
with her husband was not maintained by the poetic feelings that had
attracted him to her, but by something else—indefinite but firm as
the bond between her own body and soul.</p>
<p>To fluff out her curls, put on fashionable dresses, and sing romantic
songs to fascinate her husband would have seemed as strange as to adorn
herself to attract herself. To adorn herself for others might perhaps have
been agreeable—she did not know—but she had no time at all for
it. The chief reason for devoting no time either to singing, to dress, or
to choosing her words was that she really had no time to spare for these
things.</p>
<p>We know that man has the faculty of becoming completely absorbed in a
subject however trivial it may be, and that there is no subject so trivial
that it will not grow to infinite proportions if one's entire attention is
devoted to it.</p>
<p>The subject which wholly engrossed Natasha's attention was her family:
that is, her husband whom she had to keep so that he should belong
entirely to her and to the home, and the children whom she had to bear,
bring into the world, nurse, and bring up.</p>
<p>And the deeper she penetrated, not with her mind only but with her whole
soul, her whole being, into the subject that absorbed her, the larger did
that subject grow and the weaker and more inadequate did her powers
appear, so that she concentrated them wholly on that one thing and yet was
unable to accomplish all that she considered necessary.</p>
<p>There were then as now conversations and discussions about women's rights,
the relations of husband and wife and their freedom and rights, though
these themes were not yet termed questions as they are now; but these
topics were not merely uninteresting to Natasha, she positively did not
understand them.</p>
<p>These questions, then as now, existed only for those who see nothing in
marriage but the pleasure married people get from one another, that is,
only the beginnings of marriage and not its whole significance, which lies
in the family.</p>
<p>Discussions and questions of that kind, which are like the question of how
to get the greatest gratification from one's dinner, did not then and do
not now exist for those for whom the purpose of a dinner is the
nourishment it affords; and the purpose of marriage is the family.</p>
<p>If the purpose of dinner is to nourish the body, a man who eats two
dinners at once may perhaps get more enjoyment but will not attain his
purpose, for his stomach will not digest the two dinners.</p>
<p>If the purpose of marriage is the family, the person who wishes to have
many wives or husbands may perhaps obtain much pleasure, but in that case
will not have a family.</p>
<p>If the purpose of food is nourishment and the purpose of marriage is the
family, the whole question resolves itself into not eating more than one
can digest, and not having more wives or husbands than are needed for the
family—that is, one wife or one husband. Natasha needed a husband. A
husband was given her and he gave her a family. And she not only saw no
need of any other or better husband, but as all the powers of her soul
were intent on serving that husband and family, she could not imagine and
saw no interest in imagining how it would be if things were different.</p>
<p>Natasha did not care for society in general, but prized the more the
society of her relatives—Countess Mary, and her brother, her mother,
and Sonya. She valued the company of those to whom she could come striding
disheveled from the nursery in her dressing gown, and with joyful face
show a yellow instead of a green stain on baby's napkin, and from whom she
could hear reassuring words to the effect that baby was much better.</p>
<p>To such an extent had Natasha let herself go that the way she dressed and
did her hair, her ill-chosen words, and her jealousy—she was jealous
of Sonya, of the governess, and of every woman, pretty or plain—were
habitual subjects of jest to those about her. The general opinion was that
Pierre was under his wife's thumb, which was really true. From the very
first days of their married life Natasha had announced her demands. Pierre
was greatly surprised by his wife's view, to him a perfectly novel one,
that every moment of his life belonged to her and to the family. His
wife's demands astonished him, but they also flattered him, and he
submitted to them.</p>
<p>Pierre's subjection consisted in the fact that he not only dared not flirt
with, but dared not even speak smilingly to, any other woman; did not dare
dine at the Club as a pastime, did not dare spend money on a whim, and did
not dare absent himself for any length of time, except on business—in
which his wife included his intellectual pursuits, which she did not in
the least understand but to which she attributed great importance. To make
up for this, at home Pierre had the right to regulate his life and that of
the whole family exactly as he chose. At home Natasha placed herself in
the position of a slave to her husband, and the whole household went on
tiptoe when he was occupied—that is, was reading or writing in his
study. Pierre had but to show a partiality for anything to get just what
he liked done always. He had only to express a wish and Natasha would jump
up and run to fulfill it.</p>
<p>The entire household was governed according to Pierre's supposed orders,
that is, by his wishes which Natasha tried to guess. Their way of life and
place of residence, their acquaintances and ties, Natasha's occupations,
the children's upbringing, were all selected not merely with regard to
Pierre's expressed wishes, but to what Natasha from the thoughts he
expressed in conversation supposed his wishes to be. And she deduced the
essentials of his wishes quite correctly, and having once arrived at them
clung to them tenaciously. When Pierre himself wanted to change his mind
she would fight him with his own weapons.</p>
<p>Thus in a time of trouble ever memorable to him after the birth of their
first child who was delicate, when they had to change the wet nurse three
times and Natasha fell ill from despair, Pierre one day told her of
Rousseau's view, with which he quite agreed, that to have a wet nurse is
unnatural and harmful. When her next baby was born, despite the opposition
of her mother, the doctors, and even of her husband himself—who were
all vigorously opposed to her nursing her baby herself, a thing then
unheard of and considered injurious—she insisted on having her own
way, and after that nursed all her babies herself.</p>
<p>It very often happened that in a moment of irritation husband and wife
would have a dispute, but long afterwards Pierre to his surprise and
delight would find in his wife's ideas and actions the very thought
against which she had argued, but divested of everything superfluous that
in the excitement of the dispute he had added when expressing his opinion.</p>
<p>After seven years of marriage Pierre had the joyous and firm consciousness
that he was not a bad man, and he felt this because he saw himself
reflected in his wife. He felt the good and bad within himself
inextricably mingled and overlapping. But only what was really good in him
was reflected in his wife, all that was not quite good was rejected. And
this was not the result of logical reasoning but was a direct and
mysterious reflection.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />