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    CHAPTER I


    "Well, Prince, so Genoa and Lucca are now just family estates of the
    Buonapartes. But I warn you, if you don't tell me that this means war,
    if you still try to defend the infamies and horrors perpetrated by
    that Antichrist- I really believe he is Antichrist- I will have
    nothing more to do with you and you are no longer my friend, no longer
    my 'faithful slave,' as you call yourself! But how do you do? I see
    I have frightened you- sit down and tell me all the news."

    It was in July, 1805, and the speaker was the well-known Anna
    Pavlovna Scherer, maid of honor and favorite of the Empress Marya
    Fedorovna. With these words she greeted Prince Vasili Kuragin, a man
    of high rank and importance, who was the first to arrive at her
    reception. Anna Pavlovna had had a cough for some days. She was, as
    she said, suffering from la grippe; grippe being then a new word in
    St. Petersburg, used only by the elite.

    All her invitations without exception, written in French, and
    delivered by a scarlet-liveried footman that morning, ran as follows:

    "If you have nothing better to do, Count [or Prince], and if the
    prospect of spending an evening with a poor invalid is not too
    terrible, I shall be very charmed to see you tonight between 7 and 10-
    Annette Scherer."

    "Heavens! what a virulent attack!" replied the prince, not in the
    least disconcerted by this reception. He had just entered, wearing
    an embroidered court uniform, knee breeches, and shoes, and had
    stars on his breast and a serene expression on his flat face. He spoke
    in that refined French in which our grandfathers not only spoke but
    thought, and with the gentle, patronizing intonation natural to a
    man of importance who had grown old in society and at court. He went
    up to Anna Pavlovna, kissed her hand, presenting to her his bald,
    scented, and shining head, and complacently seated himself on the
    sofa.

    "First of all, dear friend, tell me how you are. Set your friend's
    mind at rest," said he without altering his tone, beneath the
    politeness and affected sympathy of which indifference and even
    irony could be discerned.

    "Can one be well while suffering morally? Can one be calm in times
    like these if one has any feeling?" said Anna Pavlovna. "You are
    staying the whole evening, I hope?"

    "And the fete at the English ambassador's? Today is Wednesday. I
    must put in an appearance there," said the prince. "My daughter is
    coming for me to take me there."

    "I thought today's fete had been canceled. I confess all these
    festivities and fireworks are becoming wearisome."

    "If they had known that you wished it, the entertainment would
    have been put off," said the prince, who, like a wound-up clock, by
    force of habit said things he did not even wish to be believed.

    "Don't tease! Well, and what has been decided about Novosiltsev's
    dispatch? You know everything."

    "What can one say about it?" replied the prince in a cold,
    listless tone. "What has been decided? They have decided that
    Buonaparte has burnt his boats, and I believe that we are ready to
    burn ours."

    Prince Vasili always spoke languidly, like an actor repeating a
    stale part. Anna Pavlovna Scherer on the contrary, despite her forty
    years, overflowed with animation and impulsiveness. To be an
    enthusiast had become her social vocation and, sometimes even when she
    did not feel like it, she became enthusiastic in order not to
    disappoint the expectations of those who knew her. The subdued smile
    which, though it did not suit her faded features, always played
    round her lips expressed, as in a spoiled child, a continual
    consciousness of her charming defect, which she neither wished, nor
    could, nor considered it necessary, to correct.

    In the midst of a conversation on political matters Anna Pavlovna
    burst out:

    "Oh, don't speak to me of Austria. Perhaps I don't understand
    things, but Austria never has wished, and does not wish, for war.
    She is betraying us! Russia alone must save Europe. Our gracious
    sovereign recognizes his high vocation and will be true to it. That is
    the one thing I have faith in! Our good and wonderful sovereign has to
    perform the noblest role on earth, and he is so virtuous and noble
    that God will not forsake him. He will fulfill his vocation and
    crush the hydra of revolution, which has become more terrible than
    ever in the person of this murderer and villain! We alone must
    avenge the blood of the just one.... Whom, I ask you, can we rely
    on?... England with her commercial spirit will not and cannot
    understand the Emperor Alexander's loftiness of soul. She has
    refused to evacuate Malta. She wanted to find, and still seeks, some
    secret motive in our actions. What answer did Novosiltsev get? None.
    The English have not understood and cannot understand the
    self-abnegation of our Emperor who wants nothing for himself, but only
    desires the good of mankind. And what have they promised? Nothing! And
    what little they have promised they will not perform! Prussia has
    always declared that Buonaparte is invincible, and that all Europe
    is powerless before him.... And I don't believe a word that Hardenburg
    says, or Haugwitz either. This famous Prussian neutrality is just a
    trap. I have faith only in God and the lofty destiny of our adored
    monarch. He will save Europe!"

    She suddenly paused, smiling at her own impetuosity.

    "I think," said the prince with a smile, "that if you had been
    sent instead of our dear Wintzingerode you would have captured the
    King of Prussia's consent by assault. You are so eloquent. Will you
    give me a cup of tea?"

    "In a moment. A propos," she added, becoming calm again, "I am
    expecting two very interesting men tonight, le Vicomte de Mortemart,
    who is connected with the Montmorencys through the Rohans, one of
    the best French families. He is one of the genuine emigres, the good
    ones. And also the Abbe Morio. Do you know that profound thinker? He
    has been received by the Emperor. Had you heard?"

    "I shall be delighted to meet them," said the prince. "But tell me,"
    he added with studied carelessness as if it had only just occurred
    to him, though the question he was about to ask was the chief motive
    of his visit, "is it true that the Dowager Empress wants Baron Funke
    to be appointed first secretary at Vienna? The baron by all accounts
    is a poor creature."

    Prince Vasili wished to obtain this post for his son, but others
    were trying through the Dowager Empress Marya Fedorovna to secure it
    for the baron.

    Anna Pavlovna almost closed her eyes to indicate that neither she
    nor anyone else had a right to criticize what the Empress desired or
    was pleased with.

    "Baron Funke has been recommended to the Dowager Empress by her
    sister," was all she said, in a dry and mournful tone.

    As she named the Empress, Anna Pavlovna's face suddenly assumed an
    expression of profound and sincere devotion and respect mingled with
    sadness, and this occurred every time she mentioned her illustrious
    patroness. She added that Her Majesty had deigned to show Baron
    Funke beaucoup d'estime, and again her face clouded over with sadness.

    The prince was silent and looked indifferent. But, with the
    womanly and courtierlike quickness and tact habitual to her, Anna
    Pavlovna wished both to rebuke him (for daring to speak he had done of
    a man recommended to the Empress) and at the same time to console him,
    so she said:

    "Now about your family. Do you know that since your daughter came
    out everyone has been enraptured by her? They say she is amazingly
    beautiful."

    The prince bowed to signify his respect and gra ude.

    "I often think," she continued after a short pause, drawing nearer
    to the prince and smiling amiably at him as if to show that
    political and social topics were ended and the time had come for
    intimate conversation- "I often think how unfairly sometimes the
    joys of life are distributed. Why has fate given you two such splendid
    children? I don't speak of Anatole, your youngest. I don't like
    him," she added in a tone admitting of no rejoinder and raising her
    eyebrows. "Two such charming children. And really you appreciate
    them less than anyone, and so you don't deserve to have them."

    And she smiled her ecstatic smile.

    "I can't help it," said the prince. "Lavater would have said I
    lack the bump of paternity."

    "Don't joke; I mean to have a serious talk with you. Do you know I
    am dissatisfied with your younger son? Between ourselves" (and her
    face assumed its melancholy expression), "he was mentioned at Her
    Majesty's and you were pitied...."

    The prince answered nothing, but she looked at him significantly,
    awaiting a reply. He frowned.

    "What would you have me do?" he said at last. "You know I did all
    a father could for their education, and they have both turned out
    fools. Hippolyte is at least a quiet fool, but Anatole is an active
    one. That is the only difference between them." He said this smiling
    in a way more natural and animated than usual, so that the wrinkles
    round his mouth very clearly revealed something unexpectedly coarse
    and unpleasant.

    "And why are children born to such men as you? If you were not a
    father there would be nothing I could reproach you with," said Anna
    Pavlovna, looking up pensively.

    "I am your faithful slave and to you alone I can confess that my
    children are the bane of my life. It is the cross I have to bear. That
    is how I explain it to myself. It can't be helped!"

    He said no more, but expressed his resignation to cruel fate by a
    gesture. Anna Pavlovna meditated.

    "Have you never thought of marrying your prodigal son Anatole?"
    she asked. "They say old maids have a mania for matchmaking, and
    though I don't feel that weakness in myself as yet,I know a little
    person who is very unhappy with her father. She is a relation of
    yours, Princess Mary Bolkonskaya."

    Prince Vasili did not reply, though, with the quickness of memory
    and perception befitting a man of the world, he indicated by a
    movement of the head that he was considering this information.

    "Do you know," he said at last, evidently unable to check the sad
    current of his thoughts, "that Anatole is costing me forty thousand
    rubles a year? And," he went on after a pause, "what will it be in
    five years, if he goes on like this?" Presently he added: "That's what
    we fathers have to put up with.... Is this princess of yours rich?"

    "Her father is very rich and stingy. He lives in the country. He
    is the well-known Prince Bolkonski who had to retire from the army
    under the late Emperor, and was nicknamed 'the King of Prussia.' He is
    very clever but eccentric, and a bore. The poor girl is very
    unhappy. She has a brother; I think you know him, he married Lise
    Meinen lately. He is an aide-de-camp of Kutuzov's and will be here
    tonight."

    "Listen, dear Annette," said the prince, suddenly taking Anna
    Pavlovna's hand and for some reason drawing it downwards. "Arrange
    that affair for me and I shall always be your most devoted slave-
    slafe wigh an f, as a village elder of mine writes in his reports. She
    is rich and of good family and that's all I want."

    And with the familiarity and easy grace peculiar to him, he raised
    the maid of honor's hand to his lips, kissed it, and swung it to and
    fro as he lay back in his armchair, looking in another direction.

    "Attendez," said Anna Pavlovna, reflecting, "I'll speak to Lise,
    young Bolkonski's wife, this very evening, and perhaps the thing can
    be arranged. It shall be on your family's behalf that I'll start my
    apprenticeship as old maid."





    CHAPTER II


    Anna Pavlovna's drawing room was gradually filling. The highest
    Petersburg society was assembled there: people differing widely in age
    and character but alike in the social circle to which they belonged.
    Prince Vasili's daughter, the beautiful Helene, came to take her
    father to the ambassador's entertainment; she wore a ball dress and
    her badge as maid of honor. The youthful little Princess
    Bolkonskaya, known as la femme la plus seduisante de Petersbourg,* was
    also there. She had been married during the previous winter, and being
    pregnant did not go to any large gatherings, but only to small
    receptions. Prince Vasili's son, Hippolyte, had come with Mortemart,
    whom he introduced. The Abbe Morio and many others had also come.


    *The most fascinating woman in Petersburg.


    To each new arrival Anna Pavlovna said, "You have not yet seen my
    aunt," or "You do not know my aunt?" and very gravely conducted him or
    her to a little old lady, wearing large bows of ribbon in her cap, who
    had come sailing in from another room as soon as the guests began to
    arrive; and slowly turning her eyes from the visitor to her aunt, Anna
    Pavlovna mentioned each one's name and then left them.

    Each visitor performed the ceremony of greeting this old aunt whom
    not one of them knew, not one of them wanted to know, and not one of
    them cared about; Anna Pavlovna observed these greetings with mournful
    and solemn interest and silent approval. The aunt spoke to each of
    them in the same words, about their health and her own, and the health
    of Her Majesty, "who, thank God, was better today." And each
    visitor, though politeness prevented his showing impatience, left
    the old woman with a sense of relief at having performed a vexatious
    duty and did not return to her the whole evening.

    The young Princess Bolkonskaya had brought some work in a
    gold-embroidered velvet bag. Her pretty little upper lip, on which a
    delicate dark down was just perceptible, was too short for her
    teeth, but it lifted all the more sweetly, and was especially charming
    when she occasionally drew it down to meet the lower lip. As is always
    the case with a thoroughly attractive woman, her defect- the shortness
    of her upper lip and her half-open mouth- seemed to be her own special
    and peculiar form of beauty. Everyone brightened at the sight of
    this pretty young woman, so soon to become a mother, so full of life
    and health, and carrying her burden so lightly. Old men and dull
    dispirited young ones who looked at her, after being in her company
    and talking to her a little while, felt as if they too were
    becoming, like her, full of life and health. All who talked to her,
    and at each word saw her bright smile and the constant gleam of her
    white teeth, thought that they were in a specially amiable mood that
    day.

    The little princess went round the table with quick, short,
    swaying steps, her workbag on her arm, and gaily spreading out her
    dress sat down on a sofa near the silver samovar, as if all she was
    doing was a pleasure to herself and to all around her. "I have brought
    my work," said she in French, displaying her bag and addressing all
    present. "Mind, Annette, I hope you have not played a wicked trick
    on me," she added, turning to her hostess. "You wrote that it was to
    be quite a small reception, and just see how badly I am dressed."
    And she spread out her arms to show her short-waisted, lace-trimmed,
    dainty gray dress, girdled with a broad ribbon just below the breast.

    "Soyez tranquille, Lise, you will always be prettier than anyone
    else," replied Anna Pavlovna.

    "You know," said the princess in the same tone of voice and still in
    French, turning to a general, "my husband is deserting me? He is going
    to get himself killed. Tell me what this wretched war is for?" she
    added, addressing Prince Vasili, and without waiting for an answer she
    turned to speak to his daughter, the beautiful Helene.

    "What a delightful woman this little princess is!" said Prince
    Vasili to Anna Pavlovna.

    One of the next arrivals was a stout, heavily built young man with
    close-cropped hair, spectacles, the light-colored breeches fashionable
    at that time, a very high ruffle, and a brown dress coat. This stout
    young man was an illegitimate son of Count Bezukhov, a well-known
    grandee of Catherine's time who now lay dying in Moscow. The young man
    had not yet entered either the military or civil service, as he had
    only just returned from abroad where he had been educated, and this
    was his first appearance in society. Anna Pavlovna greeted him with
    the nod she accorded to the lowest hierarchy in her drawing room.
    But in spite of this lowest-grade greeting, a look of anxiety and
    fear, as at the sight of something too large and unsuited to the
    place, came over her face when she saw Pierre enter. Though he was
    certainly rather bigger than the other men in the room, her anxiety
    could only have reference to the clever though shy, but observant
    and natural, expression which distinguished him from everyone else
    in that drawing room.

    "It is very good of you, Monsieur Pierre, to come and visit a poor
    invalid," said Anna Pavlovna, exchanging an alarmed glance with her
    aunt as she conducted him to her.

    Pierre murmured something unintelligible, and continued to look
    round as if in search of something. On his way to the aunt he bowed to
    the little princess with a pleased smile, as to an intimate
    acquaintance.

    Anna Pavlovna's alarm was justified, for Pierre turned away from the
    aunt without waiting to hear her speech about Her Majesty's health.
    Anna Pavlovna in dismay detained him with the words: "Do you know
    the Abbe Morio? He is a most interesting man."

    "Yes, I have heard of his scheme for perpetual peace, and it is very
    interesting but hardly feasible."

    "You think so?" rejoined Anna Pavlovna in order to say something and
    get away to attend to her duties as hostess. But Pierre now
    committed a reverse act of impoliteness. First he had left a lady
    before she had finished speaking to him, and now he continued to speak
    to another who wished to get away. With his head bent, and his big
    feet spread apart, he began explaining his reasons for thinking the
    abbe's plan chimerical.

    "We will talk of it later," said Anna Pavlovna with a smile.

    And having got rid of this young man who did not know how to behave,
    she resumed her duties as hostess and continued to listen and watch,
    ready to help at any point where the conversation might happen to
    flag. As the foreman of a spinning mill, when he has set the hands
    to work, goes round and notices here a spindle that has stopped or
    there one that creaks or makes more noise than it should, and
    hastens to check the machine or set it in proper motion, so Anna
    Pavlovna moved about her drawing room, approaching now a silent, now a
    too-noisy group, and by a word or slight rearrangement kept the
    conversational machine in steady, proper, and regular motion. But amid
    these cares her anxiety about Pierre was evident. She kept an
    anxious watch on him when he approached the group round Mortemart to
    listen to what was being said there, and again when he passed to
    another group whose center was the abbe.

    Pierre had been educated abroad, and this reception at Anna
    Pavlovna's was the first he had attended in Russia. He knew that all
    the intellectual lights of Petersburg were gathered there and, like
    a child in a toyshop, did not know which way to look, afraid of
    missing any clever conversation that was to be heard. Seeing the
    self-confident and refined expression on the faces of those present he
    was always expecting to hear something very profound. At last he
    came up to Morio. Here the conversation seemed interesting and he
    stood waiting for an opportunity to express his own views, as young
    people are fond of doing.




    CHAPTER III


    Anna Pavlovna's reception was in full swing. The spindles hummed
    steadily and ceaselessly on all sides. With the exception of the aunt,
    beside whom sat only one elderly lady, who with her thin careworn face
    was rather out of place in this brilliant society, the whole company
    had settled into three groups. One, chiefly masculine, had formed
    round the abbe. Another, of young people, was grouped round the
    beautiful Princess Helene, Prince Vasili's daughter, and the little
    Princess Bolkonskaya, very pretty and rosy, though rather too plump
    for her age. The third group was gathered round Mortemart and Anna
    Pavlovna.

    The vicomte was a nice-looking young man with soft features and
    polished manners, who evidently considered himself a celebrity but out
    of politeness modestly placed himself at the disposal of the circle in
    which he found himself. Anna Pavlovna was obviously serving him up
    as a treat to her guests. As a clever maitre d'hotel serves up as a
    specially choice delicacy a piece of meat that no one who had seen
    it in the kitchen would have cared to eat, so Anna Pavlovna served
    up to her guests, first the vicomte and then the abbe, as peculiarly
    choice morsels. The group about Mortemart immediately began discussing
    the murder of the Duc d'Enghien. The vicomte said that the Duc
    d'Enghien had perished by his own magnanimity, and that there were
    particular reasons for Buonaparte's hatred of him.

    "Ah, yes! Do tell us all about it, Vicomte," said Anna Pavlovna,
    with a pleasant feeling that there was something a la Louis XV in
    the sound of that sentence: "Contez nous cela, Vicomte."

    The vicomte bowed and smiled courteously in token of his willingness
    to comply. Anna Pavlovna arranged a group round him, inviting everyone
    to listen to his tale.

    "The vicomte knew the duc personally," whispered Anna Pavlovna to of
    the guests. "The vicomte is a wonderful raconteur," said she to
    another. "How evidently he belongs to the best society," said she to a
    third; and the vicomte was served up to the company in the choicest
    and most advantageous style, like a well-garnished joint of roast beef
    on a hot dish.

    The vicomte wished to begin his story and gave a subtle smile.

    "Come over here, Helene, dear," said Anna Pavlovna to the
    beautiful young princess who was sitting some way off, the center of
    another group.

    The princess smiled. She rose with the same unchanging smile with
    which she had first entered the room- the smile of a perfectly
    beautiful woman. With a slight rustle of her white dress trimmed
    with moss and ivy, with a gleam of white shoulders, glossy hair, and
    sparkling diamonds, she passed between the men who made way for her,
    not looking at any of them but smiling on all, as if graciously
    allowing each the privilege of admiring her beautiful figure and
    shapely shoulders, back, and bosom- which in the fashion of those days
    were very much exposed- and she seemed to bring the glamour of a
    ballroom with her as she moved toward Anna Pavlovna. Helene was so
    lovely that not only did she not show any trace of coquetry, but on
    the contrary she even appeared shy of her unquestionable and all too
    victorious beauty. She seemed to wish, but to be unable, to diminish
    its effect.

    "How lovely!" said everyone who saw her; and the vicomte lifted
    his shoulders and dropped his eyes as if startled by something
    extraordinary when she took her seat opposite and beamed upon him also
    with her unchanging smile.

    "Madame, I doubt my ability before such an audience," said he,
    smilingly inclining his head.

    The princess rested her bare round arm on a little table and
    considered a reply unnecessary. She smilingly waited. All the time the
    story was being told she sat upright, glancing now at her beautiful
    round arm, altered in shape by its pressure on the table, now at her
    still more beautiful bosom, on which she readjusted a diamond
    necklace. From time to time she smoothed the folds of her dress, and
    whenever the story produced an effect she glanced at Anna Pavlovna, at
    once adopted just the expression she saw on the maid of honor's
    face, and again relapsed into her radiant smile.

    The little princess had also left the tea table and followed Helene.

    "Wait a moment, I'll get my work.... Now then, what are you thinking
    of?" she went on, turning to Prince Hippolyte. "Fetch me my workbag."

    There was a general movement as the princess, smiling and talking
    merrily to everyone at once, sat down and gaily arranged herself in
    her seat.

    "Now I am all right," she said, and asking the vicomte to begin, she
    took up her work.

    Prince Hippolyte, having brought the workbag, joined the circle
    and moving a chair close to hers seated himself beside her.

    Le charmant Hippolyte was surprising by his extraordinary
    resemblance to his beautiful sister, but yet more by the fact that
    in spite of this resemblance he was exceedingly ugly. His features
    were like his sister's, but while in her case everything was lit up by
    a joyous, self-satisfied, youthful, and constant smile of animation,
    and by the wonderful classic beauty of her figure, his face on the
    contrary was dulled by imbecility and a constant expression of
    sullen self-confidence, while his body was thin and weak. His eyes,
    nose, and mouth all seemed puckered into a vacant, wearied grimace,
    and his arms and legs always fell into unnatural positions.

    "It's not going to be a ghost story?" said he, sitting down beside
    the princess and hastily adjusting his lorgnette, as if without this
    instrument he could not begin to speak.

    "Why no, my dear fellow," said the astonished narrator, shrugging
    his shoulders.

    "Because I hate ghost stories," said Prince Hippolyte in a tone
    which showed that he only understood the meaning of his words after he
    had uttered them.

    He spoke with such self-confidence that his hearers could not be
    sure whether what he said was very witty or very stupid. He was
    dressed in a dark-green dress coat, knee breeches of the color of
    cuisse de nymphe effrayee, as he called it, shoes, and silk stockings.

    The vicomte told his tale very neatly. It was an anecdote, then
    current, to the effect that the Duc d'Enghien had gone secretly to
    Paris to visit Mademoiselle George; that at her house he came upon
    Bonaparte, who also enjoyed the famous actress' favors, and that in
    his presence Napoleon happened to fall into one of the fainting fits
    to which he was subject, and was thus at the duc's mercy. The latter
    spared him, and this magnanimity Bonaparte subsequently repaid by
    death.

    The story was very pretty and interesting, especially at the point
    where the rivals suddenly recognized one another; and the ladies
    looked agitated.

    "Charming!" said Anna Pavlovna with an inquiring glance at the
    little princess.

    "Charming!" whispered the little princess, sticking the needle
    into her work as if to testify that the interest and fascination of
    the story prevented her from going on with it.

    The vicomte appreciated this silent praise and smiling gratefully
    prepared to continue, but just then Anna Pavlovna, who had kept a
    watchful eye on the young man who so alarmed her, noticed that he
    was talking too loudly and vehemently with the abbe, so she hurried to
    the rescue. Pierre had managed to start a conversation with the abbe
    about the balance of power, and the latter, evidently interested by
    the young man's simple-minded eagerness, was explaining his pet
    theory. Both were talking and listening too eagerly and too naturally,
    which was why Anna Pavlovna disapproved.

    "The means are... the balance of power in Europe and the rights of
    the people," the abbe was saying. "It is only necessary for one
    powerful nation like Russia- barbaric as she is said to be- to place
    herself disinterestedly at the head of an alliance having for its
    object the maintenance of the balance of power of Europe, and it would
    save the world!"

    "But how are you to get that balance?" Pierre was beginning.

    At that moment Anna Pavlovna came up and, looking severely at
    Pierre, asked the Italian how he stood Russian climate. The
    Italian's face instantly changed and assumed an offensively
    affected, sugary expression, evidently habitual to him when conversing
    with women.

    "I am so enchanted by the brilliancy of the wit and culture of the
    society, more especially of the feminine society, in which I have
    had the honor of being received, that I have not yet had time to think
    of the climate," said he.

    Not letting the abbe and Pierre escape, Anna Pavlovna, the more
    conveniently to keep them under observation, brought them into the
    larger circle.





    CHAPTER IV


    Just then another visitor entered the drawing room: Prince Andrew
    Bolkonski, the little princess' husband. He was a very handsome
    young man, of medium height, with firm, clearcut features.
    Everything about him, from his weary, bored expression to his quiet,
    measured step, offered a most striking contrast to his quiet, little
    wife. It was evident that he not only knew everyone in the drawing
    room, but had found them to be so tiresome that it wearied him to look
    at or listen to them. And among all these faces that he found so
    tedious, none seemed to bore him so much as that of his pretty wife.
    He turned away from her with a grimace that distorted his handsome
    face, kissed Anna Pavlovna's hand, and screwing up his eyes scanned
    the whole company.

    "You are off to the war, Prince?" said Anna Pavlovna.

    "General Kutuzov," said Bolkonski, speaking French and stressing the
    last syllable of the general's name like a Frenchman, "has been
    pleased to take me as an aide-de-camp...."

    "And Lise, your wife?"

    "She will go to the country."

    "Are you not ashamed to deprive us of your charming wife?"

    "Andre," said his wife, addressing her husband in the same
    coquettish manner in which she spoke to other men, "the vicomte has
    been telling us such a tale about Mademoiselle George and Buonaparte!"

    Prince Andrew screwed up his eyes and turned away. Pierre, who
    from the moment Prince Andrew entered the room had watched him with
    glad, affectionate eyes, now came up and took his arm. Before he
    looked round Prince Andrew frowned again, expressing his annoyance
    with whoever was touching his arm, but when he saw Pierre's beaming
    face he gave him an unexpectedly kind and pleasant smile.

    "There now!... So you, too, are in the great world?" said he to
    Pierre.

    "I knew you would be here," replied Pierre. "I will come to supper
    with you. May I?" he added in a low voice so as not to disturb the
    vicomte who was continuing his story.

    "No, impossible!" said Prince Andrew, laughing and pressing Pierre's
    hand to show that there was no need to ask the question. He wished
    to say something more, but at that moment Prince Vasili and his
    daughter got up to go and the two young men rose to let them pass.

    "You must excuse me, dear Vicomte," said Prince Vasili to the
    Frenchman, holding him down by the sleeve in a friendly way to prevent
    his rising. "This unfortunate fete at the ambassador's deprives me
    of a pleasure, and obliges me to interrupt you. I am very sorry to
    leave your enchanting party," said he, turning to Anna Pavlovna.

    His daughter, Princess Helene, passed between the chairs, lightly
    holding up the folds of her dress, and the smile shone still more
    radiantly on her beautiful face. Pierre gazed at her with rapturous,
    almost frightened, eyes as she passed him.

    "Very lovely," said Prince Andrew.

    "Very," said Pierre.

    In passing Prince Vasili seized Pierre's hand and said to Anna
    Pavlovna: "Educate this bear for me! He has been staying with me a
    whole month and this is the first time I have seen him in society.
    Nothing is so necessary for a young man as the society of clever
    women."


    Anna Pavlovna smiled and promised to take Pierre in hand. She knew
    his father to be a connection of Prince Vasili's. The elderly lady who
    had been sitting with the old aunt rose hurriedly and overtook
    Prince Vasili in the anteroom. All the affectation of interest she had
    assumed had left her kindly and tearworn face and it now expressed
    only anxiety and fear.

    "How about my son Boris, Prince?" said she, hurrying after him
    into the anteroom. "I can't remain any longer in Petersburg. Tell me
    what news I may take back to my poor boy."

    Although Prince Vasili listened reluctantly and not very politely to
    the elderly lady, even betraying some impatience, she gave him an
    ingratiating and appealing smile, and took his hand that he might
    not go away.

    "What would it cost you to say a word to the Emperor, and then he
    would be transferred to the Guards at once?" said she.

    "Believe me, Princess, I am ready to do all I can," answered
    Prince Vasili, "but it is difficult for me to ask the Emperor. I
    should advise you to appeal to Rumyantsev through Prince Golitsyn.
    That would be the best way."

    The elderly lady was a Princess Drubetskaya, belonging to one of the
    best families in Russia, but she was poor, and having long been out of
    society had lost her former influential connections. She had now
    come to Petersburg to procure an appointment in the Guards for her
    only son. It was, in fact, solely to meet Prince Vasili that she had
    obtained an invitation to Anna Pavlovna's reception and had sat
    listening to the vicomte's story. Prince Vasili's words frightened
    her, an embittered look clouded her once handsome face, but only for a
    moment; then she smiled again and dutched Prince Vasili's arm more
    tightly.

    "Listen to me, Prince," said she. "I have never yet asked you for
    anything and I never will again, nor have I ever reminded you of my
    father's friendship for you; but now I entreat you for God's sake to
    do this for my son- and I shall always regard you as a benefactor,"
    she added hurriedly. "No, don't be angry, but promise! I have asked
    Golitsyn and he has refused. Be the kindhearted man you always
    were," she said, trying to smile though tears were in her eyes.

    "Papa, we shall be late," said Princess Helene, turning her
    beautiful head and looking over her classically molded shoulder as she
    stood waiting by the door.

    Influence in society, however, is a capital which has to be
    economized if it is to last. Prince Vasili knew this, and having
    once realized that if he asked on behalf of all who begged of him,
    he would soon be unable to ask for himself, he became chary of using
    his influence. But in Princess Drubetskaya's case he felt, after her
    second appeal, something like qualms of conscience. She had reminded
    him of what was quite true; he had been indebted to her father for the
    first steps in his career. Moreover, he could see by her manners
    that she was one of those women- mostly mothers- who, having once made
    up their minds, will not rest until they have gained their end, and
    are prepared if necessary to go on insisting day after day and hour
    after hour, and even to make scenes. This last consideration moved
    him.

    "My dear Anna Mikhaylovna," said he with his usual familiarity and
    weariness of tone, "it is almost impossible for me to do what you ask;
    but to prove my devotion to you and how I respect your father's
    memory, I will do the impossible- your son shall be transferred to the
    Guards. Here is my hand on it. Are you satisfied?"

    "My dear benefactor! This is what I expected from you- I knew your
    kindness!" He turned to go.

    "Wait- just a word! When he has been transferred to the Guards..."
    she faltered. "You are on good terms with Michael Ilarionovich
    Kutuzov... recommend Boris to him as adjutant! Then I shall be at
    rest, and then..."

    Prince Vasili smiled.

    "No, I won't promise that. You don't know how Kutuzov is pestered
    since his appointment as Commander in Chief. He told me himself that
    all the Moscow ladies have conspired to give him all their sons as
    adjutants."

    "No, but do promise! I won't let you go! My dear benefactor..."

    "Papa," said his beautiful daughter in the same tone as before,
    "we shall be late."

    "Well, au revoir! Good-by! You hear her?"

    "Then tomorrow you will speak to the Emperor?"

    "Certainly; but about Kutuzov, I don't promise."

    "Do promise, do promise, Vasili!" cried Anna Mikhaylovna as he went,
    with the smile of a coquettish girl, which at one time probably came
    naturally to her, but was now very ill-suited to her careworn face.

    Apparently she had forgotten her age and by force of habit
    employed all the old feminine arts. But as soon as the prince had gone
    her face resumed its former cold, artificial expression. She
    returned to the group where the vicomte was still talking, and again
    pretended to listen, while waiting till it would be time to leave. Her
    task was accomplished.





    CHAPTER V


    "And what do you think of this latest comedy, the coronation at
    Milan?" asked Anna Pavlovna, "and of the comedy of the people of Genoa
    and Lucca laying their pe ions before Monsieur Buonaparte, and
    Monsieur Buonaparte sitting on a throne and granting the pe ions
    of the nations? Adorable! It is enough to make one's head whirl! It is
    as if the whole world had gone crazy."

    Prince Andrew looked Anna Pavlovna straight in the face with a
    sarcastic smile.

    "'Dieu me la donne, gare a qui la touche!'* They say he was very
    fine when he said that," he remarked, repeating the words in
    Italian: "'Dio mi l'ha dato. Guai a chi la tocchi!'"


    *God has given it to me, let him who touches it beware!


    "I hope this will prove the last drop that will make the glass run
    over," Anna Pavlovna continued. "The sovereigns will not be able to
    endure this man who is a menace to everything."

    "The sovereigns? I do not speak of Russia," said the vicomte, polite
    but hopeless: "The sovereigns, madame... What have they done for Louis
    XVII, for the Queen, or for Madame Elizabeth? Nothing!" and he
    became more animated. "And believe me, they are reaping the reward
    of their betrayal of the Bourbon cause. The sovereigns! Why, they
    are sending ambassadors to compliment the usurper."

    And sighing disdainfully, he again changed his position.

    Prince Hippolyte, who had been gazing at the vicomte for some time
    through his lorgnette, suddenly turned completely round toward the
    little princess, and having asked for a needle began tracing the Conde
    coat of arms on the table. He explained this to her with as much
    gravity as if she had asked him to do it.

    "Baton de gueules, engrele de gueules d' azur- maison Conde," said
    he.

    The princess listened, smiling.

    "If Buonaparte remains on the throne of France a year longer," the
    vicomte continued, with the air of a man who, in a matter with which
    he is better acquainted than anyone else, does not listen to others
    but follows the current of his own thoughts, "things will have gone
    too far. By intrigues, violence, exile, and executions, French
    society- I mean good French society- will have been forever destroyed,
    and then..."

    He shrugged his shoulders and spread out his hands. Pierre wished to
    make a remark, for the conversation interested him, but Anna Pavlovna,
    who had him under observation, interrupted:

    "The Emperor Alexander," said she, with the melancholy which
    always accompanied any reference of hers to the Imperial family,
    "has declared that he will leave it to the French people themselves to
    choose their own form of government; and I believe that once free from
    the usurper, the whole nation will certainly throw itself into the
    arms of its rightful king," she concluded, trying to be amiable to the
    royalist emigrant.

    "That is doubtful," said Prince Andrew. "Monsieur le Vicomte quite
    rightly supposes that matters have already gone too far. I think it
    will be difficult to return to the old regime."

    "From what I have heard," said Pierre, blushing and breaking into
    the conversation, "almost all the aristocracy has already gone over to
    Bonaparte's side."

    "It is the Buonapartists who say that," replied the vicomte
    without looking at Pierre. "At the present time it is difficult to
    know the real state of French public opinion.

    "Bonaparte has said so," remarked Prince Andrew with a sarcastic
    smile.

    It was evident that he did not like the vicomte and was aiming his
    remarks at him, though without looking at him.

    "'I showed them the path to glory, but they did not follow it,'"
    Prince Andrew continued after a short silence, again quoting
    Napoleon's words. "'I opened my antechambers and they crowded in.' I
    do not know how far he was justified in saying so."

    "Not in the least," replied the vicomte. "After the murder of the
    duc even the most partial ceased to regard him as a hero. If to some
    people," he went on, turning to Anna Pavlovna, "he ever was a hero,
    after the murder of the duc there was one martyr more in heaven and
    one hero less on earth."

    Before Anna Pavlovna and the others had time to smile their
    appreciation of the vicomte's epigram, Pierre again broke into the
    conversation, and though Anna Pavlovna felt sure he would say
    something inappropriate, she was unable to stop him.

    "The execution of the Duc d'Enghien," declared Monsieur Pierre, "was
    a political necessity, and it seems to me that Napoleon showed
    greatness of soul by not fearing to take on himself the whole
    responsibility of that deed."

    "Dieu! Mon Dieu!" muttered Anna Pavlovna in a terrified whisper.

    "What, Monsieur Pierre... Do you consider that assassination shows
    greatness of soul?" said the little princess, smiling and drawing
    her work nearer to her.

    "Oh! Oh!" exclaimed several voices.

    "Capital!" said Prince Hippolyte in English, and began slapping
    his knee with the palm of his hand.

    The vicomte merely shrugged his shoulders. Pierre looked solemnly at
    his audience over his spectacles and continued.

    "I say so," he continued desperately, "because the Bourbons fled
    from the Revolution leaving the people to anarchy, and Napoleon
    alone understood the Revolution and quelled it, and so for the general
    good, he could not stop short for the sake of one man's life."

    "Won't you come over to the other table?" suggested Anna Pavlovna.

    But Pierre continued his speech without heeding her.

    "No," cried he, becoming more and more eager, "Napoleon is great
    because he rose superior to the Revolution, suppressed its abuses,
    preserved all that was good in it- equality of citizenship and freedom
    of speech and of the press- and only for that reason did he obtain
    power."

    "Yes, if having obtained power, without availing himself of it to
    commit murder he had restored it to the rightful king, I should have
    called him a great man," remarked the vicomte.

    "He could not do that. The people only gave him power that he
    might rid them of the Bourbons and because they saw that he was a
    great man. The Revolution was a grand thing!" continued Monsieur
    Pierre, betraying by this desperate and provocative proposition his
    extreme youth and his wish to express all that was in his mind.

    "What? Revolution and regicide a grand thing?... Well, after that...
    But won't you come to this other table?" repeated Anna Pavlovna.

    "Rousseau's Contrat social," said the vicomte with a tolerant smile.

    "I am not speaking of regicide, I am speaking about ideas."

    "Yes: ideas of robbery, murder, and regicide," again interjected
    an ironical voice.

    "Those were extremes, no doubt, but they are not what is most
    important. What is important are the rights of man, emancipation
    from prejudices, and equality of citizenship, and all these ideas
    Napoleon has retained in full force."

    "Liberty and equality," said the vicomte contemptuously, as if at
    last deciding seriously to prove to this youth how foolish his words
    were, "high-sounding words which have long been discredited. Who
    does not love liberty and equality? Even our Saviour preached
    liberty and equality. Have people since the Revolution become happier?
    On the contrary. We wanted liberty, but Buonaparte has destroyed it."

    Prince Andrew kept looking with an amused smile from Pierre to the
    vicomte and from the vicomte to their hostess. In the first moment
    of Pierre's outburst Anna Pavlovna, despite her social experience, was
    horror-struck. But when she saw that Pierre's sacrilegious words had
    not exasperated the vicomte, and had convinced herself that it was
    impossible to stop him, she rallied her forces and joined the
    vicomte in a vigorous attack on the orator.

    "But, my dear Monsieur Pierre," said she, "how do you explain the
    fact of a great man executing a duc- or even an ordinary man who- is
    innocent and untried?"

    "I should like," said the vicomte, "to ask how monsieur explains the
    18th Brumaire; was not that an imposture? It was a swindle, and not at
    all like the conduct of a great man!"

    "And the prisoners he killed in Africa? That was horrible!" said the
    little princess, shrugging her shoulders.

    "He's a low fellow, say what you will," remarked Prince Hippolyte.

    Pierre, not knowing whom to answer, looked at them all and smiled.
    His smile was unlike the half-smile of other people. When he smiled,
    his grave, even rather gloomy, look was instantaneously replaced by
    another- a childlike, kindly, even rather silly look, which seemed
    to ask forgiveness.

    The vicomte who was meeting him for the first time saw clearly
    that this young Jacobin was not so terrible as his words suggested.
    All were silent.

    "How do you expect him to answer you all at once?" said Prince
    Andrew. "Besides, in the actions of a statesman one has to distinguish
    between his acts as a private person, as a general, and as an emperor.
    So it seems to me."

    "Yes, yes, of course!" Pierre chimed in, pleased at the arrival of
    this reinforcement.

    "One must admit," continued Prince Andrew, "that Napoleon as a man
    was great on the bridge of Arcola, and in the hospital at Jaffa
    where he gave his hand to the plague-stricken; but... but there are
    other acts which it is difficult to justify."

    Prince Andrew, who had evidently wished to tone down the awkwardness
    of Pierre's remarks, rose and made a sign to his wife that it was time
    to go.


    Suddenly Prince Hippolyte started up making signs to everyone to
    attend, and asking them all to be seated began:

    "I was told a charming Moscow story today and must treat you to
    it. Excuse me, Vicomte- I must tell it in Russian or the point will be
    lost...." And Prince Hippolyte began to tell his story in such Russian
    as a Frenchman would speak after spending about a year in Russia.
    Everyone waited, so emphatically and eagerly did he demand their
    attention to his story.

    "There is in Moscow a lady, une dame, and she is very stingy. She
    must have two footmen behind her carriage, and very big ones. That was
    her taste. And she had a lady's maid, also big. She said..."

    Here Prince Hippolyte paused, evidently collecting his ideas with
    difficulty.

    "She said... Oh yes! She said, 'Girl,' to the maid, 'put on a
    livery, get up behind the carriage, and come with me while I make some
    calls.'"

    Here Prince Hippolyte spluttered and burst out laughing long
    before his audience, which produced an effect unfavorable to the
    narrator. Several persons, among them the elderly lady and Anna
    Pavlovna, did however smile.

    "She went. Suddenly there was a great wind. The girl lost her hat
    and her long hair came down...." Here he could contain himself no
    longer and went on, between gasps of laughter: "And the whole world
    knew...."

    And so the anecdote ended. Though it was unintelligible why he had
    told it, or why it had to be told in Russian, still Anna Pavlovna
    and the others appreciated Prince Hippolyte's social tact in so
    agreeably ending Pierre's unpleasant and unamiable outburst. After the
    anecdote the conversation broke up into insignificant small talk about
    the last and next balls, about theatricals, and who would meet whom,
    and when and where.
    like i mean the entire book.

  2. #1177
    we rang stretch's Avatar
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    CHAPTER I


    "Well, Prince, so Genoa and Lucca are now just family estates of the
    Buonapartes. But I warn you, if you don't tell me that this means war,
    if you still try to defend the infamies and horrors perpetrated by
    that Antichrist- I really believe he is Antichrist- I will have
    nothing more to do with you and you are no longer my friend, no longer
    my 'faithful slave,' as you call yourself! But how do you do? I see
    I have frightened you- sit down and tell me all the news."

    It was in July, 1805, and the speaker was the well-known Anna
    Pavlovna Scherer, maid of honor and favorite of the Empress Marya
    Fedorovna. With these words she greeted Prince Vasili Kuragin, a man
    of high rank and importance, who was the first to arrive at her
    reception. Anna Pavlovna had had a cough for some days. She was, as
    she said, suffering from la grippe; grippe being then a new word in
    St. Petersburg, used only by the elite.

    All her invitations without exception, written in French, and
    delivered by a scarlet-liveried footman that morning, ran as follows:

    "If you have nothing better to do, Count [or Prince], and if the
    prospect of spending an evening with a poor invalid is not too
    terrible, I shall be very charmed to see you tonight between 7 and 10-
    Annette Scherer."

    "Heavens! what a virulent attack!" replied the prince, not in the
    least disconcerted by this reception. He had just entered, wearing
    an embroidered court uniform, knee breeches, and shoes, and had
    stars on his breast and a serene expression on his flat face. He spoke
    in that refined French in which our grandfathers not only spoke but
    thought, and with the gentle, patronizing intonation natural to a
    man of importance who had grown old in society and at court. He went
    up to Anna Pavlovna, kissed her hand, presenting to her his bald,
    scented, and shining head, and complacently seated himself on the
    sofa.

    "First of all, dear friend, tell me how you are. Set your friend's
    mind at rest," said he without altering his tone, beneath the
    politeness and affected sympathy of which indifference and even
    irony could be discerned.

    "Can one be well while suffering morally? Can one be calm in times
    like these if one has any feeling?" said Anna Pavlovna. "You are
    staying the whole evening, I hope?"

    "And the fete at the English ambassador's? Today is Wednesday. I
    must put in an appearance there," said the prince. "My daughter is
    coming for me to take me there."

    "I thought today's fete had been canceled. I confess all these
    festivities and fireworks are becoming wearisome."

    "If they had known that you wished it, the entertainment would
    have been put off," said the prince, who, like a wound-up clock, by
    force of habit said things he did not even wish to be believed.

    "Don't tease! Well, and what has been decided about Novosiltsev's
    dispatch? You know everything."

    "What can one say about it?" replied the prince in a cold,
    listless tone. "What has been decided? They have decided that
    Buonaparte has burnt his boats, and I believe that we are ready to
    burn ours."

    Prince Vasili always spoke languidly, like an actor repeating a
    stale part. Anna Pavlovna Scherer on the contrary, despite her forty
    years, overflowed with animation and impulsiveness. To be an
    enthusiast had become her social vocation and, sometimes even when she
    did not feel like it, she became enthusiastic in order not to
    disappoint the expectations of those who knew her. The subdued smile
    which, though it did not suit her faded features, always played
    round her lips expressed, as in a spoiled child, a continual
    consciousness of her charming defect, which she neither wished, nor
    could, nor considered it necessary, to correct.

    In the midst of a conversation on political matters Anna Pavlovna
    burst out:

    "Oh, don't speak to me of Austria. Perhaps I don't understand
    things, but Austria never has wished, and does not wish, for war.
    She is betraying us! Russia alone must save Europe. Our gracious
    sovereign recognizes his high vocation and will be true to it. That is
    the one thing I have faith in! Our good and wonderful sovereign has to
    perform the noblest role on earth, and he is so virtuous and noble
    that God will not forsake him. He will fulfill his vocation and
    crush the hydra of revolution, which has become more terrible than
    ever in the person of this murderer and villain! We alone must
    avenge the blood of the just one.... Whom, I ask you, can we rely
    on?... England with her commercial spirit will not and cannot
    understand the Emperor Alexander's loftiness of soul. She has
    refused to evacuate Malta. She wanted to find, and still seeks, some
    secret motive in our actions. What answer did Novosiltsev get? None.
    The English have not understood and cannot understand the
    self-abnegation of our Emperor who wants nothing for himself, but only
    desires the good of mankind. And what have they promised? Nothing! And
    what little they have promised they will not perform! Prussia has
    always declared that Buonaparte is invincible, and that all Europe
    is powerless before him.... And I don't believe a word that Hardenburg
    says, or Haugwitz either. This famous Prussian neutrality is just a
    trap. I have faith only in God and the lofty destiny of our adored
    monarch. He will save Europe!"

    She suddenly paused, smiling at her own impetuosity.

    "I think," said the prince with a smile, "that if you had been
    sent instead of our dear Wintzingerode you would have captured the
    King of Prussia's consent by assault. You are so eloquent. Will you
    give me a cup of tea?"

    "In a moment. A propos," she added, becoming calm again, "I am
    expecting two very interesting men tonight, le Vicomte de Mortemart,
    who is connected with the Montmorencys through the Rohans, one of
    the best French families. He is one of the genuine emigres, the good
    ones. And also the Abbe Morio. Do you know that profound thinker? He
    has been received by the Emperor. Had you heard?"

    "I shall be delighted to meet them," said the prince. "But tell me,"
    he added with studied carelessness as if it had only just occurred
    to him, though the question he was about to ask was the chief motive
    of his visit, "is it true that the Dowager Empress wants Baron Funke
    to be appointed first secretary at Vienna? The baron by all accounts
    is a poor creature."

    Prince Vasili wished to obtain this post for his son, but others
    were trying through the Dowager Empress Marya Fedorovna to secure it
    for the baron.

    Anna Pavlovna almost closed her eyes to indicate that neither she
    nor anyone else had a right to criticize what the Empress desired or
    was pleased with.

    "Baron Funke has been recommended to the Dowager Empress by her
    sister," was all she said, in a dry and mournful tone.

    As she named the Empress, Anna Pavlovna's face suddenly assumed an
    expression of profound and sincere devotion and respect mingled with
    sadness, and this occurred every time she mentioned her illustrious
    patroness. She added that Her Majesty had deigned to show Baron
    Funke beaucoup d'estime, and again her face clouded over with sadness.

    The prince was silent and looked indifferent. But, with the
    womanly and courtierlike quickness and tact habitual to her, Anna
    Pavlovna wished both to rebuke him (for daring to speak he had done of
    a man recommended to the Empress) and at the same time to console him,
    so she said:

    "Now about your family. Do you know that since your daughter came
    out everyone has been enraptured by her? They say she is amazingly
    beautiful."

    The prince bowed to signify his respect and gra ude.

    "I often think," she continued after a short pause, drawing nearer
    to the prince and smiling amiably at him as if to show that
    political and social topics were ended and the time had come for
    intimate conversation- "I often think how unfairly sometimes the
    joys of life are distributed. Why has fate given you two such splendid
    children? I don't speak of Anatole, your youngest. I don't like
    him," she added in a tone admitting of no rejoinder and raising her
    eyebrows. "Two such charming children. And really you appreciate
    them less than anyone, and so you don't deserve to have them."

    And she smiled her ecstatic smile.

    "I can't help it," said the prince. "Lavater would have said I
    lack the bump of paternity."

    "Don't joke; I mean to have a serious talk with you. Do you know I
    am dissatisfied with your younger son? Between ourselves" (and her
    face assumed its melancholy expression), "he was mentioned at Her
    Majesty's and you were pitied...."

    The prince answered nothing, but she looked at him significantly,
    awaiting a reply. He frowned.

    "What would you have me do?" he said at last. "You know I did all
    a father could for their education, and they have both turned out
    fools. Hippolyte is at least a quiet fool, but Anatole is an active
    one. That is the only difference between them." He said this smiling
    in a way more natural and animated than usual, so that the wrinkles
    round his mouth very clearly revealed something unexpectedly coarse
    and unpleasant.

    "And why are children born to such men as you? If you were not a
    father there would be nothing I could reproach you with," said Anna
    Pavlovna, looking up pensively.

    "I am your faithful slave and to you alone I can confess that my
    children are the bane of my life. It is the cross I have to bear. That
    is how I explain it to myself. It can't be helped!"

    He said no more, but expressed his resignation to cruel fate by a
    gesture. Anna Pavlovna meditated.

    "Have you never thought of marrying your prodigal son Anatole?"
    she asked. "They say old maids have a mania for matchmaking, and
    though I don't feel that weakness in myself as yet,I know a little
    person who is very unhappy with her father. She is a relation of
    yours, Princess Mary Bolkonskaya."

    Prince Vasili did not reply, though, with the quickness of memory
    and perception befitting a man of the world, he indicated by a
    movement of the head that he was considering this information.

    "Do you know," he said at last, evidently unable to check the sad
    current of his thoughts, "that Anatole is costing me forty thousand
    rubles a year? And," he went on after a pause, "what will it be in
    five years, if he goes on like this?" Presently he added: "That's what
    we fathers have to put up with.... Is this princess of yours rich?"

    "Her father is very rich and stingy. He lives in the country. He
    is the well-known Prince Bolkonski who had to retire from the army
    under the late Emperor, and was nicknamed 'the King of Prussia.' He is
    very clever but eccentric, and a bore. The poor girl is very
    unhappy. She has a brother; I think you know him, he married Lise
    Meinen lately. He is an aide-de-camp of Kutuzov's and will be here
    tonight."

    "Listen, dear Annette," said the prince, suddenly taking Anna
    Pavlovna's hand and for some reason drawing it downwards. "Arrange
    that affair for me and I shall always be your most devoted slave-
    slafe wigh an f, as a village elder of mine writes in his reports. She
    is rich and of good family and that's all I want."

    And with the familiarity and easy grace peculiar to him, he raised
    the maid of honor's hand to his lips, kissed it, and swung it to and
    fro as he lay back in his armchair, looking in another direction.

    "Attendez," said Anna Pavlovna, reflecting, "I'll speak to Lise,
    young Bolkonski's wife, this very evening, and perhaps the thing can
    be arranged. It shall be on your family's behalf that I'll start my
    apprenticeship as old maid."





    CHAPTER II


    Anna Pavlovna's drawing room was gradually filling. The highest
    Petersburg society was assembled there: people differing widely in age
    and character but alike in the social circle to which they belonged.
    Prince Vasili's daughter, the beautiful Helene, came to take her
    father to the ambassador's entertainment; she wore a ball dress and
    her badge as maid of honor. The youthful little Princess
    Bolkonskaya, known as la femme la plus seduisante de Petersbourg,* was
    also there. She had been married during the previous winter, and being
    pregnant did not go to any large gatherings, but only to small
    receptions. Prince Vasili's son, Hippolyte, had come with Mortemart,
    whom he introduced. The Abbe Morio and many others had also come.


    *The most fascinating woman in Petersburg.


    To each new arrival Anna Pavlovna said, "You have not yet seen my
    aunt," or "You do not know my aunt?" and very gravely conducted him or
    her to a little old lady, wearing large bows of ribbon in her cap, who
    had come sailing in from another room as soon as the guests began to
    arrive; and slowly turning her eyes from the visitor to her aunt, Anna
    Pavlovna mentioned each one's name and then left them.

    Each visitor performed the ceremony of greeting this old aunt whom
    not one of them knew, not one of them wanted to know, and not one of
    them cared about; Anna Pavlovna observed these greetings with mournful
    and solemn interest and silent approval. The aunt spoke to each of
    them in the same words, about their health and her own, and the health
    of Her Majesty, "who, thank God, was better today." And each
    visitor, though politeness prevented his showing impatience, left
    the old woman with a sense of relief at having performed a vexatious
    duty and did not return to her the whole evening.

    The young Princess Bolkonskaya had brought some work in a
    gold-embroidered velvet bag. Her pretty little upper lip, on which a
    delicate dark down was just perceptible, was too short for her
    teeth, but it lifted all the more sweetly, and was especially charming
    when she occasionally drew it down to meet the lower lip. As is always
    the case with a thoroughly attractive woman, her defect- the shortness
    of her upper lip and her half-open mouth- seemed to be her own special
    and peculiar form of beauty. Everyone brightened at the sight of
    this pretty young woman, so soon to become a mother, so full of life
    and health, and carrying her burden so lightly. Old men and dull
    dispirited young ones who looked at her, after being in her company
    and talking to her a little while, felt as if they too were
    becoming, like her, full of life and health. All who talked to her,
    and at each word saw her bright smile and the constant gleam of her
    white teeth, thought that they were in a specially amiable mood that
    day.

    The little princess went round the table with quick, short,
    swaying steps, her workbag on her arm, and gaily spreading out her
    dress sat down on a sofa near the silver samovar, as if all she was
    doing was a pleasure to herself and to all around her. "I have brought
    my work," said she in French, displaying her bag and addressing all
    present. "Mind, Annette, I hope you have not played a wicked trick
    on me," she added, turning to her hostess. "You wrote that it was to
    be quite a small reception, and just see how badly I am dressed."
    And she spread out her arms to show her short-waisted, lace-trimmed,
    dainty gray dress, girdled with a broad ribbon just below the breast.

    "Soyez tranquille, Lise, you will always be prettier than anyone
    else," replied Anna Pavlovna.

    "You know," said the princess in the same tone of voice and still in
    French, turning to a general, "my husband is deserting me? He is going
    to get himself killed. Tell me what this wretched war is for?" she
    added, addressing Prince Vasili, and without waiting for an answer she
    turned to speak to his daughter, the beautiful Helene.

    "What a delightful woman this little princess is!" said Prince
    Vasili to Anna Pavlovna.

    One of the next arrivals was a stout, heavily built young man with
    close-cropped hair, spectacles, the light-colored breeches fashionable
    at that time, a very high ruffle, and a brown dress coat. This stout
    young man was an illegitimate son of Count Bezukhov, a well-known
    grandee of Catherine's time who now lay dying in Moscow. The young man
    had not yet entered either the military or civil service, as he had
    only just returned from abroad where he had been educated, and this
    was his first appearance in society. Anna Pavlovna greeted him with
    the nod she accorded to the lowest hierarchy in her drawing room.
    But in spite of this lowest-grade greeting, a look of anxiety and
    fear, as at the sight of something too large and unsuited to the
    place, came over her face when she saw Pierre enter. Though he was
    certainly rather bigger than the other men in the room, her anxiety
    could only have reference to the clever though shy, but observant
    and natural, expression which distinguished him from everyone else
    in that drawing room.

    "It is very good of you, Monsieur Pierre, to come and visit a poor
    invalid," said Anna Pavlovna, exchanging an alarmed glance with her
    aunt as she conducted him to her.

    Pierre murmured something unintelligible, and continued to look
    round as if in search of something. On his way to the aunt he bowed to
    the little princess with a pleased smile, as to an intimate
    acquaintance.

    Anna Pavlovna's alarm was justified, for Pierre turned away from the
    aunt without waiting to hear her speech about Her Majesty's health.
    Anna Pavlovna in dismay detained him with the words: "Do you know
    the Abbe Morio? He is a most interesting man."

    "Yes, I have heard of his scheme for perpetual peace, and it is very
    interesting but hardly feasible."

    "You think so?" rejoined Anna Pavlovna in order to say something and
    get away to attend to her duties as hostess. But Pierre now
    committed a reverse act of impoliteness. First he had left a lady
    before she had finished speaking to him, and now he continued to speak
    to another who wished to get away. With his head bent, and his big
    feet spread apart, he began explaining his reasons for thinking the
    abbe's plan chimerical.

    "We will talk of it later," said Anna Pavlovna with a smile.

    And having got rid of this young man who did not know how to behave,
    she resumed her duties as hostess and continued to listen and watch,
    ready to help at any point where the conversation might happen to
    flag. As the foreman of a spinning mill, when he has set the hands
    to work, goes round and notices here a spindle that has stopped or
    there one that creaks or makes more noise than it should, and
    hastens to check the machine or set it in proper motion, so Anna
    Pavlovna moved about her drawing room, approaching now a silent, now a
    too-noisy group, and by a word or slight rearrangement kept the
    conversational machine in steady, proper, and regular motion. But amid
    these cares her anxiety about Pierre was evident. She kept an
    anxious watch on him when he approached the group round Mortemart to
    listen to what was being said there, and again when he passed to
    another group whose center was the abbe.

    Pierre had been educated abroad, and this reception at Anna
    Pavlovna's was the first he had attended in Russia. He knew that all
    the intellectual lights of Petersburg were gathered there and, like
    a child in a toyshop, did not know which way to look, afraid of
    missing any clever conversation that was to be heard. Seeing the
    self-confident and refined expression on the faces of those present he
    was always expecting to hear something very profound. At last he
    came up to Morio. Here the conversation seemed interesting and he
    stood waiting for an opportunity to express his own views, as young
    people are fond of doing.




    CHAPTER III


    Anna Pavlovna's reception was in full swing. The spindles hummed
    steadily and ceaselessly on all sides. With the exception of the aunt,
    beside whom sat only one elderly lady, who with her thin careworn face
    was rather out of place in this brilliant society, the whole company
    had settled into three groups. One, chiefly masculine, had formed
    round the abbe. Another, of young people, was grouped round the
    beautiful Princess Helene, Prince Vasili's daughter, and the little
    Princess Bolkonskaya, very pretty and rosy, though rather too plump
    for her age. The third group was gathered round Mortemart and Anna
    Pavlovna.

    The vicomte was a nice-looking young man with soft features and
    polished manners, who evidently considered himself a celebrity but out
    of politeness modestly placed himself at the disposal of the circle in
    which he found himself. Anna Pavlovna was obviously serving him up
    as a treat to her guests. As a clever maitre d'hotel serves up as a
    specially choice delicacy a piece of meat that no one who had seen
    it in the kitchen would have cared to eat, so Anna Pavlovna served
    up to her guests, first the vicomte and then the abbe, as peculiarly
    choice morsels. The group about Mortemart immediately began discussing
    the murder of the Duc d'Enghien. The vicomte said that the Duc
    d'Enghien had perished by his own magnanimity, and that there were
    particular reasons for Buonaparte's hatred of him.

    "Ah, yes! Do tell us all about it, Vicomte," said Anna Pavlovna,
    with a pleasant feeling that there was something a la Louis XV in
    the sound of that sentence: "Contez nous cela, Vicomte."

    The vicomte bowed and smiled courteously in token of his willingness
    to comply. Anna Pavlovna arranged a group round him, inviting everyone
    to listen to his tale.

    "The vicomte knew the duc personally," whispered Anna Pavlovna to of
    the guests. "The vicomte is a wonderful raconteur," said she to
    another. "How evidently he belongs to the best society," said she to a
    third; and the vicomte was served up to the company in the choicest
    and most advantageous style, like a well-garnished joint of roast beef
    on a hot dish.

    The vicomte wished to begin his story and gave a subtle smile.

    "Come over here, Helene, dear," said Anna Pavlovna to the
    beautiful young princess who was sitting some way off, the center of
    another group.

    The princess smiled. She rose with the same unchanging smile with
    which she had first entered the room- the smile of a perfectly
    beautiful woman. With a slight rustle of her white dress trimmed
    with moss and ivy, with a gleam of white shoulders, glossy hair, and
    sparkling diamonds, she passed between the men who made way for her,
    not looking at any of them but smiling on all, as if graciously
    allowing each the privilege of admiring her beautiful figure and
    shapely shoulders, back, and bosom- which in the fashion of those days
    were very much exposed- and she seemed to bring the glamour of a
    ballroom with her as she moved toward Anna Pavlovna. Helene was so
    lovely that not only did she not show any trace of coquetry, but on
    the contrary she even appeared shy of her unquestionable and all too
    victorious beauty. She seemed to wish, but to be unable, to diminish
    its effect.

    "How lovely!" said everyone who saw her; and the vicomte lifted
    his shoulders and dropped his eyes as if startled by something
    extraordinary when she took her seat opposite and beamed upon him also
    with her unchanging smile.

    "Madame, I doubt my ability before such an audience," said he,
    smilingly inclining his head.

    The princess rested her bare round arm on a little table and
    considered a reply unnecessary. She smilingly waited. All the time the
    story was being told she sat upright, glancing now at her beautiful
    round arm, altered in shape by its pressure on the table, now at her
    still more beautiful bosom, on which she readjusted a diamond
    necklace. From time to time she smoothed the folds of her dress, and
    whenever the story produced an effect she glanced at Anna Pavlovna, at
    once adopted just the expression she saw on the maid of honor's
    face, and again relapsed into her radiant smile.

    The little princess had also left the tea table and followed Helene.

    "Wait a moment, I'll get my work.... Now then, what are you thinking
    of?" she went on, turning to Prince Hippolyte. "Fetch me my workbag."

    There was a general movement as the princess, smiling and talking
    merrily to everyone at once, sat down and gaily arranged herself in
    her seat.

    "Now I am all right," she said, and asking the vicomte to begin, she
    took up her work.

    Prince Hippolyte, having brought the workbag, joined the circle
    and moving a chair close to hers seated himself beside her.

    Le charmant Hippolyte was surprising by his extraordinary
    resemblance to his beautiful sister, but yet more by the fact that
    in spite of this resemblance he was exceedingly ugly. His features
    were like his sister's, but while in her case everything was lit up by
    a joyous, self-satisfied, youthful, and constant smile of animation,
    and by the wonderful classic beauty of her figure, his face on the
    contrary was dulled by imbecility and a constant expression of
    sullen self-confidence, while his body was thin and weak. His eyes,
    nose, and mouth all seemed puckered into a vacant, wearied grimace,
    and his arms and legs always fell into unnatural positions.

    "It's not going to be a ghost story?" said he, sitting down beside
    the princess and hastily adjusting his lorgnette, as if without this
    instrument he could not begin to speak.

    "Why no, my dear fellow," said the astonished narrator, shrugging
    his shoulders.

    "Because I hate ghost stories," said Prince Hippolyte in a tone
    which showed that he only understood the meaning of his words after he
    had uttered them.

    He spoke with such self-confidence that his hearers could not be
    sure whether what he said was very witty or very stupid. He was
    dressed in a dark-green dress coat, knee breeches of the color of
    cuisse de nymphe effrayee, as he called it, shoes, and silk stockings.

    The vicomte told his tale very neatly. It was an anecdote, then
    current, to the effect that the Duc d'Enghien had gone secretly to
    Paris to visit Mademoiselle George; that at her house he came upon
    Bonaparte, who also enjoyed the famous actress' favors, and that in
    his presence Napoleon happened to fall into one of the fainting fits
    to which he was subject, and was thus at the duc's mercy. The latter
    spared him, and this magnanimity Bonaparte subsequently repaid by
    death.

    The story was very pretty and interesting, especially at the point
    where the rivals suddenly recognized one another; and the ladies
    looked agitated.

    "Charming!" said Anna Pavlovna with an inquiring glance at the
    little princess.

    "Charming!" whispered the little princess, sticking the needle
    into her work as if to testify that the interest and fascination of
    the story prevented her from going on with it.

    The vicomte appreciated this silent praise and smiling gratefully
    prepared to continue, but just then Anna Pavlovna, who had kept a
    watchful eye on the young man who so alarmed her, noticed that he
    was talking too loudly and vehemently with the abbe, so she hurried to
    the rescue. Pierre had managed to start a conversation with the abbe
    about the balance of power, and the latter, evidently interested by
    the young man's simple-minded eagerness, was explaining his pet
    theory. Both were talking and listening too eagerly and too naturally,
    which was why Anna Pavlovna disapproved.

    "The means are... the balance of power in Europe and the rights of
    the people," the abbe was saying. "It is only necessary for one
    powerful nation like Russia- barbaric as she is said to be- to place
    herself disinterestedly at the head of an alliance having for its
    object the maintenance of the balance of power of Europe, and it would
    save the world!"

    "But how are you to get that balance?" Pierre was beginning.

    At that moment Anna Pavlovna came up and, looking severely at
    Pierre, asked the Italian how he stood Russian climate. The
    Italian's face instantly changed and assumed an offensively
    affected, sugary expression, evidently habitual to him when conversing
    with women.

    "I am so enchanted by the brilliancy of the wit and culture of the
    society, more especially of the feminine society, in which I have
    had the honor of being received, that I have not yet had time to think
    of the climate," said he.

    Not letting the abbe and Pierre escape, Anna Pavlovna, the more
    conveniently to keep them under observation, brought them into the
    larger circle.





    CHAPTER IV


    Just then another visitor entered the drawing room: Prince Andrew
    Bolkonski, the little princess' husband. He was a very handsome
    young man, of medium height, with firm, clearcut features.
    Everything about him, from his weary, bored expression to his quiet,
    measured step, offered a most striking contrast to his quiet, little
    wife. It was evident that he not only knew everyone in the drawing
    room, but had found them to be so tiresome that it wearied him to look
    at or listen to them. And among all these faces that he found so
    tedious, none seemed to bore him so much as that of his pretty wife.
    He turned away from her with a grimace that distorted his handsome
    face, kissed Anna Pavlovna's hand, and screwing up his eyes scanned
    the whole company.

    "You are off to the war, Prince?" said Anna Pavlovna.

    "General Kutuzov," said Bolkonski, speaking French and stressing the
    last syllable of the general's name like a Frenchman, "has been
    pleased to take me as an aide-de-camp...."

    "And Lise, your wife?"

    "She will go to the country."

    "Are you not ashamed to deprive us of your charming wife?"

    "Andre," said his wife, addressing her husband in the same
    coquettish manner in which she spoke to other men, "the vicomte has
    been telling us such a tale about Mademoiselle George and Buonaparte!"

    Prince Andrew screwed up his eyes and turned away. Pierre, who
    from the moment Prince Andrew entered the room had watched him with
    glad, affectionate eyes, now came up and took his arm. Before he
    looked round Prince Andrew frowned again, expressing his annoyance
    with whoever was touching his arm, but when he saw Pierre's beaming
    face he gave him an unexpectedly kind and pleasant smile.

    "There now!... So you, too, are in the great world?" said he to
    Pierre.

    "I knew you would be here," replied Pierre. "I will come to supper
    with you. May I?" he added in a low voice so as not to disturb the
    vicomte who was continuing his story.

    "No, impossible!" said Prince Andrew, laughing and pressing Pierre's
    hand to show that there was no need to ask the question. He wished
    to say something more, but at that moment Prince Vasili and his
    daughter got up to go and the two young men rose to let them pass.

    "You must excuse me, dear Vicomte," said Prince Vasili to the
    Frenchman, holding him down by the sleeve in a friendly way to prevent
    his rising. "This unfortunate fete at the ambassador's deprives me
    of a pleasure, and obliges me to interrupt you. I am very sorry to
    leave your enchanting party," said he, turning to Anna Pavlovna.

    His daughter, Princess Helene, passed between the chairs, lightly
    holding up the folds of her dress, and the smile shone still more
    radiantly on her beautiful face. Pierre gazed at her with rapturous,
    almost frightened, eyes as she passed him.

    "Very lovely," said Prince Andrew.

    "Very," said Pierre.

    In passing Prince Vasili seized Pierre's hand and said to Anna
    Pavlovna: "Educate this bear for me! He has been staying with me a
    whole month and this is the first time I have seen him in society.
    Nothing is so necessary for a young man as the society of clever
    women."


    Anna Pavlovna smiled and promised to take Pierre in hand. She knew
    his father to be a connection of Prince Vasili's. The elderly lady who
    had been sitting with the old aunt rose hurriedly and overtook
    Prince Vasili in the anteroom. All the affectation of interest she had
    assumed had left her kindly and tearworn face and it now expressed
    only anxiety and fear.

    "How about my son Boris, Prince?" said she, hurrying after him
    into the anteroom. "I can't remain any longer in Petersburg. Tell me
    what news I may take back to my poor boy."

    Although Prince Vasili listened reluctantly and not very politely to
    the elderly lady, even betraying some impatience, she gave him an
    ingratiating and appealing smile, and took his hand that he might
    not go away.

    "What would it cost you to say a word to the Emperor, and then he
    would be transferred to the Guards at once?" said she.

    "Believe me, Princess, I am ready to do all I can," answered
    Prince Vasili, "but it is difficult for me to ask the Emperor. I
    should advise you to appeal to Rumyantsev through Prince Golitsyn.
    That would be the best way."

    The elderly lady was a Princess Drubetskaya, belonging to one of the
    best families in Russia, but she was poor, and having long been out of
    society had lost her former influential connections. She had now
    come to Petersburg to procure an appointment in the Guards for her
    only son. It was, in fact, solely to meet Prince Vasili that she had
    obtained an invitation to Anna Pavlovna's reception and had sat
    listening to the vicomte's story. Prince Vasili's words frightened
    her, an embittered look clouded her once handsome face, but only for a
    moment; then she smiled again and dutched Prince Vasili's arm more
    tightly.

    "Listen to me, Prince," said she. "I have never yet asked you for
    anything and I never will again, nor have I ever reminded you of my
    father's friendship for you; but now I entreat you for God's sake to
    do this for my son- and I shall always regard you as a benefactor,"
    she added hurriedly. "No, don't be angry, but promise! I have asked
    Golitsyn and he has refused. Be the kindhearted man you always
    were," she said, trying to smile though tears were in her eyes.

    "Papa, we shall be late," said Princess Helene, turning her
    beautiful head and looking over her classically molded shoulder as she
    stood waiting by the door.

    Influence in society, however, is a capital which has to be
    economized if it is to last. Prince Vasili knew this, and having
    once realized that if he asked on behalf of all who begged of him,
    he would soon be unable to ask for himself, he became chary of using
    his influence. But in Princess Drubetskaya's case he felt, after her
    second appeal, something like qualms of conscience. She had reminded
    him of what was quite true; he had been indebted to her father for the
    first steps in his career. Moreover, he could see by her manners
    that she was one of those women- mostly mothers- who, having once made
    up their minds, will not rest until they have gained their end, and
    are prepared if necessary to go on insisting day after day and hour
    after hour, and even to make scenes. This last consideration moved
    him.

    "My dear Anna Mikhaylovna," said he with his usual familiarity and
    weariness of tone, "it is almost impossible for me to do what you ask;
    but to prove my devotion to you and how I respect your father's
    memory, I will do the impossible- your son shall be transferred to the
    Guards. Here is my hand on it. Are you satisfied?"

    "My dear benefactor! This is what I expected from you- I knew your
    kindness!" He turned to go.

    "Wait- just a word! When he has been transferred to the Guards..."
    she faltered. "You are on good terms with Michael Ilarionovich
    Kutuzov... recommend Boris to him as adjutant! Then I shall be at
    rest, and then..."

    Prince Vasili smiled.

    "No, I won't promise that. You don't know how Kutuzov is pestered
    since his appointment as Commander in Chief. He told me himself that
    all the Moscow ladies have conspired to give him all their sons as
    adjutants."

    "No, but do promise! I won't let you go! My dear benefactor..."

    "Papa," said his beautiful daughter in the same tone as before,
    "we shall be late."

    "Well, au revoir! Good-by! You hear her?"

    "Then tomorrow you will speak to the Emperor?"

    "Certainly; but about Kutuzov, I don't promise."

    "Do promise, do promise, Vasili!" cried Anna Mikhaylovna as he went,
    with the smile of a coquettish girl, which at one time probably came
    naturally to her, but was now very ill-suited to her careworn face.

    Apparently she had forgotten her age and by force of habit
    employed all the old feminine arts. But as soon as the prince had gone
    her face resumed its former cold, artificial expression. She
    returned to the group where the vicomte was still talking, and again
    pretended to listen, while waiting till it would be time to leave. Her
    task was accomplished.





    CHAPTER V


    "And what do you think of this latest comedy, the coronation at
    Milan?" asked Anna Pavlovna, "and of the comedy of the people of Genoa
    and Lucca laying their pe ions before Monsieur Buonaparte, and
    Monsieur Buonaparte sitting on a throne and granting the pe ions
    of the nations? Adorable! It is enough to make one's head whirl! It is
    as if the whole world had gone crazy."

    Prince Andrew looked Anna Pavlovna straight in the face with a
    sarcastic smile.

    "'Dieu me la donne, gare a qui la touche!'* They say he was very
    fine when he said that," he remarked, repeating the words in
    Italian: "'Dio mi l'ha dato. Guai a chi la tocchi!'"


    *God has given it to me, let him who touches it beware!


    "I hope this will prove the last drop that will make the glass run
    over," Anna Pavlovna continued. "The sovereigns will not be able to
    endure this man who is a menace to everything."

    "The sovereigns? I do not speak of Russia," said the vicomte, polite
    but hopeless: "The sovereigns, madame... What have they done for Louis
    XVII, for the Queen, or for Madame Elizabeth? Nothing!" and he
    became more animated. "And believe me, they are reaping the reward
    of their betrayal of the Bourbon cause. The sovereigns! Why, they
    are sending ambassadors to compliment the usurper."

    And sighing disdainfully, he again changed his position.

    Prince Hippolyte, who had been gazing at the vicomte for some time
    through his lorgnette, suddenly turned completely round toward the
    little princess, and having asked for a needle began tracing the Conde
    coat of arms on the table. He explained this to her with as much
    gravity as if she had asked him to do it.

    "Baton de gueules, engrele de gueules d' azur- maison Conde," said
    he.

    The princess listened, smiling.

    "If Buonaparte remains on the throne of France a year longer," the
    vicomte continued, with the air of a man who, in a matter with which
    he is better acquainted than anyone else, does not listen to others
    but follows the current of his own thoughts, "things will have gone
    too far. By intrigues, violence, exile, and executions, French
    society- I mean good French society- will have been forever destroyed,
    and then..."

    He shrugged his shoulders and spread out his hands. Pierre wished to
    make a remark, for the conversation interested him, but Anna Pavlovna,
    who had him under observation, interrupted:

    "The Emperor Alexander," said she, with the melancholy which
    always accompanied any reference of hers to the Imperial family,
    "has declared that he will leave it to the French people themselves to
    choose their own form of government; and I believe that once free from
    the usurper, the whole nation will certainly throw itself into the
    arms of its rightful king," she concluded, trying to be amiable to the
    royalist emigrant.

    "That is doubtful," said Prince Andrew. "Monsieur le Vicomte quite
    rightly supposes that matters have already gone too far. I think it
    will be difficult to return to the old regime."

    "From what I have heard," said Pierre, blushing and breaking into
    the conversation, "almost all the aristocracy has already gone over to
    Bonaparte's side."

    "It is the Buonapartists who say that," replied the vicomte
    without looking at Pierre. "At the present time it is difficult to
    know the real state of French public opinion.

    "Bonaparte has said so," remarked Prince Andrew with a sarcastic
    smile.

    It was evident that he did not like the vicomte and was aiming his
    remarks at him, though without looking at him.

    "'I showed them the path to glory, but they did not follow it,'"
    Prince Andrew continued after a short silence, again quoting
    Napoleon's words. "'I opened my antechambers and they crowded in.' I
    do not know how far he was justified in saying so."

    "Not in the least," replied the vicomte. "After the murder of the
    duc even the most partial ceased to regard him as a hero. If to some
    people," he went on, turning to Anna Pavlovna, "he ever was a hero,
    after the murder of the duc there was one martyr more in heaven and
    one hero less on earth."

    Before Anna Pavlovna and the others had time to smile their
    appreciation of the vicomte's epigram, Pierre again broke into the
    conversation, and though Anna Pavlovna felt sure he would say
    something inappropriate, she was unable to stop him.

    "The execution of the Duc d'Enghien," declared Monsieur Pierre, "was
    a political necessity, and it seems to me that Napoleon showed
    greatness of soul by not fearing to take on himself the whole
    responsibility of that deed."

    "Dieu! Mon Dieu!" muttered Anna Pavlovna in a terrified whisper.

    "What, Monsieur Pierre... Do you consider that assassination shows
    greatness of soul?" said the little princess, smiling and drawing
    her work nearer to her.

    "Oh! Oh!" exclaimed several voices.

    "Capital!" said Prince Hippolyte in English, and began slapping
    his knee with the palm of his hand.

    The vicomte merely shrugged his shoulders. Pierre looked solemnly at
    his audience over his spectacles and continued.

    "I say so," he continued desperately, "because the Bourbons fled
    from the Revolution leaving the people to anarchy, and Napoleon
    alone understood the Revolution and quelled it, and so for the general
    good, he could not stop short for the sake of one man's life."

    "Won't you come over to the other table?" suggested Anna Pavlovna.

    But Pierre continued his speech without heeding her.

    "No," cried he, becoming more and more eager, "Napoleon is great
    because he rose superior to the Revolution, suppressed its abuses,
    preserved all that was good in it- equality of citizenship and freedom
    of speech and of the press- and only for that reason did he obtain
    power."

    "Yes, if having obtained power, without availing himself of it to
    commit murder he had restored it to the rightful king, I should have
    called him a great man," remarked the vicomte.

    "He could not do that. The people only gave him power that he
    might rid them of the Bourbons and because they saw that he was a
    great man. The Revolution was a grand thing!" continued Monsieur
    Pierre, betraying by this desperate and provocative proposition his
    extreme youth and his wish to express all that was in his mind.

    "What? Revolution and regicide a grand thing?... Well, after that...
    But won't you come to this other table?" repeated Anna Pavlovna.

    "Rousseau's Contrat social," said the vicomte with a tolerant smile.

    "I am not speaking of regicide, I am speaking about ideas."

    "Yes: ideas of robbery, murder, and regicide," again interjected
    an ironical voice.

    "Those were extremes, no doubt, but they are not what is most
    important. What is important are the rights of man, emancipation
    from prejudices, and equality of citizenship, and all these ideas
    Napoleon has retained in full force."

    "Liberty and equality," said the vicomte contemptuously, as if at
    last deciding seriously to prove to this youth how foolish his words
    were, "high-sounding words which have long been discredited. Who
    does not love liberty and equality? Even our Saviour preached
    liberty and equality. Have people since the Revolution become happier?
    On the contrary. We wanted liberty, but Buonaparte has destroyed it."

    Prince Andrew kept looking with an amused smile from Pierre to the
    vicomte and from the vicomte to their hostess. In the first moment
    of Pierre's outburst Anna Pavlovna, despite her social experience, was
    horror-struck. But when she saw that Pierre's sacrilegious words had
    not exasperated the vicomte, and had convinced herself that it was
    impossible to stop him, she rallied her forces and joined the
    vicomte in a vigorous attack on the orator.

    "But, my dear Monsieur Pierre," said she, "how do you explain the
    fact of a great man executing a duc- or even an ordinary man who- is
    innocent and untried?"

    "I should like," said the vicomte, "to ask how monsieur explains the
    18th Brumaire; was not that an imposture? It was a swindle, and not at
    all like the conduct of a great man!"

    "And the prisoners he killed in Africa? That was horrible!" said the
    little princess, shrugging her shoulders.

    "He's a low fellow, say what you will," remarked Prince Hippolyte.

    Pierre, not knowing whom to answer, looked at them all and smiled.
    His smile was unlike the half-smile of other people. When he smiled,
    his grave, even rather gloomy, look was instantaneously replaced by
    another- a childlike, kindly, even rather silly look, which seemed
    to ask forgiveness.

    The vicomte who was meeting him for the first time saw clearly
    that this young Jacobin was not so terrible as his words suggested.
    All were silent.

    "How do you expect him to answer you all at once?" said Prince
    Andrew. "Besides, in the actions of a statesman one has to distinguish
    between his acts as a private person, as a general, and as an emperor.
    So it seems to me."

    "Yes, yes, of course!" Pierre chimed in, pleased at the arrival of
    this reinforcement.

    "One must admit," continued Prince Andrew, "that Napoleon as a man
    was great on the bridge of Arcola, and in the hospital at Jaffa
    where he gave his hand to the plague-stricken; but... but there are
    other acts which it is difficult to justify."

    Prince Andrew, who had evidently wished to tone down the awkwardness
    of Pierre's remarks, rose and made a sign to his wife that it was time
    to go.


    Suddenly Prince Hippolyte started up making signs to everyone to
    attend, and asking them all to be seated began:

    "I was told a charming Moscow story today and must treat you to
    it. Excuse me, Vicomte- I must tell it in Russian or the point will be
    lost...." And Prince Hippolyte began to tell his story in such Russian
    as a Frenchman would speak after spending about a year in Russia.
    Everyone waited, so emphatically and eagerly did he demand their
    attention to his story.

    "There is in Moscow a lady, une dame, and she is very stingy. She
    must have two footmen behind her carriage, and very big ones. That was
    her taste. And she had a lady's maid, also big. She said..."

    Here Prince Hippolyte paused, evidently collecting his ideas with
    difficulty.

    "She said... Oh yes! She said, 'Girl,' to the maid, 'put on a
    livery, get up behind the carriage, and come with me while I make some
    calls.'"

    Here Prince Hippolyte spluttered and burst out laughing long
    before his audience, which produced an effect unfavorable to the
    narrator. Several persons, among them the elderly lady and Anna
    Pavlovna, did however smile.

    "She went. Suddenly there was a great wind. The girl lost her hat
    and her long hair came down...." Here he could contain himself no
    longer and went on, between gasps of laughter: "And the whole world
    knew...."

    And so the anecdote ended. Though it was unintelligible why he had
    told it, or why it had to be told in Russian, still Anna Pavlovna
    and the others appreciated Prince Hippolyte's social tact in so
    agreeably ending Pierre's unpleasant and unamiable outburst. After the
    anecdote the conversation broke up into insignificant small talk about
    the last and next balls, about theatricals, and who would meet whom,
    and when and where.
    can you also post jurassic park? thats a personal favorite of mine.

  3. #1178
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    CHAPTER I


    "Well, Prince, so Genoa and Lucca are now just family estates of the
    Buonapartes. But I warn you, if you don't tell me that this means war,
    if you still try to defend the infamies and horrors perpetrated by
    that Antichrist- I really believe he is Antichrist- I will have
    nothing more to do with you and you are no longer my friend, no longer
    my 'faithful slave,' as you call yourself! But how do you do? I see
    I have frightened you- sit down and tell me all the news."

    It was in July, 1805, and the speaker was the well-known Anna
    Pavlovna Scherer, maid of honor and favorite of the Empress Marya
    Fedorovna. With these words she greeted Prince Vasili Kuragin, a man
    of high rank and importance, who was the first to arrive at her
    reception. Anna Pavlovna had had a cough for some days. She was, as
    she said, suffering from la grippe; grippe being then a new word in
    St. Petersburg, used only by the elite.

    All her invitations without exception, written in French, and
    delivered by a scarlet-liveried footman that morning, ran as follows:

    "If you have nothing better to do, Count [or Prince], and if the
    prospect of spending an evening with a poor invalid is not too
    terrible, I shall be very charmed to see you tonight between 7 and 10-
    Annette Scherer."

    "Heavens! what a virulent attack!" replied the prince, not in the
    least disconcerted by this reception. He had just entered, wearing
    an embroidered court uniform, knee breeches, and shoes, and had
    stars on his breast and a serene expression on his flat face. He spoke
    in that refined French in which our grandfathers not only spoke but
    thought, and with the gentle, patronizing intonation natural to a
    man of importance who had grown old in society and at court. He went
    up to Anna Pavlovna, kissed her hand, presenting to her his bald,
    scented, and shining head, and complacently seated himself on the
    sofa.

    "First of all, dear friend, tell me how you are. Set your friend's
    mind at rest," said he without altering his tone, beneath the
    politeness and affected sympathy of which indifference and even
    irony could be discerned.

    "Can one be well while suffering morally? Can one be calm in times
    like these if one has any feeling?" said Anna Pavlovna. "You are
    staying the whole evening, I hope?"

    "And the fete at the English ambassador's? Today is Wednesday. I
    must put in an appearance there," said the prince. "My daughter is
    coming for me to take me there."

    "I thought today's fete had been canceled. I confess all these
    festivities and fireworks are becoming wearisome."

    "If they had known that you wished it, the entertainment would
    have been put off," said the prince, who, like a wound-up clock, by
    force of habit said things he did not even wish to be believed.

    "Don't tease! Well, and what has been decided about Novosiltsev's
    dispatch? You know everything."

    "What can one say about it?" replied the prince in a cold,
    listless tone. "What has been decided? They have decided that
    Buonaparte has burnt his boats, and I believe that we are ready to
    burn ours."

    Prince Vasili always spoke languidly, like an actor repeating a
    stale part. Anna Pavlovna Scherer on the contrary, despite her forty
    years, overflowed with animation and impulsiveness. To be an
    enthusiast had become her social vocation and, sometimes even when she
    did not feel like it, she became enthusiastic in order not to
    disappoint the expectations of those who knew her. The subdued smile
    which, though it did not suit her faded features, always played
    round her lips expressed, as in a spoiled child, a continual
    consciousness of her charming defect, which she neither wished, nor
    could, nor considered it necessary, to correct.

    In the midst of a conversation on political matters Anna Pavlovna
    burst out:

    "Oh, don't speak to me of Austria. Perhaps I don't understand
    things, but Austria never has wished, and does not wish, for war.
    She is betraying us! Russia alone must save Europe. Our gracious
    sovereign recognizes his high vocation and will be true to it. That is
    the one thing I have faith in! Our good and wonderful sovereign has to
    perform the noblest role on earth, and he is so virtuous and noble
    that God will not forsake him. He will fulfill his vocation and
    crush the hydra of revolution, which has become more terrible than
    ever in the person of this murderer and villain! We alone must
    avenge the blood of the just one.... Whom, I ask you, can we rely
    on?... England with her commercial spirit will not and cannot
    understand the Emperor Alexander's loftiness of soul. She has
    refused to evacuate Malta. She wanted to find, and still seeks, some
    secret motive in our actions. What answer did Novosiltsev get? None.
    The English have not understood and cannot understand the
    self-abnegation of our Emperor who wants nothing for himself, but only
    desires the good of mankind. And what have they promised? Nothing! And
    what little they have promised they will not perform! Prussia has
    always declared that Buonaparte is invincible, and that all Europe
    is powerless before him.... And I don't believe a word that Hardenburg
    says, or Haugwitz either. This famous Prussian neutrality is just a
    trap. I have faith only in God and the lofty destiny of our adored
    monarch. He will save Europe!"

    She suddenly paused, smiling at her own impetuosity.

    "I think," said the prince with a smile, "that if you had been
    sent instead of our dear Wintzingerode you would have captured the
    King of Prussia's consent by assault. You are so eloquent. Will you
    give me a cup of tea?"

    "In a moment. A propos," she added, becoming calm again, "I am
    expecting two very interesting men tonight, le Vicomte de Mortemart,
    who is connected with the Montmorencys through the Rohans, one of
    the best French families. He is one of the genuine emigres, the good
    ones. And also the Abbe Morio. Do you know that profound thinker? He
    has been received by the Emperor. Had you heard?"

    "I shall be delighted to meet them," said the prince. "But tell me,"
    he added with studied carelessness as if it had only just occurred
    to him, though the question he was about to ask was the chief motive
    of his visit, "is it true that the Dowager Empress wants Baron Funke
    to be appointed first secretary at Vienna? The baron by all accounts
    is a poor creature."

    Prince Vasili wished to obtain this post for his son, but others
    were trying through the Dowager Empress Marya Fedorovna to secure it
    for the baron.

    Anna Pavlovna almost closed her eyes to indicate that neither she
    nor anyone else had a right to criticize what the Empress desired or
    was pleased with.

    "Baron Funke has been recommended to the Dowager Empress by her
    sister," was all she said, in a dry and mournful tone.

    As she named the Empress, Anna Pavlovna's face suddenly assumed an
    expression of profound and sincere devotion and respect mingled with
    sadness, and this occurred every time she mentioned her illustrious
    patroness. She added that Her Majesty had deigned to show Baron
    Funke beaucoup d'estime, and again her face clouded over with sadness.

    The prince was silent and looked indifferent. But, with the
    womanly and courtierlike quickness and tact habitual to her, Anna
    Pavlovna wished both to rebuke him (for daring to speak he had done of
    a man recommended to the Empress) and at the same time to console him,
    so she said:

    "Now about your family. Do you know that since your daughter came
    out everyone has been enraptured by her? They say she is amazingly
    beautiful."

    The prince bowed to signify his respect and gra ude.

    "I often think," she continued after a short pause, drawing nearer
    to the prince and smiling amiably at him as if to show that
    political and social topics were ended and the time had come for
    intimate conversation- "I often think how unfairly sometimes the
    joys of life are distributed. Why has fate given you two such splendid
    children? I don't speak of Anatole, your youngest. I don't like
    him," she added in a tone admitting of no rejoinder and raising her
    eyebrows. "Two such charming children. And really you appreciate
    them less than anyone, and so you don't deserve to have them."

    And she smiled her ecstatic smile.

    "I can't help it," said the prince. "Lavater would have said I
    lack the bump of paternity."

    "Don't joke; I mean to have a serious talk with you. Do you know I
    am dissatisfied with your younger son? Between ourselves" (and her
    face assumed its melancholy expression), "he was mentioned at Her
    Majesty's and you were pitied...."

    The prince answered nothing, but she looked at him significantly,
    awaiting a reply. He frowned.

    "What would you have me do?" he said at last. "You know I did all
    a father could for their education, and they have both turned out
    fools. Hippolyte is at least a quiet fool, but Anatole is an active
    one. That is the only difference between them." He said this smiling
    in a way more natural and animated than usual, so that the wrinkles
    round his mouth very clearly revealed something unexpectedly coarse
    and unpleasant.

    "And why are children born to such men as you? If you were not a
    father there would be nothing I could reproach you with," said Anna
    Pavlovna, looking up pensively.

    "I am your faithful slave and to you alone I can confess that my
    children are the bane of my life. It is the cross I have to bear. That
    is how I explain it to myself. It can't be helped!"

    He said no more, but expressed his resignation to cruel fate by a
    gesture. Anna Pavlovna meditated.

    "Have you never thought of marrying your prodigal son Anatole?"
    she asked. "They say old maids have a mania for matchmaking, and
    though I don't feel that weakness in myself as yet,I know a little
    person who is very unhappy with her father. She is a relation of
    yours, Princess Mary Bolkonskaya."

    Prince Vasili did not reply, though, with the quickness of memory
    and perception befitting a man of the world, he indicated by a
    movement of the head that he was considering this information.

    "Do you know," he said at last, evidently unable to check the sad
    current of his thoughts, "that Anatole is costing me forty thousand
    rubles a year? And," he went on after a pause, "what will it be in
    five years, if he goes on like this?" Presently he added: "That's what
    we fathers have to put up with.... Is this princess of yours rich?"

    "Her father is very rich and stingy. He lives in the country. He
    is the well-known Prince Bolkonski who had to retire from the army
    under the late Emperor, and was nicknamed 'the King of Prussia.' He is
    very clever but eccentric, and a bore. The poor girl is very
    unhappy. She has a brother; I think you know him, he married Lise
    Meinen lately. He is an aide-de-camp of Kutuzov's and will be here
    tonight."

    "Listen, dear Annette," said the prince, suddenly taking Anna
    Pavlovna's hand and for some reason drawing it downwards. "Arrange
    that affair for me and I shall always be your most devoted slave-
    slafe wigh an f, as a village elder of mine writes in his reports. She
    is rich and of good family and that's all I want."

    And with the familiarity and easy grace peculiar to him, he raised
    the maid of honor's hand to his lips, kissed it, and swung it to and
    fro as he lay back in his armchair, looking in another direction.

    "Attendez," said Anna Pavlovna, reflecting, "I'll speak to Lise,
    young Bolkonski's wife, this very evening, and perhaps the thing can
    be arranged. It shall be on your family's behalf that I'll start my
    apprenticeship as old maid."





    CHAPTER II


    Anna Pavlovna's drawing room was gradually filling. The highest
    Petersburg society was assembled there: people differing widely in age
    and character but alike in the social circle to which they belonged.
    Prince Vasili's daughter, the beautiful Helene, came to take her
    father to the ambassador's entertainment; she wore a ball dress and
    her badge as maid of honor. The youthful little Princess
    Bolkonskaya, known as la femme la plus seduisante de Petersbourg,* was
    also there. She had been married during the previous winter, and being
    pregnant did not go to any large gatherings, but only to small
    receptions. Prince Vasili's son, Hippolyte, had come with Mortemart,
    whom he introduced. The Abbe Morio and many others had also come.


    *The most fascinating woman in Petersburg.


    To each new arrival Anna Pavlovna said, "You have not yet seen my
    aunt," or "You do not know my aunt?" and very gravely conducted him or
    her to a little old lady, wearing large bows of ribbon in her cap, who
    had come sailing in from another room as soon as the guests began to
    arrive; and slowly turning her eyes from the visitor to her aunt, Anna
    Pavlovna mentioned each one's name and then left them.

    Each visitor performed the ceremony of greeting this old aunt whom
    not one of them knew, not one of them wanted to know, and not one of
    them cared about; Anna Pavlovna observed these greetings with mournful
    and solemn interest and silent approval. The aunt spoke to each of
    them in the same words, about their health and her own, and the health
    of Her Majesty, "who, thank God, was better today." And each
    visitor, though politeness prevented his showing impatience, left
    the old woman with a sense of relief at having performed a vexatious
    duty and did not return to her the whole evening.

    The young Princess Bolkonskaya had brought some work in a
    gold-embroidered velvet bag. Her pretty little upper lip, on which a
    delicate dark down was just perceptible, was too short for her
    teeth, but it lifted all the more sweetly, and was especially charming
    when she occasionally drew it down to meet the lower lip. As is always
    the case with a thoroughly attractive woman, her defect- the shortness
    of her upper lip and her half-open mouth- seemed to be her own special
    and peculiar form of beauty. Everyone brightened at the sight of
    this pretty young woman, so soon to become a mother, so full of life
    and health, and carrying her burden so lightly. Old men and dull
    dispirited young ones who looked at her, after being in her company
    and talking to her a little while, felt as if they too were
    becoming, like her, full of life and health. All who talked to her,
    and at each word saw her bright smile and the constant gleam of her
    white teeth, thought that they were in a specially amiable mood that
    day.

    The little princess went round the table with quick, short,
    swaying steps, her workbag on her arm, and gaily spreading out her
    dress sat down on a sofa near the silver samovar, as if all she was
    doing was a pleasure to herself and to all around her. "I have brought
    my work," said she in French, displaying her bag and addressing all
    present. "Mind, Annette, I hope you have not played a wicked trick
    on me," she added, turning to her hostess. "You wrote that it was to
    be quite a small reception, and just see how badly I am dressed."
    And she spread out her arms to show her short-waisted, lace-trimmed,
    dainty gray dress, girdled with a broad ribbon just below the breast.

    "Soyez tranquille, Lise, you will always be prettier than anyone
    else," replied Anna Pavlovna.

    "You know," said the princess in the same tone of voice and still in
    French, turning to a general, "my husband is deserting me? He is going
    to get himself killed. Tell me what this wretched war is for?" she
    added, addressing Prince Vasili, and without waiting for an answer she
    turned to speak to his daughter, the beautiful Helene.

    "What a delightful woman this little princess is!" said Prince
    Vasili to Anna Pavlovna.

    One of the next arrivals was a stout, heavily built young man with
    close-cropped hair, spectacles, the light-colored breeches fashionable
    at that time, a very high ruffle, and a brown dress coat. This stout
    young man was an illegitimate son of Count Bezukhov, a well-known
    grandee of Catherine's time who now lay dying in Moscow. The young man
    had not yet entered either the military or civil service, as he had
    only just returned from abroad where he had been educated, and this
    was his first appearance in society. Anna Pavlovna greeted him with
    the nod she accorded to the lowest hierarchy in her drawing room.
    But in spite of this lowest-grade greeting, a look of anxiety and
    fear, as at the sight of something too large and unsuited to the
    place, came over her face when she saw Pierre enter. Though he was
    certainly rather bigger than the other men in the room, her anxiety
    could only have reference to the clever though shy, but observant
    and natural, expression which distinguished him from everyone else
    in that drawing room.

    "It is very good of you, Monsieur Pierre, to come and visit a poor
    invalid," said Anna Pavlovna, exchanging an alarmed glance with her
    aunt as she conducted him to her.

    Pierre murmured something unintelligible, and continued to look
    round as if in search of something. On his way to the aunt he bowed to
    the little princess with a pleased smile, as to an intimate
    acquaintance.

    Anna Pavlovna's alarm was justified, for Pierre turned away from the
    aunt without waiting to hear her speech about Her Majesty's health.
    Anna Pavlovna in dismay detained him with the words: "Do you know
    the Abbe Morio? He is a most interesting man."

    "Yes, I have heard of his scheme for perpetual peace, and it is very
    interesting but hardly feasible."

    "You think so?" rejoined Anna Pavlovna in order to say something and
    get away to attend to her duties as hostess. But Pierre now
    committed a reverse act of impoliteness. First he had left a lady
    before she had finished speaking to him, and now he continued to speak
    to another who wished to get away. With his head bent, and his big
    feet spread apart, he began explaining his reasons for thinking the
    abbe's plan chimerical.

    "We will talk of it later," said Anna Pavlovna with a smile.

    And having got rid of this young man who did not know how to behave,
    she resumed her duties as hostess and continued to listen and watch,
    ready to help at any point where the conversation might happen to
    flag. As the foreman of a spinning mill, when he has set the hands
    to work, goes round and notices here a spindle that has stopped or
    there one that creaks or makes more noise than it should, and
    hastens to check the machine or set it in proper motion, so Anna
    Pavlovna moved about her drawing room, approaching now a silent, now a
    too-noisy group, and by a word or slight rearrangement kept the
    conversational machine in steady, proper, and regular motion. But amid
    these cares her anxiety about Pierre was evident. She kept an
    anxious watch on him when he approached the group round Mortemart to
    listen to what was being said there, and again when he passed to
    another group whose center was the abbe.

    Pierre had been educated abroad, and this reception at Anna
    Pavlovna's was the first he had attended in Russia. He knew that all
    the intellectual lights of Petersburg were gathered there and, like
    a child in a toyshop, did not know which way to look, afraid of
    missing any clever conversation that was to be heard. Seeing the
    self-confident and refined expression on the faces of those present he
    was always expecting to hear something very profound. At last he
    came up to Morio. Here the conversation seemed interesting and he
    stood waiting for an opportunity to express his own views, as young
    people are fond of doing.




    CHAPTER III


    Anna Pavlovna's reception was in full swing. The spindles hummed
    steadily and ceaselessly on all sides. With the exception of the aunt,
    beside whom sat only one elderly lady, who with her thin careworn face
    was rather out of place in this brilliant society, the whole company
    had settled into three groups. One, chiefly masculine, had formed
    round the abbe. Another, of young people, was grouped round the
    beautiful Princess Helene, Prince Vasili's daughter, and the little
    Princess Bolkonskaya, very pretty and rosy, though rather too plump
    for her age. The third group was gathered round Mortemart and Anna
    Pavlovna.

    The vicomte was a nice-looking young man with soft features and
    polished manners, who evidently considered himself a celebrity but out
    of politeness modestly placed himself at the disposal of the circle in
    which he found himself. Anna Pavlovna was obviously serving him up
    as a treat to her guests. As a clever maitre d'hotel serves up as a
    specially choice delicacy a piece of meat that no one who had seen
    it in the kitchen would have cared to eat, so Anna Pavlovna served
    up to her guests, first the vicomte and then the abbe, as peculiarly
    choice morsels. The group about Mortemart immediately began discussing
    the murder of the Duc d'Enghien. The vicomte said that the Duc
    d'Enghien had perished by his own magnanimity, and that there were
    particular reasons for Buonaparte's hatred of him.

    "Ah, yes! Do tell us all about it, Vicomte," said Anna Pavlovna,
    with a pleasant feeling that there was something a la Louis XV in
    the sound of that sentence: "Contez nous cela, Vicomte."

    The vicomte bowed and smiled courteously in token of his willingness
    to comply. Anna Pavlovna arranged a group round him, inviting everyone
    to listen to his tale.

    "The vicomte knew the duc personally," whispered Anna Pavlovna to of
    the guests. "The vicomte is a wonderful raconteur," said she to
    another. "How evidently he belongs to the best society," said she to a
    third; and the vicomte was served up to the company in the choicest
    and most advantageous style, like a well-garnished joint of roast beef
    on a hot dish.

    The vicomte wished to begin his story and gave a subtle smile.

    "Come over here, Helene, dear," said Anna Pavlovna to the
    beautiful young princess who was sitting some way off, the center of
    another group.

    The princess smiled. She rose with the same unchanging smile with
    which she had first entered the room- the smile of a perfectly
    beautiful woman. With a slight rustle of her white dress trimmed
    with moss and ivy, with a gleam of white shoulders, glossy hair, and
    sparkling diamonds, she passed between the men who made way for her,
    not looking at any of them but smiling on all, as if graciously
    allowing each the privilege of admiring her beautiful figure and
    shapely shoulders, back, and bosom- which in the fashion of those days
    were very much exposed- and she seemed to bring the glamour of a
    ballroom with her as she moved toward Anna Pavlovna. Helene was so
    lovely that not only did she not show any trace of coquetry, but on
    the contrary she even appeared shy of her unquestionable and all too
    victorious beauty. She seemed to wish, but to be unable, to diminish
    its effect.

    "How lovely!" said everyone who saw her; and the vicomte lifted
    his shoulders and dropped his eyes as if startled by something
    extraordinary when she took her seat opposite and beamed upon him also
    with her unchanging smile.

    "Madame, I doubt my ability before such an audience," said he,
    smilingly inclining his head.

    The princess rested her bare round arm on a little table and
    considered a reply unnecessary. She smilingly waited. All the time the
    story was being told she sat upright, glancing now at her beautiful
    round arm, altered in shape by its pressure on the table, now at her
    still more beautiful bosom, on which she readjusted a diamond
    necklace. From time to time she smoothed the folds of her dress, and
    whenever the story produced an effect she glanced at Anna Pavlovna, at
    once adopted just the expression she saw on the maid of honor's
    face, and again relapsed into her radiant smile.

    The little princess had also left the tea table and followed Helene.

    "Wait a moment, I'll get my work.... Now then, what are you thinking
    of?" she went on, turning to Prince Hippolyte. "Fetch me my workbag."

    There was a general movement as the princess, smiling and talking
    merrily to everyone at once, sat down and gaily arranged herself in
    her seat.

    "Now I am all right," she said, and asking the vicomte to begin, she
    took up her work.

    Prince Hippolyte, having brought the workbag, joined the circle
    and moving a chair close to hers seated himself beside her.

    Le charmant Hippolyte was surprising by his extraordinary
    resemblance to his beautiful sister, but yet more by the fact that
    in spite of this resemblance he was exceedingly ugly. His features
    were like his sister's, but while in her case everything was lit up by
    a joyous, self-satisfied, youthful, and constant smile of animation,
    and by the wonderful classic beauty of her figure, his face on the
    contrary was dulled by imbecility and a constant expression of
    sullen self-confidence, while his body was thin and weak. His eyes,
    nose, and mouth all seemed puckered into a vacant, wearied grimace,
    and his arms and legs always fell into unnatural positions.

    "It's not going to be a ghost story?" said he, sitting down beside
    the princess and hastily adjusting his lorgnette, as if without this
    instrument he could not begin to speak.

    "Why no, my dear fellow," said the astonished narrator, shrugging
    his shoulders.

    "Because I hate ghost stories," said Prince Hippolyte in a tone
    which showed that he only understood the meaning of his words after he
    had uttered them.

    He spoke with such self-confidence that his hearers could not be
    sure whether what he said was very witty or very stupid. He was
    dressed in a dark-green dress coat, knee breeches of the color of
    cuisse de nymphe effrayee, as he called it, shoes, and silk stockings.

    The vicomte told his tale very neatly. It was an anecdote, then
    current, to the effect that the Duc d'Enghien had gone secretly to
    Paris to visit Mademoiselle George; that at her house he came upon
    Bonaparte, who also enjoyed the famous actress' favors, and that in
    his presence Napoleon happened to fall into one of the fainting fits
    to which he was subject, and was thus at the duc's mercy. The latter
    spared him, and this magnanimity Bonaparte subsequently repaid by
    death.

    The story was very pretty and interesting, especially at the point
    where the rivals suddenly recognized one another; and the ladies
    looked agitated.

    "Charming!" said Anna Pavlovna with an inquiring glance at the
    little princess.

    "Charming!" whispered the little princess, sticking the needle
    into her work as if to testify that the interest and fascination of
    the story prevented her from going on with it.

    The vicomte appreciated this silent praise and smiling gratefully
    prepared to continue, but just then Anna Pavlovna, who had kept a
    watchful eye on the young man who so alarmed her, noticed that he
    was talking too loudly and vehemently with the abbe, so she hurried to
    the rescue. Pierre had managed to start a conversation with the abbe
    about the balance of power, and the latter, evidently interested by
    the young man's simple-minded eagerness, was explaining his pet
    theory. Both were talking and listening too eagerly and too naturally,
    which was why Anna Pavlovna disapproved.

    "The means are... the balance of power in Europe and the rights of
    the people," the abbe was saying. "It is only necessary for one
    powerful nation like Russia- barbaric as she is said to be- to place
    herself disinterestedly at the head of an alliance having for its
    object the maintenance of the balance of power of Europe, and it would
    save the world!"

    "But how are you to get that balance?" Pierre was beginning.

    At that moment Anna Pavlovna came up and, looking severely at
    Pierre, asked the Italian how he stood Russian climate. The
    Italian's face instantly changed and assumed an offensively
    affected, sugary expression, evidently habitual to him when conversing
    with women.

    "I am so enchanted by the brilliancy of the wit and culture of the
    society, more especially of the feminine society, in which I have
    had the honor of being received, that I have not yet had time to think
    of the climate," said he.

    Not letting the abbe and Pierre escape, Anna Pavlovna, the more
    conveniently to keep them under observation, brought them into the
    larger circle.





    CHAPTER IV


    Just then another visitor entered the drawing room: Prince Andrew
    Bolkonski, the little princess' husband. He was a very handsome
    young man, of medium height, with firm, clearcut features.
    Everything about him, from his weary, bored expression to his quiet,
    measured step, offered a most striking contrast to his quiet, little
    wife. It was evident that he not only knew everyone in the drawing
    room, but had found them to be so tiresome that it wearied him to look
    at or listen to them. And among all these faces that he found so
    tedious, none seemed to bore him so much as that of his pretty wife.
    He turned away from her with a grimace that distorted his handsome
    face, kissed Anna Pavlovna's hand, and screwing up his eyes scanned
    the whole company.

    "You are off to the war, Prince?" said Anna Pavlovna.

    "General Kutuzov," said Bolkonski, speaking French and stressing the
    last syllable of the general's name like a Frenchman, "has been
    pleased to take me as an aide-de-camp...."

    "And Lise, your wife?"

    "She will go to the country."

    "Are you not ashamed to deprive us of your charming wife?"

    "Andre," said his wife, addressing her husband in the same
    coquettish manner in which she spoke to other men, "the vicomte has
    been telling us such a tale about Mademoiselle George and Buonaparte!"

    Prince Andrew screwed up his eyes and turned away. Pierre, who
    from the moment Prince Andrew entered the room had watched him with
    glad, affectionate eyes, now came up and took his arm. Before he
    looked round Prince Andrew frowned again, expressing his annoyance
    with whoever was touching his arm, but when he saw Pierre's beaming
    face he gave him an unexpectedly kind and pleasant smile.

    "There now!... So you, too, are in the great world?" said he to
    Pierre.

    "I knew you would be here," replied Pierre. "I will come to supper
    with you. May I?" he added in a low voice so as not to disturb the
    vicomte who was continuing his story.

    "No, impossible!" said Prince Andrew, laughing and pressing Pierre's
    hand to show that there was no need to ask the question. He wished
    to say something more, but at that moment Prince Vasili and his
    daughter got up to go and the two young men rose to let them pass.

    "You must excuse me, dear Vicomte," said Prince Vasili to the
    Frenchman, holding him down by the sleeve in a friendly way to prevent
    his rising. "This unfortunate fete at the ambassador's deprives me
    of a pleasure, and obliges me to interrupt you. I am very sorry to
    leave your enchanting party," said he, turning to Anna Pavlovna.

    His daughter, Princess Helene, passed between the chairs, lightly
    holding up the folds of her dress, and the smile shone still more
    radiantly on her beautiful face. Pierre gazed at her with rapturous,
    almost frightened, eyes as she passed him.

    "Very lovely," said Prince Andrew.

    "Very," said Pierre.

    In passing Prince Vasili seized Pierre's hand and said to Anna
    Pavlovna: "Educate this bear for me! He has been staying with me a
    whole month and this is the first time I have seen him in society.
    Nothing is so necessary for a young man as the society of clever
    women."


    Anna Pavlovna smiled and promised to take Pierre in hand. She knew
    his father to be a connection of Prince Vasili's. The elderly lady who
    had been sitting with the old aunt rose hurriedly and overtook
    Prince Vasili in the anteroom. All the affectation of interest she had
    assumed had left her kindly and tearworn face and it now expressed
    only anxiety and fear.

    "How about my son Boris, Prince?" said she, hurrying after him
    into the anteroom. "I can't remain any longer in Petersburg. Tell me
    what news I may take back to my poor boy."

    Although Prince Vasili listened reluctantly and not very politely to
    the elderly lady, even betraying some impatience, she gave him an
    ingratiating and appealing smile, and took his hand that he might
    not go away.

    "What would it cost you to say a word to the Emperor, and then he
    would be transferred to the Guards at once?" said she.

    "Believe me, Princess, I am ready to do all I can," answered
    Prince Vasili, "but it is difficult for me to ask the Emperor. I
    should advise you to appeal to Rumyantsev through Prince Golitsyn.
    That would be the best way."

    The elderly lady was a Princess Drubetskaya, belonging to one of the
    best families in Russia, but she was poor, and having long been out of
    society had lost her former influential connections. She had now
    come to Petersburg to procure an appointment in the Guards for her
    only son. It was, in fact, solely to meet Prince Vasili that she had
    obtained an invitation to Anna Pavlovna's reception and had sat
    listening to the vicomte's story. Prince Vasili's words frightened
    her, an embittered look clouded her once handsome face, but only for a
    moment; then she smiled again and dutched Prince Vasili's arm more
    tightly.

    "Listen to me, Prince," said she. "I have never yet asked you for
    anything and I never will again, nor have I ever reminded you of my
    father's friendship for you; but now I entreat you for God's sake to
    do this for my son- and I shall always regard you as a benefactor,"
    she added hurriedly. "No, don't be angry, but promise! I have asked
    Golitsyn and he has refused. Be the kindhearted man you always
    were," she said, trying to smile though tears were in her eyes.

    "Papa, we shall be late," said Princess Helene, turning her
    beautiful head and looking over her classically molded shoulder as she
    stood waiting by the door.

    Influence in society, however, is a capital which has to be
    economized if it is to last. Prince Vasili knew this, and having
    once realized that if he asked on behalf of all who begged of him,
    he would soon be unable to ask for himself, he became chary of using
    his influence. But in Princess Drubetskaya's case he felt, after her
    second appeal, something like qualms of conscience. She had reminded
    him of what was quite true; he had been indebted to her father for the
    first steps in his career. Moreover, he could see by her manners
    that she was one of those women- mostly mothers- who, having once made
    up their minds, will not rest until they have gained their end, and
    are prepared if necessary to go on insisting day after day and hour
    after hour, and even to make scenes. This last consideration moved
    him.

    "My dear Anna Mikhaylovna," said he with his usual familiarity and
    weariness of tone, "it is almost impossible for me to do what you ask;
    but to prove my devotion to you and how I respect your father's
    memory, I will do the impossible- your son shall be transferred to the
    Guards. Here is my hand on it. Are you satisfied?"

    "My dear benefactor! This is what I expected from you- I knew your
    kindness!" He turned to go.

    "Wait- just a word! When he has been transferred to the Guards..."
    she faltered. "You are on good terms with Michael Ilarionovich
    Kutuzov... recommend Boris to him as adjutant! Then I shall be at
    rest, and then..."

    Prince Vasili smiled.

    "No, I won't promise that. You don't know how Kutuzov is pestered
    since his appointment as Commander in Chief. He told me himself that
    all the Moscow ladies have conspired to give him all their sons as
    adjutants."

    "No, but do promise! I won't let you go! My dear benefactor..."

    "Papa," said his beautiful daughter in the same tone as before,
    "we shall be late."

    "Well, au revoir! Good-by! You hear her?"

    "Then tomorrow you will speak to the Emperor?"

    "Certainly; but about Kutuzov, I don't promise."

    "Do promise, do promise, Vasili!" cried Anna Mikhaylovna as he went,
    with the smile of a coquettish girl, which at one time probably came
    naturally to her, but was now very ill-suited to her careworn face.

    Apparently she had forgotten her age and by force of habit
    employed all the old feminine arts. But as soon as the prince had gone
    her face resumed its former cold, artificial expression. She
    returned to the group where the vicomte was still talking, and again
    pretended to listen, while waiting till it would be time to leave. Her
    task was accomplished.





    CHAPTER V


    "And what do you think of this latest comedy, the coronation at
    Milan?" asked Anna Pavlovna, "and of the comedy of the people of Genoa
    and Lucca laying their pe ions before Monsieur Buonaparte, and
    Monsieur Buonaparte sitting on a throne and granting the pe ions
    of the nations? Adorable! It is enough to make one's head whirl! It is
    as if the whole world had gone crazy."

    Prince Andrew looked Anna Pavlovna straight in the face with a
    sarcastic smile.

    "'Dieu me la donne, gare a qui la touche!'* They say he was very
    fine when he said that," he remarked, repeating the words in
    Italian: "'Dio mi l'ha dato. Guai a chi la tocchi!'"


    *God has given it to me, let him who touches it beware!


    "I hope this will prove the last drop that will make the glass run
    over," Anna Pavlovna continued. "The sovereigns will not be able to
    endure this man who is a menace to everything."

    "The sovereigns? I do not speak of Russia," said the vicomte, polite
    but hopeless: "The sovereigns, madame... What have they done for Louis
    XVII, for the Queen, or for Madame Elizabeth? Nothing!" and he
    became more animated. "And believe me, they are reaping the reward
    of their betrayal of the Bourbon cause. The sovereigns! Why, they
    are sending ambassadors to compliment the usurper."

    And sighing disdainfully, he again changed his position.

    Prince Hippolyte, who had been gazing at the vicomte for some time
    through his lorgnette, suddenly turned completely round toward the
    little princess, and having asked for a needle began tracing the Conde
    coat of arms on the table. He explained this to her with as much
    gravity as if she had asked him to do it.

    "Baton de gueules, engrele de gueules d' azur- maison Conde," said
    he.

    The princess listened, smiling.

    "If Buonaparte remains on the throne of France a year longer," the
    vicomte continued, with the air of a man who, in a matter with which
    he is better acquainted than anyone else, does not listen to others
    but follows the current of his own thoughts, "things will have gone
    too far. By intrigues, violence, exile, and executions, French
    society- I mean good French society- will have been forever destroyed,
    and then..."

    He shrugged his shoulders and spread out his hands. Pierre wished to
    make a remark, for the conversation interested him, but Anna Pavlovna,
    who had him under observation, interrupted:

    "The Emperor Alexander," said she, with the melancholy which
    always accompanied any reference of hers to the Imperial family,
    "has declared that he will leave it to the French people themselves to
    choose their own form of government; and I believe that once free from
    the usurper, the whole nation will certainly throw itself into the
    arms of its rightful king," she concluded, trying to be amiable to the
    royalist emigrant.

    "That is doubtful," said Prince Andrew. "Monsieur le Vicomte quite
    rightly supposes that matters have already gone too far. I think it
    will be difficult to return to the old regime."

    "From what I have heard," said Pierre, blushing and breaking into
    the conversation, "almost all the aristocracy has already gone over to
    Bonaparte's side."

    "It is the Buonapartists who say that," replied the vicomte
    without looking at Pierre. "At the present time it is difficult to
    know the real state of French public opinion.

    "Bonaparte has said so," remarked Prince Andrew with a sarcastic
    smile.

    It was evident that he did not like the vicomte and was aiming his
    remarks at him, though without looking at him.

    "'I showed them the path to glory, but they did not follow it,'"
    Prince Andrew continued after a short silence, again quoting
    Napoleon's words. "'I opened my antechambers and they crowded in.' I
    do not know how far he was justified in saying so."

    "Not in the least," replied the vicomte. "After the murder of the
    duc even the most partial ceased to regard him as a hero. If to some
    people," he went on, turning to Anna Pavlovna, "he ever was a hero,
    after the murder of the duc there was one martyr more in heaven and
    one hero less on earth."

    Before Anna Pavlovna and the others had time to smile their
    appreciation of the vicomte's epigram, Pierre again broke into the
    conversation, and though Anna Pavlovna felt sure he would say
    something inappropriate, she was unable to stop him.

    "The execution of the Duc d'Enghien," declared Monsieur Pierre, "was
    a political necessity, and it seems to me that Napoleon showed
    greatness of soul by not fearing to take on himself the whole
    responsibility of that deed."

    "Dieu! Mon Dieu!" muttered Anna Pavlovna in a terrified whisper.

    "What, Monsieur Pierre... Do you consider that assassination shows
    greatness of soul?" said the little princess, smiling and drawing
    her work nearer to her.

    "Oh! Oh!" exclaimed several voices.

    "Capital!" said Prince Hippolyte in English, and began slapping
    his knee with the palm of his hand.

    The vicomte merely shrugged his shoulders. Pierre looked solemnly at
    his audience over his spectacles and continued.

    "I say so," he continued desperately, "because the Bourbons fled
    from the Revolution leaving the people to anarchy, and Napoleon
    alone understood the Revolution and quelled it, and so for the general
    good, he could not stop short for the sake of one man's life."

    "Won't you come over to the other table?" suggested Anna Pavlovna.

    But Pierre continued his speech without heeding her.

    "No," cried he, becoming more and more eager, "Napoleon is great
    because he rose superior to the Revolution, suppressed its abuses,
    preserved all that was good in it- equality of citizenship and freedom
    of speech and of the press- and only for that reason did he obtain
    power."

    "Yes, if having obtained power, without availing himself of it to
    commit murder he had restored it to the rightful king, I should have
    called him a great man," remarked the vicomte.

    "He could not do that. The people only gave him power that he
    might rid them of the Bourbons and because they saw that he was a
    great man. The Revolution was a grand thing!" continued Monsieur
    Pierre, betraying by this desperate and provocative proposition his
    extreme youth and his wish to express all that was in his mind.

    "What? Revolution and regicide a grand thing?... Well, after that...
    But won't you come to this other table?" repeated Anna Pavlovna.

    "Rousseau's Contrat social," said the vicomte with a tolerant smile.

    "I am not speaking of regicide, I am speaking about ideas."

    "Yes: ideas of robbery, murder, and regicide," again interjected
    an ironical voice.

    "Those were extremes, no doubt, but they are not what is most
    important. What is important are the rights of man, emancipation
    from prejudices, and equality of citizenship, and all these ideas
    Napoleon has retained in full force."

    "Liberty and equality," said the vicomte contemptuously, as if at
    last deciding seriously to prove to this youth how foolish his words
    were, "high-sounding words which have long been discredited. Who
    does not love liberty and equality? Even our Saviour preached
    liberty and equality. Have people since the Revolution become happier?
    On the contrary. We wanted liberty, but Buonaparte has destroyed it."

    Prince Andrew kept looking with an amused smile from Pierre to the
    vicomte and from the vicomte to their hostess. In the first moment
    of Pierre's outburst Anna Pavlovna, despite her social experience, was
    horror-struck. But when she saw that Pierre's sacrilegious words had
    not exasperated the vicomte, and had convinced herself that it was
    impossible to stop him, she rallied her forces and joined the
    vicomte in a vigorous attack on the orator.

    "But, my dear Monsieur Pierre," said she, "how do you explain the
    fact of a great man executing a duc- or even an ordinary man who- is
    innocent and untried?"

    "I should like," said the vicomte, "to ask how monsieur explains the
    18th Brumaire; was not that an imposture? It was a swindle, and not at
    all like the conduct of a great man!"

    "And the prisoners he killed in Africa? That was horrible!" said the
    little princess, shrugging her shoulders.

    "He's a low fellow, say what you will," remarked Prince Hippolyte.

    Pierre, not knowing whom to answer, looked at them all and smiled.
    His smile was unlike the half-smile of other people. When he smiled,
    his grave, even rather gloomy, look was instantaneously replaced by
    another- a childlike, kindly, even rather silly look, which seemed
    to ask forgiveness.

    The vicomte who was meeting him for the first time saw clearly
    that this young Jacobin was not so terrible as his words suggested.
    All were silent.

    "How do you expect him to answer you all at once?" said Prince
    Andrew. "Besides, in the actions of a statesman one has to distinguish
    between his acts as a private person, as a general, and as an emperor.
    So it seems to me."

    "Yes, yes, of course!" Pierre chimed in, pleased at the arrival of
    this reinforcement.

    "One must admit," continued Prince Andrew, "that Napoleon as a man
    was great on the bridge of Arcola, and in the hospital at Jaffa
    where he gave his hand to the plague-stricken; but... but there are
    other acts which it is difficult to justify."

    Prince Andrew, who had evidently wished to tone down the awkwardness
    of Pierre's remarks, rose and made a sign to his wife that it was time
    to go.


    Suddenly Prince Hippolyte started up making signs to everyone to
    attend, and asking them all to be seated began:

    "I was told a charming Moscow story today and must treat you to
    it. Excuse me, Vicomte- I must tell it in Russian or the point will be
    lost...." And Prince Hippolyte began to tell his story in such Russian
    as a Frenchman would speak after spending about a year in Russia.
    Everyone waited, so emphatically and eagerly did he demand their
    attention to his story.

    "There is in Moscow a lady, une dame, and she is very stingy. She
    must have two footmen behind her carriage, and very big ones. That was
    her taste. And she had a lady's maid, also big. She said..."

    Here Prince Hippolyte paused, evidently collecting his ideas with
    difficulty.

    "She said... Oh yes! She said, 'Girl,' to the maid, 'put on a
    livery, get up behind the carriage, and come with me while I make some
    calls.'"

    Here Prince Hippolyte spluttered and burst out laughing long
    before his audience, which produced an effect unfavorable to the
    narrator. Several persons, among them the elderly lady and Anna
    Pavlovna, did however smile.

    "She went. Suddenly there was a great wind. The girl lost her hat
    and her long hair came down...." Here he could contain himself no
    longer and went on, between gasps of laughter: "And the whole world
    knew...."

    And so the anecdote ended. Though it was unintelligible why he had
    told it, or why it had to be told in Russian, still Anna Pavlovna
    and the others appreciated Prince Hippolyte's social tact in so
    agreeably ending Pierre's unpleasant and unamiable outburst. After the
    anecdote the conversation broke up into insignificant small talk about
    the last and next balls, about theatricals, and who would meet whom,
    and when and where.
    thanks.

  4. #1179
    俺はまんこが大好きなんだよ baseline bum's Avatar
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    How unoriginal.

  5. #1180
    Veteran 703 Spurz's Avatar
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    There is no God. There is the idea and concept of God which keeps believers in line, but there is definately no all-powerful devine being watching over us and creating "miracles".

    The thing I find the most funny is God in sports. When someone wins they thank God. Well.... what about the other person/people that lost? Did God forsake them or just favor you more? I thought God loved us all equally? Could it possibly be that through your own strength and talent that you won the day on your own? Is it really that hard to believe that?
    I always felt that way too. Like when a guy jacks a ball out of the park and does the religious thing with spectacles testicles pocket and watch thing.

    What, does the pitcher not believe in God so that's why he made him give up a homer?

  6. #1181
    俺はまんこが大好きなんだよ baseline bum's Avatar
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    That's ok. You've shown countless times you have no idea how to logically argue anything.

  7. #1182
    we rang stretch's Avatar
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    That's ok. You've shown countless times you have no idea how to logically argue anything.
    Okay, quit being a dip . I was just shocked more than anything that you would go through the whole equation or whatever the you wrote about to prove a negative or whatever it was. It wasn't anything negative against you, you insecure got.

  8. #1183
    right about pizzagate Blake's Avatar
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    ruh roh.

    someone's jealous of mono getting all the troll glory and wants to get some for herself.

    lol, loser.

  9. #1184
    Ruffy RuffnReadyOzStyle's Avatar
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    Okay, quit being a dip . I was just shocked more than anything that you would go through the whole equation or whatever the you wrote about to prove a negative or whatever it was. It wasn't anything negative against you, you insecure got.
    Baseline pulls a little maths/logic out and you spam the thread then go ad hominem phobic - who is the insecure one again?

    PS I'm not going to buy into the "is there or isn't there a God or Gods?" argument because I don't have a clue, and I think belief in a higher being is an entirely personal choice.

    However, I CAN tell you that the Earth is more than 8,000-odd years old, and if you reject that you are an idiot. The scientific evidence contradicting Genesis' version of events and the Old Testament time-line is overwhelming. A higher being did NOT create everything a few thousand years ago and then construct the world to make it look like it was 4 billion years old. That, if you believe it, is entirely duplicitous and contradictory of the qualities of "God-like" behaviour. It makes no rational sense, and scientific understanding makes a mockery of it.
    Last edited by RuffnReadyOzStyle; 01-07-2009 at 09:30 AM.

  10. #1185
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    so once i post the sources for the facts, you got to show your face Love Me Some Me

    see if you can re-read your friend Extra Stout's bull propaganda again

  11. #1186
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    this is a good book. can you post more of it?
    Originally Posted by monosylab1k

    CHAPTER I


    "Well, Prince, so Genoa and Lucca are now just family estates of the
    Buonapartes. But I warn you, if you don't tell me that this means war,
    if you still try to defend the infamies and horrors perpetrated by
    that Antichrist- I really believe he is Antichrist- I will have
    nothing more to do with you and you are no longer my friend, no longer
    my 'faithful slave,' as you call yourself! But how do you do? I see
    I have frightened you- sit down and tell me all the news."

    It was in July, 1805, and the speaker was the well-known Anna
    Pavlovna Scherer, maid of honor and favorite of the Empress Marya
    Fedorovna. With these words she greeted Prince Vasili Kuragin, a man
    of high rank and importance, who was the first to arrive at her
    reception. Anna Pavlovna had had a cough for some days. She was, as
    she said, suffering from la grippe; grippe being then a new word in
    St. Petersburg, used only by the elite.

    All her invitations without exception, written in French, and
    delivered by a scarlet-liveried footman that morning, ran as follows:

    "If you have nothing better to do, Count [or Prince], and if the
    prospect of spending an evening with a poor invalid is not too
    terrible, I shall be very charmed to see you tonight between 7 and 10-
    Annette Scherer."

    "Heavens! what a virulent attack!" replied the prince, not in the
    least disconcerted by this reception. He had just entered, wearing
    an embroidered court uniform, knee breeches, and shoes, and had
    stars on his breast and a serene expression on his flat face. He spoke
    in that refined French in which our grandfathers not only spoke but
    thought, and with the gentle, patronizing intonation natural to a
    man of importance who had grown old in society and at court. He went
    up to Anna Pavlovna, kissed her hand, presenting to her his bald,
    scented, and shining head, and complacently seated himself on the
    sofa.

    "First of all, dear friend, tell me how you are. Set your friend's
    mind at rest," said he without altering his tone, beneath the
    politeness and affected sympathy of which indifference and even
    irony could be discerned.

    "Can one be well while suffering morally? Can one be calm in times
    like these if one has any feeling?" said Anna Pavlovna. "You are
    staying the whole evening, I hope?"

    "And the fete at the English ambassador's? Today is Wednesday. I
    must put in an appearance there," said the prince. "My daughter is
    coming for me to take me there."

    "I thought today's fete had been canceled. I confess all these
    festivities and fireworks are becoming wearisome."

    "If they had known that you wished it, the entertainment would
    have been put off," said the prince, who, like a wound-up clock, by
    force of habit said things he did not even wish to be believed.

    "Don't tease! Well, and what has been decided about Novosiltsev's
    dispatch? You know everything."

    "What can one say about it?" replied the prince in a cold,
    listless tone. "What has been decided? They have decided that
    Buonaparte has burnt his boats, and I believe that we are ready to
    burn ours."

    Prince Vasili always spoke languidly, like an actor repeating a
    stale part. Anna Pavlovna Scherer on the contrary, despite her forty
    years, overflowed with animation and impulsiveness. To be an
    enthusiast had become her social vocation and, sometimes even when she
    did not feel like it, she became enthusiastic in order not to
    disappoint the expectations of those who knew her. The subdued smile
    which, though it did not suit her faded features, always played
    round her lips expressed, as in a spoiled child, a continual
    consciousness of her charming defect, which she neither wished, nor
    could, nor considered it necessary, to correct.

    In the midst of a conversation on political matters Anna Pavlovna
    burst out:

    "Oh, don't speak to me of Austria. Perhaps I don't understand
    things, but Austria never has wished, and does not wish, for war.
    She is betraying us! Russia alone must save Europe. Our gracious
    sovereign recognizes his high vocation and will be true to it. That is
    the one thing I have faith in! Our good and wonderful sovereign has to
    perform the noblest role on earth, and he is so virtuous and noble
    that God will not forsake him. He will fulfill his vocation and
    crush the hydra of revolution, which has become more terrible than
    ever in the person of this murderer and villain! We alone must
    avenge the blood of the just one.... Whom, I ask you, can we rely
    on?... England with her commercial spirit will not and cannot
    understand the Emperor Alexander's loftiness of soul. She has
    refused to evacuate Malta. She wanted to find, and still seeks, some
    secret motive in our actions. What answer did Novosiltsev get? None.
    The English have not understood and cannot understand the
    self-abnegation of our Emperor who wants nothing for himself, but only
    desires the good of mankind. And what have they promised? Nothing! And
    what little they have promised they will not perform! Prussia has
    always declared that Buonaparte is invincible, and that all Europe
    is powerless before him.... And I don't believe a word that Hardenburg
    says, or Haugwitz either. This famous Prussian neutrality is just a
    trap. I have faith only in God and the lofty destiny of our adored
    monarch. He will save Europe!"

    She suddenly paused, smiling at her own impetuosity.

    "I think," said the prince with a smile, "that if you had been
    sent instead of our dear Wintzingerode you would have captured the
    King of Prussia's consent by assault. You are so eloquent. Will you
    give me a cup of tea?"

    "In a moment. A propos," she added, becoming calm again, "I am
    expecting two very interesting men tonight, le Vicomte de Mortemart,
    who is connected with the Montmorencys through the Rohans, one of
    the best French families. He is one of the genuine emigres, the good
    ones. And also the Abbe Morio. Do you know that profound thinker? He
    has been received by the Emperor. Had you heard?"

    "I shall be delighted to meet them," said the prince. "But tell me,"
    he added with studied carelessness as if it had only just occurred
    to him, though the question he was about to ask was the chief motive
    of his visit, "is it true that the Dowager Empress wants Baron Funke
    to be appointed first secretary at Vienna? The baron by all accounts
    is a poor creature."

    Prince Vasili wished to obtain this post for his son, but others
    were trying through the Dowager Empress Marya Fedorovna to secure it
    for the baron.

    Anna Pavlovna almost closed her eyes to indicate that neither she
    nor anyone else had a right to criticize what the Empress desired or
    was pleased with.

    "Baron Funke has been recommended to the Dowager Empress by her
    sister," was all she said, in a dry and mournful tone.

    As she named the Empress, Anna Pavlovna's face suddenly assumed an
    expression of profound and sincere devotion and respect mingled with
    sadness, and this occurred every time she mentioned her illustrious
    patroness. She added that Her Majesty had deigned to show Baron
    Funke beaucoup d'estime, and again her face clouded over with sadness.

    The prince was silent and looked indifferent. But, with the
    womanly and courtierlike quickness and tact habitual to her, Anna
    Pavlovna wished both to rebuke him (for daring to speak he had done of
    a man recommended to the Empress) and at the same time to console him,
    so she said:

    "Now about your family. Do you know that since your daughter came
    out everyone has been enraptured by her? They say she is amazingly
    beautiful."

    The prince bowed to signify his respect and gra ude.

    "I often think," she continued after a short pause, drawing nearer
    to the prince and smiling amiably at him as if to show that
    political and social topics were ended and the time had come for
    intimate conversation- "I often think how unfairly sometimes the
    joys of life are distributed. Why has fate given you two such splendid
    children? I don't speak of Anatole, your youngest. I don't like
    him," she added in a tone admitting of no rejoinder and raising her
    eyebrows. "Two such charming children. And really you appreciate
    them less than anyone, and so you don't deserve to have them."

    And she smiled her ecstatic smile.

    "I can't help it," said the prince. "Lavater would have said I
    lack the bump of paternity."

    "Don't joke; I mean to have a serious talk with you. Do you know I
    am dissatisfied with your younger son? Between ourselves" (and her
    face assumed its melancholy expression), "he was mentioned at Her
    Majesty's and you were pitied...."

    The prince answered nothing, but she looked at him significantly,
    awaiting a reply. He frowned.

    "What would you have me do?" he said at last. "You know I did all
    a father could for their education, and they have both turned out
    fools. Hippolyte is at least a quiet fool, but Anatole is an active
    one. That is the only difference between them." He said this smiling
    in a way more natural and animated than usual, so that the wrinkles
    round his mouth very clearly revealed something unexpectedly coarse
    and unpleasant.

    "And why are children born to such men as you? If you were not a
    father there would be nothing I could reproach you with," said Anna
    Pavlovna, looking up pensively.

    "I am your faithful slave and to you alone I can confess that my
    children are the bane of my life. It is the cross I have to bear. That
    is how I explain it to myself. It can't be helped!"

    He said no more, but expressed his resignation to cruel fate by a
    gesture. Anna Pavlovna meditated.

    "Have you never thought of marrying your prodigal son Anatole?"
    she asked. "They say old maids have a mania for matchmaking, and
    though I don't feel that weakness in myself as yet,I know a little
    person who is very unhappy with her father. She is a relation of
    yours, Princess Mary Bolkonskaya."

    Prince Vasili did not reply, though, with the quickness of memory
    and perception befitting a man of the world, he indicated by a
    movement of the head that he was considering this information.

    "Do you know," he said at last, evidently unable to check the sad
    current of his thoughts, "that Anatole is costing me forty thousand
    rubles a year? And," he went on after a pause, "what will it be in
    five years, if he goes on like this?" Presently he added: "That's what
    we fathers have to put up with.... Is this princess of yours rich?"

    "Her father is very rich and stingy. He lives in the country. He
    is the well-known Prince Bolkonski who had to retire from the army
    under the late Emperor, and was nicknamed 'the King of Prussia.' He is
    very clever but eccentric, and a bore. The poor girl is very
    unhappy. She has a brother; I think you know him, he married Lise
    Meinen lately. He is an aide-de-camp of Kutuzov's and will be here
    tonight."

    "Listen, dear Annette," said the prince, suddenly taking Anna
    Pavlovna's hand and for some reason drawing it downwards. "Arrange
    that affair for me and I shall always be your most devoted slave-
    slafe wigh an f, as a village elder of mine writes in his reports. She
    is rich and of good family and that's all I want."

    And with the familiarity and easy grace peculiar to him, he raised
    the maid of honor's hand to his lips, kissed it, and swung it to and
    fro as he lay back in his armchair, looking in another direction.

    "Attendez," said Anna Pavlovna, reflecting, "I'll speak to Lise,
    young Bolkonski's wife, this very evening, and perhaps the thing can
    be arranged. It shall be on your family's behalf that I'll start my
    apprenticeship as old maid."





    CHAPTER II


    Anna Pavlovna's drawing room was gradually filling. The highest
    Petersburg society was assembled there: people differing widely in age
    and character but alike in the social circle to which they belonged.
    Prince Vasili's daughter, the beautiful Helene, came to take her
    father to the ambassador's entertainment; she wore a ball dress and
    her badge as maid of honor. The youthful little Princess
    Bolkonskaya, known as la femme la plus seduisante de Petersbourg,* was
    also there. She had been married during the previous winter, and being
    pregnant did not go to any large gatherings, but only to small
    receptions. Prince Vasili's son, Hippolyte, had come with Mortemart,
    whom he introduced. The Abbe Morio and many others had also come.


    *The most fascinating woman in Petersburg.


    To each new arrival Anna Pavlovna said, "You have not yet seen my
    aunt," or "You do not know my aunt?" and very gravely conducted him or
    her to a little old lady, wearing large bows of ribbon in her cap, who
    had come sailing in from another room as soon as the guests began to
    arrive; and slowly turning her eyes from the visitor to her aunt, Anna
    Pavlovna mentioned each one's name and then left them.

    Each visitor performed the ceremony of greeting this old aunt whom
    not one of them knew, not one of them wanted to know, and not one of
    them cared about; Anna Pavlovna observed these greetings with mournful
    and solemn interest and silent approval. The aunt spoke to each of
    them in the same words, about their health and her own, and the health
    of Her Majesty, "who, thank God, was better today." And each
    visitor, though politeness prevented his showing impatience, left
    the old woman with a sense of relief at having performed a vexatious
    duty and did not return to her the whole evening.

    The young Princess Bolkonskaya had brought some work in a
    gold-embroidered velvet bag. Her pretty little upper lip, on which a
    delicate dark down was just perceptible, was too short for her
    teeth, but it lifted all the more sweetly, and was especially charming
    when she occasionally drew it down to meet the lower lip. As is always
    the case with a thoroughly attractive woman, her defect- the shortness
    of her upper lip and her half-open mouth- seemed to be her own special
    and peculiar form of beauty. Everyone brightened at the sight of
    this pretty young woman, so soon to become a mother, so full of life
    and health, and carrying her burden so lightly. Old men and dull
    dispirited young ones who looked at her, after being in her company
    and talking to her a little while, felt as if they too were
    becoming, like her, full of life and health. All who talked to her,
    and at each word saw her bright smile and the constant gleam of her
    white teeth, thought that they were in a specially amiable mood that
    day.

    The little princess went round the table with quick, short,
    swaying steps, her workbag on her arm, and gaily spreading out her
    dress sat down on a sofa near the silver samovar, as if all she was
    doing was a pleasure to herself and to all around her. "I have brought
    my work," said she in French, displaying her bag and addressing all
    present. "Mind, Annette, I hope you have not played a wicked trick
    on me," she added, turning to her hostess. "You wrote that it was to
    be quite a small reception, and just see how badly I am dressed."
    And she spread out her arms to show her short-waisted, lace-trimmed,
    dainty gray dress, girdled with a broad ribbon just below the breast.

    "Soyez tranquille, Lise, you will always be prettier than anyone
    else," replied Anna Pavlovna.

    "You know," said the princess in the same tone of voice and still in
    French, turning to a general, "my husband is deserting me? He is going
    to get himself killed. Tell me what this wretched war is for?" she
    added, addressing Prince Vasili, and without waiting for an answer she
    turned to speak to his daughter, the beautiful Helene.

    "What a delightful woman this little princess is!" said Prince
    Vasili to Anna Pavlovna.

    One of the next arrivals was a stout, heavily built young man with
    close-cropped hair, spectacles, the light-colored breeches fashionable
    at that time, a very high ruffle, and a brown dress coat. This stout
    young man was an illegitimate son of Count Bezukhov, a well-known
    grandee of Catherine's time who now lay dying in Moscow. The young man
    had not yet entered either the military or civil service, as he had
    only just returned from abroad where he had been educated, and this
    was his first appearance in society. Anna Pavlovna greeted him with
    the nod she accorded to the lowest hierarchy in her drawing room.
    But in spite of this lowest-grade greeting, a look of anxiety and
    fear, as at the sight of something too large and unsuited to the
    place, came over her face when she saw Pierre enter. Though he was
    certainly rather bigger than the other men in the room, her anxiety
    could only have reference to the clever though shy, but observant
    and natural, expression which distinguished him from everyone else
    in that drawing room.

    "It is very good of you, Monsieur Pierre, to come and visit a poor
    invalid," said Anna Pavlovna, exchanging an alarmed glance with her
    aunt as she conducted him to her.

    Pierre murmured something unintelligible, and continued to look
    round as if in search of something. On his way to the aunt he bowed to
    the little princess with a pleased smile, as to an intimate
    acquaintance.

    Anna Pavlovna's alarm was justified, for Pierre turned away from the
    aunt without waiting to hear her speech about Her Majesty's health.
    Anna Pavlovna in dismay detained him with the words: "Do you know
    the Abbe Morio? He is a most interesting man."

    "Yes, I have heard of his scheme for perpetual peace, and it is very
    interesting but hardly feasible."

    "You think so?" rejoined Anna Pavlovna in order to say something and
    get away to attend to her duties as hostess. But Pierre now
    committed a reverse act of impoliteness. First he had left a lady
    before she had finished speaking to him, and now he continued to speak
    to another who wished to get away. With his head bent, and his big
    feet spread apart, he began explaining his reasons for thinking the
    abbe's plan chimerical.

    "We will talk of it later," said Anna Pavlovna with a smile.

    And having got rid of this young man who did not know how to behave,
    she resumed her duties as hostess and continued to listen and watch,
    ready to help at any point where the conversation might happen to
    flag. As the foreman of a spinning mill, when he has set the hands
    to work, goes round and notices here a spindle that has stopped or
    there one that creaks or makes more noise than it should, and
    hastens to check the machine or set it in proper motion, so Anna
    Pavlovna moved about her drawing room, approaching now a silent, now a
    too-noisy group, and by a word or slight rearrangement kept the
    conversational machine in steady, proper, and regular motion. But amid
    these cares her anxiety about Pierre was evident. She kept an
    anxious watch on him when he approached the group round Mortemart to
    listen to what was being said there, and again when he passed to
    another group whose center was the abbe.

    Pierre had been educated abroad, and this reception at Anna
    Pavlovna's was the first he had attended in Russia. He knew that all
    the intellectual lights of Petersburg were gathered there and, like
    a child in a toyshop, did not know which way to look, afraid of
    missing any clever conversation that was to be heard. Seeing the
    self-confident and refined expression on the faces of those present he
    was always expecting to hear something very profound. At last he
    came up to Morio. Here the conversation seemed interesting and he
    stood waiting for an opportunity to express his own views, as young
    people are fond of doing.




    CHAPTER III


    Anna Pavlovna's reception was in full swing. The spindles hummed
    steadily and ceaselessly on all sides. With the exception of the aunt,
    beside whom sat only one elderly lady, who with her thin careworn face
    was rather out of place in this brilliant society, the whole company
    had settled into three groups. One, chiefly masculine, had formed
    round the abbe. Another, of young people, was grouped round the
    beautiful Princess Helene, Prince Vasili's daughter, and the little
    Princess Bolkonskaya, very pretty and rosy, though rather too plump
    for her age. The third group was gathered round Mortemart and Anna
    Pavlovna.

    The vicomte was a nice-looking young man with soft features and
    polished manners, who evidently considered himself a celebrity but out
    of politeness modestly placed himself at the disposal of the circle in
    which he found himself. Anna Pavlovna was obviously serving him up
    as a treat to her guests. As a clever maitre d'hotel serves up as a
    specially choice delicacy a piece of meat that no one who had seen
    it in the kitchen would have cared to eat, so Anna Pavlovna served
    up to her guests, first the vicomte and then the abbe, as peculiarly
    choice morsels. The group about Mortemart immediately began discussing
    the murder of the Duc d'Enghien. The vicomte said that the Duc
    d'Enghien had perished by his own magnanimity, and that there were
    particular reasons for Buonaparte's hatred of him.

    "Ah, yes! Do tell us all about it, Vicomte," said Anna Pavlovna,
    with a pleasant feeling that there was something a la Louis XV in
    the sound of that sentence: "Contez nous cela, Vicomte."

    The vicomte bowed and smiled courteously in token of his willingness
    to comply. Anna Pavlovna arranged a group round him, inviting everyone
    to listen to his tale.

    "The vicomte knew the duc personally," whispered Anna Pavlovna to of
    the guests. "The vicomte is a wonderful raconteur," said she to
    another. "How evidently he belongs to the best society," said she to a
    third; and the vicomte was served up to the company in the choicest
    and most advantageous style, like a well-garnished joint of roast beef
    on a hot dish.

    The vicomte wished to begin his story and gave a subtle smile.

    "Come over here, Helene, dear," said Anna Pavlovna to the
    beautiful young princess who was sitting some way off, the center of
    another group.

    The princess smiled. She rose with the same unchanging smile with
    which she had first entered the room- the smile of a perfectly
    beautiful woman. With a slight rustle of her white dress trimmed
    with moss and ivy, with a gleam of white shoulders, glossy hair, and
    sparkling diamonds, she passed between the men who made way for her,
    not looking at any of them but smiling on all, as if graciously
    allowing each the privilege of admiring her beautiful figure and
    shapely shoulders, back, and bosom- which in the fashion of those days
    were very much exposed- and she seemed to bring the glamour of a
    ballroom with her as she moved toward Anna Pavlovna. Helene was so
    lovely that not only did she not show any trace of coquetry, but on
    the contrary she even appeared shy of her unquestionable and all too
    victorious beauty. She seemed to wish, but to be unable, to diminish
    its effect.

    "How lovely!" said everyone who saw her; and the vicomte lifted
    his shoulders and dropped his eyes as if startled by something
    extraordinary when she took her seat opposite and beamed upon him also
    with her unchanging smile.

    "Madame, I doubt my ability before such an audience," said he,
    smilingly inclining his head.

    The princess rested her bare round arm on a little table and
    considered a reply unnecessary. She smilingly waited. All the time the
    story was being told she sat upright, glancing now at her beautiful
    round arm, altered in shape by its pressure on the table, now at her
    still more beautiful bosom, on which she readjusted a diamond
    necklace. From time to time she smoothed the folds of her dress, and
    whenever the story produced an effect she glanced at Anna Pavlovna, at
    once adopted just the expression she saw on the maid of honor's
    face, and again relapsed into her radiant smile.

    The little princess had also left the tea table and followed Helene.

    "Wait a moment, I'll get my work.... Now then, what are you thinking
    of?" she went on, turning to Prince Hippolyte. "Fetch me my workbag."

    There was a general movement as the princess, smiling and talking
    merrily to everyone at once, sat down and gaily arranged herself in
    her seat.

    "Now I am all right," she said, and asking the vicomte to begin, she
    took up her work.

    Prince Hippolyte, having brought the workbag, joined the circle
    and moving a chair close to hers seated himself beside her.

    Le charmant Hippolyte was surprising by his extraordinary
    resemblance to his beautiful sister, but yet more by the fact that
    in spite of this resemblance he was exceedingly ugly. His features
    were like his sister's, but while in her case everything was lit up by
    a joyous, self-satisfied, youthful, and constant smile of animation,
    and by the wonderful classic beauty of her figure, his face on the
    contrary was dulled by imbecility and a constant expression of
    sullen self-confidence, while his body was thin and weak. His eyes,
    nose, and mouth all seemed puckered into a vacant, wearied grimace,
    and his arms and legs always fell into unnatural positions.

    "It's not going to be a ghost story?" said he, sitting down beside
    the princess and hastily adjusting his lorgnette, as if without this
    instrument he could not begin to speak.

    "Why no, my dear fellow," said the astonished narrator, shrugging
    his shoulders.

    "Because I hate ghost stories," said Prince Hippolyte in a tone
    which showed that he only understood the meaning of his words after he
    had uttered them.

    He spoke with such self-confidence that his hearers could not be
    sure whether what he said was very witty or very stupid. He was
    dressed in a dark-green dress coat, knee breeches of the color of
    cuisse de nymphe effrayee, as he called it, shoes, and silk stockings.

    The vicomte told his tale very neatly. It was an anecdote, then
    current, to the effect that the Duc d'Enghien had gone secretly to
    Paris to visit Mademoiselle George; that at her house he came upon
    Bonaparte, who also enjoyed the famous actress' favors, and that in
    his presence Napoleon happened to fall into one of the fainting fits
    to which he was subject, and was thus at the duc's mercy. The latter
    spared him, and this magnanimity Bonaparte subsequently repaid by
    death.

    The story was very pretty and interesting, especially at the point
    where the rivals suddenly recognized one another; and the ladies
    looked agitated.

    "Charming!" said Anna Pavlovna with an inquiring glance at the
    little princess.

    "Charming!" whispered the little princess, sticking the needle
    into her work as if to testify that the interest and fascination of
    the story prevented her from going on with it.

    The vicomte appreciated this silent praise and smiling gratefully
    prepared to continue, but just then Anna Pavlovna, who had kept a
    watchful eye on the young man who so alarmed her, noticed that he
    was talking too loudly and vehemently with the abbe, so she hurried to
    the rescue. Pierre had managed to start a conversation with the abbe
    about the balance of power, and the latter, evidently interested by
    the young man's simple-minded eagerness, was explaining his pet
    theory. Both were talking and listening too eagerly and too naturally,
    which was why Anna Pavlovna disapproved.

    "The means are... the balance of power in Europe and the rights of
    the people," the abbe was saying. "It is only necessary for one
    powerful nation like Russia- barbaric as she is said to be- to place
    herself disinterestedly at the head of an alliance having for its
    object the maintenance of the balance of power of Europe, and it would
    save the world!"

    "But how are you to get that balance?" Pierre was beginning.

    At that moment Anna Pavlovna came up and, looking severely at
    Pierre, asked the Italian how he stood Russian climate. The
    Italian's face instantly changed and assumed an offensively
    affected, sugary expression, evidently habitual to him when conversing
    with women.

    "I am so enchanted by the brilliancy of the wit and culture of the
    society, more especially of the feminine society, in which I have
    had the honor of being received, that I have not yet had time to think
    of the climate," said he.

    Not letting the abbe and Pierre escape, Anna Pavlovna, the more
    conveniently to keep them under observation, brought them into the
    larger circle.





    CHAPTER IV


    Just then another visitor entered the drawing room: Prince Andrew
    Bolkonski, the little princess' husband. He was a very handsome
    young man, of medium height, with firm, clearcut features.
    Everything about him, from his weary, bored expression to his quiet,
    measured step, offered a most striking contrast to his quiet, little
    wife. It was evident that he not only knew everyone in the drawing
    room, but had found them to be so tiresome that it wearied him to look
    at or listen to them. And among all these faces that he found so
    tedious, none seemed to bore him so much as that of his pretty wife.
    He turned away from her with a grimace that distorted his handsome
    face, kissed Anna Pavlovna's hand, and screwing up his eyes scanned
    the whole company.

    "You are off to the war, Prince?" said Anna Pavlovna.

    "General Kutuzov," said Bolkonski, speaking French and stressing the
    last syllable of the general's name like a Frenchman, "has been
    pleased to take me as an aide-de-camp...."

    "And Lise, your wife?"

    "She will go to the country."

    "Are you not ashamed to deprive us of your charming wife?"

    "Andre," said his wife, addressing her husband in the same
    coquettish manner in which she spoke to other men, "the vicomte has
    been telling us such a tale about Mademoiselle George and Buonaparte!"

    Prince Andrew screwed up his eyes and turned away. Pierre, who
    from the moment Prince Andrew entered the room had watched him with
    glad, affectionate eyes, now came up and took his arm. Before he
    looked round Prince Andrew frowned again, expressing his annoyance
    with whoever was touching his arm, but when he saw Pierre's beaming
    face he gave him an unexpectedly kind and pleasant smile.

    "There now!... So you, too, are in the great world?" said he to
    Pierre.

    "I knew you would be here," replied Pierre. "I will come to supper
    with you. May I?" he added in a low voice so as not to disturb the
    vicomte who was continuing his story.

    "No, impossible!" said Prince Andrew, laughing and pressing Pierre's
    hand to show that there was no need to ask the question. He wished
    to say something more, but at that moment Prince Vasili and his
    daughter got up to go and the two young men rose to let them pass.

    "You must excuse me, dear Vicomte," said Prince Vasili to the
    Frenchman, holding him down by the sleeve in a friendly way to prevent
    his rising. "This unfortunate fete at the ambassador's deprives me
    of a pleasure, and obliges me to interrupt you. I am very sorry to
    leave your enchanting party," said he, turning to Anna Pavlovna.

    His daughter, Princess Helene, passed between the chairs, lightly
    holding up the folds of her dress, and the smile shone still more
    radiantly on her beautiful face. Pierre gazed at her with rapturous,
    almost frightened, eyes as she passed him.

    "Very lovely," said Prince Andrew.

    "Very," said Pierre.

    In passing Prince Vasili seized Pierre's hand and said to Anna
    Pavlovna: "Educate this bear for me! He has been staying with me a
    whole month and this is the first time I have seen him in society.
    Nothing is so necessary for a young man as the society of clever
    women."


    Anna Pavlovna smiled and promised to take Pierre in hand. She knew
    his father to be a connection of Prince Vasili's. The elderly lady who
    had been sitting with the old aunt rose hurriedly and overtook
    Prince Vasili in the anteroom. All the affectation of interest she had
    assumed had left her kindly and tearworn face and it now expressed
    only anxiety and fear.

    "How about my son Boris, Prince?" said she, hurrying after him
    into the anteroom. "I can't remain any longer in Petersburg. Tell me
    what news I may take back to my poor boy."

    Although Prince Vasili listened reluctantly and not very politely to
    the elderly lady, even betraying some impatience, she gave him an
    ingratiating and appealing smile, and took his hand that he might
    not go away.

    "What would it cost you to say a word to the Emperor, and then he
    would be transferred to the Guards at once?" said she.

    "Believe me, Princess, I am ready to do all I can," answered
    Prince Vasili, "but it is difficult for me to ask the Emperor. I
    should advise you to appeal to Rumyantsev through Prince Golitsyn.
    That would be the best way."

    The elderly lady was a Princess Drubetskaya, belonging to one of the
    best families in Russia, but she was poor, and having long been out of
    society had lost her former influential connections. She had now
    come to Petersburg to procure an appointment in the Guards for her
    only son. It was, in fact, solely to meet Prince Vasili that she had
    obtained an invitation to Anna Pavlovna's reception and had sat
    listening to the vicomte's story. Prince Vasili's words frightened
    her, an embittered look clouded her once handsome face, but only for a
    moment; then she smiled again and dutched Prince Vasili's arm more
    tightly.

    "Listen to me, Prince," said she. "I have never yet asked you for
    anything and I never will again, nor have I ever reminded you of my
    father's friendship for you; but now I entreat you for God's sake to
    do this for my son- and I shall always regard you as a benefactor,"
    she added hurriedly. "No, don't be angry, but promise! I have asked
    Golitsyn and he has refused. Be the kindhearted man you always
    were," she said, trying to smile though tears were in her eyes.

    "Papa, we shall be late," said Princess Helene, turning her
    beautiful head and looking over her classically molded shoulder as she
    stood waiting by the door.

    Influence in society, however, is a capital which has to be
    economized if it is to last. Prince Vasili knew this, and having
    once realized that if he asked on behalf of all who begged of him,
    he would soon be unable to ask for himself, he became chary of using
    his influence. But in Princess Drubetskaya's case he felt, after her
    second appeal, something like qualms of conscience. She had reminded
    him of what was quite true; he had been indebted to her father for the
    first steps in his career. Moreover, he could see by her manners
    that she was one of those women- mostly mothers- who, having once made
    up their minds, will not rest until they have gained their end, and
    are prepared if necessary to go on insisting day after day and hour
    after hour, and even to make scenes. This last consideration moved
    him.

    "My dear Anna Mikhaylovna," said he with his usual familiarity and
    weariness of tone, "it is almost impossible for me to do what you ask;
    but to prove my devotion to you and how I respect your father's
    memory, I will do the impossible- your son shall be transferred to the
    Guards. Here is my hand on it. Are you satisfied?"

    "My dear benefactor! This is what I expected from you- I knew your
    kindness!" He turned to go.

    "Wait- just a word! When he has been transferred to the Guards..."
    she faltered. "You are on good terms with Michael Ilarionovich
    Kutuzov... recommend Boris to him as adjutant! Then I shall be at
    rest, and then..."

    Prince Vasili smiled.

    "No, I won't promise that. You don't know how Kutuzov is pestered
    since his appointment as Commander in Chief. He told me himself that
    all the Moscow ladies have conspired to give him all their sons as
    adjutants."

    "No, but do promise! I won't let you go! My dear benefactor..."

    "Papa," said his beautiful daughter in the same tone as before,
    "we shall be late."

    "Well, au revoir! Good-by! You hear her?"

    "Then tomorrow you will speak to the Emperor?"

    "Certainly; but about Kutuzov, I don't promise."

    "Do promise, do promise, Vasili!" cried Anna Mikhaylovna as he went,
    with the smile of a coquettish girl, which at one time probably came
    naturally to her, but was now very ill-suited to her careworn face.

    Apparently she had forgotten her age and by force of habit
    employed all the old feminine arts. But as soon as the prince had gone
    her face resumed its former cold, artificial expression. She
    returned to the group where the vicomte was still talking, and again
    pretended to listen, while waiting till it would be time to leave. Her
    task was accomplished.





    CHAPTER V


    "And what do you think of this latest comedy, the coronation at
    Milan?" asked Anna Pavlovna, "and of the comedy of the people of Genoa
    and Lucca laying their pe ions before Monsieur Buonaparte, and
    Monsieur Buonaparte sitting on a throne and granting the pe ions
    of the nations? Adorable! It is enough to make one's head whirl! It is
    as if the whole world had gone crazy."

    Prince Andrew looked Anna Pavlovna straight in the face with a
    sarcastic smile.

    "'Dieu me la donne, gare a qui la touche!'* They say he was very
    fine when he said that," he remarked, repeating the words in
    Italian: "'Dio mi l'ha dato. Guai a chi la tocchi!'"


    *God has given it to me, let him who touches it beware!


    "I hope this will prove the last drop that will make the glass run
    over," Anna Pavlovna continued. "The sovereigns will not be able to
    endure this man who is a menace to everything."

    "The sovereigns? I do not speak of Russia," said the vicomte, polite
    but hopeless: "The sovereigns, madame... What have they done for Louis
    XVII, for the Queen, or for Madame Elizabeth? Nothing!" and he
    became more animated. "And believe me, they are reaping the reward
    of their betrayal of the Bourbon cause. The sovereigns! Why, they
    are sending ambassadors to compliment the usurper."

    And sighing disdainfully, he again changed his position.

    Prince Hippolyte, who had been gazing at the vicomte for some time
    through his lorgnette, suddenly turned completely round toward the
    little princess, and having asked for a needle began tracing the Conde
    coat of arms on the table. He explained this to her with as much
    gravity as if she had asked him to do it.

    "Baton de gueules, engrele de gueules d' azur- maison Conde," said
    he.

    The princess listened, smiling.

    "If Buonaparte remains on the throne of France a year longer," the
    vicomte continued, with the air of a man who, in a matter with which
    he is better acquainted than anyone else, does not listen to others
    but follows the current of his own thoughts, "things will have gone
    too far. By intrigues, violence, exile, and executions, French
    society- I mean good French society- will have been forever destroyed,
    and then..."

    He shrugged his shoulders and spread out his hands. Pierre wished to
    make a remark, for the conversation interested him, but Anna Pavlovna,
    who had him under observation, interrupted:

    "The Emperor Alexander," said she, with the melancholy which
    always accompanied any reference of hers to the Imperial family,
    "has declared that he will leave it to the French people themselves to
    choose their own form of government; and I believe that once free from
    the usurper, the whole nation will certainly throw itself into the
    arms of its rightful king," she concluded, trying to be amiable to the
    royalist emigrant.

    "That is doubtful," said Prince Andrew. "Monsieur le Vicomte quite
    rightly supposes that matters have already gone too far. I think it
    will be difficult to return to the old regime."

    "From what I have heard," said Pierre, blushing and breaking into
    the conversation, "almost all the aristocracy has already gone over to
    Bonaparte's side."

    "It is the Buonapartists who say that," replied the vicomte
    without looking at Pierre. "At the present time it is difficult to
    know the real state of French public opinion.

    "Bonaparte has said so," remarked Prince Andrew with a sarcastic
    smile.

    It was evident that he did not like the vicomte and was aiming his
    remarks at him, though without looking at him.

    "'I showed them the path to glory, but they did not follow it,'"
    Prince Andrew continued after a short silence, again quoting
    Napoleon's words. "'I opened my antechambers and they crowded in.' I
    do not know how far he was justified in saying so."

    "Not in the least," replied the vicomte. "After the murder of the
    duc even the most partial ceased to regard him as a hero. If to some
    people," he went on, turning to Anna Pavlovna, "he ever was a hero,
    after the murder of the duc there was one martyr more in heaven and
    one hero less on earth."

    Before Anna Pavlovna and the others had time to smile their
    appreciation of the vicomte's epigram, Pierre again broke into the
    conversation, and though Anna Pavlovna felt sure he would say
    something inappropriate, she was unable to stop him.

    "The execution of the Duc d'Enghien," declared Monsieur Pierre, "was
    a political necessity, and it seems to me that Napoleon showed
    greatness of soul by not fearing to take on himself the whole
    responsibility of that deed."

    "Dieu! Mon Dieu!" muttered Anna Pavlovna in a terrified whisper.

    "What, Monsieur Pierre... Do you consider that assassination shows
    greatness of soul?" said the little princess, smiling and drawing
    her work nearer to her.

    "Oh! Oh!" exclaimed several voices.

    "Capital!" said Prince Hippolyte in English, and began slapping
    his knee with the palm of his hand.

    The vicomte merely shrugged his shoulders. Pierre looked solemnly at
    his audience over his spectacles and continued.

    "I say so," he continued desperately, "because the Bourbons fled
    from the Revolution leaving the people to anarchy, and Napoleon
    alone understood the Revolution and quelled it, and so for the general
    good, he could not stop short for the sake of one man's life."

    "Won't you come over to the other table?" suggested Anna Pavlovna.

    But Pierre continued his speech without heeding her.

    "No," cried he, becoming more and more eager, "Napoleon is great
    because he rose superior to the Revolution, suppressed its abuses,
    preserved all that was good in it- equality of citizenship and freedom
    of speech and of the press- and only for that reason did he obtain
    power."

    "Yes, if having obtained power, without availing himself of it to
    commit murder he had restored it to the rightful king, I should have
    called him a great man," remarked the vicomte.

    "He could not do that. The people only gave him power that he
    might rid them of the Bourbons and because they saw that he was a
    great man. The Revolution was a grand thing!" continued Monsieur
    Pierre, betraying by this desperate and provocative proposition his
    extreme youth and his wish to express all that was in his mind.

    "What? Revolution and regicide a grand thing?... Well, after that...
    But won't you come to this other table?" repeated Anna Pavlovna.

    "Rousseau's Contrat social," said the vicomte with a tolerant smile.

    "I am not speaking of regicide, I am speaking about ideas."

    "Yes: ideas of robbery, murder, and regicide," again interjected
    an ironical voice.

    "Those were extremes, no doubt, but they are not what is most
    important. What is important are the rights of man, emancipation
    from prejudices, and equality of citizenship, and all these ideas
    Napoleon has retained in full force."

    "Liberty and equality," said the vicomte contemptuously, as if at
    last deciding seriously to prove to this youth how foolish his words
    were, "high-sounding words which have long been discredited. Who
    does not love liberty and equality? Even our Saviour preached
    liberty and equality. Have people since the Revolution become happier?
    On the contrary. We wanted liberty, but Buonaparte has destroyed it."

    Prince Andrew kept looking with an amused smile from Pierre to the
    vicomte and from the vicomte to their hostess. In the first moment
    of Pierre's outburst Anna Pavlovna, despite her social experience, was
    horror-struck. But when she saw that Pierre's sacrilegious words had
    not exasperated the vicomte, and had convinced herself that it was
    impossible to stop him, she rallied her forces and joined the
    vicomte in a vigorous attack on the orator.

    "But, my dear Monsieur Pierre," said she, "how do you explain the
    fact of a great man executing a duc- or even an ordinary man who- is
    innocent and untried?"

    "I should like," said the vicomte, "to ask how monsieur explains the
    18th Brumaire; was not that an imposture? It was a swindle, and not at
    all like the conduct of a great man!"

    "And the prisoners he killed in Africa? That was horrible!" said the
    little princess, shrugging her shoulders.

    "He's a low fellow, say what you will," remarked Prince Hippolyte.

    Pierre, not knowing whom to answer, looked at them all and smiled.
    His smile was unlike the half-smile of other people. When he smiled,
    his grave, even rather gloomy, look was instantaneously replaced by
    another- a childlike, kindly, even rather silly look, which seemed
    to ask forgiveness.

    The vicomte who was meeting him for the first time saw clearly
    that this young Jacobin was not so terrible as his words suggested.
    All were silent.

    "How do you expect him to answer you all at once?" said Prince
    Andrew. "Besides, in the actions of a statesman one has to distinguish
    between his acts as a private person, as a general, and as an emperor.
    So it seems to me."

    "Yes, yes, of course!" Pierre chimed in, pleased at the arrival of
    this reinforcement.

    "One must admit," continued Prince Andrew, "that Napoleon as a man
    was great on the bridge of Arcola, and in the hospital at Jaffa
    where he gave his hand to the plague-stricken; but... but there are
    other acts which it is difficult to justify."

    Prince Andrew, who had evidently wished to tone down the awkwardness
    of Pierre's remarks, rose and made a sign to his wife that it was time
    to go.


    Suddenly Prince Hippolyte started up making signs to everyone to
    attend, and asking them all to be seated began:

    "I was told a charming Moscow story today and must treat you to
    it. Excuse me, Vicomte- I must tell it in Russian or the point will be
    lost...." And Prince Hippolyte began to tell his story in such Russian
    as a Frenchman would speak after spending about a year in Russia.
    Everyone waited, so emphatically and eagerly did he demand their
    attention to his story.

    "There is in Moscow a lady, une dame, and she is very stingy. She
    must have two footmen behind her carriage, and very big ones. That was
    her taste. And she had a lady's maid, also big. She said..."

    Here Prince Hippolyte paused, evidently collecting his ideas with
    difficulty.

    "She said... Oh yes! She said, 'Girl,' to the maid, 'put on a
    livery, get up behind the carriage, and come with me while I make some
    calls.'"

    Here Prince Hippolyte spluttered and burst out laughing long
    before his audience, which produced an effect unfavorable to the
    narrator. Several persons, among them the elderly lady and Anna
    Pavlovna, did however smile.

    "She went. Suddenly there was a great wind. The girl lost her hat
    and her long hair came down...." Here he could contain himself no
    longer and went on, between gasps of laughter: "And the whole world
    knew...."

    And so the anecdote ended. Though it was unintelligible why he had
    told it, or why it had to be told in Russian, still Anna Pavlovna
    and the others appreciated Prince Hippolyte's social tact in so
    agreeably ending Pierre's unpleasant and unamiable outburst. After the
    anecdote the conversation broke up into insignificant small talk about
    the last and next balls, about theatricals, and who would meet whom,
    and when and where.
    I agree with you stretch, this is good stuff.

  12. #1187
    Banned
    Location
    Miami
    Post Count
    7,516
    NBA Team
    Miami Heat
    Click on words for link.


    Claim #1 - Isis was not a virgin

    First, we have to understand how the ancient egyptians lived. They worshipped over 2,000 Gods. They had different versions/accounts/stories for the same Gods in different areas around Egypt. They did not have -1- canonical religion like you are familiar with. When you read an account of Horus' birth, just remember you are reading one account. There are several different stories.

    ALL of the Horus birth stories involve a miraculous birth.

    1) In one account, Isis is impregnated by "a flash of lightning" and in another account "begotten by a ray of light from heaven". She gives birth to Horus/Apis. Apis is an Egyptian Bull God that is another form of Osiris, they are associated as one and the same. He is most famous for being worshipped by the Israelites as a "Golden Calf" after they leave Egypt and while Moses is on Mt. Sinai.

    So. Isis gives birth to Apis (Osiris/Horus) "begotten by a ray of light from heaven". Virgin birth.

    There are more accounts, however, but they all involve some sort of miraculous birth. The one I have given however, is a virgin birth.

    There is even many accounts of Virgin Queens and Mothers, such as Mut-Em-Usa, the VIRGIN QUEEN OF EGYPT.

    You have heard of the QUEEN OF SHEEBA. She was famous for her chas y aka VIRGINITY. She ruled Ethiopia, which would be part of Egypt, around 960 BC.

    Virgin women of importance is nothing new to the Egyptians.


    Claim #2 - Isis-Meri does not exist so it didn't influence "Mary"

    Isis is one of the original Mother Goddess. She too, had many forms. She was worshipped for THOUSANDS of years and was only surpassed by the Virgin Mary.

    Isis is not her ONLY name obviously, since the egyptians worshipped many forms of Isis, the Mother Goddess.
    'Goddess of Many Names' / 'Queen of the Gods'

    She is also known as Aset, Ast, Est, Meri-En-Sakar, and many others.

    One of Isis' forms was the Goddess of Nature and Harvest - MERI-EN-SAKAR. They are all forms of ISIS, the Mother.

    Isis ultimately absorbed and represented hundreds of different goddesses, all forms of the Mother, ISIS. Her worship survived until around the 6th century CE.


    Claim #3 - The 'Mother of God' Mary in Christianity did not copy/borrow/steal from Isis the Mother of God

    To quote from this source :

    "When Christianity was spreading across the Empire, it's clear that it deliberately took images from the pagan world in which it lived and into which it spread and used those images. Old holy wells and shrines were turned into Christian shrines. In Egypt a shrine of Isis was deliberately and self-consciously re-created as a shrine of Mary."



    The connections are so similar, sometimes scholars can't even tell if they are looking at Mary or Isis.



    Claim #4 - December 25 was not celebrated by Ancient Egyptians as the birth of Horus/Osiris

    This is an Ancient Egyptian Calendar

    "Birth of Heru (Horus) the child of Aset (Isis) ; Going forth of Wadjet singing in Heliopolis;Day of Elevating the Great Netjert (Goddess) in all Her names & manifestations"


    Jesus' birth day is NEVER mentioned in the Bible, however it too is celebrated on Dec. 25th once again, to coincide with this ancient worship of the Sun. The date was chosen to occur on the same date as the birth of Horus, Mithra, Dionysus and the Sol Invictus (unconquerable Sun), etc.


    Claim #5 - Horus' birth is not heralded by a Star in the East as Jesus was

    The Star in the East is known as Sirius. Sirius is the brightest star in the sky, almost twice as bright as the next brightest star. Sirius was an important star for the ancient egyptians. They based their calendar around Siirus. They called it "the going up of the goddess Sothis". Sothis/Sirius has always been identified with Isis.

    Ok. So, the Star in The East/Isis heralds the birth of the Sun/Son of God Horus.


    Claim #6 - Isis/Horus/Osiris are not the original "holy trinity"

    Isis is the Mother of God, the Great Mother Goddess.
    Horus is the Son of Osiris/ Son of God
    Osiris is the Father, "Judge of the Dead in the Afterlife"

    Yeah. Apparently, Osiris was judging the dead well before Jehovah.

    They are the original Holy Trinity.

    Osiris' worship was still widespread until around 388 CE, when Theodosius (the last roman emperor) declared Nicene Christianity the official state religion and began punishing all other religious practices.

  13. #1188
    Banned
    Location
    Miami
    Post Count
    7,516
    NBA Team
    Miami Heat
    Click on words for link.


    Claim #1 - Isis was not a virgin

    First, we have to understand how the ancient egyptians lived. They worshipped over 2,000 Gods. They had different versions/accounts/stories for the same Gods in different areas around Egypt. They did not have -1- canonical religion like you are familiar with. When you read an account of Horus' birth, just remember you are reading one account. There are several different stories.

    ALL of the Horus birth stories involve a miraculous birth.

    1) In one account, Isis is impregnated by "a flash of lightning" and in another account "begotten by a ray of light from heaven". She gives birth to Horus/Apis. Apis is an Egyptian Bull God that is another form of Osiris, they are associated as one and the same. He is most famous for being worshipped by the Israelites as a "Golden Calf" after they leave Egypt and while Moses is on Mt. Sinai.

    So. Isis gives birth to Apis (Osiris/Horus) "begotten by a ray of light from heaven". Virgin birth.

    There are more accounts, however, but they all involve some sort of miraculous birth. The one I have given however, is a virgin birth.

    There is even many accounts of Virgin Queens and Mothers, such as Mut-Em-Usa, the VIRGIN QUEEN OF EGYPT.

    You have heard of the QUEEN OF SHEEBA. She was famous for her chas y aka VIRGINITY. She ruled Ethiopia, which would be part of Egypt, around 960 BC.

    Virgin women of importance is nothing new to the Egyptians.


    Claim #2 - Isis-Meri does not exist so it didn't influence "Mary"

    Isis is one of the original Mother Goddess. She too, had many forms. She was worshipped for THOUSANDS of years and was only surpassed by the Virgin Mary.

    Isis is not her ONLY name obviously, since the egyptians worshipped many forms of Isis, the Mother Goddess.
    'Goddess of Many Names' / 'Queen of the Gods'

    She is also known as Aset, Ast, Est, Meri-En-Sakar, and many others.

    One of Isis' forms was the Goddess of Nature and Harvest - MERI-EN-SAKAR. They are all forms of ISIS, the Mother.

    Isis ultimately absorbed and represented hundreds of different goddesses, all forms of the Mother, ISIS. Her worship survived until around the 6th century CE.


    Claim #3 - The 'Mother of God' Mary in Christianity did not copy/borrow/steal from Isis the Mother of God

    To quote from this source :

    "When Christianity was spreading across the Empire, it's clear that it deliberately took images from the pagan world in which it lived and into which it spread and used those images. Old holy wells and shrines were turned into Christian shrines. In Egypt a shrine of Isis was deliberately and self-consciously re-created as a shrine of Mary."



    The connections are so similar, sometimes scholars can't even tell if they are looking at Mary or Isis.



    Claim #4 - December 25 was not celebrated by Ancient Egyptians as the birth of Horus/Osiris

    This is an Ancient Egyptian Calendar

    "Birth of Heru (Horus) the child of Aset (Isis) ; Going forth of Wadjet singing in Heliopolis;Day of Elevating the Great Netjert (Goddess) in all Her names & manifestations"


    Jesus' birth day is NEVER mentioned in the Bible, however it too is celebrated on Dec. 25th once again, to coincide with this ancient worship of the Sun. The date was chosen to occur on the same date as the birth of Horus, Mithra, Dionysus and the Sol Invictus (unconquerable Sun), etc.


    Claim #5 - Horus' birth is not heralded by a Star in the East as Jesus was

    The Star in the East is known as Sirius. Sirius is the brightest star in the sky, almost twice as bright as the next brightest star. Sirius was an important star for the ancient egyptians. They based their calendar around Siirus. They called it "the going up of the goddess Sothis". Sothis/Sirius has always been identified with Isis.

    Ok. So, the Star in The East/Isis heralds the birth of the Sun/Son of God Horus.


    Claim #6 - Isis/Horus/Osiris are not the original "holy trinity"

    Isis is the Mother of God, the Great Mother Goddess.
    Horus is the Son of Osiris/ Son of God
    Osiris is the Father, "Judge of the Dead in the Afterlife"

    Yeah. Apparently, Osiris was judging the dead well before Jehovah.

    They are the original Holy Trinity.

    Osiris' worship was still widespread until around 388 CE, when Theodosius (the last roman emperor) declared Nicene Christianity the official state religion and began punishing all other religious practices.

  14. #1189
    Banned
    Location
    Miami
    Post Count
    7,516
    NBA Team
    Miami Heat
    page 47

    Click on words for link.


    Claim #1 - Isis was not a virgin

    First, we have to understand how the ancient egyptians lived. They worshipped over 2,000 Gods. They had different versions/accounts/stories for the same Gods in different areas around Egypt. They did not have -1- canonical religion like you are familiar with. When you read an account of Horus' birth, just remember you are reading one account. There are several different stories.

    ALL of the Horus birth stories involve a miraculous birth.

    1) In one account, Isis is impregnated by "a flash of lightning" and in another account "begotten by a ray of light from heaven". She gives birth to Horus/Apis. Apis is an Egyptian Bull God that is another form of Osiris, they are associated as one and the same. He is most famous for being worshipped by the Israelites as a "Golden Calf" after they leave Egypt and while Moses is on Mt. Sinai.

    So. Isis gives birth to Apis (Osiris/Horus) "begotten by a ray of light from heaven". Virgin birth.

    There are more accounts, however, but they all involve some sort of miraculous birth. The one I have given however, is a virgin birth.

    There is even many accounts of Virgin Queens and Mothers, such as Mut-Em-Usa, the VIRGIN QUEEN OF EGYPT.

    You have heard of the QUEEN OF SHEEBA. She was famous for her chas y aka VIRGINITY. She ruled Ethiopia, which would be part of Egypt, around 960 BC.

    Virgin women of importance is nothing new to the Egyptians.


    Claim #2 - Isis-Meri does not exist so it didn't influence "Mary"

    Isis is one of the original Mother Goddess. She too, had many forms. She was worshipped for THOUSANDS of years and was only surpassed by the Virgin Mary.

    Isis is not her ONLY name obviously, since the egyptians worshipped many forms of Isis, the Mother Goddess.
    'Goddess of Many Names' / 'Queen of the Gods'

    She is also known as Aset, Ast, Est, Meri-En-Sakar, and many others.

    One of Isis' forms was the Goddess of Nature and Harvest - MERI-EN-SAKAR. They are all forms of ISIS, the Mother.

    Isis ultimately absorbed and represented hundreds of different goddesses, all forms of the Mother, ISIS. Her worship survived until around the 6th century CE.


    Claim #3 - The 'Mother of God' Mary in Christianity did not copy/borrow/steal from Isis the Mother of God

    To quote from this source :

    "When Christianity was spreading across the Empire, it's clear that it deliberately took images from the pagan world in which it lived and into which it spread and used those images. Old holy wells and shrines were turned into Christian shrines. In Egypt a shrine of Isis was deliberately and self-consciously re-created as a shrine of Mary."



    The connections are so similar, sometimes scholars can't even tell if they are looking at Mary or Isis.



    Claim #4 - December 25 was not celebrated by Ancient Egyptians as the birth of Horus/Osiris

    This is an Ancient Egyptian Calendar

    "Birth of Heru (Horus) the child of Aset (Isis) ; Going forth of Wadjet singing in Heliopolis;Day of Elevating the Great Netjert (Goddess) in all Her names & manifestations"


    Jesus' birth day is NEVER mentioned in the Bible, however it too is celebrated on Dec. 25th once again, to coincide with this ancient worship of the Sun. The date was chosen to occur on the same date as the birth of Horus, Mithra, Dionysus and the Sol Invictus (unconquerable Sun), etc.


    Claim #5 - Horus' birth is not heralded by a Star in the East as Jesus was

    The Star in the East is known as Sirius. Sirius is the brightest star in the sky, almost twice as bright as the next brightest star. Sirius was an important star for the ancient egyptians. They based their calendar around Siirus. They called it "the going up of the goddess Sothis". Sothis/Sirius has always been identified with Isis.

    Ok. So, the Star in The East/Isis heralds the birth of the Sun/Son of God Horus.


    Claim #6 - Isis/Horus/Osiris are not the original "holy trinity"

    Isis is the Mother of God, the Great Mother Goddess.
    Horus is the Son of Osiris/ Son of God
    Osiris is the Father, "Judge of the Dead in the Afterlife"

    Yeah. Apparently, Osiris was judging the dead well before Jehovah.

    They are the original Holy Trinity.

    Osiris' worship was still widespread until around 388 CE, when Theodosius (the last roman emperor) declared Nicene Christianity the official state religion and began punishing all other religious practices.

  15. #1190
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    page 47 please

    Click on words for link.


    Claim #1 - Isis was not a virgin

    First, we have to understand how the ancient egyptians lived. They worshipped over 2,000 Gods. They had different versions/accounts/stories for the same Gods in different areas around Egypt. They did not have -1- canonical religion like you are familiar with. When you read an account of Horus' birth, just remember you are reading one account. There are several different stories.

    ALL of the Horus birth stories involve a miraculous birth.

    1) In one account, Isis is impregnated by "a flash of lightning" and in another account "begotten by a ray of light from heaven". She gives birth to Horus/Apis. Apis is an Egyptian Bull God that is another form of Osiris, they are associated as one and the same. He is most famous for being worshipped by the Israelites as a "Golden Calf" after they leave Egypt and while Moses is on Mt. Sinai.

    So. Isis gives birth to Apis (Osiris/Horus) "begotten by a ray of light from heaven". Virgin birth.

    There are more accounts, however, but they all involve some sort of miraculous birth. The one I have given however, is a virgin birth.

    There is even many accounts of Virgin Queens and Mothers, such as Mut-Em-Usa, the VIRGIN QUEEN OF EGYPT.

    You have heard of the QUEEN OF SHEEBA. She was famous for her chas y aka VIRGINITY. She ruled Ethiopia, which would be part of Egypt, around 960 BC.

    Virgin women of importance is nothing new to the Egyptians.


    Claim #2 - Isis-Meri does not exist so it didn't influence "Mary"

    Isis is one of the original Mother Goddess. She too, had many forms. She was worshipped for THOUSANDS of years and was only surpassed by the Virgin Mary.

    Isis is not her ONLY name obviously, since the egyptians worshipped many forms of Isis, the Mother Goddess.
    'Goddess of Many Names' / 'Queen of the Gods'

    She is also known as Aset, Ast, Est, Meri-En-Sakar, and many others.

    One of Isis' forms was the Goddess of Nature and Harvest - MERI-EN-SAKAR. They are all forms of ISIS, the Mother.

    Isis ultimately absorbed and represented hundreds of different goddesses, all forms of the Mother, ISIS. Her worship survived until around the 6th century CE.


    Claim #3 - The 'Mother of God' Mary in Christianity did not copy/borrow/steal from Isis the Mother of God

    To quote from this source :

    "When Christianity was spreading across the Empire, it's clear that it deliberately took images from the pagan world in which it lived and into which it spread and used those images. Old holy wells and shrines were turned into Christian shrines. In Egypt a shrine of Isis was deliberately and self-consciously re-created as a shrine of Mary."



    The connections are so similar, sometimes scholars can't even tell if they are looking at Mary or Isis.



    Claim #4 - December 25 was not celebrated by Ancient Egyptians as the birth of Horus/Osiris

    This is an Ancient Egyptian Calendar

    "Birth of Heru (Horus) the child of Aset (Isis) ; Going forth of Wadjet singing in Heliopolis;Day of Elevating the Great Netjert (Goddess) in all Her names & manifestations"


    Jesus' birth day is NEVER mentioned in the Bible, however it too is celebrated on Dec. 25th once again, to coincide with this ancient worship of the Sun. The date was chosen to occur on the same date as the birth of Horus, Mithra, Dionysus and the Sol Invictus (unconquerable Sun), etc.


    Claim #5 - Horus' birth is not heralded by a Star in the East as Jesus was

    The Star in the East is known as Sirius. Sirius is the brightest star in the sky, almost twice as bright as the next brightest star. Sirius was an important star for the ancient egyptians. They based their calendar around Siirus. They called it "the going up of the goddess Sothis". Sothis/Sirius has always been identified with Isis.

    Ok. So, the Star in The East/Isis heralds the birth of the Sun/Son of God Horus.


    Claim #6 - Isis/Horus/Osiris are not the original "holy trinity"

    Isis is the Mother of God, the Great Mother Goddess.
    Horus is the Son of Osiris/ Son of God
    Osiris is the Father, "Judge of the Dead in the Afterlife"

    Yeah. Apparently, Osiris was judging the dead well before Jehovah.

    They are the original Holy Trinity.

    Osiris' worship was still widespread until around 388 CE, when Theodosius (the last roman emperor) declared Nicene Christianity the official state religion and began punishing all other religious practices.

  16. #1191
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    page 47 yet?

  17. #1192
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    still no page 47?


    Click on words for link.


    Claim #1 - Isis was not a virgin

    First, we have to understand how the ancient egyptians lived. They worshipped over 2,000 Gods. They had different versions/accounts/stories for the same Gods in different areas around Egypt. They did not have -1- canonical religion like you are familiar with. When you read an account of Horus' birth, just remember you are reading one account. There are several different stories.

    ALL of the Horus birth stories involve a miraculous birth.

    1) In one account, Isis is impregnated by "a flash of lightning" and in another account "begotten by a ray of light from heaven". She gives birth to Horus/Apis. Apis is an Egyptian Bull God that is another form of Osiris, they are associated as one and the same. He is most famous for being worshipped by the Israelites as a "Golden Calf" after they leave Egypt and while Moses is on Mt. Sinai.

    So. Isis gives birth to Apis (Osiris/Horus) "begotten by a ray of light from heaven". Virgin birth.

    There are more accounts, however, but they all involve some sort of miraculous birth. The one I have given however, is a virgin birth.

    There is even many accounts of Virgin Queens and Mothers, such as Mut-Em-Usa, the VIRGIN QUEEN OF EGYPT.

    You have heard of the QUEEN OF SHEEBA. She was famous for her chas y aka VIRGINITY. She ruled Ethiopia, which would be part of Egypt, around 960 BC.

    Virgin women of importance is nothing new to the Egyptians.


    Claim #2 - Isis-Meri does not exist so it didn't influence "Mary"

    Isis is one of the original Mother Goddess. She too, had many forms. She was worshipped for THOUSANDS of years and was only surpassed by the Virgin Mary.

    Isis is not her ONLY name obviously, since the egyptians worshipped many forms of Isis, the Mother Goddess.
    'Goddess of Many Names' / 'Queen of the Gods'

    She is also known as Aset, Ast, Est, Meri-En-Sakar, and many others.

    One of Isis' forms was the Goddess of Nature and Harvest - MERI-EN-SAKAR. They are all forms of ISIS, the Mother.

    Isis ultimately absorbed and represented hundreds of different goddesses, all forms of the Mother, ISIS. Her worship survived until around the 6th century CE.


    Claim #3 - The 'Mother of God' Mary in Christianity did not copy/borrow/steal from Isis the Mother of God

    To quote from this source :

    "When Christianity was spreading across the Empire, it's clear that it deliberately took images from the pagan world in which it lived and into which it spread and used those images. Old holy wells and shrines were turned into Christian shrines. In Egypt a shrine of Isis was deliberately and self-consciously re-created as a shrine of Mary."



    The connections are so similar, sometimes scholars can't even tell if they are looking at Mary or Isis.



    Claim #4 - December 25 was not celebrated by Ancient Egyptians as the birth of Horus/Osiris

    This is an Ancient Egyptian Calendar

    "Birth of Heru (Horus) the child of Aset (Isis) ; Going forth of Wadjet singing in Heliopolis;Day of Elevating the Great Netjert (Goddess) in all Her names & manifestations"


    Jesus' birth day is NEVER mentioned in the Bible, however it too is celebrated on Dec. 25th once again, to coincide with this ancient worship of the Sun. The date was chosen to occur on the same date as the birth of Horus, Mithra, Dionysus and the Sol Invictus (unconquerable Sun), etc.


    Claim #5 - Horus' birth is not heralded by a Star in the East as Jesus was

    The Star in the East is known as Sirius. Sirius is the brightest star in the sky, almost twice as bright as the next brightest star. Sirius was an important star for the ancient egyptians. They based their calendar around Siirus. They called it "the going up of the goddess Sothis". Sothis/Sirius has always been identified with Isis.

    Ok. So, the Star in The East/Isis heralds the birth of the Sun/Son of God Horus.


    Claim #6 - Isis/Horus/Osiris are not the original "holy trinity"

    Isis is the Mother of God, the Great Mother Goddess.
    Horus is the Son of Osiris/ Son of God
    Osiris is the Father, "Judge of the Dead in the Afterlife"

    Yeah. Apparently, Osiris was judging the dead well before Jehovah.

    They are the original Holy Trinity.

    Osiris' worship was still widespread until around 388 CE, when Theodosius (the last roman emperor) declared Nicene Christianity the official state religion and began punishing all other religious practices.

  18. #1193
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    how's that for spamming?

  19. #1194
    I love J.T. smeagol's Avatar
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    anyone still want to argue these aren't facts?
    All I see when I read your posts is that there were dozens of civilizations before the Jews, and each civilization had hundreds of God-stories (you even mention the fact that some God-stories had several iterations).

    You are bound to find similarities between those thousands of stories that came before Christ, and the story of Christ.

    That does not mean that the story of Christ is a copy of other stories.

  20. #1195
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    Let me start by saying that I don't remember making 5 out of these 6 claims, but for argument's sake I'll address them anyway

    Let's take a look at claims made by those who deny the facts :

    Click on words for link.


    Claim #1 - Isis was not a virgin

    First, we have to understand how the ancient egyptians lived. They worshipped over 2,000 Gods. They had different versions/accounts/stories for the same Gods in different areas around Egypt. They did not have -1- canonical religion like you are familiar with. When you read an account of Horus' birth, just remember you are reading one account. There are several different stories.

    ALL of the Horus birth stories involve a miraculous birth.

    1) In one account, Isis is impregnated by "a flash of lightning" and in another account "begotten by a ray of light from heaven". She gives birth to Horus/Apis. Apis is an Egyptian Bull God that is another form of Osiris, they are associated as one and the same. He is most famous for being worshipped by the Israelites as a "Golden Calf" after they leave Egypt and while Moses is on Mt. Sinai.

    So. Isis gives birth to Apis (Osiris/Horus) "begotten by a ray of light from heaven". Virgin birth.

    There are more accounts, however, but they all involve some sort of miraculous birth. The one I have given however, is a virgin birth.

    There is even many accounts of Virgin Queens and Mothers, such as Mut-Em-Usa, the VIRGIN QUEEN OF EGYPT.

    You have heard of the QUEEN OF SHEEBA. She was famous for her chas y aka VIRGINITY. She ruled Ethiopia, which would be part of Egypt, around 960 BC.

    Virgin women of importance is nothing new to the Egyptians.
    This is really the only claim I made, questioning the virginity of Isis, in relation to the claim MH made in his original posting of these issues of a 'virgin birth'.

    For clarity, let's go ahead and make sure that we are on the same page when we are discussing a virgin. A virgin is someone who has not experienced sexual intercourse, so a virgin birth is one in which a virgin gives birth. Considering the fact that Isis and Osiris were married prior to the alleged miraculous conception of Horus gives considerable doubt to the 'virginity' of Isis at the time of conception.

    However, even if her virginity were in tact (which it most like was not) the similarities between the cir stances surrounding the conception of Horus (in any account) are not all that similar to the account of Mary. In most pagan cases (including the one discussed right now), the divine male (Osiris in this case) in human or other form, impregnates the woman through normal sexual intercourse of (to put it frankly) vaginal penetration. In Mary's case, the gospels speak clearly of her virginity, and make no mention of a divine male mating (in any form) with Mary, but rather the she would "conceive in her womb."


    Claim #2 - Isis-Meri does not exist so it didn't influence "Mary"

    Isis is one of the original Mother Goddess. She too, had many forms. She was worshipped for THOUSANDS of years and was only surpassed by the Virgin Mary.

    Isis is not her ONLY name obviously, since the egyptians worshipped many forms of Isis, the Mother Goddess.
    'Goddess of Many Names' / 'Queen of the Gods'

    She is also known as Aset, Ast, Est, Meri-En-Sakar, and many others.

    One of Isis' forms was the Goddess of Nature and Harvest - MERI-EN-SAKAR. They are all forms of ISIS, the Mother.

    Isis ultimately absorbed and represented hundreds of different goddesses, all forms of the Mother, ISIS. Her worship survived until around the 6th century CE.
    Not a claim I made, but your answer is ridiculous anyway. Simply put, Mary is in no way, shape, or form a 'diety' within the Christian teachings. She is not a goddess, and is not worshipped.

    I'll repeat this more in addressing your other claims, but I say that because no where in scripture is Mary elevated to anything more than "highly favored" by God, and "blessed among women."

    Mary is not a goddess, and is not worshipped. Therefore, the pre-existence of Isis-Meri or any other form of female diety is irrelevant to the discussion of an earthly mortal named Mary.


    Claim #3 - The 'Mother of God' Mary in Christianity did not copy/borrow/steal from Isis the Mother of God

    To quote from this source :

    "When Christianity was spreading across the Empire, it's clear that it deliberately took images from the pagan world in which it lived and into which it spread and used those images. Old holy wells and shrines were turned into Christian shrines. In Egypt a shrine of Isis was deliberately and self-consciously re-created as a shrine of Mary."



    The connections are so similar, sometimes scholars can't even tell if they are looking at Mary or Isis.
    All of these "borrowings" were done after Constantine and really several centuries later than is relevant to our conversation. Horus on the lap of Isis was certainly used by the Early Church as a concession to help new converts and for teaching purposes. This is interesting stuff, but the lateness of the use of such images really means it's not relevant to our discussion.

    I say again, I'm not too concerned with anything other than the Jesus/Christianity of the gospels and epistles. That should be the reference point for this discussion. The Bible isn't a picture book, as far as I know, so iconic images hold no place in the conversation.


    Claim #4 - December 25 was not celebrated by Ancient Egyptians as the birth of Horus/Osiris

    This is an Ancient Egyptian Calendar

    "Birth of Heru (Horus) the child of Aset (Isis) ; Going forth of Wadjet singing in Heliopolis;Day of Elevating the Great Netjert (Goddess) in all Her names & manifestations"


    Jesus' birth day is NEVER mentioned in the Bible, however it too is celebrated on Dec. 25th once again, to coincide with this ancient worship of the Sun. The date was chosen to occur on the same date as the birth of Horus, Mithra, Dionysus and the Sol Invictus (unconquerable Sun), etc.
    However, for argument's sake I'll just state that it's possible (even probable) that the early church adopted this date to celebrate Jesus' birth. In fact, it was most likely done as a compe ive strategy, to allow new converts to continue to celebrate the lighting of the lights and the other cool and fun things that went along with the "birthday of the Sun." Christians were inclined to participate in this holiday, so the church Christianized it. Besides, the content and conceptual meaning of the holiday would be (and still is) CONSIDERABLY different, even if the trappings of the holiday were much the same.

    I say again, I'm not too concerned with anything other than the Jesus/Christianity of the gospels and epistles. That should be the reference point for this discussion. As so astutely pointed out by you, "Jesus' birth day is NEVER mentioned in the Bible."

    Claim #5 - Horus' birth is not heralded by a Star in the East as Jesus was

    The Star in the East is known as Sirius. Sirius is the brightest star in the sky, almost twice as bright as the next brightest star. Sirius was an important star for the ancient egyptians. They based their calendar around Siirus. They called it "the going up of the goddess Sothis". Sothis/Sirius has always been identified with Isis.

    Ok. So, the Star in The East/Isis heralds the birth of the Sun/Son of God Horus.
    I guess, so what? I mean...the star was there, it's always been there, it'll probably always be there. To me this is really not significant at all. Besides that, I'm really having a hard time finding a lot of info about Horus birth being announced by a star. Perhaps you can elaborate more.


    Claim #6 - Isis/Horus/Osiris are not the original "holy trinity"

    Isis is the Mother of God, the Great Mother Goddess.
    Horus is the Son of Osiris/ Son of God
    Osiris is the Father, "Judge of the Dead in the Afterlife"

    Yeah. Apparently, Osiris was judging the dead well before Jehovah.

    They are the original Holy Trinity.

    Osiris' worship was still widespread until around 388 CE, when Theodosius (the last roman emperor) declared Nicene Christianity the official state religion and began punishing all other religious practices.
    The Trinity, as discussed in the Christian church has:

    God - The Father
    God - The Son
    God - The Holy Spirit

    Which is distinctly different from Osiris the Father, Isis the Mother, and Horus the Son. Firstly, and most importantly, God is God in all three forms in the Christian Trinity. He is not a different person (as Osiris, Isis, and Horus were). He is 3-in-1, the same God in three personifications.

    In any case, I'll repeat for the last time...I'm not too concerned with anything other than the Jesus/Christianity of the gospels and epistles. That should be the reference point for this discussion. None of the gospel or epistle authors were aware of or even mentioned the word or concept of a Trinity. The idea of a Trinity was something published by the Early Church.



    I find your evidence to be neither damning, nor actually evidence.I can concede that some general similar traits of a god HAVE TO apply to any religious leader...throughout history. They have to be good leaders, they have to do noteworthy feats of goodness or the supernatural, the have to establish teachings and traditions, the have to create community rituals, and they have to battle evil in some form. These are common elements of religion...NOT things that require some theory of dependence. It's simply not enough to point to some vague similarities and call Christian's "copy-cats." You'd have to show that the parallels are numerous, detailed, striking, complex, and central to that religion.

  21. #1196
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    as I said

    Love Me some Me's answer boils down to :

    "So? It's not a carbon copy so it means nothing!!!"

    "Yeah, the Christians stole things from other religions. So? They just did it for x reason, it doesn't mean the religion is fake!!!"


    Really sad to see. I didn't even get to ALL of the similarities. There are -many-, many more than what I posted. I just don't have the time to argue with lunatics who don't want to confront their religion or just trolls on SpursTalk


    This information has been known for CENTURIES, so it's not new. For a long time, even saying these things got you killed. Now we live in an era where we can be free from the christian bas s and tell the truth.

    I am leaning towards trolls, that's what I think Except angel_luv, she really does believe lol
    Last edited by MiamiHeat; 01-07-2009 at 10:30 AM.

  22. #1197
    Forum Official Personal Life Coach BacktoBasics's Avatar
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    You guys are arguing the specifics of a story that was never actually real. How can you sit there and argue virginity or not over a fable. Its not a real story so you can't logically argue that because they were married they had sex. Fables aren't rooted in reality. The story is similar. Other stories are similar. None of them are real. They're fabrications. You can't nitpic a fabricated myth because it doesn't equate to reality. He's provided evidence of a virgin birth pertaining to a myth. Then you want to bring the debate down to how that would relate in reality. I don't agree with that stance I Love Me Some Me.


    Its like arguing Jack in the Beanstalk because no vine could grow that big. No its a fable.

  23. #1198
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    i'd like to say I didn't even know WHO acharya S was until I read -this- thread on spurstalk.

    You guys realize Acharya S stole all of that info she has from other authors? this topic has been written about hundreds of times in many many books by many scholars over centuries.

    this is part of the stuff that the Church was trying to cover up.

  24. #1199
    It is what it is. I Love Me Some Me's Avatar
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    as I said

    Love Me some Me's answer boils down to :

    "So? It's not a carbon copy so it means nothing!!!"

    "Yeah, the Christians stole things from other religions. So? They just did it for x reason, it doesn't mean the religion is fake!!!"


    Really sad to see. I didn't even get to ALL of the similarities. There are -many-, many more than what I posted. I just don't have the time to argue with lunatics who don't want to confront their religion or just trolls on SpursTalk


    This information has been known for CENTURIES, so it's not new. For a long time, even saying these things got you killed. Now we live in an era where we can be free from the christian bas s and tell the truth.

    I am leaning towards trolls, that's what I think Except angel_luv, she really does believe lol

    Your quick response only tells me you don't care to debate, only to cut/paste/repeat what has been legitimately rebutted over and over again. Your posts are completely void of independent thought, and you have no interesting in conversation...only in hearing/reading your own thoughts.

    All I'm asking for is the following:

    Show me parallels that are numerous, detailed, striking, complex, and central to Christianity.

    This is not a preposterous request, just simply one that you cannot fulfill. I've confronted everything you've posted...we disagree. You are not providing evidence, but fallacies and vague similarities that apply to any religion. If you decide to bow out now, that would be cool with me since you've had nothing new to say since about page 10.

  25. #1200
    I love J.T. smeagol's Avatar
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    MH and B2B have won the debate . . . (because they say so).

    By the way, I have asked a question many times and nobody none of you two have answered it.

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