The friends were silent. Neither
cared to begin talking. Pierre continually glanced
at Prince Andrew; Prince Andrew rubbed his forehead
with his small hand.
“Let us go and have supper,”
he said with a sigh, going to the door.
They entered the elegant, newly decorated,
and luxurious dining room. Everything from the
table napkins to the silver, china, and glass bore
that imprint of newness found in the households of
the newly married. Halfway through supper Prince
Andrew leaned his elbows on the table and, with a
look of nervous agitation such as Pierre had never
before seen on his face, began to talk as
one who has long had something on his mind and suddenly
determines to speak out.
“Never, never marry, my dear
fellow! That’s my advice: never marry
till you can say to yourself that you have done all
you are capable of, and until you have ceased to love
the woman of your choice and have seen her plainly
as she is, or else you will make a cruel and irrevocable
mistake. Marry when you are old and good for nothing or
all that is good and noble in you will be lost.
It will all be wasted on trifles. Yes! Yes!
Yes! Don’t look at me with such surprise.
If you marry expecting anything from yourself in the
future, you will feel at every step that for you all
is ended, all is closed except the drawing room, where
you will be ranged side by side with a court lackey
and an idiot!... But what’s the good?...”
and he waved his arm.
Pierre took off his spectacles, which
made his face seem different and the good-natured
expression still more apparent, and gazed at his friend
in amazement.
“My wife,” continued Prince
Andrew, “is an excellent woman, one of those
rare women with whom a man’s honor is safe; but,
O God, what would I not give now to be unmarried!
You are the first and only one to whom I mention this,
because I like you.”
As he said this Prince Andrew was
less than ever like that Bolkonski who had lolled
in Anna Pavlovna’s easy chairs and with half-closed
eyes had uttered French phrases between his teeth.
Every muscle of his thin face was now quivering with
nervous excitement; his eyes, in which the fire of
life had seemed extinguished, now flashed with brilliant
light. It was evident that the more lifeless
he seemed at ordinary times, the more impassioned
he became in these moments of almost morbid irritation.
“You don’t understand
why I say this,” he continued, “but it
is the whole story of life. You talk of Bonaparte
and his career,” said he (though Pierre had
not mentioned Bonaparte), “but Bonaparte when
he worked went step by step toward his goal.
He was free, he had nothing but his aim to consider,
and he reached it. But tie yourself up with a
woman and, like a chained convict, you lose all freedom!
And all you have of hope and strength merely weighs
you down and torments you with regret. Drawing
rooms, gossip, balls, vanity, and triviality these
are the enchanted circle I cannot escape from.
I am now going to the war, the greatest war there
ever was, and I know nothing and am fit for nothing.
I am very amiable and have a caustic wit,” continued
Prince Andrew, “and at Anna Pavlovna’s
they listen to me. And that stupid set without
whom my wife cannot exist, and those women...
If you only knew what those society women are, and
women in general! My father is right. Selfish,
vain, stupid, trivial in everything that’s
what women are when you see them in their true colors!
When you meet them in society it seems as if there
were something in them, but there’s nothing,
nothing, nothing! No, don’t marry, my dear
fellow; don’t marry!” concluded Prince
Andrew.
“It seems funny to me,”
said Pierre, “that you, you should consider
yourself incapable and your life a spoiled life.
You have everything before you, everything. And
you...”
He did not finish his sentence, but
his tone showed how highly he thought of his friend
and how much he expected of him in the future.
“How can he talk like that?”
thought Pierre. He considered his friend a model
of perfection because Prince Andrew possessed in the
highest degree just the very qualities Pierre lacked,
and which might be best described as strength of will.
Pierre was always astonished at Prince Andrew’s
calm manner of treating everybody, his extraordinary
memory, his extensive reading (he had read everything,
knew everything, and had an opinion about everything),
but above all at his capacity for work and study.
And if Pierre was often struck by Andrew’s lack
of capacity for philosophical meditation (to which
he himself was particularly addicted), he regarded
even this not as a defect but as a sign of strength.
Even in the best, most friendly and
simplest relations of life, praise and commendation
are essential, just as grease is necessary to wheels
that they may run smoothly.
“My part is played out,”
said Prince Andrew. “What’s the use
of talking about me? Let us talk about you,”
he added after a silence, smiling at his reassuring
thoughts.
That smile was immediately reflected on Pierre’s
face.
“But what is there to say about
me?” said Pierre, his face relaxing into a careless,
merry smile. “What am I? An illegitimate
son!” He suddenly blushed crimson, and it was
plain that he had made a great effort to say this.
“Without a name and without means... And
it really...” But he did not say what “it
really” was. “For the present I am
free and am all right. Only I haven’t the
least idea what I am to do; I wanted to consult you
seriously.”
Prince Andrew looked kindly at him,
yet his glance friendly and affectionate
as it was expressed a sense of his own superiority.
“I am fond of you, especially
as you are the one live man among our whole set.
Yes, you’re all right! Choose what you will;
it’s all the same. You’ll be all
right anywhere. But look here: give up visiting
those Kuragins and leading that sort of life.
It suits you so badly all this debauchery,
dissipation, and the rest of it!”
“What would you have, my dear
fellow?” answered Pierre, shrugging his shoulders.
“Women, my dear fellow; women!”
“I don’t understand it,”
replied Prince Andrew. “Women who are comme
il faut, that’s a different matter;
but the Kuragins’ set of women, ’women
and wine’ I don’t understand!”
Pierre was staying at Prince Vasili
Kuragin’s and sharing the dissipated life of
his son Anatole, the son whom they were planning to
reform by marrying him to Prince Andrew’s sister.
“Do you know?” said Pierre,
as if suddenly struck by a happy thought, “seriously,
I have long been thinking of it.... Leading such
a life I can’t decide or think properly about
anything. One’s head aches, and one spends
all one’s money. He asked me for tonight,
but I won’t go.”
“You give me your word of honor not to go?”
“On my honor!”