Home
Fictions/Novels
Short Stories
Poems
Essays
Plays
 
All Authors
All Titles
 


In Association with Amazon.com

Home > Authors Index > Leo Tolstoy > War and Peace > This page

War and Peace, a novel by Leo Tolstoy

Book Four : 1806 - Chapter 15

< Previous
Table of content
Next >
________________________________________________
To say "tomorrow" and keep up a dignified tone was not difficult,

but to go home alone, see his sisters, brother, mother, and father,

confess and ask for money he had no right to after giving his word

of honor, was terrible.

At home, they had not yet gone to bed. The young people, after

returning from the theater, had had supper and were grouped round

the clavichord. As soon as Nicholas entered, he was enfolded in that

poetic atmosphere of love which pervaded the Rostov household that

winter and, now after Dolokhov's proposal and Iogel's ball, seemed

to have grown thicker round Sonya and Natasha as the air does before a

thunderstorm. Sonya and Natasha, in the light-blue dresses they had

worn at the theater, looking pretty and conscious of it, were standing

by the clavichord, happy and smiling. Vera was playing chess with

Shinshin in the drawing room. The old countess, waiting for the return

of her husband and son, sat playing patience with the old

gentlewoman who lived in their house. Denisov, with sparkling eyes and

ruffled hair, sat at the clavichord striking chords with his short

fingers, his legs thrown back and his eyes rolling as he sang, with

his small, husky, but true voice, some verses called "Enchantress,"

which he had composed, and to which he was trying to fit music:

Enchantress, say, to my forsaken lyre

What magic power is this recalls me still?

What spark has set my inmost soul on fire,

What is this bliss that makes my fingers thrill?

He was singing in passionate tones, gazing with gazing with his

sparkling black-agate eyes at the frightened and happy Natasha.

"Splendid! Excellent!" exclaimed Natasha. "Another verse, she

said, without noticing Nicholas.

"Everything's still the same with them," thought Nicholas,

glancing into the drawing room, where he saw Vera and his mother

with the old lady.

"Ah, and here's Nicholas!" cried Natasha, running up to him.

"Is Papa at home?" he asked.

"I am so glad you've come!" said Natasha, without answering him. "We

are enjoying ourselves! Vasili Dmitrich is staying a day longer for my

sake! Did you know?"

"No, Papa is not back yet," said Sonya.

"Nicholas, have you come? Come here, dear!" called the old

countess from the drawing room.

Nicholas went to her, kissed her hand, and sitting down silently

at her table began to watch her hands arranging the cards. From the

dancing room, they still heard the laughter and merry voices trying to

persuade Natasha to sing.

"All wight! All wight!" shouted Denisov. "It's no good making

excuses now! It's your turn to sing the ba'cawolla- I entweat you!"

The countess glanced at her silent son.

"What is the matter?" she asked.

"Oh, nothing," said he, as if weary of being continually asked the

same question. "Will Papa be back soon?"

"I expect so."

"Everything's the same with them. They know nothing about it!

Where am I to go?" thought Nicholas, and went again into the dancing

room where the clavichord stood.

Sonya was sitting at the clavichord, playing the prelude to

Denisov's favorite barcarolle. Natasha was preparing to sing.

Denisov was looking at her with enraptured eyes.

Nicholas began pacing up and down the room.

"Why do they want to make her sing? How can she sing? There's

nothing to be happy about!" thought he.

Sonya struck the first chord of the prelude.

"My God, I'm a ruined and dishonored man! A bullet through my

brain is the only thing left me- not singing! " his thoughts ran on.

"Go away? But where to? It's one- let them sing!"

He continued to pace the room, looking gloomily at Denisov and the

girls and avoiding their eyes.

"Nikolenka, what is the matter?" Sonya's eyes fixed on him seemed to

ask. She noticed at once that something had happened to him.

Nicholas turned away from her. Natasha too, with her quick instinct,

had instantly noticed her brother's condition. But, though she noticed

it, she was herself in such high spirits at that moment, so far from

sorrow, sadness, or self-reproach, that she purposely deceived herself

as young people often do. "No, I am too happy now to spoil my

enjoyment by sympathy with anyone's sorrow," she felt, and she said to

herself: "No, I must be mistaken, he must be feeling happy, just as

I am."

"Now, Sonya!" she said, going to the very middle of the room,

where she considered the resonance was best.

Having lifted her head and let her arms droop lifelessly, as

ballet dancers do, Natasha, rising energetically from her heels to her

toes, stepped to the middle of the room and stood still.

"Yes, that's me!" she seemed to say, answering the rapt gaze with

which Denisov followed her.

"And what is she so pleased about?" thought Nicholas, looking at his

sister. "Why isn't she dull and ashamed?"

Natasha took the first note, her throat swelled, her chest rose, her

eyes became serious. At that moment she was oblivious of her

surroundings, and from her smiling lips flowed sounds which anyone may

produce at the same intervals hold for the same time, but which

leave you cold a thousand times and the thousand and first time thrill

you and make you weep.

Natasha, that winter, had for the first time begun to sing

seriously, mainly because Denisov so delighted in her singing. She

no longer sang as a child, there was no longer in her singing that

comical, childish, painstaking effect that had been in it before;

but she did not yet sing well, as all the connoisseurs who heard her

said: "It is not trained, but it is a beautiful voice that must be

trained." Only they generally said this some time after she had

finished singing. While that untrained voice, with its incorrect

breathing and labored transitions, was sounding, even the connoisseurs

said nothing, but only delighted in it and wished to hear it again. In

her voice there was a virginal freshness, an unconsciousness of her

own powers, and an as yet untrained velvety softness, which so mingled

with her lack of art in singing that it seemed as if nothing in that

voice could be altered without spoiling it.

"What is this?" thought Nicholas, listening to her with widely

opened eyes. "What has happened to her? How she is singing today!" And

suddenly the whole world centered for him on anticipation of the

next note, the next phrase, and everything in the world was divided

into three beats: "Oh mio crudele affetto."... One, two, three... one,

two, three... One... "Oh mio crudele affetto."... One, two, three...

One. "Oh, this senseless life of ours!" thought Nicholas. "All this

misery, and money, and Dolokhov, and anger, and honor- it's all

nonsense... but this is real.... Now then, Natasha, now then, dearest!

Now then, darling! How will she take that si? She's taken it! Thank

God!" And without noticing that he was singing, to strengthen the si

he sung a second, a third below the high note. "Ah, God! How fine! Did

I really take it? How fortunate!" he thought.

Oh, how that chord vibrated, and how moved was something that was

finest in Rostov's soul! And this something was apart from

everything else in the world and above everything in the world.

"What were losses, and Dolokhov, and words of honor?... All

nonsense! One might kill and rob and yet be happy..."

Read next: Book Four : 1806#Chapter 16

Read previous: Book Four : 1806#Chapter 14

Table of content of War and Peace


GO TO TOP OF SCREEN

Post your review
Your review will be placed after the table of content of this book