Chapter 24
AT THE EXACT HOUR, the prince, powdered and
shaven, walked into the dining-room, where there were waiting for him his
daughter-in-law, Princess Marya, Mademoiselle Bourienne, and the prince’s
architect, who, by a strange whim of the old gentleman’s, dined at his table,
though being an insignificant person of no social standing, he would not
naturally have expected to be treated with such honour. The prince, who was in
practice a firm stickler for distinctions of tank, and rarely admitted to his
table even important provincial functionaries, had suddenly pitched on the
architect Mihail Ivanovitch, blowing his nose in a check pocket-handkerchief in
the corner, to illustrate the theory that all men are equal, and had more than
once impressed upon his daughter that Mihail Ivanovitch was every whit as good
as himself and her. At table the prince addressed his conversation to the
taciturn architect more often than to any one.
In the dining-room, which, like all the
other rooms in the house, was immensely lofty, the prince’s entrance was
awaited by all the members of his household and the footmen, standing behind
each chair. The butler with a table-napkin on his arm scanned the setting of
the table, making signs to the footmen, and continually he glanced uneasily
from the clock on the wall to the door, by which the prince was to enter.
Prince Andrey stood at an immense golden frame on the wall that was new to him.
It contained the genealogical tree of the Bolkonskys, and hanging opposite it was
a frame, equally immense, with a badly painted representation (evidently the
work of some household artist) of a reigning prince in a crown, intended for
the descendant of Rurik and founder of the family of the Bolkonsky princes.
Prince Andrey looked at this genealogical tree shaking his head, and he
laughed.
“There you
have him all over!” he said to Princess Marya as she came up to him.
Princess Marya looked at her brother in
surprise. She did not know what he was smiling at. Everything her father did inspired
in her reverence that did not admit of criticism.
“Every one has
his weak spot,” Prince Andrey went on; “with his vast intellect to condescend
to such triviality!”
Princess Marya could not understand the
boldness of her brother’s criticism and was making ready to protest, when the
step they were all listening for was heard coming from the study. The prince
walked in with a quick, lively step, as he always walked, as though
intentionally contrasting the elasticity of his movements with the rigidity of
the routine of the house. At that instant the big clock struck two, and another
clock in the drawing-room echoed it in thinner tones. The prince stood still;
his keen, stern eyes gleaming under his bushy, overhanging brows scanned all
the company and rested on the little princess. The little princess experienced
at that moment the sensation that courtiers know on the entrance of the Tsar,
that feeling of awe and veneration that this old man inspired in every one
about him. He stroked the little princess on the head, and then with an awkward
movement patted her on her neck.
“I’m glad,
glad to see you,” he said, and looking intently into her eyes he walked away
and sat down in his place. “Sit down, sit down, Mihail Ivanovitch, sit down.”
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