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<h2> CHAPTER VI </h2>
<p>Helene, having returned with the court from Vilna to Petersburg, found
herself in a difficult position.</p>
<p>In Petersburg she had enjoyed the special protection of a grandee who
occupied one of the highest posts in the Empire. In Vilna she had formed
an intimacy with a young foreign prince. When she returned to Petersburg
both the magnate and the prince were there, and both claimed their rights.
Helene was faced by a new problem—how to preserve her intimacy with
both without offending either.</p>
<p>What would have seemed difficult or even impossible to another woman did
not cause the least embarrassment to Countess Bezukhova, who evidently
deserved her reputation of being a very clever woman. Had she attempted
concealment, or tried to extricate herself from her awkward position by
cunning, she would have spoiled her case by acknowledging herself guilty.
But Helene, like a really great man who can do whatever he pleases, at
once assumed her own position to be correct, as she sincerely believed it
to be, and that everyone else was to blame.</p>
<p>The first time the young foreigner allowed himself to reproach her, she
lifted her beautiful head and, half turning to him, said firmly: "That's
just like a man—selfish and cruel! I expected nothing else. A woman
sacrifices herself for you, she suffers, and this is her reward! What
right have you, monseigneur, to demand an account of my attachments and
friendships? He is a man who has been more than a father to me!" The
prince was about to say something, but Helene interrupted him.</p>
<p>"Well, yes," said she, "it may be that he has other sentiments for me than
those of a father, but that is not a reason for me to shut my door on him.
I am not a man, that I should repay kindness with ingratitude! Know,
monseigneur, that in all that relates to my intimate feelings I render
account only to God and to my conscience," she concluded, laying her hand
on her beautiful, fully expanded bosom and looking up to heaven.</p>
<p>"But for heaven's sake listen to me!"</p>
<p>"Marry me, and I will be your slave!"</p>
<p>"But that's impossible."</p>
<p>"You won't deign to demean yourself by marrying me, you..." said Helene,
beginning to cry.</p>
<p>The prince tried to comfort her, but Helene, as if quite distraught, said
through her tears that there was nothing to prevent her marrying, that
there were precedents (there were up to that time very few, but she
mentioned Napoleon and some other exalted personages), that she had never
been her husband's wife, and that she had been sacrificed.</p>
<p>"But the law, religion..." said the prince, already yielding.</p>
<p>"The law, religion... What have they been invented for if they can't
arrange that?" said Helene.</p>
<p>The prince was surprised that so simple an idea had not occurred to him,
and he applied for advice to the holy brethren of the Society of Jesus,
with whom he was on intimate terms.</p>
<p>A few days later at one of those enchanting fetes which Helene gave at her
country house on the Stone Island, the charming Monsieur de Jobert, a man
no longer young, with snow white hair and brilliant black eyes, a Jesuit a
robe courte * was presented to her, and in the garden by the light of the
illuminations and to the sound of music talked to her for a long time of
the love of God, of Christ, of the Sacred Heart, and of the consolations
the one true Catholic religion affords in this world and the next. Helene
was touched, and more than once tears rose to her eyes and to those of
Monsieur de Jobert and their voices trembled. A dance, for which her
partner came to seek her, put an end to her discourse with her future
directeur de conscience, but the next evening Monsieur de Jobert came to
see Helene when she was alone, and after that often came again.</p>
<p>* Lay member of the Society of Jesus.<br/></p>
<p>One day he took the countess to a Roman Catholic church, where she knelt
down before the altar to which she was led. The enchanting, middle-aged
Frenchman laid his hands on her head and, as she herself afterward
described it, she felt something like a fresh breeze wafted into her soul.
It was explained to her that this was la grace.</p>
<p>After that a long-frocked abbe was brought to her. She confessed to him,
and he absolved her from her sins. Next day she received a box containing
the Sacred Host, which was left at her house for her to partake of. A few
days later Helene learned with pleasure that she had now been admitted to
the true Catholic Church and that in a few days the Pope himself would
hear of her and would send her a certain document.</p>
<p>All that was done around her and to her at this time, all the attention
devoted to her by so many clever men and expressed in such pleasant,
refined ways, and the state of dove-like purity she was now in (she wore
only white dresses and white ribbons all that time) gave her pleasure, but
her pleasure did not cause her for a moment to forget her aim. And as it
always happens in contests of cunning that a stupid person gets the better
of cleverer ones, Helene—having realized that the main object of all
these words and all this trouble was, after converting her to Catholicism,
to obtain money from her for Jesuit institutions (as to which she received
indications)-before parting with her money insisted that the various
operations necessary to free her from her husband should be performed. In
her view the aim of every religion was merely to preserve certain
proprieties while affording satisfaction to human desires. And with this
aim, in one of her talks with her Father Confessor, she insisted on an
answer to the question, in how far was she bound by her marriage?</p>
<p>They were sitting in the twilight by a window in the drawing room. The
scent of flowers came in at the window. Helene was wearing a white dress,
transparent over her shoulders and bosom. The abbe, a well-fed man with a
plump, clean-shaven chin, a pleasant firm mouth, and white hands meekly
folded on his knees, sat close to Helene and, with a subtle smile on his
lips and a peaceful look of delight at her beauty, occasionally glanced at
her face as he explained his opinion on the subject. Helene with an uneasy
smile looked at his curly hair and his plump, clean-shaven, blackish
cheeks and every moment expected the conversation to take a fresh turn.
But the abbe, though he evidently enjoyed the beauty of his companion, was
absorbed in his mastery of the matter.</p>
<p>The course of the Father Confessor's arguments ran as follows: "Ignorant
of the import of what you were undertaking, you made a vow of conjugal
fidelity to a man who on his part, by entering the married state without
faith in the religious significance of marriage, committed an act of
sacrilege. That marriage lacked the dual significance it should have had.
Yet in spite of this your vow was binding. You swerved from it. What did
you commit by so acting? A venial, or a mortal, sin? A venial sin, for you
acted without evil intention. If now you married again with the object of
bearing children, your sin might be forgiven. But the question is again a
twofold one: firstly..."</p>
<p>But suddenly Helene, who was getting bored, said with one of her
bewitching smiles: "But I think that having espoused the true religion I
cannot be bound by what a false religion laid upon me."</p>
<p>The director of her conscience was astounded at having the case presented
to him thus with the simplicity of Columbus' egg. He was delighted at the
unexpected rapidity of his pupil's progress, but could not abandon the
edifice of argument he had laboriously constructed.</p>
<p>"Let us understand one another, Countess," said he with a smile, and began
refuting his spiritual daughter's arguments.</p>
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