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<h2> CHAPTER XXXIII </h2>
<p>On the third of September Pierre awoke late. His head was aching, the
clothes in which he had slept without undressing felt uncomfortable on his
body, and his mind had a dim consciousness of something shameful he had
done the day before. That something shameful was his yesterday's
conversation with Captain Ramballe.</p>
<p>It was eleven by the clock, but it seemed peculiarly dark out of doors.
Pierre rose, rubbed his eyes, and seeing the pistol with an engraved stock
which Gerasim had replaced on the writing table, he remembered where he
was and what lay before him that very day.</p>
<p>"Am I not too late?" he thought. "No, probably he won't make his entry
into Moscow before noon."</p>
<p>Pierre did not allow himself to reflect on what lay before him, but
hastened to act.</p>
<p>After arranging his clothes, he took the pistol and was about to go out.
But it then occurred to him for the first time that he certainly could not
carry the weapon in his hand through the streets. It was difficult to hide
such a big pistol even under his wide coat. He could not carry it
unnoticed in his belt or under his arm. Besides, it had been discharged,
and he had not had time to reload it. "No matter, dagger will do," he said
to himself, though when planning his design he had more than once come to
the conclusion that the chief mistake made by the student in 1809 had been
to try to kill Napoleon with a dagger. But as his chief aim consisted not
in carrying out his design, but in proving to himself that he would not
abandon his intention and was doing all he could to achieve it, Pierre
hastily took the blunt jagged dagger in a green sheath which he had bought
at the Sukharev market with the pistol, and hid it under his waistcoat.</p>
<p>Having tied a girdle over his coat and pulled his cap low on his head,
Pierre went down the corridor, trying to avoid making a noise or meeting
the captain, and passed out into the street.</p>
<p>The conflagration, at which he had looked with so much indifference the
evening before, had greatly increased during the night. Moscow was on fire
in several places. The buildings in Carriage Row, across the river, in the
Bazaar and the Povarskoy, as well as the barges on the Moskva River and
the timber yards by the Dorogomilov Bridge, were all ablaze.</p>
<p>Pierre's way led through side streets to the Povarskoy and from there to
the church of St. Nicholas on the Arbat, where he had long before decided
that the deed should be done. The gates of most of the houses were locked
and the shutters up. The streets and lanes were deserted. The air was full
of smoke and the smell of burning. Now and then he met Russians with
anxious and timid faces, and Frenchmen with an air not of the city but of
the camp, walking in the middle of the streets. Both the Russians and the
French looked at Pierre with surprise. Besides his height and stoutness,
and the strange morose look of suffering in his face and whole figure, the
Russians stared at Pierre because they could not make out to what class he
could belong. The French followed him with astonishment in their eyes
chiefly because Pierre, unlike all the other Russians who gazed at the
French with fear and curiosity, paid no attention to them. At the gate of
one house three Frenchmen, who were explaining something to some Russians
who did not understand them, stopped Pierre asking if he did not know
French.</p>
<p>Pierre shook his head and went on. In another side street a sentinel
standing beside a green caisson shouted at him, but only when the shout
was threateningly repeated and he heard the click of the man's musket as
he raised it did Pierre understand that he had to pass on the other side
of the street. He heard nothing and saw nothing of what went on around
him. He carried his resolution within himself in terror and haste, like
something dreadful and alien to him, for, after the previous night's
experience, he was afraid of losing it. But he was not destined to bring
his mood safely to his destination. And even had he not been hindered by
anything on the way, his intention could not now have been carried out,
for Napoleon had passed the Arbat more than four hours previously on his
way from the Dorogomilov suburb to the Kremlin, and was now sitting in a
very gloomy frame of mind in a royal study in the Kremlin, giving detailed
and exact orders as to measures to be taken immediately to extinguish the
fire, to prevent looting, and to reassure the inhabitants. But Pierre did
not know this; he was entirely absorbed in what lay before him, and was
tortured—as those are who obstinately undertake a task that is
impossible for them not because of its difficulty but because of its
incompatibility with their natures—by the fear of weakening at the
decisive moment and so losing his self-esteem.</p>
<p>Though he heard and saw nothing around him he found his way by instinct
and did not go wrong in the side streets that led to the Povarskoy.</p>
<p>As Pierre approached that street the smoke became denser and denser—he
even felt the heat of the fire. Occasionally curly tongues of flame rose
from under the roofs of the houses. He met more people in the streets and
they were more excited. But Pierre, though he felt that something unusual
was happening around him, did not realize that he was approaching the
fire. As he was going along a foot path across a wide-open space adjoining
the Povarskoy on one side and the gardens of Prince Gruzinski's house on
the other, Pierre suddenly heard the desperate weeping of a woman close to
him. He stopped as if awakening from a dream and lifted his head.</p>
<p>By the side of the path, on the dusty dry grass, all sorts of household
goods lay in a heap: featherbeds, a samovar, icons, and trunks. On the
ground, beside the trunks, sat a thin woman no longer young, with long,
prominent upper teeth, and wearing a black cloak and cap. This woman,
swaying to and fro and muttering something, was choking with sobs. Two
girls of about ten and twelve, dressed in dirty short frocks and cloaks,
were staring at their mother with a look of stupefaction on their pale
frightened faces. The youngest child, a boy of about seven, who wore an
overcoat and an immense cap evidently not his own, was crying in his old
nurse's arms. A dirty, barefooted maid was sitting on a trunk, and, having
undone her pale-colored plait, was pulling it straight and sniffing at her
singed hair. The woman's husband, a short, round-shouldered man in the
undress uniform of a civilian official, with sausage-shaped whiskers and
showing under his square-set cap the hair smoothly brushed forward over
his temples, with expressionless face was moving the trunks, which were
placed one on another, and was dragging some garments from under them.</p>
<p>As soon as she saw Pierre, the woman almost threw herself at his feet.</p>
<p>"Dear people, good Christians, save me, help me, dear friends... help us,
somebody," she muttered between her sobs. "My girl... My daughter! My
youngest daughter is left behind. She's burned! Ooh! Was it for this I
nursed you.... Ooh!"</p>
<p>"Don't, Mary Nikolievna!" said her husband to her in a low voice,
evidently only to justify himself before the stranger. "Sister must have
taken her, or else where can she be?" he added.</p>
<p>"Monster! Villain!" shouted the woman angrily, suddenly ceasing to weep.
"You have no heart, you don't feel for your own child! Another man would
have rescued her from the fire. But this is a monster and neither a man
nor a father! You, honored sir, are a noble man," she went on, addressing
Pierre rapidly between her sobs. "The fire broke out alongside, and blew
our way, the maid called out 'Fire!' and we rushed to collect our things.
We ran out just as we were.... This is what we have brought away.... The
icons, and my dowry bed, all the rest is lost. We seized the children. But
not Katie! Ooh! O Lord!..." and again she began to sob. "My child, my dear
one! Burned, burned!"</p>
<p>"But where was she left?" asked Pierre.</p>
<p>From the expression of his animated face the woman saw that this man might
help her.</p>
<p>"Oh, dear sir!" she cried, seizing him by the legs. "My benefactor, set my
heart at ease.... Aniska, go, you horrid girl, show him the way!" she
cried to the maid, angrily opening her mouth and still farther exposing
her long teeth.</p>
<p>"Show me the way, show me, I... I'll do it," gasped Pierre rapidly.</p>
<p>The dirty maidservant stepped from behind the trunk, put up her plait,
sighed, and went on her short, bare feet along the path. Pierre felt as if
he had come back to life after a heavy swoon. He held his head higher, his
eyes shone with the light of life, and with swift steps he followed the
maid, overtook her, and came out on the Povarskoy. The whole street was
full of clouds of black smoke. Tongues of flame here and there broke
through that cloud. A great number of people crowded in front of the
conflagration. In the middle of the street stood a French general saying
something to those around him. Pierre, accompanied by the maid, was
advancing to the spot where the general stood, but the French soldiers
stopped him.</p>
<p>"On ne passe pas!" * cried a voice.</p>
<p>* "You can't pass!"<br/></p>
<p>"This way, uncle," cried the girl. "We'll pass through the side street, by
the Nikulins'!"</p>
<p>Pierre turned back, giving a spring now and then to keep up with her. She
ran across the street, turned down a side street to the left, and, passing
three houses, turned into a yard on the right.</p>
<p>"It's here, close by," said she and, running across the yard, opened a
gate in a wooden fence and, stopping, pointed out to him a small wooden
wing of the house, which was burning brightly and fiercely. One of its
sides had fallen in, another was on fire, and bright flames issued from
the openings of the windows and from under the roof.</p>
<p>As Pierre passed through the fence gate, he was enveloped by hot air and
involuntarily stopped.</p>
<p>"Which is it? Which is your house?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Ooh!" wailed the girl, pointing to the wing. "That's it, that was our
lodging. You've burned to death, our treasure, Katie, my precious little
missy! Ooh!" lamented Aniska, who at the sight of the fire felt that she
too must give expression to her feelings.</p>
<p>Pierre rushed to the wing, but the heat was so great that he involuntarily
passed round in a curve and came upon the large house that was as yet
burning only at one end, just below the roof, and around which swarmed a
crowd of Frenchmen. At first Pierre did not realize what these men, who
were dragging something out, were about; but seeing before him a Frenchman
hitting a peasant with a blunt saber and trying to take from him a fox-fur
coat, he vaguely understood that looting was going on there, but he had no
time to dwell on that idea.</p>
<p>The sounds of crackling and the din of falling walls and ceilings, the
whistle and hiss of the flames, the excited shouts of the people, and the
sight of the swaying smoke, now gathering into thick black clouds and now
soaring up with glittering sparks, with here and there dense sheaves of
flame (now red and now like golden fish scales creeping along the walls),
and the heat and smoke and rapidity of motion, produced on Pierre the
usual animating effects of a conflagration. It had a peculiarly strong
effect on him because at the sight of the fire he felt himself suddenly
freed from the ideas that had weighed him down. He felt young, bright,
adroit, and resolute. He ran round to the other side of the lodge and was
about to dash into that part of it which was still standing, when just
above his head he heard several voices shouting and then a cracking sound
and the ring of something heavy falling close beside him.</p>
<p>Pierre looked up and saw at a window of the large house some Frenchmen who
had just thrown out the drawer of a chest, filled with metal articles.
Other French soldiers standing below went up to the drawer.</p>
<p>"What does this fellow want?" shouted one of them referring to Pierre.</p>
<p>"There's a child in that house. Haven't you seen a child?" cried Pierre.</p>
<p>"What's he talking about? Get along!" said several voices, and one of the
soldiers, evidently afraid that Pierre might want to take from them some
of the plate and bronzes that were in the drawer, moved threateningly
toward him.</p>
<p>"A child?" shouted a Frenchman from above. "I did hear something squealing
in the garden. Perhaps it's his brat that the fellow is looking for. After
all, one must be human, you know...."</p>
<p>"Where is it? Where?" said Pierre.</p>
<p>"There! There!" shouted the Frenchman at the window, pointing to the
garden at the back of the house. "Wait a bit—I'm coming down."</p>
<p>And a minute or two later the Frenchman, a black-eyed fellow with a spot
on his cheek, in shirt sleeves, really did jump out of a window on the
ground floor, and clapping Pierre on the shoulder ran with him into the
garden.</p>
<p>"Hurry up, you others!" he called out to his comrades. "It's getting hot."</p>
<p>When they reached a gravel path behind the house the Frenchman pulled
Pierre by the arm and pointed to a round, graveled space where a
three-year-old girl in a pink dress was lying under a seat.</p>
<p>"There is your child! Oh, a girl, so much the better!" said the Frenchman.
"Good-by, Fatty. We must be human, we are all mortal you know!" and the
Frenchman with the spot on his cheek ran back to his comrades.</p>
<p>Breathless with joy, Pierre ran to the little girl and was going to take
her in his arms. But seeing a stranger the sickly, scrofulous-looking
child, unattractively like her mother, began to yell and run away. Pierre,
however, seized her and lifted her in his arms. She screamed desperately
and angrily and tried with her little hands to pull Pierre's hands away
and to bite them with her slobbering mouth. Pierre was seized by a sense
of horror and repulsion such as he had experienced when touching some
nasty little animal. But he made an effort not to throw the child down and
ran with her to the large house. It was now, however, impossible to get
back the way he had come; the maid, Aniska, was no longer there, and
Pierre with a feeling of pity and disgust pressed the wet, painfully
sobbing child to himself as tenderly as he could and ran with her through
the garden seeking another way out.</p>
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