Behind him stood the adjutant, the doctors,
and the men-servants; the men and the women had separated as though they were
in church. All were silently crossing themselves, nothing was audible but the
reading of the service, the subdued, deep bass singing, and in the intervals of
silence sighs could be heard and the shuffling of feet. With a significant air,
which showed she knew what she was about, Anna Mihalovna walked right across
the room to Pierre
and gave him a candle. He lighted it, and absorbed in watching the people
around him, he absent-mindedly crossed himself with the hand in which he held
the candle. The youngest princess, Sophie, the rosy, laughing one with the
mole, was looking at him. She smiled, hid her face in her handkerchief, and for
a long while did not uncover it. But looking at Pierre again, again she laughed. She was
apparently unable to look at him without laughing, but could not resist looking
at him, and to be out of temptation, she softly moved behind a column. In the
middle of the service the voices of the priests suddenly ceased, and they
whispered something to one another. The old servant, who was holding the
count’s hand, got up and turned to the ladies. Anna Mihalovna stepped forward
and, stooping over the sick man, she beckoned behind her back to Lorrain. The
French doctor had been leaning against the column without a candle, in the
respectful attitude of the foreigner, who would show that in spite of the
difference of religion he comprehends all the solemnity of the ceremony and
even approves of it. With the noiseless steps of a man in full vigour of his
age, he went up to the sick man. His delicate, white fingers lifted his
disengaged hand from the quilt, and turning away, the doctor began feeling the
pulse in absorbed attention. They gave the sick man some drink; there was a
slight bustle around him, then all went back to their places and the service
was continued. During this break in the proceedings Pierre noticed that Prince
Vassily moved away from his chair-back, and with that same air of being quite
sure of what he was about, and of its being so much the worse for others, if
they failed to understand it, he did not go up to the sick man, but passed by
him and joined the eldest princess. Then together they went away to the further
end of the room to the high bedstead under the silk canopy. When they moved
away from the bed the prince and princess disappeared together by the further
door, but before the end of the service they returned one after the other to
their places. Pierre
paid no more attention to this circumstance than to all the rest, having once
for all made up his mind that all that he saw taking place that evening must
inevitably be as it was.
The sounds of the church singing ceased and
the voice of the chief ecclesiastic was heard, respectfully congratulating the
sick man on his reception of the mystery. The dying man lay as lifeless and
immovable as before. Every one was moving about him, there was the sound of
footsteps and of whispers, Anna Mihalovna’s whisper rising above the rest.
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