BOOK ELEVEN: 1812
33. CHAPTER XXXIII
 (continued)
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. 
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. 
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. 
As soon as she saw Pierre, the woman almost threw herself at his
 feet. 
"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!" 
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