BOOK ELEVEN: 1812
34. CHAPTER XXXIV
 
Having run through different yards and side streets, Pierre got back
 with his little burden to the Gruzinski garden at the corner of the
 Povarskoy. He did not at first recognize the place from which he had
 set out to look for the child, so crowded was it now with people and
 goods that had been dragged out of the houses. Besides Russian
 families who had taken refuge here from the fire with their
 belongings, there were several French soldiers in a variety of
 clothing. Pierre took no notice of them. He hurried to find the family
 of that civil servant in order to restore the daughter to her mother
 and go to save someone else. Pierre felt that he had still much to
 do and to do quickly. Glowing with the heat and from running, he
 felt at that moment more strongly than ever the sense of youth,
 animation, and determination that had come on him when he ran to
 save the child. She had now become quiet and, clinging with her little
 hands to Pierre's coat, sat on his arm gazing about her like some
 little wild animal. He glanced at her occasionally with a slight
 smile. He fancied he saw something pathetically innocent in that
 frightened, sickly little face. 
He did not find the civil servant or his wife where he had left
 them. He walked among the crowd with rapid steps, scanning the various
 faces he met. Involuntarily he noticed a Georgian or Armenian family
 consisting of a very handsome old man of Oriental type, wearing a new,
 cloth-covered, sheepskin coat and new boots, an old woman of similar
 type, and a young woman. That very young woman seemed to Pierre the
 perfection of Oriental beauty, with her sharply outlined, arched,
 black eyebrows and the extraordinarily soft, bright color of her long,
 beautiful, expressionless face. Amid the scattered property and the
 crowd on the open space, she, in her rich satin cloak with a bright
 lilac shawl on her head, suggested a delicate exotic plant thrown
 out onto the snow. She was sitting on some bundles a little behind the
 old woman, and looked from under her long lashes with motionless,
 large, almond-shaped eyes at the ground before her. Evidently she
 was aware of her beauty and fearful because of it. Her face struck
 Pierre and, hurrying along by the fence, he turned several times to
 look at her. When he had reached the fence, still without finding
 those he sought, he stopped and looked about him. 
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