BOOK TWELVE: 1812
13. CHAPTER XIII
 
Twenty-three soldiers, three officers, and two officials were
 confined in the shed in which Pierre had been placed and where he
 remained for four weeks. 
When Pierre remembered them afterwards they all seemed misty figures
 to him except Platon Karataev, who always remained in his mind a
 most vivid and precious memory and the personification of everything
 Russian, kindly, and round. When Pierre saw his neighbor next
 morning at dawn the first impression of him, as of something round,
 was fully confirmed: Platon's whole figure- in a French overcoat
 girdled with a cord, a soldier's cap, and bast shoes- was round. His
 head was quite round, his back, chest, shoulders, and even his arms,
 which he held as if ever ready to embrace something, were rounded, his
 pleasant smile and his large, gentle brown eyes were also round. 
Platon Karataev must have been fifty, judging by his stories of
 campaigns he had been in, told as by an old soldier. He did not
 himself know his age and was quite unable to determine it. But his
 brilliantly white, strong teeth which showed in two unbroken
 semicircles when he laughed- as he often did- were all sound and good,
 there was not a gray hair in his beard or on his head, and his whole
 body gave an impression of suppleness and especially of firmness and
 endurance. 
His face, despite its fine, rounded wrinkles, had an expression of
 innocence and youth, his voice was pleasant and musical. But the chief
 peculiarity of his speech was its directness and appositeness. It
 was evident that he never considered what he had said or was going
 to say, and consequently the rapidity and justice of his intonation
 had an irresistible persuasiveness. 
His physical strength and agility during the first days of his
 imprisonment were such that he seemed not to know what fatigue and
 sickness meant. Every night before lying down, he said: "Lord, lay
 me down as a stone and raise me up as a loaf!" and every morning on
 getting up, he said: "I lay down and curled up, I get up and shake
 myself." And indeed he only had to lie down, to fall asleep like a
 stone, and he only had to shake himself, to be ready without a
 moment's delay for some work, just as children are ready to play
 directly they awake. He could do everything, not very well but not
 badly. He baked, cooked, sewed, planed, and mended boots. He was
 always busy, and only at night allowed himself conversation- of
 which he was fond- and songs. He did not sing like a trained singer
 who knows he is listened to, but like the birds, evidently giving vent
 to the sounds in the same way that one stretches oneself or walks
 about to get rid of stiffness, and the sounds were always
 high-pitched, mournful, delicate, and almost feminine, and his face at
 such times was very serious. 
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