BOOK THREE: 1805
1. CHAPTER I
 (continued)
Of his former bachelor acquaintances many were no longer in
 Petersburg. The Guards had gone to the front; Dolokhov had been
 reduced to the ranks; Anatole was in the army somewhere in the
 provinces; Prince Andrew was abroad; so Pierre had not the opportunity
 to spend his nights as he used to like to spend them, or to open his
 mind by intimate talks with a friend older than himself and whom he
 respected. His whole time was taken up with dinners and balls and
 was spent chiefly at Prince Vasili's house in the company of the stout
 princess, his wife, and his beautiful daughter Helene. 
Like the others, Anna Pavlovna Scherer showed Pierre the change of
 attitude toward him that had taken place in society. 
Formerly in Anna Pavlovna's presence, Pierre had always felt that
 what he was saying was out of place, tactless and unsuitable, that
 remarks which seemed to him clever while they formed in his mind
 became foolish as soon as he uttered them, while on the contrary
 Hippolyte's stupidest remarks came out clever and apt. Now
 everything Pierre said was charmant. Even if Anna Pavlovna did not say
 so, he could see that she wished to and only refrained out of regard
 for his modesty. 
In the beginning of the winter of 1805-6 Pierre received one of Anna
 Pavlovna's usual pink notes with an invitation to which was added:
 "You will find the beautiful Helene here, whom it is always delightful
 to see." 
When he read that sentence, Pierre felt for the first time that some
 link which other people recognized had grown up between himself and
 Helene, and that thought both alarmed him, as if some obligation
 were being imposed on him which he could not fulfill, and pleased
 him as an entertaining supposition. 
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