BOOK FIVE: 1806 - 07
2. CHAPTER II
 (continued)
The traveler was Joseph Alexeevich Bazdeev, as Pierre saw from the
 postmaster's book. Bazdeev had been one of the best-known Freemasons
 and Martinists, even in Novikov's time. For a long while after he
 had gone, Pierre did not go to bed or order horses but paced up and
 down the room, pondering over his vicious past, and with a rapturous
 sense of beginning anew pictured to himself the blissful,
 irreproachable, virtuous future that seemed to him so easy. It
 seemed to him that he had been vicious only because he had somehow
 forgotten how good it is to be virtuous. Not a trace of his former
 doubts remained in his soul. He firmly believed in the possibility
 of the brotherhood of men united in the aim of supporting one
 another in the path of virtue, and that is how Freemasonry presented
 itself to him. 
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