BOOK SEVEN: 1810 - 11
11. CHAPTER XI
 
Pelageya Danilovna Melyukova, a broadly built, energetic woman
 wearing spectacles, sat in the drawing room in a loose dress,
 surrounded by her daughters whom she was trying to keep from feeling
 dull. They were quietly dropping melted wax into snow and looking at
 the shadows the wax figures would throw on the wall, when they heard
 the steps and voices of new arrivals in the vestibule. 
Hussars, ladies, witches, clowns, and bears, after clearing their
 throats and wiping the hoarfrost from their faces in the vestibule,
 came into the ballroom where candles were hurriedly lighted. The
 clown- Dimmler- and the lady- Nicholas- started a dance. Surrounded by
 the screaming children the mummers, covering their faces and
 disguising their voices, bowed to their hostess and arranged
 themselves about the room. 
"Dear me! there's no recognizing them! And Natasha! See whom she
 looks like! She really reminds me of somebody. But Herr Dimmler- isn't
 he good! I didn't know him! And how he dances. Dear me, there's a
 Circassian. Really, how becoming it is to dear Sonya. And who is that?
 Well, you have cheered us up! Nikita and Vanya- clear away the tables!
 And we were sitting so quietly. Ha, ha, ha!... The hussar, the hussar!
 Just like a boy! And the legs!... I can't look at him..." different
 voices were saying. 
Natasha, the young Melyukovs' favorite, disappeared with them into
 the back rooms where a cork and various dressing gowns and male
 garments were called for and received from the footman by bare girlish
 arms from behind the door. Ten minutes later, all the young
 Melyukovs joined the mummers. 
Pelageya Danilovna, having given orders to clear the rooms for the
 visitors and arranged about refreshments for the gentry and the serfs,
 went about among the mummers without removing her spectacles,
 peering into their faces with a suppressed smile and failing to
 recognize any of them. It was not merely Dimmler and the Rostovs she
 failed to recognize, she did not even recognize her own daughters,
 or her late husband's, dressing gowns and uniforms, which they had put
 on. 
"And who is is this?" she asked her governess, peering into the face
 of her own daughter dressed up as a Kazan-Tartar. "I suppose it is one
 of the Rostovs! Well, Mr. Hussar, and what regiment do you serve
 in?" she asked Natasha. "Here, hand some fruit jelly to the Turk!" she
 ordered the butler who was handing things round. "That's not forbidden
 by his law." 
 |