BOOK EIGHT: 1811 - 12
1. CHAPTER I
 
After Prince Andrews engagement to Natasha, Pierre without any
 apparent cause suddenly felt it impossible to go on living as
 before. Firmly convinced as he was of the truths revealed to him by
 his benefactor, and happy as he had been in perfecting his inner
 man, to which he had devoted himself with such ardor- all the zest
 of such a life vanished after the engagement of Andrew and Natasha and
 the death of Joseph Alexeevich, the news of which reached him almost
 at the same time. Only the skeleton of life remained: his house, a
 brilliant wife who now enjoyed the favors of a very important
 personage, acquaintance with all Petersburg, and his court service
 with its dull formalities. And this life suddenly seemed to Pierre
 unexpectedly loathsome. He ceased keeping a diary, avoided the company
 of the Brothers, began going to the Club again, drank a great deal,
 and came once more in touch with the bachelor sets, leading such a
 life that the Countess Helene thought it necessary to speak severely
 to him about it. Pierre felt that she right, and to avoid compromising
 her went away to Moscow. 
In Moscow as soon as he entered his huge house in which the faded
 and fading princesses still lived, with its enormous retinue; as
 soon as, driving through the town, he saw the Iberian shrine with
 innumerable tapers burning before the golden covers of the icons,
 the Kremlin Square with its snow undisturbed by vehicles, the sleigh
 drivers and hovels of the Sivtsev Vrazhok, those old Moscovites who
 desired nothing, hurried nowhere, and were ending their days
 leisurely; when he saw those old Moscow ladies, the Moscow balls,
 and the English Club, he felt himself at home in a quiet haven. In
 Moscow he felt at peace, at home, warm and dirty as in an old dressing
 gown. 
Moscow society, from the old women down to the children, received
 Pierre like a long-expected guest whose place was always ready
 awaiting him. For Moscow society Pierre was the nicest, kindest,
 most intellectual, merriest, and most magnanimous of cranks, a
 heedless, genial nobleman of the old Russian type. His purse was
 always empty because it was open to everyone. 
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