BOOK TEN: 1812
2. CHAPTER II
 
The day after his son had left, Prince Nicholas sent for Princess
 Mary to come to his study. 
"Well? Are you satisfied now?" said he. "You've made me quarrel with
 my son! Satisfied, are you? That's all you wanted! Satisfied?... It
 hurts me, it hurts. I'm old and weak and this is what you wanted. Well
 then, gloat over it! Gloat over it!" 
After that Princess Mary did not see her father for a whole week. He
 was ill and did not leave his study. 
Princess Mary noticed to her surprise that during this illness the
 old prince not only excluded her from his room, but did not admit
 Mademoiselle Bourienne either. Tikhon alone attended him. 
At the end of the week the prince reappeared and resumed his
 former way of life, devoting himself with special activity to building
 operations and the arrangement of the gardens and completely
 breaking off his relations with Mademoiselle Bourienne. His looks
 and cold tone to his daughter seemed to say: "There, you see? You
 plotted against me, you lied to Prince Andrew about my relations
 with that Frenchwoman and made me quarrel with him, but you see I need
 neither her nor you!" 
Princess Mary spent half of every day with little Nicholas, watching
 his lessons, teaching him Russian and music herself, and talking to
 Dessalles; the rest of the day she spent over her books, with her
 old nurse, or with "God's folk" who sometimes came by the back door to
 see her. 
Of the war Princess Mary thought as women do think about wars. She
 feared for her brother who was in it, was horrified by and amazed at
 the strange cruelty that impels men to kill one another, but she did
 not understand the significance of this war, which seemed to her
 like all previous wars. She did not realize the significance of this
 war, though Dessalles with whom she constantly conversed was
 passionately interested in its progress and tried to explain his own
 conception of it to her, and though the "God's folk" who came to see
 her reported, in their own way, the rumors current among the people of
 an invasion by Antichrist, and though Julie (now Princess
 Drubetskaya), who had resumed correspondence with her, wrote patriotic
 letters from Moscow. 
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