BOOK SEVEN: 1810 - 11
13. CHAPTER XIII
 (continued)
After Nicholas had gone things in the Rostov household were more
 depressing than ever, and the countess fell ill from mental agitation. 
Sonya was unhappy at the separation from Nicholas and still more
 so on account of the hostile tone the countess could not help adopting
 toward her. The count was more perturbed than ever by the condition of
 his affairs, which called for some decisive action. Their town house
 and estate near Moscow had inevitably to be sold, and for this they
 had to go to Moscow. But the countess' health obliged them to delay
 their departure from day to day. 
Natasha, who had borne the first period of separation from her
 betrothed lightly and even cheerfully, now grew more agitated and
 impatient every day. The thought that her best days, which she would
 have employed in loving him, were being vainly wasted, with no
 advantage to anyone, tormented her incessantly. His letters for the
 most part irritated her. It hurt her to think that while she lived
 only in the thought of him, he was living a real life, seeing new
 places and new people that interested him. The more interesting his
 letters were the more vexed she felt. Her letters to him, far from
 giving her any comfort, seemed to her a wearisome and artificial
 obligation. She could not write, because she could not conceive the
 possibility of expressing sincerely in a letter even a thousandth part
 of what she expressed by voice, smile, and glance. She wrote to him
 formal, monotonous, and dry letters, to which she attached no
 importance herself, and in the rough copies of which the countess
 corrected her mistakes in spelling. 
There was still no improvement in the countess' health, but it was
 impossible to defer the journey to Moscow any longer. Natasha's
 trousseau had to be ordered and the house sold. Moreover, Prince
 Andrew was expected in Moscow, where old Prince Bolkonski was spending
 the winter, and Natasha felt sure he had already arrived. 
So the countess remained in the country, and the count, taking Sonya
 and Natasha with him, went to Moscow at the end of January. 
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