<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0153" id="link2HCH0153"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER VIII </h2>
<p>That evening the Rostovs went to the Opera, for which Marya Dmitrievna had
taken a box.</p>
<p>Natasha did not want to go, but could not refuse Marya Dmitrievna's kind
offer which was intended expressly for her. When she came ready dressed
into the ballroom to await her father, and looking in the large mirror
there saw that she was pretty, very pretty, she felt even more sad, but it
was a sweet, tender sadness.</p>
<p>"O God, if he were here now I would not behave as I did then, but
differently. I would not be silly and afraid of things, I would simply
embrace him, cling to him, and make him look at me with those searching
inquiring eyes with which he has so often looked at me, and then I would
make him laugh as he used to laugh. And his eyes—how I see those
eyes!" thought Natasha. "And what do his father and sister matter to me? I
love him alone, him, him, with that face and those eyes, with his smile,
manly and yet childlike.... No, I had better not think of him; not think
of him but forget him, quite forget him for the present. I can't bear this
waiting and I shall cry in a minute!" and she turned away from the glass,
making an effort not to cry. "And how can Sonya love Nicholas so calmly
and quietly and wait so long and so patiently?" thought she, looking at
Sonya, who also came in quite ready, with a fan in her hand. "No, she's
altogether different. I can't!"</p>
<p>Natasha at that moment felt so softened and tender that it was not enough
for her to love and know she was beloved, she wanted now, at once, to
embrace the man she loved, to speak and hear from him words of love such
as filled her heart. While she sat in the carriage beside her father,
pensively watching the lights of the street lamps flickering on the frozen
window, she felt still sadder and more in love, and forgot where she was
going and with whom. Having fallen into the line of carriages, the
Rostovs' carriage drove up to the theater, its wheels squeaking over the
snow. Natasha and Sonya, holding up their dresses, jumped out quickly. The
count got out helped by the footmen, and, passing among men and women who
were entering and the program sellers, they all three went along the
corridor to the first row of boxes. Through the closed doors the music was
already audible.</p>
<p>"Natasha, your hair!..." whispered Sonya.</p>
<p>An attendant deferentially and quickly slipped before the ladies and
opened the door of their box. The music sounded louder and through the
door rows of brightly lit boxes in which ladies sat with bare arms and
shoulders, and noisy stalls brilliant with uniforms, glittered before
their eyes. A lady entering the next box shot a glance of feminine envy at
Natasha. The curtain had not yet risen and the overture was being played.
Natasha, smoothing her gown, went in with Sonya and sat down, scanning the
brilliant tiers of boxes opposite. A sensation she had not experienced for
a long time—that of hundreds of eyes looking at her bare arms and
neck—suddenly affected her both agreeably and disagreeably and
called up a whole crowd of memories, desires and emotions associated with
that feeling.</p>
<p>The two remarkably pretty girls, Natasha and Sonya, with Count Rostov who
had not been seen in Moscow for a long time, attracted general attention.
Moreover, everybody knew vaguely of Natasha's engagement to Prince Andrew,
and knew that the Rostovs had lived in the country ever since, and all
looked with curiosity at a fiancee who was making one of the best matches
in Russia.</p>
<p>Natasha's looks, as everyone told her, had improved in the country, and
that evening thanks to her agitation she was particularly pretty. She
struck those who saw her by her fullness of life and beauty, combined with
her indifference to everything about her. Her black eyes looked at the
crowd without seeking anyone, and her delicate arm, bare to above the
elbow, lay on the velvet edge of the box, while, evidently unconsciously,
she opened and closed her hand in time to the music, crumpling her
program. "Look, there's Alenina," said Sonya, "with her mother, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"Dear me, Michael Kirilovich has grown still stouter!" remarked the count.</p>
<p>"Look at our Anna Mikhaylovna—what a headdress she has on!"</p>
<p>"The Karagins, Julie—and Boris with them. One can see at once that
they're engaged...."</p>
<p>"Drubetskoy has proposed?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes, I heard it today," said Shinshin, coming into the Rostovs' box.</p>
<p>Natasha looked in the direction in which her father's eyes were turned and
saw Julie sitting beside her mother with a happy look on her face and a
string of pearls round her thick red neck—which Natasha knew was
covered with powder. Behind them, wearing a smile and leaning over with an
ear to Julie's mouth, was Boris' handsome smoothly brushed head. He looked
at the Rostovs from under his brows and said something, smiling, to his
betrothed.</p>
<p>"They are talking about us, about me and him!" thought Natasha. "And he no
doubt is calming her jealousy of me. They needn't trouble themselves! If
only they knew how little I am concerned about any of them."</p>
<p>Behind them sat Anna Mikhaylovna wearing a green headdress and with a
happy look of resignation to the will of God on her face. Their box was
pervaded by that atmosphere of an affianced couple which Natasha knew so
well and liked so much. She turned away and suddenly remembered all that
had been so humiliating in her morning's visit.</p>
<p>"What right has he not to wish to receive me into his family? Oh, better
not think of it—not till he comes back!" she told herself, and began
looking at the faces, some strange and some familiar, in the stalls. In
the front, in the very center, leaning back against the orchestra rail,
stood Dolokhov in a Persian dress, his curly hair brushed up into a huge
shock. He stood in full view of the audience, well aware that he was
attracting everyone's attention, yet as much at ease as though he were in
his own room. Around him thronged Moscow's most brilliant young men, whom
he evidently dominated.</p>
<p>The count, laughing, nudged the blushing Sonya and pointed to her former
adorer.</p>
<p>"Do you recognize him?" said he. "And where has he sprung from?" he asked,
turning to Shinshin. "Didn't he vanish somewhere?"</p>
<p>"He did," replied Shinshin. "He was in the Caucasus and ran away from
there. They say he has been acting as minister to some ruling prince in
Persia, where he killed the Shah's brother. Now all the Moscow ladies are
mad about him! It's 'Dolokhov the Persian' that does it! We never hear a
word but Dolokhov is mentioned. They swear by him, they offer him to you
as they would a dish of choice sterlet. Dolokhov and Anatole Kuragin have
turned all our ladies' heads."</p>
<p>A tall, beautiful woman with a mass of plaited hair and much exposed plump
white shoulders and neck, round which she wore a double string of large
pearls, entered the adjoining box rustling her heavy silk dress and took a
long time settling into her place.</p>
<p>Natasha involuntarily gazed at that neck, those shoulders, and pearls and
coiffure, and admired the beauty of the shoulders and the pearls. While
Natasha was fixing her gaze on her for the second time the lady looked
round and, meeting the count's eyes, nodded to him and smiled. She was the
Countess Bezukhova, Pierre's wife, and the count, who knew everyone in
society, leaned over and spoke to her.</p>
<p>"Have you been here long, Countess?" he inquired. "I'll call, I'll call to
kiss your hand. I'm here on business and have brought my girls with me.
They say Semenova acts marvelously. Count Pierre never used to forget us.
Is he here?"</p>
<p>"Yes, he meant to look in," answered Helene, and glanced attentively at
Natasha.</p>
<p>Count Rostov resumed his seat.</p>
<p>"Handsome, isn't she?" he whispered to Natasha.</p>
<p>"Wonderful!" answered Natasha. "She's a woman one could easily fall in
love with."</p>
<p>Just then the last chords of the overture were heard and the conductor
tapped with his stick. Some latecomers took their seats in the stalls, and
the curtain rose.</p>
<p>As soon as it rose everyone in the boxes and stalls became silent, and all
the men, old and young, in uniform and evening dress, and all the women
with gems on their bare flesh, turned their whole attention with eager
curiosity to the stage. Natasha too began to look at it.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />