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War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XIX


作者: Leo Tolstoy


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  • Author: Leo Tolstoy

EVER SINCE THE DAY when Pierre had looked up at the comet in the sky on his

way home from the Rostovs', and recalling Natasha's grateful look, had felt as

though some new vista was opening before him, the haunting problem of the vanity

and senselessness of all things earthly had ceased to torment him. That terrible

question: Why? what for? which had till then haunted him in the midst of every

occupation, was not now replaced by any other question, nor by an answer to the

old question; its place was filled by the image of her. If he heard or

talked of trivialities, or read or was told of some instance of human baseness

or folly, he was not cast down as of old; he did not ask himself why people

troubled, when all was so brief and uncertain. But he thought of her as he had

seen her last, and all his doubts vanished; not because she had answered the

questions that haunted him, but because her image lifted him instantly into

another bright realm of spiritual activity, in which there could be neither

right nor wrong, into a region of beauty and love which was worth living for.

Whatever infamy he thought of, he said to himself, “Well, let so and so rob the

state and the Tsar, while the state and the Tsar heap honours on him; but she

smiled at me yesterday, and begged me to come, and I love her, and nobody will

ever know it,” he thought.



Pierre still went into society, drank as much, and led the same idle and

aimless life, because, apart from the hours he spent at the Rostovs', he had to

get through the rest of his time somehow, and the habits and the acquaintances

he had made in Moscow drew him irresistibly into the same life. But of late,

since the reports from the seat of war had become more and more disquieting, and

Natasha's health had improved, and she had ceased to call for the same tender

pity, he had begun to be more and more possessed by a restlessness that he could

not explain. He felt that the position he was in could not go on for long, that

a catastrophe was coming that would change the whole course of his life, and he

sought impatiently for signs of this impending catastrophe. One of his brother

masons had revealed to Pierre the following prophecy relating to Napoleon, and

taken from the Apocalypse of St. John.



In the Apocalypse, chapter thirteen, verse seventeen, it is written: “Here is

wisdom; let him that hath understanding, count the number of the beast; for it

is the number of a man, and his number is six hundred three-score and

six.”



And in the fifth verse of the same chapter: “And there was given unto him a

mouth speaking great things and blasphemies, and power was given unto him to

continue forty and two months.”



If the French alphabet is treated like the Hebrew system of enumeration, by

which the first ten letters represent the units, and the next the tens, and so

on, the letters have the following value:—





  

  

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

  

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   
a b c d e f g h i k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140 150 160


Turning out the words l'empereur Napoléon into ciphers on this system,

it happens that the sum of these numbers equals 666, and Napoleon is thereby

seen to be the beast prophesied in the Apocalypse. Moreover, working out in the

same way the words quarante-deux, that is, the term for which the beast

was permitted to continue, the sum of these numbers again equals 666, from which

it is deduced that the terms of Napoleon's power had come in 1812, when the

French Emperor reached his forty-second year. This prophecy made a great

impression on Pierre. He frequently asked himself what would put an end to the

power of the beast, that is, of Napoleon; and he tried by the same system of

turning letters into figures, and reckoning them up to find an answer to this

question. He wrote down as an answer, l'empereur Alexandre? La nation

russe?
He reckoned out the figures, but their sum was far more or less than

666. Once he wrote down his own name “Comte Pierre Bezuhov,” but the sum of the

figure was far from being right. He changed the spelling, putting s for z, added

“de,” added the article “le,” and still could not obtain the desired result.

Then it occurred to him that if the answer sought for were to be found in his

name, his nationality ought surely to find a place in it too. He tried Le

russe Besuhof
, and adding up the figure made the sum 671. This was only five

too much; the 5 was denoted by the letter “e,” the letter dropped in the article

in the expression l'empereur Napoléon. Dropping the “e” in a similar way,

though of course incorrectly, Pierre obtained the answer he sought in L'russe

Besuhof
, the letters of which on that system added up to 666. This discovery

greatly excited him. How, by what connection, he was associated with the great

event, foretold in the Apocalypse, he could not tell. But he did not for a

moment doubt of that connection. His love for Natasha, Antichrist, Napoleon's

invasion, the comet, the number 666, l'empereur Napoléon, and l'russe

Besuhof
—all he thought were to develop, and come to some crisis together to

extricate him from that spellbound, trivial round of Moscow habits, to which he

felt himself in bondage, and to lead him to some great achievement and great

happiness.



The day before that Sunday on which the new prayer had been read in the

churches, Pierre had promised the Rostovs to call on Count Rastoptchin, whom he

knew well, and to get from him the Tsar's appeal to the country, and the last

news from the army. On going to Count Rastoptchin's in the morning, Pierre found

there a special courier, who had only just arrived from the army. The courier

was a man whom Pierre knew, and often saw at the Moscow balls.



“For mercy's sake, couldn't you relieve me of some of my burden,” said the

courier; “I have a sack full of letters to parents.”



Among these letters was a letter from Nikolay Rostov to his father. Pierre

took that; and Count Rastoptchin gave him a copy of the Tsar's appeal to Moscow,

which had just been printed, the last announcements in the army, and his own

last placard. Looking through the army announcements, Pierre found in one of

them, among lists of wounded, killed and promoted, the name of Nikolay Rostov,

rewarded with the order of St. George, of the fourth degree, for distinguished

bravery in the Ostrovna affair, and in the same announcement the appointment of

Prince Andrey Bolkonsky to the command of a regiment of light cavalry. Though he

did not want to remind the Rostovs of Bolkonsky's existence, Pierre could not

resist the inclination to rejoice their hearts with the news of their son's

decoration. Keeping the Tsar's appeal, Rastoptchin's placard, and the other

announcement to bring with him at dinner-time, Pierre sent the printed

announcement and Nikolay's letter to the Rostovs.



The conversation with Rastoptchin, and his tone of anxiety and hurry, the

meeting with the courier, who had casually alluded to the disastrous state of

affairs in the army, the rumours of spies being caught in Moscow, of a sheet

circulating in the town stating that Napoleon had sworn to be in both capitals

before autumn, of the Tsar's expected arrival next day—all combined to revive in

Pierre with fresh intensity that feeling of excitement and expectation, that he

had been conscious of ever since the appearance of the comet, and with even

greater force since the beginning of the war.



The idea of entering the army had long before occurred to Pierre, and he

would have acted upon it, but that, in the first place, he was pledged by his

vow to the Masonic brotherhood, which preached universal peace and the abolition

of war; and secondly, when he looked at the great mass of Moscow gentlemen, who

put on uniforms, and professed themselves patriots, he felt somehow ashamed to

take the same step. A cause that weighed with him even more in not entering the

army was the obscure conception that he, l'russe Besuhof, had somehow the

mystic value of the number of the beast, 666, that his share in putting a limit

to the power of the beast, “speaking great things and blasphemies,” had been

ordained from all eternity, and that therefore it was not for him to take any

step whatever; it was for him to wait for what was bound to come to pass.


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  13. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XXI
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  16. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XVII
  17. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XVI
  18. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XV
  19. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XIV
  20. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XIII
  21. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XI
  22. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XII
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  24. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER VIII
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  27. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER V
  28. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER IV
  29. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER III
  30. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER II
  31. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER I
  32. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER IX
  33. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XXIII
  34. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XXII
  35. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXVIII
  36. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXVII
  37. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXVI
  38. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXV
  39. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXIV
  40. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXIII
  41. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXII
  42. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXI
  43. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXX
  44. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXVIII
  45. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXIX
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  48. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXIV
  49. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXV
  50. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXII
  51. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXI
  52. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXIII
  53. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XX
  54. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XVIII
  55. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XIX
  56. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XVII
  57. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XVI
  58. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XV
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  60. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XIII
  61. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XII
  62. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XI
  63. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER X
  64. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER IX

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