War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy
What follows is a listing of simple summaries for each chapter of War and Peace. The version of the text used is The Modern Library (New York) translated by Constance Garnett. 1994 Modern Library Edition. Biographical note copyright 1994 by Random House, Inc. If one has this version of the novel, they can quickly locate certain scenes or ideas by chapter summaries. The chapter summaries are indented and inside brackets. Otherwise, the use of quote marks indicates direct wording from the book so readers can view how Tolstoy uses language and to display some of the poetry of his writing. You will notice some unusual spelling which has been double checked and comes straight from Tolstoy and/or the translator. This summary is also for people who may be intimidated by the length of the book (1386 pages); they would like to see what the story is about before investing their reading time. Another nice thing to know if a reader is not sure about this undertaking is that the chapters are relatively short. You can always read just one or two chapters a day. Yes, the Russian names are difficult, but you can write down the names of the main characters and keep a list. Don’t let that stop you from enjoying a classic.
PART I
I
“To be enthusiastic had become her pose in society, and at times even when she had, indeed, no inclination to be so, she was enthusiastic so as not to disappoint the expectations of those who knew her.”
[Anna Pavlovna Scherer and Prince Vassily decide to try and marry the prince Jon Anatole to a rich princess to get him out of their hair.]
II
[Anna flits about the party, keeping it going like a good hostess, but is disconcerted by the presence of a “bastard” named Pierre who threatens the grace of the fete.]
III
“Princess Ellen smiled. She got up with the same unchanging smile of the acknowledged beauty with which she had entered the drawing room. Her white ball-dress adorned with ivy and moss rustled lightly, her white shoulders, glossy hair, and diamonds glittered, as she passed between the men who moved apart to make way for her. Not looking directly at any one, but smiling at every one, as it were courteously allowing to all the right to admire the beauty of her figure, her full shoulders, her bosom and back, which were extremely exposed in the mode of the day, she moved up to Anna Pavlovna, seeming to bring with her the brilliance of the ballroom. Ellen was so lovely that she was not merely free from the slightest shade of coquetry, she seemed on the contrary ashamed of the too evident, too violent and all-conquering influence of her beauty. She seemed to wish but to be unable to soften the effect of her beauty” (10).
[Prince Andrey will leave his wife Princess Bolkonsky in the country while he goes to war. He knows Pierre, and they will have dinner together.]
IV
[Anna Mihalovna asks Prince Vassily to get her son transferred to being a guard. Her husband had gotten Vassily started. He says he will speak to the Emperor. The party debated over Napoleon.]
V
“‘I hope I shall see you again, but I hope too you will change your opinions, my dear Monsieur Pierre.’
He made no answer, simply bowed and displayed to every one once more his smile, which said as plainly as words: ‘Opinions or no opinions, you see what a nice, good-hearted fellow I am.’ And Anna Pavlovna and every one else instinctively felt this.”
[Pierre needs to choose a job, but doesn’t want to fight against Napoleon, whom he admires. Prince Andrey just wants to leave, even his pregnant wife, by any means necessary.]
VI
“In the middle of supper Prince Andrey leaned on his elbow, and like a man who has long had something on his mind, and suddenly resolves on giving it utterance, he began to speak with an expression of nervous irritation which Pierre had never seen in his friend before” (27).
[Pierre had promised not to go back to Anatole Kuragin’s (to Prince Andrey who said he was wasting his time there). But Pierre couldn’t resist getting drunk with the boys.]
VII
[As it happens, Pierre’s father is about to die and leave a vast estate to either Prince Vassily or Pierre. We don’t know which.]
VIII
[no notes]
IX
“‘So far I have been, than God, my children’s friend and have enjoyed their full confidence,’ said the countess, repeating the error of so many parents, who imagine their children have no secrets from them” (43).
[We are introduced to the Rostovs, their family and relations.]
X
[Boris and Natasha; Nikolay and Sonya.]
XI
[Vera is jealous of and mean toward the two younger couples. They know she had never displayed an affection for anyone. Princess Anna Mihalovna wants to secure a piece of Prince Kirill Vladimirovitch Bezuhov’s fortune too for his son Boris.]
XII
[Prince Vassily isn’t too keen on godson Boris coming with his pushy mother to speak to the dying Bezuhov.]
XIII
[Anna, Boris’s mother, got in to see the dying man. Pierre met Boris and instantly took a liking to him.]
XIV
[Countess Rostov gave Anna Mihalovna enough for Boris to buy his guard equipment.]
XV
[A huge feast at the Rostov’s.]
XVI
[The men discuss war over dinner. Nikolay will be going.]
XVII
[Sonya is so upset that Nikolay has received his marching papers. The count dances to beat the band with Marya Dmitryevna.]
XVIII
“The princess smiled, as people smile who believe that they know much more about the subject than those with whom they are talking” (77).
[Prince Vassily speaks with his cousin Katerina Semyonovna regarding her father’s estate. Vassily believes Bezuhov has written the Emperor a letter requesting Pierre to be recognized as legitimate, thereby being able to leave him the entire estate. Now both Vassily and Katerina are agitated.]
XIX
[Bezuhov had called Pierre to his bedside. When he arrived, all gathered began treating him different. He was treated for the first time like an heir.]
XX
[Last rites.]
XXI
[We meet Prince Bolkonsky and his daughter, Marya. She receives a letter from friend Julie saying Anatole has been rumored to be her courter. Julie says hers will be Pierre.]
XXIII
[Prince Andrey has brought his pregnant wife to stay with his father and sister Marya while he is away fighting Bonaparte.]
XXIV
[The little princess got kind of the funky wangle at the first dinner with her father-in-law. He seems rather eccentric.]
XXV
[Prince Andrey tells his father that if he dies in the war and Liza has a son, to please raise the son in his home, never lose him. Andrey leaves.]
PART TWO
I
[Dolohov, the drunken prankster from before, is now in ranks.]
II
[Dolohov is already making friends and enemies. No fighting yet.]
III
[Mack, leading the allied Austrians has been defeated. The Russians will soon fight.]
IV
[Rostov went to visit Denisov who’d been drunk and gambling. When Telyanin came to visit, he stole Denisov’s winnings. Rostov went to retrieve it but felt such pity for a man who would steal from an acquaintance that he left Telyanin with the money.]
V
[The staff captain asked Rostov to apologize to his colonel for blaming him for taking the money. Rostov refuses. Mack has surrendered, so now these boys will be sent to the front.]
VI
“‘Look, prince,’ said another, who would dearly have liked to take another pie, but was ashamed to, and therefore affected to be gazing at the countryside…” (147).
[The enemy is in sight.]
VII
[The soldiers are all packed onto a bridge trying to get to the other side when the enemy starts firing cannonballs at them.]
VIII
[Upon battle engagement, Rostov finds he is a coward. He only wishes to live away from all this. Even Nesvitsky the commander doesn’t like to see men going down.]
IX
[Prince Andrey is asked to take papers to the minister of war saying they had retreated but had gained one victory. Not many had been wounded, fewer killed. By this delivery, Andrey may get a promotion.]
X
“Bilibin enjoyed conversation just as he enjoyed work, only when the conversation could be elegantly witty. In society he was continually watching for an opportunity of saying something striking, and did not enter into conversation except under such circumstances. Bilibin’s conversation was continually sprinkled with original, epigrammatic, polished phrases of general interest. These phrases were fashioned in the inner laboratory of Bilibin’s mind, as though intentionally, of portable form, so that insignificant persons could easily remember them and carry them from drawing-room to drawing-room. And Bilibin’s good things were hawked about in Viennese drawing-rooms and afterwards had an influence on so-called great events” (167).
[Andrey stays the night with dignitary Bilibin who seems unimpressed by Andrey’s news of the small victory. Vienna has now been taken by the French. Bilibin suspects secret peace negotiations.]
XI
[Andrey is off to meet the emperor.]
XII
[A bridge has been taken by the French. The army is in trouble. Andrey hears about it and immediately prepares to go help them.]
XIII
“‘And if there’s nothing left but to die?’ he thought. ‘Well, if it must be! I will do it no worse than others’” (179).
[Andrey returns to the front to find everything in disarray and preparing for battle. He has now returned to Kutuzov.]
XIV
[Bagration’s men (Russian) are slowly, unknowingly to them, becoming surrounded by the French. Kutuzov is on his way.]
XV
[Some troops are so close to each other that they are having conversations with their enemies.]
XVI
[Andrey is at the front making field notes while Tushin et. al. contemplate life after death.]
XVII
[Prince Bagration remains cool under fire.]
XVIII
[Here we go…]
Footnote “This was the attack of which Thiers says: ‘The Russians behaved valiantly and, which is rare in warfare, two bodies of infantry marched resolutely upon each other, neither giving way before the other came up.’ And Napoleon on St. Helena said: ‘Some Russian battalions showed intrepidity’” (202).
XIX
“Again, as on the Enns bridge, there was no one between the squadron and the enemy, and between them lay that terrible border-line of uncertainty and dread, like the line dividing the living from the dead” (205).
“‘It must be one of ours taken prisoner…Yes. Surely they couldn’t take me too? What sort of men are they?’ Rostov was still wondering, unable to believe his own eyes. ‘Can they be the French?’ He gazed at the approaching French, and although only a few seconds before he had been longing to get at these Frenchmen and to cut them down, their being so near seemed to him now so awful that he could not believe his eyes. ‘Who are they? What are they running for? Can it be to me? Can they be running to me? And what for? To kill me? Me, whom every one’s so fond of?’ He recalled his mother’s love, the love of his family and his friends, and the enemy’s intention of killing him seemed impossible. ‘But they may even kill me.’ For more than ten seconds he stood, not moving from the spot, nor grasping his position. The foremost Frenchman with the hook nose was getting so near that he could see the expression on his face. And the excited, alien countenance of the man, who was running so lightly and breathlessly towards him, with his bayonet lowered, terrified Rostov. He snatched up his pistol, and instead of firing with it, flung it at the Frenchman and ran to the bushes with all his might. Not with the feeling of doubt and conflict with which he had moved at the Enns bridge, did he now run, but with the feeling of a hare fleeing from the dogs. One unmixed feeling of fear for his young, happy life took possession of his whole being. Leaping rapidly over the hedges with the same impetuosity with which he used to run when he played games, he flew over the field, now and then turning his pale, good-natured, youthful face, and a chill of horror ran down his spine. ‘No, better not to look,’ he thought, but as he got near to the bushes he looked round once more. The French had given it up, and just at the moment when he looked round the foremost man was just dropping from a run into a walk, and turning round to shout something loudly to a comrade behind. Rostov stopped. ‘There’s some mistake,’ he thought, ‘it can’t be that they meant to kill me.’ And meanwhile his left arm was as heavy as if a hundred pound weight were hanging on it. He could run no further. The Frenchman stopped too and took aim. Rostov frowned and ducked. One bullet and then another flew hissing by him; he took his left hand in his right, and with a last effort ran as far as the bushes. In the bushes there were Russian sharpshooters” (207).
[Zherkov was sent to deliver a message, but when he got closer to the line of battle he chickened out and went the other way. Rostov was leading the way but before he knew it, he and his horse went down. Wounded and being chased by the enemy, Rostov ran.]
XX
“The infantry, who had been caught unawares in the copse, had run away, and the different companies all confused together had retreated in disorderly crowds. One soldier in a panic had uttered those words–terrible in ware and meaningless: ‘Cut off!’ and those words had infected the whole mass with panic.
“‘Outflanked! Cut off! Lost!’ they shouted as they ran.
“When their general heard the firing and the shouts in the rear he had grasped at the instant that something awful was happening to his regiment; and the thought that he, an exemplary officer, who had served so many years without ever having been guilty of the slightest shortcoming, might be held responsible by his superiors for negligence or lack of discipline, so affected him that, instantly oblivious of the insubordinate cavalry colonel and his dignity as a general, utterly oblivious even of danger and of the instinct of self-preservation, he clutched at the crupper of his saddle, and spurring his horse, galloped off to the regiment under a perfect hail of bullets that luckily missed him. He was possessed by the one desire to find out what was wrong, and to help and correct the mistake whatever it might be, if it were a mistake on his part, so that after twenty-two years of exemplary service, without incurring a reprimand for anything, he might avoid being responsible for this blunder.
“Galloping successfully between the French forces, he reached the field behind the copse across which our men were running downhill, not heeding the word of command. That moment had come of moral vacillation which decides the fate of battles. Would these disorderly crowds of soldiers hear the voice of their commander, or, looking back at him, run on further? In spite of the despairing yell of the commander, who had once been so awe-inspiring to his soldiers, in spite of his infuriated, purple face, distorted out of all likeness to itself, in spite of his brandished sword, the soldiers still ran and talked together, shooting into the air and not listening to the word of command. The moral balance which decides the fate of battle was unmistakably falling on the side of panic” (208).
[Timohin’s sharpshooters helped keep the French from dividing the troops. Dolohov caught a French officer and presented the general with the French officer’s ammunition. Tushin and his four cannons were kicking ass until he was commanded to retreat. Andrey helped get their cannons in motion.]
XXI
[Night falls. Officers meet to discuss the action of the day. Andrey stood up for Tushin. Rostov is homesick, wounded, and wondering why he ever came to war.]
PART THREE
I
“She glanced at her niece, as though to inquire what she was to do with them. Anna Pavlovna again laid a finger on Pierre’s sleeve and said: ‘I hope you will never say in future that people are bored at my house,’ and glanced at Ellen. Ellen smiled with an air which seemed to say that she did not admit the possibility of any one’s seeing her without being enchanted. The old aunt coughed, swallowed the phlegm, and said in French that she was very glad to see Ellen; then she addressed Pierre with the same greeting and the same grimace.”
“She was, as always in the evening, wearing a dress cut in the fashion of the day, very low in the neck both in front and behind. Her bust, which had always to Pierre looked like marble, was so close to his short-sighted eyes that he could discern all the living charm of her neck and shoulders, and so near his lips that he need scarcely have stooped to kiss it. He felt the warmth of her body, the fragrance of scent, and heard the creaking of her corset as she moved. He saw not her marble beauty making up one whole with her gown; he saw and felt all the charm of her body, which was only veiled by her clothes. And having once seen this, he could not see it otherwise, just as we cannot return to an illusion that has been explained” (226-7).
[Prince Vassily has stayed with Pierre to help him settle into his affairs. Although Vassily is not doing harm to Pierre. Vassily also benefits from the union. Pierre finally realizes everyone thinks he should marry Vassily’s daughter Ellen which at once repulses and excites him.]
II
“The diplomat went out of the drawing-room in dumb dejection. He felt vividly all this vanity of his diplomatic career by comparison with Pierre’s happiness” (234).
[Even though he didn’t direct it, Pierre is married to Ellen.]
III
Princess Marya crossed herself, sighing, and went downstairs, without thinking of her dress nor how her hair was done; of how she would go in nor what she would say” (244).
[Prince Vassily and son Anatole come to visit the senior Bolkonsky and his daughter.]
IV
[Even though everyone knows Anatole has been brought to meet Marya, he and Mademoiselle Bourienne are secretly flirting.]
V
[When Marya found Anatole and Bourienne kissing in the garden, she knew she couldn’t marry him. She wants them to marry each other.]
VI
[Nikolay writes to his family about being wounded and advanced in rank. He still loves Sonya. They send him a care package. (Rostov family)]
VII
“‘I say, Berg, my dear fellow,’ said Rostov; ‘when you get a letter from home and meet one of your own people, whom you want to talk everything over with, and I’m on the scene, I’ll clear out at once, so as not to be in your way. Do you hear, be off, please, anywhere, anywhere…to the devil!’ he cried, and immediately seizing him by the shoulder, and looking affectionately into his face, evidently to soften the rudeness of his words, he added: ‘you know, you’re not angry, my dear fellow, I speak straight from the hear to an old friend like you’” (265).
“He begged Rostov to tell them how and where he had been wounded. That pleased Rostov, and he began telling them, getting more and more eager as he talked. He described to them his battle at Schongraben exactly as men who have taken part in battles always do describe them, that is, as they would have liked them to be, as they have heard them described by others, and as sounds well, but not in the least as it really had been. Rostov was a truthful young man; he would not have intentionally told a lie” (267).
“‘Let me tell you this,’ Prince Andrey cut him short in a tone of quiet authority, ‘you are trying to insult me, and I’m ready to agree with you that it is very easy to do so, if you haven’t sufficient respect for yourself.”
“Rostov only bethought him of what he ought to have answered when he had gone. And he was more furious till that he had not thought of saying it” (269).
[When Rostov was in the middle of telling his battle story to his friends, he was interrupted by Andre who had come to see Boris. Instant dislike on both sides.]
VIII
[The two emperors come to inspect their troops. Rostov was obsessed with tsar. They all looked great and are ready to go back into battle.]
IX
[Boris is trying to move up through Andrey’s recommendation. It is slow going.]
X
[Rostov’s love for the tsar.]
XI
[Napoleon has sent word of peace negotiations, but the Russians will have none of it. When Dolgorukov shows Andrey the attack plans, Andrey notices many flaws which he will speak of at the evening meeting.]
XII
“Kutuzov, his uniform unbuttoned, and his fat neck as though set free from bondage, bulging over the collar, was sitting in a low chair…” (290).
[Since Andrey had no chance to speak at the meeting, he imagines himself in the thick of battle, coming to the army’s aid with his ideas of attack that will save the day. More than anything he wants to be loved by military men.]
XIII
[The French are rallying, getting ready to fight.]
XIV
[The Russians believe the French to be in the fog ahead, when in fact they are above and behind.]
XV
[Troops moving into the valley. Even the emperors are there.]
XVI
[As Andrey is leading with this flag in his dream battle, someone knocks him on the head and he goes down.]
XVII
[Rostov was sent to deliver a message and was not only surprised to find the hill occupied by enemy instead of ally, but that some Russian and Austrian soldiers had been shooting at each other.]
XVIII
[The battle has been lost. Rostov chickens out when he gets his chance with the emperor. Dolohov’s hand is wounded. They are being chased by the French. Dolohov encourages everyone on to the frozen lake to get away, but the ice breaks and people start to drown.]
XIX
“Gazing into Napoleon’s eyes, Prince Andrey mused on the nothingness of greatness, on the nothingness of life, of which no one could comprehend the significance, and on the nothingness–still more–of death, the meaning of which could be understood and explained by none of the living.
“The Emperor, after vainly pausing for a reply, turned away and said to one of the officers in command–
“‘See that they look after these gentlemen and take them to my bivouac, let my doctor Larrey attend to their wounds. Au revoir, Prince Repnin,’ and he galloped away.
“His face was radiant with happiness and self-satisfaction.
“The soldiers, who had been carrying Prince Andrey, had come across the golden relic Princess Marya had hung upon her brother’s neck, and taken it off him, but seeing the graciousness the Emperor had shown to the prisoners, they made haste to restore the holy image.
“Prince Andrey did not see who put it on him again, nor how it was replaced, but all at once he found the locket on its delicate gold chain on his chest outside his uniform.
“‘How good it would be,’ thought Prince Andrey, as he glanced at the image which his sister had hung round his neck with such emotion and reverence, ‘how good it would be if all were as clear and simple as it seems to Marie. How good to know where to seek aid in this life and what to expect after it, there, beyond the grave!’
“‘How happy and at peace I should be, if I could say now, ‘Lord, have mercy on me!…’ But to whom am I to say that? Either a Power infinite, inconceivable, to which I cannot appeal, which I cannot even put into words, the great whole, or nothing,’ he said to himself, ‘or that Good, who has been sewn up here in this locket by Marie? There is nothing, nothing certain but the nothingness of all that is comprehensible to us, and the grandeur of something incomprehensible, but more important!’
“The stretchers began to be moved. At every jolt he felt intolerable pain again. The fever became higher, and he fell into delirium. Visions of his father, his wife, his sister, and his future son, and the tenderness he had felt for them on the night before the battle, the figure of that little, petty Napoleon, and over all these the lofty sky, formed the chief substance of his delirious dreams. The quiet home life and peaceful happiness of Bleak Hills passed before his imagination” (327).
[Napoleon had the wounded picked up and patched. All seems insignificant now to Andrey who had battle epiphanies.]
PART FOUR
I
“But their eyes when they met spoke more fondly and kissed tenderly. Her eyes asked his forgiveness for having dared, by Natasha’s mediation, to remind him of his promise, and thanked him for his love. His eyes thanked her for offering him his freedom, and told her that whether so, or otherwise, he should never cease to love her, because it was impossible not to love her.
“‘How queer it is, though,’ said Vera, selecting a moment of general silence, ‘that Sonya and Nikolenka meet now and speak like strangers.’
“Vera’s observation was true, as were all her observations; but like most of her observations it made every one uncomfortable…” (335).
[Denisov is invited to Rostov’s house while they are on leave. Warm reception. Rostov and Sonya have an understanding that they love each other but must remain free for now.]
II
[Nilolay’s father Count Ilya Andreivitch is throwing a party for the one hero they could find. Prince Bagration. Everyone speaks poorly of Kutuzov.]
III
[Party hearty!]
IV
[Pierre feels Dolohov has been messing around with his wife. They challenge each other to a duel.]
V
[Pierre shot Dolohov.]
VI
[Pierre and Ellen break up. She claimed Dolohov was never her lover. Pierre had never loved her. He gave her over half of his estate to get rid of her.]
VII
[Prince Andrey Bolkonsky’s family doesn’t know if he is dead or alive. The father accepts him as dead, but the daughter still has hope.]
VIII
[Andrey returns, just as his child is being born.]
IX
[During childbirth the baby lives, but the little princess dies. Andrey loves his son and mourns his wife’s death.]
X
[Dolohov has taken a liking to Sonya, Nikolay’s sister’s friend. Dolohov has not died in the duel.]
XI
[Nikolay told Sonya she better take Dolohov’s offer of marriage while the getting is good because Nikolay knew that although he loved Sonya, he would fall in love many more times in the future.]
XII
[At the ball, Denisov and Natasha boogie down and hang out.]
XIII
[Rostov suckered into a betting game with Dolohov lost all the money he had that was to last him all spring.]
XIV
[Dolohov put Nikolay into gambling debt all for being angry that Sonya loves Nikolay and not himself.]
XV
[Nikolay went back home because now he has to ask for more money.]
XVI
[Denisov asked Natasha to marry him, but she had to refuse, being too young. Nikolay’s dad pays off his debt. Nikolay and Denisov head back to war.]
PART FIVE
I
“‘Was that good or bad?’ Pierre wondered. ‘For me good, for the next traveler bad, and for himself inevitable because he has nothing to eat; he said that an officer had thrashed him for it. And the officer thrashed him because he had to travel in haste. And I shot Dolohov because I considered myself injured. Louis XVI was executed because they considered him to be a criminal, and a year later his judges were killed too for something. What is wrong? What is right? What must one love, what must one hate? What is life for, and what am I? What is life? What is death? What force controls it all?’ he asked himself. And there was no answer to one of these questions, except one illogical reply that was in no way an answer to any of them. That reply was: ‘One dies and it’s all over. One dies and finds it all out or ceases asking.’ But dying too was terrible.
“The Torzhok pedlar woman in a whining voice proffered her wares, especially some goatskin slippers. ‘I have hundreds of roubles I don’t know what to do with, and she’s standing in her torn cloak looking timidly at me,’ thought Pierre. ‘And what does she want the money for? As though the money could give her one hairsbreadth of happiness, of peace of soul. Is there anything in the world that can make her and me less enslaved to evil and to death? Death, which ends all, and must come to-day or to-morrow–which beside eternity is the same as an instant’s time.’ And again he turned the screw that did not bite in anything, and the screw still went on turning in the same place.
“His servant handed him a half-cut volume of a novel in the form of letters by Madame Suza. He began reading of the sufferings and the virtuous struggles of a certain ‘Amelie de Mansfeld.’ ‘And what did she struggle against her seducer for?’ he thought, ‘when she loved him. God could not have put in her heart an impulse that was against His will. My wife–as she was once–didn’t struggle, and perhaps she was right. Nothing has been discovered,’ Pierre said to himself again, ‘nothing has been invented. We can only know that we know nothing. And that’s the highest degree of human wisdom.’
“Everything within himself and around him struck him as confused, meaningless, and loathsome. But in this very loathing of everything surrounding him Pierre found a sort of tantalising satisfaction” (389).
[Pierre is traveling.]
II [Great chapter]
“‘I am afraid,’ said Pierre, smiling and hesitating between the confidence inspired in him by the personality of the freemason and the habit of ridiculing the articles of the masons’ creed; ‘I am afraid that I am very far from a comprehension–how shall I say–I am afraid that my way of thinking in regard to the whole theory of the universe is so opposed to yours that we shall not understand one another.’
“‘I am aware of your way of thinking,’ said the freemason, ‘and that way of thinking of which you speak, which seems to you the result of your own thought, is the way of thinking of the majority of men, and is the invariable fruit of pride, indolence, and ignorance. Excuse my saying, sir, that if I had not been aware of it, I should not have addressed you. Your way of thinking is a melancholy error’” (391-2).
“Pierre could not and would not interrupt this silence.
“‘He exists, but to comprehend Him is hard,’ the mason began again, not looking into Pierre’s face, but straight before him, while his old hands, which could not keep still for inward emotion, turned the leaves of the book. ‘If it had been a man of whose existence thou hadst doubts, I could have brought thee the man, taken him by the hand, and shown him thee. But how am I, an insignificant mortal, to show all the power, all the eternity, all the blessedness of Him to one who is blind, or to one who shuts his eyes that he may not see, may not understand Him, and may not see, and not understand all his own vileness and viciousness.’ He paused. ‘Who art thou? What art thou? Thou dreamest that thou art wise because thou couldst utter those scoffing words,’ he said, with a gloomy and scornful irony, ‘while thou art more foolish and artless than a little babe, who, playing with the parts of a cunningly fashioned watch, should rashly say that because he understands not the use of that watch, he does not believe in the maker who fashioned it. To know Him is a hard matter. For ages, from our first father Adam to our day, have we been striving for this knowledge, and are infinitely far from the attainment of our aim; but in our lack of understanding we see only our own weakness and His greatness…’
“Pierre gazed with shining eyes into the freemason’s face, listening with a thrill at his heart to his words; he did not interrupt him, not ask questions, but with all his soul he believed what this strange man was telling him. Whether he believed on the rational grounds put before him by the freemason, or believed, as children do, through the intonations, the conviction, and the earnestness, of the mason’s words, the quiver in his voice that sometimes almost broke his utterance, or the gleaming old eyes that had grown old in that conviction, or the calm, the resolution, and the certainty of his destination, which were conspicuous in the whole personality of the old man, and struck Pierre with particular force, beside his own abjectness and hopelessness,–any way, with his whole soul he longed to believe, and believed and felt a joyful sense of soothing, of renewal, and of return to life” (395).
[Pierre meets a religious man–a freemason–who may have just changed Pierre’s life.]
III
[Pierre begins his initiation into freemasonry.]
IV
[Pierre feels changed and anxious to begin.]
V
[Vassily came to clear up the misunderstanding between his daughter Ellen and Pierre, but Pierre simply asked Vassily to go.]
VI
[Anna’s soiree. Boris, the adjutant, meets Ellen, the estranged wife of Pierre.]
VII
[Boris starts hanging out with Ellen.]
VIII
[Prince Andrey’s baby is sick so he doesn’t want to work. Bolkonsky Sr. is now a commander; Andrey his adjutant.]
IX
[Bilibin sent Andrey a letter about how mixed up things are on the front line. The baby’s fever broke.]
X
[As Pierre is trying to improve the profitability and life for serfs on his estates. He is being duped by his head steward, who knows just the right buttons to push.]
XI
[Pierre and Andre have totally different views on how to treat their slaves.]
XII
[Pierre convinced Andre of thing or two regarding his beliefs about life.]
XIII
[When Pierre gets to Andrey’s house, Marya is visiting with religious pilgrims. The men have trouble believing what they say.]
XIV
[Pierre was well received in the Bolkonsky house.]
XV
[Rostov returns to the ranks. He and Denisov grow closer.]
XVI
[Because his men were starving, Denisov stole provisions from another regiment. He was shot in the thigh; not a serious wound. He took the opportunity to go to the hospital instead of to court.]
XVII
[Rostov goes to the hospital to find Denisov with no luck yet. Typhoid has hit the patients and it is hell in there.]
XVIII
[Rostov finds Denisov and through the help of his hospital peers, Denisov finally writes the Emperor for forgiveness for taking the rations.]
XIX
[Rostov came to Boris hoping he would take Denisov’s note of apology to the Emperor. Boris didn’t seem too accommodating.]
XX
[Rostov was successful at getting the message to the Tsar, but it is not looking favorable for Denisov to be pardoned.]
XXI
[Alexander and Napoleon have declared peace. Some of the fighting men don’t know what to think.]
PART SIX
I
[For the last two years, Andrey has only kept to his estates and making steady improvements.]
II
“Prince Andrey got up and went to the window to open it. As soon as he opened the shutter, the moonlight broke into the room as though it had been waiting a long while outside on the watch for this chance. He opened the window. The night was fresh and bright and still. Just in front of the window stood a row of pollard-trees, black on one side, silvery bright on the other. Under the trees were rank, moist, bushy, growing plants of some kind, with leaves and stems touched here and there with silver. Further away, beyond the black trees, was the roof of something glistening with dew; to the right was a great, leafy tree, with its trunk and branches brilliantly white, and above it the moon, almost full, in a clear, almost starless, spring sky. Prince Andrey leaned his elbow on the window, and his eyes rested on that sky” (474).
[Prince Andrey goes to the Rostov house on business and cannot understand why Natasha is always so happy.]
III
[Prince Andrey is starting to think socially and about love again.]
IV
[Andrey met with the minister of war regarding some regulation ideas. The man appointed Andrey to a certain committee but with no pay.]
V
[Andrey becomes intrigued with Speransky. They have a respect for each other. Speransky is going to talk with Magnitsky regarding Andrey’s ideas.]
VI
“Within a week Prince Andrey was a member of the committee for the reconstruction of the army regulations, and–a thing he would never have expected–he was also chairman of a section of the commission for the revision of the legal code. At Speransky’s request he took the first part of the civil code under revision; and with the help of the Napoleonic Code and the Code of Justinian he worked at the revision of the section on Personal Rights” (488).
VII
“Yet even in the whirl of his active work and his dissipations, Pierre began, after the lapse of a year, to feel more and more as though the ground of freemasonry on which he had taken his stand was slipping away under his feet the more firmly he tried to rest on it. At the same time he felt that the further the ground slipped from under his feet, the more close was his bondage to the order. When he had entered the brotherhood he had felt like a man who confidently puts his foot down on the smooth surface of a bog. Having put one foot down, he had sunk in; and to convince himself of the firmness of the ground on which he stood, he had put the other foot down on it too, and had sunk in further, had stuck in the mud, and now was against this own will struggling knee-deep in the bog” (488-9).
“Every reform by violence is to be deprecated, because it does little to correct the evil while men remain as they are, and because wisdom has no need of violence” (491).
[When Pierre recognized the freemasons were getting off track, he gave a speech which divided the group. Pierre’s ideas were dismissed by those higher in rank.]
VIII
[Osip Alexyevitch leads Pierre through tough spiritual times. Ellen writes Pierre and begs to get back together. Being his own role model, he returns to his wife.]
IX
[Ellen is a socialite. Pierre is her husband in name only. Pierre is evolving, but Boris can still make him jealous.]
X
[Pierre writes down his dreams.]
XI
[Berg is marrying Vera only for the money. The father gives the money, even though he is broke.]
XII
[Boris means to let Natasha know that he doesn’t intend on marrying her. He keeps hanging out but gets caught up in the fun, always coming away without breaking his vow.]
XIII
[Natasha spoke with her mom. Although she loved flirting with Boris, she wasn’t in love. They were both poor. Mom had to tell Boris not to come over so much.]
XIV
[The poor Rostovs have been invited to one of the best balls of the year. They take Madame Peronsky along.]
XV
[This chapter catches you up on who is after whom romantically.]
XVI
“Her bare neck and arms were thin, and not beautiful compared with Ellen’s shoulders. Her shoulders were thin, her bosom undefined, her arms were slender. But Ellen was, as it were, covered with the hard varnish of those thousands of eyes that had scanned her person, while Natasha seemed like a young girl stripped for the first time, who would have been greatly ashamed if she had not been assured by every one that it must be so” (520).
[Prince Andrey asked Natasha to dance and became intoxicated with her beauty.]
XVII
“Like all men who have grown up in society, Prince Andrey liked meeting anything not of the conventional society stamp.
“‘I should have been glad to rest and sit by you. I’m tired; but you see how they keep asking me, and I’m glad of it, and I’m happy, and I love every one, and you and I understand all about it,’ and more, much more was said in that smile” (521).
“‘Enjoying myself as I never have before in my life!’ she said, and Prince Andrey noticed how her thin arms were swiftly raised as though to embrace her father, and dropped again at once. Natasha was happy as she had never been in her life. She was at that highest pitch of happiness, when one becomes completely good and kind, and disbelieves in the very possibility of evil, unhappiness, and sorrow” (522).
[Prince Andrey notices Natasha is a rare find. She is having the time of her life.]
XVIII
[Prince Andre is having somewhat of a career crisis. His hero, Speransky, no longer appears heroic, nor does any of the work he’s been doing.]
XIX
[Andrey doesn’t know he’s in love, but getting reacquainted with Natasha makes him see his life as new.]
XX
[The Bergs have a soiree.]
XXI
[I think Prince Andrey is about to pop the question to Natasha.]
XXII
[Pierre is severely depressed. Andrey is in love.]
XXIII
[The proposal is accepted under the terms of a one year engagement.]
XXIV
[Natasha has the right at any time of her engagement to change her mind. Andrey leaves to go abroad.]
XXV
[Marya writing to a friend doesn’t think her brother Andrey will ever marry again; certainly not anyone the likes of Natasha.]
XXVI
[Marya is a religious fanatic. She wants to become a pilgrim but can’t yet leave her nephew and father.]
PART SEVEN
I
“The Biblical tradition tells us that the absence of work–idleness–was a condition of the first man’s blessedness before the Fall. The love of idleness has remained the same in fallen man; but the curse still lies heavy upon man, and not only because in the sweat of our brow we must eat bread, but because from our moral qualities we are unable to be idle and at peace. A secret voice tells us that we must be to blame for being idle. If a man could find a state in which while being idle he could feel himself to be of use and to be doing his duty, he would have attained to one side of primitive blessedness. And such a class–the military class. It is in that obligatory and irreproachable idleness that the chief attraction of military service has always consisted, and will always consist” (553).
“…Dozhoyveyky, and was beginning to wonder uneasily what he should find on reaching Otradnoe. The nearer he got, the more intense, far more intense, were his thoughts of home (as though moral feeling were subject to the law of acceleration in inverse ratio with the square of the distance)” (555).
[Natasha’s mother worries about Andrey’s health.]
II
[The Rostov’s have no business sense, and their estate is going into debt.]
III
“Five minutes later Danilo and Uvarka were standing in Nikolay’s big study. Although Danilo was not tall, to see him in a room gave one an impression such as one has on seeing a horse or bear standing on the floor among the furniture and surroundings of human life. Danilo felt this himself, and as usual he kept close to the door and tried to speak more softly, and not to move for fear of causing some breakage in the master’s apartments” (560).
[When Natasha and Petya find their older brother Nikolay is going hunting. They determine to go along.]
IV
[Old Count Rostov let the wolf slip.]
V
[The wolf hunt.]
VI
[Another hunt.]
VII
[Natasha and Nikolay have a wonderful time at their uncle’s after the chases.]
VIII
[The Rostov’s last hope of keeping their estate is if Nikolay marries money. His mother has already picked out a woman, but Nikolay loves the poor Sonya. Andrey’s return has been delayed due to health problems.]
IX
[Natasha is restless.]
X
[To pass the time, a big group of house servants and the Rostov kids all dress up in costume and go visiting.]
XI
[When they all dressed up, Nikolay began to see Sonya in a different light. They had grown up together, but now they seemed different. He kisses her.]
XII
[Sonya and Natasha play at trying to look into the future.]
XIII
[When Nikolay announced his intention to marry Sonya, it sent his mother into a depressing downward spin. She had never been displeased with her son before. The Rostovs were selling off their estates to relieve some of their debt.]
PART EIGHT
I
“He suffered from an unlucky faculty–common to many men, especially Russians–the faculty of seeing and believing in the possibility of good and truth, and at the same time seeing too clearly the evil and falsity of life to be capable of taking a serious part in it” (612).
“Although the doctors told him that in view of his corpulence wine was injurious to him, he drank a very great deal. He never felt quite content except when he had, almost unconsciously, lifted several glasses of wine to his big mouth. Then he felt agreeably warm all over his body, amiably disposed towards all his fellows, and mentally ready to respond superficially to every idea, without going too deeply into it. It was only after drinking a bottle or two of wine that he felt vaguely that the terrible tangled skein of life which had terrified him so before was not so terrible as he had fancied. With a buzzing in his head, chatting, listening to talk or reading after dinner and supper, he invariably saw that tangled skein on some one of its sides. It was only under the influence of wine that he said to himself: ‘Never mind. I’ll disentangle it all; here I have a solution all ready. But now’s not the time. I’ll go into all that later on!’ But that later on never came.
“In the morning, before breakfast, all the old questions looked as insoluble and fearful as ever, and Pierre hurriedly snatched up a book and rejoiced when any one came in to see him.
“Sometimes Pierre remembered what he had been told of soldiers under fire in ambuscade when they have nothing to do, how they try hard to find occupation so as to bear their danger more easily. And Pierre pictured all men as such soldiers trying to find a refuge from life: some in ambition, some in cards, some in framing laws, some in women, some in playthings, some in horses, some in politics, some in sport, some in wine, some in the government service. ‘Nothing is trivial, nothing is important, everything is the same, only to escape from it as best one can,’ thought Pierre. ‘Only not to see it, that terrible it’” (613).
[Pierre’s psychological life.]
II
[Marya is abused by her feeble, crazy father.]
III
[Old Prince Andreitch’s birthday party. Men spoke of the upcoming war and how the youth of Russia now seem to love everything French. The Prince told Marya to move out.]
IV
[Pierre notices Marya is sad. He mentions that one of the guests was flirting with her. Marya is anxious about Natasha showing up to meet Andrey.]
V
[Boris asks Julie Karagin to marry, although for money, NOT for love.]
VI
[The Rostovs come to town and are staying with old Marya Dmitryevna.]
VII
[Natasha’s first meeting with Marya did not go well at all.]
VIII
[Everyone is at the symphony.]
IX
[Everyone at the opera seems impressed with Natasha . Ellen Bezuhov invites Natasha to sit beside her.]
X
[When Natasha meets Anatole Kuragin, they both freak out.]
XI
[Anatole is secretly married to a Polish woman whom he has abandoned. He drinks, spends money and flirts.]
XII
[M. Dmitryevna went to visit Andrey’s father to ask what was up with the wedding plans. She seemed upset when she came home.]
XIII
[Anatole kisses Natasha at a party. Now she feels she loves him and Andrey.]
XIV
[Now Natasha has received a love letter from Anatole.]
XV
[Natasha’s love for Anatole has sickened Sonya. Natasha wrote to Marya saying she wasn’t going to marry Andrey. She is secretly planning to run away with Anatole.]
XVI
[Dolohov and Anatole’s driver is known for driving horses until they die. Anatole is to secret Natasha away and marry her invalidly.]
XVII
[The gig was up. They tried to capture Anatole when he came for Natasha.]
XVIII
[Marya had stopped the disgrace from happening and proposes to keep it from Natasha’s father.]
XIX
[Marya sent for Pierre. He should inform Anatole to leave town before the foiled elopement is found out and someone challenges a duel. Pierre tells Natasha that Anatole is already married.]
XX
[Pierre cannot believe his brother-in-law Anatole has been so insensitive. Pierre gives him money to leave town.]
XXI
[Andrey finally returned to Moscow. After hearing the news, he gives Pierre all of Natasha’s letters to be returned to her.]
XXII
[When Pierre went to return the Letters, he felt so strongly for Natasha that he couldn’t even do it. He simply offered her his friendship.]
PART NINE
I
“It was essential that the millions of men in whose hands the real power lay–the soldiers who fired guns and transported provisions and cannons–should consent to carry out the will of those feeble and isolated persons, and that they should have been brought to this acquiescence by an infinite number of varied and complicated causes” (689).
“When the apple is ripe and falls–why does it fall? Is it because it is drawn by gravitation to the earth, because its stalk is withered, because it is dried by the sun, because it grows heavier, because the wind shakes it, or because the boy standing under the tree wants to eat it?
“Not one of those is the cause. All that simply makes up the conjunction of conditions under which every living, organic, elemental event takes place. And the botanist who says that the apple has fallen because the cells are decomposing, and so on, will be just as right as the boy standing under the tree who says the apple has fallen because he wanted to eat it and prayed for it to fall. The historian, who says that Napoleon went to Moscow because he wanted to, and was ruined because Alexander desired his ruin, will be just as right and as wrong as the man who says that the mountain of millions of tons, tottering and undermined, has been felled by the last stroke of the last workingman’s pick-axe. In historical events great men–so called–are but the labels that serve to give a name to an event, and like labels, they have the least possible connection with the event itself.
“Every action of theirs, that seems to them an act of their own free will, is in a historical sense not free at all, but in bondage to the whole course of previous history, and predestined from all eternity” (690-1).
[The war began for a multitude of reasons.]
II
[Napoleon’s own men would do wildly audacious things for him, even if they died trying.]
III
[Alexander has found out Napoleon is invading Moscow. His troops are unprepared.]
IV
“The sun was only beginning to rise behind storm-clouds, the air was fresh and dewy. A herd of cattle was being driven along the road from the village. Larks sprang up trilling one after another in the fields, like bubbles rising to the surface of water” (699).
[Alexander is trying to send word that he will not let go Moscow.]
V
“Davoust was to the Emperor Napoleon what Araktcheev was to Alexander. Davoust was not like Araktcheev a coward, but he was as exacting and as cruel, and as unable to express his devotion except by cruelty.
“In the mechanism of the state organism these men are as necessary as wolves in the organism of nature. And they are always to be found in every government; they always make their appearance and hold their own, incongruous as their presence and their close relations with the head of the state may appear. It is only on the theory of this necessity that one can explain the fact that a man so cruel–capable of pulling out grenadiers’ moustaches with his own hand–though unable, from the weakness of his nerves, to face danger, so uncultured, so boorish as Araktcheev, was able to retain such influence with a sovereign of chivalrous tenderness and nobility of character like Alexander.
“Better quarters could have been found, but Marshal Davoust was one of these people who purposely put themselves into the most dismal conditions of life in order to have a right to be dismal. For the same reason they always persist in being busy and in a hurry” (702).
[Before Balashov could even get Napoleon the note, they had advanced.]
VI
[Napoleon is pissed.]
VII
[Marya tries to get Andrey to forgive Anatole and the temper of his own father, but he cannot.]
IX
“The members of this party–to which Araktcheev belonged–were mostly not military men, and they spoke and reasoned as men usually do who have no convictions, but wish to pass for having them” (722).
[With the tsar at the front, the Russians didn’t know if they were coming or going. They suggested he return to Moscow to keep up patriotism.]
X
“Pfuhl was one of those hopelessly, immutably conceited men, ready to face martyrdom for their own ideas, conceited as only Germans can be, just because it is only a German’s conceit that is based on an abstract idea–science, that is, the supposed possession of absolute truth. The Frenchman is conceited from supposing himself mentally and physically to be inordinately fascinating both to men and to women. An Englishman is conceited on the ground of being a citizen of the best-constituted state in the world, and also because he as an Englishman always knows what is the correct thing to do, and knows that everything that he, as an Englishman, does do is indisputably the correct thing. An Italian is conceited from being excitable and easily forgetting himself and other people. A Russian is conceited precisely because he knows nothing and cares to know nothing, since he does not believe it possible to know anything fully. A conceited German is the worst of them all, and the most hardened of all, and the most repulsive of all; for he imagines that he possesses the truth in a science of his own invention, which is to him absolute truth” (728).
[Description of Pfuhl.]
XI
[As Andrey listens to all of those military strategists, he becomes disgusted there was no science to this. He chose to be sent to the front.]
XII
[The Rostovs ask Nikolay to come home but he can’t now that the regiments are moving again.]
XIII
[A night of innocent flirtations on the front.]
XIV
“All that day and the next Rostov’s friends and comrades noticed that, without being exactly depressed or irritable, he was silent, dreamy, and preoccupied. He did not care to drink, tried to be alone, and seemed absorbed in thought. Rostov was still pondering on his brilliant exploit, which, to his amazement, had won him the St. George’s Cross and made his reputation indeed for fearless gallantry. There was something he could not fathom in it. ‘So they are even more frightened than we are,’ he thought. ‘Why, is this all that’s meant by heroism? And did I do it for the sake of my country? And was he to blame with his dimple and his blue eyes? How frightened he was! He thought I was going to kill him. Why should I kill him? My hand trembled. And they have given me the St. George’s Cross. I can’t make it out, I can’t make it out’” (746)!
XVI
[Natasha is only now regaining her health after taking the arsenic.]
XVII
[Natasha finds more comfort in religion than in medicine.]
XVIII
[Natasha puts all her passion into prayer.]
XIX
[Pierre is secretly in love with Natasha. He now feels he and Napoleon are bound to meet by some weird superstition he has about the number of the beast.]
XX
[Being around Natasha is starting to break Pierre’s heart. He made up his mind to not visit the Rostovs.]
XXI
[Petya has war fever! He’s signing up!]
XXII
[Everyone in Moscow has a different opinion.]
XXIII
[Everyone signs on in a fever of patriotism.]
PART TEN
I
[When you look back at history, it APPEARS as if everyone knows what they were talking about, but they didn’t. Napoleon is going for the heart of Russia.]
II
[Prince Bolkonsky Sr. is losing his wits more and more. He won’t acknowledge the current war.]
III
[Sr. Prince grasps for a moment that the soldiers are on their way.]
IV
[On the same day the governor sent a letter to the Bolkonskys to escape to Smolensk, Prince Andrey Jr. sent a letter saying Smolensk had already surrendered.]
V
[Prince Andrey sees Bleak Hills decimated.]
VI
[Vassily condemns Kutuzov but then when he is turned autocrat, Vassily backs up that decision.]
VII
“He was very well aware that this was Napoleon, and Napoleon’s presence impressed him no more than Rostov’s or the quartermaster’s with the rod in his hand, because he had nothing of which either the quartermaster or Napoleon could not deprive him” (811).
[A temporary P.O.W. tells Napoleon that if he wants to win Russia, he better start now.]
VIII
[The old Rostov prince finally dies.]
IX
[The serfs have been in cahoots with the French. They are not following orders to help people leave.]
X
[Marya wants to leave because they are becoming surrounded, but there are no horses. The serfs are starving. She gives them wheat. She is taking control.]
XI
[Marya’s serfs won’t leave or take her corn. She plans to escape next day.]
XII
[Marya lets her imagination frighten her.]
XIII
[Rostov, out looking for hay, comes across Marya’s situation. He will escort her out of danger.
XIV
[It seems Nikolay Rostov and Marya Bolkonsky have fallen in love, but no one has yet spoken of it. Nikolay worries about his promise to Sonya.
XV
“He was obviously hearing it simply because he had ears, and although one of them was stuffed up with cotton-wool they could not help hearing. But it was obvious that nothing that general could possibly say could surprise or interest him, that he knew beforehand all he would be told, and listened only because he had to listen to it, just as one has to listen to the litany being sung” (848).
[Kutuzov in action. Denisov meets Andre. Denisov has once proposed to Andrey’s sister Natasha when they were kids.]
XVI
“How, and why it was, Prince Andrey could not explain, but after this interview with Kutuzov, he went back to his regiment feeling reassured as to the future course of the war, and as to the man to whom its guidance was entrusted. The more clearly he perceived the absence of everything personal in the old leader, who seemed to have nothing left of his own but habits of passions, and instead of an intellect grasping events and making plans, had only the capacity for the calm contemplation of the course of events, the more confident he felt that all would be as it should be. ‘He will put in nothing of himself. He will contrive nothing, will undertake nothing,’ thought Prince Andrey; ‘but he will hear everything, will think of everything, will put everything in its place, will not hinder anything that could be of use, and will not allow anything that could do harm. He knows that there is something stronger and more important than his will–that is the inevitable march of events, and he can see them, can grasp their significance, and, seeing their significance, can abstain from meddling, from following his own will, and aiming at something else. And the chief reason,’ thought Prince Andrey, ‘why one believes in him is that he’s Russian…” (851).
[Andrey felt reassured of Kutuzov’s capabilities after visiting with him.]
XVII
[Julie fills in Pierre on all the romantic news. Marya is in town. Natasha seems fully recovered.]
XVIII
[Pierre joins the front.]
XIX
[Battle of Borodino fought with the Russians doing a half ass job.]
XX
[Pierre contemplates death and war.]
XXI
[Pierre watches a procession. He gets a handle on everyone’s position.]
XXII
[Boris works for Benningsen in a high position. They will take Pierre with them to inspect their position.]
XXIII
[Miscommunication moves a group of soldiers from ambush to obvious position.]
XXIV
“He knew that the battle next day would be the most awful of all he had taken part in, and death, for the first time, presented itself to him, not in relation to his actual manner of life, or to the effect of it on others, but simply in relation to himself, to his soul, and rose before him simply and awfully with a vividness that made it like a concrete reality. And from the height of this vision everything that had once occupied him seemed suddenly illumined by a cold, white light, without shade, without perspective or outline. His whole life seemed to him like a magic lantern, at which he had been looking through the glass and by artificial light. Now he saw suddenly, without the glass, in the clear light of day, those badly daubed pictures. ‘Yes, yes, there are they; there are the cheating forms that excited torments and ecstasies in me,’ he said to himself, going over in imagination the chief pictures of the magic lantern of his life, looking at them now in the cold, white daylight of a clear view of death. ‘These are they, these coarsely sketched figures which seemed something splendid and mysterious. Glory, the good society, love for a woman, the fatherland–what grand pictures they used to seem to me, with what deep meaning they seemed to be filled! And it is all so simple, so colourless and coarse in the cold light of the day that I feel is dawning for me.’ The three chief sorrows of his life held his attention especially. His love for a woman, his father’s death, and the invasion of the French–now in possession of half of Russia. ‘Love!…That little girl, who seemed to me brimming over with mysterious forces. How I loved her! I made romantic plans of love, of happiness with her! O simple-hearted youth!’ he said aloud bitterly. ‘Why, I believed in some ideal love which was to keep her faithful to me for the whole year of my absence! Like the faithful dove in the fable, she was to pine away in my absence from her! And it was all so much simpler…It is all so horribly simple and loathsome!
“‘My father, too, laid out Bleak Hills, and thought it was his place, his land, his air, his peasants. But Napoleon came along, and without even knowing of his existence, swept him away like a chip out of his path, and his Bleak Hills laid in the dust, and all his life with it brought to nought. Princess Marya says that it is a trial sent from above. What is the trial for, since he is not and never will be? He will never come back again! He is not! So for whom is it a trial? Fatherland, the spoiling of Moscow! But tomorrow I shall be killed; and not by a Frenchman even, maybe, but by one of our own men, like the soldier who let off his gun close to my ear yesterday; and the French will come and pick me up by my head and my heels and pitch me into a hole that I may not stink under their noses; and new conditions of life will arise, and I shall know nothing of them, and I shall not be at all’” (879-80).
[Pierre accidentally runs into Prince Andrey. Pierre confirms that the Bolkonskys have moved out of danger.]
XXV
“‘So you think the battle tomorrow will be a victory,’ said Pierre.
“‘Yes, yes,’ said Prince Andrey absently. ‘There’s one thing I would do, if I were in power,’ he began again. ‘I wouldn’t take prisoners. What sense is there in taking prisoners? That’s chivalry. The French have destroyed my home and are coming to destroy Moscow; they have outraged and are outraging me at every second. They are my enemies, they are all criminals to my way of thinking. And so thinks Timohin, and all the army with him. They must be put to death. Since they are my enemies, they can’t be my friends, whatever they may have said at Tilsit.’
“‘Yes, yes,’ said Pierre, looking with shining eyes at Prince Andrey. ‘I entirely agree with you!’
“The question that had been disturbing Pierre all that day, since the Mozhaisk hill, now struck him as perfectly clear and fully solved. He saw now all the import and all the gravity of the war and the impending battle. All he had seen that day, all the stern, grave faces of which he had had glimpses, appeared to him in a new light now. He saw, to borrow a term from physics, the latent heat of patriotism in all those men he had seen, and saw in it the explanation of the composure and apparent levity with which they were all preparing for death. ‘We ought not to take prisoners,’ said Prince Andrey. ‘That change alone would transform the whole aspect of war and would make it less cruel. But playing at war, that’s what’s vile; and playing at magnanimity and all the rest of it. That magnanimity and sensibility is like the magnanimity and sensibility of the lady who turns sick at the sight of a slaughtered calf–she is so kind-hearted she can’t see blood–but eats fricasseed veal with a very good appetite. They talk of the laws of warfare, of chivalry, of flags of true, and humanity to the wounded, and so on. That’s all rubbish. I saw enough in 1805 of chivalry and flags of truce: they duped us, and we duped them. They plunder other people’s homes, issue false money, and, worse than all, kill my children, my father, and then talk of the laws of warfare, and generosity to a fallen foe. No prisoners; and go to give and to meet death! Any one who has come to think this as I have, through the same sufferings…’
“Prince Andrey, who had thought that he did not care whether they took Moscow as they had taken Smolensk, was suddenly pulled up in his speech by a nervous catch in his throat. He walked to and fro several times in silence, but his eyes blazed with feverish brilliance and his lips quivered, as he began to speak again.
“‘If there were none of this playing at generosity in warfare, we should never go to war, except for something worth facing certain death for, as now. Then there would not be wars because Pavel Ivanitch had insulted Mihail Ivanitch. But if there is war as now, let it be really war. And then the intensity of warfare would be something quite different. All these Westphalians and Hessians Napoleon is leading against us would not have come to fight us in Russia, and we should not have gone to war in Austria and in Prussia without knowing what for. War is not a polite recreation, but the vilest thing in life, and we ought to understand that and not play at war. We ought to accept it sternly and solemnly as a fearful necessity. It all comes to this: have done with lying, and if it’s war, then it’s war and not a game, or else warfare is simply the favourite pastime of the idle and frivolous…The military is the most honoured calling. And what is war, what is needed for success in war, what are the morals of the military world? The object of warfare is murder; the means employed in warfare–spying, treachery, and the encouragement of it, the ruin of a country, the plundering of its inhabitants and robbery for the maintenance of the army, trickery and lying, which are called military strategy; the morals of the military class–absence of all independence, that is, discipline, idleness, ignorance, cruelty, debauchery, and drunkenness. And in spite of all that, it is the highest class, respected by every one. All sovereigns, except the Chinese, wear a military uniform, and give the greatest rewards to the man who succeeds in killing most people…they meet together to murder one another, as we shall do tomorrow; they slaughter and mutilate tens of thousands of men, and then offer up thanksgiving services for the number f men they have killed (and even add to it in the telling), and glorify the victory, supposing that the more men have been slaughtered the greater the achievement. How God can look down from above and hear them!’ shrieked Prince Andrey in a shrill, piercing voice. ‘Ah, my dear boy, life has been a bitter thing for me of late. I see that I have come to understand too much. And it is not good for man to taste of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil…Ah, well, it’s not for long!’ he added. ‘But you are getting sleepy and it’s time I was in bed too. Go back to Gorky,’ said Prince Andrey suddenly.
“‘Oh no!’ answered Pierre, gazing with eyes full of scared sympathy at Prince Andrey.
“‘You must be off; before a battle one needs to get a good sleep’” (885-886).
[Andrey describes his ideas of war to Pierre. Andrey remembers loving Natasha; how Pierre’s brother-in-law wronged her.]
XXVI
[Napoleon]
XXVII
[How Napoleon’s plans are skewed.]
XXVIII
[The leaders don’t create war; it’s the combination of every man on his own.]
XXIX
“‘Corvisart gave me these lozenges, but they do no good. What can they cure? They can’t cure anything. Our body is a machine for living. It is organised for that, it is its nature; leave life to it unhindered, let life defend itself in it; it will do more than if you paralyse it, encumbering it with remedies. Our body is a perfect watch, meant to for a certain time; the watchmaker has not the power of opening it, he can only handle it in fumbling fashion, blindfold. Our body is a machine for living, that’s all’” (898-9).
[The game had begun.]
XXX
[The battle has begun. Pierre throws himself in.]
XXXI
[The group Pierre is hanging with starts to get fired on.]
XXXII
[Many are lost. The fighting continues.]
XXXIII
[Actions during battle.]
XXXIV
[The Russians are holding their line. The French ask for reinforcements.]
XXXV
[The French left off firing but the Russians plan on attacking tomorrow.]
XXXVI
[Prince Andrey is severely wounded.]
XXXVII
[After Andrey has been patched, he notices the man whose leg was being amputated as Anatole. Andrey cries for all the love he has missed in his life.]
XXXVIII
[Napoleon “imagined that the war with Russia was entirely due to his will, and the horror of what was done made no impression on his soul. He boldly assumed the whole responsibility of it all; and his clouded intellect found justification in the fact that among the hundreds of thousands of men who perished, there were fewer Frenchmen than Hessians and Bavarians” (933).]
XXXIX
[“The direct consequence of the battle of Borodino was Napoleon’s causeless flight from Moscow, his return by the old Smolensk road, the ruin of the invading army of five hundred thousand men, and the downfall of the Napoleonic rule, on which, for the first time at Borodino, was laid the hand of a foe of stronger spirit” (936).]
PART ELEVEN
I
[The laws of history.]
II
[How the decisions of a commander rely upon a variety of factors.]
III
[Kutuzov can’t believe he has given up Moscow.]
IV
[Kutuzov gives orders to retire.]
V
[Rastoptchin during the abandonment of Moscow.]
VI
“To her notions, the real object of every religion was to provide recognized forms of propriety for the satisfaction of human desires” (954).
[Ellen becomes Catholic with the intention of divorcing.]
VII
[Ellen wants a divorce and to marry another. She writes to Pierre to begin the proceedings.]
VIII
[Pierre heads home while contemplating that the battle had been enough for him.]
IX
“When he recalled those thoughts later, although they had been evoked by the impressions of that day, Pierre was convinced that they were uttered by some one outside himself. It seemed to him that he had never been capable of thinking those thoughts and expressing them in that form in his waking moments.
“‘The most difficult thing is the subjection of man’s will to the law of God,’ said the voice. ‘Simplicity is the submission to god; there is no escaping from Him. And they are simple. They do not talk, but act. A word uttered is silver, but unuttered is golden. No one can be master of anything while he fears death. And all things belong to him who fears it not. If it were not for suffering, a man would know not his limits, would know not himself. The hardest thing’ (Pierre thought or heard in his dream) ‘is to know how to unite in one’s soul the significance of the whole. To unite the whole?’ Pierre said to himself. ‘No, not to unite. One cannot unite one’s thoughts, but to harness together,’ Pierre repeated to himself with a thrill of ecstasy, feeling that those words, and only those words, expressed what he wanted to express, and solved the whole problem fretting him.
“‘Yes, one must harness together; it’s time to harness…’” (962-3).
[Pierre has an important dream. Anatole and Andrey are dead.]
X
[Pierre is hearing the gossip of the town. They say Ellen is preparing to go abroad.]
XI
[So many people want to do business or have questions of Pierre that he just simply runs away.]
XII
“She was gay too, because she needed some one to adore her (the adoration of others was like the grease on the wheels, without which her mechanism never worked quite smoothly), and Petya did adore her” (972).
[Petya comes home as his family packs for evacuation.]
XIII
[Mother Rostov finally lost it. Let’s get out of here!]
XIV
[Andrey is not quite dead, but at death’s door. He has by coincidence ended up at the soon-to-be abandoned Rostov mansion.]
XV
[Now Rostov Sr. wants to unload the wagons of their possessions and take wounded soldiers out of the town.]
XVI
[The family decides to transport the wounded instead of their earthly possessions.]
XVII
[On their way out of Moscow, Natasha spots Pierre. He is staying.]
XVIII
[Pierre prepares for battle within the city.]
XIX
[Napoleon wants to make a general statement to the city, but everyone has gone except a small gang of drunk fighters. This embarrasses Napoleon.]
XX
“Moscow meanwhile was empty. There were still people in the city; a fiftieth part of all the former inhabitants still remained in it, but it was empty.
“It was deserted as a dying, queenless hive is deserted.
“In a queenless hive there is no life left. Yet at a superficial glance it seems as much alive as other hives.
“In the hot rays of the midday sun the bees soar as gaily around the queenless hive as around other living hives; from a distance it smells of honey like the rest, and bees fly into and out of it just the same. Yet one has but to watch it a little to see that there is no life in the hive. The flight of the bees is not as in living hives, the smell and the sound that meet the beekeeper are changed. When the beekeeper strikes the wall of the sick hive, instead of the instant, unanimous response, the buzzing of tens of thousands of bees menacingly arching their backs, and by the rapid stroke of their wings making that whirring, living sound, he is greeted by a disconnected, droning him from different parts of the deserted hive. From the alighting board comes not as of old the spirituous, fragrant smell of honey and bitterness, and the whiff of heat from the multitudes within. A smell of chill emptiness and decay mingles with the scent of honey. Around the entrance there is now no throng of guards, arching their backs and trumpeting the menace, ready to die in its defense. There is heard no more the low, even hum, the buzz of toil, like the singing of boiling water, but the broken, discordant uproar of disorder comes forth. The black, long-shaped, honey-smeared workers fly timidly and furtively in and out of the hive: they do not sting, but crawl away at the sight of danger. Of old they flew in only with their bags of honey, and flew out empty: now they fly out with their burdens. The beekeeper opens the lower partition and peeps into the lower half of the hive. Instead of the clusters of black, sleek bees, clinging on each other’s legs, hanging to the lower side of the partition, and with an unbroken hum of toil building at the wax, drowsy, withered bees wander listlessly about over the roof and walls of the hive. Instead of the cleanly glued-up floor, swept by the bees’ wings, there are now bits of wax, excrement, dying bees feebly kicking, and dead bees lying not cleared away on the floor.
“The beekeeper opens the upper door and examines the super of the hive. In place of close rows of bees, sealing up every gap left in the combs and fostering the brood, he sees only the skillful, complex, edifice of combs, and even in this the virginal purity of old days is gone. All is forsaken; and soiled, black, stranger bees scurry swiftly and stealthily about the combs in search of plunder; while the dried-up, shrunken, listless, old-looking bees of the hive wander slowly about, doing nothing to hinder them, having lost every desire and sense of life. Drones, gadflies, wasps and butterflies flutter about aimlessly, brushing their wings against the walls of the hive. Here and there, between the cells full of dead brood and honey, is heard an angry buzz; here and there a couple of bees from old habit and custom, though they know not why they do it, are cleaning the hive, painfully dragging away a dead bee or a wasp, a task beyond their strength. In another corner two other old bees are languidly fighting or cleaning themselves or feeding one another, themselves unaware whether with friendly or hostile intent. Elsewhere a crowd of bees, squeezing one another, is falling upon some victim, beating and crushing it; and the killed or enfeebled bee drops slowly, light as a feather, on to the heap of corpses. The beekeeper parts the two centre partitions to look at the nursery. Instead of the dense, black rings of thousands of bees, sitting back to back, watching the high mysteries of the work of generation, he sees hundreds of dejected, lifeless, and slumbering wrecks of bees. Almost all have died, unconscious of their coming end, sitting in the holy place, which they had watched–now no more. They reek of death and corruption. But a few of them still stir, rise up, fly languidly and settle on the hand of the foe, without the spirit to die stinging him; the rest are dead and as easily brushed aside as fishes’ scales. The beekeeper closes the partition, chalks a mark on the hive, and choosing his own time, breaks it up and burns it.
“So was Moscow deserted, as Napoleon, weary, uneasy and frowning, paced up and down at the Kamerkolezhsky wall awaiting that merely external, but still to his mind essential observance of the proprieties–a deputation.
“Some few men were still astir in odd corners of Moscow, aimlessly following their old habits, with no understanding of what they were doing.
“When, with due circumspectness, Napoleon was informed that Moscow was deserted, he looked wrathfully at his informant, and turning his back on him, went on pacing up and down in silence.
“‘My carriage,’ he said. He sat down in his carriage beside the adjutant on duty, and drove into the suburbs.
“‘Moscow deserted! What an incredible event!’ he said to himself.
“He did not drive right into the town, but put up for the night at an inn in the Dorogomilov suburb. The dramatic scene had not come off” (998-1000).
XXI
[Pillaging of the shops.]
XXII
[A stranger that had the Rostov features stopped by for a handout. The family had gone so Marya gave the boy some money.]
XXIII
[The people left in Moscow don’t know what to do. No plan.]
XXIV
[Rastoptchin is the last man left in the city in charge of anything. He is pissy that everyone gave up.]
XXV
“‘Kindly leave me; I know what to do without your assistance,’ cried Rastoptchin angrily. He stood at the door of the balcony looking at the crowd. ‘This is what they have done with Russia! This is what they have done with me!’ thought Rastoptchin, feeling a rush of irrepressible rage against the undefined some one to whose fault what was happening could be set down. As is often the case with excitable persons, he was possessed by fury, while still seeking an object for it. ‘Here is the populace, the dregs of the people,’ he thought, looking at the crowd, ‘that they have stirred up by their folly. They want a victim,’ came into his mind, as he watched the waving arm of the tall fellow in front. And the thought struck him precisely because he too wanted a victim, an object for his wrath” (1014).
“Kutuzov stared at Rastoptchin, and, as though not understanding the meaning of the words addressed to him, he strove earnestly to decipher the special meaning betrayed at that minute on the face of the man addressing him. Rastoptchin ceased speaking in discomfiture. Kutuzov slightly shook his head, and, still keeping his searching eyes on Rastoptchin’s face, he murmured softly:
“‘Yes, I won’t give up Moscow without a battle.’
“Whether Kutuzov was thinking of something different when he uttered those words, or said them purposely, knowing them to be meaningless, Count Rastoptchin made him no reply, and hastily left him. And–strange to tell! The governor of Moscow, the proud Count Rastoptchin, picking up a horse whip, went to the bridge, and fell to shouting and driving on the crowded carts” (1021).
XXVI
[Moscow burns. The French army takes up residence.]
XXVII
“The other was that vague and exclusively Russian feeling of contempt for everything conventional, artificial, human, for everything that is regarded by the majority of men as the highest good in the world. Pierre had for the first time experienced that strange and fascinating feeling in the Slobodsky palace, when he suddenly felt that wealth and power and life, all that men build up and guard with such effort, is only worth anything through the joy with which it can all be cast away.
“It was the same feeling that impels the volunteer-recruit to drink up his last farthing, the drunken man to smash looking-glasses and window panes for no apparent cause, though he knows it will cost him his little all; the feeling through which a man in doing things, vulgarly speaking,, senseless, as it were, proves his personal force and power, by manifesting the presence of a higher standard of judging life, outside mere human limitations” (1028).
[Pierre intends to defend his turf. Makar Alexyevitch grabs a gun and gets escorted out.]
XXVIII
[Instead of fighting them, Pierre ends up saving a Frenchman’s life. They are going to dine.]
XXIX
[Pierre and the Frenchman talk all night.]
XXX
[Moscow is set on fire.]
XXXI
[Natasha sneaks in to see Andrey.]
XXXII
[Natasha nurses Andrey. They show true love for one another.]
XXXIII
[On his way to kill Napoleon, Pierre is called upon to save a child from a fire.]
XXXIV
[Pierre is busted by the French for interfering with their poor treatment of the people.]
PART TWELVE
I
[In Petersburg society carries on. Vassily reads a decree at Anna’s soiree. Ellen has taken ill.]
II
[Ellen dies suddenly. Kutuzov abandons the city.]
III
[When the news of surrender is brought to the tsar, he says he will stay and fight when all other resources have been used.]
IV
“Towards the end of the evening, however, as the wife’s face grew more flushed and animated, the husband’s grew steadily more melancholy and stolid, as though they had a given allowance of liveliness between them, and as the wife’s increased, the husband’s dwindled” (1076).
[Nikolay is the life of the party.]
V
[The governor’s wife is going to arrange for Marya Bolkonsky and Nikolay Rostov to date.]
VI
[Nikolay likes Marya but doesn’t want to marry her.]
VII
[Without provocation, Sonya wrote Nikolay giving him his freedom. He told Marya that her brother Andrey is being nursed by Natasha.]
VIII
[Thinking Nikolay unable to marry Marya, Sonya releases him from his promise.]
IX
[Pierre is a prisoner of the French.]
X
[Pierre’s position as a P.O.W. doesn’t look good.]
XI
[For some unknown reason, Pierre is saved from execution.]
XII
“‘Tss…tss…’ said the little man. ‘Sin, indeed,…sin…’ he added quickly, just as though the words were already in his mouth and flew out of it by accident…” (1103).
[Pierre speaks with another prisoner.]
XIII
[Platon Karataev]
XIV
[Marya comes to the Rostov’s to see her dying brother Andrey.]
XV
[Marya and Natasha nurse Andrey.]
XVI
[Marya and Natasha nurse Andrey until the end.]
PART THIRTEEN
I
[How the army got to their best position.]
II
[The French have been partying in Moscow, losing strength, while the Russians have been resting with their supplies just outside of town.]
III
[The Russians are ready to fight.]
IV
[The German officers were at a ball, delaying the receipt of important papers.]
V
[The Russians had not received the order to move so they would do it the next day.]
VI
[The Russian attack is unorganized.]
VII
[Even though it wasn’t perfect, it worked.]
VIII
[Napoleon was wearing down his army.]
IX
[Napoleon lays down new rules.]
X
[Napoleon and his weak and greedy men are caught off guard.]
XI
[Pierre’s prison group is about to be moved.]
XII
“He often thought now of his conversation with Prince Andrey, and agreed fully with his friend, though he put a somewhat different construction on his meaning. Prince Andrey had said and thought that happiness is only negative, but he had said this with a shade of bitterness and irony. It was as though in saying this he had expressed another thought–that all the strivings towards positive happiness, that are innate in us, were only given us for our torment. But Pierre recognised the truth of the main idea with no such undercurrent of feeling. The absence of suffering, the satisfaction of needs, and following upon that, freedom in the choice of occupation, that is, of one’s manner of life, seemed to Pierre the highest and most certain happiness of man. Only here and now for the first time in his life Pierre fully appreciated the enjoyment of eating when he was hungry, of drinking when he was thirsty, of sleep when he was sleepy, of warmth when he was cold, of talking to a fellow creature when he wanted to talk and to hear men’s voices. The satisfaction of his needs–good food, cleanliness, freedom–seemed to Pierre now that he was deprived of them to be perfect happiness; and the choice of his occupation, that is, of his manner of life now that that choice was so limited, seemed to him such an easy matter that he forgot that a superfluity of the conveniences of life destroys all happiness in satisfying the physical needs, while a great freedom in the choice of occupation, that freedom which education, wealth, and position in society had given him, makes the choice of occupations exceedingly difficult, and destroys the very desire and possibility of occupation.
“All Pierre’s dreams now turned to the time when he would be free. And yet, in all his later life, Pierre thought and spoke with enthusiasm of that month of imprisonment, of those intense and joyful sensations that could never be recalled, and above all of that full, spiritual peace, of that perfect, inward freedom, of which he had only experience at that period” (1153).
[Through being a prisoner, Pierre finds himself.]
XIII
[Prisoners and soldiers move out.]
XIV
“Pierre did not see the people separately; he saw only their movement.
“All these men and horses seemed, as it were, driven along by some unseen force. During the hour in which Pierre watched them they all were swept out of the different streets with the same one desire to get on as quickly as possible. All of them, alike hindered by the rest, began to get angry and to fight. The same oaths were bandied to and fro, and white teeth flashed, and every frowning face wore the same look of reckless determination and cold cruelty, which had struck Pierre in the morning in the corporal’s face, while the drums were beating” (1159).
[Pierre’s epiphanies.]
XV
[Dohturov was sent to take Fominskoe when there was one French detachment there but now it appears their entire army is there. Does he still attack? They send for advice.]
XVI
[Russian heads are to gather.]
XVII
[The French are leaving Moscow.]
XVIII
[What happened at Napoleon’s retreat.]
XIX
[As the French retreat.]
PART FOURTEEN
I
[Why the French fell apart.]
II
[How small groups can defeat larger groups.]
III
[Denisov and Dolohov are each in charge of their own irregular band of soldiers. They captured a couple regiments.]
IV
[Petya Rostov hooks up with Denisov.]
V
[Tihon]
VI
[Dolohov is on his way.]
VII
[Petya feels for the little drummer boy taken prisoner.]
VIII
[Dolohov wants to check out the French numbers before attacking. Petya invites himself.]
IX
[Petya and Dolohov dress like the French and go in fishing for information.]
X
[Preparing to capture.]
XI
[Petya dies in battle. They save Pierre.]
XII
[Pierre’s plight.]
XIII
[Karataev’s story.]
XIV
[Because Karataev was sick and couldn’t move on, he had his own men shoot him.]
XV
[Pierre is saved. Petya gets buried.]
XVI
[The French]
XVII
“Their chief commander wrapped himself in a fur cloak, and getting into a sledge, galloped off alone, deserting his companions. Whoever could, ran away too, and those who could not–surrendered or died” (1217).
XVIII
[How historians write of Napoleon’s final moments.]
XIX
“The Russian army had to act as a whip urging on a fleeing animal. And the experienced driver knew that it was better to keep the whip raised as a menace than to bring it down on the creature’s back” (1223).
PART FIFTEEN
I
“When a man sees an animal dying, a horror comes over him. What he is himself–his essence, visibly before his eyes, perishes–ceases to exist. But when the dying creature is a man and a man dearly loved, then, besides the horror at the extinction of life, what is felt is a rending of the soul, a spiritual wound, which, like a physical wound, is sometimes mortal, sometimes healed, but always aches and shrinks from contact with the outer world, that sets it smarting” (1224).
[Natasha mourns Andrey.]
II
[The Rostovs learn of Petya’s death.]
III
[Natasha needs to see a doctor for her poor health.]
IV
[How some Russian leaders wanted to engage the fleeing French only to distinguish themselves.]
V
“The hatred and contempt of the crowd is the punishment of such men for their comprehension of higher laws” (1236).
“To the flunkey no man can be great, because the flunkey has his own flunkey conception of greatness” (1238).
[Kutuzov.]
VI
[Kutuzov.]
VII
[The camp.]
VIII
[The camp at night.]
IX
[The camp at night.]
X
[The tsar comes to speak with Kutuzov.]
XI
[The end of Kutuzov’s rein and life.]
XII
“He felt like a man who finds what he has sought at his feet, when he has been straining his eyes to seek it in the distance. All his life he had been looking far away over the heads of all around him, while he need not have strained his eyes, but had only to look in front of him.
“In old days he had been unable to see the great, the unfathomable, and the infinite in anything. He had only felt that it must be somewhere, and had been seeking it. In everything near and comprehensible, he had seen only what was limited, petty, everyday, and meaningless. He had armed himself with the telescope of intellect, and gazed far away into the distance, where that petty, everyday world, hidden in the mists of distance, had seemed to him great and infinite, simply because it was not clearly seen…
“Now he had learnt to see the great, the eternal, and the infinite in everything; and naturally therefore, in order to see it, to revel in its contemplation, he flung aside the telescope through which he had hitherto been gazing over men’s heads, and looked joyfully at the ever-changing , ever grand, unfathomable, and infinite life around him. And the closer he looked at it, the calmer and happier he was. The terrible question that had shattered all his intellectual edifices in old days, the question: What for? Had no existence for him now. To that question, What for? He had now always ready in his soul the simple answer: Because there is a God, that God without whom not one hair of a man’s head falls” (1258).
[What Pierre found.]
XIII
“And Pierre had won the Italian’s passionate devotion simply by drawing out what was best in his soul and admiring it” (1260).
“In Pierre’s relations with Villarsky, with his cousin, with the doctor, and with all the people he met now, there was a new feature that gained him the good-will of all. This was the recognition of the freedom of every man to think, to feel, and to look at things in his own way; the recognition of the impossibility of altering a man’s conviction by words. This legitimate individuality of every man’s views, which had in old days troubled and irritated Pierre, now formed the basis of the sympathetic interest he felt in people. The inconsistency, sometimes the complete antagonism of men’s views with their own lives or with one another, delighted Pierre, and drew from him a gentle and mocking smile” (1261).
[Pierre must get back to life. It is better now.]
XIV
[Rebuilding.]
XV
“And the face with the intent eyes–painfully, with effort, like a rusty door opening–smiled, and through that opened door there floated to Pierre a sudden, overwhelming rush of long-forgotten bliss, of which, especially now, he had no thought. It breathed upon him, overwhelmed him, and swallowed him up entirely. When she smiled, there could be no doubt. It was Natasha, and he loved her.
“In that first minute Pierre unwittingly betrayed to her and to Princess Marya, and most of all to himself, the secret of which he had been himself unaware. He flushed joyfully, and with agonising distress. He tried to conceal his emotion. But the more he tried to conceal it, the more clearly–more clearly than if he had uttered the most definite words–be betrayed to himself, and to her, and to Princess Marya, that he loved her” (1268).
[Pierre goes to visit Marya and Natasha is there. He loves her!]
XVI
[Marya, Pierre and Natasha are all emotional remembering Andrey.]
XVII
“Pierre told the tale of his adventures as he had never thought of them before. He saw now as it were a new significance in all he had been through. He experienced now in telling it all to Natasha that rare happiness given to men by women when they listen to them–not by clever women, who, as they listen, are either trying to remember what they are told to enrich their intellect and on occasion to repeat it, or to adapt what is told them to their own ideas and to bring out in haste the clever comments elaborated in their little mental factory. This rare happiness is given only by those real women, gifted with a faculty for picking out and assimilating all that is best in what a man shows them. Natasha, though herself unconscious of it, was all rapt attention; she did not lose one word, one quaver of the voice, one glance, one twitching in the facial muscles, one gesture of Pierre’s. She caught the word before it was uttered and bore it straight to her open heart, divining the secret import of all Pierre’s spiritual travail” (1274).
“‘They say: sufferings are misfortunes,’ said Pierre. ‘But if at once, this minute, I was asked, would I remain what I was before I was taken prisoner, or go through it all again, I should say, for God’s sake let me rather be a prisoner and eat horseflesh again. We imagine that as soon as we are torn out of our habitual path all is over, but it is only the beginning of something new and good. As long as there is life, there is happiness. There is a great deal, a great deal before us. That I say to you,’ he said, turning to Natasha” (1275).
[Pierre tells his story to Marya and Natasha.]
XVIII
[Pierre is making arrangements to propose to Natasha.]
XIX
[Pierre is filled with joy and love.]
XX
[Natasha loves Pierre.]
EPILOGUE PART ONE
I
“What is the substance of the charge brought in these criticisms? It is a charge brought against an historical personage standing at the highest possible pinnacle of human power, as it were, in the focus where all the rays of history concentrated their blinding light upon him; a personage subjected to the strongest influences of intrigue, deceit, flattery, and self-deception, inseparable from power; a personage who felt himself at every moment of his life responsible for all that was being done in Europe; and a personage, not an invented character, but a live creature, like any other man, with his own personal idiosyncrasies, and passions and impulses towards goodness, beauty, and truth. And the charge brought against this personage is not that he was not virtuous (the historians have no reproach to make against him on this score), but that he, living fifty years ago, had not the same views as to the good of humanity as those have to-day by a professor who had, from his youth up, been engaged in study, i.e. in reading books, listening to lectures, and making notes of those books and those lectures in a note-book” (1286).
“…assuming that the historian, criticising Alexander, will, after a certain lapse of time, prove to be also incorrect in his view of what is for the good of humanity. It is the more natural and inevitable to assume this because, watching the development of history, we see that with every year, with every new writer, the view of what is for the good of humanity is somewhat shifted; so that what did seem good, after ten years, is regarded as harmful, and vice versa. That is not all. We even find in history the views of contemporaries as to what was good, and what was harmful, utterly opposed to one another.
“It is impossible to say of the careers of Alexander and of Napoleon that they were beneficial or harmful, seeing that we cannot say wherein the benefit or harm of humanity lies. If any one dislikes the career of either, he only dislikes it from its incompatibility with his own limited conception of what is the good of humanity” (1287).
“Once admit that human life can be guided by reason, and all possibility of life is annihilated” (1288).
[The views of historians.]
II
“But what is chance? What is genius?
“The words chance and genius mean nothing actually existing, and so cannot be defined. These words merely denote a certain stage in the comprehension of phenomena. I do not know how some phenomenon is brought about; I believe that I cannot know; consequently I do not want to know and talk of chance. I see a force producing an effect out of proportion with the average effect of human powers; I do not understand how this is brought about, and I talk about genius” (1288).
[How to look at history.]
III
[How Napoleon grew by chance.]
IV
[Alexander. How we cannot see all of life at once.]
V
[When Rostov Sr. dies, Nikolay inherits the debt. Sonya he values more as a sister than a love interest.]
VI
[Andrey and Marya finally talk for real.]
VII
[Nikolay married Marya but fell in love with farming. His expertise at managing his serfs and land got him out of debt and began to prosper.]
VIII
“In the winter he visited their other properties and spent his time in reading, chiefly historical books, on which he spent a certain sum regularly every year. He was forming for himself, as he used to say, a serious library, and he made it a principle to read through every book he bought. He would stand over his book in his study with an important air; and what he had at first undertaken as a duty became an habitual pursuit, which afforded him a special sort of gratification in the feeling that he was engaged in serious study” (1308).
[Nikolay trying to learn not to fight the Rostov routine.]
IX
“‘Oh, how absurd you are! It’s not those who are handsome we love, but those we love who are handsome” (1313).
[Andrey and Marya argue and make up.]
X
“She acted in direct contravention of all those rules. She felt that the arts of attraction that instinct had taught her to use before would now have seemed only ludicrous to her husband, to whom she had form the first moment given herself up entirely, that is with her whole soul, not keeping a single corner of it hidden from him. She felt that the tie that bound her to her husband did not rest on those romantic feelings which had attracted him to her, but rested on something else undefined, but as strong as the tie that bound her soul to her body” (1316).
[Natasha makes family her entire life.]
XI
[Pierre loves being a father. Andrey…not so much.]
XII
[Countess Rostov’s failing health.]
XIII
[Life at Bleak Hills.]
XIV
[Nikolinka loves Pierre and hangs on his every word. Pierre speaks of an anti-government secret society. Nikolay is on the side of the government.]
XV
“Countess Marya listened to her husband, and understood all he said to her. She knew that when he was thus thinking aloud, he would sometimes ask what he had been saying, and was vexed when he noticed she had been thinking of something else. But she had to make a great effort to attend, because she did not feel the slightest interest in what he was saying to her. She looked at him, and though she would not exactly think of other things, her feelings were elsewhere. She felt a submissive, tender love for this man, who could never understand all that she understood; and she seemed, for that very reason, to love him the more, with a shade of passionate tenderness. Apart from that feeling, which absorbed her entirely, and prevented her from following the details of her husband’s plans, thoughts kept floating through her brain that had nothing in common with what he was saying” (1338).
[Marya worries about Nikolinka’s lack of direct ties.]
XVI
“‘No, the real thing is that to Nikolay,’ said Pierre, ‘thoughts and ideas are an amusement, almost a pastime. Here he’s forming a library and has made it a rule not to buy a new book till he has read through the last he has bought–Sismondi and Rousseau and Montesquieu,’ Pierre added with a smile” (1340).
[Nikolenka dreams of battle.]
PART TWO
I
[History. The force that moves nations.]
II
“(1) That history is written by learned men; and so it is natural and agreeable to them to believe that the pursuit of their calling is the basis of the movement of the whole of humanity, just as a similar belief would be natural and agreeable to merchants, agriculturists, or soldiers (such a belief on their part does not find expression simply because merchants and soldiers don’t write history…“ (1351).
“…the histories of culture, towards which all general histories tend more and more to approximate, are noteworthy from the fact that though they give a serious and detailed analysis of various religious, philosophic, and political doctrines as causes of events, every time they have to describe an actual historical event, as, for instance, the campaign of 1812, they unconsciously describe it as the effect of the exercise of power, frankly saying that that campaign was the work of Napoleon’s will. In saying this, the historian of culture unconsciously contradict themselves, to prove that the new force they have invented is not the expression of historical events, and that the sole means of explaining history is by that power which they had apparently rejected” (1352).
III
[What is the central force driving humanity? Power?]
IV
[What makes people follow a leader?]
V
[What drives people to seek leadership?]
VI
[Everything that goes into commanding an army.]
VII
[Power, commands and movements.]
VIII
[The question of free will and how people try to solve it.]
IX
[Cause and effect on free will.]
X
“I raise my arm in order to perform an act independent of any cause, but the fact that I want to perform an act independent of any cause is the cause of my action” (1380).
[Cause and effect on free will.]
XI
[Same.]
XII