“Do you
see?…My doll…Mimi…you see…” And Natasha could say no more, it all seemed to her
so funny. She sank on her mother’s lap, and went off into such a loud peal of
laughter that every one, even the prim visitor, could not help laughing too.
“Come, run
along, run along with your monstrosity!” said her mother, pushing her daughter
off with a pretence of anger. “This is my younger girl,” she said to the
visitor. Natasha, pulling her face away from her mother’s lace kerchief for a
minute, peeped down at her through tears of laughter, and hid her face again.
The visitor, forced to admire this domestic
scene, thought it suitable to take some part in it.
“Tell me, my
dear,” she said, addressing Natasha, “how did you come by your Mimi? Your
daughter, I suppose?”
Natasha did not like the tone of
condescension to childish things with which the visitor had spoken to her. She
made no answer, but stared solemnly at her.
Meanwhile all the younger generation,
Boris, the officer, Anna Milhalovna’s son; Nikolay, the student, the count’s
elder son; Sonya, the count’s niece; and little Petya, his younger son, had all
placed themselves about the drawing-room, and were obviously trying to restrain
within the bounds of decorum the excitement and mirth which was brimming over
in their faces. Clearly in the back part of the house, from which they had
dashed out so impetuously, the conversation had been more amusing than the
small-talk in the drawing-room of the scandal of the town, the weather, and
Countess Apraxin. Now and then they glanced at one another and could hardly
suppress their laughter.
The two young men,
the student and the officer, friends from childhood, were of the same age, and
both good-looking, but not like each other. Boris was a tall, fair-haired lad with
delicate, regular features, and a look of composure on his handsome face.
Nikolay was a curly-headed youth, not tall, with an open expression. On his
upper lip there were already signs of a black moustache coming, and his whole
face expressed impulsiveness and enthusiasm. Nikolay flushed red as he came
into the drawing-room. He was unmistakably trying to find something to say, and
unable to find anything. Boris, on the contrary, was at home immediately and
talked easily and playfully of the doll Mimi, saying that he had known her as a
young girl before her nose was broken, and she had grown older during the five
years he remembered her, and how her head was cracked right across the skull.
As he said this he looked at Natasha. Natasha turned away from him, glanced at
her younger brother, who, with a scowl on his face, was shaking with noiseless
laughter, and unable to restrain herself, she skipped up and flew out of the
room as quickly as her swift little legs could carry her. Boris did not laugh.
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