Chapter 18
WHILE IN THE ROSTOVS’ HALL they were dancing
the sixth anglaise, while the weary orchestra played wrong notes, and the tired
footmen and cooks were getting the supper, Count Bezuhov had just had his sixth
stroke. The doctors declared that there was no hope of recovery; the sick man
received absolution and the sacrament while unconscious. Preparations were
being made for administering extreme unction, and the house was full of the
bustle and thrill of suspense usual at such moments. Outside the house
undertakers were crowding beyond the gates, trying to escape the notice of the
carriages that drove up, but eagerly anticipating a good order for the count’s
funeral. The governor of Moscow, who had been constantly sending his adjutants
to inquire after the count’s condition, came himself that evening to say good-bye to the
renowned grandee of Catherine’s court, Count Bezuhov.
The magnificent reception-room was full.
Every one stood up respectfully when the governor, after being half an hour
alone with the sick man, came out of the sick-room. Bestowing scanty
recognition on the bows with which he was received, he tried to escape as
quickly as possible from the gaze of the doctors, ecclesiastical personages,
and relations. Prince Vassily, who had grown paler and thinner during the last
few days, escorted the governor out, and softly repeated something to him
several times over.
After seeing the governor, Prince Vassily
sat down on a chair in the hall alone, crossing one leg high over the other,
leaning his elbow on his knee, and covering his eyes with his hand. After
sitting so for some time he got up, and with steps more hurried than his wont,
he crossed the long corridor, looking round him with frightened eyes, and went
to the back part of the house to the apartments of the eldest princess.
The persons he had left in the dimly
lighted reception-room, next to the sick-room, talked in broken whispers among
themselves, pausing, and looking round with eyes full of suspense and inquiry
whenever the door that led into the dying man’s room creaked as some one went
in or came out.
“Man’s
limitation,” said a little man, an ecclesiastic of some sort, to a lady, who
was sitting near him listening na?vely to his words—“his limitation is fixed,
there is no overstepping it.”
“I wonder if
it won’t be late for extreme unction?” inquired the lady, using his clerical
title, and apparently having no opinion of her own on the matter.
“It is a great
mystery, ma’am,” answered the clerk, passing his hands over his bald head, on
which lay a few tresses of carefully combed, half grey hair.
“Who was that?
was it the governor himself?” they were asking at the other end of the room.
“What a young-looking man!”
“And he’s over
sixty!. … What, do they say, the count does not know any one? Do they mean to
give extreme unction?”
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