“If you really
want some,” he said. And he went to the bedstead, took a purse from under the
clean pillows, and ordered some wine. “Oh, and I have a letter and money to
give you,” he added.
“They sent you
a decent lot of money, though,” said Berg, looking at the heavy bag, that sank
into the sofa. “But we manage to scrape along on our pay, count, I can tell you
in my own case. …”
“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 heart to an old friend like
you.”
“Why, of
course, count, I quite understand,” said Berg, getting up and speaking in his
deep voice.
“You might go
and see the people of the house; they did invite you,” added Boris.
Berg put on a spotless clean coat, brushed
his lovelocks upwards before the looking-glass, in the fashion worn by the Tsar
Alexander Pavlovitch, and having assured himself from Rostov ’s expression that his coat had been
observed, he went out of the room with a bland smile.
“Ah, what a
beast I am, though,” said Rostov, as he read the letter.
“Oh, why?”
“Ah, what a
pig I’ve been, never once to have written and to have given them such a fright.
Ah, what a pig I am!” he repeated, flushing all at once. “Well, did you send
Gavrila for some wine? That’s right, let’s have some!” said he.
With the letters from his family there had
been inserted a letter of recommendation to Prince Bagration, by Anna
Mihalovna’s advice, which Countess Rostov had obtained through acquaintances,
and had sent to her son, begging him to take it to its address, and to make use
of it.
“What
nonsense! Much use to me,” said Rostov ,
throwing the letter under the table.
“What did you
throw that away for?” asked Boris.
“It’s a letter
of recommendation of some sort; what the devil do I want with a letter like
that!”
“What the
devil do you want with it?” said Boris, picking it up and reading the address;
“that letter would be of great use to you.”
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