party for my own and my wife’s friends.’ (He smiled still
War and Peace
870
more pleasantly.) ‘I wished to ask the countess and you to do
me the honor of coming to tea and to supper.’
Only Countess Helene, considering the society of such
people as the Bergs beneath her, could be cruel enough to
refuse such an invitation. Berg explained so clearly why he
wanted to collect at his house a small but select company,
and why this would give him pleasure, and why though he
grudged spending money on cards or anything harmful, he
was prepared to run into some expense for the sake of good
societythat Pierre could not refuse, and promised to come.
‘But don’t be late, Count, if I may venture to ask; about
ten minutes to eight, please. We shall make up a rubber.
Our general is coming. He is very good to me. We shall have
supper, Count. So you will do me the favor.’
Contrary to his habit of being late, Pierre on that day ar-
rived at the Bergs’ house, not at ten but at fifteen minutes
to eight.
Having prepared everything necessary for the party, the
Bergs were really for their guests’ arrival.
In their new, clean, and light study with its small busts
and pictures and new furniture sat Berg and his wife. Berg,
closely buttoned up in his new uniform, sat beside his wife
explaining to her that one always could and should be ac-
quainted with people above one, because only then does one
get satisfaction from acquaintances.
‘You can get to know something, you can ask for some-
thing. See how I managed from my first promotion.’ (Berg
measured his life not by years but by promotions.) ‘My
comrades are still nobodies, while I am only waiting for a
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vacancy to command a regiment, and have the happiness to
be your husband.’ (He rose and kissed Vera’s hand, and on
the way to her straightened out a turned-up corner of the
carpet.) ‘And how have I obtained all this? Chiefly by know-
ing how to choose my aquaintances. It goes without saying
that one must be conscientious and methodical.’
Berg smiled with a sense of his superiority over a weak
woman, and paused, reflecting that this dear wife of his was
after all but a weak woman who could not understand all
that constitutes a man’s dignity, what it was ein Mann zu
sein.* Vera at the same time smiling with a sense of supe-
riority over her good, conscientious husband, who all the
same understood life wrongly, as according to Vera all men
did. Berg, judging by his wife, thought all women weak and
foolish. Vera, judging only by her husband and generalizing
from that observation, supposed that all men, though they
understand nothing and are conceited and selfish, ascribe
common sense to themselves alone.
*To be a man.
Berg rose and embraced his wife carefully, so as not to
crush her lace fichu for which he had paid a good price, kiss-
ing her straight on the lips.
‘The only thing is, we mustn’t have children too soon,’ he
continued, following an unconscious sequence of ideas.
‘Yes,’ answered Vera, ‘I don’t at all want that. We must
live for society.’
‘Princess Yusupova wore one exactly like this,’ said Berg,
pointing to the fichu with a happy and kindly smile.
Just then Count Bezukhov was announced. Husband and
War and Peace
872
wife glanced at one another, both smiling with self-satisfac-
tion, and each mentally claiming the honor of this visit.
‘This is what what comes of knowing how to make ac-
quaintances,’ thought Berg. ‘This is what comes of knowing
how to conduct oneself.’
‘But please don’t interrupt me when I am entertaining
the guests,’ said Vera, ‘because I know what interests each
of them and what to say to different people.’
Berg smiled again.
‘It can’t be helped: men must sometimes have masculine
conversation,’ said he.
They received Pierre in their small, new drawing-room,
where it was impossible to sit down anywhere without dis-
turbing its symmetry, neatness, and order; so it was quite
comprehensible and not strange that Berg, having gener-
ously offered to disturb the symmetry of an armchair or of
the sofa for his dear guest, but being apparently painfully
undecided on the matter himself, eventually left the visi-
tor to settle the question of selection. Pierre disturbed the
symmetry by moving a chair for himself, and Berg and Vera
immediately began their evening party, interrupting each
other in their efforts to entertain their guest.
Vera, having decided in her own mind that Pierre ought
to be entertained with conversation about the French em-
bassy, at once began accordingly. Berg, having decided that
masculine conversation was required, interrupted his wife’s
remarks and touched on the question of the war with Aus-
tria, and unconsciously jumped from the general subject to
personal considerations as to the proposals made him to
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take part in the Austrian campaign and the reasons why he
had declined them. Though the conversation was very inco-
herent and Vera was angry at the intrusion of the masculine
element, both husband and wife felt with satisfaction that,
even if only one guest was present, their evening had begun
very well and was as like as two peas to every other evening
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