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1 He stopped as if awakening from a dream and lifted his head.
War and Peace 4By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 11: CHAPTER XXXIII
2 I want to understand what was revealing itself to me in my dream.
War and Peace 4By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 11: CHAPTER IX
3 After the return of Alpatych from Smolensk the old prince suddenly seemed to awake as from a dream.
War and Peace 4By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 10: CHAPTER VIII
4 He dreamed that he was lying in the room he really was in, but that he was quite well and unwounded.
War and Peace 4By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 12: CHAPTER XVI
5 The countess did not sleep at night, or when she did fall asleep dreamed that she saw her sons lying dead.
War and Peace 4By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 11: CHAPTER XII
6 And compared to the duration of life it did not seem to him slower than an awakening from sleep compared to the duration of a dream.
War and Peace 4By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 12: CHAPTER XVI
7 Reveries about Sonya had had something merry and playful in them, but to dream of Princess Mary was always difficult and a little frightening.
War and Peace 4By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 12: CHAPTER VII
8 He did not know how or when this thought had taken such possession of him, but he remembered nothing of the past, understood nothing of the present, and all he saw and heard appeared to him like a dream.
War and Peace 4By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 11: CHAPTER XXVII
9 Napoleon rode on, dreaming of the Moscow that so appealed to his imagination, and "the bird restored to its native fields" galloped to our outposts, inventing on the way all that had not taken place but that he meant to relate to his comrades.
War and Peace 4By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 10: CHAPTER VII
10 Yes, it was like a dream in which a man fancies that a ruffian is coming to attack him, and raises his arm to strike that ruffian a terrible blow which he knows should annihilate him, but then feels that his arm drops powerless and limp like a rag, and the horror of unavoidable destruction seizes him in his helplessness.
War and Peace 4By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 10: CHAPTER XXXIV