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War and Peace 6By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 16: CHAPTER XI
2 So the boy also was happy that Pierre had arrived.
War and Peace 6By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 16: CHAPTER XII
3 And she was right, said Countess Mary with a happy smile.
War and Peace 6By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 16: CHAPTER IX
4 I have had so little happiness in life that every loss is hard for me to bear.
War and Peace 6By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 16: CHAPTER VI
5 Pierre began with self-satisfaction and enthusiasm, Natasha with a quiet, happy smile.
War and Peace 6By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 16: CHAPTER XVI
6 There was an expression of carefree happiness on the faces of both father and daughter.
War and Peace 6By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 16: CHAPTER IX
7 "I should never, never have believed that one could be so happy," she whispered to herself.
War and Peace 6By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 16: CHAPTER IX
8 He was always so anxious to find seemliness, happiness, and peace in everything, and I should have been proud to let him see us.
War and Peace 6By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 16: CHAPTER XVI
9 Pierre knew he was not to blame, for he could not have come sooner; he knew this outburst was unseemly and would blow over in a minute or two; above all he knew that he himself was bright and happy.
War and Peace 6By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 16: CHAPTER XI
10 She could not understand why he was so particularly animated and happy when, after getting up at daybreak and spending the whole morning in the fields or on the threshing floor, he returned from the sowing or mowing or reaping to have tea with her.
War and Peace 6By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 16: CHAPTER VII
11 A smile lit up her face but at the same time she sighed, and her deep eyes expressed a quiet sadness as though she felt, through her happiness, that there is another sort of happiness unattainable in this life and of which she involuntarily thought at that instant.
War and Peace 6By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 16: CHAPTER IX
12 His capers reminded him of dancing, and looking at the child's round happy little face he thought of what she would be like when he was an old man, taking her into society and dancing the mazurka with her as his old father had danced Daniel Cooper with his daughter.
War and Peace 6By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 16: CHAPTER IX