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1 You ask whether we shall spend next winter in Moscow.
War and Peace 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 6: CHAPTER XXV
2 Early in the winter Denisov also came back and stayed with them.
War and Peace 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 4: CHAPTER X
3 Natasha, that winter, had for the first time begun to sing seriously, mainly because Denisov so delighted in her singing.
War and Peace 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 4: CHAPTER XV
4 His health was better in the winter, but last spring his wound reopened and the doctor said he ought to go away for a cure.
War and Peace 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 5: CHAPTER XIV
5 The coarse evergreen color of the small fir trees scattered here and there among the birches was an unpleasant reminder of winter.
War and Peace 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 6: CHAPTER I
6 It was one of those March nights when winter seems to wish to resume its sway and scatters its last snows and storms with desperate fury.
War and Peace 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 4: CHAPTER VIII
7 During the winter Prince Andrew had come to Bald Hills and had been gay, gentle, and more affectionate than Princess Mary had known him for a long time past.
War and Peace 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 6: CHAPTER XXV
8 The horses also had been fed for a fortnight on straw from the thatched roofs and had become terribly thin, though still covered with tufts of felty winter hair.
War and Peace 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 5: CHAPTER XV
9 As soon as Nicholas entered, he was enfolded in that poetic atmosphere of love which pervaded the Rostov household that winter and, now after Dolokhov's proposal and Iogel's ball, seemed to have grown thicker round Sonya and Natasha as the air does before a thunderstorm.
War and Peace 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 4: CHAPTER XV
10 They went through the muddy village, past threshing floors and green fields of winter rye, downhill where snow still lodged near the bridge, uphill where the clay had been liquefied by the rain, past strips of stubble land and bushes touched with green here and there, and into a birch forest growing on both sides of the road.
War and Peace 2By Leo Tolstoy ContextHighlight In BOOK 6: CHAPTER I