Definition of Hyperbole
Tolstoy uses hyperbole when depicting Pierre's high degree of respect and praise for Prince Andrei. After they leave a soiree held by Anna Pavlovna, Prince Andrei expresses dissatisfaction with his own life, shocking Pierre:
Pierre considered Prince Andrei the model of all perfections, precisely because Prince Andrei united in the highest degree all those qualities which Pierre did not possess and which could be most nearly expressed by the notion of strength of will. Pierre always marveled at Prince Andrei’s ability to deal calmly with all sorts of people, at his extraordinary memory, his erudition (he had read everything, knew everything, had notions about everything), and most of all at his ability to work and learn.
In a passage rife with comedic hyperbole, the presence of Anatole Kuragin, a handsome young man and eligible bachelor, makes a distinct impression on the women living in the Bolkonsky household:
Unlock with LitCharts A+As always happens with lonely women who have long lived without the society of men, on Anatole’s appearance all three women in Prince Nikolai Andreevich’s house felt equally that their life had not been life until that moment. The power of thought, feeling, observation instantly increased tenfold in them, as if their life, going on in darkness till then, was suddenly lit up by a new light filled with meaning [...] Thousands of fancies of [Marya's] future family life kept emerging in her imagination. She drove them away and tried to hide them.