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Next day he woke late. Recalling his recent impressions, the first
thought that came into his mind was that today he had to be presented to the
Emperor Francis; he remembered the Minister of War, the polite Austrian
adjutant, Bilibin, and last night's conversation. Having dressed for his
attendance at court in full parade uniform, which he had not worn for a long
time, he went into Bilibin's study fresh, animated, and handsome, with his hand
bandaged. In the study were four gentlemen of the diplomatic corps. With Prince
Hippolyte Kuragin, who was a secretary to the embassy, Bolkonski was already
acquainted. Bilibin introduced him to the others. |
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The gentlemen assembled at Bilibin's were young, wealthy, gay society
men, who here, as in Vienna, formed a special set which Bilibin, their leader,
called les notres.* This set, consisting almost exclusively of diplomats,
evidently had its own interests which had nothing to do with war or politics but
related to high society, to certain women, and to the official side of the
service. These gentlemen received Prince Andrew as one of themselves, an honor
they did not extend to many. From politeness and to start conversation, they
asked him a few questions about the army and the battle, and then the talk went
off into merry jests and gossip. |
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*Ours. |
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"But the best of it was," said one, telling of the misfortune
of a fellow diplomat, "that the Chancellor told him flatly that his
appointment to London was a promotion and that he was so to regard it. Can you
fancy the figure he cut?..." |
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"But the worst of it, gentlemen- I am giving Kuragin away to you- is
that that man suffers, and this Don Juan, wicked fellow, is taking advantage of
it!" |
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Prince Hippolyte was lolling in a lounge chair with his legs over its
arm. He began to laugh. |
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"Tell me about that!" he said. |
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"Oh, you Don Juan! You serpent!" cried several voices. |
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"You, Bolkonski, don't know," said Bilibin turning to Prince
Andrew, "that all the atrocities of the French army (I nearly said of the
Russian army) are nothing compared to what this man has been doing among the
women!" |
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"La femme est la compagne de l'homme,"* announced Prince
Hippolyte, and began looking through a lorgnette at his elevated legs. |
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*"Woman is man's companion." |
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Bilibin and the rest of "ours" burst out laughing in
Hippolyte's face, and Prince Andrew saw that Hippolyte, of whom- he had to
admit- he had almost been jealous on his wife's account, was the butt of this
set. |
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"Oh, I must give you a treat," Bilibin whispered to Bolkonski.
"Kuragin is exquisite when he discusses politics- you should see his
gravity!" |
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He sat down beside Hippolyte and wrinkling his forehead began talking to
him about politics. Prince Andrew and the others gathered round these two. |
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"The Berlin cabinet cannot express a feeling of alliance,"
began Hippolyte gazing round with importance at the others, "without
expressing... as in its last note... you understand... Besides, unless His
Majesty the Emperor derogates from the principle of our alliance... |
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"Wait, I have not finished..." he said to Prince Andrew,
seizing him by the arm, "I believe that intervention will be stronger than
nonintervention. And..." he paused. "Finally one cannot impute the
nonreceipt of our dispatch of November 18. That is how it will end." And he
released Bolkonski's arm to indicate that he had now quite finished. |
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"Demosthenes, I know thee by the pebble thou secretest in thy golden
mouth!" said Bilibin, and the mop of hair on his head moved with
satisfaction. |
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Everybody laughed, and Hippolyte louder than anyone. He was evidently
distressed, and breathed painfully, but could not restrain the wild laughter
that convulsed his usually impassive features. |
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"Well now, gentlemen," said Bilibin, "Bolkonski is my
guest in this house and in Brunn itself. I want to entertain him as far as I
can, with all the pleasures of life here. If we were in Vienna it would be easy,
but here, in this wretched Moravian hole, it is more difficult, and I beg you
all to help me. Brunn's attractions must be shown him. You can undertake the
theater, I society, and you, Hippolyte, of course the women." |
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"We must let him see Amelie, she's exquisite!" said one of
"ours," kissing his finger tips. |
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"In general we must turn this bloodthirsty soldier to more humane
interests," said Bilibin. |
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"I shall scarcely be able to avail myself of your hospitality,
gentlemen, it is already time for me to go," replied Prince Andrew looking
at his watch. |
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"Where to?" |
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"To
the Emperor." |
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"Oh! Oh! Oh!" Well, au revoir, Bolkonski! Au revoir, Prince!
Come back early to dinner," cried several voices. "We'll take you in
hand." |
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"When speaking to the Emperor, try as far as you can to praise the
way that provisions are supplied and the routes indicated," said Bilibin,
accompanying him to the hall. |
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"I should like to speak well of them, but as far as I the facts, I
can't," replied Bolkonski, smiling. |
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"Well, talk as much as you can, anyway. He has a passion for giving
audiences, but he does not like talking himself and can't do it, as you will
see." |
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At the levee Prince Andrew stood among the Austrian officers as he had
been told to, and the Emperor Francis merely looked fixedly into his face and
just nodded to him with to him with his long head. But after it was over, the
adjutant he had seen the previous day ceremoniously informed Bolkonski that the
Emperor desired to give him an audience. The Emperor Francis received him
standing in the middle of the room. Before the conversation began Prince Andrew
was struck by the fact that the Emperor seemed confused and blushed as if not
knowing what to say. |
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"Tell me, when did the battle begin?" he asked hurriedly. |
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Prince Andrew replied. Then followed other questions just as simple:
"Was Kutuzov well? When had he left Krems?" and so on. The Emperor
spoke as if his sole aim were to put a given number of questions- the answers to
these questions, as was only too evident, did not interest him. |
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"At what o'clock did the battle begin?" asked the Emperor. |
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"I cannot inform Your Majesty at what o'clock the battle began at
the front, but at Durrenstein, where I was, our attack began after five in the
afternoon," replied Bolkonski growing more animated and expecting that he
would have a chance to give a reliable account, which he had ready in his mind,
of all he knew and had seen. But the Emperor smiled and interrupted him. |
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"How many miles?" |
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"From where to where, Your Majesty?" |
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"From Durrenstein to Krems." |
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"Three and a half miles, Your Majesty." |
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"The French have abandoned the left bank?" |
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"According to the scouts the last of them crossed on rafts during
the night." |
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"Is there sufficient forage in Krems?" |
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"Forage has not been supplied to the extent..." |
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The Emperor interrupted him. |
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"At what o'clock was General Schmidt killed?" |
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"At seven o'clock, I believe." |
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"At seven o'clock? It's very sad, very sad!" |
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The Emperor thanked Prince Andrew and bowed. Prince Andrew withdrew and
was immediately surrounded by courtiers on all sides. Everywhere he saw friendly
looks and heard friendly words. Yesterday's adjutant reproached him for not
having stayed at the palace, and offered him his own house. The Minister of War
came up and congratulated him on the Maria Theresa Order of the third grade,
which the Emperor was conferring on him. The Empress' chamberlain invited him to
see Her Majesty. The archduchess also wished to see him. He did not know whom to
answer, and for a few seconds collected his thoughts. Then the Russian
ambassador took him by the shoulder, led him to the window, and began to talk to
him. |
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Contrary to Bilibin's forecast the news he had brought was joyfully
received. A thanksgiving service was arranged, Kutuzov was awarded the Grand
Cross of Maria Theresa, and the whole army received rewards. Bolkonski was
invited everywhere, and had to spend the whole morning calling on the principal
Austrian dignitaries. Between four and five in the afternoon, having made all
his calls, he was returning to Bilibin's house thinking out a letter to his
father about the battle and his visit to Brunn. At the door he found a vehicle
half full of luggage. Franz, Bilibin's man, was dragging a portmanteau with some
difficulty out of the front door. |
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Before returning to Bilibin's Prince Andrew had gone to bookshop to
provide himself with some books for the campaign, and had spent some time in the
shop. |
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"What is it?" he asked. |
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"Oh, your excellency!" said Franz, with difficulty rolling the
portmanteau into the vehicle, "we are to move on still farther. The
scoundrel is again at our heels!" |
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"Eh? What?" asked Prince Andrew. |
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Bilibin came out to meet him. His usually calm face showed excitement. |
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"There now! Confess that this is delightful," said he.
"This affair of the Thabor Bridge, at Vienna.... They have crossed without
striking a blow!" |
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Prince Andrew could not understand. |
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"But where do you come from not to know what every coachman in the
town knows?" |
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"I come from the archduchess'. I heard nothing there." |
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"And you didn't see that everybody is packing up?" |
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"I did not... What is it all about?" inquired Prince Andrew
impatiently. |
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"What's it all about? Why, the French have crossed the bridge that
Auersperg was defending, and the bridge was not blown up: so Murat is now
rushing along the road to Brunn and will be here in a day or two." |
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"What? Here? But why did they not blow up the bridge, if it was
mined?" |
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"That is what I ask you. No one, not even Bonaparte, knows
why." |
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Bolkonski shrugged his shoulders. |
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"But if the bridge is crossed it means that the army too is lost? It
will be cut off," said he. |
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"That's just it," answered Bilibin. "Listen! The French
entered Vienna as I told you. Very well. Next day, which was yesterday, those
gentlemen, messieurs les marechaux,* Murat, Lannes,and Belliard, mount and ride
to bridge. (Observe that all three are Gascons.) 'Gentlemen,' says one of them,
'you know the Thabor Bridge is mined and doubly mined and that there are
menacing fortifications at its head and an army of fifteen thousand men has been
ordered to blow up the bridge and not let us cross? But it will please our
sovereign the Emperor Napoleon if we take this bridge, so let us three go and
take it!' 'Yes, let's!' say the others. And off they go and take the bridge,
cross it, and now with their whole army are on this side of the Danube, marching
on us, you, and your lines of communication." |
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*The marshalls. |
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"Stop jesting," said Prince Andrew sadly and seriously. This
news grieved him and yet he was pleased. |
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As soon as he learned that the Russian army was in such a hopeless
situation it occurred to him that it was he who was destined to lead it out of
this position; that here was the Toulon that would lift him from the ranks of
obscure officers and offer him the first step to fame! Listening to Bilibin he
was already imagining how on reaching the army he would give an opinion at the
war council which would be the only one that could save the army, and how he
alone would be entrusted with the executing of the plan. |
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"Stop this jesting," he said |
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"I am not jesting," Bilibin went on. "Nothing is truer or
sadder. These gentlemen ride onto the bridge alone and wave white handkerchiefs;
they assure the officer on duty that they, the marshals, are on their way to
negotiate with Prince Auersperg. He lets them enter the tete-de-pont.* They spin
him a thousand gasconades, saying that the war is over, that the Emperor Francis
is arranging a meeting with Bonaparte, that they desire to see Prince Auersperg,
and so on. The officer sends for Auersperg; these gentlemen embrace the
officers, crack jokes, sit on the cannon, and meanwhile a French battalion gets
to the bridge unobserved, flings the bags of incendiary material into the water,
and approaches the tete-de-pont. At length appears the lieutenant general, our
dear Prince Auersperg von Mautern himself. 'Dearest foe! Flower of the Austrian
army, hero of the Turkish wars Hostilities are ended, we can shake one another's
hand.... The Emperor Napoleon burns with impatience to make Prince Auersperg's
acquaintance.' In a word, those gentlemen, Gascons indeed, so bewildered him
with fine words, and he is so flattered by his rapidly established intimacy with
the French marshals, and so dazzled by the sight of Murat's mantle and ostrich
plumes, qu'il n'y voit que du feu, et oublie celui qu'il devait faire faire sur
l'ennemi!"*[2] In spite of the animation of his speech, Bilibin did not
forget to pause after this mot to give time for its due appreciation. "The
French battalion rushes to the bridgehead, spikes the guns, and the bridge is
taken! But what is best of all," he went on, his excitement subsiding under
the delightful interest of his own story, "is that the sergeant in charge
of the cannon which was to give the signal to fire the mines and blow up the
bridge, this sergeant, seeing that the French troops were running onto the
bridge, was about to fire, but Lannes stayed his hand. The sergeant, who was
evidently wiser than his general, goes up to Auersperg and says: 'Prince, you
are being deceived, here are the French!' Murat, seeing that all is lost if the
sergeant is allowed to speak, turns to Auersperg with feigned astonishment (he
is a true Gascon) and says: 'I don't recognize the world-famous Austrian
discipline, if you allow a subordinate to address you like that!' It was a
stroke of genius. Prince Auersperg feels his dignity at stake and orders the
sergeant to be arrested. Come, you must own that this affair of the Thabor
Bridge is delightful! It is not exactly stupidity, nor rascality...." |
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*Bridgehead. |
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*[2] That their fire gets into his eyes and he forgets that he ought to
be firing at the enemy. |
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"It may be treachery," said Prince Andrew, vividly imagining
the gray overcoats, wounds, the smoke of gunpowder, the sounds of firing, and
the glory that awaited him. |
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"Not that either. That puts the court in too bad a light,"
replied Bilibin."It's not treachery nor rascality nor stupidity: it is just
as at Ulm... it is..."- he seemed to be trying to find the right
expression. "C'est... c'est du Mack. Nous sommes mackes [It is... it is a
bit of Mack. We are Macked]," he concluded, feeling that he had produced a
good epigram, a fresh one that would be repeated. His hitherto puckered brow
became smooth as a sign of pleasure, and with a slight smile he began to examine
his nails. |
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"Where are you off to?" he said suddenly to Prince Andrew who
had risen and was going toward his room. |
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"I am going away." |
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"Where to?" |
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"To the army." |
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"But you meant to stay another two days?" |
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"But now I am off at once." |
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And Prince Andrew after giving directions about his departure went to his
room. |
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"Do you know, mon cher," said Bilibin following him, "I
have been thinking about you. Why are you going?" |
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And in proof of the conclusiveness of his opinion all the wrinkles
vanished from his face. |
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Prince Andrew looked inquiringly at him and gave no reply. |
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"Why are you going? I know you think it your duty to gallop back to
the army now that it is in danger. I understand that. Mon cher, it is
heroism!" |
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"Not at all," said Prince Andrew. |
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"But as you are a philosopher, be a consistent one, look at the
other side of the question and you will see that your duty, on the contrary, is
to take care of yourself. Leave it to those who are no longer fit for anything
else.... You have not been ordered to return and have not been dismissed from
here; therefore, you can stay and go with us wherever our ill luck takes us.
They say we are going to Olmutz, and Olmutz is a very decent town. You and I
will travel comfortably in my caleche." |
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"Do stop joking, Bilibin," cried Bolkonski. |
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"I am speaking sincerely as a friend! Consider! Where and why are
you going, when you might remain here? You are faced by one of two things,"
and the skin over his left temple puckered, "either you will not reach your
regiment before peace is concluded, or you will share defeat and disgrace with
Kutuzov's whole army." |
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And Bilibin unwrinkled his temple, feeling that the dilemma was
insoluble. |
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"I cannot argue about it," replied Prince Andrew coldly, but he
thought: "I am going to save the army." |
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"My dear fellow, you are a hero!" said Bilibin. |
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That same night, having taken leave of the Minister of War, Bolkonski set
off to rejoin the army, not knowing where he would find it and fearing to be
captured by the French on the way to Krems. |
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In Brunn everybody attached to the court was packing up, and the heavy
baggage was already being dispatched to Olmutz. Near Hetzelsdorf Prince Andrew
struck the high road along which the Russian army was moving with great haste
and in the greatest disorder. The road was so obstructed with carts that it was
impossible to get by in a carriage. Prince Andrew took a horse and a Cossack
from a Cossack commander, and hungry and weary, making his way past the baggage
wagons, rode in search of the commander in chief and of his own luggage. Very
sinister reports of the position of the army reached him as he went along, and
the appearance of the troops in their disorderly flight confirmed these rumors. |
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"Cette armee russe que l'or de l'Angleterre a transportee des
extremites de l'univers, nous allons lui faire eprouver le meme sort- (le sort
de l'armee d'Ulm)."* He remembered these words in Bonaparte's address to
his army at the beginning of the campaign, and they awoke in him astonishment at
the genius of his hero, a feeling of wounded pride, and a hope of glory.
"And should there be nothing left but to die?" he thought. "Well,
if need be, I shall do it no worse than others." |
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*"That Russian army which has been brought from the ends of the
earth by English gold, we shall cause to share the same fate- (the fate of the
army at Ulm)." |
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He looked with disdain at the endless confused mass of detachments,
carts, guns, artillery, and again baggage wagons and vehicles of all kinds
overtaking one another and blocking the muddy road, three and sometimes four
abreast. From all sides, behind and before, as far as ear could reach, there
were the rattle of wheels, the creaking of carts and gun carriages, the tramp of
horses, the crack of whips, shouts, the urging of horses, and the swearing of
soldiers, orderlies, and officers. All along the sides of the road fallen horses
were to be seen, some flayed, some not, and broken-down carts beside which
solitary soldiers sat waiting for something, and again soldiers straggling from
their companies, crowds of whom set off to the neighboring villages, or returned
from them dragging sheep, fowls, hay, and bulging sacks. At each ascent or
descent of the road the crowds were yet denser and the din of shouting more
incessant. Soldiers floundering knee-deep in mud pushed the guns and wagons
themselves. Whips cracked, hoofs slipped, traces broke, and lungs were strained
with shouting. The officers directing the march rode backward and forward
between the carts. Their voices were but feebly heard amid the uproar and one
saw by their faces that they despaired of the possibility of checking this
disorder. |
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"Here is our dear Orthodox Russian army," thought Bolkonski,
recalling Bilibin's words. |
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Wishing to find out where the commander in chief was, he rode up to a
convoy. Directly opposite to him came a strange one-horse vehicle, evidently
rigged up by soldiers out of any available materials and looking like something
between a cart, a cabriolet, and a caleche. A soldier was driving, and a woman
enveloped in shawls sat behind the apron under the leather hood of the vehicle.
Prince Andrew rode up and was just putting his question to a soldier when his
attention was diverted by the desperate shrieks of the woman in the vehicle. An
officer in charge of transport was beating the soldier who was driving the
woman's vehicle for trying to get ahead of others, and the strokes of his whip
fell on the apron of the equipage. The woman screamed piercingly. Seeing Prince
Andrew she leaned out from behind the apron and, waving her thin arms from under
the woolen shawl, cried: |
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"Mr. Aide-de-camp! Mr. Aide-de-camp!... For heaven's sake... Protect
me! What will become of us? I am the wife of the doctor of the Seventh
Chasseurs.... They won't let us pass, we are left behind and have lost our
people..." |
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"I'll flatten you into a pancake!" shouted the angry officer to
the soldier. "Turn back with your slut!" |
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"Mr. Aide-de-camp! Help me!... What does it all mean?" screamed
the doctor's wife. |
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"Kindly let this cart pass. Don't you see it's a woman?" said
Prince Andrew riding up to the officer. |
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|
The officer glanced at him, and without replying turned again to the
soldier. "I'll teach you to push on!... Back!" |
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|
"Let them pass, I tell you!" repeated Prince Andrew,
compressing his lips. |
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|
"And who are you?" cried the officer, turning on him with tipsy
rage, "who are you? Are you in command here? Eh? I am commander here, not
you! Go back or I'll flatten you into a pancake," repeated he. This
expression evidently pleased him. |
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|
"That was a nice snub for the little aide-de-camp," came a
voice from behind. |
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|
Prince Andrew saw that the officer was in that state of senseless, tipsy
rage when a man does not know what he is saying. He saw that his championship of
the doctor's wife in her queer trap might expose him to what he dreaded more
than anything in the world- to ridicule; but his instinct urged him on. Before
the officer finished his sentence Prince Andrew, his face distorted with fury,
rode up to him and raised his riding whip. |
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"Kind...ly let- them- pass!" |
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|
The officer flourished his arm and hastily rode away. |
|
|
"It's all the fault of these fellows on the staff that there's this
disorder," he muttered. "Do as you like." |
|
|
Prince Andrew without lifting his eyes rode hastily away from the
doctor's wife, who was calling him her deliverer, and recalling with a sense of
disgust the minutest details of this humiliating scene he galloped on to the
village where he was told that the commander in chief was. |
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|
On reaching the village he dismounted and went to the nearest house,
intending to rest if but for a moment, eat something, and try to sort out the
stinging and tormenting thoughts that confused his mind. "This is a mob of
scoundrels and not an army," he was thinking as he went up to the window of
the first house, when a familiar voice called him by name. |
|
|
He turned round. Nesvitski's handsome face looked out of the little
window. Nesvitski, moving his moist lips as he chewed something, and flourishing
his arm, called him to enter. |
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|
"Bolkonski! Bolkonski!... Don't you hear? Eh? Come quick..." he
shouted. |
|
|
Entering the house, Prince Andrew saw Nesvitski and another adjutant
having something to eat. They hastily turned round to him asking if he had any
news. On their familiar faces he read agitation and alarm. This was particularly
noticeable on Nesvitski's usually laughing countenance. |
|
|
"Where is the commander in chief?" asked Bolkonski. |
|
|
"Here, in that house," answered the adjutant. |
|
|
"Well, is it true that it's peace and capitulation?" asked
Nesvitski. |
|
|
"I was going to ask you. I know nothing except that it was all I
could do to get here." |
|
|
"And we, my dear boy! It's terrible! I was wrong to laugh at Mack,
we're getting it still worse," said Nesvitski. "But sit down and have
something to eat." |
|
|
"You won't be able to find either your baggage or anything else now,
Prince. And God only knows where your man Peter is," said the other
adjutant. |
|
|
"Where are headquarters?" |
|
|
"We are to spend the night in Znaim." |
|
|
"Well, I have got all I need into packs for two horses," said
Nesvitski. "They've made up splendid packs for me- fit to cross the
Bohemian mountains with. It's a bad lookout, old fellow! But what's the matter
with you? You must be ill to shiver like that," he added, noticing that
Prince Andrew winced as at an electric shock. |
|
|
"It's nothing," replied Prince Andrew. |
|
|
He had just remembered his recent encounter with the doctor's wife and
the convoy officer. |
|
|
"What is the commander in chief doing here?" he asked. |
|
|
"I can't make out at all," said Nesvitski. |
|
|
"Well, all I can make out is that everything is abominable,
abominable, quite abominable!" said Prince Andrew, and he went off to the
house where the commander in chief was. |
|
|
Passing by Kutuzov's carriage and the exhausted saddle horses of his
suite, with their Cossacks who were talking loudly together, Prince Andrew
entered the passage. Kutuzov himself, he was told, was in the house with Prince
Bagration and Weyrother. Weyrother was the Austrian general who had succeeded
Schmidt. In the passage little Kozlovski was squatting on his heels in front of
a clerk. The clerk, with cuffs turned up, was hastily writing at a tub turned
bottom upwards. Kozlovski's face looked worn- he too had evidently not slept all
night. He glanced at Prince Andrew and did not even nod to him. |
|
|
"Second line... have you written it?" he continued dictating to
the clerk. "The Kiev Grenadiers, Podolian..." |
|
|
"One can't write so fast, your honor," said the clerk, glancing
angrily and disrespectfully at Kozlovski. |
|
|
Through the door came the sounds of Kutuzov's voice, excited and
dissatisfied, interrupted by another, an unfamiliar voice. From the sound of
these voices, the inattentive way Kozlovski looked at him, the disrespectful
manner of the exhausted clerk, the fact that the clerk and Kozlovski were
squatting on the floor by a tub so near to the commander in chief, and from the
noisy laughter of the Cossacks holding the horses near the window, Prince Andrew
felt that something important and disastrous was about to happen. |
|
|
He turned to Kozlovski with urgent questions. |
|
|
"Immediately, Prince," said Kozlovski. "Dispositions for
Bagration." |
|
|
"What about capitulation?" |
|
|
"Nothing of the sort. Orders are issued for a battle." |
|
|
Prince Andrew moved toward the door from whence voices were heard. Just
as he was going to open it the sounds ceased, the door opened, and Kutuzov with
his eagle nose and puffy face appeared in the doorway. Prince Andrew stood right
in front of Kutuzov but the expression of the commander in chief's one sound eye
showed him to be so preoccupied with thoughts and anxieties as to be oblivious
of his presence. He looked straight at his adjutant's face without recognizing
him. |
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|
"Well, have you finished?" said he to Kozlovski. |
|
|
"One moment, your excellency." |
|
|
Bagration, a gaunt middle-aged man of medium height with a firm,
impassive face of Oriental type, came out after the commander in chief. |
|
|
"I have the honor to present myself," repeated Prince Andrew
rather loudly, handing Kutuzov an envelope. |
|
|
Ah, from Vienna? Very good. Later, later!" |
|
|
Kutuzov went out into the porch with Bagration. |
|
|
"Well, good-by, Prince," said he to Bagration. "My
blessing, and may Christ be with you in your great endeavor!" |
|
|
His face suddenly softened and tears came into his eyes. With his left
hand he drew Bagration toward him, and with his right, on which he wore a ring,
he made the sign of the cross over him with a gesture evidently habitual,
offering his puffy cheek, but Bagration kissed him on the neck instead. |
|
|
"Christ be with you!" Kutuzov repeated and went toward his
carriage. "Get in with me," said he to Bolkonski. |
|
|
"Your excellency, I should like to be of use here. Allow me to
remain with Prince Bagration's detachment." |
|
|
"Get in," said Kutuzov, and noticing that Bolkonski still
delayed, he added: "I need good officers myself, need them myself!" |
|
|
They got into the carriage and drove for a few minutes in silence. |
|
|
"There is still much, much before us," he said, as if with an
old man's penetration he understood all that was passing in Bolkonski's mind.
"If a tenth part of his detachment returns I shall thank God," he
added as if speaking to himself. |
|
|
Prince Andrew glanced at Kutuzov's face only a foot distant from him and
involuntarily noticed the carefully washed seams of the scar near his temple,
where an Ismail bullet had pierced his skull, and the empty eye socket.
"Yes, he has a right to speak so calmly of those men's death," thought
Bolkonski. |
|
|
"That is why I beg to be sent to that detachment," he said. |
|
|
Kutuzov did not reply. He seemed to have forgotten what he had been
saying, and sat plunged in thought. Five minutes later, gently swaying on the
soft springs of the carriage, he turned to Prince Andrew. There was not a trace
of agitation on his face. With delicate irony he questioned Prince Andrew about
the details of his interview with the Emperor, about the remarks he had heard at
court concerning the Krems affair, and about some ladies they both knew. |
|
|
On November 1 Kutuzov had received, through a spy, news that the army he
commanded was in an almost hopeless position. The spy reported that the French,
after crossing the bridge at Vienna, were advancing in immense force upon
Kutuzov's line of communication with the troops that were arriving from Russia.
If Kutuzov decided to remain at Krems, Napoleon's army of one hundred and fifty
thousand men would cut him off completely and surround his exhausted army of
forty thousand, and he would find himself in the position of Mack at Ulm. If
Kutuzov decided to abandon the road connecting him with the troops arriving from
Russia, he would have to march with no road into unknown parts of the Bohemian
mountains, defending himself against superior forces of the enemy and abandoning
all hope of a junction with Buxhowden. If Kutuzov decided to retreat along the
road from Krems to Olmutz, to unite with the troops arriving from Russia, he
risked being forestalled on that road by the French who had crossed the Vienna
bridge, and encumbered by his baggage and transport, having to accept battle on
the march against an enemy three times as strong, who would hem him in from two
sides. |
|
|
Kutuzov chose this latter course. |
|
|
The French, the spy reported, having crossed the Vienna bridge, were
advancing by forced marches toward Znaim, which lay sixty-six miles off on the
line of Kutuzov's retreat. If he reached Znaim before the French, there would be
great hope of saving the army; to let the French forestall him at Znaim meant
the exposure of his whole army to a disgrace such as that of Ulm, or to utter
destruction. But to forestall the French with his whole army was impossible. The
road for the French from Vienna to Znaim was shorter and better than the road
for the Russians from Krems to Znaim. |
|
|
The night he received the news, Kutuzov sent Bagration's vanguard, four
thousand strong, to the right across the hills from the Krems-Znaim to the
Vienna-Znaim road. Bagration was to make this march without resting, and to halt
facing Vienna with Znaim to his rear, and if he succeeded in forestalling the
French he was to delay them as long as possible. Kutuzov himself with all his
transport took the road to Znaim. |
|
|
Marching thirty miles that stormy night across roadless hills, with his
hungry, ill-shod soldiers, and losing a third of his men as stragglers by the
way, Bagration came out on the Vienna-Znaim road at Hollabrunn a few hours ahead
of the French who were approaching Hollabrunn from Vienna. Kutuzov with his
transport had still to march for some days before he could reach Znaim. Hence
Bagration with his four thousand hungry, exhausted men would have to detain for
days the whole enemy army that came upon him at Hollabrunn, which was clearly
impossible. But a freak of fate made the impossible possible. The success of the
trick that had placed the Vienna bridge in the hands of the French without a
fight led Murat to try to deceive Kutuzov in a similar way. Meeting Bagration's
weak detachment on the Znaim road he supposed it to be Kutuzov's whole army. To
be able to crush it absolutely he awaited the arrival of the rest of the troops
who were on their way from Vienna, and with this object offered a three days'
truce on condition that both armies should remain in position without moving.
Murat declared that negotiations for peace were already proceeding, and that he
therefore offered this truce to avoid unnecessary bloodshed. Count Nostitz, the
Austrian general occupying the advanced posts, believed Murat's emissary and
retired, leaving Bagration's division exposed. Another emissary rode to the
Russian line to announce the peace negotiations and to offer the Russian army
the three days' truce. Bagration replied that he was not authorized either to
accept or refuse a truce and sent his adjutant to Kutuzov to report the offer he
had received. |
|
|
A truce was Kutuzov's sole chance of gaining time, giving Bagration's
exhausted troops some rest, and letting the transport and heavy convoys (whose
movements were concealed from the French) advance if but one stage nearer Znaim.
The offer of a truce gave the only, and a quite unexpected, chance of saving the
army. On receiving the news he immediately dispatched Adjutant General
Wintzingerode, who was in attendance on him, to the enemy camp. Wintzingerode
was not merely to agree to the truce but also to offer terms of capitulation,
and meanwhile Kutuzov sent his adjutants back to hasten to the utmost the
movements of the baggage trains of the entire army along the Krems-Znaim road.
Bagration's exhausted and hungry detachment, which alone covered this movement
of the transport and of the whole army, had to remain stationary in face of an
enemy eight times as strong as itself. |
|
|
Kutuzov's expectations that the proposals of capitulation (which were in
no way binding) might give time for part of the transport to pass, and also that
Murat's mistake would very soon be discovered, proved correct. As soon as
Bonaparte (who was at Schonbrunn, sixteen miles from Hollabrunn) received
Murat's dispatch with the proposal of a truce and a capitulation, he detected a
ruse and wrote the following letter to Murat: |
|
|
Schonbrunn, 25th Brumaire, 1805, |
|
|
at eight o'clock in the morning |
|
|
To PRINCE MURAT, |
|
|
I cannot find words to express to you my displeasure. You command only my
advance guard, and have no right to arrange an armistice without my order. You
are causing me to lose the fruits of a campaign. Break the armistice immediately
and march on the enemy. Inform him that the general who signed that capitulation
had no right to do so, and that no one but the Emperor of Russia has that right. |
|
|
If, however, the Emperor of Russia ratifies that convention, I will
ratify it; but it is only a trick. March on, destroy the Russian army.... You
are in a position to seize its baggage and artillery. |
|
|
The Russian Emperor's aide-de-camp is an impostor. Officers are nothing
when they have no powers; this one had none.... The Austrians let themselves be
tricked at the crossing of the Vienna bridge, you are letting yourself be
tricked by an aide-de-camp of the Emperor. |
|
|
NAPOLEON |
|
|
Bonaparte's adjutant rode full gallop with this menacing letter to Murat.
Bonaparte himself, not trusting to his generals, moved with all the Guards to
the field of battle, afraid of letting a ready victim escape, and Bagration's
four thousand men merrily lighted campfires, dried and warmed themselves, cooked
their porridge for the first time for three days, and not one of them knew or
imagined what was in store for him. |
|
|
Between three and four o'clock in the afternoon Prince Andrew, who had
persisted in his request to Kutuzov, arrived at Grunth and reported himself to
Bagration. Bonaparte's adjutant had not yet reached Murat's detachment and the
battle had not yet begun. In Bagration's detachment no one knew anything of the
general position of affairs. They talked of peace but did not believe in its
possibility; others talked of a battle but also disbelieved in the nearness of
an engagement. Bagration, knowing Bolkonski to be a favorite and trusted
adjutant, received him with distinction and special marks of favor, explaining
to him that there would probably be an engagement that day or the next, and
giving him full liberty to remain with him during the battle or to join the
rearguard and have an eye on the order of retreat, "which is also very
important." |
|
|
"However, there will hardly be an engagement today," said
Bagration as if to reassure Prince Andrew. |
|
|
"If he is one of the ordinary little staff dandies sent to earn a
medal he can get his reward just as well in the rearguard, but if he wishes to
stay with me, let him... he'll be of use here if he's a brave officer,"
thought Bagration. Prince Andrew, without replying, asked the prince's
permission to ride round the position to see the disposition of the forces, so
as to know his bearings should he be sent to execute an order. The officer on
duty, a handsome, elegantly dressed man with a diamond ring on his forefinger,
who was fond of speaking French though he spoke it badly, offered to conduct
Prince Andrew. |
|
|
On all sides they saw rain-soaked officers with dejected faces who seemed
to be seeking something, and soldiers dragging doors, benches, and fencing from
the village. |
|
|
"There now, Prince! We can't stop those fellows," said the
staff officer pointing to the soldiers. "The officers don't keep them in
hand. And there," he pointed to a sutler's tent, "they crowd in and
sit. This morning I turned them all out and now look, it's full again. I must go
there, Prince, and scare them a bit. It won't take a moment." |
|
|
"Yes, let's go in and I will get myself a roll and some
cheese," said Prince Andrew who had not yet had time to eat anything. |
|
|
"Why didn't you mention it, Prince? I would have offered you
something." |
|
|
They dismounted and entered the tent. Several officers, with flushed and
weary faces, were sitting at the table eating and drinking. |
|
|
"Now what does this mean, gentlemen?" said the staff officer,
in the reproachful tone of a man who has repeated the same thing more than once.
"You know it won't do to leave your posts like this. The prince gave orders
that no one should leave his post. Now you, Captain," and he turned to a
thin, dirty little artillery officer who without his boots (he had given them to
the canteen keeper to dry), in only his stockings, rose when they entered,
smiling not altogether comfortably. |
|
|
"Well, aren't you ashamed of yourself, Captain Tushin?" he
continued. "One would think that as an artillery officer you would set a
good example, yet here you are without your boots! The alarm will be sounded and
you'll be in a pretty position without your boots!" (The staff officer
smiled.) "Kindly return to your posts, gentlemen, all of you, all!" he
added in a tone of command. |
|
|
Prince Andrew smiled involuntarily as he looked at the artillery officer
Tushin, who silent and smiling, shifting from one stockinged foot to the other,
glanced inquiringly with his large, intelligent, kindly eyes from Prince Andrew
to the staff officer. |
|
|
"The soldiers say it feels easier without boots," said Captain
Tushin smiling shyly in his uncomfortable position, evidently wishing to adopt a
jocular tone. But before he had finished he felt that his jest was unacceptable
and had not come off. He grew confused. |
|
|
"Kindly return to your posts," said the staff officer trying to
preserve his gravity. |
|
|
Prince Andrew glanced again at the artillery officer's small figure.
There was something peculiar about it, quite unsoldierly, rather comic, but
extremely attractive. |
|
|
The staff officer and Prince Andrew mounted their horses and rode on. |
|
|
Having ridden beyond the village, continually meeting and overtaking
soldiers and officers of various regiments, they saw on their left some
entrenchments being thrown up, the freshly dug clay of which showed up red.
Several battalions of soldiers, in their shirt sleeves despite the cold wind,
swarmed in these earthworks like a host of white ants; spadefuls of red clay
were continually being thrown up from behind the bank by unseen hands. Prince
Andrew and the officer rode up, looked at the entrenchment, and went on again.
Just behind it they came upon some dozens of soldiers, continually replaced by
others, who ran from the entrenchment. They had to hold their noses and put
their horses to a trot to escape from the poisoned atmosphere of these latrines. |
|
|
"Voila l'agrement des camps, monsieur le Prince,"* said the
staff officer. |
|
|
*"This is a pleasure one gets in camp, Prince." |
|
|
They rode up the opposite hill. From there the French could already be
seen. Prince Andrew stopped and began examining the position. |
|
|
"That's our battery," said the staff officer indicating the
highest point. "It's in charge of the queer fellow we saw without his
boots. You can see everything from there; let's go there, Prince." |
|
|
"Thank you very much, I will go on alone," said Prince Andrew,
wishing to rid himself of this staff officer's company, "please don't
trouble yourself further." |
|
|
The staff officer remained behind and Prince Andrew rode on alone. |
|
|
The farther forward and nearer the enemy he went, the more orderly and
cheerful were the troops. The greatest disorder and depression had been in the
baggage train he had passed that morning on the Znaim road seven miles away from
the French. At Grunth also some apprehension and alarm could be felt, but the
nearer Prince Andrew came to the French lines the more confident was the
appearance of our troops. The soldiers in their greatcoats were ranged in lines,
the sergeants major and company officers were counting the men, poking the last
man in each section in the ribs and telling him to hold his hand up. Soldiers
scattered over the whole place were dragging logs and brushwood and were
building shelters with merry chatter and laughter; around the fires sat others,
dressed and undressed, drying their shirts and leg bands or mending boots or
overcoats and crowding round the boilers and porridge cookers. In one company
dinner was ready, and the soldiers were gazing eagerly at the steaming boiler,
waiting till the sample, which a quartermaster sergeant was carrying in a wooden
bowl to an officer who sat on a log before his shelter, had been tasted. |
|
|
Another company, a lucky one for not all the companies had vodka, crowded
round a pock-marked, broad-shouldered sergeant major who, tilting a keg, filled
one after another the canteen lids held out to him. The soldiers lifted the
canteen lids to their lips with reverential faces, emptied them, rolling the
vodka in their mouths, and walked away from the sergeant major with brightened
expressions, licking their lips and wiping them on the sleeves of their
greatcoats. All their faces were as serene as if all this were happening at home
awaiting peaceful encampment, and not within sight of the enemy before an action
in which at least half of them would be left on the field. After passing a
chasseur regiment and in the lines of the Kiev grenadiers- fine fellows busy
with similar peaceful affairs- near the shelter of the regimental commander,
higher than and different from the others, Prince Andrew came out in front of a
platoon of grenadiers before whom lay a naked man. Two soldiers held him while
two others were flourishing their switches and striking him regularly on his
bare back. The man shrieked unnaturally. A stout major was pacing up and down
the line, and regardless of the screams kept repeating: |
|
|
"It's a shame for a soldier to steal; a soldier must be honest,
honorable, and brave, but if he robs his fellows there is no honor in him, he's
a scoundrel. Go on! Go on!" |
|
|
So the swishing sound of the strokes, and the desperate but unnatural
screams, continued. |
|
|
"Go on, go on!" said the major. |
|
|
A young officer with a bewildered and pained expression on his face
stepped away from the man and looked round inquiringly at the adjutant as he
rode by. |
|
|
Prince Andrew, having reached the front line, rode along it. Our front
line and that of the enemy were far apart on the right and left flanks, but in
the center where the men with a flag of truce had passed that morning, the lines
were so near together that the men could see one another's faces and speak to
one another. Besides the soldiers who formed the picket line on either side,
there were many curious onlookers who, jesting and laughing, stared at their
strange foreign enemies. |
|
|
Since early morning- despite an injunction not to approach the picket
line- the officers had been unable to keep sight-seers away. The soldiers
forming the picket line, like showmen exhibiting a curiosity, no longer looked
at the French but paid attention to the sight-seers and grew weary waiting to be
relieved. Prince Andrew halted to have a look at the French. |
|
|
"Look! Look there!" one soldier was saying to another, pointing
to a Russian musketeer who had gone up to the picket line with an officer and
was rapidly and excitedly talking to a French grenadier. "Hark to him
jabbering! Fine, isn't it? It's all the Frenchy can do to keep up with him.
There now, Sidorov!" |
|
|
"Wait a bit and listen. It's fine!" answered Sidorov, who was
considered an adept at French. |
|
|
The soldier to whom the laughers referred was Dolokhov. Prince Andrew
recognized him and stopped to listen to what he was saying. Dolokhov had come
from the left flank where their regiment was stationed, with his captain. |
|
|
"Now then, go on, go on!" incited the officer, bending forward
and trying not to lose a word of the speech which was incomprehensible to him.
"More, please: more! What's he saying?" |
|
|
Dolokhov did not answer the captain; he had been drawn into a hot dispute
with the French grenadier. They were naturally talking about the campaign. The
Frenchman, confusing the Austrians with the Russians, was trying to prove that
the Russians had surrendered and had fled all the way from Ulm, while Dolokhov
maintained that the Russians had not surrendered but had beaten the French. |
|
|
"We have orders to drive you off here, and we shall drive you
off," said Dolokhov. |
|
|
"Only take care you and your Cossacks are not all captured!"
said the French grenadier. |
|
|
The French onlookers and listeners laughed. |
|
|
"We'll make you dance as we did under Suvorov...,"* said
Dolokhov. |
|
|
*"On vous fera danser." |
|
|
"Qu' est-ce qu'il chante?"* asked a Frenchman. |
|
|
*"What's he singing about?" |
|
|
"It's ancient history," said another, guessing that it referred
to a former war. "The Emperor will teach your Suvara as he has taught the
others..." |
|
|
"Bonaparte..." began Dolokhov, but the Frenchman interrupted
him. |
|
|
"Not Bonaparte. He is the Emperor! Sacre nom...!" cried he
angrily. |
|
|
"The devil skin your Emperor." |
|
|
And Dolokhov swore at him in coarse soldier's Russian and shouldering his
musket walked away. |
|
|
"Let us go, Ivan Lukich," he said to the captain. |
|
|
"Ah, that's the way to talk French," said the picket soldiers.
"Now, Sidorov, you have a try!" |
|
|
Sidorov, turning to the French, winked, and began to jabber meaningless
sounds very fast: "Kari, mala, tafa, safi, muter, Kaska," he said,
trying to give an expressive intonation to his voice. |
|
|
"Ho! ho! ho! Ha! ha! ha! ha! Ouh! ouh!" came peals of such
healthy and good-humored laughter from the soldiers that it infected the French
involuntarily, so much so that the only thing left to do seemed to be to unload
the muskets, muskets, explode the ammunition, and all return home as quickly as
possible. |
|
|
But the guns remained loaded, the loopholes in blockhouses and
entrenchments looked out just as menacingly, and the unlimbered cannon
confronted one another as before. |
|
|
Having ridden round the whole line from right flank to left, Prince
Andrew made his way up to the battery from which the staff officer had told him
the whole field could be seen. Here he dismounted, and stopped beside the
farthest of the four unlimbered cannon. Before the guns an artillery sentry was
pacing up and down; he stood at attention when the officer arrived, but at a
sign resumed his measured, monotonous pacing. Behind the guns were their limbers
and still farther back picket ropes and artillerymen's bonfires. To the left,
not far from the farthest cannon, was a small, newly constructed wattle shed
from which came the sound of officers' voices in eager conversation. |
|
|
It was true that a view over nearly the whole Russian position and the
greater part of the enemy's opened out from this battery. Just facing it, on the
crest of the opposite hill, the village of Schon Grabern could be seen, and in
three places to left and right the French troops amid the smoke of their
campfires, the greater part of whom were evidently in the village itself and
behind the hill. To the left from that village, amid the smoke, was something
resembling a battery, but it was impossible to see it clearly with the naked
eye. Our right flank was posted on a rather steep incline which dominated the
French position. Our infantry were stationed there, and at the farthest point
the dragoons. In the center, where Tushin's battery stood and from which Prince
Andrew was surveying the position, was the easiest and most direct descent and
ascent to the brook separating us from Schon Grabern. On the left our troops
were close to a copse, in which smoked the bonfires of our infantry who were
felling wood. The French line was wider than ours, and it was plain that they
could easily outflank us on both sides. Behind our position was a steep and deep
dip, making it difficult for artillery and cavalry to retire. Prince Andrew took
out his notebook and, leaning on the cannon, sketched a plan of the position. He
made some notes on two points, intending to mention them to Bagration. His idea
was, first, to concentrate all the artillery in the center, and secondly, to
withdraw the cavalry to the other side of the dip. Prince Andrew, being always
near the commander in chief, closely following the mass movements and general
orders, and constantly studying historical accounts of battles, involuntarily
pictured to himself the course of events in the forthcoming action in broad
outline. He imagined only important possibilities: "If the enemy attacks
the right flank," he said to himself, "the Kiev grenadiers and the
Podolsk chasseurs must hold their position till reserves from the center come
up. In that case the dragoons could successfully make a flank counterattack. If
they attack our center we, having the center battery on this high ground, shall
withdraw the left flank under its cover, and retreat to the dip by
echelons." So he reasoned.... All the time he had been beside the gun, he
had heard the voices of the officers distinctly, but as often happens had not
understood a word of what they were saying. Suddenly, however, he was struck by
a voice coming from the shed, and its tone was so sincere that he could not but
listen. |
|
|
"No, friend," said a pleasant and, as it seemed to Prince
Andrew, a familiar voice, "what I say is that if it were possible to know
what is beyond death, none of us would be afraid of it. That's so, friend." |
|
|
Another, a younger voice, interrupted him: "Afraid or not, you can't
escape it anyhow." |
|
|
"All the same, one is afraid! Oh, you clever people," said a
third manly voice interrupting them both. "Of course you artillery men are
very wise, because you can take everything along with you- vodka and
snacks." |
|
|
And the owner of the manly voice, evidently an infantry officer, laughed. |
|
|
"Yes,
one is afraid," continued the first speaker, he of the familiar voice.
"One is afraid of the unknown, that's what it is. Whatever we may say about
the soul going to the sky... we know there is no sky but only an
atmosphere." |
|
|
The manly voice again interrupted the artillery officer. |
|
|
"Well, stand us some of your herb vodka, Tushin," it said. |
|
|
"Why," thought Prince Andrew, "that's the captain who
stood up in the sutler's hut without his boots." He recognized the
agreeable, philosophizing voice with pleasure. |
|
|
"Some herb vodka? Certainly!" said Tushin. "But still, to
conceive a future life..." |
|
|
He did not finish. Just then there was a whistle in the air; nearer and
nearer, faster and louder, louder and faster, a cannon ball, as if it had not
finished saying what was necessary, thudded into the ground near the shed with
super human force, throwing up a mass of earth. The ground seemed to groan at
the terrible impact. |
|
|
And immediately Tushin, with a short pipe in the corner of his mouth and
his kind, intelligent face rather pale, rushed out of the shed followed by the
owner of the manly voice, a dashing infantry officer who hurried off to his
company, buttoning up his coat as he ran. |
|
|
Mounting his horse again Prince Andrew lingered with the battery, looking
at the puff from the gun that had sent the ball. His eyes ran rapidly over the
wide space, but he only saw that the hitherto motionless masses of the French
now swayed and that there really was a battery to their left. The smoke above it
had not yet dispersed. Two mounted Frenchmen, probably adjutants, were galloping
up the hill. A small but distinctly visible enemy column was moving down the
hill, probably to strengthen the front line. The smoke of the first shot had not
yet dispersed before another puff appeared, followed by a report. The battle had
begun! Prince Andrew turned his horse and galloped back to Grunth to find Prince
Bagration. He heard the cannonade behind him growing louder and more frequent.
Evidently our guns had begun to reply. From the bottom of the slope, where the
parleys had taken place, came the report of musketry. |
|
|
Lemarrois had just arrived at a gallop with Bonaparte's stern letter, and
Murat, humiliated and anxious to expiate his fault, had at once moved his forces
to attack the center and outflank both the Russian wings, hoping before evening
and before the arrival of the Emperor to crush the contemptible detachment that
stood before him. |
|
|
"It has begun. Here it is!" thought Prince Andrew, feeling the
blood rush to his heart. "But where and how will my Toulon present
itself?" |
|
|
Passing between the companies that had been eating porridge and drinking
vodka a quarter of an hour before, he saw everywhere the same rapid movement of
soldiers forming ranks and getting their muskets ready, and on all their faces
he recognized the same eagerness that filled his heart. "It has begun! Here
it is, dreadful but enjoyable!" was what the face of each soldier and each
officer seemed to say. |
|
|
Before he had reached the embankments that were being thrown up, he saw,
in the light of the dull autumn evening, mounted men coming toward him. The
foremost, wearing a Cossack cloak and lambskin cap and riding a white horse, was
Prince Bagration. Prince Andrew stopped, waiting for him to come up; Prince
Bagration reined in his horse and recognizing Prince Andrew nodded to him. He
still looked ahead while Prince Andrew told him what he had seen. |
|
|
The feeling, "It has begun! Here it is!" was seen even on
Prince Bagration's hard brown face with its half-closed, dull, sleepy eyes.
Prince Andrew gazed with anxious curiosity at that impassive face and wished he
could tell what, if anything, this man was thinking and feeling at that moment.
"Is there anything at all behind that impassive face?" Prince Andrew
asked himself as he looked. Prince Bagration bent his head in sign of agreement
with what Prince Andrew told him, and said, "Very good!" in a tone
that seemed to imply that everything that took place and was reported to him was
exactly what he had foreseen. Prince Andrew, out of breath with his rapid ride,
spoke quickly. Prince Bagration, uttering his words with an Oriental accent,
spoke particularly slowly, as if to impress the fact that there was no need to
hurry. However, he put his horse to a trot in the direction of Tushin's battery.
Prince Andrew followed with the suite. Behind Prince Bagration rode an officer
of the suite, the prince's personal adjutant, Zherkov, an orderly officer, the
staff officer on duty, riding a fine bobtailed horse, and a civilian- an
accountant who had asked permission to be present at the battle out of
curiosity. The accountant, a stout, full-faced man, looked around him with a
naive smile of satisfaction and presented a strange appearance among the
hussars, Cossacks, and adjutants, in his camlet coat, as he jolted on his horse
with a convoy officer's saddle. |
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"He wants to see a battle," said Zherkov to Bolkonski, pointing
to the accountant, "but he feels a pain in the pit of his stomach
already." |
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"Oh, leave off!" said the accountant with a beaming but rather
cunning smile, as if flattered at being made the subject of Zherkov's joke, and
purposely trying to appear stupider than he really was. |
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"It is very strange, mon Monsieur Prince," said the staff
officer. (He remembered that in French there is some peculiar way of addressing
a prince, but could not get it quite right.) |
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By this time they were all approaching Tushin's battery, and a ball
struck the ground in front of them. |
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"What's that that has fallen?" asked the accountant with a
naive smile. |
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"A French pancake," answered Zherkov. |
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"So that's what they hit with?" asked the accountant. "How
awful!" |
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He seemed to swell with satisfaction. He had hardly finished speaking
when they again heard an unexpectedly violent whistling which suddenly ended
with a thud into something soft... f-f-flop! and a Cossack, riding a little to
their right and behind the accountant, crashed to earth with his horse. Zherkov
and the staff officer bent over their saddles and turned their horses away. The
accountant stopped, facing the Cossack, and examined him with attentive
curiosity. The Cossack was dead, but the horse still struggled. |
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Prince Bagration screwed up his eyes, looked round, and, seeing the cause
of the confusion, turned away with indifference, as if to say, "Is it worth
while noticing trifles?" He reined in his horse with the case of a skillful
rider and, slightly bending over, disengaged his saber which had caught in his
cloak. It was an old-fashioned saber of a kind no longer in general use. Prince
Andrew remembered the story of Suvorov giving his saber to Bagration in Italy,
and the recollection was particularly pleasant at that moment. They had reached
the battery at which Prince Andrew had been when he examined the battlefield. |
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"Whose company?" asked Prince Bagration of an artilleryman
standing by the ammunition wagon. |
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He asked, "Whose company?" but he really meant, "Are you
frightened here?" and the artilleryman understood him. |
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"Captain Tushin's, your excellency!" shouted the red-haired,
freckled gunner in a merry voice, standing to attention. |
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"Yes, yes," muttered Bagration as if considering something, and
he rode past the limbers to the farthest cannon. |
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As he approached, a ringing shot issued from it deafening him and his
suite, and in the smoke that suddenly surrounded the gun they could see the
gunners who had seized it straining to roll it quickly back to its former
position. A huge, broad-shouldered gunner, Number One, holding a mop, his legs
far apart, sprang to the wheel; while Number Two with a trembling hand placed a
charge in the cannon's mouth. The short, round-shouldered Captain Tushin,
stumbling over the tail of the gun carriage, moved forward and, not noticing the
general, looked out shading his eyes with his small hand. |
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"Lift it two lines more and it will be just right," cried he in
a feeble voice to which he tried to impart a dashing note, ill suited to his
weak figure. "Number Two!" he squeaked. "Fire, Medvedev!" |
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Bagration called to him, and Tushin, raising three fingers to his cap
with a bashful and awkward gesture not at all like a military salute but like a
priest's benediction, approached the general. Though Tushin's guns had been
intended to cannonade the valley, he was firing incendiary balls at the village
of Schon Grabern visible just opposite, in front of which large masses of French
were advancing. |
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No one had given Tushin orders where and at what to fire, but after
consulting his sergeant major, Zakharchenko, for whom he had great respect, he
had decided that it would be a good thing to set fire to the village. "Very
good!" said Bagration in reply to the officer's report, and began
deliberately to examine the whole battlefield extended before him. The French
had advanced nearest on our right. Below the height on which the Kiev regiment
was stationed, in the hollow where the rivulet flowed, the soul-stirring rolling
and crackling of musketry was heard, and much farther to the right beyond the
dragoons, the officer of the suite pointed out to Bagration a French column that
was outflanking us. To the left the horizon bounded by the adjacent wood. Prince
Bagration ordered two battalions from the center to be sent to reinforce the
right flank. The officer of the suite ventured to remark to the prince that if
these battalions went away, the guns would remain without support. Prince
Bagration turned to the officer and with his dull eyes looked at him in silence.
It seemed to Prince Andrew that the officer's remark was just and that really no
answer could be made to it. But at that moment an adjutant galloped up with a
message from the commander of the regiment in the hollow and news that immense
masses of the French were coming down upon them and that his regiment was in
disorder and was retreating upon the Kiev grenadiers. Prince Bagration bowed his
head in sign of assent and approval. He rode off at a walk to the right and sent
an adjutant to the dragoons with orders to attack the French. But this adjutant
returned half an hour later with the news that the commander of the dragoons had
already retreated beyond the dip in the ground, as a heavy fire had been opened
on him and he was losing men uselessly, and so had hastened to throw some
sharpshooters into the wood. |
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"Very good!" said Bagration. |
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As he was leaving the battery, firing was heard on the left also, and as
it was too far to the left flank for him to have time to go there himself,
Prince Bagration sent Zherkov to tell the general in command (the one who had
paraded his regiment before Kutuzov at Braunau) that he must retreat as quickly
as possible behind the hollow in the rear, as the right flank would probably not
be able to withstand the enemy's attack very long. About Tushin and the
battalion that had been in support of his battery all was forgotten. Prince
Andrew listened attentively to Bagration's colloquies with the commanding
officers and the orders he gave them and, to his surprise, found that no orders
were really given, but that Prince Bagration tried to make it appear that
everything done by necessity, by accident, or by the will of subordinate
commanders was done, if not by his direct command, at least in accord with his
intentions. Prince Andrew noticed, however, that though what happened was due to
chance and was independent of the commander's will, owing to the tact Bagration
showed, his presence was very valuable. Officers who approached him with
disturbed countenances became calm; soldiers and officers greeted him gaily,
grew more cheerful in his presence, and were evidently anxious to display their
courage before him. |
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Prince Bagration, having reached the highest point of our right flank,
began riding downhill to where the roll of musketry was heard but where on
account of the smoke nothing could be seen. The nearer they got to the hollow
the less they could see but the more they felt the nearness of the actual
battlefield. They began to meet wounded men. One with a bleeding head and no cap
was being dragged along by two soldiers who supported him under the arms. There
was a gurgle in his throat and he was spitting blood. A bullet had evidently hit
him in the throat or mouth. Another was walking sturdily by himself but without
his musket, groaning aloud and swinging his arm which had just been hurt, while
blood from it was streaming over his greatcoat as from a bottle. He had that
moment been wounded and his face showed fear rather than suffering. Crossing a
road they descended a steep incline and saw several men lying on the ground;
they also met a crowd of soldiers some of whom were unwounded. The soldiers were
ascending the hill breathing heavily, and despite the general's presence were
talking loudly and gesticulating. In front of them rows of gray cloaks were
already visible through the smoke, and an officer catching sight of Bagration
rushed shouting after the crowd of retreating soldiers, ordering them back.
Bagration rode up to the ranks along which shots crackled now here and now
there, drowning the sound of voices and the shouts of command. The whole air
reeked with smoke. The excited faces of the soldiers were blackened with it.
Some were using their ramrods, others putting powder on the touchpans or taking
charges from their pouches, while others were firing, though who they were
firing at could not be seen for the smoke which there was no wind to carry away.
A pleasant humming and whistling of bullets were often heard. "What is
this?" thought Prince Andrew approaching the crowd of soldiers. "It
can't be an attack, for they are not moving; it can't be a square- for they are
not drawn up for that." |
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The commander of the regiment, a thin, feeble-looking old man with a
pleasant smile- his eyelids drooping more than half over his old eyes, giving
him a mild expression, rode up to Bagration and welcomed him as a host welcomes
an honored guest. He reported that his regiment had been attacked by French
cavalry and that, though the attack had been repulsed, he had lost more than
half his men. He said the attack had been repulsed, employing this military term
to describe what had occurred to his regiment, but in reality he did not himself
know what had happened during that half-hour to the troops entrusted to him, and
could not say with certainty whether the attack had been repulsed or his
regiment had been broken up. All he knew was that at the commencement of the
action balls and shells began flying all over his regiment and hitting men and
that afterwards someone had shouted "Cavalry!" and our men had begun
firing. They were still firing, not at the cavalry which had disappeared, but at
French infantry who had come into the hollow and were firing at our men. Prince
Bagration bowed his head as a sign that this was exactly what he had desired and
expected. Turning to his adjutant he ordered him to bring down the two
battalions of the Sixth Chasseurs whom they had just passed. Prince Andrew was
struck by the changed expression on Prince Bagration's face at this moment. It
expressed the concentrated and happy resolution you see on the face of a man who
on a hot day takes a final run before plunging into the water. The dull, sleepy
expression was no longer there, nor the affectation of profound thought. The
round, steady, hawk's eyes looked before him eagerly and rather disdainfully,
not resting on anything although his movements were still slow and measured. |
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The commander of the regiment turned to Prince Bagration, entreating him
to go back as it was too dangerous to remain where they were. "Please, your
excellency, for God's sake!" he kept saying, glancing for support at an
officer of the suite who turned away from him. "There, you see!" and
he drew attention to the bullets whistling, singing, and hissing continually
around them. He spoke in the tone of entreaty and reproach that a carpenter uses
to a gentleman who has picked up an ax: "We are used to it, but you, sir,
will blister your hands." He spoke as if those bullets could not kill him,
and his half-closed eyes gave still more persuasiveness to his words. The staff
officer joined in the colonel's appeals, but Bagration did not reply; he only
gave an order to cease firing and re-form, so as to give room for the two
approaching battalions. While he was speaking, the curtain of smoke that had
concealed the hollow, driven by a rising wind, began to move from right to left
as if drawn by an invisible hand, and the hill opposite, with the French moving
about on it, opened out before them. All eyes fastened involuntarily on this
French column advancing against them and winding down over the uneven ground.
One could already see the soldiers' shaggy caps, distinguish the officers from
the men, and see the standard flapping against its staff. |
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"They march splendidly," remarked someone in Bagration's suite. |
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The head of the column had already descended into the hollow. The clash
would take place on this side of it... |
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The remains of our regiment which had been in action rapidly formed up
and moved to the right; from behind it, dispersing the laggards, came two
battalions of the Sixth Chasseurs in fine order. Before they had reached
Bagration, the weighty tread of the mass of men marching in step could be heard.
On their left flank, nearest to Bagration, marched a company commander, a fine
round-faced man, with a stupid and happy expression- the same man who had rushed
out of the wattle shed. At that moment he was clearly thinking of nothing but
how dashing a fellow he would appear as he passed the commander. |
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With the self-satisfaction of a man on parade, he stepped lightly with
his muscular legs as if sailing along, stretching himself to his full height
without the smallest effort, his ease contrasting with the heavy tread of the
soldiers who were keeping step with him. He carried close to his leg a narrow
unsheathed sword (small, curved, and not like a real weapon) and looked now at
the superior officers and now back at the men without losing step, his whole
powerful body turning flexibly. It was as if all the powers of his soul were
concentrated on passing the commander in the best possible manner, and feeling
that he was doing it well he was happy. "Left... left... left..." he
seemed to repeat to himself at each alternate step; and in time to this, with
stern but varied faces, the wall of soldiers burdened with knapsacks and muskets
marched in step, and each one of these hundreds of soldiers seemed to be
repeating to himself at each alternate step, "Left... left... left..."
A fat major skirted a bush, puffing and falling out of step; a soldier who had
fallen behind, his face showing alarm at his defection, ran at a trot, panting
to catch up with his company. A cannon ball, cleaving the air, flew over the
heads of Bagration and his suite, and fell into the column to the measure of
"Left... left!" "Close up!" came the company commander's
voice in jaunty tones. The soldiers passed in a semicircle round something where
the ball had fallen, and an old trooper on the flank, a noncommissioned officer
who had stopped beside the dead men, ran to catch up his line and, falling into
step with a hop, looked back angrily, and through the ominous silence and the
regular tramp of feet beating the ground in unison, one seemed to hear left...
left... left. |
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"Well done, lads!" said Prince Bagration. |
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"Glad to do our best, your ex'len-lency!" came a confused shout
from the ranks. A morose soldier marching on the left turned his eyes on
Bagration as he shouted, with an expression that seemed to say: "We know
that ourselves!" Another, without looking round, as though fearing to
relax, shouted with his mouth wide open and passed on. |
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The order was given to halt and down knapsacks. |
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Bagration rode round the ranks that had marched past him and dismounted.
He gave the reins to a Cossack, took off and handed over his felt coat,
stretched his legs, and set his cap straight. The head of the French column,
with its officers leading, appeared from below the hill. |
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"Forward, with God!" said Bagration, in a resolute, sonorous
voice, turning for a moment to the front line, and slightly swinging his arms,
he went forward uneasily over the rough field with the awkward gait of a
cavalryman. Prince Andrew felt that an invisible power was leading him forward,
and experienced great happiness. |
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The French were already near. Prince Andrew, walking beside Bagration,
could clearly distinguish their bandoliers, red epaulets, and even their faces.
(He distinctly saw an old French officer who, with gaitered legs and turned-out
toes, climbed the hill with difficulty.) Prince Bagration gave no further orders
and silently continued to walk on in front of the ranks. Suddenly one shot after
another rang out from the French, smoke appeared all along their uneven ranks,
and musket shots sounded. Several of our men fell, among them the round-faced
officer who had marched so gaily and complacently. But at the moment the first
report was heard, Bagration looked round and shouted, "Hurrah!" |
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"Hurrah- ah!- ah!" rang a long-drawn shout from our ranks, and
passing Bagration and racing one another they rushed in an irregular but joyous
and eager crowd down the hill at their disordered foe. |
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The attack of the Sixth Chasseurs secured the retreat of our right flank.
In the center Tushin's forgotten battery, which had managed to set fire to the
Schon Grabern village, delayed the French advance. The French were putting out
the fire which the wind was spreading, and thus gave us time to retreat. The
retirement of the center to the other side of the dip in the ground at the rear
was hurried and noisy, but the different companies did not get mixed. But our
left- which consisted of the Azov and Podolsk infantry and the Pavlograd
hussars- was simultaneously attacked and outflanked by superior French forces
under Lannes and was thrown into confusion. Bagration had sent Zherkov to the
general commanding that left flank with orders to retreat immediately. |
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Zherkov, not removing his hand from his cap, turned his horse about and
galloped off. But no sooner had he left Bagration than his courage failed him.
He was seized by panic and could not go where it was dangerous. |
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Having reached the left flank, instead of going to the front where the
firing was, he began to look for the general and his staff where they could not
possibly be, and so did not deliver the order. |
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The command of the left flank belonged by seniority to the commander of
the regiment Kutuzov had reviewed at Braunau and in which Dolokhov was serving
as a private. But the command of the extreme left flank had been assigned to the
commander of the Pavlograd regiment in which Rostov was serving, and a
misunderstanding arose. The two commanders were much exasperated with one
another and, long after the action had begun on the right flank and the French
were already advancing, were engaged in discussion with the sole object of
offending one another. But the regiments, both cavalry and infantry, were by no
means ready for the impending action. From privates to general they were not
expecting a battle and were engaged in peaceful occupations, the cavalry feeding
the horses and the infantry collecting wood. |
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"He higher iss dan I in rank," said the German colonel of the
hussars, flushing and addressing an adjutant who had ridden up, "so let him
do what he vill, but I cannot sacrifice my hussars... Bugler, sount ze
retreat!" |
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|
But haste was becoming imperative. Cannon and musketry, mingling
together, thundered on the right and in the center, while the capotes of Lannes'
sharpshooters were already seen crossing the milldam and forming up within twice
the range of a musket shot. The general in command of the infantry went toward
his horse with jerky steps, and having mounted drew himself up very straight and
tall and rode to the Pavlograd commander. The commanders met with polite bows
but with secret malevolence in their hearts. |
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"Once again, Colonel," said the general, "I can't leave
half my men in the wood. I beg of you, I beg of you," he repeated, "to
occupy the position and prepare for an attack." |
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"I peg of you yourself not to mix in vot is not your business!"
suddenly replied the irate colonel. "If you vere in the cavalry..." |
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"I am not in the cavalry, Colonel, but I am a Russian general and if
you are not aware of the fact..." |
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"Quite avare, your excellency," suddenly shouted the colonel,
touching his horse and turning purple in the face. "Vill you be so goot to
come to ze front and see dat zis position iss no goot? I don't vish to destroy
my men for your pleasure!" |
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"You forget yourself, Colonel. I am not considering my own pleasure
and I won't allow it to be said!" |
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|
Taking the colonel's outburst as a challenge to his courage, the general
expanded his chest and rode, frowning, beside him to the front line, as if their
differences would be settled there amongst the bullets. They reached the front,
several bullets sped over them, and they halted in silence. There was nothing
fresh to be seen from the line, for from where they had been before it had been
evident that it was impossible for cavalry to act among the bushes and broken
ground, as well as that the French were outflanking our left. The general and
colonel looked sternly and significantly at one another like two fighting cocks
preparing for battle, each vainly trying to detect signs of cowardice in the
other. Both passed the examination successfully. As there was nothing to said,
and neither wished to give occasion for it to be alleged that he had been the
first to leave the range of fire, they would have remained there for a long time
testing each other's courage had it not been that just then they heard the
rattle of musketry and a muffled shout almost behind them in the wood. The
French had attacked the men collecting wood in the copse. It was no longer
possible for the hussars to retreat with the infantry. They were cut off from
the line of retreat on the left by the French. However inconvenient the
position, it was now necessary to attack in order to cut away through for
themselves. |
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|
The squadron in which Rostov was serving had scarcely time to mount
before it was halted facing the enemy. Again, as at the Enns bridge, there was
nothing between the squadron and the enemy, and again that terrible dividing
line of uncertainty and fear- resembling the line separating the living from the
dead- lay between them. All were conscious of this unseen line, and the question
whether they would they would cross it or not, and how they would cross it,
agitated them all. |
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|
The colonel rode to the front, angrily gave some reply to questions put
to him by the officers, and, like a man desperately insisting on having his own
way, gave an order. No one said anything definite, but the rumor of an attack
spread through the squadron. The command to form up rang out and the sabers
whizzed as they were drawn from their scabbards. Still no one moved. The troops
of the left flank, infantry and hussars alike, felt that the commander did not
himself know what to do, and this irresolution communicated itself to the men. |
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"If only they would be quick!" thought Rostov, feeling that at
last the time had come to experience the joy of an attack of which he had so
often heard from his fellow hussars. |
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"Fo'ward, with God, lads!" rang out Denisov's voice. "At a
twot fo'ward!" |
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|
The horses' croups began to sway in the front line. Rook pulled at the
reins and started of his own accord. |
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|
Before him, on the right, Rostov saw the front lines of his hussars and
still farther ahead a dark line which he could not see distinctly but took to be
the enemy. Shots could be heard, but some way off. |
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|
"Faster!" came the word of command, and Rostov felt Rook's
flanks drooping as he broke into a gallop. |
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|
Rostov anticipated his horse's movements and became more and more elated.
He had noticed a solitary tree ahead of him. This tree had been in the middle of
the line that had seemed so terrible- and now he had crossed that line and not
only was there nothing terrible, but everything was becoming more and more happy
and animated. "Oh, how I will slash at him!" thought Rostov, gripping
the hilt of his saber. |
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|
"Hur-a-a-a-ah!" came a roar of voices. "Let anyone come my
way now," thought Rostov driving his spurs into Rook and letting him go at
a full gallop so that he outstripped the others. Ahead, the enemy was already
visible. Suddenly something like a birch broom seemed to sweep over the
squadron. Rostov raised his saber, ready to strike, but at that instant the
trooper Nikitenko, who was galloping ahead, shot away from him, and Rostov felt
as in a dream that he continued to be carried forward with unnatural speed but
yet stayed on the same spot. From behind him Bondarchuk, an hussar he knew,
jolted against him and looked angrily at him. Bondarchuk's horse swerved and
galloped past. |
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|
"How is it I am not moving? I have fallen, I am killed!" Rostov
asked and answered at the same instant. He was alone in the middle of a field.
Instead of the moving horses and hussars' backs, he saw nothing before him but
the motionless earth and the stubble around him. There was warm blood under his
arm. "No, I am wounded and the horse is killed." Rook tried to rise on
his forelegs but fell back, pinning his rider's leg. Blood was flowing from his
head; he struggled but could not rise. Rostov also tried to rise but fell back,
his sabretache having become entangled in the saddle. Where our men were, and
where the French, he did not know. There was no one near. |
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|
Having disentangled his leg, he rose. "Where, on which side, was now
the line that had so sharply divided the two armies?" he asked himself and
could not answer. "Can something bad have happened to me?" he wondered
as he got up: and at that moment he felt that something superfluous was hanging
on his benumbed left arm. The wrist felt as if it were not his. He examined his
hand carefully, vainly trying to find blood on it. "Ah, here are people
coming," he thought joyfully, seeing some men running toward him.
"They will help me!" In front came a man wearing a strange shako and a
blue cloak, swarthy, sunburned, and with a hooked nose. Then came two more, and
many more running behind. One of them said something strange, not in Russian. In
among the hindmost of these men wearing similar shakos was a Russian hussar. He
was being held by the arms and his horse was being led behind him. |
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|
"It must be one of ours, a prisoner. Yes. Can it be that they will
take me too? Who are these men?" thought Rostov, scarcely believing his
eyes. "Can they be French?" He looked at the approaching Frenchmen,
and though but a moment before he had been galloping to get at them and hack
them to pieces, their proximity now seemed so awful that he could not believe
his eyes. "Who are they? Why are they running? Can they be coming at me?
And why? To kill me? Me whom everyone is so fond of?" He remembered his
mother's love for him, and his family's, and his friends', and the enemy's
intention to kill him seemed impossible. "But perhaps they may do it!"
For more than ten seconds he stood not moving from the spot or realizing the
situation. The foremost Frenchman, the one with the hooked nose, was already so
close that the expression of his face could be seen. And the excited, alien face
of that man, his bayonet hanging down, holding his breath, and running so
lightly, frightened Rostov. He seized his pistol and, instead of firing it,
flung it at the Frenchman and ran with all his might toward the bushes. He did
not now run with the feeling of doubt and conflict with which he had trodden the
Enns bridge, but with the feeling of a hare fleeing from the hounds. One single
sentiment, that of fear for his young and happy life, possessed his whole being.
Rapidly leaping the furrows, he fled across the field with the impetuosity he
used to show at catchplay, now and then turning his good-natured, pale, young
face to look back. A shudder of terror went through him: "No, better not
look," he thought, but having reached the bushes he glanced round once
more. The French had fallen behind, and just as he looked round the first man
changed his run to a walk and, turning, shouted something loudly to a comrade
farther back. Rostov paused. "No, there's some mistake," thought he.
"They can't have wanted to kill me." But at the same time, his left
arm felt as heavy as if a seventy-pound weight were tied to it. He could run no
more. The Frenchman also stopped and took aim. Rostov closed his eyes and
stooped down. One bullet and then another whistled past him. He mustered his
last remaining strength, took hold of his left hand with his right, and reached
the bushes. Behind these were some Russian sharpshooters. |
|
|
The infantry regiments that had been caught unawares in the outskirts of
the wood ran out of it, the different companies getting mixed, and retreated as
a disorderly crowd. One soldier, in his fear, uttered the senseless cry,
"Cut off!" that is so terrible in battle, and that word infected the
whole crowd with a feeling of panic. |
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|
"Surrounded! Cut off? We're lost!" shouted the fugitives. |
|
|
The moment he heard the firing and the cry from behind, the general
realized that something dreadful had happened to his regiment, and the thought
that he, an exemplary officer of many years' service who had never been to
blame, might be held responsible at headquarters for negligence or inefficiency
so staggered him that, forgetting the recalcitrant cavalry colonel, his own
dignity as a general, and above all quite forgetting the danger and all regard
for self-preservation, he clutched the crupper of his saddle and, spurring his
horse, galloped to the regiment under a hail of bullets which fell around, but
fortunately missed him. His one desire was to know what was happening and at any
cost correct, or remedy, the mistake if he had made one, so that he, an
exemplary officer of twenty-two years' service, who had never been censured,
should not be held to blame. |
|
|
Having galloped safely through the French, he reached a field behind the
copse across which our men, regardless of orders, were running and descending
the valley. That moment of moral hesitation which decides the fate of battles
had arrived. Would this disorderly crowd of soldiers attend to the voice of
their commander, or would they, disregarding him, continue their flight? Despite
his desperate shouts that used to seem so terrible to the soldiers, despite his
furious purple countenance distorted out of all likeness to his former self, and
the flourishing of his saber, the soldiers all continued to run, talking, firing
into the air, and disobeying orders. The moral hesitation which decided the fate
of battles was evidently culminating in a panic. |
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|
The general had a fit of coughing as a result of shouting and of the
powder smoke and stopped in despair. Everything seemed lost. But at that moment
the French who were attacking, suddenly and without any apparent reason, ran
back and disappeared from the outskirts, and Russian sharpshooters showed
themselves in the copse. It was Timokhin's company, which alone had maintained
its order in the wood and, having lain in ambush in a ditch, now attacked the
French unexpectedly. Timokhin, armed only with a sword, had rushed at the enemy
with such a desperate cry and such mad, drunken determination that, taken by
surprise, the French had thrown down their muskets and run. Dolokhov, running
beside Timokhin, killed a Frenchman at close quarters and was the first to seize
the surrendering French officer by his collar. Our fugitives returned, the
battalions re-formed, and the French who had nearly cut our left flank in half
were for the moment repulsed. Our reserve units were able to join up, and the
fight was at an end. The regimental commander and Major Ekonomov had stopped
beside a bridge, letting the retreating companies pass by them, when a soldier
came up and took hold of the commander's stirrup, almost leaning against him.
The man was wearing a bluish coat of broadcloth, he had no knapsack or cap, his
head was bandaged, and over his shoulder a French munition pouch was slung. He
had an officer's sword in his hand. The soldier was pale, his blue eyes looked
impudently into the commander's face, and his lips were smiling. Though the
commander was occupied in giving instructions to Major Ekonomov, he could not
help taking notice of the soldier. |
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|
"Your excellency, here are two trophies," said Dolokhov,
pointing to the French sword and pouch. "I have taken an officer prisoner.
I stopped the company." Dolokhov breathed heavily from weariness and spoke
in abrupt sentences. "The whole company can bear witness. I beg you will
remember this, your excellency!" |
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|
"All right, all right," replied the commander, and turned to
Major Ekonomov. |
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But Dolokhov did not go away; he untied the handkerchief around his head,
pulled it off, and showed the blood congealed on his hair. |
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"A bayonet wound. I remained at the front. Remember, your
excellency!" |
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|
Tushin's battery had been forgotten and only at the very end of the
action did Prince Bagration, still hearing the cannonade in the center, send his
orderly staff officer, and later Prince Andrew also, to order the battery to
retire as quickly as possible. When the supports attached to Tushin's battery
had been moved away in the middle of the action by someone's order, the battery
had continued firing and was only not captured by the French because the enemy
could not surmise that anyone could have the effrontery to continue firing from
four quite undefended guns. On the contrary, the energetic action of that
battery led the French to suppose that here- in the center- the main Russian
forces were concentrated. Twice they had attempted to attack this point, but on
each occasion had been driven back by grapeshot from the four isolated guns on
the hillock. |
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Soon after Prince Bagration had left him, Tushin had succeeded in setting
fire to Schon Grabern. |
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"Look at them scurrying! It's burning! Just see the smoke! Fine!
Grand! Look at the smoke, the smoke!" exclaimed the artillerymen,
brightening up. |
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All the guns, without waiting for orders, were being fired in the
direction of the conflagration. As if urging each other on, the soldiers cried
at each shot: "Fine! That's good! Look at it... Grand!" The fire,
fanned by the breeze, was rapidly spreading. The French columns that had
advanced beyond the village went back; but as though in revenge for this
failure, the enemy placed ten guns to the right of the village and began firing
them at Tushin's battery. |
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In their childlike glee, aroused by the fire and their luck in
successfully cannonading the French, our artillerymen only noticed this battery
when two balls, and then four more, fell among our guns, one knocking over two
horses and another tearing off a munition-wagon driver's leg. Their spirits once
roused were, however, not diminished, but only changed character. The horses
were replaced by others from a reserve gun carriage, the wounded were carried
away, and the four guns were turned against the ten-gun battery. Tushin's
companion officer had been killed at the beginning of the engagement and within
an hour seventeen of the forty men of the guns' crews had been disabled, but the
artillerymen were still as merry and lively as ever. Twice they noticed the
French appearing below them, and then they fired grapeshot at them. |
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Little Tushin, moving feebly and awkwardly, kept telling his orderly to
"refill my pipe for that one!" and then, scattering sparks from it,
ran forward shading his eyes with his small hand to look at the French. |
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"Smack at 'em, lads!" he kept saying, seizing the guns by the
wheels and working the screws himself. |
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Amid the smoke, deafened by the incessant reports which always made him
jump, Tushin not taking his pipe from his mouth ran from gun to gun, now aiming,
now counting the charges, now giving orders about replacing dead or wounded
horses and harnessing fresh ones, and shouting in his feeble voice, so high
pitched and irresolute. His face grew more and more animated. Only when a man
was killed or wounded did he frown and turn away from the sight, shouting
angrily at the men who, as is always the case, hesitated about lifting the
injured or dead. The soldiers, for the most part handsome fellows and, as is
always the case in an artillery company, a head and shoulders taller and twice
as broad as their officer- all looked at their commander like children in an
embarrassing situation, and the expression on his face was invariably reflected
on theirs. |
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Owing to the terrible uproar and the necessity for concentration and
activity, Tushin did not experience the slightest unpleasant sense of fear, and
the thought that he might be killed or badly wounded never occurred to him. On
the contrary, he became more and more elated. It seemed to him that it was a
very long time ago, almost a day, since he had first seen the enemy and fired
the first shot, and that the corner of the field he stood on was well-known and
familiar ground. Though he thought of everything, considered everything, and did
everything the best of officers could do in his position, he was in a state akin
to feverish delirium or drunkenness. |
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From the deafening sounds of his own guns around him, the whistle and
thud of the enemy's cannon balls, from the flushed and perspiring faces of the
crew bustling round the guns, from the sight of the blood of men and horses,
from the little puffs of smoke on the enemy's side (always followed by a ball
flying past and striking the earth, a man, a gun, a horse), from the sight of
all these things a fantastic world of his own had taken possession of his brain
and at that moment afforded him pleasure. The enemy's guns were in his fancy not
guns but pipes from which occasional puffs were blown by an invisible smoker. |
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"There... he's puffing again," muttered Tushin to himself, as a
small cloud rose from the hill and was borne in a streak to the left by the
wind. |
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"Now look out for the ball... we'll throw it back." |
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"What do you want, your honor?" asked an artilleryman, standing
close by, who heard him muttering. |
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|
"Nothing... only a shell..." he answered. |
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|
"Come along, our Matvevna!" he said to himself.
"Matvevna"* was the name his fancy gave to the farthest gun of the
battery, which was large and of an old pattern. The French swarming round their
guns seemed to him like ants. In that world, the handsome drunkard Number One of
the second gun's crew was "uncle"; Tushin looked at him more often
than at anyone else and took delight in his every movement. The sound of
musketry at the foot of the hill, now diminishing, now increasing, seemed like
someone's breathing. He listened intently to the ebb and flow of these sounds. |
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*Daughter of Matthew. |
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"Ah! Breathing again, breathing!" he muttered to himself. |
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He imagined himself as an enormously tall, powerful man who was throwing
cannon balls at the French with both hands. |
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"Now then, Matvevna, dear old lady, don't let me down!" he was
saying as he moved from the gun, when a strange, unfamiliar voice called above
his head: "Captain Tushin! Captain!" |
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Tushin turned round in dismay. It was the staff officer who had turned
him out of the booth at Grunth. He was shouting in a gasping voice: |
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"Are you mad? You have twice been ordered to retreat, and
you..." |
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"Why are they down on me?" thought Tushin, looking in alarm at
his superior. |
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|
"I... don't..." he muttered, holding up two fingers to his cap.
"I..." |
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|
But the staff officer did not finish what he wanted to say. A cannon
ball, flying close to him, caused him to duck and bend over his horse. He
paused, and just as he was about to say something more, another ball stopped
him. He turned his horse and galloped off. |
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|
"Retire! All to retire!" he shouted from a distance. |
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|
The soldiers laughed. A moment later, an adjutant arrived with the same
order. |
|
|
It was Prince Andrew. The first thing he saw on riding up to the space
where Tushin's guns were stationed was an unharnessed horse with a broken leg,
that lay screaming piteously beside the harnessed horses. Blood was gushing from
its leg as from a spring. Among the limbers lay several dead men. One ball after
another passed over as he approached and he felt a nervous shudder run down his
spine. But the mere thought of being afraid roused him again. "I cannot be
afraid," thought he, and dismounted slowly among the guns. He delivered the
order and did not leave the battery. He decided to have the guns removed from
their positions and withdrawn in his presence. Together with Tushin, stepping
across the bodies and under a terrible fire from the French, he attended to the
removal of the guns. |
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|
"A staff officer was here a minute ago, but skipped off," said
an artilleryman to Prince Andrew. "Not like your honor!" |
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|
Prince Andrew said nothing to Tushin. They were both so busy as to seem
not to notice one another. When having limbered up the only two cannon that
remained uninjured out of the four, they began moving down the hill (one
shattered gun and one unicorn were left behind), Prince Andrew rode up to
Tushin. |
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|
"Well, till we meet again..." he said, holding out his hand to
Tushin. |
|
|
"Good-by, my dear fellow," said Tushin. "Dear soul!
Good-by, my dear fellow!" and for some unknown reason tears suddenly filled
his eyes. |
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|
The wind had fallen and black clouds, merging with the powder smoke, hung
low over the field of battle on the horizon. It was growing dark and the glow of
two conflagrations was the more conspicuous. The cannonade was dying down, but
the rattle of musketry behind and on the right sounded oftener and nearer. As
soon as Tushin with his guns, continually driving round or coming upon wounded
men, was out of range of fire and had descended into the dip, he was met by some
of the staff, among them the staff officer and Zherkov, who had been twice sent
to Tushin's battery but had never reached it. Interrupting one another, they all
gave, and transmitted, orders as to how to proceed, reprimanding and reproaching
him. Tushin gave no orders, and, silently- fearing to speak because at every
word he felt ready to weep without knowing why- rode behind on his artillery
nag. Though the orders were to abandon the wounded, many of them dragged
themselves after troops and begged for seats on the gun carriages. The jaunty
infantry officer who just before the battle had rushed out of Tushin's wattle
shed was laid, with a bullet in his stomach, on "Matvevna's" carriage.
At the foot of the hill, a pale hussar cadet, supporting one hand with the
other, came up to Tushin and asked for a seat. |
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"Captain, for God's sake! I've hurt my arm," he said timidly.
"For God's sake... I can't walk. For God's sake!" |
|
|
It was plain that this cadet had already repeatedly asked for a lift and
been refused. He asked in a hesitating, piteous voice. |
|
|
"Tell them to give me a seat, for God's sake!" |
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|
"Give him a seat," said Tushin. "Lay a cloak for him to
sit on, lad," he said, addressing his favorite soldier. "And where is
the wounded officer?" |
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|
"He has been set down. He died," replied someone. |
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|
"Help him up. Sit down, dear fellow, sit down! Spread out the cloak,
Antonov." |
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|
The cadet was Rostov. With one hand he supported the other; he was pale
and his jaw trembled, shivering feverishly. He was placed on
"Matvevna," the gun from which they had removed the dead officer. The
cloak they spread under him was wet with blood which stained his breeches and
arm. |
|
|
"What, are you wounded, my lad?" said Tushin, approaching the
gun on which Rostov sat. |
|
|
"No, it's a sprain." |
|
|
"Then what is this blood on the gun carriage?" inquired Tushin. |
|
|
"It was the officer, your honor, stained it," answered the
artilleryman, wiping away the blood with his coat sleeve, as if apologizing for
the state of his gun. |
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|
It was all that they could do to get the guns up the rise aided by the
infantry, and having reached the village of Gruntersdorf they halted. It had
grown so dark that one could not distinguish the uniforms ten paces off, and the
firing had begun to subside. Suddenly, near by on the right, shouting and firing
were again heard. Flashes of shot gleamed in the darkness. This was the last
French attack and was met by soldiers who had sheltered in the village houses.
They all rushed out of the village again, but Tushin's guns could not move, and
the artillerymen, Tushin, and the cadet exchanged silent glances as they awaited
their fate. The firing died down and soldiers, talking eagerly, streamed out of
a side street. |
|
|
"Not hurt, Petrov?" asked one. |
|
|
"We've given it 'em hot, mate! They won't make another push
now," said another. |
|
|
"You couldn't see a thing. How they shot at their own fellows!
Nothing could be seen. Pitch-dark, brother! Isn't there something to
drink?" |
|
|
The French had been repulsed for the last time. And again and again in
the complete darkness Tushin's guns moved forward, surrounded by the humming
infantry as by a frame. |
|
|
In the darkness, it seemed as though a gloomy unseen river was flowing
always in one direction, humming with whispers and talk and the sound of hoofs
and wheels. Amid the general rumble, the groans and voices of the wounded were
more distinctly heard than any other sound in the darkness of the night. The
gloom that enveloped the army was filled with their groans, which seemed to melt
into one with the darkness of the night. After a while the moving mass became
agitated, someone rode past on a white horse followed by his suite, and said
something in passing: "What did he say? Where to, now? Halt, is it? Did he
thank us?" came eager questions from all sides. The whole moving mass began
pressing closer together and a report spread that they were ordered to halt:
evidently those in front had halted. All remained where they were in the middle
of the muddy road. |
|
|
Fires were lighted and the talk became more audible. Captain Tushin,
having given orders to his company, sent a soldier to find a dressing station or
a doctor for the cadet, and sat down by a bonfire the soldiers had kindled on
the road. Rostov, too, dragged himself to the fire. From pain, cold, and damp, a
feverish shivering shook his whole body. Drowsiness was irresistibly mastering
him, but he kept awake kept awake by an excruciating pain in his arm, for which
he could find no satisfactory position. He kept closing his eyes and then again
looking at the fire, which seemed to him dazzlingly red, and at the feeble,
round-shouldered figure of Tushin who was sitting cross-legged like a Turk
beside him. Tushin's large, kind, intelligent eyes were fixed with sympathy and
commiseration on Rostov, who saw that Tushin with his whole heart wished to help
him but could not. |
|
|
From all sides were heard the footsteps and talk of the infantry, who
were walking, driving past, and settling down all around. The sound of voices,
the tramping feet, the horses' hoofs moving in mud, the crackling of wood fires
near and afar, merged into one tremulous rumble. |
|
|
It was no longer, as before, a dark, unseen river flowing through the
gloom, but a dark sea swelling and gradually subsiding after a storm. Rostov
looked at and listened listlessly to what passed before and around him. An
infantryman came to the fire, squatted on his heels, held his hands to the
blaze, and turned away his face. |
|
|
"You don't mind your honor?" he asked Tushin. "I've lost
my company, your honor. I don't know where... such bad luck!" |
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|
With the soldier, an infantry officer with a bandaged cheek came up to
the bonfire, and addressing Tushin asked him to have the guns moved a trifle to
let a wagon go past. After he had gone, two soldiers rushed to the campfire.
They were quarreling and fighting desperately, each trying to snatch from the
other a boot they were both holding on to. |
|
|
"You picked it up?... I dare say! You're very smart!" one of
them shouted hoarsely. |
|
|
Then a thin, pale soldier, his neck bandaged with a bloodstained leg
band, came up and in angry tones asked the artillerymen for water. |
|
|
"Must one die like a dog?" said he. |
|
|
Tushin told them to give the man some water. Then a cheerful soldier ran
up, begging a little fire for the infantry. |
|
|
"A nice little hot torch for the infantry! Good luck to you, fellow
countrymen. Thanks for the fire- we'll return it with interest," said he,
carrying away into the darkness a glowing stick. |
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|
Next came four soldiers, carrying something heavy on a cloak, and passed
by the fire. One of them stumbled. |
|
|
"Who the devil has put the logs on the road?" snarled he. |
|
|
"He's dead- why carry him?" said another. |
|
|
"Shut up!" |
|
|
And they disappeared into the darkness with with their load. |
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|
"Still aching?" Tushin asked Rostov in a whisper. |
|
|
"Yes." |
|
|
"Your honor, you're wanted by the general. He is in the hut
here," said a gunner, coming up to Tushin. |
|
|
"Coming, friend." |
|
|
Tushin rose and, buttoning his greatcoat and pulling it straight, walked
away from the fire. |
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|
Not far from the artillery campfire, in a hut that had been prepared for
him, Prince Bagration sat at dinner, talking with some commanding officers who
had gathered at his quarters. The little old man with the half-closed eyes was
there greedily gnawing a mutton bone, and the general who had served blamelessly
for twenty-two years, flushed by a glass of vodka and the dinner; and the staff
officer with the signet ring, and Zherkov, uneasily glancing at them all, and
Prince Andrew, pale, with compressed lips and feverishly glittering eyes. |
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|
In a corner of the hut stood a standard captured from the French, and the
accountant with the naive face was feeling its texture, shaking his head in
perplexity- perhaps because the banner really interested him, perhaps because it
was hard for him, hungry as he was, to look on at a dinner where there was no
place for him. In the next hut there was a French colonel who had been taken
prisoner by our dragoons. Our officers were flocking in to look at him. Prince
Bagration was thanking the individual commanders and inquiring into details of
the action and our losses. The general whose regiment had been inspected at
Braunau was informing the prince that as soon as the action began he had
withdrawn from the wood, mustered the men who were woodcutting, and, allowing
the French to pass him, had made a bayonet charge with two battalions and had
broken up the French troops. |
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|
"When I saw, your excellency, that their first battalion was
disorganized, I stopped in the road and thought: 'I'll let them come on and will
meet them with the fire of the whole battalion'- and that's what I did." |
|
|
The general had so wished to do this and was so sorry he had not managed
to do it that it seemed to him as if it had really happened. Perhaps it might
really have been so? Could one possibly make out amid all that confusion what
did or did not happen? |
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|
"By the way, your excellency, I should inform you," he
continued- remembering Dolokhov's conversation with Kutuzov and his last
interview with the gentleman-ranker- "that Private Dolokhov, who was
reduced to the ranks, took a French officer prisoner in my presence and
particularly distinguished himself." |
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|
"I saw the Pavlograd hussars attack there, your excellency,"
chimed in Zherkov, looking uneasily around. He had not seen the hussars all that
day, but had heard about them from an infantry officer. "They broke up two
squares, your excellency." |
|
|
Several of those present smiled at Zherkov's words, expecting one of his
usual jokes, but noticing that what he was saying redounded to the glory of our
arms and of the day's work, they assumed a serious expression, though many of
them knew that what he was saying was a lie devoid of any foundation. Prince
Bagration turned to the old colonel: |
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|
"Gentlemen, I thank you all; all arms have behaved heroically:
infantry, cavalry, and artillery. How was it that two guns were abandoned in the
center?" he inquired, searching with his eyes for someone. (Prince
Bagration did not ask about the guns on the left flank; he knew that all the
guns there had been abandoned at the very beginning of the action.) "I
think I sent you?" he added, turning to the staff officer on duty. |
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|
"One was damaged," answered the staff officer, "and the
other I can't understand. I was there all the time giving orders and had only
just left.... It is true that it was hot there," he added, modestly. |
|
|
Someone mentioned that Captain Tushin was bivouacking close to the
village and had already been sent for. |
|
|
"Oh, but you were there?" said Prince Bagration, addressing
Prince Andrew. |
|
|
"Of course, we only just missed one another," said the staff
officer, with a smile to Bolkonski. |
|
|
"I had not the pleasure of seeing you," said Prince Andrew,
coldly and abruptly. |
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|
All were silent. Tushin appeared at the threshold and made his way
timidly from behind the backs of the generals. As he stepped past the generals
in the crowded hut, feeling embarrassed as he always was by the sight of his
superiors, he did not notice the staff of the banner and stumbled over it.
Several of those present laughed. |
|
|
"How was it a gun was abandoned?" asked Bagration, frowning,
not so much at the captain as at those who were laughing, among whom Zherkov
laughed loudest. |
|
|
Only now, when he was confronted by the stern authorities, did his guilt
and the disgrace of having lost two guns and yet remaining alive present
themselves to Tushin in all their horror. He had been so excited that he had not
thought about it until that moment. The officers' laughter confused him still
more. He stood before Bagration with his lower jaw trembling and was hardly able
to mutter: "I don't know... your excellency... I had no men... your
excellency." |
|
|
"You might have taken some from the covering troops." |
|
|
Tushin did not say that there were no covering troops, though that was
perfectly true. He was afraid of getting some other officer into trouble, and
silently fixed his eyes on Bagration as a schoolboy who has blundered looks at
an examiner. |
|
|
The silence lasted some time. Prince Bagration, apparently not wishing to
be severe, found nothing to say; the others did not venture to intervene. Prince
Andrew looked at Tushin from under his brows and his fingers twitched nervously. |
|
|
"Your excellency!" Prince Andrew broke the silence with his
abrupt voice," you were pleased to send me to Captain Tushin's battery. I
went there and found two thirds of the men and horses knocked out, two guns
smashed, and no supports at all." |
|
|
Prince Bagration and Tushin looked with equal intentness at Bolkonski,
who spoke with suppressed agitation. |
|
|
"And, if your excellency will allow me to express my opinion,"
he continued, "we owe today's success chiefly to the action of that battery
and the heroic endurance of Captain Tushin and his company," and without
awaiting a reply, Prince Andrew rose and left the table. |
|
|
Prince Bagration looked at Tushin, evidently reluctant to show distrust
in Bolkonski's emphatic opinion yet not feeling able fully to credit it, bent
his head, and told Tushin that he could go. Prince Andrew went out with him. |
|
|
"Thank you; you saved me, my dear fellow!" said Tushin. |
|
|
Prince Andrew gave him a look, but said nothing and went away. He felt
sad and depressed. It was all so strange, so unlike what he had hoped. |
|
|
"Who are they? Why are they here? What do they want? And when will
all this end?" thought Rostov, looking at the changing shadows before him.
The pain in his arm became more and more intense. Irresistible drowsiness
overpowered him, red rings danced before his eyes, and the impression of those
voices and faces and a sense of loneliness merged with the physical pain. It was
they, these soldiers- wounded and unwounded- it was they who were crushing,
weighing down, and twisting the sinews and scorching the flesh of his sprained
arm and shoulder. To rid himself of them he closed his eyes. |
|
|
For a moment he dozed, but in that short interval innumerable things
appeared to him in a dream: his mother and her large white hand, Sonya's thin
little shoulders, Natasha's eyes and laughter, Denisov with his voice and
mustache, and Telyanin and all that affair with Telyanin and Bogdanich. That
affair was the same thing as this soldier with the harsh voice, and it was that
affair and this soldier that were so agonizingly, incessantly pulling and
pressing his arm and always dragging it in one direction. He tried to get away
from them, but they would not for an instant let his shoulder move a hair's
breadth. It would not ache- it would be well- if only they did not pull it, but
it was immpossible to get rid of them. |
|
|
He opened his eyes and looked up. The black canopy of night hung less
than a yard above the glow of the charcoal. Flakes of falling snow were
fluttering in that light. Tushin had not returned, the doctor had not come. He
was alone now, except for a soldier who was sitting naked at the other side of
the fire, warming his thin yellow body. |
|
|
"Nobody wants me!" thought Rostov. "There is no one to
help me or pity me. Yet I was once at home, strong, happy, and loved." He
sighed and, doing so, groaned involuntarily. |
|
|
"Eh, is anything hurting you?" asked the soldier, shaking his
shirt out over the fire, and not waiting for an answer he gave a grunt and
added: "What a lot of men have been crippled today- frightful!" |
|
|
Rostov did not listen to the soldier. He looked at the snowflakes
fluttering above the fire and remembered a Russian winter at his warm, bright
home, his fluffy fur coat, his quickly gliding sleigh, his healthy body, and all
the affection and care of his family. "And why did I come here?" he
wondered. |
|
|
Next day the French army did not renew their attack, and the remnant of
Bagration's detachment was reunited to Kutuzov's army. |
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¡¡
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| ¡¡ |

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