parture went to his room.
‘Do you know, mon cher,’ said Bilibin following him, ‘I
have been thinking about you. Why are you going?’
And in proof of the conclusiveness of his opinion all the
wrinkles vanished from his face.
Prince Andrew looked inquiringly at him and gave no
reply.
‘Why are you going? I know you think it your duty to
gallop back to the army now that it is in danger. I under-
stand that. Mon cher, it is heroism!’
‘Not at all,’ said Prince Andrew.
‘But as you are a philosopher, be a consistent one, look
War and Peace
294
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.’
‘Do stop joking, Bilibin,’ cried Bolkonski.
‘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 dis-
grace with Kutuzov’s whole army.’
And Bilibin unwrinkled his temple, feeling that the di-
lemma was insoluble.
‘I cannot argue about it,’ replied Prince Andrew coldly,
but he thought: ‘I am going to save the army.’
‘My dear fellow, you are a hero!’ said Bilibin.
295
Free eBooks at
Planet eBook.com
Chapter XIII
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.
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 obstruct-
ed 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 con-
firmed these rumors.
‘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 begin-
ning 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?’
War and Peace
296
he thought. ‘Well, if need be, I shall do it no worse than oth-
ers.’
*”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).’
He looked with disdain at the endless confused mass of
detachments, carts, guns, artillery, and again baggage wag-
ons 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, order-
lies, 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 some-
thing, and again soldiers straggling from their companies,
crowds of whom set off to the neighboring villages, or re-
turned 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 check-
ing this disorder.
‘Here is our dear Orthodox Russian army,’ thought
297
Free eBooks at
Planet eBook.com
Bolkonski, recalling Bilibin’s words.
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 pierc-
ingly. Seeing Prince Andrew she leaned out from behind the
apron and, waving her thin arms from under the woolen
shawl, cried:
‘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..’
‘I’ll flatten you into a pancake!’ shouted the angry officer
to the soldier. ‘Turn back with your slut!’
‘Mr. Aide-de-camp! Help me!... What does it all mean?’
screamed the doctor’s wife.
‘Kindly let this cart pass. Don’t you see it’s a woman?’
said Prince Andrew riding up to the officer.
The officer glanced at him, and without replying turned
again to the soldier. ‘I’ll teach you to push on!... Back!’
War and Peace
298
‘Let them pass, I tell you!’ repeated Prince Andrew, com-
pressing his lips.
‘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.
‘That was a nice snub for the little aide-de-camp,’ came a
voice from behind.
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 worldto ridicule; but his instinct urged
him on. Before the officer finished his sentence Prince An-
drew, his face distorted with fury, rode up to him and raised
his riding whip.
‘Kind...ly letthempass!’
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.
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
299
Free eBooks at
Planet eBook.com
thoughts that confused his mind. ‘This is a mob of scoun-
drels 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.
‘Bolkonski! Bolkonski!... Don’t you hear? Eh? Come
quick...’ he shouted.
Entering the house, Prince Andrew saw Nesvitski and an-
other 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 no-
ticeable 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 any-
thing 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.’
War and Peace
300
‘Well, I have got all I need into packs for two horses,’
said Nesvitski. ‘They’ve made up splendid packs for mefit
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. Ku-
tuzov 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 wornhe
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 dictat-
ing to the clerk. ‘The Kiev Grenadiers, Podolian..’
‘One can’t write so fast, your honor,’ said the clerk, glanc-
ing angrily and disrespectfully at Kozlovski.
301
Free eBooks at
Planet eBook.com
Through the door came the sounds of Kutuzov’s voice, ex-
cited 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 some-
thing 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 oblivi-
ous of his presence. He looked straight at his adjutant’s face
without recognizing him.
‘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 An-
War and Peace
302
drew 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 bless-
ing, 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 in-
stead.
‘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 Is-
mail bullet had pierced his skull, and the empty eye socket.
‘Yes, he has a right to speak so calmly of those men’s death,’
303
Free eBooks at
Planet eBook.com
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 min-
utes later, gently swaying on the soft springs of the carriage,
he turned to Prince Andrew. There was not a trace of agita-
tion on his face. With delicate irony he questioned Prince
Andrew about the details of his interview with the Emper-
or, about the remarks he had heard at court concerning the
Krems affair, and about some ladies they both knew.
War and Peace
304
Chapter XIV
On November 1 Kutuzov had received, through a spy, news
that the army he commanded was in an almost hopeless po-
sition. 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 ex-
hausted army of forty thousand, and he would find himself
in the position of Mack at Ulm. If Kutuzov decided to aban-
don the road connecting him with the troops arriving from
Russia, he would have to march with no road into unknown
Dostları ilə paylaş: |