Home
Fictions/Novels
Short Stories
Poems
Essays
Plays
 
All Authors
All Titles
 


In Association with Amazon.com

Home > Authors Index > Leo Tolstoy > War and Peace > This page

War and Peace, a novel by Leo Tolstoy

Book Three: 1805 - Chapter 18

< Previous
Table of content
Next >
________________________________________________
Rostov had been ordered to look for Kutuzov and the Emperor near the

village of Pratzen. But neither they nor a single commanding officer

were there, only disorganized crowds of troops of various kinds. He

urged on his already weary horse to get quickly past these crowds, but

the farther he went the more disorganized they were. The highroad on

which he had come out was thronged with caleches, carriages of all

sorts, and Russian and Austrian soldiers of all arms, some wounded and

some not. This whole mass droned and jostled in confusion under the

dismal influence of cannon balls flying from the French batteries

stationed on the Pratzen Heights.

"Where is the Emperor? Where is Kutuzov?" Rostov kept asking

everyone he could stop, but got no answer from anyone.

At last seizing a soldier by his collar he forced him to answer.

"Eh, brother! They've all bolted long ago!" said the soldier,

laughing for some reason and shaking himself free.

Having left that soldier who was evidently drunk, Rostov stopped the

horse of a batman or groom of some important personage and began to

question him. The man announced that the Tsar had been driven in a

carriage at full speed about an hour before along that very road and

that he was dangerously wounded.

"It can't be!" said Rostov. "It must have been someone else."

"I saw him myself." replied the man with a self-confident smile of

derision. "I ought to know the Emperor by now, after the times I've

seen him in Petersburg. I saw him just as I see you.... There he sat

in the carriage as pale as anything. How they made the four black

horses fly! Gracious me, they did rattle past! It's time I knew the

Imperial horses and Ilya Ivanych. I don't think Ilya drives anyone

except the Tsar!"

Rostov let go of the horse and was about to ride on, when a

wounded officer passing by addressed him:

"Who is it you want?" he asked. "The commander in chief? He was

killed by a cannon ball- struck in the breast before our regiment."

"Not killed- wounded!" another officer corrected him.

"Who? Kutuzov?" asked Rostov.

"Not Kutuzov, but what's his name- well, never mind... there are not

many left alive. Go that way, to that village, all the commanders

are there," said the officer, pointing to the village of Hosjeradek,

and he walked on.

Rostov rode on at a footpace not knowing why or to whom he was now

going. The Emperor was wounded, the battle lost. It was impossible

to doubt it now. Rostov rode in the direction pointed out to him, in

which he saw turrets and a church. What need to hurry? What was he now

to say to the Tsar or to Kutuzov, even if they were alive and

unwounded?

"Take this road, your honor, that way you will be killed at once!" a

soldier shouted to him. "They'd kill you there!"

"Oh, what are you talking about?" said another. "Where is he to

go? That way is nearer."

Rostov considered, and then went in the direction where they said he

would be killed.

"It's all the same now. If the Emperor is wounded, am I to try to

save myself?" he thought. He rode on to the region where the

greatest number of men had perished in fleeing from Pratzen. The

French had not yet occupied that region, and the Russians- the

uninjured and slightly wounded- had left it long ago. All about the

field, like heaps of manure on well-kept plowland, lay from ten to

fifteen dead and wounded to each couple of acres. The wounded crept

together in twos and threes and one could hear their distressing

screams and groans, sometimes feigned- or so it seemed to Rostov. He

put his horse to a trot to avoid seeing all these suffering men, and

he felt afraid- afraid not for his life, but for the courage he needed

and which he knew would not stand the sight of these unfortunates.

The French, who had ceased firing at this field strewn with dead and

wounded where there was no one left to fire at, on seeing an

adjutant riding over it trained a gun on him and fired several

shots. The sensation of those terrible whistling sounds and of the

corpses around him merged in Rostov's mind into a single feeling of

terror and pity for himself. He remembered his mother's last letter.

"What would she feel," thought he, "if she saw me here now on this

field with the cannon aimed at me?"

In the village of Hosjeradek there were Russian troops retiring from

the field of battle, who though still in some confusion were less

disordered. The French cannon did not reach there and the musketry

fire sounded far away. Here everyone clearly saw and said that the

battle was lost. No one whom Rostov asked could tell him where the

Emperor or Kutuzov was. Some said the report that the Emperor was

wounded was correct, others that it was not, and explained the false

rumor that had spread by the fact that the Emperor's carriage had

really galloped from the field of battle with the pale and terrified

Ober-Hofmarschal Count Tolstoy, who had ridden out to the

battlefield with others in the Emperor's suite. One officer told

Rostov that he had seen someone from headquarters behind the village

to the left, and thither Rostov rode, not hoping to find anyone but

merely to ease his conscience. When he had ridden about two miles

and had passed the last of the Russian troops, he saw, near a

kitchen garden with a ditch round it, two men on horseback facing

the ditch. One with a white plume in his hat seemed familiar to

Rostov; the other on a beautiful chestnut horse (which Rostov

fancied he had seen before) rode up to the ditch, struck his horse

with his spurs, and giving it the rein leaped lightly over. Only a

little earth crumbled from the bank under the horse's hind hoofs.

Turning the horse sharply, he again jumped the ditch, and

deferentially addressed the horseman with the white plumes,

evidently suggesting that he should do the same. The rider, whose

figure seemed familiar to Rostov and involuntarily riveted his

attention, made a gesture of refusal with his head and hand and by

that gesture Rostov instantly recognized his lamented and adored

monarch.

"But it can't be he, alone in the midst of this empty field!"

thought Rostov. At that moment Alexander turned his head and Rostov

saw the beloved features that were so deeply engraved on his memory.

The Emperor was pale, his cheeks sunken and his eyes hollow, but the

charm, the mildness of his features, was all the greater. Rostov was

happy in the assurance that the rumors about the Emperor being wounded

were false. He was happy to be seeing him. He knew that he might and

even ought to go straight to him and give the message Dolgorukov had

ordered him to deliver.

But as a youth in love trembles, is unnerved, and dares not utter

the thoughts he has dreamed of for nights, but looks around for help

or a chance of delay and flight when the longed-for moment comes and

he is alone with her, so Rostov, now that he had attained what he

had longed for more than anything else in the world, did not know

how to approach the Emperor, and a thousand reasons occurred to him

why it would be inconvenient, unseemly, and impossible to do so.

"What! It is as if I were glad of a chance to take advantage of

his being alone and despondent! A strange face may seem unpleasant

or painful to him at this moment of sorrow; besides, what can I say to

him now, when my heart fails me and my mouth feels dry at the mere

sight of him?" Not one of the innumerable speeches addressed to the

Emperor that he had composed in his imagination could he now recall.

Those speeches were intended for quite other conditions, they were for

the most part to be spoken at a moment of victory and triumph,

generally when he was dying of wounds and the sovereign had thanked

him for heroic deeds, and while dying he expressed the love his

actions had proved.

"Besides how can I ask the Emperor for his instructions for the

right flank now that it is nearly four o'clock and the battle is lost?

No, certainly I must not approach him, I must not intrude on his

reflections. Better die a thousand times than risk receiving an unkind

look or bad opinion from him," Rostov decided; and sorrowfully and

with a heart full despair he rode away, continually looking back at

the Tsar, who still remained in the same attitude of indecision.

While Rostov was thus arguing with himself and riding sadly away,

Captain von Toll chanced to ride to the same spot, and seeing the

Emperor at once rode up to him, offered his services, and assisted him

to cross the ditch on foot. The Emperor, wishing to rest and feeling

unwell, sat down under an apple tree and von Toll remained beside him.

Rostov from a distance saw with envy and remorse how von Toll spoke

long and warmly to the Emperor and how the Emperor, evidently weeping,

covered his eyes with his hand and pressed von Toll's hand.

"And I might have been in his place!" thought Rostov, and hardly

restraining his tears of pity for the Emperor, he rode on in utter

despair, not knowing where to or why he was now riding.

His despair was all the greater from feeling that his own weakness

was the cause his grief.

He might... not only might but should, have gone up to the

sovereign. It was a unique chance to show his devotion to the

Emperor and he had not made use of it.... "What have I done?"

thought he. And he turned round and galloped back to the place where

he had seen the Emperor, but there was no one beyond the ditch now.

Only some carts and carriages were passing by. From one of the drivers

he learned that Kutuzov's staff were not far off, in the village the

vehicles were going to. Rostov followed them. In front of him walked

Kutuzov's groom leading horses in horsecloths. Then came a cart, and

behind that walked an old, bandy-legged domestic serf in a peaked

cap and sheepskin coat.

"Tit! I say, Tit!" said the groom.

"What?" answered the old man absent-mindedly.

"Go, Tit! Thresh a bit!"

"Oh, you fool!" said the old man, spitting angrily. Some time passed

in silence, and then the same joke was repeated.

Before five in the evening the battle had been lost at all points.

More than a hundred cannon were already in the hands of the French.

Przebyszewski and his corps had laid down their arms. Other

columns after losing half their men were retreating in disorderly

confused masses.

The remains of Langeron's and Dokhturov's mingled forces were

crowding around the dams and banks of the ponds near the village of

Augesd.

After five o'clock it was only at the Augesd Dam that a hot

cannonade (delivered by the French alone) was still to be heard from

numerous batteries ranged on the slopes of the Pratzen Heights,

directed at our retreating forces.

In the rearguard, Dokhturov and others rallying some battalions kept

up a musketry fire at the French cavalry that was pursuing our troops.

It was growing dusk. On the narrow Augesd Dam where for so many

years the old miller had been accustomed to sit in his tasseled cap

peacefully angling, while his grandson, with shirt sleeves rolled

up, handled the floundering silvery fish in the watering can, on

that dam over which for so many years Moravians in shaggy caps and

blue jackets had peacefully driven their two-horse carts loaded with

wheat and had returned dusty with flour whitening their carts- on that

narrow dam amid the wagons and the cannon, under the horses' hoofs and

between the wagon wheels, men disfigured by fear of death now

crowded together, crushing one another, dying, stepping over the dying

and killing one another, only to move on a few steps and be killed

themselves in the same way.

Every ten seconds a cannon ball flew compressing the air around,

or a shell burst in the midst of that dense throng, killing some and

splashing with blood those near them.

Dolokhov- now an officer- wounded in the arm, and on foot, with

the regimental commander on horseback and some ten men of his company,

represented all that was left of that whole regiment. Impelled by

the crowd, they had got wedged in at the approach to the dam and,

jammed in on all sides, had stopped because a horse in front had

fallen under a cannon and the crowd were dragging it out. A cannon

ball killed someone behind them, another fell in front and splashed

Dolokhov with blood. The crowd, pushing forward desperately,

squeezed together, moved a few steps, and again stopped.

"Move on a hundred yards and we are certainly saved, remain here

another two minutes and it is certain death," thought each one.

Dolokhov who was in the midst of the crowd forced his way to the

edge of the dam, throwing two soldiers off their feet, and ran onto

the slippery ice that covered the millpool.

"Turn this way!" he shouted, jumping over the ice which creaked

under him; "turn this way!" he shouted to those with the gun. "It

bears!..."

The ice bore him but it swayed and creaked, and it was plain that it

would give way not only under a cannon or a crowd, but very soon

even under his weight alone. The men looked at him and pressed to

the bank, hesitating to step onto the ice. The general on horseback at

the entrance to the dam raised his hand and opened his mouth to

address Dolokhov. Suddenly a cannon ball hissed so low above the crowd

that everyone ducked. It flopped into something moist, and the general

fell from his horse in a pool of blood. Nobody gave him a look or

thought of raising him.

"Get onto the ice, over the ice! Go on! Turn! Don't you hear? Go

on!" innumerable voices suddenly shouted after the ball had struck the

general, the men themselves not knowing what, or why, they were

shouting.

One of the hindmost guns that was going onto the dam turned off onto

the ice. Crowds of soldiers from the dam began running onto the frozen

pond. The ice gave way under one of the foremost soldiers, and one leg

slipped into the water. He tried to right himself but fell in up to

his waist. The nearest soldiers shrank back, the gun driver stopped

his horse, but from behind still came the shouts: "Onto the ice, why

do you stop? Go on! Go on!" And cries of horror were heard in the

crowd. The soldiers near the gun waved their arms and beat the

horses to make them turn and move on. The horses moved off the bank.

The ice, that had held under those on foot, collapsed in a great mass,

and some forty men who were on it dashed, some forward and some

back, drowning one another.

Still the cannon balls continued regularly to whistle and flop

onto the ice and into the water and oftenest of all among the crowd

that covered the dam, the pond, and the bank.

Read next: Book Three: 1805#Chapter 19

Read previous: Book Three: 1805#Chapter 17

Table of content of War and Peace


GO TO TOP OF SCREEN

Post your review
Your review will be placed after the table of content of this book