登陆注册
19079600000146

第146章

ROSTOV had been sent that night with a platoon on picket duty to the line of outposts in the foremost part of Bagration’s detachment. His hussars were scattered in couples about the outposts; he himself rode about the line of the outposts trying to struggle against the sleepiness which kept overcoming him. Behind him could be seen the immense expanse of the dimly burning fires of our army; before him was the misty darkness. However intently Rostov gazed into this misty distance, he could see nothing; at one moment there seemed something greyish, at the next something blackish, then something like the glimmer of a fire over there where the enemy must be, then he fancied the glimmer had been only in his own eyes. His eyes kept closing, and there floated before his mind the image of the Emperor, then of Denisov, and Moscow memories, and again he opened his eyes and saw close before him the head and ears of the horse he was riding, and sometimes black figures of hussars, when he rode within six paces of them, but in the distance still the same misty darkness. “Why? it may well happen,” mused Rostov, “that the Emperor will meet me and give me some commission, as he might to any officer; he’ll say, “Go and find out what’s there.” There are a lot of stories of how quite by chance he has made the acquaintance of officers and given them some place close to him too. Oh, if he were to give me a place in attendance on him! Oh, what care I would take of him, how I would tell him the whole truth, how I would unmask all who deceive him!” And to picture his love and devotion to the Tsar more vividly, Rostov imagined some enemy or treacherous German, whom he would with great zest not simply kill, but slap in the face before the Tsar’s eyes. All at once a shout in the distance roused Rostov. He started and opened his eyes. “Where am I? Yes, in the picket line; the pass and watchword—shaft, Olmütz. How annoying that our squadron will be in reserve …” he thought. “I’ll ask to go to the front. It may be my only chance of seeing the Emperor. And now it’s not long before I’m off duty. I’ll ride round once more, and as I come back, I’ll go to the general and ask him.” He sat up straight in the saddle and set off to ride once more round his hussars. It seemed to him that it was lighter. On the left side he could see a sloping descent that looked lighted up and a black knoll facing it that seemed steep as a wall. On this knoll was a white patch which Rostov could not understand; was it a clearing in the wood, lighted up by the moon, or the remains of snow, or white horses? It seemed to him indeed that something was moving over that white spot. “It must be snow—that spot: a spot—une tache,” Rostov mused dreamily. “But that’s not a tache … Na … tasha, my sister, her black eyes. Na … tasha (won’t she be surprised when I tell her how I’ve seen the Emperor!) Natasha … tasha … sabretache.…” “Keep to the right, your honour, there are bushes here,” said the voice of an hussar, by whom Rostov was riding as he fell asleep. Rostov lifted his head, which had dropped on to his horse’s mane, and pulled up beside the hussar. He could not shake off the youthful, childish drowsiness that overcame him. “But, I say, what was I thinking? I mustn’t forget. How I am going to speak to the Emperor? No, not that—that’s to-morrow. Yes, yes! Natasha, attacks, tacks us,—whom? The hussars. Ah, the hussars with their moustaches … Along the Tversky boulevard rode that hussar with the moustaches, I was thinking of him too just opposite Guryev’s house.… Old Guryev.… Ah, a fine fellow, Denisov! But that’s all nonsense. The great thing is that the Emperor’s here now. How he looked at me and longed to say something, but he did not dare.… No, it was I did not dare. But that’s nonsense, and the great thing is not to forget something important I was thinking of, yes. Natasha, attacks us, yes, yes, yes. That’s right.” And again he dropped with his head on his horse’s neck. All at once it seemed to him that he was being fired at. “What? what?… Cut them down! What?” Rostov was saying, as he wakened up. At the instant that he opened his eyes, Rostov heard in front, over where the enemy were, the prolonged shouting of thousands of voices. His horse and the horse of the hussar near him pricked up their ears at these shouts. Over where the shouts came from, a light was lighted and put out, then another, and all along the line of the French troops on the hillside fires were lighted and the shouts grew louder and louder. Rostov heard the sound of French words though he could not distinguish them. He could only hear: aaaa! and rrrr!

“What is it? What do you think?” Rostov said to the hussar near him. “That’s in the enemy’s camp surely?”

The hussar made no reply.

“Why, don’t you hear it?” Rostov asked again, after waiting some time for a reply.

“Who can tell, your honour?” the hussar answered reluctantly.

“From the direction it must be the enemy,” Rostov said again.

“May be ’tis, and may be not,” said the hussar; “it’s dark. Now! steady,” he shouted to his horse, who fidgeted. Rostov’s horse too was restless, and pawed the frozen ground as it listened to the shouts and looked at the lights. The shouting grew louder and passed into a mingled roar that could only be produced by an army of several thousands. The lights stretched further and further probably along the line of the French camp. Rostov was not sleepy now. The gay, triumphant shouts in the enemy’s army had a rousing effect on him. “Vive l’Empereur! l’Empereur!” Rostov could hear distinctly now.

“Not far off, beyond the stream it must be,” he said to the hussar near him.

The hussar merely sighed without replying, and cleared his throat angrily. They heard the thud of a horse trotting along the line of hussars, and there suddenly sprang up out of the night mist, looking huge as an elephant, the figure of a sergeant of hussars.

同类推荐
  • 大日如来剑印

    大日如来剑印

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Tin Woodman of Oz

    The Tin Woodman of Oz

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 对山医话

    对山医话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 女科撮要

    女科撮要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Chaperon

    The Chaperon

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 吃货之我入江湖

    吃货之我入江湖

    “那个娃娃好可爱。”一女子犯了母爱,作花痴状。“现已加入烟雨楼豪华午餐.....”这是一群来自地狱的吃货,他们遇兽食兽、遇禽食禽、遇人食人。
  • 修仙世界里的科学狂人

    修仙世界里的科学狂人

    星际时代的年轻科学家萧言,穿越到修仙世界,成为炼器阁的少阁主。拥有智能芯片的萧言,开始用科学手段,改变没落的家族炼器阁与这个修仙世界。珍贵稀有的炼丹药材,咱可以人工种植;失传的丹药,咱可以进行药物分析,还原配方;各种仙符,咱可以用智能精雕机批量制造……萧言发誓,他只想搞研究,日子过得舒服一些,没想要搞破坏,给别人找麻烦。
  • 伊人笑

    伊人笑

    血族少女不在西方玩乐,竟来东方学人家修真?开什么玩笑!!可偏偏这不是什么玩笑,亦不是贵族小姐的消遣,而是——逃亡!
  • 关于,二十

    关于,二十

    不是最好的时光里有你们在,而是你们在,我才有了最好的时光。你知道城乡结合部么?你知道那里的女生二十岁是什么模样么?笑看三个走在迷茫路上的二十岁女生,一路跌跌撞撞,看看那里是否有你自己的影子?
  • 最近三年全国高考满分作文

    最近三年全国高考满分作文

    《最近三年全国高考满分作文》是品牌作文书“金笔尖作文工具书”最新品种。由具有丰富教学经验的名校名师搜罗最近三年全国各地高考优秀作文,精选具有示范作用的满分作文300多篇加以编辑而成。《最近三年全国高考满分作文》体例精当,包括“高考回放”、“满分作文”、“点评”三部分;内容新鲜丰富,可以窥见最新高考作文命题趋势,可以借鉴各地优秀作文的写法;点评部分尤其精当,切中要点,不仅指出该篇作文的满分原因,且对可进一步提高之处给予了准确剖析。是一部实用性和针对性极强、可以作为全国各地高中师生备战高考作文的最佳参考辅导书。
  • 重生之我是农民

    重生之我是农民

    本书只适合年龄在30岁以上且来自于农村的网友阅读,萌妹子、骚年、城市小朋友等可以请忽略。一个大学毕业后工作了十几年的程序员,在回乡探亲后,竟然重生回到了十五年前,重生后的他没有考上大学,居然还是个疯子。这辈子也只能当个农民了。没权没势,没有特异功能,就用我这双手来建设更加美好的家乡吧。
  • 仙人是怎样炼成的

    仙人是怎样炼成的

    人之为人,本为天,人生于天地,始于阴阳,品受天地之眷顾,道可道,非常道,名可名,非常名,无名天地之始,有名万物之母,。仙道一途本是无情,看主人公在修仙路上如何面对凡间七情六欲,他又如何面对老去的容颜,逝去的感情,看主人公如何逆天伐仙。情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 无限之剑者

    无限之剑者

    莫笙,21世纪的大好青年,稀里糊涂便被选入了武道空间,彪悍的人生就此拉开帷幕!叶孤城的天外飞仙、西门吹雪的寒梅剑法、独孤求败的独孤九剑、燕十三的第十五剑、阿飞的快剑……当这些绝顶剑术,集于一人身上,世界和平可以托付于莫笙了。至于辟邪剑法,还是留给后来人吧。PS:每天两更,求收藏,求推荐票!!!QQ群:剑冢:184516375
  • 极限召唤

    极限召唤

    一个《传奇》菜鸟玩家,在游戏中捡到一本带有乱码的技能书,没想到却被《传奇》中的怪物黑野猪附体。——————————吴凡很郁闷,看YY小说附身主角的不是龙就是凤,最差也是一位资质极佳的异界强者。到了自己这里却是一只黑野猪,而且食量超大,让他不禁仰天长啸:我——操!!不过很快,吴凡就惊喜地发现,事情并不是他所想象的那样简单。附身的黑野猪不但能够升级,还能变身,变成传奇中的各大知名BOSS!于是,原本平凡无奇的一个小小打工青年,陡然间就变得牛B闪电!——————————海底寻宝,古墓探险,追回文物,惩治贪官……想知道吴凡都是怎么做到的吗?那就赶快收藏阅读吧,精彩不容错过^^
  • 武尽法则

    武尽法则

    一个新世纪的来临,一场奢华的战斗盛宴。破碎虚空的武者,以科技与武技共同引领的时代,这才是真正的大时代……一个传奇,一个故事。当人类已经忘记如何修炼,而是以科技的力量代替武技,两者相互存在,又会发生什么样的碰撞……