登陆注册
19079600000612

第612章

The unanswered question, whether the wound dealt at Borodino were mortal or not, had been for a whole month hanging over Kutuzov’s head. On one side, the French had taken possession of Moscow. On the other side, in all his being, Kutuzov felt beyond all doubt that the terrible blow for which, together with all the Russians, he had strained all his strength must have been mortal. But in any case proofs were wanted, and he had been waiting for them now a month, and as time went on he grew more impatient. As he lay on his bed through sleepless nights, he did the very thing these younger generals did, the very thing he found fault with in them. He imagined all possible contingencies, just like the younger generation, but with this difference that he based no conclusion on the suppositions, and that he saw these contingencies not as two or three, but as thousands. The more he pondered, the more of them he saw. He imagined all sorts of movements of Napoleon’s army, acting as a whole or in part, on Petersburg, against him, to out-flank him (that was what he was most afraid of), and also the possibility that Napoleon would fight against him with his own weapon, that he would stay on in Moscow waiting for him to move. Kutuzov even imagined Napoleon’s army marching back to Medyn and Yuhnov. But the one thing he could not foresee was what happened—the mad, convulsive stampede of Napoleon’s army during the first eleven days of its march from Moscow—the stampede that made possible what Kutuzov did not yet dare to think about, the complete annihilation of the French. Dorohov’s report of Broussier’s division, the news brought by the irregulars of the miseries of Napoleon’s army, rumours of preparations for leaving Moscow, all confirmed the supposition that the French army was beaten and preparing to take flight. But all this was merely supposition, that seemed of weight to the younger men, but not to Kutuzov. With his sixty years’ experience he knew how much weight to attach to rumours; he knew how ready men are when they desire anything to manipulate all evidence so as to confirm what they desire; and he knew how readily in that case they let everything of an opposite significance pass unheeded. And the more Kutuzov desired this supposition to be correct, the less he permitted himself to believe it. This question absorbed all his spiritual energies. All the rest was for him the mere customary performance of the routine of life. Such a customary performance and observance of routine were his conversations with the staff-officers, his letters to Madame de Sta?l that he wrote from Tarutino, his French novels, distribution of rewards, correspondence with Petersburg, and so on. But the destruction of the French, which he alone foresaw, was the one absorbing desire of his heart.

On the night of the 11th of October he lay leaning on his arm and thinking of that.

There was a stir in the next room, and he heard the steps of Toll, Konovnitsyn and Bolhovitinov.

“Hey, who is there? Come in, come in! Anything new?” the commander-in-chief called to them.

While a footman lighted a candle, Toll told the drift of the news.

“Who brought it?” asked Kutuzov, with a face that impressed Toll when the candle was lighted by its frigid sternness.

“There can be no doubt of it, your highness.”

“Call him, call him here!”

Kutuzov sat with one leg out of bed and his unwieldy, corpulent body propped on the other leg bent under him. He screwed up his one seeing eye to get a better view of the messenger, as though he hoped in his face to read what he cared to know.

“Tell me, tell me, my dear fellow,” he said to Bolhovitinov, in his low, aged voice, pulling the shirt together that had come open over his chest. “Come here, come closer. What news is this you have brought me? Eh? Napoleon has marched out of Moscow? Is it truly so? Eh?”

Bolhovitinov began repeating in detail the message that had been given him.

“Tell me, make haste, don’t torture me,” Kutuzov interrupted him.

Bolhovitinov told him all and paused, awaiting instructions. Toll was beginning to speak, but Kutuzov checked him. He tried to say something, but all at once his face began to work, to pucker; waving his hand at Toll, he turned the other way to the corner of the hut, which looked black with the holy pictures. “Lord, my Creator! Thou hast heard our prayer …” he said in a trembling voice, clasping his hands. “Russia is saved. I thank Thee, O Lord.” And he burst into tears.

同类推荐
  • 七元真诀语驱疫秘经

    七元真诀语驱疫秘经

    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。
  • Memories and Portraits

    Memories and Portraits

    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。
  • 是应篇

    是应篇

    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。
  • 离骚草木疏

    离骚草木疏

    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。
  • 测海集节钞

    测海集节钞

    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。
热门推荐
  • 乱世佳人:众神终结者

    乱世佳人:众神终结者

    这家伙打娘胎里出来就沉睡,没有童年,没有记忆,却有一个女子陪他沉睡。
  • 仇杀者

    仇杀者

    上古年间,天地间无数尊者,然而千年之后,却寥寥无几。少年蒙秋带着玉灵,踏上复仇争强之路。
  • 我很幸运遇见了你们

    我很幸运遇见了你们

    一个平凡的丫头闯入了他们的世界,而他们却被她的平凡所吸引,都奋不顾身的爱上了她,四个帅气男孩,一个漂亮女孩之间的故事,歆婷第一次写文章,希望大家多多投推荐票,多多支持!
  • 愿为德国效力:平民总理默克尔传

    愿为德国效力:平民总理默克尔传

    默克尔从一名不知名的平民少女成长为德国第一位女总理,在冷漠、枯燥、内敛,甚至没有女人味的外表下究竟住着一个怎样的灵魂,才能让她以不屈不挠的意志迈向权力之巅?本书用细致朴实的笔法展示了德国第一位女总理默克尔的的成长轨迹。从初出茅庐的青涩到处理危机的冷静,从联邦部长到党派领袖,最终,她以“我愿为德国人民服务”叩响人们的心扉,凭借着坚定的意志成为德国总理。作者用最平实的文字将这位遥远的领导人带到读者面前,展现了默克尔沉稳、镇定的形象,以及她勇敢、坚强、不服输的特性。
  • 紫宛

    紫宛

    两百年前,宛宛被自己暗恋的师父东莱一剑刺死,鬼宗少主葵苍遍寻世间秘术用鬼宗圣物将她救活。复生后,宛宛养父蚩晏病重,宛宛与葵苍寻求天下五颗罕见心脏救父。血珀之力,生死人肉白骨,宛宛因此拥有起死回生的能力。因救人而杀人,这世上本是无欲便无求,只不过因果天有命,谁又能逃开命运的桎梏?这是一个有点冷有点暖的玄幻文,谈谈情,说说爱,感慨一下为嘛糖葫芦不能配大葱,爱的太深终归是个坑的等等问题,是这么个意思
  • 笑蛋CP:我家萌蛋变凤凰

    笑蛋CP:我家萌蛋变凤凰

    中考结束O(∩_∩)O~!一次爬山丢三次手机,又三次是后面的帅哥捡还,,,O__O"…其实帅哥脾气火爆o(╯□╰)o骂了我三次,就这样,孽缘开始。哦,不,我林淡淡的那啥故事开始。呵呵呵······然后然后。大家捧起小说,准备大笑吧。(此文很爆笑,次文值得一看,O(∩_∩)O哈哈哈~,每天笑笑更健康,每天笑笑更美丽,嚯嚯嚯^_^)
  • 一世医恋

    一世医恋

    当现代的西医穿越到古代能做什么?把脉不会,针灸不懂,中草药更是一头雾水,难道一无是处?当独立的女医生遇到多疑的落魄贵公子,医术成为了连接他们的纽带,但当爱情遭遇阴谋,他们还能继续携手相伴吗?
  • 笑傲江湖之玉笛暗飞

    笑傲江湖之玉笛暗飞

    继金庸的《笑傲江湖》后,以令狐冲和任盈盈之子令狐天的江湖事件。
  • 我的双面总裁

    我的双面总裁

    高考前夕碰上个疯子。五年后再次落入恶魔之手,她只想逃,却意外发现他的秘密……“我曾经患过人格分裂,不过现在已经痊愈了。”“我管你人格分裂还是精神病,我们之间早就两清了!秦深,你休想再纠缠我!”她拼尽全力要逃脱,命运却一次次将他们捆绑在一起。“求求你,救救我们的儿子……”他摁灭烟头,双眸猩红,一把掐住她的下巴,与她鼻尖相抵:“沈尽欢,你好样的,居然将我秦深的儿子藏了五年!”
  • 为爱殇璃

    为爱殇璃

    简介:她原本是生活在地球的一个默默无名的小演员,却在某一天无缘无故的被召唤到一个位面,从此被作为一枚棋子的她,为他活,为他伤,为他痛,为他放下一切而他,最后爱上她,为她疯,为她狂,为她撕裂空间,只为找回他的爱?这一段柔情虐恋皆因一个劫……