War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER IX


Author: Leo Tolstoy

Category: Novel


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71 views since 2007-05-10, updated at 2007-05-27. Bookmark this: War And Peace Book 9 CHAPTER IX

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PRINCE ANDREY reached the headquarters of the army at the end of June. The

first army, with which the Tsar was, was stationed in a fortified camp at

Drissa. The second army was retreating, striving to effect a junction with the

first army, from which—so it was said—it had been cut off by immense forces of

the French. Every one was dissatisfied with the general course of events in the

Russian army. But no one even dreamed of any danger of the Russian provinces

being invaded, no one imagined the war could extend beyond the frontiers of the

western Polish provinces.



Prince Andrey found Barclay de Tolly, to whom he was sent, on the bank of the

Drissa. Since there was not one large village nor dwelling-place in the

neighbourhood of the camp, the immense multitude of generals and courtiers

accompanying the army were distributed about the neighborhood for ten versts

round in the best houses of the village on both sides of the river. Barclay de

Tolly was staying four versts away from the Tsar. He gave Bolkonsky a dry and

frigid reception, and said in his German accent that he would mention him to the

Tsar so that a definite appointment might be given him, and that meanwhile he

begged him to remain on his staff. Anatole Kuragin, whom Prince Andrey had

expected to find in the army, was not here. He was in Petersburg, and Bolkonsky

was glad to hear it. He was absorbed in the interest of being at the centre of

the immense war that was in progress, and he was relieved to be free for a time

from the irritability produced in him by the idea of Kuragin. The first four

days, during which he was not called upon to do anything, he spent in riding

round the whole of the fortified camp, and by the aid of his experiences and his

conversations with persons of greater experience, he tried to form a definite

idea about it. But the question whether such a camp were of use at all or not

remained an open one in his mind. He had already, from his own military

experience, formed the conviction that in war the most deeply meditated plans

are of no avail (as he had seen at Austerlitz), that everything depends on how

unexpected actions of the enemy, actions that cannot possibly be foreseen, are

met; that all depends on how, and by whom, the battle is led. In order to settle

this last question to his own satisfaction, Prince Andrey took advantage of his

position and his acquaintances to try to get an insight into the character of

the persons and parties who had a hand in the organisation of the army. This was

the general idea he gained of the position of affairs.



While the Tsar had been at Vilna, the army had been divided into three. The

first army was under the command of Barclay de Tolly, the second under the

command of Bagration, and the third under the command of Tormasov. The Tsar was

with the first army, but not in the capacity of commander-in-chief. In the

proclamations, it was announced that the Tsar would be with the army, but it was

not announced that he would take the command. Moreover, there was in attendance

on the Tsar personally not a commander-in-chief's staff, but the staff of the

imperial headquarters. The chief officer of the imperial staff was

General-Quartermaster Volkonsky, and it contained generals, aides-de-camp,

diplomatic officials, and an immense number of foreigners, but it was not a

military staff. The Tsar had also in attendance on him in no definite capacity,

Araktcheev, the late minister of war; Count Bennigsen, by seniority the first of

the generals; the Tsarevitch, Konstantin Pavlovitch; Count Rumyantsev, the

chancellor; Stein, the former Prussian minister; Armfeldt, the Swedish general;

Pfuhl, the chief organiser of the plan of the campaign; Paulucci, a Sardinian

refugee, who had been made a general-adjutant; Woltzogen; and many others.

Though those personages had no definite posts in the army, yet, from their

position, they had influence, and often the commander of a corps, or even one of

the commanders-in-chief, did not know in what capacity Bennigsen or the

Tsarevitch or Araktcheev or Prince Volkonsky addressed some advice or inquiry to

him, and could not tell whether some command in the form of advice came directly

from the person who got it or through him from the Tsar, and whether he ought or

ought not to obey it. But all this formed simply the external aspect of the

situation; the inner import of the presence of the Tsar and all these great

personages was, from a courtier's point of view (and in the presence of a

monarch all men become courtiers), plain to all. All grasped the fact that

though the Tsar was not formally assuming the position of commander-in-chief, he

did, in fact, hold the supreme control of all the armies in his hands, and the

persons about him were his councillors. Araktcheev was a trusty administrator, a

stern upholder of discipline, and careful of the safety of the Tsar. Bennigsen

was a land-holder in the neighbourhood, and seemed to feel it his function to

entertain the Tsar there; while he was in reality, too, a good general, useful

as an adviser, and useful to have in readiness to replace Barclay at any time.

The Tsarevitch was there because he thought fit to be. The former Prussian

minister, Stein, was there because his advice might be useful, and the Emperor

Alexander had a high opinion of his personal qualities. Armfeldt was a bitter

enemy of Napoleon, and had self-confidence, which never failed to have influence

with Alexander. Paulucci was there because he was bold and decided in his

utterances. The generals on the staff were there because they were always where

the Emperor was; and the last and principal figure, Pfuhl, was there because he

had created a plan of warfare against Napoleon, and having made Alexander

believe in the consistency of this plan, was now conducting the plan of the

whole campaign. Pfuhl was accompanied by Woltzogen, who put Pfuhl's ideas into a

more easily comprehensible form than could be done by Pfuhl himself, who was a

rigid theorist, with an implicit faith in his own views, and an absolute

contempt for everything else.



The above-mentioned were the most prominent personages about the Tsar, and

among them the foreigners were in the ascendant, and were every day making new

and startling suggestions with the audacity characteristic of men who are acting

in a sphere not their own. But, besides those, there were many more persons of

secondary importance, who were with the army because their principals were

there.



In this vast, brilliant, haughty, and uneasy world, among all these

conflicting voices, Prince Andrey detected the following sharply opposed parties

and differences of opinion.



The first party consisted of Pfuhl and his followers; military theorists, who

believe in a science of war, having its invariable laws—laws of oblique

movements, out-flanking, etc. Pfuhl and his adherents demanded that the army

should retreat into the heart of the country in accordance with the exact

principles laid down by their theory of war, and in every departure from this

theory they saw nothing but barbarism, ignorance, or evil intention. To this

party belonged Woltzogen, Wintzengerode, and others—principally Germans.



The second party was in direct opposition to the first. As is always the case

where there is one extreme opinion, representatives had come forward of the

opposite extreme. This party had urged an advance from Vilna into Poland

regardless of all previous plans. This party, while advocating bold action,

consisted of the representatives of nationalism, which made them even more

one-sided in their views. They were Russians: Bagration, Yermolov, who was just

beginning to make his mark, and some others. Yermolov's well-known joke was much

quoted at the time—a supposed petition to the Tsar for promotion to be a

“German.” The members of this party, recalling Suvorov, maintained that what was

wanted was not reasoning and sticking pins into maps, but fighting, beating the

enemy, preventing the enemy from getting into Russia, and keeping up the spirits

of the army.



To the third party, in which the Tsar was disposed to place most confidence,

belonged the courtiers, who tried to effect a compromise between the two

contending sides. The members of this party—to which Araktcheev belonged—were

mostly not military men, and they spoke and reasoned as men usually do who have

no convictions, but wish to pass for having them. They admitted that a war with

such a genius as Bonaparte (they called him Bonaparte again now) did undoubtedly

call for the profoundest tactical considerations and thorough scientific

knowledge, and that on that side Pfuhl was a genius. But, at the same time, they

acknowledged that it could not be denied that theorists were often one-sided,

and so one should not put implicit confidence in them, but should listen too to

what Pfuhl's opponents urged, and also to the views of practical men who had

experience, and should take a middle course. They advocated maintaining the camp

at Drissa on Pfuhl's plan, but altering his disposition of the other two armies.

Though by this course of action neither aim could be attained, this seemed to

the party of compromise the best line to adopt.



Of the fourth section of opinions, the most prominent representative was the

Grand Duke, and heir-apparent, who could not get over his rude awakening at

Austerlitz. He had ridden out at the head of his guards in helmet and cuirass as

though to a review, expecting gallantly to rout the French, and finding himself

unexpectedly just in the line of the enemy's fire, had with difficulty escaped

in the general disorder. The members of this party had at once the merit and the

defect of sincerity in their convictions. They feared Napoleon; they saw his

strength and their own weakness, and frankly admitted it. They said: “Nothing

but a huge disgrace and ruin can come of the war! We have abandoned Vilna, and

abandoned Vitebsk, and we are abandoning the Drissa too. The only sensible thing

left for us to do is to conclude peace, and as soon as possible, before we have

been driven out of Petersburg!”



This view was widely diffused in the higher military circles, and found

adherents, too, in Petersburg—one of them being the chancellor Rumyantsev, who

advocated peace on other political considerations.



A fifth section were the adherents of Barclay de Tolly, not so much from his

qualities as a man, as a minister of war and commander-in-chief. “Whatever he

may be,” they always began, “he is an honest, practical man, and there is nobody

better. Let him have sole responsibility, since war can never be prosecuted

successfully under divided authority and he will show what he can do, as he did

in Finland. We owe it simply to Barclay that our army is strong and well

organised, and has retreated to the Drissa without disaster. If Barclay is

replaced by Bennigsen now, everything will be lost; for Bennigsen has proved his

incapacity already in 1807.” Such was the line of argument of the fifth

party.



The sixth party, the partisans of Bennigsen, maintained on the contrary that

there was after all no one more capable and experienced than Bennigsen, and that

whatever else were done they would have to come back to him. They maintained

that the whole Russian retreat to Drissa had been an uninterrupted series of

shameful disasters and blunders. “Let them blunder now if they will,” they said;

“the more blunders the better, at least it will teach them all the sooner that

we can't go on like this. And we want none of your Barclays, but a man like

Bennigsen, who showed what he was in 1807, so that Napoleon himself had to do

him justice, and a man, too, is needed to whom all would readily intrust

authority, and Bennigsen is the only such man.”



The seventh class were persons such as are always found in courts, and

especially in the courts of young sovereigns, and were particularly plentiful in

the suite of Alexander—generals and adjutants, who were passionately devoted to

the Tsar, not merely as an emperor, but sincerely and disinterestedly adored him

as a man, as Rostov had adored him in 1805, and saw in him every virtue and good

quality of humanity. These persons, while they were ecstatic over the modesty of

the Tsar in declining the chief command of the army, deplored that excess of

modesty, and desired and urged one thing only, that their adored Tsar,

conquering his excessive diffidence, would openly proclaim that he put himself

at the head of the army, would gather the staff of the commander-in-chief about

him, and, consulting experienced theorists and practical men where necessary,

would himself lead his forces, who would be excited to the highest pitch of

enthusiasm by this step.



The eighth and largest group, numbering ninety-nine to every one of the

others, consisted of people who were eager neither for peace nor for war,

neither for offensive operations nor defensive camps, neither at Drissa nor

anywhere else; who did not take the side of Barclay, nor of the Tsar, nor of

Pfuhl, nor of Bennigsen, but cared only for the one thing most essential—their

own greatest gain and enjoyment. In the troubled waters of those cross-currents

of intrigue, eddying about the Tsar's headquarters, success could be attained in

very many ways that would have been inconceivable at other times. One courtier,

with the single-hearted motive of retaining a lucrative position, would agree

today with Pfuhl, and to-morrow with his opponents, and the day after to-morrow

would declare that he had no opinion on the subject in question, simply to avoid

responsibility and to gratify the Tsar. Another, in the hope of bettering his

position, would seek to attract the Tsar's attention by loudly clamouring a

suggestion hinted at by the Tsar on the previous day, by quarrelling noisily at

the council, striking himself on the chest and challenging opponents to a duel

to prove his readiness to sacrifice himself for the common good. A third simply

took advantage of the absence of enemies between two councils to beg a grant

from the Single Assistance Fund for his faithful service, knowing there would be

no time now for a refusal. A fourth took care to place himself where the Tsar

might quite casually find him deeply engrossed in work. A fifth tried to reach

the long-desired goal of his ambition—a dinner at the Tsar's table—by violently

espousing one side or another and collecting more or less true and valid

arguments in support of it.



All the members of this party were on the hunt after roubles, crosses, and

promotions; and in that chase they simply followed the scent given them by the

fluctuations of imperial favour. As soon as they saw the imperial weather-cock

shifting to one quarter the whole swarm of these drones began buzzing away in

the direction, making it more difficult for the Tsar to shift his course back

again. In the uncertainty of the position, with the menace of serious danger,

which gave a peculiarly intense character to everything, in this whirlpool of

ambitions, of conflicting vanities, and views, and feelings, and different

nationalities, this eighth and largest party, absorbed only in the pursuit of

personal interests, greatly increased the complexity and confusion. Whatever

question arose, the swarm of drones, still humming over the last subject, flew

to the new one, and by their buzzing drowned and confused the voices of sincere

disputants.



At the time when Prince Andrey reached the army yet another—a ninth party—was

being formed out of all the rest, and was just making its voice heard. It

consisted of sensible men of age and political experience, sharing none of the

conflicting opinions, and able to take a general view of all that was being done

at headquarters, and to consider means for escaping from the vagueness,

uncertainty, confusion, and feebleness.



The members of this party thought and said that the whole evil was primarily

due to the presence of the Tsar with his military court in the army; that it

brought into the army that indefinite, conditional, and fluctuating uncertainty

of relations which is in place in a court, but mischievous in an army; that it

was for the Tsar to govern and not to lead his troops; that the only escape from

the position was the departure of the Tsar and his court from the army; that the

simple presence of the Tsar paralysed fifty thousand troops, which must be

retained to secure his personal safety; that the worst commander-in-chief,

acting independently, would be better than the best commander-in-chief with his

hands tied by the presence and authority of the Tsar.



While Prince Andrey was staying, with nothing to do, at Drissa, Sishkov, the

secretary of state, one of the leading representatives of this last group, wrote

to the Tsar a letter to which Balashov and Araktcheev agreed to add their

signatures. In this letter he took advantage of the Tsar's permitting him to

offer his opinion on the general question, and respectfully suggested the

sovereign's leaving the army, urging as a pretext for his doing so the absolute

necessity of his presence to rouse public feeling in the capital.



To appeal to the people, and to rouse them in defence of their fatherland,

was represented as urgently necessary to the Tsar, and was accepted by him as a

sufficient reason for leaving. The outburst of patriotism that followed that

appeal (so far indeed as it can be said to have been produced by the Tsar's

visit to Moscow) was the principal cause of the subsequent triumph of

Russia.



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More on This Book:
  1. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XV
  2. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XIV
  3. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XIII
  4. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XI
  5. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XII
  6. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER X
  7. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER VIII
  8. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER VII
  9. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER VI
  10. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER V
  11. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER IV
  12. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER III
  13. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER II
  14. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER I
  15. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XXIII
  16. War And Peace: Book 9 - CHAPTER XXII
  17. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXVIII
  18. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXVII
  19. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXVI
  20. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXV
  21. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXIV
  22. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXIII
  23. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXII
  24. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXI
  25. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXX
  26. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXVIII
  27. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXIX
  28. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXVII
  29. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXVI
  30. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXIV
  31. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXV
  32. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXII
  33. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXI
  34. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXIII
  35. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XX
  36. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XVIII
  37. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XIX
  38. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XVII
  39. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XVI
  40. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XV
  41. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XIV
  42. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XIII
  43. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XII
  44. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XI
  45. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER X
  46. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER IX
  47. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER VIII
  48. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER VII
  49. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER VI
  50. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER V
  51. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER IV
  52. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER III
  53. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER II
  54. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER I
  55. War And Peace: Book 10 - CHAPTER XXXIX
  56. War And Peace: Book 11 - CHAPTER XXXIV
  57. War And Peace: Book 11 - CHAPTER XXXIII
  58. War And Peace: Book 11 - CHAPTER XXXII
  59. War And Peace: Book 11 - CHAPTER XXXI
  60. War And Peace: Book 11 - CHAPTER XXX
  61. War And Peace: Book 11 - CHAPTER XXIX
  62. War And Peace: Book 11 - CHAPTER XXVIII
  63. War And Peace: Book 11 - CHAPTER XXVII
  64. War And Peace: Book 11 - CHAPTER XXVI

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