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<h2> CHAPTER XXXIV </h2>
<p>Napoleon's generals—Davout, Ney, and Murat, who were near that
region of fire and sometimes even entered it—repeatedly led into it
huge masses of well-ordered troops. But contrary to what had always
happened in their former battles, instead of the news they expected of the
enemy's flight, these orderly masses returned thence as disorganized and
terrified mobs. The generals re-formed them, but their numbers constantly
decreased. In the middle of the day Murat sent his adjutant to Napoleon to
demand reinforcements.</p>
<p>Napoleon sat at the foot of the knoll, drinking punch, when Murat's
adjutant galloped up with an assurance that the Russians would be routed
if His Majesty would let him have another division.</p>
<p>"Reinforcements?" said Napoleon in a tone of stern surprise, looking at
the adjutant—a handsome lad with long black curls arranged like
Murat's own—as though he did not understand his words.</p>
<p>"Reinforcements!" thought Napoleon to himself. "How can they need
reinforcements when they already have half the army directed against a
weak, unentrenched Russian wing?"</p>
<p>"Tell the King of Naples," said he sternly, "that it is not noon yet, and
I don't yet see my chessboard clearly. Go!..."</p>
<p>The handsome boy adjutant with the long hair sighed deeply without
removing his hand from his hat and galloped back to where men were being
slaughtered.</p>
<p>Napoleon rose and having summoned Caulaincourt and Berthier began talking
to them about matters unconnected with the battle.</p>
<p>In the midst of this conversation, which was beginning to interest
Napoleon, Berthier's eyes turned to look at a general with a suite, who
was galloping toward the knoll on a lathering horse. It was Belliard.
Having dismounted he went up to the Emperor with rapid strides and in a
loud voice began boldly demonstrating the necessity of sending
reinforcements. He swore on his honor that the Russians were lost if the
Emperor would give another division.</p>
<p>Napoleon shrugged his shoulders and continued to pace up and down without
replying. Belliard began talking loudly and eagerly to the generals of the
suite around him.</p>
<p>"You are very fiery, Belliard," said Napoleon, when he again came up to
the general. "In the heat of a battle it is easy to make a mistake. Go and
have another look and then come back to me."</p>
<p>Before Belliard was out of sight, a messenger from another part of the
battlefield galloped up.</p>
<p>"Now then, what do you want?" asked Napoleon in the tone of a man
irritated at being continually disturbed.</p>
<p>"Sire, the prince..." began the adjutant.</p>
<p>"Asks for reinforcements?" said Napoleon with an angry gesture.</p>
<p>The adjutant bent his head affirmatively and began to report, but the
Emperor turned from him, took a couple of steps, stopped, came back, and
called Berthier.</p>
<p>"We must give reserves," he said, moving his arms slightly apart. "Who do
you think should be sent there?" he asked of Berthier (whom he
subsequently termed "that gosling I have made an eagle").</p>
<p>"Send Claparede's division, sire," replied Berthier, who knew all the
divisions regiments, and battalions by heart.</p>
<p>Napoleon nodded assent.</p>
<p>The adjutant galloped to Claparede's division and a few minutes later the
Young Guards stationed behind the knoll moved forward. Napoleon gazed
silently in that direction.</p>
<p>"No!" he suddenly said to Berthier. "I can't send Claparede. Send Friant's
division."</p>
<p>Though there was no advantage in sending Friant's division instead of
Claparede's, and even in obvious inconvenience and delay in stopping
Claparede and sending Friant now, the order was carried out exactly.
Napoleon did not notice that in regard to his army he was playing the part
of a doctor who hinders by his medicines—a role he so justly
understood and condemned.</p>
<p>Friant's division disappeared as the others had done into the smoke of the
battlefield. From all sides adjutants continued to arrive at a gallop and
as if by agreement all said the same thing. They all asked for
reinforcements and all said that the Russians were holding their positions
and maintaining a hellish fire under which the French army was melting
away.</p>
<p>Napoleon sat on a campstool, wrapped in thought.</p>
<p>M. de Beausset, the man so fond of travel, having fasted since morning,
came up to the Emperor and ventured respectfully to suggest lunch to His
Majesty.</p>
<p>"I hope I may now congratulate Your Majesty on a victory?" said he.</p>
<p>Napoleon silently shook his head in negation. Assuming the negation to
refer only to the victory and not to the lunch, M. de Beausset ventured
with respectful jocularity to remark that there is no reason for not
having lunch when one can get it.</p>
<p>"Go away..." exclaimed Napoleon suddenly and morosely, and turned aside.</p>
<p>A beatific smile of regret, repentance, and ecstasy beamed on M. de
Beausset's face and he glided away to the other generals.</p>
<p>Napoleon was experiencing a feeling of depression like that of an
ever-lucky gambler who, after recklessly flinging money about and always
winning, suddenly just when he has calculated all the chances of the game,
finds that the more he considers his play the more surely he loses.</p>
<p>His troops were the same, his generals the same, the same preparations had
been made, the same dispositions, and the same proclamation courte et
energique, he himself was still the same: he knew that and knew that he
was now even more experienced and skillful than before. Even the enemy was
the same as at Austerlitz and Friedland—yet the terrible stroke of
his arm had supernaturally become impotent.</p>
<p>All the old methods that had been unfailingly crowned with success: the
concentration of batteries on one point, an attack by reserves to break
the enemy's line, and a cavalry attack by "the men of iron," all these
methods had already been employed, yet not only was there no victory, but
from all sides came the same news of generals killed and wounded, of
reinforcements needed, of the impossibility of driving back the Russians,
and of disorganization among his own troops.</p>
<p>Formerly, after he had given two or three orders and uttered a few
phrases, marshals and adjutants had come galloping up with congratulations
and happy faces, announcing the trophies taken, the corps of prisoners,
bundles of enemy eagles and standards, cannon and stores, and Murat had
only begged leave to loose the cavalry to gather in the baggage wagons. So
it had been at Lodi, Marengo, Arcola, Jena, Austerlitz, Wagram, and so on.
But now something strange was happening to his troops.</p>
<p>Despite news of the capture of the fleches, Napoleon saw that this was not
the same, not at all the same, as what had happened in his former battles.
He saw that what he was feeling was felt by all the men about him
experienced in the art of war. All their faces looked dejected, and they
all shunned one another's eyes—only a de Beausset could fail to
grasp the meaning of what was happening.</p>
<p>But Napoleon with his long experience of war well knew the meaning of a
battle not gained by the attacking side in eight hours, after all efforts
had been expended. He knew that it was a lost battle and that the least
accident might now—with the fight balanced on such a strained center—destroy
him and his army.</p>
<p>When he ran his mind over the whole of this strange Russian campaign in
which not one battle had been won, and in which not a flag, or cannon, or
army corps had been captured in two months, when he looked at the
concealed depression on the faces around him and heard reports of the
Russians still holding their ground—a terrible feeling like a
nightmare took possession of him, and all the unlucky accidents that might
destroy him occurred to his mind. The Russians might fall on his left
wing, might break through his center, he himself might be killed by a
stray cannon ball. All this was possible. In former battles he had only
considered the possibilities of success, but now innumerable unlucky
chances presented themselves, and he expected them all. Yes, it was like a
dream in which a man fancies that a ruffian is coming to attack him, and
raises his arm to strike that ruffian a terrible blow which he knows
should annihilate him, but then feels that his arm drops powerless and
limp like a rag, and the horror of unavoidable destruction seizes him in
his helplessness.</p>
<p>The news that the Russians were attacking the left flank of the French
army aroused that horror in Napoleon. He sat silently on a campstool below
the knoll, with head bowed and elbows on his knees. Berthier approached
and suggested that they should ride along the line to ascertain the
position of affairs.</p>
<p>"What? What do you say?" asked Napoleon. "Yes, tell them to bring me my
horse."</p>
<p>He mounted and rode toward Semenovsk.</p>
<p>Amid the powder smoke, slowly dispersing over the whole space through
which Napoleon rode, horses and men were lying in pools of blood, singly
or in heaps. Neither Napoleon nor any of his generals had ever before seen
such horrors or so many slain in such a small area. The roar of guns, that
had not ceased for ten hours, wearied the ear and gave a peculiar
significance to the spectacle, as music does to tableaux vivants. Napoleon
rode up the high ground at Semenovsk, and through the smoke saw ranks of
men in uniforms of a color unfamiliar to him. They were Russians.</p>
<p>The Russians stood in serried ranks behind Semenovsk village and its
knoll, and their guns boomed incessantly along their line and sent forth
clouds of smoke. It was no longer a battle: it was a continuous slaughter
which could be of no avail either to the French or the Russians. Napoleon
stopped his horse and again fell into the reverie from which Berthier had
aroused him. He could not stop what was going on before him and around him
and was supposed to be directed by him and to depend on him, and from its
lack of success this affair, for the first time, seemed to him unnecessary
and horrible.</p>
<p>One of the generals rode up to Napoleon and ventured to offer to lead the
Old Guard into action. Ney and Berthier, standing near Napoleon, exchanged
looks and smiled contemptuously at this general's senseless offer.</p>
<p>Napoleon bowed his head and remained silent a long time.</p>
<p>"At eight hundred leagues from France, I will not have my Guard
destroyed!" he said, and turning his horse rode back to Shevardino.</p>
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