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<h2> CHAPTER II </h2>
<p>The forces of a dozen European nations burst into Russia. The Russian army
and people avoided a collision till Smolensk was reached, and again from
Smolensk to Borodino. The French army pushed on to Moscow, its goal, its
impetus ever increasing as it neared its aim, just as the velocity of a
falling body increases as it approaches the earth. Behind it were seven
hundred miles of hunger-stricken, hostile country; ahead were a few dozen
miles separating it from its goal. Every soldier in Napoleon's army felt
this and the invasion moved on by its own momentum.</p>
<p>The more the Russian army retreated the more fiercely a spirit of hatred
of the enemy flared up, and while it retreated the army increased and
consolidated. At Borodino a collision took place. Neither army was broken
up, but the Russian army retreated immediately after the collision as
inevitably as a ball recoils after colliding with another having a greater
momentum, and with equal inevitability the ball of invasion that had
advanced with such momentum rolled on for some distance, though the
collision had deprived it of all its force.</p>
<p>The Russians retreated eighty miles—to beyond Moscow—and the
French reached Moscow and there came to a standstill. For five weeks after
that there was not a single battle. The French did not move. As a
bleeding, mortally wounded animal licks its wounds, they remained inert in
Moscow for five weeks, and then suddenly, with no fresh reason, fled back:
they made a dash for the Kaluga road, and (after a victory—for at
Malo-Yaroslavets the field of conflict again remained theirs) without
undertaking a single serious battle, they fled still more rapidly back to
Smolensk, beyond Smolensk, beyond the Berezina, beyond Vilna, and farther
still.</p>
<p>On the evening of the twenty-sixth of August, Kutuzov and the whole
Russian army were convinced that the battle of Borodino was a victory.
Kutuzov reported so to the Emperor. He gave orders to prepare for a fresh
conflict to finish the enemy and did this not to deceive anyone, but
because he knew that the enemy was beaten, as everyone who had taken part
in the battle knew it.</p>
<p>But all that evening and next day reports came in one after another of
unheard-of losses, of the loss of half the army, and a fresh battle proved
physically impossible.</p>
<p>It was impossible to give battle before information had been collected,
the wounded gathered in, the supplies of ammunition replenished, the slain
reckoned up, new officers appointed to replace those who had been killed,
and before the men had had food and sleep. And meanwhile, the very next
morning after the battle, the French army advanced of itself upon the
Russians, carried forward by the force of its own momentum now seemingly
increased in inverse proportion to the square of the distance from its
aim. Kutuzov's wish was to attack next day, and the whole army desired to
do so. But to make an attack the wish to do so is not sufficient, there
must also be a possibility of doing it, and that possibility did not
exist. It was impossible not to retreat a day's march, and then in the
same way it was impossible not to retreat another and a third day's march,
and at last, on the first of September when the army drew near Moscow—despite
the strength of the feeling that had arisen in all ranks—the force
of circumstances compelled it to retire beyond Moscow. And the troops
retired one more, last, day's march, and abandoned Moscow to the enemy.</p>
<p>For people accustomed to think that plans of campaign and battles are made
by generals—as any one of us sitting over a map in his study may
imagine how he would have arranged things in this or that battle—the
questions present themselves: Why did Kutuzov during the retreat not do
this or that? Why did he not take up a position before reaching Fili? Why
did he not retire at once by the Kaluga road, abandoning Moscow? and so
on. People accustomed to think in that way forget, or do not know, the
inevitable conditions which always limit the activities of any commander
in chief. The activity of a commander in chief does not at all resemble
the activity we imagine to ourselves when we sit at ease in our studies
examining some campaign on the map, with a certain number of troops on
this and that side in a certain known locality, and begin our plans from
some given moment. A commander in chief is never dealing with the
beginning of any event—the position from which we always contemplate
it. The commander in chief is always in the midst of a series of shifting
events and so he never can at any moment consider the whole import of an
event that is occurring. Moment by moment the event is imperceptibly
shaping itself, and at every moment of this continuous, uninterrupted
shaping of events the commander in chief is in the midst of a most complex
play of intrigues, worries, contingencies, authorities, projects,
counsels, threats, and deceptions and is continually obliged to reply to
innumerable questions addressed to him, which constantly conflict with one
another.</p>
<p>Learned military authorities quite seriously tell us that Kutuzov should
have moved his army to the Kaluga road long before reaching Fili, and that
somebody actually submitted such a proposal to him. But a commander in
chief, especially at a difficult moment, has always before him not one
proposal but dozens simultaneously. And all these proposals, based on
strategics and tactics, contradict each other.</p>
<p>A commander in chief's business, it would seem, is simply to choose one of
these projects. But even that he cannot do. Events and time do not wait.
For instance, on the twenty-eighth it is suggested to him to cross to the
Kaluga road, but just then an adjutant gallops up from Miloradovich asking
whether he is to engage the French or retire. An order must be given him
at once, that instant. And the order to retreat carries us past the turn
to the Kaluga road. And after the adjutant comes the commissary general
asking where the stores are to be taken, and the chief of the hospitals
asks where the wounded are to go, and a courier from Petersburg brings a
letter from the sovereign which does not admit of the possibility of
abandoning Moscow, and the commander in chief's rival, the man who is
undermining him (and there are always not merely one but several such),
presents a new project diametrically opposed to that of turning to the
Kaluga road, and the commander in chief himself needs sleep and
refreshment to maintain his energy and a respectable general who has been
overlooked in the distribution of rewards comes to complain, and the
inhabitants of the district pray to be defended, and an officer sent to
inspect the locality comes in and gives a report quite contrary to what
was said by the officer previously sent; and a spy, a prisoner, and a
general who has been on reconnaissance, all describe the position of the
enemy's army differently. People accustomed to misunderstand or to forget
these inevitable conditions of a commander in chief's actions describe to
us, for instance, the position of the army at Fili and assume that the
commander in chief could, on the first of September, quite freely decide
whether to abandon Moscow or defend it; whereas, with the Russian army
less than four miles from Moscow, no such question existed. When had that
question been settled? At Drissa and at Smolensk and most palpably of all
on the twenty-fourth of August at Shevardino and on the twenty-sixth at
Borodino, and each day and hour and minute of the retreat from Borodino to
Fili.</p>
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