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<h2> CHAPTER XXIV </h2>
<p>On the evening of the first of September, after his interview with
Kutuzov, Count Rostopchin had returned to Moscow mortified and offended
because he had not been invited to attend the council of war, and because
Kutuzov had paid no attention to his offer to take part in the defense of
the city; amazed also at the novel outlook revealed to him at the camp,
which treated the tranquillity of the capital and its patriotic fervor as
not merely secondary but quite irrelevant and unimportant matters.
Distressed, offended, and surprised by all this, Rostopchin had returned
to Moscow. After supper he lay down on a sofa without undressing, and was
awakened soon after midnight by a courier bringing him a letter from
Kutuzov. This letter requested the count to send police officers to guide
the troops through the town, as the army was retreating to the Ryazan road
beyond Moscow. This was not news to Rostopchin. He had known that Moscow
would be abandoned not merely since his interview the previous day with
Kutuzov on the Poklonny Hill but ever since the battle of Borodino, for
all the generals who came to Moscow after that battle had said unanimously
that it was impossible to fight another battle, and since then the
government property had been removed every night, and half the inhabitants
had left the city with Rostopchin's own permission. Yet all the same this
information astonished and irritated the count, coming as it did in the
form of a simple note with an order from Kutuzov, and received at night,
breaking in on his beauty sleep.</p>
<p>When later on in his memoirs Count Rostopchin explained his actions at
this time, he repeatedly says that he was then actuated by two important
considerations: to maintain tranquillity in Moscow and expedite the
departure of the inhabitants. If one accepts this twofold aim all
Rostopchin's actions appear irreproachable. "Why were the holy relics, the
arms, ammunition, gunpowder, and stores of corn not removed? Why were
thousands of inhabitants deceived into believing that Moscow would not be
given up—and thereby ruined?" "To preserve the tranquillity of the
city," explains Count Rostopchin. "Why were bundles of useless papers from
the government offices, and Leppich's balloon and other articles removed?"
"To leave the town empty," explains Count Rostopchin. One need only admit
that public tranquillity is in danger and any action finds a
justification.</p>
<p>All the horrors of the reign of terror were based only on solicitude for
public tranquillity.</p>
<p>On what, then, was Count Rostopchin's fear for the tranquillity of Moscow
based in 1812? What reason was there for assuming any probability of an
uprising in the city? The inhabitants were leaving it and the retreating
troops were filling it. Why should that cause the masses to riot?</p>
<p>Neither in Moscow nor anywhere in Russia did anything resembling an
insurrection ever occur when the enemy entered a town. More than ten
thousand people were still in Moscow on the first and second of September,
and except for a mob in the governor's courtyard, assembled there at his
bidding, nothing happened. It is obvious that there would have been even
less reason to expect a disturbance among the people if after the battle
of Borodino, when the surrender of Moscow became certain or at least
probable, Rostopchin instead of exciting the people by distributing arms
and broadsheets had taken steps to remove all the holy relics, the
gunpowder, munitions, and money, and had told the population plainly that
the town would be abandoned.</p>
<p>Rostopchin, though he had patriotic sentiments, was a sanguine and
impulsive man who had always moved in the highest administrative circles
and had no understanding at all of the people he supposed himself to be
guiding. Ever since the enemy's entry into Smolensk he had in imagination
been playing the role of director of the popular feeling of "the heart of
Russia." Not only did it seem to him (as to all administrators) that he
controlled the external actions of Moscow's inhabitants, but he also
thought he controlled their mental attitude by means of his broadsheets
and posters, written in a coarse tone which the people despise in their
own class and do not understand from those in authority. Rostopchin was so
pleased with the fine role of leader of popular feeling, and had grown so
used to it, that the necessity of relinquishing that role and abandoning
Moscow without any heroic display took him unawares and he suddenly felt
the ground slip away from under his feet, so that he positively did not
know what to do. Though he knew it was coming, he did not till the last
moment wholeheartedly believe that Moscow would be abandoned, and did not
prepare for it. The inhabitants left against his wishes. If the government
offices were removed, this was only done on the demand of officials to
whom the count yielded reluctantly. He was absorbed in the role he had
created for himself. As is often the case with those gifted with an ardent
imagination, though he had long known that Moscow would be abandoned he
knew it only with his intellect, he did not believe it in his heart and
did not adapt himself mentally to this new position of affairs.</p>
<p>All his painstaking and energetic activity (in how far it was useful and
had any effect on the people is another question) had been simply directed
toward arousing in the masses his own feeling of patriotic hatred of the
French.</p>
<p>But when events assumed their true historical character, when expressing
hatred for the French in words proved insufficient, when it was not even
possible to express that hatred by fighting a battle, when self-confidence
was of no avail in relation to the one question before Moscow, when the
whole population streamed out of Moscow as one man, abandoning their
belongings and proving by that negative action all the depth of their
national feeling, then the role chosen by Rostopchin suddenly appeared
senseless. He unexpectedly felt himself ridiculous, weak, and alone, with
no ground to stand on.</p>
<p>When, awakened from his sleep, he received that cold, peremptory note from
Kutuzov, he felt the more irritated the more he felt himself to blame. All
that he had been specially put in charge of, the state property which he
should have removed, was still in Moscow and it was no longer possible to
take the whole of it away.</p>
<p>"Who is to blame for it? Who has let things come to such a pass?" he
ruminated. "Not I, of course. I had everything ready. I had Moscow firmly
in hand. And this is what they have let it come to! Villains! Traitors!"
he thought, without clearly defining who the villains and traitors were,
but feeling it necessary to hate those traitors whoever they might be who
were to blame for the false and ridiculous position in which he found
himself.</p>
<p>All that night Count Rostopchin issued orders, for which people came to
him from all parts of Moscow. Those about him had never seen the count so
morose and irritable.</p>
<p>"Your excellency, the Director of the Registrar's Department has sent for
instructions... From the Consistory, from the Senate, from the University,
from the Foundling Hospital, the Suffragan has sent... asking for
information.... What are your orders about the Fire Brigade? From the
governor of the prison... from the superintendent of the lunatic
asylum..." All night long such announcements were continually being
received by the count.</p>
<p>To all these inquiries he gave brief and angry replies indicating that
orders from him were not now needed, that the whole affair, carefully
prepared by him, had now been ruined by somebody, and that that somebody
would have to bear the whole responsibility for all that might happen.</p>
<p>"Oh, tell that blockhead," he said in reply to the question from the
Registrar's Department, "that he should remain to guard his documents. Now
why are you asking silly questions about the Fire Brigade? They have
horses, let them be off to Vladimir, and not leave them to the French."</p>
<p>"Your excellency, the superintendent of the lunatic asylum has come: what
are your commands?"</p>
<p>"My commands? Let them go away, that's all.... And let the lunatics out
into the town. When lunatics command our armies God evidently means these
other madmen to be free."</p>
<p>In reply to an inquiry about the convicts in the prison, Count Rostopchin
shouted angrily at the governor:</p>
<p>"Do you expect me to give you two battalions—which we have not got—for
a convoy? Release them, that's all about it!"</p>
<p>"Your excellency, there are some political prisoners, Meshkov,
Vereshchagin..."</p>
<p>"Vereshchagin! Hasn't he been hanged yet?" shouted Rostopchin. "Bring him
to me!"</p>
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