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<h2> CHAPTER XV </h2>
<p>The stores, the prisoners, and the marshal's baggage train stopped at the
village of Shamshevo. The men crowded together round the campfires. Pierre
went up to the fire, ate some roast horseflesh, lay down with his back to
the fire, and immediately fell asleep. He again slept as he had done at
Mozhaysk after the battle of Borodino.</p>
<p>Again real events mingled with dreams and again someone, he or another,
gave expression to his thoughts, and even to the same thoughts that had
been expressed in his dream at Mozhaysk.</p>
<p>"Life is everything. Life is God. Everything changes and moves and that
movement is God. And while there is life there is joy in consciousness of
the divine. To love life is to love God. Harder and more blessed than all
else is to love this life in one's sufferings, in innocent sufferings."</p>
<p>"Karataev!" came to Pierre's mind.</p>
<p>And suddenly he saw vividly before him a long-forgotten, kindly old man
who had given him geography lessons in Switzerland. "Wait a bit," said the
old man, and showed Pierre a globe. This globe was alive—a vibrating
ball without fixed dimensions. Its whole surface consisted of drops
closely pressed together, and all these drops moved and changed places,
sometimes several of them merging into one, sometimes one dividing into
many. Each drop tried to spread out and occupy as much space as possible,
but others striving to do the same compressed it, sometimes destroyed it,
and sometimes merged with it.</p>
<p>"That is life," said the old teacher.</p>
<p>"How simple and clear it is," thought Pierre. "How is it I did not know it
before?"</p>
<p>"God is in the midst, and each drop tries to expand so as to reflect Him
to the greatest extent. And it grows, merges, disappears from the surface,
sinks to the depths, and again emerges. There now, Karataev has spread out
and disappeared. Do you understand, my child?" said the teacher.</p>
<p>"Do you understand, damn you?" shouted a voice, and Pierre woke up.</p>
<p>He lifted himself and sat up. A Frenchman who had just pushed a Russian
soldier away was squatting by the fire, engaged in roasting a piece of
meat stuck on a ramrod. His sleeves were rolled up and his sinewy, hairy,
red hands with their short fingers deftly turned the ramrod. His brown
morose face with frowning brows was clearly visible by the glow of the
charcoal.</p>
<p>"It's all the same to him," he muttered, turning quickly to a soldier who
stood behind him. "Brigand! Get away!"</p>
<p>And twisting the ramrod he looked gloomily at Pierre, who turned away and
gazed into the darkness. A prisoner, the Russian soldier the Frenchman had
pushed away, was sitting near the fire patting something with his hand.
Looking more closely Pierre recognized the blue-gray dog, sitting beside
the soldier, wagging its tail.</p>
<p>"Ah, he's come?" said Pierre. "And Plat-" he began, but did not finish.</p>
<p>Suddenly and simultaneously a crowd of memories awoke in his fancy—of
the look Platon had given him as he sat under the tree, of the shot heard
from that spot, of the dog's howl, of the guilty faces of the two
Frenchmen as they ran past him, of the lowered and smoking gun, and of
Karataev's absence at this halt—and he was on the point of realizing
that Karataev had been killed, but just at that instant, he knew not why,
the recollection came to his mind of a summer evening he had spent with a
beautiful Polish lady on the veranda of his house in Kiev. And without
linking up the events of the day or drawing a conclusion from them, Pierre
closed his eyes, seeing a vision of the country in summertime mingled with
memories of bathing and of the liquid, vibrating globe, and he sank into
water so that it closed over his head.</p>
<p>Before sunrise he was awakened by shouts and loud and rapid firing. French
soldiers were running past him.</p>
<p>"The Cossacks!" one of them shouted, and a moment later a crowd of
Russians surrounded Pierre.</p>
<p>For a long time he could not understand what was happening to him. All
around he heard his comrades sobbing with joy.</p>
<p>"Brothers! Dear fellows! Darlings!" old soldiers exclaimed, weeping, as
they embraced Cossacks and hussars.</p>
<p>The hussars and Cossacks crowded round the prisoners; one offered them
clothes, another boots, and a third bread. Pierre sobbed as he sat among
them and could not utter a word. He hugged the first soldier who
approached him, and kissed him, weeping.</p>
<p>Dolokhov stood at the gate of the ruined house, letting a crowd of
disarmed Frenchmen pass by. The French, excited by all that had happened,
were talking loudly among themselves, but as they passed Dolokhov who
gently switched his boots with his whip and watched them with cold glassy
eyes that boded no good, they became silent. On the opposite side stood
Dolokhov's Cossack, counting the prisoners and marking off each hundred
with a chalk line on the gate.</p>
<p>"How many?" Dolokhov asked the Cossack.</p>
<p>"The second hundred," replied the Cossack.</p>
<p>"Filez, filez!" * Dolokhov kept saying, having adopted this expression
from the French, and when his eyes met those of the prisoners they flashed
with a cruel light.</p>
<p>* "Get along, get along!"<br/></p>
<p>Denisov, bareheaded and with a gloomy face, walked behind some Cossacks
who were carrying the body of Petya Rostov to a hole that had been dug in
the garden.</p>
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