<h3> CHAPTER IV </h3>
<p class="t3">
"WAR AND PEACE"</p>
<p><i>War and Peace</i> is the longest and most important of
Tolstoy's single works. In this book Tolstoy aimed at
giving the picture of a whole epoch, and that one of the
most stirring in the history of modern Europe; the
real subject is the conflict between the French and the
Prussians from 1805 to 1812, the historical events of the
novel concluding with the tragedy of the French retreat
from Moscow. The enormous scope of the book, the
power of its psychology, the vast number of characters
crowding its pages, its tremendous vitality—all won
for Tolstoy a recognition deservedly world-wide. After
reading it we feel as if we have beheld with our own eyes
a terrific and soul-stirring crisis in the history of a
great nation, and one of the epoch-making events of the
world. And yet the work is truly a novel, and not
history in the form of fiction, because we are shown all
these events not in the dry, detached light of the
historian (whom Tolstoy dislikes), but through their effect
on the minds and souls of the private individuals
participating in them. Tolstoy selects a little group of
Russian families whose circumstances involve them in
all the main events; we see with their eyes and hear
with their ears; we share in their sufferings, until at
the end it is difficult to believe that we ourselves have
not witnessed Austerlitz and Borodino, the conflagration
of Moscow, and the horrors of the French retreat.
Yet the total impression is not one of catastrophe; the
great nation, having shed of its heart's blood and
sacrificed its noblest, yet recuperates and recovers; those
who are left continue the race, and life proceeds as before.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P37"></SPAN>37}</span></p>
<p>The whole narrative is grouped around three families:
the Bolkonskys, the Rostofs, and the Bezukhois,
whose relations and inter-relations are very skilfully
planned.</p>
<p>The book has three heroes, one in each of the families,
and our attention is first attracted to Prince Andrei
Bolkonsky. He is a man of high rank, son of a
distinguished general, possessed of aristocratic prejudice,
handsome, far more intellectual than his companions;
the faults of his character are haughtiness and disdain;
far superior to the majority of human beings, he is only
too keenly conscious of the fact. Yet Prince Andrei is
capable of strong and deep affections; he dearly loves
his father, his sister, and one friend—Pierre Bezukhoi.
Bezukhoi is massive, clumsy, and sensuous, but the
keen-sighted Prince Andrei pierces through all his
faults and judges his friend justly when he declares
that he has "a heart of gold." Among the people
whom Prince Andrei secretly despises is his own wife,
the Princess Lisa: he finds her cowardly and frivolous,
and, though outwardly respectful, he has little real
affection.</p>
<p>Prince Andrei enters military service; he becomes
aide-de-camp to Kutuzof, and Tolstoy thus has an
opportunity of showing us the whole course of the
campaign from a really intimate point of view. The
great passion of Prince Andrei's life is ambition—the
desire for glory—and he considers war as being essentially
a means to honour; he is present throughout the
battle of Austerlitz, where his calm, cool courage wins
him the highest commendations. But the experience
changes all his views of life. In the first place he
realises how seldom the rewards of courage go to the
really deserving.</p>
<p>During the engagement at the Enns the honours of
the day really rest with an obscure artillery officer
named Tushin, who keeps his battery firing upon the
French, and at the critical moment covers the Russian
retreat; Tushin's gunners are almost annihilated, but,
with the most heroic courage, the battery stick to their
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P38"></SPAN>38}</span>
task and the army is saved. Tushin himself is a modest
and unassuming man, and his superiors are so confused
that they not only fail to recognise his achievement,
but are about to reprimand him severely for losing
some of his guns; Prince Andrei's indignant protest
that this man has saved the army spares Tushin the
reprimand, but his superiors are too hopelessly
bewildered to recognise the truth. The real hero of the
day is thus a man who gains nothing—not a single
reward or honour—and is only too thankful to escape
blame.</p>
<p>At Austerlitz, when the Russian army are broken
and in flight, Prince Andrei attempts to save the day;
he stems the tide of the fugitives, seizes the flag as it
falls from the hand of a dying officer, and leads the whole
battalion against a French battery; he is shot down
with the flag still in his hand; he believes himself
fatally wounded and, as he sinks into unconsciousness,
realises suddenly the emptiness of all he has striven for
and the beauty of that sweet and profound peace which
lies at the heart of the world, but which, until that
moment of marvellous insight—-the insight given by
the near approach of death—he had never even seen.</p>
<p>"He opened his eyes, hoping to see how the struggle
between the artilleryman and the Frenchman ended,
and anxious to know whether or not the red-headed
artillerist was killed, and the cannon saved or captured.
But he could see nothing of it. Over him, he could see
nothing except the sky, the lofty sky, no longer clear
but still immeasurably lofty and with light grey clouds
slowly wandering over it.</p>
<p>"'How still, calm, and solemn! How entirely different
from when I was running,' said Prince Andrei to himself.
'It was not so when we were all running and shouting
and fighting.... How is it that I never saw before this
lofty sky? And how glad I am that I have learned to
know it at last. Yes! all is empty, all is deception,
except these infinite heavens. Nothing, nothing at all,
beside! And even that is nothing but silence and
peace! And thank God!'"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P39"></SPAN>39}</span></p>
<p>Prince Andrei, sinking once more into unconsciousness,
recovers to find Napoleon surveying him and calling
him "une belle mort." When it is discovered that
he is alive Napoleon congratulates him on his magnificent
courage; but even the praise of this man, hitherto Prince
Andrei's idol, does not move him. He has seen, once
and for all, the emptiness of military glory. He
recovers from his wound, and, softened and tender,
returns to his family, who are mourning him as dead;
he finds a son just born to him and his wife dying in
childbirth.</p>
<p>Henceforward Prince Andrei is changed, gentle, and
tender, but melancholy, and regarding himself as a
man whose life is done. Interest returns again when
he meets Natasha Rostof—one of the most charming
heroines in fiction; Natasha is the very embodiment of
joy in life, all poetry, passion, and romance. She enthrals
Prince Andrei, he is happy as he has never been, and
they are betrothed, but the opposition of his family
causes the marriage to be postponed.</p>
<p>Unfortunately Natasha has the defects of her
qualities; she allows herself to be fascinated (though
only momentarily) by a hopelessly inferior man. Prince
Andrei, deeply wounded both in his love and in his pride,
refuses to forgive; the old bitterness against life, the old
anger return once more. He seeks his rival, Kuragin,
and, not finding him, re-enters military service.</p>
<p>At the battle of Borodino Prince Andrei is wounded
again, and this time, as it proves, fatally; he lingers
for some weeks, and, before his death, fate grants him
one last happiness; the Rostofs, in the flight from
Moscow, sacrifice their own property to save some
Russian wounded among whom, unknown to them, is
Prince Andrei; he and Natasha meet again.</p>
<p>In all Tolstoy's pages none are more lovely and
pathetic than those depicting this union on the edge of
the grave; for a time there is hope—the renewal of
his heart's joy assisting the wounded man to rally—but
it is only for a brief space, and there succeeds the
tragic and terrible yet beautiful alienation of death.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P40"></SPAN>40}</span></p>
<p>Prince Andrei is one of the few Tolstoyan heroes who
have no physical fear of death, who meet it, not with
shuddering nausea, but with noble and grave composure.
If he clings to life it is not from any weak fear but
because life means Natasha, poetry, and joy; when
the pang of resignation is once over, all is peace.</p>
<p>"Prince Andrei not only knew that he was going to die,
but he also felt that he was dying, that he was already
half-way towards death. He experienced a consciousness
of alienation from everything earthly, and a
strange beatific exaltation of being. Without impatience
and without anxiety, he waited for what was before
him. That ominous Eternal Presence, unknown and
far away, which had never once ceased, throughout all
his life, to haunt his senses, was now near at hand and,
by reason of that strange exhilaration which he felt,
almost comprehensible and palpable."</p>
<p>Natasha and his sister grieve for themselves, but they
cannot really grieve for him. "They both saw how he
was sinking, deeper and deeper, slowly and peacefully
away from them, and they both knew that this was
inevitable, and that it was well. He was shrived and
partook of the sacrament. All came to bid him
farewell.</p>
<p>"When his little son was brought, he kissed him and
turned away, not because his heart was sore and filled
with pity, but simply because this was all that was
required of him."</p>
<p>In this lofty and beautiful isolation the hero passes
away. Prince Andrei has something in him of Byronism;
there is the Byronic ideal in his aristocratic disdain, his
mental solitude, his melancholy; he is Byronic also in
his courage, his love of glory and his disillusionment
with glory, but no mere Byronist could ever have
drawn the portrait. The marvellous thing in Tolstoy's
art is that he so plainly reveals the change and
development of human character; we never feel that his
people are static and finished; before our very eyes
Prince Andrei changes from Byronic pride to sweetness
and tenderness, a bitter disillusion brings him back to
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P41"></SPAN>41}</span>
pride, but, once more, the depths of the man's nature
are stirred and his fundamental sweetness is revealed.</p>
<p>Many times in his epic novel Tolstoy makes us feel
the bitter cost of war, but never more than in the death
of this, the noblest of his heroes, on the threshold of
happiness and love.</p>
<p>Pierre Bezukhoi—the second hero—is a wholly
different type. He is much more Russian and national
than Prince Andrei; the two are so unlike that the
friendship between them strikes us with the same
surprise as it would in real life. Pierre is clumsy and
awkward, and not sufficiently strong-willed; he is
continually led away to do things he does not desire;
his chief fault is sensuality, and this is the rock on which
he all but wrecks his life. It leads him into marriage
with a woman whom he desires but does not love—the
beautiful, profligate Elena. The analysis of his motives
is wrought with a terrible sombre power, which
anticipates <i>The Kreutzer Sonata</i>. Pierre, in the toils of
his own sensuality, is, on our first acquaintance with
him, a most unattractive character, and we wonder why
Tolstoy has allowed him a position so prominent, just
as we wonder why the fastidious Prince Andrei can have
selected him as a friend; but, by degrees, we realise his
true nature; he has indeed a heart of gold and, little
by little, his goodness and kindness and simplicity
shake his character free from its coarsest faults. He has
a genius for sympathy, and he appears to understand
all those who surround him better than they understand
themselves. The real love of his life is Natasha Rostof,
but he does his best, most unselfishly, to reconcile her
to Prince Andrei; in a sense he deserves her the better
of the two, for, even when her betrothed turns against
her, Pierre still loves and appreciates, and his devotion
helps her through the darkest hours of her life. It is
only fitting that, in the end, Natasha should make him
happy. Like Prince Andrei, Pierre finds his moral
regeneration in war, but in a different way; he does not
enter active service nor is he wounded, but he views
other aspects of the great tragedy; he is present at the
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P42"></SPAN>42}</span>
burning of Moscow, he is captured by the French, and
taken as prisoner on their terrible retreat. It is the
heroism of the common man, the beauty and nobility
of suffering finely borne, which redeem Pierre from the
depression which has darkened his mind and which
teach him the true meaning of life.</p>
<p>He is especially influenced by one man—the peasant
soldier Platon Karatayef—one of Tolstoy's greatest
creations. Platon is not clever nor handsome, his whole
life has been privation, but he is love itself, kind and sweet
to all men. Most tragic is his fate! The French shoot
those of the Russian prisoners who cannot keep up
with the march, and Pierre, seeing his friend failing,
cannot endure the thought of what must happen and
keeps away. One morning he sees Platon, not attempting
to walk, but sitting beneath a tree with a calm and
radiantly happy expression; he gives a beseeching
glance to Pierre, but Pierre turns his back and walks
off. Shortly afterwards there is heard the sound of a
gunshot, two French soldiers pass with guilty faces,
and there is the melancholy howling of Karatayef's
dog.</p>
<p>Platon's fate is one of the means Tolstoy uses to
drive home his lesson of the immense futility of war;
it is to the last degree abominable that this most loving
and beautiful nature, wholly guiltless, should be
murdered in cold blood; even a dog has the sense to lament
such a deed.</p>
<p>But the moral of this wonderful nature is not lost
upon Pierre; he finds in it "the meaning of life," the
clue which he has all along been seeking. As Pierre's
sufferings increase so does his heart grow lighter; he
learns the joy of endurance and the pleasure even of
anguish, and all things are less grievous than he would
have thought.</p>
<p>"Of all that which he afterwards called sufferings,
but which at the time he scarcely felt, the worst was
from his bare, bruised, scurvy-scarred feet. The
horse-flesh was palatable and nourishing, the saltpetre odour
of the gunpowder which they used instead of salt was
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P43"></SPAN>43}</span>
even pleasant ... the vermin which fed upon him
warmed his body. The one thing hard at that time
was the state of his feet. On the second day of the
retreat, Pierre, examining his sores by the fire, felt that
it was impossible to take another step on them; but
when all got up he went along, treading gingerly, and
afterwards, when he was warmed to it, he walked
without pain, though when evening came it was more
than ever terrible to look at his feet. But he did not
look at them and turned his thoughts to other things....
He saw and heard not how the prisoners who
straggled were shot down, although more than a
hundred had perished in this way.... The more
trying his position, the more appalling the future,
... the more joyful and consoling were the thoughts,
recollections, and visions which came to him."</p>
<p>Tolstoy's account of this terrible retreat is Homeric
in its tragic nobility; Homeric, too, is the spirit of the
Russian army: they are short of food, short of clothes,
sleeping in the snow at twenty degrees below zero;
they melt away to half their numbers, yet they grow
ever happier and happier, more and more cheerful, for
all the poor-spirited, the weak, and cowardly succumb,
and only the heroes remain. In his previous life Pierre
has been miserable, disenchanted, and disillusioned,
but he emerges from this hell of suffering a man finally
happy. And Tolstoy makes us see that it could not
be otherwise; his hero has learnt for ever the
tremendous capacities of the human soul.</p>
<p>Of Tolstoy's two heroines the Princess Mariya is the
nobler type; she is what he imagined his mother to
have been, and to this, no doubt, a large part of her
fascination may be traced. In her the author has
drawn a woman exceedingly plain, not particularly
clever, without accomplishments and melancholy by
temperament, yet, by sheer spiritual beauty, she compels
admiration, affection, even passionate love.</p>
<p>Her physical appearance, on which Tolstoy dwells,
gives the clue to her nature; she treads heavily and
blushes unbecomingly in patches; this heavy tread
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P44"></SPAN>44}</span>
shows us her awkwardness and self-distrust, and the
blushing her almost painful modesty.</p>
<p>But she is one of those who have life's secret—the
gift of love; she idolises her brother; she loves and
admires her little selfish sister-in-law, the Princess
Lisa; she bears, year in and year out, with the
exasperating and even cruel tyrannies of her father, and
loves him dearly to the end; she cherishes her nephew.
Ultimately, though slowly, she wins her reward for all
this patient sweetness; her brother has always understood
her at her full value, her father dies acknowledging
her as his good angel, and we are not surprised when
Nikolai Rostof, cold to more beautiful and more
attractive women, turns and gives her his love.</p>
<p>And yet the portrait is not sentimentalised or made
incredibly virtuous; the Princess Mariya does not find
self-abnegation easy, she longs for a home and happiness,
she is jealous of Natasha because Natasha is young
and beautiful, and has achieved the poetry of love; to
the end, notwithstanding her deep affections, she finds
it a little hard to comprehend others.</p>
<p>Tolstoy's second heroine, Natasha Rostof, is, for
pure fascination, the most enthralling character in the
book. Tolstoy seems to have drawn her from an actual
person—his sister-in-law; and she has all the reality
of a minute portrait.</p>
<p>Natasha is beautiful or, it would be more correct to
say, has the promise of beauty; she has also a lovely
voice; but her most remarkable gift is her power of
winning love. From her first introduction she is the
idolised of all; she and her younger brother, Petya,
are her mother's favourite children; Natasha is the
adored of her brothers and her father, and almost every
man who visits the house falls in love with her. Tolstoy
makes us understand why. Natasha is herself prepared
to see all that is delightful and all that is good in
others; she is highly vitalised; she has strong
affections, and an intense joy in life; wherever Natasha is
things move; it is she who is always ready to suggest
games and amusements; it is she who perceives poetry
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P45"></SPAN>45}</span>
and romance where others cannot or only in much less
degree. Morning in the forest, a moonlight night in
spring, sledging over the snow, music—all are to her
enrapturing things. That magical period of youth, that
period of half-childhood, half-adolescence, when the
world is suffused by "the light that never was on sea
or land," has nowhere been more beautifully depicted
than in her. It is this romantic charm which so
powerfully attracts the somewhat cold but poetic nature of
Prince Andrei. In the midst of the gloomy tragedies
of bloodshed and battle Natasha Rostof shines like an
incarnation of springtime, the very joy of life in a
human form. The most beautiful passage in the whole
novel is probably that which describes Prince Andrei's
first meeting with her.</p>
<p>He is in a mood of some sadness, and feels, after all
his experiences, old beyond his years; he drives to the
Rostofs and perceives a number of young girls running
among the trees. "In front of the others ... ran a
very slender, indeed a strangely slender maiden, with
dark hair and dark eyes, in a yellow chintz dress, with
a white handkerchief round her head, the locks emerging
from it in ringlets."</p>
<p>It is Natasha, and, that same night, Prince Andrei
hears her conversing with her cousin Sonya at the
window above his own. "The night was cool and
calmly beautiful. In front of the window was a row of
clipped trees, dark on one side and silver-bright on the
other.... Farther away, beyond the trees, was a roof
glittering with dew; farther to the right a tall tree with
wide-spreading branches, showed a brilliant white bole
and limbs; and directly above it the moon, almost at
her full, shone in the bright, nearly starless spring night.
Prince Andrei leaned his elbows on the window-sill and
fixed his eyes on that sky."</p>
<p>He hears Sonya and Natasha sing a duet, he hears
Sonya try to persuade her cousin to sleep and Natasha's
protest:</p>
<p>"Sonya! Sonya! How can you go to sleep? Just
see how lovely it is! How lovely! Come wake up,
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P46"></SPAN>46}</span>
Sonya," she said again with, tears in her voice. "Come,
now, such a lovely, lovely night was never seen!"</p>
<p>Prince Andrei meets her again at a ball in St. Petersburg,
where her childlike happiness brings a breath of
pure air into the artificial atmosphere; Natasha is so
completely unaffected that, in the very midst of
affectations, she keeps her unspoilt romance.</p>
<p>Prince Andrei proposes for her hand, but the Rostofs'
family affairs are in confusion, and Prince Andrei's
father insists on a year's delay; for that space of time
he goes abroad. Prince Andrei does not find the time
of delay unreasonably long, and cannot understand that
Natasha should do so, but the girl suffers the dangers of
her inexperience; Prince Andrei has roused her to a
full consciousness of womanhood, and her sensuous
and passionate nature cannot endure the blank of his
absence; also, since she is extremely sensitive, she is
grieved by the cold attitude his family persistently
maintain.</p>
<p>She meets Anatol Kuragin, a man exceedingly handsome
but unscrupulous, who at once makes violent love
to her; she writes a letter to Prince Andrei breaking off
their engagement, and consents to elope with Kuragin,
this plan being discovered and frustrated by her family.
Natasha wakens from her brief madness, realises how
badly she has behaved to her betrothed, and, in her
remorse and shame, attempts suicide.</p>
<p>Prince Andrei, returning, learns the whole story; he
is stung to the quick in his haughty pride; his spiritual
nature makes him totally unable to understand the
temptation, and he cannot forgive.</p>
<p>It is Natasha's innate generosity which gives them,
however, their last chance of reconciliation; the Rostofs
are carting their family property away from Moscow,
which is threatened by the French, but there are not
sufficient horses to transport the Russian wounded,
and Natasha, keenly opposing her mother, demands
that the family property shall be sacrificed, and the
wounded rescued instead; the Rostofs discover Prince
Andrei's presence and forbid Natasha to see him, but
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P47"></SPAN>47}</span>
her own daring takes her to his side, and there follows
the most simple but touching of reconciliations.</p>
<p>Natasha becomes his nurse, and proves the depth of
her nature by her skill and tenderness. But the brief
time of joy is soon over; Prince Andrei's sufferings
are agonising, and he passes away.</p>
<p>Natasha feels bereavement with the same intensity
as everything else; she herself seems to sink out of the
world; thin and pale and visibly wasting away, she sits
for hours in silence, gazing at the place where Prince
Andrei has lain. Her family have lost all hope of saving
her life, but tragic news arrives; the younger
brother—Petya—has been killed in battle, and the mother is
mad with grief; she screams for her beloved Natasha,
who is the only person who can comfort her, and, in
straining every nerve to save her mother's reason, the
girl herself is restored to life. She lives again by virtue
of those profound and passionate affections which had
almost destroyed her. She is so greatly changed,
however, that, when Pierre meets her again, he does not
know her; he cannot recognise in her thin, pale, and
stern face the Natasha of adorable and abounding life;
yet the moment he shows that he loves her, the old
Natasha, with her radiant joy, flashes back into his view,
and she is willing, almost at once, to become Pierre's
affianced. To the Princess Mariya, with a nature much
less emotional but infinitely more constant, Natasha
is a continual marvel, and, though she is glad of her
friend's happiness, the Princess grieves at the
inconstancy to her brother.</p>
<p>The whole portrait is wonderful in its realism, glowing
with vitality and with charm, and, just as in the case of the
men, Natasha deepens and changes before our very eyes.</p>
<p>But few readers will be inclined, however, to appreciate
Tolstoy's final picture of her; he shows us Natasha as
Pierre's wife and the mother of four children; she is
loving but exacting, very jealous, almost parsimonious
in her care for her children, she has become untidy in
her personal appearance, and the old poetic charm only
in the rarest moments returns.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P48"></SPAN>48}</span></p>
<p>Natasha, in fact, seems to show us the limitations in
Tolstoy's patriarchal view of woman; he regards her not
really as an individual, an end in herself, but as a means
towards the race, and the individual loss is nothing to
regret; he seems to realise and rejoice in the shock he
gives us when he tells us of Natasha the generous
become parsimonious, of Natasha the sylph tearing round
in a dirty morning wrapper; but we are inclined to resent
the admiration accorded to this second Natasha, who
limits her sympathies to such a narrow circle, and who
has become a maternal egoist of the most colossal type.
Tolstoy himself found, as we have seen, in his relations
with his wife, that the maternal egoist is not quite the
finest ideal of humanity.</p>
<p>It is impossible to study in any detail the crowded
canvas of <i>War and Peace</i>, but the minor characters are
often among the best-drawn and the most attractive.</p>
<p>The whole Rostof group are delightfully depicted.
Petya Rostof, the dear boy who is killed, has almost
the same charm as Natasha. He has intense affections,
is full of amusing boyish interests, and possesses a lofty
ideal of patriotism; he likes to think himself a hero, and
really is one. When only sixteen he insists on joining
the army: his brother's friends try to protect him and
to keep him out of danger, but his gallantry leads him
into every peril, and he is killed, quite uselessly and
casually, while exposing himself in a dangerous
engagement. It is one more example of the immense futility
of war. Nikolai Rostof, Tolstoy's third hero, is more
commonplace than Pierre and Prince Andrei, but he
gives Tolstoy a splendid opportunity for depicting the
psychology of war; we are shown all his emotions
from the day when he first joins, is alternately elated
with a feeling of heroism and depressed by the conviction
that he is a coward, to the time when, as a seasoned
veteran, he can hardly recall his old excitement and his
old dread; the only trace his former fear has left in his
mind shows itself in his compassion for the younger
officers, whose mental sufferings he so fully understands.
Nikolai Rostof has always a certain humility of
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P49"></SPAN>49}</span>
character; he is very ready to reverence others, and is
attracted to the Princess Mariya by her great spiritual
superiority to himself.</p>
<p>The artillery officer, Tushin, to whom we have
already alluded, is evidently Tolstoy's type of a true
Russian hero. He is simplicity and modesty itself; his
magnificent courage is not in the least sanguinary, but
is accompanied by a heart as tender as a woman's;
when he is returning after his terrific day he is still kind
enough to help the wounded Nikolai Rostof on to the
blood-bespattered gun-carriage.</p>
<p>Nor does Tushin stand alone; continually in <i>War
and Peace</i>, as in so many other works, Tolstoy makes us
feel the enormous value of man as man.</p>
<p>With the really eminent we cannot but feel that he
is less successful. One curious feature of the book is
its almost Eastern fatalism. Tolstoy will allow practically
nothing to the will of man as an individual; all
the great events of the book are due to the power of an
unknown destiny urging men on to deeds which are,
even to themselves, unexpected and surprising, while
the men who think that they are directing all are really
as helplessly incapable of any true control as a fly
revolving upon a cart-wheel.</p>
<p>Tolstoy is especially embittered towards Napoleon;
he does not blame him, like Byron, because his greatness
was "antithetically mixed" with so much of meanness;
he does not blame him, like Shelley, because, possessing
in his genius a unique opportunity for good, he chose to
divert that genius to his own self-aggrandisement.</p>
<p>Tolstoy goes much further; he is so excessively
angry that he altogether denies Napoleon's genius; he
will not acknowledge him to have any talent except of
the most trifling kind; to him Napoleon is a mean-souled,
small-minded man, contemptible in everything,
colossal in his vanity but great in nothing besides. And
when the reader asks in amazement how Napoleon won
his tremendous victories, how he gained the unparalleled
devotion of his army, Tolstoy answers contemptuously
that the victories were due mainly to destiny, to the
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P50"></SPAN>50}</span>
unknown Ruler of the world who so ordained, and that
the devotion of the army was mere hypnotism. Nor is
it only from Napoleon that he endeavours to strip the
borrowed plumes; in several amusing studies Napoleon's
great soldier-marshals are revealed as vain, childish, and
even absurd, proud of their uniforms and almost
infantile in their love of decorations. But, it must be
confessed, Tolstoy is impartial in his dislike of the
eminent; he is almost as hard on the Russian generals
as on the French. The one man whom he
praises—Kutuzof—is the man whom the Russians themselves
failed to appreciate, and Tolstoy admires him for the
somewhat curious reason that he also was a fatalist,
that he believed no general could do much, and was
always, with Fabian tactics, waiting upon the event.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap05"></SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P51"></SPAN>51}</span></p>
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