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<h2> CHAPTER XXVI </h2>
<p>Toward four o'clock in the afternoon Murat's troops were entering Moscow.
In front rode a detachment of Wurttemberg hussars and behind them rode the
King of Naples himself accompanied by a numerous suite.</p>
<p>About the middle of the Arbat Street, near the Church of the Miraculous
Icon of St. Nicholas, Murat halted to await news from the advanced
detachment as to the condition in which they had found the citadel, le
Kremlin.</p>
<p>Around Murat gathered a group of those who had remained in Moscow. They
all stared in timid bewilderment at the strange, long-haired commander
dressed up in feathers and gold.</p>
<p>"Is that their Tsar himself? He's not bad!" low voices could be heard
saying.</p>
<p>An interpreter rode up to the group.</p>
<p>"Take off your cap... your caps!" These words went from one to another in
the crowd. The interpreter addressed an old porter and asked if it was far
to the Kremlin. The porter, listening in perplexity to the unfamiliar
Polish accent and not realizing that the interpreter was speaking Russian,
did not understand what was being said to him and slipped behind the
others.</p>
<p>Murat approached the interpreter and told him to ask where the Russian
army was. One of the Russians understood what was asked and several voices
at once began answering the interpreter. A French officer, returning from
the advanced detachment, rode up to Murat and reported that the gates of
the citadel had been barricaded and that there was probably an ambuscade
there.</p>
<p>"Good!" said Murat and, turning to one of the gentlemen in his suite,
ordered four light guns to be moved forward to fire at the gates.</p>
<p>The guns emerged at a trot from the column following Murat and advanced up
the Arbat. When they reached the end of the Vozdvizhenka Street they
halted and drew in the Square. Several French officers superintended the
placing of the guns and looked at the Kremlin through field glasses.</p>
<p>The bells in the Kremlin were ringing for vespers, and this sound troubled
the French. They imagined it to be a call to arms. A few infantrymen ran
to the Kutafyev Gate. Beams and wooden screens had been put there, and two
musket shots rang out from under the gate as soon as an officer and men
began to run toward it. A general who was standing by the guns shouted
some words of command to the officer, and the latter ran back again with
his men.</p>
<p>The sound of three more shots came from the gate.</p>
<p>One shot struck a French soldier's foot, and from behind the screens came
the strange sound of a few voices shouting. Instantly as at a word of
command the expression of cheerful serenity on the faces of the French
general, officers, and men changed to one of determined concentrated
readiness for strife and suffering. To all of them from the marshal to the
least soldier, that place was not the Vozdvizhenka, Mokhavaya, or Kutafyev
Street, nor the Troitsa Gate (places familiar in Moscow), but a new
battlefield which would probably prove sanguinary. And all made ready for
that battle. The cries from the gates ceased. The guns were advanced, the
artillerymen blew the ash off their linstocks, and an officer gave the
word "Fire!" This was followed by two whistling sounds of canister shot,
one after another. The shot rattled against the stone of the gate and upon
the wooden beams and screens, and two wavering clouds of smoke rose over
the Square.</p>
<p>A few instants after the echo of the reports resounding over the
stone-built Kremlin had died away the French heard a strange sound above
their head. Thousands of crows rose above the walls and circled in the
air, cawing and noisily flapping their wings. Together with that sound
came a solitary human cry from the gateway and amid the smoke appeared the
figure of a bareheaded man in a peasant's coat. He grasped a musket and
took aim at the French. "Fire!" repeated the officer once more, and the
reports of a musket and of two cannon shots were heard simultaneously. The
gate was again hidden by smoke.</p>
<p>Nothing more stirred behind the screens and the French infantry soldiers
and officers advanced to the gate. In the gateway lay three wounded and
four dead. Two men in peasant coats ran away at the foot of the wall,
toward the Znamenka.</p>
<p>"Clear that away!" said the officer, pointing to the beams and the
corpses, and the French soldiers, after dispatching the wounded, threw the
corpses over the parapet.</p>
<p>Who these men were nobody knew. "Clear that away!" was all that was said
of them, and they were thrown over the parapet and removed later on that
they might not stink. Thiers alone dedicates a few eloquent lines to their
memory: "These wretches had occupied the sacred citadel, having supplied
themselves with guns from the arsenal, and fired" (the wretches) "at the
French. Some of them were sabered and the Kremlin was purged of their
presence."</p>
<p>Murat was informed that the way had been cleared. The French entered the
gates and began pitching their camp in the Senate Square. Out of the
windows of the Senate House the soldiers threw chairs into the Square for
fuel and kindled fires there.</p>
<p>Other detachments passed through the Kremlin and encamped along the
Moroseyka, the Lubyanka, and Pokrovka Streets. Others quartered themselves
along the Vozdvizhenka, the Nikolski, and the Tverskoy Streets. No masters
of the houses being found anywhere, the French were not billeted on the
inhabitants as is usual in towns but lived in it as in a camp.</p>
<p>Though tattered, hungry, worn out, and reduced to a third of their
original number, the French entered Moscow in good marching order. It was
a weary and famished, but still a fighting and menacing army. But it
remained an army only until its soldiers had dispersed into their
different lodgings. As soon as the men of the various regiments began to
disperse among the wealthy and deserted houses, the army was lost forever
and there came into being something nondescript, neither citizens nor
soldiers but what are known as marauders. When five weeks later these same
men left Moscow, they no longer formed an army. They were a mob of
marauders, each carrying a quantity of articles which seemed to him
valuable or useful. The aim of each man when he left Moscow was no longer,
as it had been, to conquer, but merely to keep what he had acquired. Like
a monkey which puts its paw into the narrow neck of a jug, and having
seized a handful of nuts will not open its fist for fear of losing what it
holds, and therefore perishes, the French when they left Moscow had
inevitably to perish because they carried their loot with them, yet to
abandon what they had stolen was as impossible for them as it is for the
monkey to open its paw and let go of its nuts. Ten minutes after each
regiment had entered a Moscow district, not a soldier or officer was left.
Men in military uniforms and Hessian boots could be seen through the
windows, laughing and walking through the rooms. In cellars and storerooms
similar men were busy among the provisions, and in the yards unlocking or
breaking open coach house and stable doors, lighting fires in kitchens and
kneading and baking bread with rolled-up sleeves, and cooking; or
frightening, amusing, or caressing women and children. There were many
such men both in the shops and houses—but there was no army.</p>
<p>Order after order was issued by the French commanders that day forbidding
the men to disperse about the town, sternly forbidding any violence to the
inhabitants or any looting, and announcing a roll call for that very
evening. But despite all these measures the men, who had till then
constituted an army, flowed all over the wealthy, deserted city with its
comforts and plentiful supplies. As a hungry herd of cattle keeps well
together when crossing a barren field, but gets out of hand and at once
disperses uncontrollably as soon as it reaches rich pastures, so did the
army disperse all over the wealthy city.</p>
<p>No residents were left in Moscow, and the soldiers—like water
percolating through sand—spread irresistibly through the city in all
directions from the Kremlin into which they had first marched. The
cavalry, on entering a merchant's house that had been abandoned and
finding there stabling more than sufficient for their horses, went on, all
the same, to the next house which seemed to them better. Many of them
appropriated several houses, chalked their names on them, and quarreled
and even fought with other companies for them. Before they had had time to
secure quarters the soldiers ran out into the streets to see the city and,
hearing that everything had been abandoned, rushed to places where
valuables were to be had for the taking. The officers followed to check
the soldiers and were involuntarily drawn into doing the same. In Carriage
Row carriages had been left in the shops, and generals flocked there to
select caleches and coaches for themselves. The few inhabitants who had
remained invited commanding officers to their houses, hoping thereby to
secure themselves from being plundered. There were masses of wealth and
there seemed no end to it. All around the quarters occupied by the French
were other regions still unexplored and unoccupied where, they thought,
yet greater riches might be found. And Moscow engulfed the army ever
deeper and deeper. When water is spilled on dry ground both the dry ground
and the water disappear and mud results; and in the same way the entry of
the famished army into the rich and deserted city resulted in fires and
looting and the destruction of both the army and the wealthy city.</p>
<p>The French attributed the Fire of Moscow au patriotisme feroce de
Rostopchine, * the Russians to the barbarity of the French. In reality,
however, it was not, and could not be, possible to explain the burning of
Moscow by making any individual, or any group of people, responsible for
it. Moscow was burned because it found itself in a position in which any
town built of wood was bound to burn, quite apart from whether it had, or
had not, a hundred and thirty inferior fire engines. Deserted Moscow had
to burn as inevitably as a heap of shavings has to burn on which sparks
continually fall for several days. A town built of wood, where scarcely a
day passes without conflagrations when the house owners are in residence
and a police force is present, cannot help burning when its inhabitants
have left it and it is occupied by soldiers who smoke pipes, make
campfires of the Senate chairs in the Senate Square, and cook themselves
meals twice a day. In peacetime it is only necessary to billet troops in
the villages of any district and the number of fires in that district
immediately increases. How much then must the probability of fire be
increased in an abandoned, wooden town where foreign troops are quartered.
"Le patriotisme feroce de Rostopchine" and the barbarity of the French
were not to blame in the matter. Moscow was set on fire by the soldiers'
pipes, kitchens, and campfires, and by the carelessness of enemy soldiers
occupying houses they did not own. Even if there was any arson (which is
very doubtful, for no one had any reason to burn the houses—in any
case a troublesome and dangerous thing to do), arson cannot be regarded as
the cause, for the same thing would have happened without any
incendiarism.</p>
<p>* To Rostopchin's ferocious patriotism.<br/></p>
<p>However tempting it might be for the French to blame Rostopchin's ferocity
and for Russians to blame the scoundrel Bonaparte, or later on to place an
heroic torch in the hands of their own people, it is impossible not to see
that there could be no such direct cause of the fire, for Moscow had to
burn as every village, factory, or house must burn which is left by its
owners and in which strangers are allowed to live and cook their porridge.
Moscow was burned by its inhabitants, it is true, but by those who had
abandoned it and not by those who remained in it. Moscow when occupied by
the enemy did not remain intact like Berlin, Vienna, and other towns,
simply because its inhabitants abandoned it and did not welcome the French
with bread and salt, nor bring them the keys of the city.</p>
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