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<h2> CHAPTER V </h2>
<p>Next day the decrepit Kutuzov, having given orders to be called early,
said his prayers, dressed, and, with an unpleasant consciousness of having
to direct a battle he did not approve of, got into his caleche and drove
from Letashovka (a village three and a half miles from Tarutino) to the
place where the attacking columns were to meet. He sat in the caleche,
dozing and waking up by turns, and listening for any sound of firing on
the right as an indication that the action had begun. But all was still
quiet. A damp dull autumn morning was just dawning. On approaching
Tarutino Kutuzov noticed cavalrymen leading their horses to water across
the road along which he was driving. Kutuzov looked at them searchingly,
stopped his carriage, and inquired what regiment they belonged to. They
belonged to a column that should have been far in front and in ambush long
before then. "It may be a mistake," thought the old commander in chief.
But a little further on he saw infantry regiments with their arms piled
and the soldiers, only partly dressed, eating their rye porridge and
carrying fuel. He sent for an officer. The officer reported that no order
to advance had been received.</p>
<p>"How! Not rec..." Kutuzov began, but checked himself immediately and sent
for a senior officer. Getting out of his caleche, he waited with drooping
head and breathing heavily, pacing silently up and down. When Eykhen, the
officer of the general staff whom he had summoned, appeared, Kutuzov went
purple in the face, not because that officer was to blame for the mistake,
but because he was an object of sufficient importance for him to vent his
wrath on. Trembling and panting the old man fell into that state of fury
in which he sometimes used to roll on the ground, and he fell upon Eykhen,
threatening him with his hands, shouting and loading him with gross abuse.
Another man, Captain Brozin, who happened to turn up and who was not at
all to blame, suffered the same fate.</p>
<p>"What sort of another blackguard are you? I'll have you shot! Scoundrels!"
yelled Kutuzov in a hoarse voice, waving his arms and reeling.</p>
<p>He was suffering physically. He, the commander in chief, a Serene Highness
who everybody said possessed powers such as no man had ever had in Russia,
to be placed in this position—made the laughingstock of the whole
army! "I needn't have been in such a hurry to pray about today, or have
kept awake thinking everything over all night," thought he to himself.
"When I was a chit of an officer no one would have dared to mock me so...
and now!" He was in a state of physical suffering as if from corporal
punishment, and could not avoid expressing it by cries of anger and
distress. But his strength soon began to fail him, and looking about him,
conscious of having said much that was amiss, he again got into his
caleche and drove back in silence.</p>
<p>His wrath, once expended, did not return, and blinking feebly he listened
to excuses and self-justifications (Ermolov did not come to see him till
the next day) and to the insistence of Bennigsen, Konovnitsyn, and Toll
that the movement that had miscarried should be executed next day. And
once more Kutuzov had to consent.</p>
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