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<h2> CHAPTER IV </h2>
<p>After the encounter at Vyazma, where Kutuzov had been unable to hold back
his troops in their anxiety to overwhelm and cut off the enemy and so on,
the farther movement of the fleeing French, and of the Russians who
pursued them, continued as far as Krasnoe without a battle. The flight was
so rapid that the Russian army pursuing the French could not keep up with
them; cavalry and artillery horses broke down, and the information
received of the movements of the French was never reliable.</p>
<p>The men in the Russian army were so worn out by this continuous marching
at the rate of twenty-seven miles a day that they could not go any faster.</p>
<p>To realize the degree of exhaustion of the Russian army it is only
necessary to grasp clearly the meaning of the fact that, while not losing
more than five thousand killed and wounded after Tarutino and less than a
hundred prisoners, the Russian army which left that place a hundred
thousand strong reached Krasnoe with only fifty thousand.</p>
<p>The rapidity of the Russian pursuit was just as destructive to our army as
the flight of the French was to theirs. The only difference was that the
Russian army moved voluntarily, with no such threat of destruction as hung
over the French, and that the sick Frenchmen were left behind in enemy
hands while the sick Russians left behind were among their own people. The
chief cause of the wastage of Napoleon's army was the rapidity of its
movement, and a convincing proof of this is the corresponding decrease of
the Russian army.</p>
<p>Kutuzov as far as was in his power, instead of trying to check the
movement of the French as was desired in Petersburg and by the Russian
army generals, directed his whole activity here, as he had done at
Tarutino and Vyazma, to hastening it on while easing the movement of our
army.</p>
<p>But besides this, since the exhaustion and enormous diminution of the army
caused by the rapidity of the advance had become evident, another reason
for slackening the pace and delaying presented itself to Kutuzov. The aim
of the Russian army was to pursue the French. The road the French would
take was unknown, and so the closer our troops trod on their heels the
greater distance they had to cover. Only by following at some distance
could one cut across the zigzag path of the French. All the artful
maneuvers suggested by our generals meant fresh movements of the army and
a lengthening of its marches, whereas the only reasonable aim was to
shorten those marches. To that end Kutuzov's activity was directed during
the whole campaign from Moscow to Vilna—not casually or
intermittently but so consistently that he never once deviated from it.</p>
<p>Kutuzov felt and knew—not by reasoning or science but with the whole
of his Russian being—what every Russian soldier felt: that the
French were beaten, that the enemy was flying and must be driven out; but
at the same time he like the soldiers realized all the hardship of this
march, the rapidity of which was unparalleled for such a time of the year.</p>
<p>But to the generals, especially the foreign ones in the Russian army, who
wished to distinguish themselves, to astonish somebody, and for some
reason to capture a king or a duke—it seemed that now—when any
battle must be horrible and senseless—was the very time to fight and
conquer somebody. Kutuzov merely shrugged his shoulders when one after
another they presented projects of maneuvers to be made with those
soldiers—ill-shod, insufficiently clad, and half starved—who
within a month and without fighting a battle had dwindled to half their
number, and who at the best if the flight continued would have to go a
greater distance than they had already traversed, before they reached the
frontier.</p>
<p>This longing to distinguish themselves, to maneuver, to overthrow, and to
cut off showed itself particularly whenever the Russians stumbled on the
French army.</p>
<p>So it was at Krasnoe, where they expected to find one of the three French
columns and stumbled instead on Napoleon himself with sixteen thousand
men. Despite all Kutuzov's efforts to avoid that ruinous encounter and to
preserve his troops, the massacre of the broken mob of French soldiers by
worn-out Russians continued at Krasnoe for three days.</p>
<p>Toll wrote a disposition: "The first column will march to so and so," etc.
And as usual nothing happened in accord with the disposition. Prince
Eugene of Wurttemberg fired from a hill over the French crowds that were
running past, and demanded reinforcements which did not arrive. The
French, avoiding the Russians, dispersed and hid themselves in the forest
by night, making their way round as best they could, and continued their
flight.</p>
<p>Miloradovich, who said he did not want to know anything about the
commissariat affairs of his detachment, and could never be found when he
was wanted—that chevalier sans peur et sans reproche * as he styled
himself—who was fond of parleys with the French, sent envoys
demanding their surrender, wasted time, and did not do what he was ordered
to do.</p>
<p>* Knight without fear and without reproach.<br/></p>
<p>"I give you that column, lads," he said, riding up to the troops and
pointing out the French to the cavalry.</p>
<p>And the cavalry, with spurs and sabers urging on horses that could
scarcely move, trotted with much effort to the column presented to them—that
is to say, to a crowd of Frenchmen stark with cold, frost-bitten, and
starving—and the column that had been presented to them threw down
its arms and surrendered as it had long been anxious to do.</p>
<p>At Krasnoe they took twenty-six thousand prisoners, several hundred
cannon, and a stick called a "marshal's staff," and disputed as to who had
distinguished himself and were pleased with their achievement—though
they much regretted not having taken Napoleon, or at least a marshal or a
hero of some sort, and reproached one another and especially Kutuzov for
having failed to do so.</p>
<p>These men, carried away by their passions, were but blind tools of the
most melancholy law of necessity, but considered themselves heroes and
imagined that they were accomplishing a most noble and honorable deed.
They blamed Kutuzov and said that from the very beginning of the campaign
he had prevented their vanquishing Napoleon, that he thought of nothing
but satisfying his passions and would not advance from the Linen Factories
because he was comfortable there, that at Krasnoe he checked the advance
because on learning that Napoleon was there he had quite lost his head,
and that it was probable that he had an understanding with Napoleon and
had been bribed by him, and so on, and so on.</p>
<p>Not only did his contemporaries, carried away by their passions, talk in
this way, but posterity and history have acclaimed Napoleon as grand,
while Kutuzov is described by foreigners as a crafty, dissolute, weak old
courtier, and by Russians as something indefinite—a sort of puppet
useful only because he had a Russian name.</p>
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