On the Pratzen Heights, where he had
fallen with the flagstaff in his hand, lay Prince
Andrew Bolkonski bleeding profusely and unconsciously
uttering a gentle, piteous, and childlike moan.
Toward evening he ceased moaning and
became quite still. He did not know how long
his unconsciousness lasted. Suddenly he again
felt that he was alive and suffering from a burning,
lacerating pain in his head.
“Where is it, that lofty sky
that I did not know till now, but saw today?”
was his first thought. “And I did not know
this suffering either,” he thought. “Yes,
I did not know anything, anything at all till now.
But where am I?”
He listened and heard the sound of
approaching horses, and voices speaking French.
He opened his eyes. Above him again was the same
lofty sky with clouds that had risen and were floating
still higher, and between them gleamed blue infinity.
He did not turn his head and did not see those who,
judging by the sound of hoofs and voices, had ridden
up and stopped near him.
It was Napoleon accompanied by two
aides-de-camp. Bonaparte riding over the battlefield
had given final orders to strengthen the batteries
firing at the Augesd Dam and was looking at the killed
and wounded left on the field.
“Fine men!” remarked Napoleon,
looking at a dead Russian grenadier, who, with his
face buried in the ground and a blackened nape, lay
on his stomach with an already stiffened arm flung
wide.
“The ammunition for the guns
in position is exhausted, Your Majesty,” said
an adjutant who had come from the batteries that were
firing at Augesd.
“Have some brought from the
reserve,” said Napoleon, and having gone on
a few steps he stopped before Prince Andrew, who lay
on his back with the flagstaff that had been dropped
beside him. (The flag had already been taken by the
French as a trophy.)
“That’s a fine death!”
said Napoleon as he gazed at Bolkonski.
Prince Andrew understood that this
was said of him and that it was Napoleon who said
it. He heard the speaker addressed as Sire.
But he heard the words as he might have heard the
buzzing of a fly. Not only did they not interest
him, but he took no notice of them and at once forgot
them. His head was burning, he felt himself bleeding
to death, and he saw above him the remote, lofty,
and everlasting sky. He knew it was Napoleon—his
hero—but at that moment Napoleon seemed
to him such a small, insignificant creature compared
with what was passing now between himself and that
lofty infinite sky with the clouds flying over it.
At that moment it meant nothing to him who might be
standing over him, or what was said of him; he was
only glad that people were standing near him and only
wished that they would help him and bring him back
to life, which seemed to him so beautiful now that
he had today learned to understand it so differently.
He collected all his strength, to stir and utter a
sound. He feebly moved his leg and uttered a
weak, sickly groan which aroused his own pity.
“Ah! He is alive,”
said Napoleon. “Lift this young man up and
carry him to the dressing station.”
Having said this, Napoleon rode on
to meet Marshal Lannes, who, hat in hand, rode up
smiling to the Emperor to congratulate him on the
victory.
Prince Andrew remembered nothing more:
he lost consciousness from the terrible pain of being
lifted onto the stretcher, the jolting while being
moved, and the probing of his wound at the dressing
station. He did not regain consciousness till
late in the day, when with other wounded and captured
Russian officers he was carried to the hospital.
During this transfer he felt a little stronger and
was able to look about him and even speak.
The first words he heard on coming
to his senses were those of a French convoy officer,
who said rapidly: “We must halt here:
the Emperor will pass here immediately; it will please
him to see these gentlemen prisoners.”
“There are so many prisoners
today, nearly the whole Russian army, that he is probably
tired of them,” said another officer.
“All the same! They say
this one is the commander of all the Emperor Alexander’s
Guards,” said the first one, indicating a Russian
officer in the white uniform of the Horse Guards.
Bolkonski recognized Prince Repnin
whom he had met in Petersburg society. Beside
him stood a lad of nineteen, also a wounded officer
of the Horse Guards.
Bonaparte, having come up at a gallop,
stopped his horse.
“Which is the senior?”
he asked, on seeing the prisoners.
They named the colonel, Prince Repnin.
“You are the commander of the
Emperor Alexander’s regiment of Horse Guards?”
asked Napoleon.
“I commanded a squadron,” replied Repnin.
“Your regiment fulfilled its duty honorably,”
said Napoleon.
“The praise of a great commander
is a soldier’s highest reward,” said Repnin.
“I bestow it with pleasure,”
said Napoleon. “And who is that young man
beside you?”
Prince Repnin named Lieutenant Sukhtelen.
After looking at him Napoleon smiled.
“He’s very young to come to meddle with
us.”
“Youth is no hindrance to courage,”
muttered Sukhtelen in a failing voice.
“A splendid reply!” said Napoleon.
“Young man, you will go far!”
Prince Andrew, who had also been brought
forward before the Emperor’s eyes to complete
the show of prisoners, could not fail to attract his
attention. Napoleon apparently remembered seeing
him on the battlefield and, addressing him, again
used the epithet “young man” that was
connected in his memory with Prince Andrew.
“Well, and you, young man,” said he.
“How do you feel, mon brave?”
Though five minutes before, Prince
Andrew had been able to say a few words to the soldiers
who were carrying him, now with his eyes fixed straight
on Napoleon, he was silent…. So insignificant
at that moment seemed to him all the interests that
engrossed Napoleon, so mean did his hero himself with
his paltry vanity and joy in victory appear, compared
to the lofty, equitable, and kindly sky which he had
seen and understood, that he could not answer him.
Everything seemed so futile and insignificant
in comparison with the stern and solemn train of thought
that weakness from loss of blood, suffering, and the
nearness of death aroused in him. Looking into
Napoleon’s eyes Prince Andrew thought of the
insignificance of greatness, the unimportance of life
which no one could understand, and the still greater
unimportance of death, the meaning of which no one
alive could understand or explain.
The Emperor without waiting for an
answer turned away and said to one of the officers
as he went: “Have these gentlemen attended
to and taken to my bivouac; let my doctor, Larrey,
examine their wounds. Au revoir, Prince Repnin!”
and he spurred his horse and galloped away.
His face shone with self-satisfaction and pleasure.
The soldiers who had carried Prince
Andrew had noticed and taken the little gold icon
Princess Mary had hung round her brother’s neck,
but seeing the favor the Emperor showed the prisoners,
they now hastened to return the holy image.
Prince Andrew did not see how and
by whom it was replaced, but the little icon with
its thin gold chain suddenly appeared upon his chest
outside his uniform.
“It would be good,” thought
Prince Andrew, glancing at the icon his sister had
hung round his neck with such emotion and reverence,
“it would be good if everything were as clear
and simple as it seems to Mary. How good it would
be to know where to seek for help in this life, and
what to expect after it beyond the grave! How
happy and calm I should be if I could now say:
’Lord, have mercy on me!’... But to
whom should I say that? Either to a Power indefinable,
incomprehensible, which I not only cannot address but
which I cannot even express in words—the
Great All or Nothing-” said he to himself, “or
to that God who has been sewn into this amulet by Mary!
There is nothing certain, nothing at all except the
unimportance of everything I understand, and the greatness
of something incomprehensible but all-important.”
The stretchers moved on. At every
jolt he again felt unendurable pain; his feverishness
increased and he grew delirious. Visions of his
father, wife, sister, and future son, and the tenderness
he had felt the night before the battle, the figure
of the insignificant little Napoleon, and above all
this the lofty sky, formed the chief subjects of his
delirious fancies.
The quiet home life and peaceful happiness
of Bald Hills presented itself to him. He was
already enjoying that happiness when that little Napoleon
had suddenly appeared with his unsympathizing look
of shortsighted delight at the misery of others, and
doubts and torments had followed, and only the heavens
promised peace. Toward morning all these dreams
melted and merged into the chaos and darkness of unconciousness
and oblivion which in the opinion of Napoleon’s
doctor, Larrey, was much more likely to end in death
than in convalescence.
“He is a nervous, bilious subject,”
said Larrey, “and will not recover.”
And Prince Andrew, with others fatally
wounded, was left to the care of the inhabitants of
the district.