登陆注册
4793600000160

第160章

He might…not only might, but ought to have gone up to the Emperor. And it was a unique chance of showing his devotion to the Emperor. And he had not made use of it.… “What have I done?” he thought. And he turned his horse and galloped back to the spot where he had seen the Emperor; but there was no one now beyond the ditch. There were only transport waggons and carriages going by. From one carrier Rostov learned that Kutuzov’s staff were not far off in the village towards which the transport waggons were going. Rostov followed them.

In front of him was Kutuzov’s postillion leading horses in horse-cloths. A baggage waggon followed the postillion, and behind the waggon walked an old bandy-legged servant in a cap and a cape.

“Tit, hey. Tit!” said the postillion.

“Eh,” responded the old man absent-mindedly.

“Tit! Stupay molotit!” (“Tit, go a-thrashing!”)

“Ugh, the fool, pugh!” said the old man, spitting angrily. A short interval of silence followed, and then the same joke was repeated.

By five o’clock in the evening the battle had been lost at every point. More than a hundred cannons were in the possession of the French. Przhebyshevsky and his corps had surrendered. The other columns had retreated, with the loss of half their men, in confused, disorderly masses. All that were left of Langeron’s and Dohturov’s forces were crowded together in hopeless confusion on the dikes and banks of the ponds near the village of Augest.

At six o’clock the only firing still to be heard was a heavy cannonade on the French side from numerous batteries ranged on the slope of the table-land of Pratzen, and directed at our retreating troops.

In the rearguard Dohturov and the rest, rallying their battalions, had been firing at the French cavalry who were pursuing them. It was begining to get dark. On the narrow dam of Augest, where the old miller in his peaked cap had sat for so many years with his fishing tackle, while his grandson, with tucked-up shirt-sleeves, turned over the silvery, floundering fish in the net; on that dam where the Moravians, in their shaggy caps and blue jackets, had for so many years peacefully driven their horses and waggons, loaded with wheat, to the mill and driven back over the same dam, dusty with flour that whitened their waggons—on that narrow dam men, made hideous by the terror of death, now crowded together, amid army waggons and cannons, under horses’ feet and between carriage-wheels, crushing each other, dying, stepping over the dying, and killing each other, only to be killed in the same way a few steps further on.

Every ten seconds a cannon ball flew lashing the air and thumped down, or a grenade burst in the midst of that dense crowd, slaying men and splashing blood on those who stood near. Dolohov, wounded in the hand, with some dozen soldiers of his company on foot (he was already an officer) and his general on horseback, were the sole representatives of a whole regiment. Carried along by the crowd, they were squeezed in the approach to the dam and stood still, jammed in on all sides because a horse with a cannon had fallen, and the crowd were dragging it away. A cannon ball killed some one behind them, another fell in front of them and spurted the blood upon Dolohov. The crowd moved forward desperately, was jammed, moved a few steps and was stopped again. “Only to get over these hundred steps and certain safety: stay here two minutes and death to a certainty,” each man was thinking.

Dolohov standing in the centre of the crowd, forced his way to the edge of the dam, knocking down two soldiers, and ran on to the slippery ice that covered the millpond.

“Turn this way!” he shouted, bounding over the ice, which cracked under him. “Turn this way!” he kept shouting to the cannon. “It bears!…” The ice bore him, but swayed and cracked, and it was evident that, not to speak of a cannon or a crowd of people, it would give way in a moment under him alone. Men gazed at him and pressed to the bank, unable to bring themselves to step on to the ice. The general of his regiment on horseback at the end of the dam lifted his hand and opened his mouth to speak to Dolohov. Suddenly one of the cannon balls flew so low over the heads of the crowd that all ducked. There was a wet splash, as the general fell from his horse into a pool of blood. No one glanced at the general, no one thought of picking him up.

“On to the ice! Get on the ice! Get on! turn! don’t you hear! Get on!” innumerable voices fell to shouting immediately after the ball had struck the general, not knowing themselves what and why they were shouting.

One of the hindmost cannons that had been got on to the dam was turned off upon the ice. Crowds of soldiers began running from the dam on to the frozen pond. The ice cracked under one of the foremost soldiers, and one leg slipped into the water. He tried to right himself and floundered up to his waist. The soldiers nearest tried to draw back, the driver of the cannon pulled up his horse, but still the shouts were heard from behind: “Get on to the ice, why are you stopping? go on! go on!” And screams of terror were heard in the crowd. The soldiers near the cannon waved at the horses, and lashed them to make them turn and go on. The horses moved from the dam’s edge. The ice that had held under the foot-soldiers broke in a huge piece, and some forty men who were on it dashed, some forwards, some backwards, drowning one another.

Still the cannon balls whizzed as regularly and thumped on to the ice, into the water, and most often into the crowd that covered the dam, the pond and the bank.

同类推荐
  • The Age Of Reason

    The Age Of Reason

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 辽阳州志

    辽阳州志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 骊宫高-美天子重惜

    骊宫高-美天子重惜

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大乘起信论别记(本)

    大乘起信论别记(本)

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 疡医大全

    疡医大全

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 钢铁燃魂

    钢铁燃魂

    把一个刚毕业两年的工科男丢到动荡战乱的时空去,结果会不会瞬间扑街?魏斯同学的穿越稍稍有些坑爹,他自带半成品的“敌我识别系统”来到了一个陆地面积多过海洋、战舰可以在天空飞行的类地星球,附身在一个手工枪械作坊家族的继承人身上。是的,没有搞错,在这个时空,他们家的作坊还在手工制作镶金嵌银的工艺枪械!啥?想当个与世无争的败家子?抱歉,内有军火巨头的挖角打压,外有军事帝国的侵略威胁,这样的生活有如逆水行舟,不进则退。好在咱魏斯同学不但是个玩枪的高手,还是某著名军事杂志的骨灰级读者,各种战史谋略烂熟于胸,混着混着,貌似是要成为这乱世英豪的节奏啊……
  • Storyteller

    Storyteller

    A visitor from Peru, happening upon an exhibition of photographs from the Amazon jungle in an obscure Florentine picture gallery, finds his attention drawn to a picture of a tribal storyteller seated among a circle of Michiguenga Indians. There is something odd about the storyteller. He is too light-skinned to be an Indian. As the visitor stares at the photograph, it dawns on him that he knows this man. The storyteller is his long-lost friend, Saul Zuratas, his classmate from university who was thought to have disappeared in Israel. The Storyteller is a brilliant and compelling study of the world of the primitive and its place in our own modern lives.
  • 鬼谷子(中国古典文学荟萃)

    鬼谷子(中国古典文学荟萃)

    中国古典文学是中国文学史上闪烁着灿烂光辉的经典性作品或优秀作品,它是世界文学宝库中令人瞩目的瑰宝。几千年来,中国传统文化养育了中国古典文学,中国古典文学又大大丰富了中国传统文化,使传统文化更具有深刻的影响力。
  • 最糗穿越

    最糗穿越

    想看装叉的就别点了,想找牛叉的也别进了,那些东西这里都没有,这里有的只是一个精彩的故事,离奇的情节外加一点小小的幽默,如果能给你的闲暇时光带来一点快乐,将是我最大的荣幸。
  • 不一样的奋斗

    不一样的奋斗

    行走人生,不可或缺的智慧启迪,走向成功,独辟蹊径的奋斗指南。成功就像走路,前路不通的时候,停下来看清路况,你会发现,希望就在转角处。奋斗就是不停拼搏,永远不放弃希望,即使跌倒一万次,也要有一万零一次站起来的勇气,但奋斗不是稀里糊涂地努力,奋斗也应独辟蹊径。
  • 只为途中与你相见:仓央嘉措传与诗全集

    只为途中与你相见:仓央嘉措传与诗全集

    他像西西弗斯一样,被无法抗拒的命运困锁着,被高高在上的诸神无休无止地惩罚着,他是黄金囚笼里最高贵的犯人。虽然有芸芸众生对他顶礼膜拜,却没有一个人怜悯地抛给他囚笼的钥匙,诸神把世界托付给了他,他却只想要回他自己,要回那个最真的自己。
  • 男神借我一个抱抱

    男神借我一个抱抱

    婚礼篇:婚礼上,牧师问出了问题,只是迟迟得不到新娘的回应,下头议论纷纷,某男神紧张的看着某女,“宝贝儿,为什么不说话,你不愿意嫁给我吗?”某女满头大汗委屈地对他嘟嘴,指着圆鼓鼓的肚皮道,“烨,你儿子说他要参加你的婚礼,他要出来了!”说完,眼皮一翻,晕了过去。宁琛烨赶紧抱起她往医院跑去,婚礼什么的……等儿子出来了再说!!作者被吓哭了。!!!请假n天
  • 邪神的逃妻:绝色天命师

    邪神的逃妻:绝色天命师

    修行者?炼丹师?驯兽师?聚魂师?符咒师?众人嗤笑,她是可耻的废柴!她冷笑,废柴?笑话,她可是天下人不得不从天命师!说得直白,她就是天命所归!只不过她确实缺少可以修行的体质,所以她只能扮可爱吃老虎的谋尽天下,以报杀父之仇。可戏耍天下之后,她唯独算漏了一个人。这天,她面对大陆所有人的围攻,他问她:“你可曾真心爱过我?”“不曾。”不带丝毫感情,他方知她残忍无情,方知他也只有她可依。再见她,她已是高高在上的一国储君,身后立着的却是一位名不见经传的美貌男子,他和他们又该何去何从?
  • 铿锵红颜之风行天下

    铿锵红颜之风行天下

    一次意外,他把自己炸飞到了古代,重生为婴儿!他,紫罗国将军府的唯一男孙,被爷爷寄予厚望的孙子。幼小时:八个月能走,一岁吐字清晰,三岁吟诗作画,名声响彻整个越州,百姓云:生儿当如生如风。少年时:貌比潘安,风流倜傥,逃学频频,夜宿花街,争风吃醋,招蜂引蝶…成年时:替爷爷征战沙场,立下赫赫战功…但,很少有人知道,他,原来是个她。注:此文是女扮男装,轻松温馨纯真的专情文,也是我写的第三部小说,写得较为满意,呵呵^_^看完正文大概需要16元,番外和后续都是1元多。********************************************感谢婉如初上为我做的封面,o(∩_∩)o...第二个视频地址:?pstyle=1(是群里的管家点点做的,很精美哦,人物比第一个视频多一点,谢谢点点,辛苦了)********************************************我其他的文《桃花障》完结,半价,看完只需2.14元。《穿越之一代风云女皇》完结,半价,看完只需3.42元。《痴缠》,正文完结。新文《指鹿为姬》连载中……
  • 美国:从殖民地到惟一超级大国

    美国:从殖民地到惟一超级大国

    本书探讨了美国如何在两百多年中获得迅速发展,成为世界头号经济、军事强国的原因。