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<h2> CHAPTER XXI </h2>
<p>The Emperor rode to the square where, facing one another, a battalion of
the Preobrazhensk regiment stood on the right and a battalion of the
French Guards in their bearskin caps on the left.</p>
<p>As the Tsar rode up to one flank of the battalions, which presented arms,
another group of horsemen galloped up to the opposite flank, and at the
head of them Rostov recognized Napoleon. It could be no one else. He came
at a gallop, wearing a small hat, a blue uniform open over a white vest,
and the St. Andrew ribbon over his shoulder. He was riding a very fine
thoroughbred gray Arab horse with a crimson gold-embroidered saddlecloth.
On approaching Alexander he raised his hat, and as he did so, Rostov, with
his cavalryman's eye, could not help noticing that Napoleon did not sit
well or firmly in the saddle. The battalions shouted "Hurrah!" and "Vive
l'Empereur!" Napoleon said something to Alexander, and both Emperors
dismounted and took each other's hands. Napoleon's face wore an unpleasant
and artificial smile. Alexander was saying something affable to him.</p>
<p>In spite of the trampling of the French gendarmes' horses, which were
pushing back the crowd, Rostov kept his eyes on every movement of
Alexander and Bonaparte. It struck him as a surprise that Alexander
treated Bonaparte as an equal and that the latter was quite at ease with
the Tsar, as if such relations with an Emperor were an everyday matter to
him.</p>
<p>Alexander and Napoleon, with the long train of their suites, approached
the right flank of the Preobrazhensk battalion and came straight up to the
crowd standing there. The crowd unexpectedly found itself so close to the
Emperors that Rostov, standing in the front row, was afraid he might be
recognized.</p>
<p>"Sire, I ask your permission to present the Legion of Honor to the bravest
of your soldiers," said a sharp, precise voice, articulating every letter.</p>
<p>This was said by the undersized Napoleon, looking up straight into
Alexander's eyes. Alexander listened attentively to what was said to him
and, bending his head, smiled pleasantly.</p>
<p>"To him who has borne himself most bravely in this last war," added
Napoleon, accentuating each syllable, as with a composure and assurance
exasperating to Rostov, he ran his eyes over the Russian ranks drawn up
before him, who all presented arms with their eyes fixed on their Emperor.</p>
<p>"Will Your Majesty allow me to consult the colonel?" said Alexander and
took a few hasty steps toward Prince Kozlovski, the commander of the
battalion.</p>
<p>Bonaparte meanwhile began taking the glove off his small white hand, tore
it in doing so, and threw it away. An aide-de-camp behind him rushed
forward and picked it up.</p>
<p>"To whom shall it be given?" the Emperor Alexander asked Koslovski, in
Russian in a low voice.</p>
<p>"To whomever Your Majesty commands."</p>
<p>The Emperor knit his brows with dissatisfaction and, glancing back,
remarked:</p>
<p>"But we must give him an answer."</p>
<p>Kozlovski scanned the ranks resolutely and included Rostov in his
scrutiny.</p>
<p>"Can it be me?" thought Rostov.</p>
<p>"Lazarev!" the colonel called, with a frown, and Lazarev, the first
soldier in the rank, stepped briskly forward.</p>
<p>"Where are you off to? Stop here!" voices whispered to Lazarev who did not
know where to go. Lazarev stopped, casting a sidelong look at his colonel
in alarm. His face twitched, as often happens to soldiers called before
the ranks.</p>
<p>Napoleon slightly turned his head, and put his plump little hand out
behind him as if to take something. The members of his suite, guessing at
once what he wanted, moved about and whispered as they passed something
from one to another, and a page—the same one Rostov had seen the
previous evening at Boris'—ran forward and, bowing respectfully over
the outstretched hand and not keeping it waiting a moment, laid in it an
Order on a red ribbon. Napoleon, without looking, pressed two fingers
together and the badge was between them. Then he approached Lazarev (who
rolled his eyes and persistently gazed at his own monarch), looked round
at the Emperor Alexander to imply that what he was now doing was done for
the sake of his ally, and the small white hand holding the Order touched
one of Lazarev's buttons. It was as if Napoleon knew that it was only
necessary for his hand to deign to touch that soldier's breast for the
soldier to be forever happy, rewarded, and distinguished from everyone
else in the world. Napoleon merely laid the cross on Lazarev's breast and,
dropping his hand, turned toward Alexander as though sure that the cross
would adhere there. And it really did.</p>
<p>Officious hands, Russian and French, immediately seized the cross and
fastened it to the uniform. Lazarev glanced morosely at the little man
with white hands who was doing something to him and, still standing
motionless presenting arms, looked again straight into Alexander's eyes,
as if asking whether he should stand there, or go away, or do something
else. But receiving no orders, he remained for some time in that rigid
position.</p>
<p>The Emperors remounted and rode away. The Preobrazhensk battalion,
breaking rank, mingled with the French Guards and sat down at the tables
prepared for them.</p>
<p>Lazarev sat in the place of honor. Russian and French officers embraced
him, congratulated him, and pressed his hands. Crowds of officers and
civilians drew near merely to see him. A rumble of Russian and French
voices and laughter filled the air round the tables in the square. Two
officers with flushed faces, looking cheerful and happy, passed by Rostov.</p>
<p>"What d'you think of the treat? All on silver plate," one of them was
saying. "Have you seen Lazarev?"</p>
<p>"I have."</p>
<p>"Tomorrow, I hear, the Preobrazhenskis will give them a dinner."</p>
<p>"Yes, but what luck for Lazarev! Twelve hundred francs' pension for life."</p>
<p>"Here's a cap, lads!" shouted a Preobrazhensk soldier, donning a shaggy
French cap.</p>
<p>"It's a fine thing! First-rate!"</p>
<p>"Have you heard the password?" asked one Guards' officer of another. "The
day before yesterday it was 'Napoleon, France, bravoure'; yesterday,
'Alexandre, Russie, grandeur.' One day our Emperor gives it and next day
Napoleon. Tomorrow our Emperor will send a St. George's Cross to the
bravest of the French Guards. It has to be done. He must respond in kind."</p>
<p>Boris, too, with his friend Zhilinski, came to see the Preobrazhensk
banquet. On his way back, he noticed Rostov standing by the corner of a
house.</p>
<p>"Rostov! How d'you do? We missed one another," he said, and could not
refrain from asking what was the matter, so strangely dismal and troubled
was Rostov's face.</p>
<p>"Nothing, nothing," replied Rostov.</p>
<p>"You'll call round?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I will."</p>
<p>Rostov stood at that corner for a long time, watching the feast from a
distance. In his mind, a painful process was going on which he could not
bring to a conclusion. Terrible doubts rose in his soul. Now he remembered
Denisov with his changed expression, his submission, and the whole
hospital, with arms and legs torn off and its dirt and disease. So vividly
did he recall that hospital stench of dead flesh that he looked round to
see where the smell came from. Next he thought of that self-satisfied
Bonaparte, with his small white hand, who was now an Emperor, liked and
respected by Alexander. Then why those severed arms and legs and those
dead men?... Then again he thought of Lazarev rewarded and Denisov
punished and unpardoned. He caught himself harboring such strange thoughts
that he was frightened.</p>
<p>The smell of the food the Preobrazhenskis were eating and a sense of
hunger recalled him from these reflections; he had to get something to eat
before going away. He went to a hotel he had noticed that morning. There
he found so many people, among them officers who, like himself, had come
in civilian clothes, that he had difficulty in getting a dinner. Two
officers of his own division joined him. The conversation naturally turned
on the peace. The officers, his comrades, like most of the army, were
dissatisfied with the peace concluded after the battle of Friedland. They
said that had we held out a little longer Napoleon would have been done
for, as his troops had neither provisions nor ammunition. Nicholas ate and
drank (chiefly the latter) in silence. He finished a couple of bottles of
wine by himself. The process in his mind went on tormenting him without
reaching a conclusion. He feared to give way to his thoughts, yet could
not get rid of them. Suddenly, on one of the officers' saying that it was
humiliating to look at the French, Rostov began shouting with uncalled-for
wrath, and therefore much to the surprise of the officers:</p>
<p>"How can you judge what's best?" he cried, the blood suddenly rushing to
his face. "How can you judge the Emperor's actions? What right have we to
argue? We cannot comprehend either the Emperor's aims or his actions!"</p>
<p>"But I never said a word about the Emperor!" said the officer, justifying
himself, and unable to understand Rostov's outburst, except on the
supposition that he was drunk.</p>
<p>But Rostov did not listen to him.</p>
<p>"We are not diplomatic officials, we are soldiers and nothing more," he
went on. "If we are ordered to die, we must die. If we're punished, it
means that we have deserved it, it's not for us to judge. If the Emperor
pleases to recognize Bonaparte as Emperor and to conclude an alliance with
him, it means that that is the right thing to do. If once we begin judging
and arguing about everything, nothing sacred will be left! That way we
shall be saying there is no God—nothing!" shouted Nicholas, banging
the table—very little to the point as it seemed to his listeners,
but quite relevantly to the course of his own thoughts.</p>
<p>"Our business is to do our duty, to fight and not to think! That's
all...." said he.</p>
<p>"And to drink," said one of the officers, not wishing to quarrel.</p>
<p>"Yes, and to drink," assented Nicholas. "Hullo there! Another bottle!" he
shouted.</p>
<p>In 1808 the Emperor Alexander went to Erfurt for a fresh interview with
the Emperor Napoleon, and in the upper circles of Petersburg there was
much talk of the grandeur of this important meeting.</p>
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