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<h2> CHAPTER IX </h2>
<p>The officer and soldiers who had arrested Pierre treated him with
hostility but yet with respect, in the guardhouse to which he was taken.
In their attitude toward him could still be felt both uncertainty as to
who he might be—perhaps a very important person—and hostility
as a result of their recent personal conflict with him.</p>
<p>But when the guard was relieved next morning, Pierre felt that for the new
guard—both officers and men—he was not as interesting as he
had been to his captors; and in fact the guard of the second day did not
recognize in this big, stout man in a peasant coat the vigorous person who
had fought so desperately with the marauder and the convoy and had uttered
those solemn words about saving a child; they saw in him only No. 17 of
the captured Russians, arrested and detained for some reason by order of
the Higher Command. If they noticed anything remarkable about Pierre, it
was only his unabashed, meditative concentration and thoughtfulness, and
the way he spoke French, which struck them as surprisingly good. In spite
of this he was placed that day with the other arrested suspects, as the
separate room he had occupied was required by an officer.</p>
<p>All the Russians confined with Pierre were men of the lowest class and,
recognizing him as a gentleman, they all avoided him, more especially as
he spoke French. Pierre felt sad at hearing them making fun of him.</p>
<p>That evening he learned that all these prisoners (he, probably, among
them) were to be tried for incendiarism. On the third day he was taken
with the others to a house where a French general with a white mustache
sat with two colonels and other Frenchmen with scarves on their arms. With
the precision and definiteness customary in addressing prisoners, and
which is supposed to preclude human frailty, Pierre like the others was
questioned as to who he was, where he had been, with what object, and so
on.</p>
<p>These questions, like questions put at trials generally, left the essence
of the matter aside, shut out the possibility of that essence's being
revealed, and were designed only to form a channel through which the
judges wished the answers of the accused to flow so as to lead to the
desired result, namely a conviction. As soon as Pierre began to say
anything that did not fit in with that aim, the channel was removed and
the water could flow to waste. Pierre felt, moreover, what the accused
always feel at their trial, perplexity as to why these questions were put
to him. He had a feeling that it was only out of condescension or a kind
of civility that this device of placing a channel was employed. He knew he
was in these men's power, that only by force had they brought him there,
that force alone gave them the right to demand answers to their questions,
and that the sole object of that assembly was to inculpate him. And so, as
they had the power and wish to inculpate him, this expedient of an inquiry
and trial seemed unnecessary. It was evident that any answer would lead to
conviction. When asked what he was doing when he was arrested, Pierre
replied in a rather tragic manner that he was restoring to its parents a
child he had saved from the flames. Why had he fought the marauder? Pierre
answered that he "was protecting a woman," and that "to protect a woman
who was being insulted was the duty of every man; that..." They
interrupted him, for this was not to the point. Why was he in the yard of
a burning house where witnesses had seen him? He replied that he had gone
out to see what was happening in Moscow. Again they interrupted him: they
had not asked where he was going, but why he was found near the fire? Who
was he? they asked, repeating their first question, which he had declined
to answer. Again he replied that he could not answer it.</p>
<p>"Put that down, that's bad... very bad," sternly remarked the general with
the white mustache and red flushed face.</p>
<p>On the fourth day fires broke out on the Zubovski rampart.</p>
<p>Pierre and thirteen others were moved to the coach house of a merchant's
house near the Crimean bridge. On his way through the streets Pierre felt
stifled by the smoke which seemed to hang over the whole city. Fires were
visible on all sides. He did not then realize the significance of the
burning of Moscow, and looked at the fires with horror.</p>
<p>He passed four days in the coach house near the Crimean bridge and during
that time learned, from the talk of the French soldiers, that all those
confined there were awaiting a decision which might come any day from the
marshal. What marshal this was, Pierre could not learn from the soldiers.
Evidently for them "the marshal" represented a very high and rather
mysterious power.</p>
<p>These first days, before the eighth of September when the prisoners were
had up for a second examination, were the hardest of all for Pierre.</p>
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