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"
Killed
?
"
cried
Denísov
,
recognizing
from
a
distance
the
unmistakably
lifeless
attitude
--
very
familiar
to
him
--
in
which
Pétya
's
body
was
lying
.
"
Done
for
!
"
repeated
Dólokhov
as
if
the
utterance
of
these
words
afforded
him
pleasure
,
and
he
went
quickly
up
to
the
prisoners
,
who
were
surrounded
by
Cossacks
who
had
hurried
up
.
"
We
wo
n't
take
them
!
"
he
called
out
to
Denísov
.
Denísov
did
not
reply
;
he
rode
up
to
Pétya
,
dismounted
,
and
with
trembling
hands
turned
toward
himself
the
bloodstained
,
mud-bespattered
face
which
had
already
gone
white
.
"
I
am
used
to
something
sweet
.
Raisins
,
fine
ones
...
take
them
all
!
"
he
recalled
Pétya
's
words
.
And
the
Cossacks
looked
round
in
surprise
at
the
sound
,
like
the
yelp
of
a
dog
,
with
which
Denísov
turned
away
,
walked
to
the
wattle
fence
,
and
seized
hold
of
it
.
Among
the
Russian
prisoners
rescued
by
Denísov
and
Dólokhov
was
Pierre
Bezúkhov
.
During
the
whole
of
their
march
from
Moscow
no
fresh
orders
had
been
issued
by
the
French
authorities
concerning
the
party
of
prisoners
among
whom
was
Pierre
.
On
the
twenty-second
of
October
that
party
was
no
longer
with
the
same
troops
and
baggage
trains
with
which
it
had
left
Moscow
.
Half
the
wagons
laden
with
hardtack
that
had
traveled
the
first
stages
with
them
had
been
captured
by
Cossacks
,
the
other
half
had
gone
on
ahead
.
Not
one
of
those
dismounted
cavalrymen
who
had
marched
in
front
of
the
prisoners
was
left
;
they
had
all
disappeared
.
The
artillery
the
prisoners
had
seen
in
front
of
them
during
the
first
days
was
now
replaced
by
Marshal
Junot
's
enormous
baggage
train
,
convoyed
by
Westphalians
.
Behind
the
prisoners
came
a
cavalry
baggage
train
.
From
Vyázma
onwards
the
French
army
,
which
had
till
then
moved
in
three
columns
,
went
on
as
a
single
group
.
The
symptoms
of
disorder
that
Pierre
had
noticed
at
their
first
halting
place
after
leaving
Moscow
had
now
reached
the
utmost
limit
.
The
road
along
which
they
moved
was
bordered
on
both
sides
by
dead
horses
;
ragged
men
who
had
fallen
behind
from
various
regiments
continually
changed
about
,
now
joining
the
moving
column
,
now
again
lagging
behind
it
.
Several
times
during
the
march
false
alarms
had
been
given
and
the
soldiers
of
the
escort
had
raised
their
muskets
,
fired
,
and
run
headlong
,
crushing
one
another
,
but
had
afterwards
reassembled
and
abused
each
other
for
their
causeless
panic
.
These
three
groups
traveling
together
--
the
cavalry
stores
,
the
convoy
of
prisoners
,
and
Junot
's
baggage
train
--
still
constituted
a
separate
and
united
whole
,
though
each
of
the
groups
was
rapidly
melting
away
.