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Отмена
Dólokhov
stood
at
the
gate
of
the
ruined
house
,
letting
a
crowd
of
disarmed
Frenchmen
pass
by
The
French
,
excited
by
all
that
had
happened
,
were
talking
loudly
among
themselves
,
but
as
they
passed
Dólokhov
who
gently
switched
his
boots
with
his
whip
and
watched
them
with
cold
glassy
eyes
that
boded
no
good
,
they
became
silent
.
On
the
opposite
side
stood
Dólokhov
's
Cossack
,
counting
the
prisoners
and
marking
off
each
hundred
with
a
chalk
line
on
the
gate
.
"
How
many
?
"
Dólokhov
asked
the
Cossack
.
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"
The
second
hundred
,
"
replied
the
Cossack
.
"
Filez
,
filez
!
"
*
Dólokhov
kept
saying
,
having
adopted
this
expression
from
the
French
,
and
when
his
eyes
met
those
of
the
prisoners
they
flashed
with
a
cruel
light
.
*
"
Get
along
,
get
along
!
"
Denísov
,
bareheaded
and
with
a
gloomy
face
,
walked
behind
some
Cossacks
who
were
carrying
the
body
of
Pétya
Rostóv
to
a
hole
that
had
been
dug
in
the
garden
.
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After
the
twenty-eighth
of
October
when
the
frosts
began
,
the
flight
of
the
French
assumed
a
still
more
tragic
character
,
with
men
freezing
,
or
roasting
themselves
to
death
at
the
campfires
,
while
carriages
with
people
dressed
in
furs
continued
to
drive
past
,
carrying
away
the
property
that
had
been
stolen
by
the
Emperor
,
kings
,
and
dukes
;
but
the
process
of
the
flight
and
disintegration
of
the
French
army
went
on
essentially
as
before
.
From
Moscow
to
Vyázma
the
French
army
of
seventy-three
thousand
men
not
reckoning
the
Guards
(
who
did
nothing
during
the
whole
war
but
pillage
)
was
reduced
to
thirty-six
thousand
,
though
not
more
than
five
thousand
had
fallen
in
battle
.
From
this
beginning
the
succeeding
terms
of
the
progression
could
be
determined
mathematically
.
The
French
army
melted
away
and
perished
at
the
same
rate
from
Moscow
to
Vyázma
,
from
Vyázma
to
Smolénsk
,
from
Smolénsk
to
the
Berëzina
,
and
from
the
Berëzina
to
Vílna
--
independently
of
the
greater
or
lesser
intensity
of
the
cold
,
the
pursuit
,
the
barring
of
the
way
,
or
any
other
particular
conditions
.
Beyond
Vyázma
the
French
army
instead
of
moving
in
three
columns
huddled
together
into
one
mass
,
and
so
went
on
to
the
end
.
Berthier
wrote
to
his
Emperor
(
we
know
how
far
commanding
officers
allow
themselves
to
diverge
from
the
truth
in
describing
the
condition
of
an
army
)
and
this
is
what
he
said
:
I
deem
it
my
duty
to
report
to
Your
Majesty
the
condition
of
the
various
corps
I
have
had
occasion
to
observe
during
different
stages
of
the
last
two
or
three
days
'
march
.
They
are
almost
disbanded
.