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With
this
object
his
staff
was
gradually
reconstructed
and
its
real
strength
removed
and
transferred
to
the
Emperor
.
Toll
,
Konovnítsyn
,
and
Ermólov
received
fresh
appointments
.
Everyone
spoke
loudly
of
the
field
marshal
's
great
weakness
and
failing
health
.
His
health
had
to
be
bad
for
his
place
to
be
taken
away
and
given
to
another
.
And
in
fact
his
health
was
poor
.
So
naturally
,
simply
,
and
gradually
--
just
as
he
had
come
from
Turkey
to
the
Treasury
in
Petersburg
to
recruit
the
militia
,
and
then
to
the
army
when
he
was
needed
there
--
now
when
his
part
was
played
out
,
Kutúzov
's
place
was
taken
by
a
new
and
necessary
performer
.
The
war
of
1812
,
besides
its
national
significance
dear
to
every
Russian
heart
,
was
now
to
assume
another
,
a
European
,
significance
.
The
movement
of
peoples
from
west
to
east
was
to
be
succeeded
by
a
movement
of
peoples
from
east
to
west
,
and
for
this
fresh
war
another
leader
was
necessary
,
having
qualities
and
views
differing
from
Kutúzov
's
and
animated
by
different
motives
.
Alexander
I
was
as
necessary
for
the
movement
of
the
peoples
from
east
to
west
and
for
the
refixing
of
national
frontiers
as
Kutúzov
had
been
for
the
salvation
and
glory
of
Russia
.
Kutúzov
did
not
understand
what
Europe
,
the
balance
of
power
,
or
Napoleon
meant
He
could
not
understand
it
.
For
the
representative
of
the
Russian
people
,
after
the
enemy
had
been
destroyed
and
Russia
had
been
liberated
and
raised
to
the
summit
of
her
glory
,
there
was
nothing
left
to
do
as
a
Russian
.
Nothing
remained
for
the
representative
of
the
national
war
but
to
die
,
and
Kutúzov
died
.
As
generally
happens
,
Pierre
did
not
feel
the
full
effects
of
the
physical
privation
and
strain
he
had
suffered
as
prisoner
until
after
they
were
over
.
After
his
liberation
he
reached
Orël
,
and
on
the
third
day
there
,
when
preparing
to
go
to
Kiev
,
he
fell
ill
and
was
laid
up
for
three
months
.
He
had
what
the
doctors
termed
"
bilious
fever
.
"
But
despite
the
fact
that
the
doctors
treated
him
,
bled
him
,
and
gave
him
medicines
to
drink
,
he
recovered
.
Scarcely
any
impression
was
left
on
Pierre
's
mind
by
all
that
happened
to
him
from
the
time
of
his
rescue
till
his
illness
.
He
remembered
only
the
dull
gray
weather
now
rainy
and
now
snowy
,
internal
physical
distress
,
and
pains
in
his
feet
and
side
.
He
remembered
a
general
impression
of
the
misfortunes
and
sufferings
of
people
and
of
being
worried
by
the
curiosity
of
officers
and
generals
who
questioned
him
,
he
also
remembered
his
difficulty
in
procuring
a
conveyance
and
horses
,
and
above
all
he
remembered
his
incapacity
to
think
and
feel
all
that
time
.
On
the
day
of
his
rescue
he
had
seen
the
body
of
Pétya
Rostóv
.
That
same
day
he
had
learned
that
Prince
Andrew
,
after
surviving
the
battle
of
Borodinó
for
more
than
a
month
had
recently
died
in
the
Rostóvs
'
house
at
Yaroslávl
,
and
Denísov
who
told
him
this
news
also
mentioned
Hélène
's
death
,
supposing
that
Pierre
had
heard
of
it
long
before
.
All
this
at
the
time
seemed
merely
strange
to
Pierre
:
he
felt
he
could
not
grasp
its
significance
.