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Toward
evening
Dolgorúkov
came
back
,
went
straight
to
the
Tsar
,
and
remained
alone
with
him
for
a
long
time
.
On
the
eighteenth
and
nineteenth
of
November
,
the
army
advanced
two
days
'
march
and
the
enemy
's
outposts
after
a
brief
interchange
of
shots
retreated
.
In
the
highest
army
circles
from
midday
on
the
nineteenth
,
a
great
,
excitedly
bustling
activity
began
which
lasted
till
the
morning
of
the
twentieth
,
when
the
memorable
battle
of
Austerlitz
was
fought
.
Till
midday
on
the
nineteenth
,
the
activity
--
the
eager
talk
,
running
to
and
fro
,
and
dispatching
of
adjutants
--
was
confined
to
the
Emperor
's
headquarters
.
But
on
the
afternoon
of
that
day
,
this
activity
reached
Kutúzov
's
headquarters
and
the
staffs
of
the
commanders
of
columns
.
By
evening
,
the
adjutants
had
spread
it
to
all
ends
and
parts
of
the
army
,
and
in
the
night
from
the
nineteenth
to
the
twentieth
,
the
whole
eighty
thousand
allied
troops
rose
from
their
bivouacs
to
the
hum
of
voices
,
and
the
army
swayed
and
started
in
one
enormous
mass
six
miles
long
.
The
concentrated
activity
which
had
begun
at
the
Emperor
's
headquarters
in
the
morning
and
had
started
the
whole
movement
that
followed
was
like
the
first
movement
of
the
main
wheel
of
a
large
tower
clock
.
One
wheel
slowly
moved
,
another
was
set
in
motion
,
and
a
third
,
and
wheels
began
to
revolve
faster
and
faster
,
levers
and
cogwheels
to
work
,
chimes
to
play
,
figures
to
pop
out
,
and
the
hands
to
advance
with
regular
motion
as
a
result
of
all
that
activity
.
Just
as
in
the
mechanism
of
a
clock
,
so
in
the
mechanism
of
the
military
machine
,
an
impulse
once
given
leads
to
the
final
result
;
and
just
as
indifferently
quiescent
till
the
moment
when
motion
is
transmitted
to
them
are
the
parts
of
the
mechanism
which
the
impulse
has
not
yet
reached
.
Wheels
creak
on
their
axles
as
the
cogs
engage
one
another
and
the
revolving
pulleys
whirr
with
the
rapidity
of
their
movement
,
but
a
neighboring
wheel
is
as
quiet
and
motionless
as
though
it
were
prepared
to
remain
so
for
a
hundred
years
;
but
the
moment
comes
when
the
lever
catches
it
and
obeying
the
impulse
that
wheel
begins
to
creak
and
joins
in
the
common
motion
the
result
and
aim
of
which
are
beyond
its
ken
.
Just
as
in
a
clock
,
the
result
of
the
complicated
motion
of
innumerable
wheels
and
pulleys
is
merely
a
slow
and
regular
movement
of
the
hands
which
show
the
time
,
so
the
result
of
all
the
complicated
human
activities
of
160,000
Russians
and
French
--
all
their
passions
,
desires
,
remorse
,
humiliations
,
sufferings
,
outbursts
of
pride
,
fear
,
and
enthusiasm
--
was
only
the
loss
of
the
battle
of
Austerlitz
,
the
so-called
battle
of
the
three
Emperors
--
that
is
to
say
,
a
slow
movement
of
the
hand
on
the
dial
of
human
history
.
Prince
Andrew
was
on
duty
that
day
and
in
constant
attendance
on
the
commander
in
chief
.
At
six
in
the
evening
,
Kutúzov
went
to
the
Emperor
's
headquarters
and
after
staying
but
a
short
time
with
the
Tsar
went
to
see
the
grand
marshal
of
the
court
,
Count
Tolstóy
.
Bolkónski
took
the
opportunity
to
go
in
to
get
some
details
of
the
coming
action
from
Dolgorúkov
.
He
felt
that
Kutúzov
was
upset
and
dissatisfied
about
something
and
that
at
headquarters
they
were
dissatisfied
with
him
,
and
also
that
at
the
Emperor
's
headquarters
everyone
adopted
toward
him
the
tone
of
men
who
know
something
others
do
not
know
:
he
therefore
wished
to
speak
to
Dolgorúkov
.