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"
You
will
go
far
,
"
he
said
,
and
took
him
to
Tilsit
with
him
.
Borís
was
among
the
few
present
at
the
Niemen
on
the
day
the
two
Emperors
met
.
He
saw
the
raft
,
decorated
with
monograms
,
saw
Napoleon
pass
before
the
French
Guards
on
the
farther
bank
of
the
river
,
saw
the
pensive
face
of
the
Emperor
Alexander
as
he
sat
in
silence
in
a
tavern
on
the
bank
of
the
Niemen
awaiting
Napoleon
's
arrival
,
saw
both
Emperors
get
into
boats
,
and
saw
how
Napoleon
--
reaching
the
raft
first
--
stepped
quickly
forward
to
meet
Alexander
and
held
out
his
hand
to
him
,
and
how
they
both
retired
into
the
pavilion
.
Since
he
had
begun
to
move
in
the
highest
circles
Borís
had
made
it
his
habit
to
watch
attentively
all
that
went
on
around
him
and
to
note
it
down
.
At
the
time
of
the
meeting
at
Tilsit
he
asked
the
names
of
those
who
had
come
with
Napoleon
and
about
the
uniforms
they
wore
,
and
listened
attentively
to
words
spoken
by
important
personages
.
At
the
moment
the
Emperors
went
into
the
pavilion
he
looked
at
his
watch
,
and
did
not
forget
to
look
at
it
again
when
Alexander
came
out
.
The
interview
had
lasted
an
hour
and
fifty-three
minutes
.
He
noted
this
down
that
same
evening
,
among
other
facts
he
felt
to
be
of
historic
importance
.
As
the
Emperor
's
suite
was
a
very
small
one
,
it
was
a
matter
of
great
importance
,
for
a
man
who
valued
his
success
in
the
service
,
to
be
at
Tilsit
on
the
occasion
of
this
interview
between
the
two
Emperors
,
and
having
succeeded
in
this
,
Borís
felt
that
henceforth
his
position
was
fully
assured
.
He
had
not
only
become
known
,
but
people
had
grown
accustomed
to
him
and
accepted
him
.
Twice
he
had
executed
commissions
to
the
Emperor
himself
,
so
that
the
latter
knew
his
face
,
and
all
those
at
court
,
far
from
cold-shouldering
him
as
at
first
when
they
considered
him
a
newcomer
,
would
now
have
been
surprised
had
he
been
absent
.
Отключить рекламу
Borís
lodged
with
another
adjutant
,
the
Polish
Count
Zhilínski
.
Zhilínski
,
a
Pole
brought
up
in
Paris
,
was
rich
,
and
passionately
fond
of
the
French
,
and
almost
every
day
of
the
stay
at
Tilsit
,
French
officers
of
the
Guard
and
from
French
headquarters
were
dining
and
lunching
with
him
and
Borís
.
On
the
evening
of
the
twenty-fourth
of
June
,
Count
Zhilínski
arranged
a
supper
for
his
French
friends
.
The
guest
of
honor
was
an
aide-de-camp
of
Napoleon
's
,
there
were
also
several
French
officers
of
the
Guard
,
and
a
page
of
Napoleon
's
,
a
young
lad
of
an
old
aristocratic
French
family
.
That
same
day
,
Rostóv
,
profiting
by
the
darkness
to
avoid
being
recognized
in
civilian
dress
,
came
to
Tilsit
and
went
to
the
lodging
occupied
by
Borís
and
Zhilínski
.
Rostóv
,
in
common
with
the
whole
army
from
which
he
came
,
was
far
from
having
experienced
the
change
of
feeling
toward
Napoleon
and
the
French
--
who
from
being
foes
had
suddenly
become
friends
--
that
had
taken
place
at
headquarters
and
in
Borís
.
In
the
army
,
Bonaparte
and
the
French
were
still
regarded
with
mingled
feelings
of
anger
,
contempt
,
and
fear
.
Only
recently
,
talking
with
one
of
Plátov
's
Cossack
officers
,
Rostóv
had
argued
that
if
Napoleon
were
taken
prisoner
he
would
be
treated
not
as
a
sovereign
,
but
as
a
criminal
.
Quite
lately
,
happening
to
meet
a
wounded
French
colonel
on
the
road
,
Rostóv
had
maintained
with
heat
that
peace
was
impossible
between
a
legitimate
sovereign
and
the
criminal
Bonaparte
.
Rostóv
was
therefore
unpleasantly
struck
by
the
presence
of
French
officers
in
Borís
'
lodging
,
dressed
in
uniforms
he
had
been
accustomed
to
see
from
quite
a
different
point
of
view
from
the
outposts
of
the
flank
.
As
soon
as
he
noticed
a
French
officer
,
who
thrust
his
head
out
of
the
door
,
that
warlike
feeling
of
hostility
which
he
always
experienced
at
the
sight
of
the
enemy
suddenly
seized
him
.
He
stopped
at
the
threshold
and
asked
in
Russian
whether
Drubetskóy
lived
there
.
Borís
,
hearing
a
strange
voice
in
the
anteroom
,
came
out
to
meet
him
.
Отключить рекламу
An
expression
of
annoyance
showed
itself
for
a
moment
on
his
face
on
first
recognizing
Rostóv
.
"
Ah
,
it
's
you
?
Very
glad
,
very
glad
to
see
you
,
"
he
said
,
however
,
coming
toward
him
with
a
smile
.
But
Rostóv
had
noticed
his
first
impulse
.
"
I
've
come
at
a
bad
time
I
think
.
I
should
not
have
come
,
but
I
have
business
,
"
he
said
coldly
.