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The
Emperor
ceased
speaking
,
the
crowd
began
pressing
round
him
,
and
rapturous
exclamations
were
heard
from
all
sides
.
"
Yes
,
most
precious
...
a
royal
word
,
"
said
Count
Rostóv
,
with
a
sob
.
He
stood
at
the
back
,
and
,
though
he
had
heard
hardly
anything
,
understood
everything
in
his
own
way
.
From
the
hall
of
the
nobility
the
Emperor
went
to
that
of
the
merchants
.
There
he
remained
about
ten
minutes
.
Pierre
was
among
those
who
saw
him
come
out
from
the
merchants
'
hall
with
tears
of
emotion
in
his
eyes
.
As
became
known
later
,
he
had
scarcely
begun
to
address
the
merchants
before
tears
gushed
from
his
eyes
and
he
concluded
in
a
trembling
voice
.
When
Pierre
saw
the
Emperor
he
was
coming
out
accompanied
by
two
merchants
,
one
of
whom
Pierre
knew
,
a
fat
otkupshchík
.
The
other
was
the
mayor
,
a
man
with
a
thin
sallow
face
and
narrow
beard
.
Both
were
weeping
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Tears
filled
the
thin
man
's
eyes
,
and
the
fat
otkupshchík
sobbed
outright
like
a
child
and
kept
repeating
:
"
Our
lives
and
property
--
take
them
,
Your
Majesty
!
"
Pierre
's
one
feeling
at
the
moment
was
a
desire
to
show
that
he
was
ready
to
go
all
lengths
and
was
prepared
to
sacrifice
everything
.
He
now
felt
ashamed
of
his
speech
with
its
constitutional
tendency
and
sought
an
opportunity
of
effacing
it
.
Having
heard
that
Count
Mamónov
was
furnishing
a
regiment
,
Bezúkhov
at
once
informed
Rostopchín
that
he
would
give
a
thousand
men
and
their
maintenance
.
Old
Rostóv
could
not
tell
his
wife
of
what
had
passed
without
tears
,
and
at
once
consented
to
Pétya
's
request
and
went
himself
to
enter
his
name
.
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Next
day
the
Emperor
left
Moscow
.
The
assembled
nobles
all
took
off
their
uniforms
and
settled
down
again
in
their
homes
and
clubs
,
and
not
without
some
groans
gave
orders
to
their
stewards
about
the
enrollment
,
feeling
amazed
themselves
at
what
they
had
done
.
Napoleon
began
the
war
with
Russia
because
he
could
not
resist
going
to
Dresden
,
could
not
help
having
his
head
turned
by
the
homage
he
received
,
could
not
help
donning
a
Polish
uniform
and
yielding
to
the
stimulating
influence
of
a
June
morning
,
and
could
not
refrain
from
bursts
of
anger
in
the
presence
of
Kurákin
and
then
of
Balashëv
.
Alexander
refused
negotiations
because
he
felt
himself
to
be
personally
insulted
.
Barclay
de
Tolly
tried
to
command
the
army
in
the
best
way
,
because
he
wished
to
fulfill
his
duty
and
earn
fame
as
a
great
commander
.
Rostóv
charged
the
French
because
he
could
not
restrain
his
wish
for
a
gallop
across
a
level
field
;
and
in
the
same
way
the
innumerable
people
who
took
part
in
the
war
acted
in
accord
with
their
personal
characteristics
,
habits
,
circumstances
,
and
aims
.
They
were
moved
by
fear
or
vanity
,
rejoiced
or
were
indignant
,
reasoned
,
imagining
that
they
knew
what
they
were
doing
and
did
it
of
their
own
free
will
,
but
they
all
were
involuntary
tools
of
history
,
carrying
on
a
work
concealed
from
them
but
comprehensible
to
us
.
Such
is
the
inevitable
fate
of
men
of
action
,
and
the
higher
they
stand
in
the
social
hierarchy
the
less
are
they
free
.