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Soldiers
!
This
is
the
battle
you
have
so
longed
for
.
Victory
depends
on
you
.
It
is
essential
for
us
;
it
will
give
us
all
we
need
:
comfortable
quarters
and
a
speedy
return
to
our
country
.
Behave
as
you
did
at
Austerlitz
,
Friedland
,
Vítebsk
,
and
Smolénsk
.
Let
our
remotest
posterity
recall
your
achievements
this
day
with
pride
.
Let
it
be
said
of
each
of
you
:
"
He
was
in
the
great
battle
before
Moscow
!
"
"
Before
Moscow
!
"
repeated
Napoleon
,
and
inviting
M.
de
Beausset
,
who
was
so
fond
of
travel
,
to
accompany
him
on
his
ride
,
he
went
out
of
the
tent
to
where
the
horses
stood
saddled
"
Your
Majesty
is
too
kind
!
"
replied
de
Beausset
to
the
invitation
to
accompany
the
Emperor
;
he
wanted
to
sleep
,
did
not
know
how
to
ride
and
was
afraid
of
doing
so
.
But
Napoleon
nodded
to
the
traveler
,
and
de
Beausset
had
to
mount
.
When
Napoleon
came
out
of
the
tent
the
shouting
of
the
Guards
before
his
son
's
portrait
grew
still
louder
.
Napoleon
frowned
.
"
Take
him
away
!
"
he
said
,
pointing
with
a
gracefully
majestic
gesture
to
the
portrait
.
"
It
is
too
soon
for
him
to
see
a
field
of
battle
.
"
De
Beausset
closed
his
eyes
,
bowed
his
head
,
and
sighed
deeply
,
to
indicate
how
profoundly
he
valued
and
comprehended
the
Emperor
's
words
.
On
the
twenty-fifth
of
August
,
so
his
historians
tell
us
,
Napoleon
spent
the
whole
day
on
horseback
inspecting
the
locality
,
considering
plans
submitted
to
him
by
his
marshals
,
and
personally
giving
commands
to
his
generals
.
The
original
line
of
the
Russian
forces
along
the
river
Kolochá
had
been
dislocated
by
the
capture
of
the
Shevárdino
Redoubt
on
the
twenty-fourth
,
and
part
of
the
line
--
the
left
flank
--
had
been
drawn
back
.
That
part
of
the
line
was
not
entrenched
and
in
front
of
it
the
ground
was
more
open
and
level
than
elsewhere
.
It
was
evident
to
anyone
,
military
or
not
,
that
it
was
here
the
French
should
attack
.
It
would
seem
that
not
much
consideration
was
needed
to
reach
this
conclusion
,
nor
any
particular
care
or
trouble
on
the
part
of
the
Emperor
and
his
marshals
,
nor
was
there
any
need
of
that
special
and
supreme
quality
called
genius
that
people
are
so
apt
to
ascribe
to
Napoleon
;
yet
the
historians
who
described
the
event
later
and
the
men
who
then
surrounded
Napoleon
,
and
he
himself
,
thought
otherwise
.
Napoleon
rode
over
the
plain
and
surveyed
the
locality
with
a
profound
air
and
in
silence
,
nodded
with
approval
or
shook
his
head
dubiously
,
and
without
communicating
to
the
generals
around
him
the
profound
course
of
ideas
which
guided
his
decisions
merely
gave
them
his
final
conclusions
in
the
form
of
commands
.
Having
listened
to
a
suggestion
from
Davout
,
who
was
now
called
Prince
d'Eckmühl
,
to
turn
the
Russian
left
wing
,
Napoleon
said
it
should
not
be
done
,
without
explaining
why
not
.
To
a
proposal
made
by
General
Campan
(
who
was
to
attack
the
flèches
)
to
lead
his
division
through
the
woods
,
Napoleon
agreed
,
though
the
so-called
Duke
of
Elchingen
(
Ney
)
ventured
to
remark
that
a
movement
through
the
woods
was
dangerous
and
might
disorder
the
division
.