登陆注册
15259000000374

第374章

To the third party, in which the Tsar was disposed to place most confidence, belonged the courtiers, who tried to effect a compromise between the two contending sides. The members of this party—to which Araktcheev belonged—were mostly not military men, and they spoke and reasoned as men usually do who have no convictions, but wish to pass for having them. They admitted that a war with such a genius as Bonaparte (they called him Bonaparte again now) did undoubtedly call for the profoundest tactical considerations and thorough scientific knowledge, and that on that side Pfuhl was a genius. But, at the same time, they acknowledged that it could not be denied that theorists were often one-sided, and so one should not put implicit confidence in them, but should listen too to what Pfuhl’s opponents urged, and also to the views of practical men who had experience, and should take a middle course. They advocated maintaining the camp at Drissa on Pfuhl’s plan, but altering his disposition of the other two armies. Though by this course of action neither aim could be attained, this seemed to the party of compromise the best line to adopt.

Of the fourth section of opinions, the most prominent representative was the Grand Duke, and heir-apparent, who could not get over his rude awakening at Austerlitz. He had ridden out at the head of his guards in helmet and cuirass as though to a review, expecting gallantly to rout the French, and finding himself unexpectedly just in the line of the enemy’s fire, had with difficulty escaped in the general disorder. The members of this party had at once the merit and the defect of sincerity in their convictions. They feared Napoleon; they saw his strength and their own weakness, and frankly admitted it. They said: “Nothing but a huge disgrace and ruin can come of the war! We have abandoned Vilna, and abandoned Vitebsk, and we are abandoning the Drissa too. The only sensible thing left for us to do is to conclude peace, and as soon as possible, before we have been driven out of Petersburg!”

This view was widely diffused in the higher military circles, and found adherents, too, in Petersburg—one of them being the chancellor Rumyantsev, who advocated peace on other political considerations.

A fifth section were the adherents of Barclay de Tolly, not so much from his qualities as a man, as a minister of war and commander-in-chief. “Whatever he may be,” they always began, “he is an honest, practical man, and there is nobody better. Let him have sole responsibility, since war can never be prosecuted successfully under divided authority and he will show what he can do, as he did in Finland. We owe it simply to Barclay that our army is strong and well organised, and has retreated to the Drissa without disaster. If Barclay is replaced by Bennigsen now, everything will be lost; for Bennigsen has proved his incapacity already in 1807.” Such was the line of argument of the fifth party.

The sixth party, the partisans of Bennigsen, maintained on the contrary that there was after all no one more capable and experienced than Bennigsen, and that whatever else were done they would have to come back to him. They maintained that the whole Russian retreat to Drissa had been an uninterrupted series of shameful disasters and blunders. “Let them blunder now if they will,” they said; “the more blunders the better, at least it will teach them all the sooner that we can’t go on like this. And we want none of your Barclays, but a man like Bennigsen, who showed what he was in 1807, so that Napoleon himself had to do him justice, and a man, too, is needed to whom all would readily intrust authority, and Bennigsen is the only such man.”

The seventh class were persons such as are always found in courts, and especially in the courts of young sovereigns, and were particularly plentiful in the suite of Alexander—generals and adjutants, who were passionately devoted to the Tsar, not merely as an emperor, but sincerely and disinterestedly adored him as a man, as Rostov had adored him in 1805, and saw in him every virtue and good quality of humanity. These persons, while they were ecstatic over the modesty of the Tsar in declining the chief command of the army, deplored that excess of modesty, and desired and urged one thing only, that their adored Tsar, conquering his excessive diffidence, would openly proclaim that he put himself at the head of the army, would gather the staff of the commander-in-chief about him, and, consulting experienced theorists and practical men where necessary, would himself lead his forces, who would be excited to the highest pitch of enthusiasm by this step.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 倾城公主太妖娆

    倾城公主太妖娆

    她本是西凉公主,本该娇生惯养,风光无限。谁料生母病逝,渣爹大反转,不管不问十五年!她本是超级特工。一朝穿越,竟成冷宫公主!斗皇后,整渣姐。一遇美男误终身。什么?你说我爹另有其人!!某男笑笑,不置可否。五年后,荣极一时的宝月公主重返西凉,再选驸马,只是,身边还多了俩奶娃?
  • 养个男神苏又甜

    养个男神苏又甜

    从修仙世界穿回现代后,朝歌的画风原本应该是,左手神兽围绕,右手灵丹妙药,拳打渣男渣女,随便人生巅峰。但自从养了这个世界的气运之子后,画风却变成了……“朝朝坐好,今晚有你最喜欢的红烧肉吃。”“朝朝别怕,这些坏人,我来收拾他们!”“挣的钱都给朝朝,我的一切都是朝朝的,朝朝天下第一可爱!”……没错,她,恐怖如斯的修仙者,被一个凡人养娇了。
  • 戮语

    戮语

    在TBG公司新游戏发布的当天,所有玩家由于所谓的程序故障,而穿越进了游戏世界。玩家们一边为了获取高额赏金而相互击杀,一边又因为某些原因,要避免自己在游戏中死亡。因此一场游戏演变成了一场史无前例的杀戮。
  • 我怎么没想到:职场中人的必知细节

    我怎么没想到:职场中人的必知细节

    发生在面试中的“没想到”、发生在会议桌上的“没想到”、发生在谈判桌上的“没想到”、发生在秘书室的“没想到”、发生在财务部的“没想到”、发生在市场部的“没想到发生在企划部的“没想到”、发生在人力资源部的“没想到”。那关键的、注定你失败的一处并非是一眼看不到底的深渊,甚至也不是当时便让你感觉踩了一空的陷阱。也许它只是一颗小石子,你根本没有察觉。但当结果铸成,并且赫然兀立在眼前时,你会大悟:原来很多的“没想到”都能从一个人的思想、性情的深处找到根源,而且很多还是可以有效避免的。本书将帮助你认清“命运的拐角”
  • 星叶琉璃

    星叶琉璃

    浩瀚星河之中,沟通的是一个又一个的异世,万族林立,强者争锋,看似辉煌的盛世中,却是暗藏杀机……
  • 超能宇宙大侠游记

    超能宇宙大侠游记

    失去父母的瓦带着弟弟,和几个同命相怜的朋友被街头混混欺辱,在反抗的过程中,他逐渐发现了自己潜在的超能力,一步一步,走向太空,成为整个宇宙的守护神
  • 第一战神在都市

    第一战神在都市

    【都市争霸,热血不灭】这一生,曾血染江山,泪洒战场,也曾裂土封王,只手遮住半壁江山,权倾天下,独我无王!“你好叶轻舞,我是北境之王——沈朝歌!”
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 外星学生

    外星学生

    我,是一个没有故乡的人,地球,她也不是我的故乡,早在地球公元纪年1892年来到了地球,开始了百年的生活