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had suddenly attacked the French。 Timohin had rushed with such a desperate yell upon the French; and with such desperate and drunken energy had he dashed at the enemy with only a sword in his hand; that the French flung down their weapons and fled without pausing to recover themselves。 Dolohov; running beside Timohin; killed one French soldier at close quarters; and was the first to seize by the collar an officer who surrendered。 The fleeing Russians came back; the battalions were brought together; and the French; who had been on the point of splitting the forces of the left flank into two parts; were for the moment held in check。 The reserves had time to join the main forces; and the runaways were stopped。 The general stood with Major Ekonomov at the bridge; watching the retreating companies go by; when a soldier ran up to him; caught hold of his stirrup; and almost clung on to it。 The soldier was wearing a coat of blue fine cloth; he had no knapsack nor shako; his head was bound up; and across his shoulders was slung a French cartridge case。 In his hand he held an officer’s sword。 The soldier was pale; his blue eyes looked impudently into the general’s face; but his mouth was smiling。 Although the general was engaged in giving instructions to Major Ekonomov; he could not help noticing this soldier。
“Your excellency; here are two trophies;” said Dolohov; pointing to the French sword and cartridge case。 “An officer was taken prisoner by me。 I stopped the company。” Dolohov breathed hard from weariness; he spoke in jerks。 “The whole company can bear me witness。 I beg you to remember me; your excellency!”
“Very good; very good;” said the general; and he turned to Major Ekonomov。 But Dolohov did not leave him; he undid the bandage; and showed the blood congealed on his head。
“A bayonet wound; I kept my place in the front。 Remember me; your excellency。”
Tushin’s battery had been forgotten; and it was only at the very end of the action that Prince Bagration; still hearing the cannonade in the centre; sent the staff…officer on duty and then Prince Andrey to command the battery to retire as quickly as possible。 The force which had been stationed near Tushin’s cannons to protect them had by somebody’s orders retreated in the middle of the battle。 But the battery still kept up its fire; and was not taken by the French simply because the enemy could not conceive of the reckless daring of firing from four cannons that were quite unprotected。 The French supposed; on the contrary; judging from the energetic action of the battery; that the chief forces of the Russians were concentrated here in the centre; and twice attempted to attack that point; and both times were driven back by the grapeshot fired on them from the four cannons which stood in solitude on the heights。 Shortly after Prince Bagration’s departure; Tushin had succeeded in setting fire to Sch?ngraben。
“Look; what a fuss they’re in! It’s flaming! What a smoke! Smartly done! First…rate! The smoke! the smoke!” cried the gunners; their spirits reviving。
All the guns were aimed without instructions in the direction of the conflagration。 The soldiers; as though they were urging each other on; shouted at every volley: “Bravo! That’s something like now! Go it!… First…rate!” The fire; fanned by the wind; soon spread。 The French columns; who had marched out beyond the village; went back; but as though in revenge for this mischance; the enemy stationed ten cannons a little to the right of the village; and began firing from them on Tushin。
In their childlike glee at the conflagration of the village; and the excitement of their successful firing on the French; our artillerymen only noticed this battery when two cannon…balls and after them four more fell among their cannons; and one knocked over two horses and another tore off the foot of a gunner。 Their spirits; however; once raised; did not flag; their excitement simply found another direction。 The horses were replaced by others from the ammunition carriage; the wounded were removed; and the four cannons were turned facing the ten of the enemy’s battery。 The other officer; Tushin’s comrade; was killed at the beginning of the action; and after an hour’s time; of the forty gunners of the battery; seventeen were disabled; but they were still as merry and as eager as ever。 Twice they noticed the French appearing below close to them; and they sent volleys of grapeshot at them。
The little man with his weak; clumsy movements; was continually asking his orderly for just one more pipe for that stroke; as he said; and scattering sparks from it; he kept running out in front and looking from under his little hand at the French。
“Smash away; lads!” he was continually saying; and he clutched at the cannon wheels himself and unscrewed the screws。 In the smoke; deafened by the incessant booming of the cannons that made him shudder every time one was fired; Tushin ran from one cannon to the other; his short pipe never out of his mouth。 At one moment he was taking aim; then reckoning the charges; then arranging for the changing and unharnessing of the killed and wounded horses; and all the time shouting in his weak; shrill; hesitating voice。 His face grew more and more eager。 Only when men were killed and wounded he knitted his brows; and turning away from the dead man; shouted angrily to the men; slow; as they always are; to pick up a wounded man or a dead body。 The soldiers; for the most part fine; handsome fellows (a couple of heads taller than their officer and twice as broad in the chest; as they mostly are in the artillery); all looked to their commanding officer like children in a difficult position; and the expression they found on his face was invariably reflected at once on their own。
Owing to the fearful uproar and noise and the necessity of attention and activity; Tushin experienced not the slightest unpleasant sensation of fear; and the idea that he might be killed or badly wounded never entered his head。 On the contrary; he felt more and more lively。 It seemed to him that the moment in which he had first seen the enemy and had fired the first shot was long; long ago; yesterday perhaps; and that the spot of earth on which he stood was a place long familiar to him; in which he was quite at home。 Although he thought of everything; considered everything; did everything the very best officer could have done in his position; he was in a state of mind akin to the delirium of fever or the intoxication of a drunken man。
The deafening sound of his own guns on all sides; the hiss and thud of the enemy’s shells; the sight of the perspiring; flushed gunners hurrying about the cannons; the sight of the blood of men and horses; and of the puffs of smoke from the enemy on the opposite side (always followed by a cannon…ball that flew across and hit the earth; a man; a horse; or a cannon)—all these images made up for him a fantastic world of his own; in which he found enjoyment at the moment。 The enemy’s cannons in his fancy were not cannons; but pipes from which an invisible smoker blew puffs of smoke at intervals。
“There he’s puffing away again;” Tushin murmured to himself as a cloud of smoke rolled downhill; and was