Partisan movement in the work of Leo Tolstoy "War and Peace". Introduction Images of partisans in war and peace
The definition of guerrilla warfare in the novel "War and Peace"
According to military science, in times of war, "Law is always on the side of large armies." Talking about guerrilla warfare in the novel War and Peace, Tolstoy refutes this statement and writes: "Guerrilla warfare (always successful, as history shows) is directly opposite to this rule."
The French in 1812, believing that they had conquered Russia, were very mistaken. They did not expect that the war is not only the observance of the rules of military science, it is also that invisible force that lurks in the souls of the Russian people. It was this force that led both ordinary peasants and the military, uniting them into small detachments, which provided invaluable assistance to the Russian army in defeating the French.
Napoleon, behaving so pompously and pompously in Vilna, was sure that his army would conquer Russia easily and beautifully, and did not expect to meet resistance not only from the army, but also from the common people. He believed that his large army would march victoriously across the territory of Russia and add another page to the book of his glory.
But Napoleon did not expect that this war would become popular and his army would be practically destroyed by small detachments of people, sometimes far from military science - partisans.
The guerrillas often acted contrary to the logic of war, on a whim, observing their own rules of warfare. “One of the most tangible and advantageous deviations from the so-called rules of war is the action of scattered people against people huddled together. This kind of action always manifests itself in a war that takes on a popular character. These actions consist in the fact that, instead of becoming a crowd against the crowd, people disperse separately, attack one by one and immediately run away when they are attacked by large forces, and then attack again when the opportunity presents itself,” Tolstoy wrote about them.
Because when it comes to defending their Fatherland, all means are good, and, realizing this, absolutely unfamiliar people unite in a single impulse for this goal.
Partisans, description and characters
In the novel War and Peace, guerrilla warfare is initially described as spontaneous and unconscious actions of individual peasants and peasants. Tolstoy compares the destruction of the French with the extermination of mad dogs: "thousands of people of the enemy army - backward marauders, foragers - were exterminated by Cossacks and peasants, who beat these people just as unconsciously as dogs unconsciously bite a runaway mad dog."
The state could not fail to recognize the strength and effectiveness of individual scattered detachments of partisans, who "destroyed the Great Army in parts" and therefore recognized the partisan movement quite officially. Many “parties” along the entire front line have already joined him.
Partisans are people of a special temperament, adventurers by nature, they are at the same time true patriots, without high-flown speeches and beautiful performances. Their patriotism is natural movement soul, which does not allow to stand aside from the events taking place in Russia.
The prominent representatives of the army in the partisan movement in the novel are Denisov and Dolokhov. With their detachments, they are ready to attack the French transport, not wanting to unite with either the German or the Polish generals. Without thinking about the hardships and difficulties of camp life, as if effortlessly, they capture the French and free the Russian prisoners.
In the novel War and Peace, the partisan movement unites people who, in ordinary life, might not even have met each other. In any case, they would not communicate and be friends. As, for example, Denisov and Tikhon Shcherbaty, so kindly described by Tolstoy. The war shows the true face of every person, and forces them to act and act as the significance of this historical moment dictates. Tikhon Shcherbaty, dexterous and cunning man, alone making his way into the enemy camp to capture the language - the embodiment of people from the common people, ready to serve to destroy enemies out of "loyalty to the tsar and fatherland and hatred for the French, which the sons of the fatherland must observe," as Denisov said .
The relationship between people during hostilities is interesting. On the one hand, Tikhon, having taken the “plastun” and deciding that he is not suitable for Denisov, because he doesn’t really know anything, easily kills him. And on the other hand, he also says that “We don’t do anything bad to the French ... We just played with the guys out of hunting. It was like a dozen or two Miroderov were beaten, otherwise we didn’t do anything bad ... "
Denisov, taking French soldiers prisoner, sends them on receipt, regretting to shoot them on the spot. Dolokhov even laughs at this scrupulousness of his. At the same time, both Denisov and Dolokhov are well aware that if they are captured by the French, there will be no mercy for either one or the other. And the fact that Denisov treated the prisoners nobly will not matter. “But they will catch me and you, with your chivalry, all the same on an aspen,” Dolokhov tells him.
Some come to the partisans for romance, since Petya Rostov came to the war, representing everything that happens in the form of a game. But most often, people participating in the partisan movement make a conscious choice, realizing that in such difficult and dangerous historical periods, each person must make every effort to defeat the enemy.
The Russian people, combining warmth, humility towards loved ones, simplicity and modesty, at the same time is full of rebellious spirit, bold, rebellious and spontaneous, which does not allow you to calmly watch how the conquerors walk on their native land.
conclusions
In the novel "War and Peace" Tolstoy, talking about the events, presents them not as a historian, but as a participant in these events, from the inside. Showing all the ordinary nature of essentially heroic phenomena, the author tells us not just about the war of 1812, but about the people who led Russia to victory in this war. He tells the reader about ordinary people, with their usual sorrows, joys and worries about how they look. The fact that, despite the war, people fall in love and suffer from betrayal, live and enjoy life.
Someone uses the war for their own purposes in order to advance in the service, like Boris Drubetskoy, someone simply follows the orders of his superiors, trying not to think about the consequences of following these orders, as Nikolai Rostov begins to do over time.
But there are special people, those who go to war at the behest of the soul, out of patriotism, these are partisans, almost invisible, but at the same time irreplaceable heroes of the war. I want to finish the essay on the topic “Guerrilla warfare in the novel “War and Peace” with a quote from the novel: “The French, retreating in 1812, although they should have defended separately, according to tactics, huddle together, because the spirit of the army has fallen so that only the mass holds the army together. The Russians, on the contrary, tactically should have attacked en masse, but in reality they are split up, because the spirit is raised so that individuals they beat without the order of the French and do not need coercion in order to expose themselves to labor and danger ”
Artwork test
Partisan warfare in Leo Tolstoy's novel "War and Peace"
Radkova Yu.N.,
teacher of Russian language and literature
MBOU "Gymnasium No. 5", Bryansk
Lesson Objectives:create conditions for the formation of an idea of the glorification of the feat of the people by L. N. Tolstoy in Patriotic war 1812; improve the skills of working with text, the ability to analyze what is read; express their own position on the issues under discussion; contribute to the education of an active life position, civic duty and patriotism on the example of a national feat in the Patriotic War of 1812.
During the classes.
1. Preparation for perception.
From the 10th (burnt) chapter of A.S. Pushkin's novel "Eugene Onegin" only fragments have been preserved. One of them says:
Storm of the Twelfth Year
It has come. Who helped us here?
The frenzy of the people
Barclay, winter or Russian God?
For L.N. Tolstoy, the answer to this question was obvious: only an unprecedented patriotic upsurge and the unity of the people in the fight against the enemy saved the Fatherland from inevitable death. "The frenzy of the people", and by the word "people" Tolstoy meant the entire patriotic population of Russia, including the peasantry, the urban poor, the nobility, and the merchant class, led to a people's war, the ideology of which was formulated by the writer in the words of Prince Andrei Bolkonsky: "... the French ruined my house... They are my enemies, they are all criminals according to my concepts. And Timokhin and the whole army think the same way. They must be executed."
How does Tolstoy depict the popular, partisan war on the pages of the novel "War and Peace"? This is what we will be talking about in today's lesson.
2. Communication of the topic and objectives of the lesson.
3. Work on the topic of the lesson.
The guerrilla war, as Tolstoy writes, began with the entry of the enemy into Smolensk: “From the time of the fire of Smolensk, a war began that does not fit any previous legends of the war. The burning of towns and villages, the retreat after battles, the blow of Borodin and again the retreat, the abandonment and fire of Moscow, the catching of marauders, the capture of transports, the guerrilla war - all these were deviations from the rules. When faced with a people's war for the first time, Napoleon repeatedly complained to Kutuzov and Emperor Alexander that the war was being waged "against all the rules," "as if there were some rules for killing people," adds Tolstoy. The writer glorifies the "club of the people's war", which "rose with all its formidable and majestic strength and, without asking anyone's tastes and rules, with stupid simplicity, but with expediency, without analyzing anything, rose, fell and nailed the French until then until the whole invasion is gone."
What was, according to Tolstoy, the historical role of the partisans?
“The guerrillas destroyed the great army in parts. They picked up those fallen leaves that fell of themselves from a withered tree - the French army, and sometimes shook this tree. Tolstoy talks about the audacity of the Russian partisans, especially the peasants, who "climbed between the French" and believed "that now everything was possible."
- When was the first partisan detachment established? Who owns "the glory of the first step to legitimize this method of war"?
What partisan detachments does the writer talk about?
“There were parties ... small, prefabricated, on foot and horseback, there were peasants and landowners, unknown to anyone. There was a deacon head of the party, who took several hundred prisoners a month. There was an elder, Vasilisa, who beat hundreds of Frenchmen. In a larger plan, the author draws the partisan detachments of Denisov and Dolokhov.
Who especially stands out in Denisov's partisan detachment? Tell us about Tikhon Shcherbat.
"Tikhon Shcherbaty was one of the most the right people in the party. He was a peasant from Pokrovsky near Gzhatia. When Denisov came to Pokrovskoye, he told the headman "that his goal was to beat the French call", and learned from him "that in their village only Tishka Shcherbaty was engaged in these matters." Denisov called Tikhon and praised him, and "the next day ... he was informed that Tikhon had joined the party and asked to be left with her." Tikhon at first performed "the menial work of laying fires, delivering water, skinning horses", but "soon showed a great desire and ability for guerrilla warfare. He went out at night to plunder and each time brought with him a dress and French weapons, and when he was ordered, he brought prisoners. Denisov put Tikhon away from work, began to take him on trips with him and enrolled him in the Cossacks.
Tikhon did not like to ride and always walked, never falling behind the cavalry. His weapons were a blunderbuss, which he wore more for laughter, a peak and an ax, which he owned, like a wolf owns his teeth ... Tikhon equally true ... split logs with an ax and ... cut out thin pegs with them and cut out spoons. In the party of Denisov, Tikhon occupied his special, exceptional place. When it was necessary to do something especially difficult and ugly - to turn a wagon out of the mud with a shoulder, to pull a horse out of the swamp by the tail, skin it, climb into the very middle of the French, walk fifty miles a day - everyone pointed ... to Tikhon.<…>Once a Frenchman, who was taken by Tikhon, shot him with a pistol and hit him in the flesh of his back, "but from this wound," Tikhon was treated only with vodka. “This incident had only the effect on Tikhon that, after his wound, he rarely brought prisoners.
Tikhon was the most useful and brave man in the party. No one more than him discovered cases of attack, no one else took him and beat the French; and as a result of this, he was the jester of all the Cossacks, hussars, and he himself willingly succumbed to this rank.
Tikhon Shcherbat embodies the best typical character traits of an avenging peasant, strong, courageous, energetic and savvy. The French for him are enemies who must be destroyed. And he hunts them day and night. With his behavior, Tikhon even comes into conflict with the tactical plans of Denisov, who needed a “language”, and Tikhon did not bring him to his own and “executed”. Even Denisov, angry with him, must recognize the justice of the main thought, Tikhon's feelings, and act exactly as he wants: "Aah, he says, well, you will take everyone."
However, the same Tikhon, who “didn’t take prisoners,” says: “We don’t do bad things to the French ... We only beat a dozen Ma-roders, otherwise we didn’t do bad things ...”. These thoughts are especially vividly expressed in the story of the French boy Vincent Boss. Why does the author need an episode with Vincent Boss?
This episode shows how hatred for enemies, a sense of revenge go away, replaced by pity, compassion. The captive French drummer, a boy like Petya Rostov, is fed by both the soldiers and Petya himself, even his name is remade in the Russian manner: Spring or Visenya.
- How did Petya Rostov end up in Denisov's partisan detachment?
Instead of going to university, 15-year-old Petya goes to war. He serves as an orderly for a German general, whom he asks to send him with an assignment to Denisov's detachment. Having completed the assignment, Petya, however, does not return back, but remains in the detachment.
Why are the pages about Petya so necessary in the description of the partisan detachment?
Petya Rostov is a boy with an amazing spontaneity, a desire to see the good in all people, love them and find a response in them: “Petya was in an enthusiastic childish state of tender love for all people and, as a result, confidence in the same love for others day". Petya perceives the world poetically: at night he dreams that he is in a magical kingdom, there is a magical sky above him, he hears the magical sounds of music
Tell us about the stay of Petya Rostov in the Denisov detachment.
Having completed the order of the general, Petya does not return, but remains in the detachment and at night, together with Dolokhov, goes to reconnaissance in the French camp, and then participates in the attack. In an effort to be in the thick of things, afraid of being late, Petya jumps exactly where the shots come from and where the powder smoke is thicker, and dies
After the death of Petya Rostov Once again, the cruel law of war concerning the prisoners receives its justification: “Ready,” repeated Dolokhov ... and quickly went to the prisoners ... “we will not take!” he shouted to Denisov. And Denisov, who had previously sent prisoners on receipt, even knowing that they would die on the way, “did not answer” Dolokhov; "He rode up to Petya, dismounted from his horse, and with trembling hands turned towards him Petya's already pale face, stained with blood and mud."
Tolstoy ends his description of the war with the expulsion of the French from Russian soil. Why do you think the author does not depict the actual end of the war in Western Europe, does not describe the entry of the Russians into Paris?
Such a compositional solution more clearly sets off the idea of the book: only a war of liberation is just and necessary, and everything that, according to the will of Alexander, took place in Western Europe was made for glory.
The French army almost ceased to exist. Tolstoy shows its decomposition. He writes that the French army could not recover anywhere. Since the Battle of Borodino and the robbery of Moscow, it already carried in itself, as it were, the chemical conditions of decomposition. The people of this former army they fled with their leaders not knowing where, wanting only one thing: to get out ... from a hopeless situation ... (vol. IV, part II, ch. 18). Moreover, they still thought each of their prey. The emperor, kings, dukes had especially a lot of loot, shows Tolstoy.
Therefore, the Russian army changed tactics. “The Russian army was supposed to act like a whip on fleeing animals ... (vol. IV, part III, ch. 19). This meant that Kutuzov kept the army from battles with all his might, giving them only when it was impossible to get away from them. “Waiting for the enemy from behind, and not from the front, the French fled (p. 128) - ... who could not - surrendered or died.”
The feeling of revenge of the Russian people was satisfied. The French are no longer enemies, but simply miserable people. And if the Russians had hatred for the enemies, then mercy for the vanquished. Tolstoy shows how the soldiers treat the prisoners Rambal and Morel. “They are people too,” says the old soldier, like Kutuzov. And the captured Italian said to Pierre: “... to fight with people like you is a crime. You who have suffered so much from the French, you do not even have malice against them.
The laws of the world again triumph over war. However, this is not Christian forgiveness. Heroes remember everything that happened. “And then say, who called them to us? Serve them right ... - says Kutuzov, - I thank everyone for the difficult and faithful service, the victory is perfect, and Russia will not forget you. Glory to you forever!
So Tolstoy conveyed the qualities inherent in the Russian people: on the one hand, peacefulness, humanism, quick-wittedness, on the other hand, the power of anger against those who violate his peaceful life, and the indelible memory of his heroes and defenders.
Literature:L.N. Tolstoy. War and Peace. - M.: Enlightenment, 1987.
From the time when the Russian troops left Smolensk, a partisan war began.
The so-called guerrilla war began with the entry of the enemy into Smolensk. Before the guerrilla war was officially accepted by our government, already thousands of people of the enemy army - backward marauders, foragers - were exterminated by the Cossacks and peasants, who beat these people as unconsciously as dogs unconsciously bite a runaway rabid dog. Denis Davydov, with his Russian intuition, was the first to understand the significance of that terrible club, which, without asking the rules of military art, destroyed the French, and he owns the glory of the first step in legitimizing this method of war.
On August 24, the first partisan detachment of Davydov was established, and after his detachment others began to be established. The further the campaign progressed, the more the number of these detachments increased.
The partisans destroyed the Great Army in parts. They picked up those fallen leaves that fell of themselves from a withered tree - the French army, and sometimes shook this tree. In October, while the French fled to Smolensk, there were hundreds of these parties of various sizes and characters ...
The last days of October were the time of the height of the guerrilla war ...
Denisov took an active part in the partisan movement. On August 22, he followed the French transport all day, which, along with Russian prisoners, separated from other French armies and moved forward under heavy cover. According to scouts, he was heading towards Smolensk. Many partisan detachments knew about this French transport, but Denisov was going to attack and take this transport with his own forces together with Dolokhov (a partisan with a small detachment). His detachment did not leave the forest all day, not losing sight of the moving French. In the morning, Cossacks from Denisov's detachment seized two French wagons and took them to the forest. Considering that it was dangerous to attack, Denisov sent a peasant from his detachment - Tikhon Shcherbaty - to capture the French quartermasters who were there.
Waiting for Tikhon, sent for the French, Denisov went around the forest. It was rainy autumn weather. Next to Denisov rode his collaborator - a Cossack captain, and a little behind - a young French officer-drummer, taken prisoner this morning. Thinking about how best to capture the French transport, Denisov noticed two people approaching them. A disheveled, soaking wet young officer rode ahead, and a Cossack behind him. The officer handed Denisov a package from the general. After reading the message, Denisov looked at the young officer and recognized him as Petya Rostov. Petya, delighted by the meeting, began to tell Denisov how he had passed the French, how glad he was that he had been given such an assignment as he fought near Vyazma. Forgetting about officiality, Petya asked Denisov to leave him in the detachment for at least a day. Denisov agreed, and Petya stayed.
When Denisov and the captain were discussing from what place it would be better to start an attack on the French, Tikhon Shcherbaty returned. The partisans sent on reconnaissance said that they saw how he was running away from the French, who fired at him from all barrels. As it turned out later, Tikhon captured the Frenchman yesterday, but since he turned out to be “wrong and swore a lot,” he did not bring him alive to the camp. Shcherbaty tried to get another "tongue", but the French noticed him.
Tikhon Shcherbaty was one of the most needed people in the party. He was a peasant from Pokrovsky near Gzhatya ...
In the party of Denisov, Tikhon occupied his own special, exceptional place. When it was necessary to do something especially difficult and nasty - turn a wagon in the mud with your shoulder, pull a horse out of the swamp by the tail, skin it, climb into the very middle of the French, walk fifty miles a day - everyone pointed, chuckling, at Tikhon. ..
Tikhon was the most useful and brave man in the party. No one else discovered cases of attacks, no one else took him and beat the French ...
Tikhon, justifying himself to Denisov for not delivering a living Frenchman, tried to turn everything into a joke. His story caused Petya to laugh, but when Rostov realized that Tikhon had killed a man, he became embarrassed.
It was already getting dark when Denisov, Petya and the esaul drove up to the guardhouse. In the semi-darkness one could see horses in saddles, Cossacks, hussars, adjusting huts in a clearing and (so that the French would not see the smoke) making a reddening fire in a forest ravine. In the hallway of a small hut, a Cossack, rolling up his sleeves, was chopping lamb. In the hut itself there were three officers from Denisov's party, setting up a table out of the door. Petya took off his wet clothes to dry and immediately began to assist the officers in setting up the dining table.
Ten minutes later, the table was ready, covered with a napkin. There was vodka on the table, rum in a flask, white bread and roast lamb with salt.
Sitting together with the officers at the table and tearing with his hands, over which the bacon flowed, fatty fragrant mutton, Petya was in an enthusiastic childish state of tender love for all people and, as a result, confidence in the same love of other people for himself.
For a long time Petya could not make up his mind to ask Denisov if it was possible to invite a French boy, whom the partisans had taken prisoner some time ago, to dinner, but then he nevertheless decided. Denisov allowed, and Petya went for a French drummer (Vincent). The Cossacks have already remade his name and called it "Spring", and the peasants and soldiers - "Spring". Petya invited the young Frenchman to the house.
Dolokhov soon arrived. About his courage and cruelty towards the French, they told a lot in the detachment.
Dolokhov's appearance struck Petya strangely with its simplicity.
Denisov dressed in a chekmen, wore a beard and on his chest the image of Nicholas the Wonderworker, and in his manner of speaking, in all methods, he showed the peculiarity of his position. Dolokhov, on the other hand, who had previously worn a Persian suit in Moscow, now looked like the most prim guards officer. His face was clean-shaven, he was dressed in a Guards padded frock coat with Georgy in his buttonhole and in a plain cap put on directly. He took off his wet cloak in the corner and, going up to Denisov, without greeting anyone, immediately began to question him about the matter.
Dolokhov, taking with him two French uniforms, invited the officers to ride with him to the French camp. Petya, despite Denisov's protests, firmly decided to go on reconnaissance with Dolokhov.
Dressed in French uniforms, Dolokhov and Petya went to the enemy camp. Having approached one of the fires, they spoke in French to the soldiers. One of the French greeted Dolokhov and asked him what he could serve.
Dolokhov said that he and his comrade were catching up with his regiment, and asked if they knew anything about his regiment. The French replied that they did not know. Then Dolokhov continued to ask the officers about whether the road they were traveling on was safe, how many people they had in the battalion, how many battalions, how many prisoners. During the conversation, it always seemed to Petya that the French would reveal the deception, but no one noticed anything, and they returned safely to the camp. Approaching the place, Dolokhov asked Petya to tell Denisov that tomorrow, at dawn, at the first shot, the Cossacks would act.
Returning to the guardhouse, Petya found Denisov in the entryway. Denisov, in agitation, anxiety and annoyance at himself for letting Petya go, was waiting for him.
God bless! he shouted. - Well, thank God! he repeated, listening to Petya's enthusiastic story. - And why not take you, I didn’t sleep because of you! Denisov said. - Well, thank God, now go to bed. Let's take a step further to utg'a.
Yes ... No, - said Petya. - I don't want to sleep yet. Yes, I know myself, if I fall asleep, it's over. And then I got used to not sleeping before the battle.
Petya sat for some time in the hut, joyfully recalling the details of his trip and vividly imagining what would happen tomorrow. Then, noticing that Denisov had fallen asleep, he got up and went into the yard...
Petya came out of the passage, looked around in the darkness, and went up to the wagons. Someone was snoring under the wagons, and saddled horses stood around them, chewing oats. In the darkness, Petya recognized his horse, which he called Karabakh, although it was a Little Russian horse, and went up to her.
Seeing a Cossack sitting under the wagon, Petya spoke to him, told him in detail about the trip and asked him to sharpen his saber.
For a long time after that Petya was silent, listening to the sounds...
Petya should have known that he was in the forest, in the party of Denisov, a verst from the road, that he was sitting on a wagon recaptured from the French, near which horses were tied, that the Cossack Likhachev was sitting under him and sharpening his saber, that a large black spot to the right - a guardhouse, and a red bright spot below to the left - a dying fire, that the man who came for a cup was a hussar who wanted to drink; but he knew nothing and did not want to know it. He was in a magical realm, in which there was nothing like reality. A big black spot, maybe it was a guardhouse, or maybe there was a cave that led into the very depths of the earth. The red spot may have been fire, or perhaps the eye of a huge monster. Maybe he’s definitely sitting on a wagon now, but it’s very possible that he’s not sitting on a wagon, but on a terribly high tower, from which if you fall, you would fly to the ground all day, a whole month - all fly and you will never reach . It may be that just the Cossack Likhachev is sitting under the wagon, or it may very well be that he is the kindest, bravest, most wonderful, most excellent person in the world, whom no one knows. Perhaps it was the hussar who was exactly passing for water and went into the hollow, or perhaps he had just disappeared from sight and completely disappeared, and he was not there.
Whatever Petya saw now, nothing would surprise him. He was in a magical realm where anything was possible.
He looked up at the sky. And the sky was as magical as the earth. The sky was clearing, and over the tops of the trees clouds quickly ran, as if revealing the stars. Sometimes it seemed that the sky was clearing and showed a black, clear sky. Sometimes it seemed that these black spots were clouds.
Sometimes it seemed that the sky was high, high above the head; sometimes the sky descended completely, so that you could reach it with your hand ...
Petya did not know how long this went on: he enjoyed himself, was constantly surprised at his own pleasure and regretted that there was no one to tell him. Likhachev's gentle voice woke him up.
The next morning, the Cossacks set out on a campaign, and Petya asked Denisov to entrust him with some important business. But Vasily Fedorovich strictly ordered him to obey and not to do anything without his instructions. When the signal to attack was given, Petya, forgetting about Denisov's order, set his horse at full speed.
Wait? .. Hooray! .. - Petya shouted and, without delaying a single minute, he galloped to the place where the shots were heard and where the powder smoke was thicker. A volley was heard, empty bullets squealed into something. The Cossacks and Dolokhov jumped after Petya through the gates of the house. The French, in the swaying thick smoke, some threw down their weapons and ran out of the bushes towards the Cossacks, others ran downhill to the pond. Petya galloped along the manor's yard on his horse and, instead of holding the reins, waved both hands strangely and quickly, and kept falling further and further from the saddle to one side. The horse, running into a fire smoldering in the morning light, rested, and Petya fell heavily to the wet ground. The Cossacks saw how quickly his arms and legs twitched, despite the fact that his head did not move. The bullet pierced his head.
After talking with a senior French officer, who came out from behind the house with a handkerchief on a sword and announced that they were surrendering, Dolokhov got off his horse and went up to Petya, motionless, with his arms outstretched.
Ready, - he said, frowning, and went to the gate to meet Denisov, who was coming towards him.
Killed?! cried Denisov, seeing from afar that familiar to him, undoubtedly lifeless position in which Petya's body lay.
Ready, - repeated Dolokhov, as if pronouncing this word gave him pleasure, and quickly went to the prisoners, who were surrounded by dismounted Cossacks. - We won't take it! he shouted to Denisov.
Denisov did not answer; he rode up to Petya, dismounted from his horse, and with trembling hands turned towards him Petya's already pale face, stained with blood and mud...
Among the Russian prisoners recaptured by Denisov and Dolokhov was Pierre Bezukhov ...
Pierre spent a lot of time in captivity. Of the 330 people who left Moscow, less than 100 survived. The French no longer needed the prisoners, and every day they became more and more burdensome. The French soldiers did not understand why they, hungry and cold, should guard the same hungry and cold prisoners who were sick and dying, so every day they treated the Russians more and more strictly.
On the third day after leaving Moscow, Karataev developed a fever. As he weakened, Pierre moved away from him.
In captivity, in a booth, Pierre learned not with his mind, but with his whole being, with his life, that man was created for happiness, that happiness is in himself, in the satisfaction of natural human needs, and that all misfortune comes not from lack, but from excess; but now, in these last three weeks of the campaign, he learned another new, comforting truth - he learned that there is nothing terrible in the world. He learned that just as there is no position in which a person would be happy and completely free, so there is no position in which he would be unhappy and not free. He learned that there is a limit to suffering and a limit to freedom, and that this limit is very close; that the man who suffered because one leaf was wrapped in his pink bed, suffered in the same way as he suffered now, falling asleep on the bare, damp earth, cooling one side and warming the other; that when he used to put on his narrow ballroom shoes, he suffered in exactly the same way as now, when he was completely barefoot (his shoes had long been disheveled), his feet covered with sores. He learned that when he, as it seemed to him, of his own free will married his wife, he was no more free than now, when he was locked up at night in the stable. Of all that he later called suffering, but which he then hardly felt, the main thing was his bare, worn, scabbed feet. (Horse meat was tasty and nutritious, the nitrate bouquet of gunpowder used instead of salt was even pleasant, there was not much cold, and it was always hot during the day on the move, and at night there were fires; the lice that ate the body warmed pleasantly.) One thing was hard. First, it's the legs.
On the second day of the march, having examined his sores by the fire, Pierre thought it impossible to step on them; but when everyone got up, he walked limping, and then, when warmed up, he walked without pain, although in the evening it was still more terrible to look at his feet. But he did not look at them and thought about something else.
Now only Pierre understood the whole force of human vitality and the saving power of shifting attention, invested in a person, similar to that saving valve in steam engines, which releases excess steam as soon as its density exceeds a certain norm.
He did not see or hear how backward prisoners were shot, although more than a hundred of them had already died in this way. He did not think about Karataev, who was weakening every day and, obviously, was soon to undergo the same fate. Even less did Pierre think of himself. The more difficult his position became, the more terrible the future was, the more independent of the position in which he was, joyful and soothing thoughts, memories and ideas came to him ...
At one of the halts, Pierre went up to the fire, at which the sick Platon Karataev was sitting and telling the soldiers a story familiar to Pierre.
Pierre knew this story for a long time, Karataev told this story to him alone six times, and always with a special, joyful feeling. But no matter how well Pierre knew this story, he now listened to it as if it were something new, and that quiet delight that Karataev apparently experienced while telling, was also communicated to Pierre. This story was about an old merchant who lived decently and God-fearing with his family and who once went with a friend, a wealthy merchant, to Macarius.
Stopping at the inn, both merchants fell asleep, and the next day the merchant's friend was found stabbed to death and robbed. The bloodied knife was found under the old merchant's pillow. The merchant was judged, punished with a whip, and, having pulled out his nostrils, - as follows in order, Karataev said, - they were exiled to hard labor.
And so, my brother (at this place Pierre found Karataev’s story), the case has been going on for ten years or more. The old man lives in hard labor. As it should, he submits, he does no harm. Only the god of death asks. - Good. And they get together, night work, hard labor, just like you and me, and the old man with them. And the conversation turned, who suffers for what, what God is to blame for. They began to say that he ruined the soul, that two, that set it on fire, that fugitive, so for nothing. They began to ask the old man: why, they say, grandfather, are you suffering? I, my dear brothers, say, I suffer for my own and for human sins. And I didn’t destroy souls, I didn’t take someone else’s, except that I clothed the poor brethren. I, my dear brothers, are a merchant; and had great wealth. So and so, he says. And he told them, then, how the whole thing was, in order. I, he says, do not grieve about myself. It means that God found me. One thing, he says, I feel sorry for my old woman and children. And so the old man cried. If the same person happened in their company, it means that the merchant was killed. Where, says grandfather, was it? When, what month? asked everyone. His heart ached. Suitable in this manner to the old man - clap at the feet. For me, you, he says, old man, disappear. The truth is true; innocently in vain, he says, guys, this man is tormented. I, he says, did the same thing and put a knife under your sleepy head. Forgive me, says grandfather, you are me for the sake of Christ.
Karataev fell silent, smiling joyfully, looking at the fire, and straightened the logs.
The old man says: God, they say, will forgive you, and we all, he says, are sinful to God, I suffer for my sins. He burst into tears himself. What do you think, falcon, - Karataev said, beaming brighter and brighter with an enthusiastic smile, as if what he had now to tell contained the main charm and the whole meaning of the story, - what do you think, falcon, this murderer showed up most according to his superiors . I, he says, ruined six souls (there was a big villain), but all I feel sorry for this old man. Let him not cry at me. Showed up: written off, sent the paper, as it should. The place is far away, while the court and the case, while all the papers have been written off as they should, according to the authorities, that means. It came to the king. So far, the royal decree has come: to release the merchant, to give him rewards, how many were awarded there. The paper came, they began to look for the old man. Where did such an old man suffer innocently in vain? The paper came out from the king. They began to search. - Lower jaw Karataeva trembled. - And God forgave him - he died. So, falcon, - finished Karataev and for a long time, silently smiling, looked in front of him.
Not the story itself, but its mysterious meaning, that enthusiastic joy that shone in the face of Karataev at this story, the mysterious meaning of this joy, it now vaguely and joyfully filled Pierre's soul ...
Pierre last saw Karataev when he was sitting leaning against a birch.
Karataev looked at Pierre with his kind, round eyes, now covered with tears, and, apparently, called him to him, wanted to say something. But Pierre was too scared for himself. He acted as if he hadn't seen his eyes and hurried away.
When the prisoners started off again, Pierre looked back. Karataev was sitting on the edge of the road, by a birch; and two Frenchmen were saying something over him. Pierre did not look back anymore. He walked limping up the hill. Behind, from the place where Karataev was sitting, a shot was heard. Pierre clearly heard this shot ...
The convoy with the prisoners stopped in the village.
Pierre went up to the fire, ate roasted horse meat, lay down with his back to the fire and immediately fell asleep. He slept again in the same dream as he slept in Mozhaisk after Borodin.
Again the events of reality were combined with dreams, and again someone, whether he himself or someone else, spoke to him thoughts, and even the same thoughts that were spoken to him in Mozhaisk.
“Life is everything. Life is God. Everything moves and moves, and this movement is God. And as long as there is life, there is the enjoyment of the self-consciousness of the deity. Love life, love God. It is most difficult and most blessed to love this life in one's suffering, in the innocence of suffering.
"Karataev" - Pierre remembered.
On this day, Denisov's detachment released the prisoners.
From October 28, when frosts began, the flight of the French only acquired the more tragic character of people freezing and roasting to death at the fires and continuing to ride in fur coats and carriages with the loot of the emperor, kings and dukes; but in essence the process of flight and disintegration of the French army has not changed at all since the departure from Moscow ...
Having burst into Smolensk, which seemed to them the promised land, the French killed each other for provisions, robbed their own shops and, when everything was looted, they ran on.
Everyone was walking, not knowing where and why they were going...
The partisan movement in the Patriotic War of 1812 is one of the main expressions of the will and desire for the victory of the Russian people against the French troops. The partisan movement reflects the popular character of the Patriotic War.
The movement of partisans began after the entry of Napoleonic troops into Smolensk. Before the guerrilla war was officially accepted by our government, already thousands of people of the enemy army were exterminated by the Cossacks and "Partizans". At first, the partisan movement was spontaneous, represented by the performance of small, scattered partisan detachments, then it captured entire areas. Large detachments began to be created, thousands of folk heroes appeared, and talented organizers of the guerrilla war came to light. Many participants in the events testify to the beginning of the movement of the people: a participant in the war, the Decembrist I. D. Yakushin, A. Chicherin and many others. They repeatedly claimed that the inhabitants, not on the orders of the authorities, when the French approached, retired to the forests and swamps, leaving their homes to be burned, and from there waged a guerrilla war against the invaders. The war was waged not only by the peasants, but by all sections of the population. But some of the nobility remained in place in order to preserve their estates. Significantly inferior in numbers to the French, the Russian troops were forced to retreat, holding back the enemy with rearguard battles. After fierce resistance, the city of Smolensk was surrendered. The retreat caused discontent in the country and in the army. Following the advice of those around him, the tsar appointed M. I. Kutuzov as commander-in-chief of the Russian army. Kutuzov ordered to continue the retreat, trying to avoid in unfavorable conditions a general battle, which Napoleon persistently sought. On the way to Moscow, near the village of Borodino, Kutuzov gave the French a general battle, in which the French army, having suffered heavy losses, did not achieve victory. At the same time, the Russian army retained its strength, which prepared the conditions for a turning point in the war and the final defeat of the French armies. In order to preserve and replenish the Russian army, Kutuzov left Moscow, withdrew his troops with a skillful flank march and took up positions at Tarutin, thus blocking Napoleon's path to the food-rich southern regions of Russia. At the same time, he organized the actions of army partisan detachments. A widespread popular guerrilla war also unfolded against the French troops. The Russian army launched a counteroffensive. The French, forced to retreat, suffered huge losses and suffered defeat after defeat. The deeper the Napoleonic troops penetrated, the more clearly the partisan resistance of the people became.
In 1869, Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy finished writing one of the most global works - the epic novel War and Peace. He lifts many important points that apply to both civilian and military people. The writer allocates a separate place to describe the guerrilla war, which became a decisive factor in the victory over the French in 1812.
At all times, it was believed that the war was won not so much by front-line fighters as by partisans. After all, they act spontaneously, not following any specific military laws and regulations. Their actions forced the government to officially recognize the participation of partisan detachments in the war. Lev Nikolaevich Tolstoy says that people who fight as partisans are adventurers by nature who are not afraid to act. The prominent representatives of this movement in the novel "War and Peace" are Dolokhov and Denisov, who are not going to unite with other allied countries. They are well aware of the rules of conduct in war, but this does not prevent them from famously sneaking into the enemy camp and causing significant damage.
Also, the war is able to unite people who, most likely, would never have met, and even if the meeting took place, they would definitely not talk to each other. A striking example is the relationship between Denisov and Tikhon, who almost immediately found mutual language. Despite the fact that sometimes they act in different ways, the characters are able to agree and find positive aspects in each other. But still, at some points, their opinions completely diverge. So, having caught the “tongue” and realizing that he knows nothing, Tikhon immediately kills him and does not regret what he did. And Denisov, in turn, cannot commit a heartless murder and gives the prisoners on receipt. Moreover, both understand that if they were in their place, one could not even stutter about mercy.
Most people who serve in partisan detachments are well aware of this and all the other hardships and dangers that they will have to face. They are sure of where they are going. But it happens that very young people come across who still don’t really know anything about military operations: that’s why they think that this is all one big game. Petya Rostov, who came to the partisans with romantic ideas. But very soon the young hero nevertheless understood what a real war is. But even such romantic persons are in some ways similar to other representatives of partisanship. All who have ever been among them came of their own free will, because they wanted to protect their fatherland, their homes and families. If you say that none of them were afraid, then it would be a lie, because fear is a normal state, under those circumstances when it can be turned into the right thing. However, no one doubted for a moment whether he should be among the partisans or not.
Thus, in the epic novel War and Peace, Leo Tolstoy pays great attention to guerrilla warfare, believing that it key moment to defeat enemy forces. The writer shows how people behave in certain conditions, and how war