| BOOK THIRTEEN: 1812
1. CHAPTER I
 (continued)The third and most incomprehensible thing is that people studying
 history deliberately avoid seeing that this flank march cannot be
 attributed to any one man, that no one ever foresaw it, and that in
 reality, like the retreat from Fili, it did not suggest itself to
 anyone in its entirety, but resulted- moment by moment, step by
 step, event by event- from an endless number of most diverse
 circumstances and was only seen in its entirety when it had been
 accomplished and belonged to the past. At the council at Fili the prevailing thought in the minds of the
 Russian commanders was the one naturally suggesting itself, namely,
 a direct retreat by the Nizhni road. In proof of this there is the
 fact that the majority of the council voted for such a retreat, and
 above all there is the well-known conversation after the council,
 between the commander in chief and Lanskoy, who was in charge of the
 commissariat department. Lanskoy informed the commander in chief
 that the army supplies were for the most part stored along the Oka
 in the Tula and Ryazan provinces, and that if they retreated on Nizhni
 the army would be separated from its supplies by the broad river
 Oka, which cannot be crossed early in winter. This was the first
 indication of the necessity of deviating from what had previously
 seemed the most natural course- a direct retreat on Nizhni-Novgorod.
 The army turned more to the south, along the Ryazan road and nearer to
 its supplies. Subsequently the in activity of the French (who even
 lost sight of the Russian army), concern for the safety of the arsenal
 at Tula, and especially the advantages of drawing nearer to its
 supplies caused the army to turn still further south to the Tula road.
 Having crossed over, by a forced march, to the Tula road beyond the
 Pakhra, the Russian commanders intended to remain at Podolsk and had
 no thought of the Tarutino position; but innumerable circumstances and
 the reappearance of French troops who had for a time lost touch with
 the Russians, and projects of giving battle, and above all the
 abundance of provisions in Kaluga province, obliged our army to turn
 still more to the south and to cross from the Tula to the Kaluga
 road and go to Tarutino, which was between the roads along which those
 supplies lay. Just as it is impossible to say when it was decided to
 abandon Moscow, so it is impossible to say precisely when, or by whom,
 it was decided to move to Tarutino. Only when the army had got
 there, as the result of innumerable and varying forces, did people
 begin to assure themselves that they had desired this movement and
 long ago foreseen its result. |