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lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lรฉgion dโ€™honneur of which Napoleon was himself the head.

Quos vult perdere dementat.77

III

The Emperor of Russia had, meanwhile, been in Vรญlna for more than a month, reviewing troops and holding maneuvers. Nothing was ready for the war that everyone expected and to prepare for which the Emperor had come from Petersburg. There was no general plan of action. The vacillation between the various plans that were proposed had even increased after the Emperor had been at headquarters for a month. Each of the three armies had its own commander in chief, but there was no supreme commander of all the forces, and the Emperor did not assume that responsibility himself.

The longer the Emperor remained in Vรญlna the less did everybodyโ โ€”tired of waitingโ โ€”prepare for the war. All the efforts of those who surrounded the sovereign seemed directed merely to making him spend his time pleasantly and forget that war was impending.

In June, after many balls and fรชtes given by the Polish magnates, by the courtiers, and by the Emperor himself, it occurred to one of the Polish aides-de-camp in attendance that a dinner and ball should be given for the Emperor by his aides-de-camp. This idea was eagerly received. The Emperor gave his consent. The aides-de-camp collected money by subscription. The lady who was thought to be most pleasing to the Emperor was invited to act as hostess. Count Bennigsen, being a landowner in the Vรญlna province, offered his country house for the fรชte, and the thirteenth of June was fixed for a ball, dinner, regatta, and fireworks at Zakret, Count Bennigsenโ€™s country seat.

The very day that Napoleon issued the order to cross the Niemen, and his vanguard, driving off the Cossacks, crossed the Russian frontier, Alexander spent the evening at the entertainment given by his aides-de-camp at Bennigsenโ€™s country house.

It was a gay and brilliant fรชte. Connoisseurs of such matters declared that rarely had so many beautiful women been assembled in one place. Countess Bezรบkhova was present among other Russian ladies who had followed the sovereign from Petersburg to Vรญlna and eclipsed the refined Polish ladies by her massive, so-called Russian type of beauty. The Emperor noticed her and honored her with a dance.

Borรญs Drubetskรณy, having left his wife in Moscow and being for the present en garรงon (as he phrased it), was also there and, though not an aide-de-camp, had subscribed a large sum toward the expenses. Borรญs was now a rich man who had risen to high honors and no longer sought patronage but stood on an equal footing with the highest of those of his own age. He was meeting Elรจn in Vรญlna after not having seen her for a long time and did not recall the past, but as Elรจn was enjoying the favors of a very important personage and Borรญs had only recently married, they met as good friends of long standing.

At midnight dancing was still going on. Elรจn, not having a suitable partner, herself offered to dance the mazurka with Borรญs. They were the third couple. Borรญs, coolly looking at Elรจnโ€™s dazzling bare shoulders which emerged from a dark, gold-embroidered, gauze gown, talked to her of old acquaintances and at the same time, unaware of it himself and unnoticed by others, never for an instant ceased to observe the Emperor who was in the same room. The Emperor was not dancing, he stood in the doorway, stopping now one pair and now another with gracious words which he alone knew how to utter.

As the mazurka began, Borรญs saw that Adjutant General Balashรซv, one of those in closest attendance on the Emperor, went up to him and contrary to court etiquette stood near him while he was talking to a Polish lady. Having finished speaking to her, the Emperor looked inquiringly at Balashรซv and, evidently understanding that he only acted thus because there were important reasons for so doing, nodded slightly to the lady and turned to him. Hardly had Balashรซv begun to speak before a look of amazement appeared on the Emperorโ€™s face. He took Balashรซv by the arm and crossed the room with him, unconsciously clearing a path seven yards wide as the people on both sides made way for him. Borรญs noticed Arakchรฉevโ€™s excited face when the sovereign went out with Balashรซv. Arakchรฉev looked at the Emperor from under his brow and, sniffing with his red nose, stepped forward from the crowd as if expecting the Emperor to address him. (Borรญs understood that Arakchรฉev envied Balashรซv and was displeased that evidently important news had reached the Emperor otherwise than through himself.)

But the Emperor and Balashรซv passed out into the illuminated garden without noticing Arakchรฉev who, holding his sword and glancing wrathfully around, followed some twenty paces behind them.

All the time Borรญs was going through the figures of the mazurka, he was worried by the question of what news Balashรซv had brought and how he could find it out before others. In the figure in which he had to choose two ladies, he whispered to Elรจn that he meant to choose Countess Potocka who, he thought, had gone out onto the veranda, and glided over the parquet to the door opening into the garden, where, seeing Balashรซv and the Emperor returning to the veranda, he stood still. They were moving toward the door. Borรญs, fluttering as if he had not had time to withdraw, respectfully pressed close to the doorpost with bowed head.

The Emperor, with the agitation of one who has been personally affronted, was finishing with these words:

โ€œTo enter Russia without declaring war! I will not make peace as long as a single armed enemy remains in my country!โ€ It seemed to Borรญs that it gave the Emperor pleasure to utter these words. He was satisfied with the form in which he had expressed his thoughts, but displeased that Borรญs had overheard it.

โ€œLet no one know of it!โ€ the Emperor added with a frown.

Borรญs understood that this was meant for him

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