酷兔英语

《War And Peace》 Book10  CHAPTER XX
    by Leo Tolstoy


ON THE MORNING of the 25th Pierre drove out of Mozhaisk. On the slope of an
immense, steep, and winding hill, leading out of the town, Pierre got out of the
carriage, and walked by a cathedral on the right of the hill, where a service
was being performed. A cavalry regiment followed him down the hill, the singers
of the regiment in front. A train of carts came up the hill towards them, filled
with wounded from the previous day's engagement. The peasant drivers kept
running from side to side, shouting and whipping the horses. The carts, in each
of which three or four wounded soldiers were lying or sitting, jolted up and
down on the stones that had been thrown on the steep ascent to mend the road.
The wounded men, pale and bandaged up, with compressed lips and knitted brows,
clung to the sides, as they were shaken and jolted in the carts. Almost all of
them stared with naïve and childlike curiosity at Pierre's white hat and green
coat.


Pierre's coachman shouted angrily at the train of wounded men to keep to one
side of the road. The cavalry regiment, coming down the hill in time to their
song, overtook Pierre's chaise and blocked the road. Pierre stopped, keeping
close to the edge of the road that had been hollowed out in the hill. The sun
did not reach over the side of the hill to the road, and there it felt cold and
damp. But overhead it was a bright August morning, and the chimes rang out
merrily. One cart full of wounded men came to a standstill at the edge of the
road quite close to Pierre. The driver, in bast shoes, ran panting up to his
cart, thrust a stone under the hind wheels, which were without tires, and began
setting straight the breech on his horse.


An old wounded soldier, with his arm in a sling, walking behind the cart,
caught hold of it with his uninjured arm, and looked round at Pierre.


name=Marker5>

"Well, fellow-countryman, are we to be put down here or taken on to Moscow?"
he said.


Pierre was so lost in thought that he did not hear the question. He looked
from the cavalry regiment, which was now meeting the train of wounded, to the
cart by which he stood, with the two wounded men sitting, and one lying down in
it. One of the soldiers sitting in the cart had probably been wounded in the
cheek. His whole head was done up in bandages, and one cheek was swollen as
large as a baby's head. All his mouth and nose were on one side. This soldier
was looking at the cathedral and crossing himself. Another, a young fellow, a
light-haired recruit, as white as though there were not a drop of blood in his
thin face, gazed with a fixed, good-natured smile at Pierre. The third lay so
that his face could not be seen. The singers of the cavalry regiment passed
close by the cart.


"A! za-pro-pa-la ..."


they sang the military dance tune. As though seconding them, though in a
different tone of gaiety, clanged out the metallic notes of the chimes at the
top of the hill. And the hot rays of the sun bathed the top of the opposite
slope with sunshine sparkling with another suggestion of gaiety. But where
Pierre stood under the hillside, by the cart full of wounded soldiers, and the
panting, little nag, it was damp, overcast, and dismal.


The soldier with the wounded cheek looked angrily at the singing horse
soldiers.


"Oh, the smart fellows!" he murmured reproachfully.


"It's not soldiers only, but peasants, too, I have seen to-day! Peasants,
too, they are hunting up," said the soldier standing by the cart, addressing
himself to Pierre, with a melancholy smile. "They can't pick and choose now. ...
They want to mass all the people together-it's a matter of Moscow, you see.
There is only one thing to do now." In spite of the vagueness of the soldier's
words, Pierre fully grasped his meaning, and nodded his head approvingly.


name=Marker11>

The road was clear once more, and Pierre walked downhill, and drove on
further.


Pierre drove on, looking on both sides of the road for familiar faces, and
meeting none but unfamiliar, military faces, belonging to all sorts of
regiments, and all staring with the same surprise at his white hat and green
coat.


After driving four versts, for the first time he met an acquaintance, and
greeted him joyfully. This was a doctor, one of the heads of the medical staff.
He drove to meet Pierre in a covered gig, with a young doctor sitting beside
him; and recognising Pierre, he called to the Cossack, who sat on the driver's
seat, and told him to stop.


"Count, your excellency, how do you come here?" asked the doctor.


name=Marker15>

"Oh, I wanted to have a look ..."


"Oh well, there will be something to look at ..." Pierre got out of his
carriage, and stopped to have a talk with the doctor, explaining to him his plan
for taking part in the battle.


The doctor advised Bezuhov to go straight to his highness.


name=Marker18>

"Why, you would be God knows where during the battle, out of sight," he said,
with a glance at his young companion; "and his highness knows you anyway, and
will give you a gracious reception. That's what I should do, my friend," said
the doctor.


The doctor seemed tired and hurried.


"So you think. ... But one thing more I wanted to ask you, where is the
position exactly?" said Pierre.


"The position?" said the doctor; "well, that's not in my line. Drive on to
Tatarinovo, there's a great deal of digging going on there. There you'll come
out on a mound; from there you get a view," said the doctor.


name=Marker22>

"A view from it? ... If you would ..."


But the doctor interrupted, and moved toward his gig.


name=Marker24>

"I would have shown you the way, but by God, you see" (the doctor made a
significant gesture), "I'm racing to the commander of the corps. We're in such a
fix, you see ... you know, count, there's to be a battle tomorrow; with a hundred
thousand troops, we must reckon on twenty thousand wounded at least; and we
haven't the stretchers, nor beds, nor attendants, nor doctors for six thousand.
There are ten thousand carts; but we want other things; one must manage as one
can."


The strange idea that of those thousands of men, alive and well, young and
old, who had been staring with such light-hearted amusement at his hat, twenty
thousand were inevitably doomed to wounds and death (perhaps the very men whom
he had seen) made a great impression on Pierre.


"They will die, perhaps, to-morrow; how can they think of anything but
death?" And suddenly, by some latent connection of ideas, he saw a vivid picture
of the hillside of Mozhaisk, the carts of wounded men, the chimes, the slanting
sunshine, and the singing of the cavalry regiment.


"They were going into battle, and meeting wounded soldiers, and never for a
minute paused to think what was in store for them, but went by and winked at
their wounded comrades. And of all those, twenty thousand are doomed to death,
and they can wonder at my hat! Strange!" thought Pierre, as he went on towards
Tatarinovo.


Carriages, waggons, and crowds of orderlies and sentinels were standing about
a gentleman's house on the left side of the road. The commander-in-chief was
putting up there. But when Pierre arrived, he found his highness and almost all
the staff were out. They had all gone to the church service. Pierre pushed on
ahead to Gorky; and driving uphill into a little village street, Pierre saw for
the first time the peasants of the militia in white shirts, with crosses on
their caps. With loud talk and laughter, eager and perspiring, they were working
on the right of the road at a huge mound overgrown with grass.


name=Marker29>

Some of them were digging out the earth, others were carrying the earth away
in wheelbarrows, while a third lot stood doing nothing.


There were two officers on the knoll giving them instructions. Seeing these
peasants, who were unmistakably enjoying the novelty of their position as
soldiers, Pierre thought again of the wounded soldiers at Mozhaisk, and he
understood what the soldier had tried to express by the words "they want to mass
all the people together." The sight of these bearded peasants toiling on the
field of battle with their queer, clumsy boots, with their perspiring necks, and
here and there with shirts unbuttoned showing their sun-burnt collar-bones,
impressed Pierre more strongly than anything he had yet seen and heard with the
solemnity and gravity of the moment.


关键字:战争与和平第10部
生词表:
  • compressed [kəm´prest] 移动到这儿单词发声 a.压缩的 六级词汇
  • coachman [´kəutʃmən] 移动到这儿单词发声 n.赶马车人 四级词汇
  • overtook [,əuvə´tuk] 移动到这儿单词发声 overtake的过去式 四级词汇
  • august [ɔ:´gʌst] 移动到这儿单词发声 a.尊严的;威严的 六级词汇
  • setting [´setiŋ] 移动到这儿单词发声 n.安装;排字;布景 四级词汇
  • swollen [´swəulən] 移动到这儿单词发声 swell的过去分词 四级词汇
  • good-natured [´gud-´neitʃəd] 移动到这儿单词发声 a.脾气好的,温厚的 四级词汇
  • gaiety [´geəti] 移动到这儿单词发声 n.欢乐;乐事;华丽 六级词汇
  • hunting [´hʌntiŋ] 移动到这儿单词发声 n.打猎 六级词汇
  • unfamiliar [ʌnfə´miljə] 移动到这儿单词发声 a.不熟悉的;生疏的 六级词汇
  • joyfully [´dʒɔifuli] 移动到这儿单词发声 ad.高兴地,快乐地 四级词汇
  • excellency [´eksələnsi] 移动到这儿单词发声 n.阁下 六级词汇
  • taking [´teikiŋ] 移动到这儿单词发声 a.迷人的 n.捕获物 六级词汇
  • inevitably [in´evitəbli] 移动到这儿单词发声 ad.不可避免地;必然地 四级词汇
  • latent [´leitənt] 移动到这儿单词发声 a.潜在的,潜伏的 六级词汇
  • solemnity [sə´lemniti] 移动到这儿单词发声 n.庄严;(隆重的)仪式 六级词汇