Sunday, 27 September 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 15, Chapters 16, 17, 18, 19, and 20

 Chapter 16


We're still with Pierre, Natasha, and Mary, who are talking about the deaths of Andrew and Petya.  Mostly exchanging details, since none of them were present for both.  Natasha leaves the room in tears when Young Nikolai arrives, and, after a break, they move the conversation to the dining room.


Chapter 17


Mary, Natasha, and Pierre continue catching up.  We already know of these events, so this is more about how they share and communicate with one another, and what's changed.  Apparently, the big change for Natasha and Pierre is that Natasha now listens to him with childlike wonder (my words) like a real woman (Tolstoy's words) without trying to learn from his stories or trying to build on the conversation herself.  So now they can get married I guess.   Really, Tolstoy was doing quite well for someone who died in 1910.  I suppose we can make some allowances, considering how old the book is.  And maybe it lost something in translation.


Meanwhile, Mary realises that Natasha and Pierre might be in love and is very happy for them both.  It's now 3am.  Natasha and Pierre agree that, given their time again, they would make the same choices and relive it all, which reminds me a lot of Shadow Hearts and makes me wonder if that reference is intentional, since the main character is supposed to be half-Russian.


Anyway, realising the time, Pierre leaves while Mary and Natasha talk a little longer.  Natasha confirms that it was okay to talk of Andrew's death, since Pierre loved him and Mary reassures her.  I love Mary now, I don't care what I said about her at the beginning, she is a precious baby angel who deserves better.  I want her to show up in a gooey romance novel where she is swept off her feet by someone who adores her.


Chapter 18


While Natasha and Mary talking, Pierre is pacing up and down and feeling jealous of the relationship Andrew had with Natasha.  He decides he and Natasha must be married as soon as possible.  The next day, he talks to Savelich - who I think is some kind of representative of his peasants, who we might have met before though google won't tell me - about the possibility that he might get married soon and also tries to hint to his cousin the Princess.  The Princess has heard rumours of Mary marrying Nikolai Rostov, who I hope will be as worthy of her as any romantic hero (modern day romance, not, like, Byronic or Heathcliff-esque).  Pierre is very happy with everyone and everything today, and goes to Mary's for dinner.  He experiences a brief moment of doubt and fear before he goes in, but he gets over that and Natasha appears to have recovered her former light.  He goes round for dinner every night that week, but they soon run out of things to say and it gets a little bit awkward.  Eventually, the night before he heads to St Petersburg, after promising that he'll call again before he goes, he confesses his feelings about Natasha to Mary and asks for her advice.  He doesn't want to step over Andrew's still-warm body to propose but he also doesn't want to leave it too late and miss his chance.  Mary says she's confident Natasha does/will return his feelings and offers to take care of everything if Pierre writes to the Rostov parents.


Chapter 19


Pierre's feelings towards Natasha are- favourably - compared with his feelings about Helene at the same place in their courtship.  He's feeling a lot less anxious about having said or done the wrong thing, for a start.  He's very happy, except for when he doubts himself and sometimes wonders if he made the whole thing up.


Chapter 20


We now go back a little in time to see how Natasha's been feeling.  She does love Pierre, and Mary's a little troubled about what that implies about Natasha's feelings for Andrew but is glad to see Natasha happy again.  Mary tells Natasha exactly what Pierre has said before heading to St Petersburg, and can't quite hide her own sadness over Andrew but forgives Natasha.  Natasha is a little upset and baffled that Pierre has confessed all this and then immediately left for St Petersburg.


...and that's the end of book 15!  Books 16 and 17 are sometimes referred to as epilogues 1 and 2, so I think this is the end of the main narrative.  If I recall correctly, book 16 is 16 chapters and book 17 is 12 chapters, so I might be done in a week if I keep reading 5 chapters a night.  On the other hand, my Masters degree begins tomorrow, so we'll see.

Saturday, 26 September 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 15, Chapters 11, 12, 13, 14, and 15

 Chapter 11


Despite the honours heaped on Kutuzov, everyone understands that he is old and out of touch and not in favour with the Emperor.  This is because Kutuzov doesn't see the sense in having another war when the country is still recovering from the last one and when there is no way it can improve Russia in anyway.  Kutuzov doesn't understand about being European, but only about being Russian. And so, he is quietly left behind and dies.


Chapter 12


Pierre fell ill with bilious fever three days after becoming free.  It was only then that the weight of having been a prisoner falls on him.  As he recovers he is continually surprised by the thought that no one is going to give him orders or demand that he go somewhere and do something - he is free.  Not least because, on the same day he learned of Petya's death, he also learned of the death of Helene and the fact that he is now a widower.  He also learned of the death of Andrew at the same time.  Now, entirely free of obligations, Pierre is at peace and he has found the answer to his search for meaning in life.  For him, the meaning of life is the fact that God exists.


I looked it up, and bilious fever is an illness characterised by fever, nausea or vomiting, and diarrhoea.  We now understand that illnesses with those symptoms might be caused by any number of infections - I think those are some of the symptoms of covid-19, for a start - and so, today, we would instead identify the illness by the cause rather than the symptoms.  I had quite an interesting lecture on this topic in a history of medicine class, about how we classify different things, including illnesses.  It even comes up in discussions of covid-19, when people talk about deaths being attributed to underlying illnesses, like diabetes, when the cause of their death was covid-19, or rather, that was the thing that changed, even though maybe they wouldn't have died without that prior condition.  It's that leeway that lets you massage the figures, since we decided those categories, they're not completely objective.  We looked at one list of causes of death which listed death due to lack of vitamin A, scurvy, etc, and a lot of them could be summed as "not enough food" or "not enough variety of food" but that fact was almost hidden in the way the deaths were categorised, even though none of the categories were "wrong".


Chapter 13


Pierre hasn't changed much from the outside, except now he's much happier and a better listener, which makes him more likable.   The "oldest princess" who the chapter identifies as his cousin, but I think she'd actually be his half sister?  I'm sure the princesses were the counts daughters.  Anyway, the oldest princess is nursing him and is quite vexed that she actually likes him now when she just wanted to be pious.


I googled and apparently the three princesses are his cousins, and their names are Katarina, Olga, and Sophie.  Apparently the Count also has other illegitimate sons, he just likes Pierre best.


Pierre also makes friends with his servants, his doctor, and an Italian prisoner of war.  At some point, Willarski, the freemason who introduced him to the lodge, comes to visit.  He doesn't approve of the changes in Pierre, even though he likes him better now.  Pierre knows he used to be like Willarski and finds him interesting to observe.


Pierre's become a lot better with money, mostly by developing a sense of whom he should give money to and whom he shouldn't, instead of just giving it to everyone.


Chapter 14


Moscow has been thoroughly plundered, not just by the French but by the Russians recovering from the war.


Chapter 15


Pierre goes to Moscow at the end of January, intending to head on to St Petersburg within a few days.  He barely thinks of Natasha, feeling as free of his feelings about her as he is from everything else.  When he hears that Mary is also in Moscow, he goes to visit, not least because thoughts of Andrew have stuck with him.  Natasha is with Mary, but Pierre doesn't recognise her because the grief has changed her a lot.  As soon as he does recognise her, it becomes clear to everyone that he loves her.

Monday, 21 September 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 15, Chapters 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10

 Chapter 6


It's the 5th of November, but no one's setting off fireworks except in the bullety sense because it's the first day of what will later be called the battle of Krasnoe.  Krasnoe is a place (I googled to check).  After a day of utter shambles, Kutuzov has realised there's no need for a battle - because the French are already running away, so what else could anyone possibly want? - and heads to his headquarters at Dobroe.  There are groups of French prisoners everywhere, because 7000 were captured that day.  Kutuzov gives a brief speech, which soon becomes an old soldier just talking to his comrades, about how Russia has won and now they can even have room to pity their French captives.


Chapter 7

The army has moved and is setting up camp.  Really, you'd think this would have been described at some point earlier in the book, it must have been happening all the time.


Chapter 8


Considering the army is lacking in supplies and it's freezing, you'd think they'd be miserable but they're doing pretty well.  This chapter - like the last one - is mostly just eavesdropping on the day to day life of the soldiers who aren't main characters.  Apparently there's a rumour that the French dead don't rot - "probably because of the food they eat".  Also, sometimes the soldiers refer to older men as "Daddy" which I guess is intended a sign of familiarity and respect, but that's not what it means to me so I have to do a little mental correction every time.  The chapter ends with some of the men hearing a ruckus from fifth company, so they wander over to see what's happening.


Chapter 9


Two French soldiers - Morel and Ramballe - have wandered out of the woods to sit by the fire because they're quite ill.  After first mistaking them for bears, the fifth company offer them vodka, because I'm pretty sure they have to hand in their Russian passports if they don't.   None of fifth company actually speak French, but they have fun trying to repeat Morel's songs in Russian-French gibberish.



Apparently, Ramballe was previously saved by Pierre, but I don't remember that part.

Chapter 10


This one's another history essay.  Apparently, the French army crossing the Berezina river has been lauded as an important, victorious point for Russia, but Tolstoy points out that the Battle of Krasnoe was a bigger loss for them and traversing the Russian countryside picked off most of them.  Everyone - Russian and French - were starving and cold and saving the French prisoners would have meant taking food from the Russians.  Which some Russians did, but there just wasn't enough for everyone, and that's why the French retreated rather than surrendering, because they had a better chance of surviving with a group of other French soldiers rather than hoping the Russians would feed them.  Around this time, the other Russian generals are getting annoyed with Kutuzov for not giving them glorious battles.  How dare he not let thousands of men kill each other unnecessarily?  One of the generals, Chichagov, is under the impression that Kutuzov owes him because Chichagov was honest about Kutuzov doing his job (brokering peace with Turkey in 1911) before he even arrived.  Kutuzov receives an Order of St George of the First Class, which I think is the highest honour possible, despite no one seeming to approve of him.

Sunday, 20 September 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 15 Chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5

 Chapter 1


We're now with Natasha and Mary, who are united in mourning for Andrew.  However, Mary is now "an absolute and independent arbiter of her own fate" since the death of her father and brother, and is the sole guardian of her nephew, so she has to pull herself together.  Natasha has less responsibilities - and is more of a drama queen - so it takes her longer.  She keeps going over what she and didn't say to Andrew.   The chapter ends with her being called to hear the news of Petya's death.


Chapter 2


Petya's death reunites Natasha with her family, after Andrew's had estranged her.  


Chapter 3


Mary delays the departure of her and her nephew, little Nikolai, because Natasha is the only one able to comfort her mother.  Natasha's love, in caring for her mother, is able to help her heal begin to heal from her grief.  Natasha cares for her mother until she becomes ill, and then Mary takes care of her.  Natasha and Mary begin a tender and passionate friendship "such as only exists between women" with much kissing of hands and face.  They begin to feel that life is only possible in one another's presence.  They spend a great deal of time talking, and Natasha comes to appreciate Mary's relationship with religion, despite not being able to relate to it herself, which is rather sweet.  Natasha and Mary stay with the Rostovs until January - remember, Petya died at the end of October - before leaving together.


Chapter 4


We're back to the war.  The French have been fleeing so fast the Russians cannot keep up.  The Russian generals are trying to get Kutuzov to take some action even though, as Tolstoy likes to point out, the French are already doing exactly what Russia wants.  Kutuzov is doing his best to ignore these orders, but the generals are getting more eager because they're seeing their last chance for a bit of battle glory.  It's all very Lord Rust (see Jingo).  There are some battles - one senselessly raging on for three days, for no good reason, just because Napoleon happens to be there and some Russian generals want to capture him - but the French mostly just want to go home and are using guerilla tactics to slip past the Russian army if they can't just surrender.  Plus, none of the plans are working because they're all out of date by the time they get to the troops and/or someone wants to do something a bit more dramatic.  A bit shambolic really.  This chapter is stolidly in defence of Kutuzov and damns other historians for their lack of respect.


Chapter 5


In 1812 and 1813 Kutuzov was very much criticised for, basically, trying to preserve lives and have a sensible war rather than throwing soldiers away on vainglorious folly, and since we're not upset about all of Mary's family dying - except her and her nephew - and poor little Petya, we're inclined to agree with Tolstoy, who describes Napoleon, scathingly, as "that most insignificant tool of history who never anywhere, even in exile, showed human dignity".


You know, I've been thinking about the book of The Princess Bride recently, and the conceit that it's abridged from a much longer original novel which kept leaving the story for essays about the history of the country it was set in.  I wonder if William Goldman read War and Peace and took inspiration from it, or if that's just a coincidence?  I recently got a fully voice-acted abridged version of War and Peace on Audible, which comes in at, if I recall correctly, about 9 hours.  Considering 100 pages is normally about 3 hours, that's only a third of the book so I suspect they've cut out all these war essays in the same way Goldman claimed to have edited Morgenstern's story.


Anyway, Tolstoy is very admiring of Kutuzov's dignity, and the way he appeared - from the writings and communications we have from the time - to be the only person who really understood what was going on and taking sensible actions about it.  Tolstoy attributes this to Kutuzov's pure Russian spirit.  There is definitely a vodka pun to be made here.  Tolstoy says that it is the fact that Kutuzov was a true hero and great leader that prevented him from being put in the false mould of the "European hero" because, as he's been saying since the beginning, the real world doesn't work like a story and battles and wars never go to plan, and you can't intend to carry out a plan and then do it in the middle of a battlefield so pretending that some generals did is just dumb.  He makes a very convincing argument.

Saturday, 19 September 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 14, Chapters 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18 and 19

 Chapter 11


Petya charges into his first battle.  He keeps trying to get to the exciting bits, but the enemies are all dead when he arrives.  Then Petya is dead, or at least gravely wounded.  It is very sudden.  Denisov and Dolokhov are dealing with that and their new Russian prisoners who, it turns out, includes Pierre.



Chapter 12


Nothing much has changed with Pierre since we last saw him, at least as far as orders from the French go.  They've basically just been travelling to this point, slowly losing bits of the French army and prisoners as they go.  Pierre has become more meditative and realised that, actually, being a prisoner really isn't any less free than being married to Helena.  He's managing to ignore the men who are being shot or dying of illness, and is quite content.


Chapter 13


We're still with Pierre, on the 22nd of October, strolling through Moscow.  There are rotting creatures "from men to horses" lying around everywhere.  Pierre is finding it harder to ignore the death around him, and finally has to face his dying friend and fellow prisoner.


Chapter 14


We're still with Pierre as a French marshal with a three-cornered hat goes past.  I associate that hat entirely with Napoleon, but I don't think it's Napoleon.  There's a gunshot.  Pierre doesn't understand its significance - and nor do I - but the French soldiers seem concerned.


Chapter 15


Pierre is reunited with the Russian army.  The soldiers and prisoners are very happy to see one another, even those who haven't before met in person.  Petya is being buried.  He was dead, after all.


Chapter 16


We're doing big picture stuff again now, on October 28th.  Mostly about how terribly the French are handling things.


Chapter 17


More big picture stuff.  Basically, the French were panicking and ran straight into the Russians.


Chapter 18


Tolstoy does not approve of historians describing any of this as if Napoleon planned it or as if the generals were great or clever.  "There is no greatness where simplicity, goodness and truth are absent".


Chapter 19


...and yet, why did the Russians fail to capture or cut off the French?  And, if this failure to be captured is a French victory, why did it lead to the defeat of France?  Because, according to Tolstoy, the Russians weren't trying to capture the French.  The French were running away, that's what Russia wanted.  And because you can't "cut off" an army.  It's not one thing, it's thousands of people who can each break apart and escape and get through the gaps.  Also, the Russians were out of vodka (that sounds like a joke, and I have phrased it more humorously than in the text, but I didn't make it up, it is in there).


Anyway, Tolstoy ascribes the difference between what happened and what historians wrote about to the fact that historians are writing about the beautiful words and plans the generals wrote, and not what actually happened.  For example, they never talk about the 50,000 men who dropped out of the war because they were old and sick and couldn't carry on.  He describes the Russian army as a whip behind a fleeing animal, held as a threat but not actually needing to strike.


This is the end of part 14!  I have three parts left, of 20, 16, and 12 chapters each.  We'll see how I get on with them.



Friday, 18 September 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 14, Chapters 10

 Chapter 10


Petya returns to find Denisov waiting, very worried about him.  Petya's too excited to sleep, and goes exploring when Denisov drifts off.  Petya talks to his horse about all the exciting adventures they're going to have in battle and then is interrupted by a Cossack.  Petya asks the cossack to sharpen Petya's never-been-used sword and also asks after Vesenny, the little French drummer boy.  The narration reflects on how unaware Petya is of what's around him and the reality of the upcoming battle.  I'm pretty sure Petya's going to die.  He dreams of music.

Saturday, 29 August 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 14, Chapters 8 and 9

 Chapter 8


Dolokhov turns up, and Petya can't take his eyes of him because he's heard so many stories about Dolokhov being badass.  Dolokhov asks someone to come to the French camp with him, and Petya offers.  Denisov tries to stop him, but he will not be stopped.  Denisov and Dolokhov have an argument because Denisov insists no men have died on his watch - his motivation for not wanting Petya to go to the French camp - but Dolokhov points out that that's only because he sends them elsewhere to be killed.  Dolokhov wins the argument.  Petya doesn't fully understand that he's not actually immoral and prides himself on his lack of concern for his own life, so he's pretty happy about this.


Chapter 9


Disguised as French soldiers, Petya and Dolokhov set off.  Petya is very excited.  He insists he won't be taken alive if they're caught because he has a pistol.  Dolokhov do-you-know-who-I-ams his way through a sentinel and this works for a few minutes while they gather information.  They leave and Petya, high on the audacity of having gotten away with it, is even more impressed with Dolokhov.

Saturday, 22 August 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 14, Chapter 7

 Chapter 7


We've now gone back in time a little, to go over Petya's experiences since joining the army.  He's been feeling very grown-up.  He begged to be allowed to be the one sent to Denisov, but his commander has banned him from actually taking part in any of Denisov's actions because Petya went a bit off the rails when he last faced the enemy.  Since meeting with Denisov, Petya has decided that the commander is dumb and he, Petya, is going to ignore the explicit instructions he's been given.



Petya is delighted to be hanging out with Denisov and his regiment and goes around offering everyone shares of the little treats he's been buying himself, like raisins.  A French drummer boy, Vincent, has been caught by the Cossacks that day, and Petya tries to make friends with him in French, and considers offering him money.  The Russians have nicknamed Vincent Vesenny and Vesenya, because apparently even visitors aren't allowed to just go around in Russia without having multiple names.

Tuesday, 23 June 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 14, Chapter 6

Chapter 6

Plans for tomorrow attack are finalised, and then Denisov and Petya ride off back to camp.  On the way, they run into Tikhon, who has found a tongue.  Well, he found two, but he took the first one back because he decided the first wasn't suitable.  And then he didn't quite manage to capture the second because he had back-up.  Tikhon doesn't understand why this angers Denisov, and says he'll get as many Frenchman as Denisov could want when it gets dark.  Petya at first finds this funny, and is then a little disturbed at the thought that Tikhon has killed a man.

Tuesday, 19 May 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 14, Chapter 5

Chapter 5

We're still with Petya and Denisov.  They're hanging around the French camp looking out for Tikhon, the man they sent to find a "tongue".  He was picked up by the Russian army from a village they marched through.  He was the sole guerilla-warrior defending it, and had gotten quite good at it.  Unfortunately, it turns out, he's still guerilla-ing and has so far not been able to find a tongue.

Sunday, 17 May 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 14, Chapter 4

I have now finished my degree.  I predict a 2:1, but I won't have the grades back for a while.  Last night I dreamt I completely failed a module I passed last year, so my judgement is probably not reliable.

Chapter 4

Denisov is wandering about, waiting for word from Dolokhov, when an officer arrives with news.  It's Petya Rostov!  Petya had vowed to behave like a proper officer, but rapidly reverts to childhood when recognised - since he is 15 - and asks to stay with Denisov over night.

Tuesday, 7 April 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 14, Chapters 1, 2, and 3

Chapter 1

This chapter is another of the history essays.  Tolstoy points out that, usually, when one army is defeated by another, that results in the subjugation or loss of rights of the latter country to the former, even though the army is only a small part of the country.  However, in this case, the French won at Borodino, took Moscow...then retreated and lost without actually losing any more battles.  One factor in this was the lack of hay for horses.  The peasants collectively decided to burn it rather than sell it to the French, depriving them of resources.

Tolstoy uses an analogy.  Say France had demanded a fencing match according to the rules of fencing.  Halfway through, Russia throws down his sword and grabs a cudgel instead.  The French might technically have won according to the rules of fencing, but they're still about to get their face beaten in (paraphrased).  The 'cudgel' in this case is the guerilla warfare of the peasants.  Napoleon complains about this being against the rules "as if there were any rules for killing people".

Chapter 2

The essay continues.  Tolstoy points out that, when used, guerilla warfare is always successful, despite going against the basic rules of war (which is that you should have more soldiers and attack where your opponent has less soldiers).  His theory is that most tacticians are assuming that mass = force, when, in fact, mass * X = force, and the guerilla warriors have more of X which makes up for the lack of mass.  Tolstoy says that 'X' is the spirit of the army.  The desire of each individual to fight, and to win, rather than to just follow orders.  The spirit of the French army had been entirely depleted, so they grouped together en mass instead, despite this being ineffective tactically.

Chapter 3

The first person to recognise that guerilla warfare was happening and to consciously take advantage of it was Denis Davydov, who arranged for more strikes.  By October, there were hundreds of small companies, all striking at the French army.  Special mention goes to Vasilisa, "The wife of a village elder who slewed hundreds of the French".  According to wikipedia, she lead women and teenagers in the "Patriotic war of 1812".  I did not know it was called that before, but that's making a lot of sense.

Denisov is a member of the 'irregulars', the name given to the guerilla regiments.  We've not heard from him in a while!  I had to do a quick google and read this to remember exactly who he was.  Are we back to the story now?  Dolokhov is also leading a small party nearby.  It's October 22nd.  They're all watching a French convoy.  Denisov receives invitations from a Polish and a German commander to join their regiments and replies to both that, sadly, he is already under the command of the other.

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Denisov and Dolokhov are intending to join forces and seize the convoy themselves.  I wonder if this is the one holding Pierre prisoner?  The convoy is about 1500 men and Denisov and Dolokhov have about 200 each, but this doesn't bother them.  They take out the supply wagons, and their next objective is to capture a 'tongue' - an enemy soldier who can tell them about the inner workings of the convoy (they didn't get one with the supply wagons because they killed everyone).  Dolokhov sends a peasant, Tikhon Shcherbaty, to try to seize one of the quartermasters.

birthdays: Cobie Smulders (gifs and photos)

Monday, 6 April 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapters 18 and 19

Chapter 18

This is one of those broad-view historical essays again.  Apparently, many historians have expressed theories on what could have gone differently if the French hadn't retreated, but Tolstoy points out that the Russians made no effort to make them retreat or stop them advancing (which he puts down to Kutuzov conserving energy, knowing the French army would break itself).  Tolstoy theorises that every single individual member of the French army, including Napoleon, could feel their encroaching defeat, and that's why they destroyed the resources available in Moscow, rather than using them, and why they retreated rather than advancing.

GSP in new French interview said that UFC/Dana refused to give him ...

Chapter 19

The essay continues.  

Each individual Frenchman - and thus, the entire crowd - want to go home, but home is quite a way away so instead they focus on Smolensk, as the first stop on the journey.  As many of them as possible attempt to surrender, so apparently that stereotype goes back quite a while.  The army moves like a wave, unstoppable in its retreat.  Kutuzov recognises this, and uses all his power to stop the Russian generals attacking to try to gain some glory and "great victories" for themselves.  It doesn't work - there are a lot of little skirmishes, and French and Russians killed who needn't have been, because it doesn't make a blind bit of difference.  The French army continues towards Smolensk, with about a third of it melting away via surrenders.



And that's the end of part 13!  There are three parts left, with a total of 67 chapters left.  If I read one chapter per day, I'd be done by the 12th of June.    If I read 5 chapters per day, I'd be done by the 18th of April.  All of my coursework is due by the middle of May, so I probably won't be reading 5 chapters per day.

Saturday, 4 April 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapter 17

Chapter 17

Kutuzov - who was awake anyway - finally gets to hear the news from Bolkhovitinov.  He dearly hopes that the French are defeated, but knows that that wish will make him read the evidence to point that way so he's being very cautious.  After questioning Bolkhovitinov he thanks the Lord that Russia is saved.

Friday, 3 April 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapter 16

Chapter 16

I've not been writing for a while because, firstly, my final year lab report is due at the end of the month and is worth 16% of my entire degree grade.  Secondly, we're back in the war chapters and I'm less interested in those.  Oh, I've also started reading another Stephen King novel - I still consider myself in the middle of the project to read all of Stephen King's published works, even though I've not actually read one since before I began my degree - so that's been taking up a little of my attention.  Anyway.

Bolkhovitinov has been riding through a dark and stormy night with a message from Dokhturov and Yermelov.  Napoleon is at Firminsk, which sounds like quiet exciting news - I think this means he's closer than they initially thought he was, based on the last chapter? - but no one seems willing to believe it at first.  Eventually, the message starts making its way up the chain of command and many people are woken because, to quote Good Omens (I think) if a man is woken up in alarm at 3am, he at least wants to know that he isn't alone.  One of those woken is Peter Petrovich Konovnitsyn, who, like Dokhturov, isn't thought of as a brilliant general, but is always just quietly getting on with his job in the most difficult situations.  He's not looking forward to passing the message up to Bennigsen, who doesn't like Kutuzov and will do stupid things.  He's pretty sure all the higher ups will waste time bickering and doing stupid things.  He is proven right.

Wednesday, 12 February 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapter 15

Chapter 15

This chapter consists, almost entirely, of Tolstoy pointing out that Dokhturov is almost never talked about as a great soldier, he's just recorded as leading the Russian army to almost every victory.  Basically, he's quietly and competently getting on with things.  The rest is logistics for the specific battle we seem to be building up to.

Tuesday, 11 February 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapter 14

Chapter 14

The prisoners - including Pierre - are being marched out of Moscow.  The officers begin to comment on the looters as they go.  Pierre isn't really paying attention because he's started to feel his mortality again.  The whole peaceful mood has been smashed.

Monday, 10 February 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapter 13

Chapter 13

Between the 6th and 7th of October, the French army begin to march on from Moscow, taking the prisoners with them.  One has dysentery and is afraid of being left behind to die alone.  Pierre tries to reassure him that the hospital in Moscow is still staffed and that he might well be better off being left there, but he does also try to intercede with the French army on the man's behalf.  He had previously begun to think of the officers as friends, but now the same strange thing that came upon them the day of the executions is back.  Basically, everyone is back in war mode.  The atmosphere is not helped when they come across a dead man as they begin to move on.

Tuesday, 4 February 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapter 12

Chapter 12

Pierre has finally found the inner peace and harmony he's been seeking all this time.  All his old worries - assassinating Napoleon, anxiety over his wife embarrassing him - seem small and ridiculous now.  He appreciates his life and finds enjoyment in the sheer simplicity of his life.  All the qualities which made him awkward and out of place in society - his ability to sit still and think, his strength, his kindness, his ability to speak French - make him very popular here.

Thursday, 23 January 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapter 11

Chapter 11

Pierre has now been a prisoner for a while and has made many friends, including with a stray dog.  Because he can speak French, he's able to act as a go-between between the French soldiers and the Russian soldiers, and keep the peace between both sides.  It's been several weeks now, so they've settled into a sort of awkward day-to-day life.

Sunday, 19 January 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapters 7, 8, 9, and 10

Chapter 7

Battle is still complete and utter shambles, which Kutuzov expected.  It's the main reason he didn't want to have a battle right now.  Hundreds of men are needlessly lost and, afterwards, some shiny medals are given out.  No one got what they wanted or planned, and yet, this battle was the start of the ultimate Russian victory over the French.

Chapter 8

Napoleon entered Moscow in such a good position that he had to really try to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.  Historians argue that Napoleon lost his faculties at this point, but Tolstoy continues to make the point that the victory wasn't attributable to Napoleon's genius and so the failure cannot be attributed to Napoleon's foolishness.  Napoleon carried on doing his best.

Chapter 9

This chapter lays out the steps Napoleon took to try to keep the looting of Moscow civilised and return it to normal function, for example by setting up markets and promising the peasants they would be allowed to buy and sell fairly.

Chapter 10

The measures laid out in the last chapter fail to work entirely, because Napoleon is basically asking criminals to please stop being criminals.  Tolstoy states that the French army is dying and so is flailing like a dying beast.  He repeatedly compares Napoleon to a child, but I don't think that's entirely unbiased commentary.

Friday, 17 January 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapter 6

Chapter 6

6th October.  Battle continues to be complete and utter shambles.

Wednesday, 15 January 2020

In Which We Discuss Bellman & Black

I saw this image on facebook a week or so ago, thought it was cute, and used it as an excuse to finally read Diane Setterfield's Bellman & Black.  I bought the book a while ago because I loved her other novel, The Thirteenth Tale but, for whatever reason, it's been sitting on my unread pile.




I did do a reverse image search to try to find the original but I can't.

I started the book last night and finished it this afternoon, on a long train journey.  At first, I found the ending a little disappointing and puzzling, but then something clicked for me and I suddenly got it.  I wanted to post about that because, according to a quick google search, many, many people have had the disappointing/puzzled experience without the clicking part, and so I wanted to explain what the book is about because I'm confident that I understand it.  It's possible I don't understand it in the way Setterfield intends, but my understanding is satisfying and makes sense to me, so I'm sticking with it.  

This post will contain spoilers from this point on, and will make a lot more sense if you've read the book.

Firstly, let's look at the blurb for the book, taken from amazon.co.uk;

A haunting Victorian ghost story of love, loss and the mystery of death from the bestselling author of THE THIRTEENTH TALE.
As a boy, William Bellman commits one small cruel act that appears to have unforeseen and terrible consequences. The killing of a rook with his catapult is soon forgotten amidst the riot of boyhood games. And by the time he is grown, with a wife and children of his own, he seems indeed, to be a man blessed by fortune.
Until tragedy strikes, and the stranger in black comes, and William Bellman starts to wonder if all his happiness is about to be eclipsed. Desperate to save the one precious thing he has left, he enters into a bargain. A rather strange bargain, with an even stranger partner, to found a decidedly macabre business.
And Bellman & Black is born.
This blurb is written by someone who misunderstood the book, but it's a starting point.  I am confident in stating that because the blurb is written as if it's describing a horror story, which this is not.  My edition contains a Q&A with Diane Setterfield who outright states that it's a ghost story, not a horror story.  I see the confusion, because there are many stories which are both ghost stories and horror stories, but this is not one of them.  The goodreads blurb is a little better;

Bellman & Black is a heart-thumpingly perfect ghost story, beautifully and irresistibly written, its ratcheting tension exquisitely calibrated line by line. Its hero is William Bellman, who, as a boy of 10, killed a shiny black rook with a catapult, and who grew up to be someone, his neighbours think, who "could go to the good or the bad." And indeed, although William Bellman's life at first seems blessed—he has a happy marriage to a beautiful woman, becomes father to a brood of bright, strong children, and thrives in business—one by one, people around him die. And at each funeral, he is startled to see a strange man in black, smiling at him. At first, the dead are distant relatives, but eventually his own children die, and then his wife, leaving behind only one child, his favourite, Dora. Unhinged by grief, William gets drunk and stumbles to his wife's fresh grave—and who should be there waiting, but the smiling stranger in black. The stranger has a proposition for William—a mysterious business called "Bellman & Black" . . .


So.  The book does start with William Bellman, as a child fooling around with his friends, deciding to try to make an impossible shot with a homemade catapult, to shoot down a rook.  He doesn't intend to succeed, but he does, killing the rook.  The rest of the book is his life story from this point on, with a particular focus on the occasions when his friends or family die.  At many of the funerals he attends, William Bellman sees a mysterious man in black, who he is afraid of, and whom, afterwards, he finds he can't quite describe.  At the death of his wife and three of his children - arguably the lowest point of his life - Bellman has a conversation with this mysterious figure, leaving him with the idea to start a retail emporium devoted to the trappings of death - mourning clothes, coffins, etc.  He names the store 'Bellman & Black', mentally assigning the name 'Black' to the mysterious figure which he believes he has made some kind of deal with.  It is never explicitly stated - because Setterfield doesn't really do explicit statements - but it is clear that Bellman believes he owes Black something for the survival of his remaining child.  Bellman lives in fear of when Black will come to claim whatever this something might be. The book ends when Bellman dies, shortly after his final meeting with Black.  In-between the chapters on Bellman are chapters on rooks, all of them ending with different collective nouns for them.

It is possible to interpret the first 90% of the book as follows; with Black as the human form of the dead rook, striking down those around Bellman, being convinced to spare Dora, the child's life, in exchange for Bellman's service in creating the moratorium emporium and eventually his life.  I think most people, lead to believe they are reading a horror story, are interpreting the first 90% of the book in this way, and that's why the ending - the meeting between Bellman and Black - is unsatisfying.  Black never explains what he wants from Bellman or why he has been killing those around him.  There is no big confrontation, no sacrifice.  Bellman...just dies.  And his daughter lives on.

The reason the ending doesn't make sense with this interpretation is because, again, the book is not a horror story. Black isn't the dead rook taking revenge.  All of the people around William Bellman die of natural causes. His life isn't filled with more death than those around him.  The first to go are his grandfather, his uncle, and his mother.  All sad, but, also, very natural.  Most people's grandfathers, uncles, and mothers will die before they do because, by definition (except in some rare cases for the uncles), these relatives are a generation ahead of you.  They're supposed to die before you do.  That isn't an unnatural occurrence.

I may be mistaken on the order here (or anywhere in this list of deaths), but the next death is that of one of William Bellman's friends, who saw the rook fall.  He dies in an accident.  Again, sad, but also not that unusual.  Sure, some of us will be the first amongst our generation to die but most of us won't.  A guy I went to primary school with died at eighteen because he was accidentally shot (in Britain, which made it especially weird).  Another child I attended primary school with - whom I barely recall at all, because I was five - died of leukaemia.  Another of my friends died of leukaemia a few weeks before his 21st birthday.  During my access course, before attending uni, another student died of an accidental drug overdose over the Christmas holidays.  I saw a stranger get hit by a car and die on impact when we were both in our early twenties.  All of these were tragic, of course, but they were not unusual.  I am not unusually beset by death and nor is William Bellman. This is not an unusual amount of death. It feels like it is because that's what the narration focuses on, and we're used to seeing what the narration focuses on as unusual and significant, but I will shortly explain why that is not the case.

The next deaths are those of Bellman's wife and three of his children, and the near death of his eldest child.  This would be unusual for us, but it is made explicit that it is not unusual at that time and place.  A fever runs through the village and almost every family has lost someone.  Setterfield describes the fact that the dead have to be buried in groups, daily, because there'll be another pile tomorrow.  Other characters - who are explicitly stated to have lost family members - notice that Bellman, who is normally focused on the work of running the mill he inherited from his uncle - is, instead, focused on his family.  Bellman is able to do this because he's been so successful at building up a solid reputation with the mill's clients, with making the mill better able to weather variables, and building up a trustworthy, competent staff, who can keep the mill going despite losses in their own families. They've all lost people, but only Bellman dwells on it. He doesn't face an unusual amount of death; he places an unusual amount of focus on it.

It is after the loss of his family - specifically after his wife's burial - that Bellman spends the night at her grave and meets with Black.  He is left with the idea of turning his business acumen to creating the moratorium emporium.  When Bellman returns home, he expects his daughter to breathe her last - because he has kept copious records of the symptoms of the rest of his family and all the treatments he tried in an effort to save them, and so knows exactly how people die from this illness - but she doesn't.  Dora survives, though she is left permanently disabled from the experience, requiring help for the rest of her life.

Bellman focuses obsessively on work.  He hears of the deaths of his cousin and his other friend (the other two children who saw him kill the rook), both before the ages of 49.  It's implied the cousin committed suicide - and, again, I know at least one person who died that way and I'm 31 - while the friend died of a heart attack (I think).  While one of these deaths was a little on the young side, I don't think it's strange that Bellman outlived three of his childhood friends.  Out of any group of four childhood friends, any of them has a 25% chance of being the last one to die (except in scenarios where, for example, two die in an accident together).  Personally, I think the story followed Bellman because he was the last of his four friends to die, not that his friends died because there was something unusual about Bellman. Bellman is unusually obsessed with death, not abnormally surrounded by it.

So who is Black?  Well, remember that this, while not a horror story, is a ghost story.  Black is the ghost.  But who's ghost?  For me, the answer to this question is what unlocks the whole book.  I think Black represents Bellman's own ghost, not in the sense of being his post-mortem spirit, but more in the sense of the death-daemons in The Subtle Knife.  Black is Bellman's knowledge and fear that Bellman himself will someday die.  That's why Bellman sees him at funerals, when he's reminded of his own immortality.  That's why Bellman's afraid of him, because Black is the representation of his fear of dying.  That's why Bellman can't find Black when he tries to find him at a funeral and is distracted by the act of searching, but only when he begins to fear that he won't see him.  That's why, after Bellman names his store Bellman & Black (I only bold book titles, and while this is the same as the title of the book I am not actually saying the title of the book), characters constantly mistake Bellman for Black.  That's why, after his wife's death, Bellman tries to fill every single minute with business and productivity - as he himself explains, time passes more slowly for busy people.  Making time pass more slowly is one way to keep his death further from him, although, in the end, the overwork is a factor in his death.  Putting money aside for Black - as Bellman does, in his fear that Black will return to claim something from him - doesn't work because death can't be kept away with money.  It can be delayed, in the sense that money can pay for healthcare and nutrition, but it can't be stopped.

So, what's up with the rooks?  The '&' chapters describe them, both literally and figuratively.  The first chapter describes the magnificence of rooks - their feathers, their ability to split black into different shades - and asks why such a magnificent creature spends its time in such common places, like with cows.  The same chapter answers by explaining that they go where they want.  Rooks are egalitarian.  In my opinion, both Black (the shade and the character) and the rooks are metaphors for death and grief in this novel.  Both are egalitarian - death accepts everyone equally.  

The first '&' chapter mentions that some people say "a parish of rooks".  Parishes, among other things, are associated with both death and grief.  The next '&' chapter follows the description of fever running through the village, and ends by stating that some people say "a clamour of rooks".  This, after describing a clamour of death and grief throughout the village.  The third '&' chapter mentions Huginn and Munnin, rooks from Norse mythology with names translated by this book as 'Thought' and 'Memory'.  The chapter ends by stating that some people say "an unkindness" of rooks, but adds that Thought and Memory find this puzzling.  Since this chapter states that the rooks represent Thought and Memory, then I am taking the 'unkindness' to be a description of them, which the narrative disagrees with, implicitly stating that thoughts and memories are not unkind.  That ties into the ending, so I'll come back to it in a minute.  The next collective noun is 'parliament'.  Arguably, death is the highest legislation.  It's a law no one has ever broken.  That wasn't the first thing I thought of, though.  I thought of democracy when I read that and, and death and grief are nothing if not democratic.



The next collective noun is 'building', coming right after the completion of the building (both noun and verb) of Bellman & Black, an edifice dedicated to death and grief.  The final noun is 'storytelling', and that's explained by the very last line.  This book has a little trick in it.  Right up until the last page it seems to be written in third person, but it's not.  It's written in first person, and the rooks are telling the story.  This is a story about how Bellman deals with death and grief in his live - by constantly working and distracting himself, to keep both at bay.  When confronted by Black - his own death - he is first forced to face that fear, by remembering his grief, but then he recalls his life and all the happy moments (via thought and memory).  The narrative character is/are these metaphorical rooks because the rook was his first experience of death.  The story is built around the deaths in his life not because those deaths are unusual but because Bellman's entire life is shaped by his grief and his fear of his own death, both of them triggered by the deaths of others in his life.  In addition, there are specific expectations of narration, namely that, if it is third person then it is unbiased.  However, this narration is not in third person - it's in first person.  It is biased towards specific events and topics, not because they are objectively interesting but because they are subjectively interesting.  The narrator itself is the embodiment of a metaphor for grief and death and so the narration focuses on those things.

Bellman remembers his deal with Black as Black having offered him an opportunity.  Bellman thought the opportunity was the opening of Bellman & Black, and the money he made from the enterprise, but Black tells him that was incorrect during their final meeting.  I think one thing that people find disappointing at the ending is what the opportunity was isn't stated by Black.  The final chapter repeats that some people say "a storytelling of rooks", and expands on the idea that rooks harvest lives and stories, as "I harvested William Bellman's story".   The opportunity given by your death is the fact that, to die, you must have first lived.  This is a bit of a tricky one because some people, and even some characters in this book, die at a very young age, so I welcome other interpretations.  I do have a vague memory of Neil Gaiman making the point that all lives are the same length - they all last a lifetime.  Which I think is a similar idea.

I post this suspecting that blogger will add a bunch of characters to my ampersands, but I cba to fix it.

Edit:  A few things have occured to me since posting this.  Firstly that, in order to grieve someone's death, you must have loved them.  That's the opportunity inherent in grief.  Love.  In the same way that life is the opportunity inherent in death.  That's why, after Black makes Bellman remember grieving his family, Bellman remembers the other memories that he repressed - how much he loved them.  Funerals can be an act of love and respect as well as an expression of grief, and that's where Bellman channels all his energy.

Secondly, because the rooks are Bellman's personal metaphor for grief and loss, and because they are the ones telling the story that means, in a way, that the story is being told by Bellman.  That's why it's biased to how he sees the world, as being unreasonably filled with death and loss, despite the fact that the deaths surrounding him are not unusual.

Edit the Second: this is an excellent analysis that picks up on some things I missed.  I don't think it contradicts my interpretation.

Monday, 13 January 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapter 5

Chapter 5

Kutuzov is grumpy at having to get early to general a battle he doesn't think they should be having, and even grumpier when he sees that the columns aren't where they should be.  He shouts at people until he learns no one got the order (presumably because of Ermelov).  They decide to hold the battle the next day instead.

Sunday, 12 January 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapter 4

Chapter 4

It is the fourth of October, and a marvellous battle plan has been drawn up, which will definitely result in a Russian victory.  Of course, it relies on every column being where they're supposed to be when they're supposed to be, which never happens.

A young officer is sent out to deliver a copy of the battle plan to Ermelov, who is determined not to receive it and spends the day being awol, though the officer finds him in the end.  Apparently, Ermelov is a real person, Aleksey Petrovich Yermolov, which I guess is why Tolstoy didn't introduce him.  According to wikipedia, he played an important role in the quarrel between Barclay de Tolly and Bagration, which has come up a bit in the past few chapters, but I didn't find it very interesting.  Apparently there is a huge fuss over who's in charge.  I think they should just let Kutuzov get on with things.

Incidentally, I went on a bit of a wikiwalk and learned that Barclay de Tolly did gain the 'Barclay' part of his name from the Scottish clan, who were his ancestors.  His father was the first member of his family to be accepted into Russian nobility.  I knew Barclay was a Scottish name, I just assumed this Barclay had a different origin.  The 'de Tolly' part refers to Towie, in Aberdeenshire.

Friday, 10 January 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapter 3

Chapter 3

The Russian army is commanded both by Kutuzov, who is with the army, and by the Emperor, who is in St Petersburg.  The Emperor keeps sending ridiculous, impractical orders based on what he thinks is happening rather than what is actually happening, which Kutuzov politely ignores.  Eventually, it is decided to attack the left flank of the French on the 5th of October.

Thursday, 9 January 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapter 2

Chapter 2

Chapter 2 continues Tolstoy's essay on the Russian retreat and flanking of the French army as something natural "like a ball rolling downhill", rather than some inspired military tactic.  He does give Kutuzov credit for realising that the battle of Borodino was a victory for Russia and that the French army was a "wounded beast".

Wednesday, 8 January 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 13, Chapter 1

Chapter 1

This is another of Tolstoy's essays on how you can only truly understand the cause of an event if you understand all the moving parts, which is impossible, so people deviate to assuming the cause is what god wanted, or want key players like Napoleon wanted, in this case.   This time, he's focussed on where the Russian army went after the battle of Borodino.  Many historians claim this move was one of great strategic wisdom, as it lead to the defeat of the French.  Tolstoy says no one could possibly have known or planned that, since the French could just have easily have moved on St Petersburg and won - the Russian army just went where the provisions were.  Most of the command are known to have voted for a totally different retreat, and, after this vote, it was pointed out that the suggested movement would separate the army from its supplies over winter.

Tuesday, 7 January 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 12, Chapter 16

Chapter 16

This chapter is dedicated to explaining exactly what happened to Andrew.  It's tricky to summarise, but he's basically accepted death, which means letting go of his earthly connections.  His love for Natasha has been interfering with that, but now death is coming and everyone around him accepts it, even Mary and Natasha.  Andrew kisses his son and blesses him when reminded, but otherwise the days pass calmly until Andrew dies.

That's the end of part 12.  There are five parts left, ranging between 20 and 12 chapters, for a total of 86 chapters.  If I read one a day, I'll be done by the first of April.

Sunday, 5 January 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 12, Chapter 15

Chapter 15

Apparently, what happened two days ago is that Prince Andrew mentally moved on from life.  It takes him a lot of effort to understand why Mary and Natasha is crying, and what their concerns are.  He tells Mary that she should marry Nikolai, and kisses his son.  Baby Nikolai - Andrew's son - understands what is happening, and spends the next few days clinging to either Mary or Natasha.

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 12, Chapter 14

Chapter 14

Back to Mary, who is hurrying to her brother now that Nikolai has told her that Andrew is alive.  It takes her awhile because she takes along her nephew and full staff as well.  She's feeling good, in terms of realising that Nikolai loves her and she loves him, though she's not sure how that will work out, but terrified that Andrew is dying. 

When she arrives, the Countess Rostova is described as being "a Russian of the Oriental type" which is quite interesting.  The Count seems depressed.  He used to be a confident man, but now he doesn't seem to know what his place is in the world.  Mary just wants to see Andrew, but realises she should humour people right now.  She takes an instant dislike to Sonya, but tries to hide it.  She's lost her instant dislike for Natasha, now she sees the grief they share.  Natasha updates her on Andrew's condition.  So far, he's come through his fever, pain, gangrene, and festering, but some new complication two days ago makes Natasha sure he won't live.

Saturday, 4 January 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 12, Chapter 13

Chapter 13

Pierre is imprisoned with 30 other men, but they all become a faceless mass apart from Karataev, who is Pierre's new model for living.  He's an old, round, soldier, who sounds rather like Jackrum (of Monstrous Regiment).  Karataev, now he is a prisoner, mostly waxes lyrical about his former life on the farm as a peasant.  Pierre attaches a 'moral beauty' to these stories and the folk sayings, which now seem full of wisdom to him.  I feel like Pierre, being Russian raised in France, being a bastard son become the heir, doesn't have a strong sense of his identity, so he's looking for other people to tell him what he is or what he should be.  Karataev, an ordinary soldier to everyone else, is the "personification of the spirit of simplicity and truth" to Pierre.

Friday, 3 January 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 12, Chapter 12

Chapter 12

Pierre is pardoned and lead away to be imprisoned somewhere else, but he's not really taking any of it in.  His entire world order and belief that the world is fair has been upended.  He's imprisoned with Karataev, a soldier from a peasant family, who's a little more used to this sort of thing than Pierre and counts his blessing that it's him sent to join the army rather than his younger brother, who has five children.  This helps Pierre.

Wednesday, 1 January 2020

In Which We Discuss War and Peace, Part 12, Chapter 11

Chapter 11

Pierre is being lead out to be shot, along with his fellow prisoners.  He is terrified, but I'm pretty sure he survives - there's still 20% of the book to go.  He's 6th in line, and the prisoners are being shot in pairs.  Pierre notices that everyone seems as horrified as he is, even the Frenchmen who are carrying out the execution, which strikes him as strange.  The fifth man is shot alone, and buried immediately before he's quite dead.  Pierre thinks of it as criminals, hurrying to hide evidence of their crime.    Then the crowd disperses - only five of the group were executed and Pierre is still alive.