James and Mary Ford, eds. Every Day in the Year. 1902.
December 10The Retreat from Moscow
By George Walter Thornbury (18281876)
T
Dark, brooding, dull, and brown,
About the ramparts, hiding all
The steeples of the town;
The icicles, as thick as beams,
Hung down from every roof,
When all at once we heard a sound
As of a muffled hoof.
All riderless and torn
With bullets; scarce his bleeding legs
Could reach the gate. A morn
Of horror broke upon us then;
We listened, but no drum—
Only a sullen, distant roar,
Telling us that they come.
A grenadier reeled past,
A bloody turban round his head,
His pallid face aghast.
Behind him, with an arm bound up
With half a Russian flag,
Came one—then three—the last one sopped
His breast with crimson rag.
Came pouring through the place;
Drums broken, colours torn to shreds,
Foul wounds on every face.
Black powder-wagons, scorched and split,
Broad wheels caked thick with snow,
Red bayonets bent, and swords that still
Were reeking from the blow.
Letters, and cards, and songs;
The barrels, leaking drops of gold,
Were trampled by the throngs.
A brutal, selfish, goring mob,
Yet here and there a trace
Of the divine shone out, and lit
A gashed and suffering face.
His dying father bore;
With bandaged feet the brave youth limped,
Slow, shuddering, dripping gore.
And even ’mid the trampling crowd,
Maimed, crippled by the frost,
I found that every spark of good
Was not extinct and lost.
I saw two grenadiers
Leading their corporal, his breast
Stabbed by the Cossack spears.
He saved that boy, whose tearful eyes
Were fixed upon the three—
Although too weak to beat his drum
Still for his company.
The broken ranks went on;
They ran if any one called out
“The Cossacks of the Don!”
The whispered rumour, like a fire,
Spreads fast from street to street,
With boding look and shaking head
The staring gossips meet.
Were smitten by the frost;
Full thirty thousand rank and file
In Beresina lost.
The Cossacks fill their caps with gold
The Frenchmen fling away.
Napoleon was shot the first,
And only lived a day—
The guns are left behind;
God’s curse has fallen on these thieves—
He sent the snow and wind.”
Tired of the clatter and the noise,
I sought an inner room,
Where twenty wax-lights, starry clear,
Drove off the fog and gloom.
And soon forgot the scene,
As through my dreams I saw arise
The rosy-bosomed queen.
My wine stood mantling in the glass
(The goblet of Voltaire),
I sipped and dozed, and dozed and sipped,
Slow rocking in my chair,
When open flew the bursting door,
And Coulaincourt stalked in—
Tall, gaunt, and wrapped in frozen fun
Hard frozen to his skin.
Puffed at the sullen fire
Of spitting wood, that hissed and smoked;
There stood the Jove whose ire
But lately set the world aflame,
Wrapped in a green pelisse,
Fur-lined, and stiff with half-burnt lace,
Trying to seem at ease.
Il n’y a qu’un pas,”
He said. “The rascals think they’ve made
A comet of my star.
The army broken?—dangers?—pish!
I did not bring the frost.
Levy ten thousand Poles, Duroc—
Who tells me we have lost?
It is a costly game;
But nothing venture, nothing win—
I’m sorry now we came.
That burning Moscow was a deed
Worthy of ancient Rome—
Mind that I gild the Invalides
To match the Kremlin dome.
He leaped into the sleigh
Sent for to bear the Cæsar off
Upon his ruthless way.
A flash of fire!—the court-yard stones
Snapped out—the landlord cheered—
In a hell-gulf of pitchy dark
The carriage disappeared.