BOOK FOURTEEN: 1812
1. CHAPTER I
 
The Battle of Borodino, with the occupation of Moscow that
 followed it and the flight of the French without further conflicts, is
 one of the most instructive phenomena in history. 
All historians agree that the external activity of states and
 nations in their conflicts with one another is expressed in wars,
 and that as a direct result of greater or less success in war the
 political strength of states and nations increases or decreases. 
Strange as may be the historical account of how some king or
 emperor, having quarreled with another, collects an army, fights his
 enemy's army, gains a victory by killing three, five, or ten
 thousand men, and subjugates a kingdom and an entire nation of several
 millions, all the facts of history (as far as we know it) confirm
 the truth of the statement that the greater or lesser success of one
 army against another is the cause, or at least an essential
 indication, of an increase or decrease in the strength of the
 nation- even though it is unintelligible why the defeat of an army-
 a hundredth part of a nation- should oblige that whole nation to
 submit. An army gains a victory, and at once the rights of the
 conquering nation have increased to the detriment of the defeated.
 An army has suffered defeat, and at once a people loses its rights
 in proportion to the severity of the reverse, and if its army
 suffers a complete defeat the nation is quite subjugated. 
So according to history it has been found from the most ancient
 times, and so it is to our own day. All Napoleon's wars serve to
 confirm this rule. In proportion to the defeat of the Austrian army
 Austria loses its rights, and the rights and the strength of France
 increase. The victories of the French at Jena and Auerstadt destroy
 the independent existence of Prussia. 
But then, in 1812, the French gain a victory near Moscow. Moscow
 is taken and after that, with no further battles, it is not Russia
 that ceases to exist, but the French army of six hundred thousand, and
 then Napoleonic France itself. To strain the facts to fit the rules of
 history: to say that the field of battle at Borodino remained in the
 hands of the Russians, or that after Moscow there were other battles
 that destroyed Napoleon's army, is impossible. 
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