Chapter 297
The Emperor's Close Call
From the time he received this news to the end of the campaign all Kutúzov’s activity was directed toward restraining his troops, by authority, by guile, and by entreaty, from useless attacks, maneuvers, or encounters with the perishing enemy. Dokhtúrov went to Málo-Yaroslávets, but Kutúzov lingered with the main army and gave orders for the evacuation of Kalúga—a retreat beyond which town seemed to him quite possible. Everywhere Kutúzov retreated, but the enemy without waiting for his retreat fled in the opposite direction. Napoleon’s historians describe to us his skilled maneuvers at Tarútino and Málo-Yaroslávets, and make conjectures as to…
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Now let's explore the literary elements.
Key Quotes & Analysis
"That army could not recover anywhere. Since the battle of Borodinó and the pillage of Moscow it had borne within itself, as it were, the chemical elements of dissolution."
Context: Why no new province could restore the French
Tolstoy treats morale and discipline as material facts. Once an army wastes what it captures, geography cannot repair the rot.
In Today's Words:
Some damage is internal, not situational. When a team burns through trust, money, and goodwill in good times, moving offices will not fix the culture. Watch for hoarding, looting, and blame before you chase a new strategy. The rot travels with the group and will poison the next location too.
"the one thing needful was to get away as quickly as possible"
Context: French council at Malo-Yaroslavets after generals dodge the obvious
Rank and rhetoric collapse when a plain soldier names the truth. Everyone already knew; they needed someone without status to say it aloud.
In Today's Words:
In a failing project, the clearest read often comes from the person with least to protect. When executives spin scenarios, listen for the worker who says we need to exit now. Plain truth lands harder than polished denial because rank has been buying time for shame.
"what saved him was the very thing that was destroying the French army, the booty on which the Cossacks fell"
Context: Cossacks nearly capture Napoleon during an inspection
The army's vices save its leader by accident. Greed that dissolves discipline also distracts pursuers from the biggest prize.
In Today's Words:
A team's worst habits can shield the boss in the short term. When everyone chases side rewards instead of the main goal, chaos looks like cover. Do not mistake that distraction for health; the same greed that saves the leader is dissolving the organization beneath him.
"That Napoleon agreed with Mouton, and that the army retreated, does not prove that Napoleon caused it to retreat"
Context: Tolstoy's closing argument on historical causation
Leaders often claim decisions they only ratified. The retreat was already inevitable; Napoleon received credit for yielding to force.
In Today's Words:
People in charge sometimes announce moves the situation already demanded. Before you credit a leader's bold pivot, ask what would have happened if they had refused. Often the room was already leaving and the memo only recorded a retreat that physics had chosen Notice who pays when delay finally ends.
Thematic Threads
Internal Rot
In This Chapter
French looting and broken discipline carry what Tolstoy calls chemical elements of dissolution
Development
Introduced here as the real cause of defeat, not Kutuzov's attacks
In Your Life:
You might spot a team failing from habits long before any single bad quarter.
Forced Retreat
In This Chapter
Napoleon retreats only after Cossacks nearly capture him; Tolstoy denies he caused the flight
Development
Builds Tolstoy's argument that leaders ratify forces they do not command
In Your Life:
You might notice when a boss takes credit for a decision the room already made.
You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.
Discussion Questions
This is not a test. Five prompts guide you through the chapter, from how it opens to how it closes, so you notice context and rhythm rather than facts to memorize. Sit with each question in your own words. When you see "One way to read it," treat it as a starting point, not the only answer.
- 1
Why does Kutuzov restrain his army instead of pursuing the retreating French?
analysis • surfaceOne way to read it
The enemy is destroying itself; useless attacks would cost Russian lives for no gain.
- 2
What does Mouton's line at the council change in the French conversation?
analysis • mediumOne way to read it
He names what every general already feels, making retreat speakable after diplomatic evasions.
- 3
Where have you seen a team delay an obvious decision until an external crisis made it respectable?
application • mediumOne way to read it
Closures, breakups, and layoffs often follow this shape: truth first, permission second.
- 4
Why do the Cossacks miss Napoleon, and what does Tolstoy say that reveals about the army?
application • deepOne way to read it
Plunder distracts them; the same greed dissolving the army accidentally saves its leader.
- 5
Does Tolstoy's closing claim about Napoleon change how you read leadership in crisis?
reflection • deepOne way to read it
Leaders may ratify retreats already forced by mass panic and material collapse, not invent them.
Critical Thinking Exercise
Permission Audit
Make two lists: situations in your life where you're seeing warning signs but haven't acted, and external events you're unconsciously waiting for to give you 'permission' to make changes. For each situation, write down what the early warning signs are telling you and what action you'd take if you gave yourself permission right now.
Consider:
- •Look for patterns where you explain away obvious problems
- •Notice if you're waiting for someone else to make the decision for you
- •Consider what you'd advise a friend in the same situation
Journaling Prompt
Write about a time when you waited too long to act on something you knew needed to change. What would have happened if you'd trusted your instincts earlier instead of waiting for external permission?
Coming Up Next...
Chapter 298: The Psychology of Retreat
Tolstoy turns to the psychology of the retreat itself: France is too far to imagine, so Smolensk becomes a false promised land. Individual soldiers want to surrender, but crowd momentum carries the mass forward while Kutuzov again refuses useless attacks.





