With reference to the military side⁠—the plan of campaign⁠—that work of genius of which Thiers remarks that, “His genius never devised anything more profound, more skillful, or more admirable,” and enters into a polemic with M. Fain to prove that this work of genius must be referred not to the fourth but to the fifteenth of October⁠—that plan never was or could be executed, for it was quite out of touch with the facts of the case. The fortifying of the KrĂ©mlin, for which la MosquĂ©e (as Napoleon termed the church of Basil the Beatified) was to have been razed to the ground, proved quite useless. The mining of the KrĂ©mlin only helped toward fulfilling Napoleon’s wish that it should be blown up when he left Moscow⁠—as a child wants the floor on which he has hurt himself to be beaten. The pursuit of the Russian army, about which Napoleon was so concerned, produced an unheard-of result. The French generals lost touch with the Russian army of sixty thousand men, and according to Thiers it was only eventually found, like a lost pin, by the skill⁠—and apparently the genius⁠—of Murat.

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