The Tsar stopped a few minutes in front of the hussars as if undecided.
"How can the Emperor be undecided?" thought Rostov, but then even this indecision appeared to him majestic and enchanting, like everything else the Tsar did.
The Tsar's foot, in the narrow pointed boot then fashionable, touched the groin of the bobtailed bay mare he rode, his hand in a white glove gathered up the reins, and he moved off accompanied by an irregularly swaying sea of aides-de-camp.
Rostov, standing in the front lines of Kutuzov's army which the Tsar approached first, experienced the same feeling as every other man in that army: a feeling of self-forgetfulness, a proud consciousness of might, and a passionate attraction to him who was the cause of this triumph.
Hurrah!" thundered from all sides, one regiment after another greeting the Tsar with the strains of the march, and then "Hurrah!"...
For example, the famous imperial Russian historian Vasilii Kliuchevskii wrote that Peter "ceased being the mythical political figure to the people that previous
tsars had been." (10) For Anisimov, "Peter I with his plebian behavior, unprecedented reforms, and contemptible--in the eyes of the people--adulterous affairs largely destroyed the sanctity of the autocracy." (11)
The report, which calls for a "neurology
tsar", found patients often being treated by hospital staff with no neurological background and delays in diagnosis and treatment.