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    The Bridge on the Drina - PDFDrive.com

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      smiling, visiting churches and monasteries, religious meetings and festivals; he

      prayed, did penance and fasted. Earlier the Turkish authorities had paid no

      attentiontohimandregardedhimasafeeble-mindedandreligiousman,letting

      himgowherehewouldandsaywhatheliked.Butnow,duetotheinsurrection

      in Serbia, new times had come and harsher measures prevailed. A few Turkish

      families had arrived in the town whose property had been destroyed by the

      insurgents; they spread hatred and called for vengeance. Guards were

      everywhere. Supervision was intensified, the local Turks were anxious, filled

      with rancour and ill-will and looked on everyone bloodthirstily and with

      suspicion.

      TheoldmanhadbeentravellingalongtheroadfromRogaticaandbybadluck

      wasthefirsttravelleronthedaywhentheblockhousehadbeencompletedand

      the first guards had taken up their posts there. In fact he had chosen the very

      worst time, for the day had not fully dawned. He bore before him, as a man

      carries a lighted candle, a sort of thick stick decorated with strange signs and

      letters. The blockhouse swallowed him up like a spider does a fly. They

      interrogated him curtly. They demanded who he was, what he was doing and

      whencehecame,andcommandedhimtoexplainthedecorationsandwritingon

      hisstaff.Herepliedfreelyandopenly,eventoquestionsthathadnotbeenasked

      him,asifspeakingbeforetheLastJudgmentofGodandnotbeforeagroupof

      evil Turks. He said that he was no one and nothing, a traveller on this earth, a transientinatransientworld,ashadowinthesun,butthathepassedhisfewand

      short days in prayer and in going from monastery to monastery, until he had

      visitedalltheholyplaces,allthebequestsandthetombsoftheSerbiantsarsand

      nobles. As to the signs and letters on his staff they represented the times of

      Serbian freedom and greatness, past and future. For, said the old man, smiling

      gentlyandtimidly,thedayofresurrectionwascomingsoonand,judgingfrom

      whathehadreadinbooksandfromwhatmightbeseenontheearthandinthe

      skies, it was now quite near. The kingdom was reborn, redeemed by trials and

      foundedontruth.

      'Iknowthatitisnotpleasant,gentlemen,foryoutohavetolistentothesethings

      andthatIshouldnotevenspeakofthembeforeyou,butyouhavestoppedme

      andtoldmethatIshouldtellyouthewholetruth,whereveritmaylead.Godis

      truthandGodisOne!Andnow,Ibegyou,letmegoonmywayforIamdue

      todayatBanja,attheMonasteryoftheHolyTrinity.'

      The interpreter Shefko translated, struggling in vain to find in his poor

      knowledgeoftheTurkishlanguageequivalentsforabstractideas.TheCaptainof

      theGuard,asicklyAnatolian,stillonlyhalfawake,listenedtotheconfusedand

      disconnectedwordsofthetranslatorandfromtimetotimethrewaglanceatthe

      old man who, without fear or evil thoughts, looked back at him and confirmed

      withhiseyesthateverythingwasjustastheinterpreterhadsaid,thoughheknew

      not a word of Turkish. Somewhere in the back of his mind it was clear to the

      Captain that this man was some sort of half-witted infidel dervish, a good-

      natured and harmless madman. And in the old man's staff, which they had

      already cut through in several places thinking that it was hollow and that

      messages were concealed in it, they found nothing. But in Shefko's translation

      theoldman'swordsseemedsuspicious,smelledofpoliticsandseditiousintent.

      The Captain, for his part, would have let this poor dim-witted creature go his

      way,buttherestofthesoldiersandcivilguardshadgatheredtogetherthereand

      were listening to the interrogation. There was his sergeant Tahir, an evil man,

      sullen and rheumy-eyed, who had already several times slandered him to his

      chief and accused him of lack of care and severity. Then too there was that

      Shefko, who in his translation was obviously putting the worst possible

      construction on the old man's exalted phrases and who loved to stick his nose

      into everything and carry tales even when there was nothing in them, and was

      everreadytogiveortoconfirmanevilreport.ThentootherewerethoseTurks

      fromthetown,volunteers,whowenttheirroundssullenlyandself-importantly,

      arrested suspicious characters and interfered needlessly in his official duties.

      They were all there. And all of them, these days, were as if drunk with

      bitterness, from desire for vengeance and longed to punish and to kill

      whomsoever they could, since they could not punish or kill those whom they

      wished.Hedidnotunderstandthem,nordidheapproveofthem,buthesawthat

      theywereallagreedthattheblockhousemusthaveitsvictimthisfirstmorning.

      Hesuspectedthatbecauseoftheirintoxicationofbitternesshemightbetheone to suffer if he opposed their wishes. The thought that he might have

      unpleasantnessbecauseofthismadoldfoolseemedtohimintolerable.Andthe

      oldmanwithhistalesoftheSerbianEmpirewouldnotinanycasegetveryfar

      among the Turks of the district who, these days, were like a swarm of angry

      bees. Let the troubled waters carry him away, even as they had brought him

      here....

      AssoonastheoldmanhadbeenboundandtheCaptainwaspreparingtogointo

      thetownsoasnottohavetowatchtheexecution,someTurkishpolicemenanda

      fewciviliansappeared,leadingapoorlydressedSerbianyouth.Hisclothingwas

      tornandhisfaceandhandsscratched.ThiswasacertainMile,apoordevilfrom

      Lijesko,wholivedquitealoneinawater-millatOsojnica.Hemighthavebeen

      nineteenatmost,strongandburstingwithhealth.

      That morning before sunrise Mile placed some barley in the mill to be ground

      and then opened the big millrace and went into the forest to cut wood. He

      brandished his axe and cut the soft alder branches like straws. He enjoyed the

      morningfreshnessandtheeasewithwhichthewoodfellbeforehisaxe.Hisown

      movementswereapleasuretohim.Buthisaxewassharpandthethinwoodtoo

      frailfortheforcethatwasinhim.Somethingwithinhimswelledhisbreastand

      drove him to shout aloud at each movement. His cries became more and more

      frequent and connected. Mile who, like all men of Lijesko, had no ear and no

      idea of how to sing, sang and shouted in the thick and shady forest. Without

      thinkingofanythingandforgettingwherehewas,hebegantosingwhathehad

      heardotherssinging.

      At that time, when Serbia had risen in revolt, the people had made of the old

      song:

      'WhenAlibegwasayoungbeg

      Amaidenborehisstandard..."anewsong:

      'WhenKarageorgewasayoungbeg

      Amaidenborehisstandard...'


      Inthatgreatandstrangestruggle,whichhadbeenwagedinBosniaforcenturies

      between two faiths, for land and power and their own conception of life and

      order, the adversaries had taken from each other not only women, horses and

      armsbutalsosongs.

      Manyaversepassedfromonetotheotherasthemostpreciousofbooty.

      This song, then, was one recently sung among the Serbs, but stealthily and in

      secret, in closed houses, at family feasts or in distant pastures where a Turk

      mightnotsetfootforyearsatatimeandwhereaman,atthepriceofloneliness

      andpovertyinthewilds,mightliveashewishedandsingwhatheliked.Andit

      was just this song that Mile, the mill attendant, had thought fit to sing in the forestjustbelowtheroadalongwhichtheTurksofOlujacandOrahovacpassed

      ontheirwaytothemarketinthetown.

      Dawnhadjusttouchedthecrestsofthemountainsandthere,inthatshadyplace,

      it was still quite dark. Mile was all wet with the dew but warm from a good

      night'ssleep,hotbreadandwork.Hebrandishedhisaxeandstrucktheslender

      aldernearitsrootbutthetreeonlybentandbowedlikeayoungbridewhokisses

      the hand of the 'kum' who leads her to marriage. The alder was sprinkled with

      colddewlikeafinerainandremainedbent,foritcouldnotfallbecauseofthe

      thicknessofthegreeneryaround.Thenhecutoffthegreenbrancheswithhisaxe

      inonehandasifplaying.Whilehewasdoingthishesangatthetopofhisvoice

      pronouncing certain of the words with enjoyment. 'Karageorge' was something

      vaguebutstronganddaring;'maiden'and'standard'werealsothingsunknownto

      him, but things which in some way answered to his most intimate dreams; to

      haveagirlofhisownandtobearastandard.Inanycasetherewasasweetness

      in pronouncing such words. And all the strength within him drove him on to

      pronouncethemclearlyandcountlesstimesover.Hisutteranceofthemseemed

      torenewhisstrengthmakinghimrepeatthemstillmoreloudly.

      SosangMileatthebreakofdayuntilhehadcutandtrimmedthebranchesfor

      whichhehadcome.Thenhewentdownthewetslopedragginghisfreshburden

      behindhim.ThereweresomeTurksinfrontofthemill.Theyhadtetheredtheir

      horses and were waiting for someone. There were ten of them. He felt himself

      again,ashehadbeenbeforehehadsetouttogetthewood,clumsy,raggedand

      embarrassed, without Karageorge before his eyes, without a girl or a standard

      nearhim.TheTurkswaiteduntilhehadputdownhisaxe,thenfellonhimfrom

      allsidesandafterashortstruggleboundhimwithahalterandtookhimtothe

      town.Ontheirwaytheybeathimandkickedhiminthegroin,askinghimwhere

      washisKarageorgenowandsayingevilwordsabouthisgirlandhisstandard.

      Undertheblockhouseonthe kapia wheretheyhadjustboundthehalf-wittedold

      mansomeofthetownne'er-do-wellshadjoinedthesoldierseventhoughithad

      onlyjustdawned.Amongstthemwere

      anumberofrefugeesfromSerbiawhosehomestherehadbeenburntdown.All

      werearmedandworeasolemnexpressionasthoughagreateventoradecisive

      battle were in question. Their emotion rose with the rising sun. The sun rose

      rapidly, amid shining mists down there on the skyline above Goleš. The Turks

      waitedfortheterrifiedyouthasifhehadbeenarevolutionaryleader,thoughhe

      wasraggedandmiserableandhadbeenbroughtfromtheleftbankoftheDrina

      wheretherewasnoinsurrection.

      TheTurksfromOlujacandOrahovac,exasperatedbythearrogancewhichthey

      wereunabletobelievewasnotintentional,borewitnessthattheyoungmanhad

      been singing in a provocative manner beside the road songs about Karageorge

      and the infidel fighters. He, frightened, in wet rags, scratched and beaten, his

      eyesfilledwithemotionthatmadehimseemtosquint,watchedtheCaptainasif

      hewerehopingforsalvationfromhim.Ashecamerarelytothetownhehadnot

      knownthatablockhousewasbeingerectedonthebridge;thereforeeverything

      seemed to him strange and unreal as if he had wandered in his sleep into a

      strangetownfilledwithevilanddangerousmen.Stutteringandkeepinghiseyes

      ontheground,hesworethathehadneversunganythingandthathehadnever

      struckaTurk,thathewasapoorman,wholookedafterthewater-mill,thathe

      wascuttingwoodanddidnotknowwhyhehadbeenbroughthere.Heshivered

      fromfearandwasreallyunabletounderstandwhathadhappenedandhow,after

      that exalted mood down there by the freshness of the stream, he had suddenly

      found himself bound and beaten here on the kapia, the centre of all interest, before so many people to whom he had to answer. He had himself quite

      forgottenthathehadeversungeventhemostinnocentofsongs.

      But the Turks stood by their words; that he had been singing insurrectionist

      songsatthemomenttheyhadbeenpassingandthathehadresistedthemwhen

      they wanted to bind him. Each of them confirmed this on oath to the Captain

      whointerrogatedthem:

      'DoyouswearbyAllah?'

      'IswearbyAllah.'

      'Isthatthetruth?'

      'Thatisthetruth.'

      So thrice repeated. Then they put the young man beside Jelisije and went to

      wakentheheadsmanwho,itseemed,sleptverysoundly.Theoldmanlookedat

      the youth who, confused and ashamed, blinked since he was not used to being

      the centre of attention in broad daylight on the bridge surrounded by so many people.

      'Whatisyourname?'theoldmanasked.

      'Mile,' said the youth humbly, as if he were still replying to the Turkish

      questions.

      'Mile, my son, let us kiss,' and the old man leant his grey head on Mile's

      shoulder.'LetuskissandmakethesignoftheCross.IntheNameoftheFather

      andoftheSonandoftheHolyGhost.IntheNameoftheFatherandoftheSon

      andoftheHolyGhost.Amen.'

      Sohecrossedhimselfandtheyouthinwordsonly,fortheirhandswerebound,

      quickly,fortheexecutionerhadalreadyarrived.

      The headsman, who was one of the soldiers, rapidly finished his task and the

      firstcomers,whodescendedthehillsbecauseofmarketdayandwentacrossthe

      bridge,couldseethetwoheadsplacedonfreshstakesontheblockhouseanda

      bloodstained place, sprinkled with gravel and smoothed down, on the bridge

      wheretheyhadbeenbeheaded.

      Thustheblockhousebeganitswork.

      Fromthatdayonwardsallwhoweresuspectedorguiltyofinsurrection,whether

      caught on the bridge itself or somewhere on the frontier, were brought to

      the kapia. Oncetheretheyrarelygotawayalive.Theheadsofthoseconnected

      with the revolt, or simply those who were unlucky, were exposed on stakes

      placed around the blockhouse and their bodies thrown from the bridge into the

      Drinaifnooneappearedtoran
    somtheheadlesscorpse.

      The revolt, with shorter or longer periods of truce, lasted for years and in the

      courseofthoseyearsthenumberofthosethrownintotherivertodriftdownto

      'look for another, better and more reasonable land' was very great. Chance had

      decreed, that chance that overwhelms the weak and unmindful, that these two

      simplemen,thispairfromthemassofunlearned,poverty-strickenandinnocent,

      shouldheadtheprocession,sinceitisoftensuchmenwhoarefirstcaughtupin

      the whirlpool of great events and whom this whirlpool irresistibly attracts and

      sucksdown.ThustheyouthMileandtheoldmanJelisije,beheadedatthesame

      moment and in the same place, united as brothers, first decorated with their

      headsthemilitaryblockhouseonthe kapia, whichfromthenonwards,aslongas

      the revolt lasted, was practically never without such decoration. So these two,

      whom no one before then had ever seen or heard of, remained together in memory, a memory clearer and most lasting than that of so many other, more

      important,victims.

      So the kapia disappeared under this bloodstained blockhouse of ill repute and withitvanishedalsoallmeetings,conversations,songsandenjoyment.Eventhe

      Turks passed that way unwillingly while only those Serbs who were forced to

      crossedthebridgehastilyandwithloweredheads.

      Aroundthewoodenblockhouse,whoseplankswithtimebecamefirstgreyand

      thenblack,wasquicklycreatedthatatmospherethatalwayssurroundsbuildings

      inpermanentusebythearmy.Thesoldiers'washinghungfromthebeamsand

      rubbish was tipped from the windows into the Drina, dirty water and all the

      refuseandfilthofbarracklife.Onthewhitecentralpierofthebridgeremained

      longdirtystreakswhichcouldbeseenfromafar.

      The job of headsman was for long always carried out by the same soldier. He

      wasafatanddark-skinnedAnatolianwithdullyellowisheyesandnegroidlips

      in a greasy and earthen-coloured face, who seemed always to be smiling, with

      thesmileofawell-nourishedandgood-humouredman.HewascalledHairuddin

      andwassoonknowntothewholetownandevenbeyondthefrontier.Hecarried

     


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