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    The Bridge on the Drina - PDFDrive.com

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      littlemoredirtthanhehimselfhadfound.

      Dauthodjadidallthathecouldtosavethe han andkeepitgoing.Firsthespent

      his own money and then he began to borrow from his relatives. So he patched

      thingsupfromyeartoyearandkeptthepreciousbuildinginitsformerbeauty.

      Tothosewhoreproachedhimforruininghimselftryingtopreservewhatcould

      notbepreserved,herepliedthathewasinvestingthemoneywellforhegaveit

      as a loan to God and that he, the mutevelia, should be the last to desert this bequestwhichitseemedallothershaddesertedandabandoned.

      This wise and godfearing, stubborn and obstinate man, whom the town long

      remembered, allowed no one to turn him from his vain effort. Working

      devotedly, he had long become reconciled to the idea that our destiny on this

      earthliesinthestruggleagainstdecay,deathanddissolutionandthatmanmust

      persevere in this struggle, even if it were completely in vain. Sitting before

      the han whichwasfallingintodissolutionbeforehiseyes,herepliedtoallthose

      whotriedtodissuadehimorpitiedhim:

      'Thereisnoneedtofeelsorryforme.Forallofusdieonlyonce,whereasgreat

      men die twice, once when they leave this world and a second time when their

      lifeworkdisappears.'

      When he was no longer able to pay day-labourers, he himself, old as he was,

      rooted up the weeds around the han with his own hands and carried out minor repairstothebuilding.Soitwasthatdeathovertookhimonedaywhenhehad

      climbed up to repair a cracked slate on the roof. It was natural that a small

      town hodja could not maintain what a Grand Vezir had founded and which

      historicaleventshadsentencedtodisaster.

      AfterDauthodja'sdeaththe han rapidlybegantofallintoruins.Signsofdecay

      appearedeverywhere.Theguttersbegantocrackandtosmellnasty,theroofto

      letintherains,thedoorsandwindowsthewinds,andthestablestobechoked with manure and weeds. But from without the perfect building still looked

      unchanged,calmandindestructibleinitsbeauty.Thosegreatarchedwindowson

      the ground floor, with grilles as delicate as lace cut in soft stone from a single block, looked peacefully out upon the world, but the simpler windows on the

      floorabovealreadyshowedsignsofpoverty,neglectandinternaldisorder.Little

      bylittletravellersbegantoavoidspendingthenightinthetownor,iftheydid,

      stayedatUstamujić'sinnandpaidfortheirnight'slodging.Theycamemoreand

      morerarelytothecaravanserai,eventhoughtheyhadnottopaybutonlytowish

      peace to the Vezir's soul. At last, when it become clear that the money would

      nevercome,everyoneabandonedanypretencetocareforthebuilding,eventhe

      new mutevelia, andthecaravanseraistayedmuteanddesertedandfellintoruin

      anddisrepairasdoallbuildingsinwhichnoonelivesandwhichnoonelooks

      after.Wildgrasses,weedsandthistlesgrewaroundit.Ravensnestedontheroof

      andcrowsgatheredthereindenseblackflocks.

      Thusbeforeitstimeandunexpectedlyforsaken(allsuchthingsseentohappen

      unexpectedly)theVezir'sStoneHanbegantodisintegrateandfalltopieces.

      But if the caravanserai, due to unusual circumstances, was forced to betray its

      mission and fall into ruin before its time, the bridge, which needed neither

      supervisionnormaintenance,remaineduprightandunchanged,linkingthetwo

      banksandbearingacrosstheriverburdensdeadandalive,asithadinthefirst

      daysofitsexistence.

      Initswallsthebirdsnestedandintheinvisiblecracksopenedbytimegrewlittle

      tufts of grass. The yellowish porous stone of which the bridge was built

      hardened and contracted under the alternate influence of moisture and of heat.

      Eternallybeatenbythewindswhichblewupanddowntherivervalley,washed

      by the rains and dried by the fierce heats of summer, that stone in time turned

      whitewiththedullwhitenessofparchmentandshoneinthetwilightasiflighted

      from within. The great and frequent floods, which were a heavy and continual

      menace to the town, were unable to do anything against it. They came every

      year, in spring and autumn, but all were not dangerous and fateful to the town

      beside the bridge. Every year, once or perhaps twice, the Drina rose in tumult

      and its muddied waters roared down, bearing through the arches of the bridge

      torn-upfencesfromthefields,uprootedstumpsoftrees,anddarkearthywaters

      filled with leaves and branches from the riverside forests. The courtyards,

      gardensandstoreroomsofthehousesnearesttheriversuffered.Buteverything

      endedthere.Atirregularintervalsofbetweentwentyandthirtyyearscamegreat

      floods which were afterwards remembered as one remembers insurrections or wars and were long used as a date from which to reckon time, to calculate the

      ages of citizens or the term of men's lives ('Five or six years before the great flood....''Duringthegreatflood....').

      Afterthesegreatfloodslittlemovablepropertyremainedinthatlargerpartofthe

      townwhichlayonthelowsandystripbetweentheDrinaandtheRzav.Sucha

      floodthrewthewholetownseveralyearsback.Thatgenerationspenttherestof

      itslifeinrepairingthedamageandthemisfortuneleftbythe'greatflood'.Tothe

      end of their lives men, talking amongst themselves, recalled the terror of that

      autumn night when, in the chill rain and hellish wind, to the light of an

      occasionallantern,theywouldtakeouttheirgoods,eachfromhisownshop,and

      carry them to higher ground at Mejdan and there store them in the shops and

      warehousesofothers.Whenthenextday,inthecloudydawn,theylookeddown

      fromthehillsideonthetownthattheylovedasstronglyandasunconsciouslyas

      their own blood, and saw the darkened muddied waters rushing through the

      streetsatrooflevel,theywouldtrytoguesswhosehouseitwasfromwhichthe

      foaming waters were noisily tearing the roof plank by plank and whose house

      stillremainedupright.

      On feast days and festivals and during the nights of Ramazan the grey-haired

      toilworn and anxious fathers of families would grow lively and talkative when

      the conversation turned to the greatest and hardest event of their lives, to the

      'greatflood'.Aftertheintervaloffifteenortwentyyearsinwhichtheyhadonce

      more restored their fortunes and their homes, the flood was recalled as

      something great and terrible, near and dear to them; it was an intimate bond

      betweenthemenofthatgenerationwhowerestillliving,fornothingbringsmen

      closer together than a common misfortune happily overcome. They felt

      themselvescloselyboundbythememoryofthatbygonedisaster.Theylovedto

      recallmemoriesofthehardestblowdealtthemintheirlives.Theirrecollections

      were inexhaustible and they
    repeated them continually, amplified by memory

      andrepetition;theylookedintooneanother'seyes,sceleroticandwithyellowing

      whites,andsawtherewhattheyoungermencouldnotevensuspect.Theywere

      carriedawaybytheirownwordsanddrownedalltheirpresenteverydaytroubles

      intherecollectionofthosegreateroneswhichtheyhadexperiencedsolongago.

      Sitting in the warm rooms of their homes through which that flood had at one

      time passed, they recounted for the hundredth time with special enjoyment

      movingandtragicscenes.Andthemoreharrowingandpainfultherecollection

      thegreaterpleasurewasthereinrecollectingit.Seenthroughtobaccosmokeora

      glass of plum brandy, such scenes were often transformed by distance and imagination, magnified and embellished, but not one of them ever noticed that

      this was so and would have sworn that it had in fact so happened, for they all

      sharedinthisunconsciousexaggeration.

      Thustherestilllivedafewoldmenwhorememberedthelast'greatflood',about

      which they could still speak among themselves, repeating to the younger men

      thattherewerenolongersuchdisastersasintimepast,butnosuchblessingsand

      goodlivingeither.

      Oneoftheverygreatestofallthesefloods,whichoccurredinthesecondhalfof

      theeighteenthcentury,wasespeciallylongrememberedandbecamethesubject

      ofcountlesstales.

      Inthatgeneration,astheoldermenlatersaid,therewaspracticallynoonewho

      rememberedthelastgreatfloodwell.Nonetheless,onthoserainyautumndays

      all were on the alert, knowing that 'the waters were hostile'. They emptied the

      warehousesclosesttotheriverandwanderedbynight,bythelightoflanterns,

      alongthebankstolistentotheroarofthewaters,fortheoldermenaffirmedthat

      theycouldtellbysomespecialmoaningofthewaterswhetherthefloodtocome

      would be one of those ordinary ones which visited the town every year and

      causedminordamage,orwhetheritwouldbeoneofthose,happilyrare,which

      floodedboththebridgeandthetownandcarriedawayeverythingthatwasnot

      onfirmfoundations.NextdaytheDrinadidnotriseandthetownthatnightslept

      soundly, for men were tired out from lack of sleep and the excitement of the

      nightbefore.Soitwasthatthewatersdeceivedthem.ThatnighttheRzavrose

      suddenlyinamannerneverbeforerememberedand,redwithmud,piledupat

      itsconfluencewiththeDrina.Thusthetworiversoverwhelmedthewholetown.

      Suljaga Osmanagić, one of the richest Turks in the town, then owned a

      thoroughbred Arab horse, a chestnut of great value and beauty. As soon as the

      reinforced Drina began to rise, two hours before it overflowed into the streets,

      this chestnut began to neigh and did not calm down until it had awakened the

      stable-boys and its owner and until they had taken it out of its stall which was besidetheriver.Sothegreaterpartoftheinhabitantswereawakened.Underthe

      chill rain and the raging wind of the dark October night began a flight and a

      saving of all that could be saved. Half-dressed, the people waded up to their

      knees,carryingontheirbackstheirwakenedandcomplainingchildren.Atevery

      moment dull crashes could be heard when the tree stumps which the Drina

      washed down from the flooded forests struck against the piers of the stone

      bridge.

      Up at Mejdan, which the waters had never in any circumstances been able to

      reach, windows were all alight and flickering lanterns danced and quivered in

      thedarkness.Allthehouseswereopentowelcomethosewhohadsufferedand

      who came drenched and despondent with their children or their most precious

      belongings in their arms. In the stables burned fires by which those unable to

      findaplaceinthehousescoulddrythemselves.

      The leading merchants of the town, after they had placed the people in the

      houses,TurkishinTurkishhomesandChristianandJewishinChristianhomes,

      gathered in the great ground-floor room of Hadji Ristić's house. There were

      the mukhtars(theMoslemleaders)andthe kmets(theChristianheadmen)ofall

      thequarters,exhaustedandwettotheskin,afterhavingwakenedandmovedto

      safe quarters all their fellow citizens. Turks, Christians and Jews mingled

      together. The force of the elements and the weight of common misfortune

      broughtallthesementogetherandbridged,atleastforthisoneevening,thegulf

      thatdividedonefaithfromtheotherand,especially,the rayah from the Turks:

      SuljagaOsmanagić,PetarBogdanović,MordoPapo,thebig,taciturnandwitty

      parish priest Pop Mihailo, the fat and serious Mula Ismet, the

      Višegrad hodja, and Elias Levi, known as Hadji Liacho, the Jewish rabbi well knownevenfarbeyondthetownforhissoundjudgmentandopennature.There

      were about ten others, from all three faiths. All were wet, pale, with clenched

      jaws,butoutwardlycalm;theysatandsmokedandtalkedofwhathadbeendone

      tosavethepeopleandofwhatstillremainedtobedone.Everymomentyounger

      people entered, streaming with water, who reported that everything living had

      been taken to Mejdan and to the fortress and put in houses there, Turkish and

      Christian, and that the waters down in the valley were still rising and invading

      streetafterstreet.

      As the night passed—and it passed slowly and seemed enormous, growing

      greaterandgreaterlikethewatersinthevalley—theleadersandrichmenof

      thetownbegantowarmthemselvesovercoffeeandplumbrandy.Awarmand

      close circle formed, like a new existence, created out of realities and yet itself unreal,whichwasnotwhatithadbeenthedaybeforenorwhatitwouldbethe

      dayafter,butlikeatransientislandinthefloodoftime.Theconversationrose

      and strengthened and changed subject. They avoided speaking of past floods

      known only in tales, but spoke of other things that had no connection with the

      watersandwiththedisasterwhichwasatthatmomenttakingplace.

      Desperate men make desperate efforts to appear calm and indifferent, almost casual. By some tacit superstitious agreement and by the unwritten but sacred

      laws of patronal dignity and business order which have existed since olden

      times,eachconsideredithisdutytomakeaneffortandatthatmomentatleast

      externallytoconcealhisfearandhisanxietiesinfaceofadisasteragainstwhich

      hecoulddonothingandtotalkinalighttoneaboutunrelatedthings.

      But just as they began to grow calm in this conversation and to find in it a

      momentofforgetfulness,andtherebytherestandenergythattheywouldneed

      sogreatlyinthedaytocome,amanentered,bringingwithhimKostaBaranac.

      That young merchant was wet through, muddied to the knees and dishevelled.

      Dazzledbythelightandconfusedbythenumberspresent,helookedatthemas


      if in a dream, wiping the water from his face with his open hand. They made

      roomforhimandofferedhimplumbrandy,whichhewasunabletoraisetohis

      lips.Hiswholebodyshivered.Awhisperranthroughtheroomthathehadtried

      to leap into the dark current that now flowed in a sandy torrent immediately

      abovethespotwherehisbarnsandgranarieshadbeen.

      Hewasayoungman,arecentsettler,whohadbeenbroughttothetowntwenty

      years before as an apprentice, but had later married into a good family and

      become a merchant. A peasant's son, he had in the last few years by daring

      speculation and ruthless exploitation become rich, richer than many of the

      leading families of the town. But he was not used to loss and was unable to

      support disaster. That autumn he had bought large quantities of plums and

      walnuts,farbeyondhisrealresources,reckoningthatinwinterhewouldbeable

      tocontrolthepriceofbothdriedplumsandwalnutsandsoclearhisdebtsand

      makeagoodprofit,ashehaddoneinpreviousyears.Nowhewasruined.

      Sometimewastopassbeforetheimpressionmadeonthembythesightofthis

      ruinedmancouldbedispelled,sinceallofthem,somemoresomeless,hadbeen

      hit by this flood and only by inborn dignity had they been able to control

      themselvesbetterthanthisupstart.

      The oldest and most prominent amongst them once again turned the

      conversationtocasualmatters.Theybegantotelllongstoriesofformertimes,

      whichhadnosortofconnectionwiththedisasterthathaddrawnthemhitherand

      surroundedthemonallsides.

      They drank hot plum brandy and embarked on recollections of earlier days,

      abouttheeccentriccharactersofthetownandeverykindofstrangeandunusual

      event.PopMihailoandHadjiLiachosettheexample.Whenthetalkinevitably

      returnedtoearlierfloods,theyrecalledonlywhatwaspleasantorcomical,orat least seemed so after so many years, as if they wanted to cast a spell upon the watersandtodefytheflood.

      They talked of Pop Jovan, who had once been parish priest here, who his

      parishioners had said was a good man but did not have 'a lucky hand' and that

     


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