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    The Bridge on the Drina - PDFDrive.com

    Page 32
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      companions. He was now like some gigantic monster far above them. His first

      steps were slow and hesitating. His heavy clogs kept slipping on the stones

      coveredwithice.Itseemedtohimthathislegswerefailinghim,thatthedepths

      below attracted him irresistibly, that he must slip and fall, that he was already

      falling. But his unusual position and the nearness of great danger gave him

      strength and hitherto unknown powers. Struggling to maintain his balance, he

      made more and more little jumps and bent more and more from his waist and

      knees. Instead of walking he began to dance, he himself did not know how, as

      freeofcareasifhehadbeenonawidegreenfieldandnotonthatnarrowand

      icyedge.Allofasuddenhefelthimselflightandskilfulasamansometimesis

      in dreams. His heavy and exhausted body felt without weight. The drunken

      Ćorkandancedandfloatedabovethedepthsasifonwings.Hefeltasifagay

      strength flowed through his body which danced to an unheard music and that

      gave him security and balance. His dance bore him onward where his walk

      wouldneverhavebornehim.Nolongerthinkingofthedangerorthepossibility

      ofafall,heleaptfromonelegtotheotherandsangwithoutstretchedarmsasif

      accompanyinghimselfonadrum.

      "Tiridam,tiridam,tiritiritiritiridam,tiridam,tiridam....'

      Corkansangandhimselfbeatouttherhythmtowhichdancingsurefootedlyhe

      madehisdangerouscrossing.Hislegsbentatthekneesandhemovedhishead

      toleftandright.

      'Tiridam,tiridam...hai...hai....'

      Inthatunusualanddangerousposition,exaltedabovealltheothers,hewasno

      longerĆorkantheOne-Eyed,thebuttofthetownandtheinn.Belowhimthere

      wasnolongerthatnarrowandslipperystoneparapetofthatfamiliarbridgeon

      whichhehadcountlesstimesmunchedhisbreadand,thinkingofthesweetness

      ofdeathinthewavesbeneath,hadgonetosleepintheshadeofthe kapia.

      No, this was that distant and unattainable voyage of which they had spoken

      everynightattheinnwithcoarsejokesandmockeryandonwhichnow,atlast,

      he had set out. This was that glorious long-desired path of great achievements

      andthatinthedistanceattheendofitwastheimperialcityofBrusawithitsreal

      riches and his legitimate heritage, the setting sun and the lovely Paša with his

      son;hiswifeandhischild.

      So,dancinginasortofecstasy,hepassedtheparapetaroundthe sofa and then

      the second half of the bridge. When he came to the end he leapt down and

      looked confusedly about him, in wonder that he had once again landed on the

      hard and familiar Višegrad road. The crowd which till then had accompanied

      himwithencouragementandjokeswelcomedhim.Thosewhohadhaltedinfear

      rushedup.Theybegantoembracehim,toclaphimonthebackandonhisfaded

      fez.Allofthemshoutedtogether:

      'Aferim,bravo,Ćorkan,ourfalcon!'

      'Bravo,hero!'

      'RumforĆorkan!'yelledSantoPapoinaraucousvoicewithaSpanishaccent,

      thinkingthathewasintheinn.

      Inthisgeneraluproarandcommotionsomeoneproposedthattheystaytogether

      andnotgohome,butgoondrinkinginhonourofĆorkan'sexploit.

      Those children who were then in their eighth and ninth years and were that

      morning hurrying across the frozen bridge to their distant school stopped and

      staredattheunusualsight.Theyopenedtheirmouthsinastonishmentandlittle

      cloudsofsteamrosefromthem.Tiny,muffledup,withslatesandschoolbooks

      undertheirarms,theycouldnotunderstandthisgameofthegrown-ups,butfor

      therestoftheirlivestheywouldremember,togetherwiththelinesoftheirown

      bridge, the picture of Ćorkan the One-Eyed, that man so well known to them

      whonow,transfiguredandlight,dancingdaringlyandjoyouslyasiftransported bymagic,walkedwhereitwasforbiddentowalkandwherenooneeverdared

      togo.

      XVI

      AscoreofyearshadpassedsincethefirstyellowAustrianmilitaryvehicleshad

      crossed the bridge. Twenty years of occupation — that is a long sequence of

      days and months. Each such day and month, taken by itself, seemed uncertain

      and temporary, but all of them taken together constituted the longest period of

      peaceandmaterialprogressthatthetowneverremembered,themainpartofthe

      lifeofthatgenerationwhichatthemomentoftheoccupationhadjustcometo

      yearsofdiscretion.

      Thesewereyearsofapparentprosperityandsafegains,eventhoughsmall,when

      mothersspeakingoftheirsonssaid:'MayheliveandbehealthyandmayGod

      grant him easy bread!', and when even the wife of tall Ferhat, the eternal poor

      man, who lit the municipal street lamps and received for his work the wage of

      twelveflorinsamonth,saidwithpride:'ThanksbetoGod,evenmyFerhathas

      becomeanofficial.'

      The last years of the nineteenth century, years without upheavals or important

      events,flowedpastlikeabroadcalmriverbeforereachingitsunknownmouth.

      Judgingfromthem,itseemedasiftragicmomentshadceasedtodisturbthelife

      oftheEuropeanpeoplesorthatofthetownbesidethebridge.Insofarasthey

      tookplacenowandagainintheworldoutside,theydidnotpenetratetoVišegrad

      andwerefar-offandincomprehensibletoitstownspeople.

      Thus, one summer day after so many years, there once more appeared on

      the kapia a white official notice. It was short and this time framed in a heavy blackborder,andannouncedthatHerMajestytheEmpressElizabethhaddiedin

      Geneva, the victim of a dastardly assassination by an Italian anarchist,

      Lucchieni. The announcement went on to express the disgust and profound

      sorrowofallthepeoplesofthegreatAustro-HungarianMonarchyandcalledon

      themtorallystillmorecloselyaroundthethroneinloyaldevotionandthereby

      affordthegreatestconsolationtotherulerwhomfatehadsoheavilybereaved.

      The announcement was pasted up below the white plaque with the Turkish

      inscription,ashadatonetimebeentheproclamationofGeneralFilipovićabout

      the occupation, and all the people read it with emotion since it concerned an

      Empress,awoman,butwithoutanyrealunderstandingordeepsympathy.

      For a few evenings there were no songs or noisy gatherings on the kapia by

      orderoftheauthorities.

      There was only one man in the town whom this news deeply affected. He was

      Pietro Sola, the only Italian in the town, a contractor and builder, stonemason

      andartist,inshortamanofalltasksandthespecialistofthetown.Maistor-Pero,

      as the whole town called him, had come at the time of the occupation and had

      remainedinthetown,marryingacertainStana,apoorgirlofnottoosavourya

      reputation. She was reddish, powerful, twice as big as Maistor-
    Pero and was

      considered a woman of sharp tongue and heavy hand with whom it was better

      not to quarrel. Maistor-Pero himself was a small, bent, good-natured man with

      mild blue eyes and pendent moustaches. He worked well and earned much. In

      time he had become a real townsman only, like Lotte, he was never able to

      master the language and the pronunciation. Because of his skilful hands and

      gentlenaturehewaslovedbythewholetownandhisathleticallypowerfulwife

      ledhimthroughlifestrictlyandmaternally,likeachild.

      When,returninghomefromworkgreywithstone-dustandstreakedwithpaint,

      Maistor-Peroreadtheannouncementonthe kapia, hepulledhishatdownover

      hiseyesandfeverishlybitonthethinpipewhichwasalwaysbetweenhisteeth.

      He explained to the more serious and respected citizens whom he met that he,

      although an Italian, had nothing in common with this Lucchieni and his

      dastardlycrime.Thepeoplelistenedtohim,consoledhimandassuredhimthat

      theybelievedhim andthat,furthermore, theyhadnever eventhoughtanything

      ofthesortabouthim.Nonetheless,hewentonexplainingtoeveryonethathe

      wasashamedtobealive,thathehadneverevenkilledachickeninhislifehow

      muchlessahumanbeing,andthatawomanandsogreatapersonage.Intheend

      his timidity became a real mania. The townspeople began to laugh at Maistor-

      Pero's worries, his zeal and his superfluous assurances that he had nothing in

      common with anarchists and murderers. The urchins of the town at once made

      upacruelgame.HiddenbehindsomefencetheywouldshoutatMaistor-Pero:

      'Lucchieni!'Thepoordevildefendedhimselffromtheseshoutsasfromaswarm

      ofwasps,pulledhishatdownoverhiseyesandfledhometobewailhisfateand

      weeponthebroadlapofhisStana.

      'Iamashamed,Iamashamed,'sobbedthelittleman,'Ican'tlookanyoneinthe

      face.'

      'Get along, you old fool, what have you to be ashamed of? That an Italian has

      murderedtheEmpress?LettheItaliankingbeashamedofthat!Butwhoareyou

      andwhathaveyoudonetobeashamedof?'

      'Iamashamedtobealive,'wailedMaistor-Perotothewoman,whoshookhim

      and tried to instil a little strength and resolution into him and to teach him to walkthroughthemarketplacewithheadheldhigh,notloweringhisgazebefore

      anyone.

      Meanwhiletheoldermensatonthe kapia withstonyfacesanddowncastlooks

      andlistenedtothemostrecentnews,withdetailsofthemurderoftheAustrian

      Empress.Thenewswasnomorethananexcuseforadiscussiononthefateof

      crownedheadsandgreatmen.Surroundedbyagroupofrespectable,inquisitive

      and unlettered Turkish merchants, the Višegrad schoolmaster Hussein Effendi

      washoldingforthonwhoandwhatwereanarchists.

      The schoolmaster was just as stiff and solemn, clean and neat, as he had been

      twenty years before when awaiting the arrival of the first Schwabes with Mula

      IbrahimandPopNikola,bothofwhomhadlongbeenlyingintheirrespective

      graveyards. His beard was already grey but just as carefully trimmed and

      rounded,hiswholesmoothfacecalmandpeaceful,formenwitharigidunder-

      standihgandhardheartageslowly.Thehighopinionwhichhehadalwayshad

      ofhimselfhadgrownevengreaterintheselasttwentyyears.Itmaybesaidin

      passingthatthecaseofbooksonwhichhisreputationasalearnedmanrestedto

      agreatextentwasstilllargelyunread,andhischronicleofthetownhadgrown

      inthesetwentyyearsbyfourpagesonly,fortheoldertheschoolmastergrewhe

      esteemed himself and his chronicle more and more and the events around him

      lessandless.

      Now he spoke in a low voice, slowly as if reading from some obscure

      manuscript and in a dignified manner, solemnly and severely, using the fate of

      theinfidelEmpressonlyasapretextwhichdidnotinanywayenterintothereal

      senseofhisinterpretation.Accordingtothisinterpretation(andthattoowasnot

      his own, for he had found it in the good old books inherited from his onetime

      teacher, the famous Arap-hodja) those now known as anarchists had always

      existed and would always exist while the world lasted. Human life was so

      ordered—andGod,theOne,theMercifulandCompassionate,hadsoordained

      —thatforeverydramofgoodthereweretwodramsofevilandtherecouldbe

      nogoodnessonthisearthwithouthatredandnogreatnesswithoutenvy,evenas

      therewasnoteventhesmallestobjectwithoutitsshadow.Thatwasparticularly

      trueoffamouspeople.Besideeachoneofthem,alongsidetheirglory,wasalso

      their executioner waiting for his chance and who seized it, sometimes earlier,

      sometimeslater.

      'Take for example our countryman Mehmed Pasha who has long been in

      Paradise,' said the schoolmaster and pointed to the stone plaque above the

      proclamation,'whoservedthreeSultansandwaswiserthanAsafandwhobyhis

      power and piety erected even this stone on which we are sitting and who too

      diedbytheknife.Despiteallhispowerandwisdomhewasunabletoescapehis

      appointed hour. Those whom the Grand Vezir hindered in their plans, and they

      wereagreatandpowerfulparty,foundawaytoarmandsubornamaddervishto

      killhim,andthatjustatthemomentwhenhewasenteringthemosquetopray.

      Withhisshabbydervishcloakonhisbackandarosaryinhishandthedervish

      barredthewayoftheVezir'ssuiteandhumblyandhypocriticallyaskedforalms,

      andwhentheVezirwasabouttoputhishandinhispockettogivethemtohim,

      thedervishstabbedhim.AndsoMehmedPashadiedasamartyrtothefaith.'

      Themenlistenedandblowingthesmokeoftheircigarettesfarfromthemlooked

      nowatthestoneplaquewiththeinscription,nowatthewhiteplacardbordered

      by a black line. They listened attentively, though not one of them fully

      understoodeverywordoftheschoolmaster'sinterpretation.But,lookingthrough

      their cigarette smoke into the distance, beyond the inscription and the placard,

      theyseemedtoseesomewhereintheworldanotheranddifferentlife,alifeof

      great ascents and sudden falls, in which greatness mingled with tragedy and

      whichinsomemannermaintainedabalancewiththispeacefulandmonotonous

      existenceoftheirsonthe kapia.

      Butthosedayspassedtoo.Theoldorderreturnedtothe kapia withitsusualloud

      conversations, jokes and songs. Discussions about anarchists ceased; the

      announcement of the death of that foreign and little-known Empress changed

      undertheinfluenceofsun,rainanddustuntilatlastthewindtoreitawayandit

      floatedinfragmentsdownriverintothevoid.

      Foralittlelongertheragamuffinsofthetownshouted'Lucchieni'afterMaistor-

      Pero without knowing themselves what they meant nor why they did so, but

      solelyfromthatchildish
    needtoteaseandtormentweakandsensitivecreatures.

      They shouted, and then ceased to shout having found some other amusement.

      StanaofMejdancontributednotalittletothisresultbymercilesslybeatingtwo

      ofthemostobstreperousoftheurchins.

      After a couple of months no one mentioned the Empress's death or anarchists

      any longer. That life at the end of the century, which seemed tamed and

      domesticated for ever, concealed everything beneath its wide and monotonous

      course and left among men the feeling that a century was opening of peaceful

      industryleadingintosomedistantandunattainablefuture.

      That unceasing and irresistible activity to which the foreign administrators

      seemed condemned and with which the townspeople were with difficulty

      reconciled, though they had just this to thank for their livelihood and their

      prosperity, changed many things in the course of those twenty years, in the

      outwardappearanceofthetownandinthecostumeandhabitsofitscitizens.It

      was natural that it would not stop short of the ancient bridge which looked

      eternallythesame.

      It was in 1900, the close of that happy century and the beginning of the new,

      which in the feelings and opinions of many was to be even happier, that

      engineerscameto examinethebridge. Thepeoplewere alreadyaccustomed to

      such things; even the children knew what it meant when these men in leather

      overcoats,withbreast-pocketsstuffedwithvaricolouredpencils,begantoprowl

      aboutsomehillorsomebuilding.Itmeantthatsomethingwouldbedemolished,

      built,duguporchanged.Onlynoonewasabletoimaginewhattheycouldbe

      doing with the bridge which to every living soul in the town meant a thing as

      eternalandunalterableastheearthonwhichtheytrodortheskiesabovethem;

      Buttheengineersinspectedit,measureditandtooknotes;thentheyWentaway

      and the matter was forgotten. But about midsummer, when the river was at its

      lowest,contractorsandworkmensuddenlybegantoarriveanderecttemporary

      lean-tostostoretheirtoolsnearthebridge.Alreadytherumourspreadthatthe

     


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