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    The Bridge on the Drina - PDFDrive.com

    Page 36
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      schoolchildrentalkaboutit?'the hodja interruptedangrily.'Whathasthebridge

      todowiththeirwar?'

      'It has, Alihodja; it has very much to do with it,' said Branković, once again

      smiling.

      AndheexplainedtoAlihodjaamiablybutalittlecondescendingly,asifspeaking

      toachild,thatallthiswasprovidedforintherulesoftheservice,thatthiswas

      the duty of engineers and bridge-builders, and that in the Imperial Army

      everyone knew only his own job and did not concern himself in the affairs of

      someotherbranch.

      The hodja listened to him, listened and watched, but did not understand very much.Finally,hecouldnolongerholdhimselfin.

      'All that is very fine, my fine fellow, but do they know that this is a Vezir's bequest,builtforthegoodofhissoulandthegloryofGodandthatitisasinto

      takeevenastonefromit?'

      The sergeant-major only waved his hands, shrugged his shoulders, pursed his

      lipsandclosedhiseyes,sothathiswholefaceassumedacraftyandobsequious

      expression,unmoving,blind,deaf,suchasmencanonlyachievebylongyears

      ofpracticeinold-fashionedanddecayingadministrationsinwhichdiscretionhas

      long degenerated into insensibility and obedience into cowardice. A page of

      white unsullied paper is eloquent compared with the dumb caution of such a

      face. A moment later, the Emperor's man opened his eyes, let fall his hands,

      composedhisfaceandonceagainresumedhisusualappearanceofconfidence

      and serenity in which Viennese good-humour and Turkish courtesy met and

      mingled like two waters. Changing the subject and praising with well-chosen

      words the hodja's health and youthful appearance, he took his leave with the same inexhaustible amiability with which he had come. The hodja remained

      confusedanduncertaininhimselfbutinnowaylesstroubledthanhehadbeen

      before.Lostinhisthoughtshelookedoutfromhisshopattheshiningloveliness of that first day of March. Opposite him, a little to the side, stood the eternal bridge,everlastinglythesame;throughitswhitearchescouldbeseenthegreen,

      sparkling,tumultouswatersoftheDrina,sothattheyseemedlikesomestrange

      diademintwocolourswhichsparkledinthesun.

      XVIII

      The tension known to the outside world as 'the annexation crisis', which had

      thrown its ill-omened shadow over the bridge and the town beside it, rapidly

      subsided. Somewhere out there, by diplomacy and discussions between the

      interestedparties,apeacefulsolutionhadbeenfound.

      Thefrontier,alwayssoinflammable,foroncedidnotflareup.Thearmywhich

      hadfilledthetownandthefrontiervillagesinthefirstdaysofspringbeganto

      withdraw.Butasalwaysthechangeswhichthecrisishadbroughtremainedafter

      ithadpassed.Thepermanentgarrisoninthetownwasmuchlargerthanithad

      been before. The bridge remained mined. But no one gave it a thought except

      AlihodjaMutevelić.Thepieceoflandontheleftflankofthebridgeabovethe

      ancient retaining wall, which had been the town park, was taken over by the

      militaryauthorities.Thefruittreesinthecentreoftheparkwerecutdownanda

      fine building erected. That was the new officers' mess, for the former mess, a

      small one-storied building up at Bikavac, was now too small for the increased

      numberofofficers.Sothatnow,ontherightofthebridgewasLotte'shoteland

      onthelefttheofficers'mess,twowhitealmostidenticalbuildingsandbetween

      themthesquare,surroundedbyshopsand,onasmallriseabovethesquare,the

      great barracks which the people still called the Stone Han in memory of

      Mehmed Pasha's caravanserai which had once been there but had now

      disappearedwithouttrace.

      Prices,whichhadleaptupthepreviousautumnbecauseofthelargenumberof

      soldiers,remainedunchanged,withmuchgreaterlikelihoodoffurtherrisesthan

      ofreturningtotheirformerlevel.ThatyearaSerbianandaMoslembankwere

      opened.Thepeoplemadeuseofmoney-orderslikemedicines.Noweverybody

      incurreddebtsmorefreely.Butthemoremoneyamanhadthemoreheneeded.

      Onlytothosewhospentmorethantheygaineddidlifeseemeasyandgood.But

      the merchants and business men were worried. Terms of payment become

      shorterthanever.Goodandreliableeus-

      tomers were fewer and fewer. The number of articles

      whose price was higher than the people could afford to

      paywasevergreater.Businesswasonasmallscale,and

      cheaper and cheaper types of goods were in demand.

      Only bad payers bought freely. The only sure and safe

      business was army contracting or work for some

      government institution, but not everyone could get it.

      State taxes and municipal dues became larger and more

      numerous; the strictness of the collectors increased. One

      could feel from afar the unhealthy fluctuations of the

      exchanges.Theprofitswhicharosefromthemwentinto

      unseen hands, while the losses reached even the most

      remote corners of the monarchy and struck the retail

      traders,bothassellersandconsumers.

      Thegeneralfeelinginthetownwasneithermoreserene

      normorecalm.Thatsuddenslackeningoftensiondidnot

      resultinarealappeasementeitheramongtheSerbsorthe

      Moslems; it left to the first a concealed disillusionment,

      to the second distrust and fear of the future. The

      expectation of great events began to grow once more,

      withoutvisiblereasonordirectcause.Thepeoplehoped

      forsomethingorwereafraidofsomething(inactualfact

      some hoped while others feared) and looked on

      everything in the light of those hopes and fears. In a

      word, men's hearts were disturbed, even among the

      simple and illiterate, especially among the younger

      people, and no one was any longer satisfied with the

      monotonoussortoflifewhichhaddraggedonforyears.

      Everyone wanted more, asked for better or trembled in

      fearofworse.Theolderpeoplestillregrettedthat'sweet

      tranquillity'whichinTurkishtimeshadbeenregardedas

      themainaimofexistenceandthemostperfectexpression

      of public and private life, and which had still existed in

      thefirstdecadesoftheAustrianadministration.Butthere

      werefewofthese.Alltheothersdemandedananimated,

      noisy and exciting life. They wanted sensations or the

      echo of sensations or at least variety, noise and

      excitement which would give the illusion of sensation.

      Thatdesirechangednotonlythestateofmen'smindsbut

      eventheexternalappearanceofthetown.Eventhattime-

      honoured and established life on the kapia, that life of

      quietconversationandpeacefulmeditations,simplejokes

      and lovesick songs between the wa
    ters, the sky and the

      mountains,begantochange.

      The coffee merchant obtained a gramophone, a clumsy

      wooden box with a big tin trumpet in the shape of a

      bright blue flower. His son changed the records and the

      needles and was continually winding this raucous

      contraption which echoed from both banks and made

      the kapia quiver.Hehadbeenforcedtogetitinordernot

      to be left behind by his competitors, for now

      gramophonescouldbe

      heard not only at meetings and in the reading rooms but even in the humblest

      cafés where the guests sat under a lime tree, on the grass or on brightly-lit

      balconies, and talked with few words and in low voices. Everywhere the

      gramophonegroundandchurnedoutTurkishmarches,Serbianpatrioticsongsor

      ariasfromVienneseoperettas,accordingtothetastesoftheguestsforwhomit

      played. For men would no longer go where there was neither noise, glitter nor

      movement.

      Newspapers were read avidly, but superficially and hastily; everyone looked onlyforthesensationalnewsprintedinlargetypeonthefrontpage.Therewere

      few who read the articles or the news in small type. All that took place was

      accompanied by clamour and the brilliance of big words. The younger people

      did not think that they had lived that day if by the evening their ears were not singingortheireyeshadnotbeendazzledbywhattheyhadheardorseeninthe

      courseoftheday.

      The agas and eSendis of the town came to the kapia, serious and outwardly indifferent, to listen to the latest news about the Turco-Italian war in Tripoli.

      Theylistenedavidlytoallthatwaswritteninthepapersabouttheheroicyoung

      Turkishmajor,EnverBey,whobeattheItaliansanddefendedtheSultan'slands

      likeadescendantoftheSokollisortheKuprulus.Theyfrownedattheraucous

      musicofthegramophone,whichpreventedtheirthinking,and,withoutshowing

      it, trembled deeply and sincerely for the fate of the distant Turkish province in

      Africa.

      It chanced that just then Pietro the Italian, Maistor-Pero, returning from work

      clothed in his linen overall, white with stone-dust and stained with paint and

      turpentine, crossed the bridge. He had grown old and bent and even more

      humble and timid. As at the time when Lucchieni assassinated the Empress, it

      seemed, by some logic incomprehensible to him, that he was again guilty of

      something which his Italian fellow-countrymen, with whom for many years he

      hadhadnocontact,haddonesomewhereintheouterworld.OneoftheTurkish

      youthsshouted:

      'So you want Tripoli, you bastard! You there, I mean!' and made obscene

      gesturesathim.

      ButMaistor-Pero,bentandtired,withhistoolsunderhisarm,onlypulledhishat

      furtheroverhiseyes,feverishlybitonhispipestemandhurriedhometoMejdan.

      TherehisStanawaswaitingforhim.Shetoohadgrownolderandhadlostsome

      of her physical strength, but she was still a formidable and outspoken woman.

      HecomplainedbitterlytoherabouttheyoungTurkswhosaidthingstheyshould

      not have said and had asked him about Tripoli, which until a few days ago he

      hadnotevenknownexisted.ButStana,asalways,wouldnotunderstandhimor

      consolehim,butwentonsayingthatitwashehimselfwhowasatfaultandeven

      deservedtohaveinsultsshoutedathim.

      'Ifyouwerearealman,whichyouarenot,youwouldhavehittheiruglyphizzes

      withyourchiseloryourhammer.Thenthoseragamuffinswouldnoteventhink

      ofjeeringatyoubutwouldgettotheirfeetwhenyoucrossthebridge.'

      'Eh, Stana, Stana,' said Maistor-Pero good-humouredly and a little sadly, 'how

      couldamanhitanotherinthefacewithahammer?'

      So those years passed in a succession of greater or lesser sensations, or in the

      constant need of them. So it came to the autumn of 1912; then 1913 with the

      BalkanwarsandtheSerbianvictories.Byastrangeexception,justthesethings

      whichwereofsuchgreatimportancetothefateofthebridgeandthetownand

      allwholivedinitcamesilentlyandalmostunnoticed.

      Flushed with red at sunrise and sunset, golden at midday, the October days

      passed over the town, which was waiting for the maize crop and the new

      season'splumbrandy.Itwasstillpleasanttositonthe kapia inthenoondaysun.

      Time, it seemed, was holding its breath over the town. It was just then that it

      happened.

      Even before the literates in the town could find their way through the

      contradictory newspaper reports, the war between Turkey and the four Balkan

      States had already broken out and followed the well-worn paths across the

      Balkans.Beforethepeoplehadfullygraspedthesenseandimportofthiswarit

      was practically over as a result of the victories of the Serbian and Christian

      armies;allwasendedfarfromVišegrad,withoutfiresonthefrontiers,without

      the grumble of the guns and without heads on the kapia. As it had been with trade and money, so it was with those more important things also; everything

      happenedfarawayandunbelievablyquickly.Somewherefarawayintheworld

      thedicehadbeenthrown,thebattlesfought,anditwastherethatthefateofeach

      oneofthetownsfolkwasdecided.

      But if the outward appearance of the town remained peaceful and unchanged,

      these events stirred up in the minds of men whole tempests of the greatest

      enthusiasmandthedeepestdepression.Asinthecaseofeverythingelsethathad

      happened in the world m recent years, they were looked on in the town with

      diametrically opposed feelings by the Serbs and the Moslems; only in their

      intensity and depth were they perhaps equal. These events surpassed all the

      hopes of the one; all the fears of the others appeared justified. Those desires

      which for hundreds of years had flown before the slow pace of history could

      now no longer keep pace with it but outdistanced it by some fantastic flight

      alongtheroadtothemostdaringrealization.

      Everythingthatthetowncouldseeorfeeldirectlyofthatfatefulwartookplace incrediblysimplyandwiththeswiftnessofanarrow.

      At Uvce where the frontier between Austro-Hungary and Turkey followed the

      littleriverUvac,andwhereawoodenbridgeseparatedtheAustriangendarmerie

      barracksfromtheTurkishblockhouse,theTurkishofficerwithhissmallguard

      crossedtotheAustrianside.There,hebrokehisswordwithatheatricalgesture

      ontheparapetofthebridgeandsurrenderedtotheAustriangendarmes.Atthat

      momentthegrey-cladSerbianinfantrycamedownfromthehills.Theyreplaced

      the old-fashioned askers along the whole frontier between Bosnia and the

      Sanjak. The triangle between Austria, Turkey and Serbia disappeared. The

      Turkishfrontierwhi
    chonlythedaybeforehadbeenaboutninemilesfromthe

      town was suddenly withdrawn more than 600 miles, somewhere far beyond

      Jedrene(Adrianople).

      Somanyandsuchimportantchanges,carriedoutinsoshortatime,shookthe

      towntoitsfoundations.

      For the bridge on the Drina this change was fateful. The railway link with

      Sarajevohad,aswehaveseen,reduceditsconnectionwiththeWestandnow,in

      amoment,itsconnectionwiththeEastalsoceased.InfacttheEast,whichhad

      createditandwhichhaduptothedaybeforestillbeenthere,greatlyshakenand

      weakened no doubt, but still as permanent and real as sky and land, had now

      vanishedlikeanapparition.Nowthebridgeinrealitynolongerlinkedanything

      savethetwopartsofthetownandthosedozenorsovillagesononeortheother

      sideoftheDrina.

      Thegreatstonebridgewhich,accordingtotheideasandthepiousintentionsof

      theGrandVezirfromSokolovići,wasmeanttolinkthetwopartsoftheEmpire,

      and 'for the love of God' make easier the passage from West to East and from

      East to West, was now in fact cut off from both East and West and abandoned

      likeastrandedshiporadesertedshrine.Forthreewholecenturiesithadendured

      and experienced everything and, unchanging, had truly served its purpose, but

      human needs had altered and world conditions changed; now its task had

      betrayedit.Byitssize,itssolidityanditsbeauty,armiesmightpassacrossitand

      caravansfollowoneanotherforcenturiestocome,butthus,bytheeternaland

      unforeseen play of human relations, the Vezir's bequest suddenly found itself

      abandonedand,asifbysomemagicspell,outsidethemainstreamoflife.The

      present role of the bridge in no way corresponded to its eternally young

      appearance and its gigantic but harmonious proportions. But it still stood the

      same as when the Grand Vezir had seen it in his inward vision behind closed eyes and as when his masons had built it; powerful, beautiful and enduring,

      beyondallpossibilityofchange.

      Itneededtime,itneededeffort,beforethetownspeopleunderstoodallthathas

     


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