The Purple Of The Balkan Kings
Text 22
Saki
The Purple Of The Balkan Kings
Luitpold Wolkenstein, financier and diplomat on a small, obtrusive, self-important
scale, sat in his favoured cafe in the world-wise Habsburg capital, confronted
with the Neue Freie Presse and the cup of cream-topped coffee and attendant
glass of water that a sleekheaded piccolo had just brought him. For years
longer than a dog's lifetime sleek-headed piccolos had placed the Neue Freie
Presse and a cup of cream-topped coffee on his table; for years he had sat at
the same spot, under the dust-coated, stuffed eagle, that had once been a
living, soaring bird on the Styrian mountains, and was now made monstrous and
symbolical with a second head grafted on to its neck and a gilt crown planted
on either dusty skull. To-day Luitpold Wolkenstein read no more than the first
article in his paper, but read it again and again.
"The Turkish fortress of Kirk Kilisseh has fallen
. . . The Serbs, it is officially announced, have taken Kumanovo . . . The
fortress of Kirk Kilisseh lost, Kumanovo taken by the Serbs, these are tiding
for Constantinople resembling something out of Shakspeare's tragedies of the
kings . . . The neighbourhood of Adrianople and the Eastern region, where the
great battle is now in progress, will not reveal merely the future of Turkey,
but also what position and what influence the Balkan States are to have in the
world."
For years longer than a dog's lifetime Luitpold
Wolkenstein had disposed of the pretensions and strivings of the Balkan States
over the cup of cream-topped coffee that sleek-headed piccolos had brought him.
Never travelling further eastward than the horse-fair at Temesvar, never
inviting personal risk in an encounter with anything more potentially desperate
than a hare or partridge, he had constituted himself the critical appraiser and
arbiter of the military and national prowess of the small countries that
fringed the Dual Monarchy on its
Worshipping power and force and money-mastery as an elderly nerve-ridden woman
might worship youthful physical energy, the comfortable, plump-bodied
cafe-oracle had jested and gibed at the ambitions of the Balkan kinglets and
their peoples, had unloosed against them that battery of strange lip-sounds
that a Viennese employs almost as an auxiliary language to express the thoughts
when his thoughts are not complimentary. British travellers had visited the
Balkan lands and reported high things of the Bulgarians and their future,
Russian officers had taken peeps at their army and confessed "this is a
thing to be reckoned with, and it is not we who have created it, they have done
it by themselves." But over his cups of coffee and his hour-long games of
dominoes the oracle had laughed and wagged his head and distilled the worldly
wisdom of his castle. The Grossmachte had not succeeded in stifling the roll of
the war-drum, that was true; the big battalions of the
Luitpold Wolkenstein drank his coffee, but the
flavour had somehow gone out of it. His world, his pompous, imposing, dictating
world, had suddenly rolled up into narrower dimensions. The big purses and the
big threats had been pushed unceremoniously on one side; a force that he could
not fathom, could not comprehend, had made itself rudely felt. The august
Caesars of Mammon and armament had looked down frowningly on the combat, and
those about to die had not saluted, had no intention of saluting. A lesson was
being imposed on unwilling learners, a lesson of respect for certain
fundamental principles, and it was not the small struggling States who were
being taught the lesson.
Luitpold Wolkenstein did not wait for the quorum of
domino players to arrive. They would all have read the article in the Freie
Presse. And there are moments when an oracle finds its greatest salvation in
withdrawing itself from the area of human questioning.
Будь-те первым, поделитесь мнением с остальными.