Black Lamb & Grey Falcon
Page 582
“But the Austrian Empire had numbers. It had at
this moment little else; it had so little virtue or wisdom or even common sense
that again and again the student must marvel that this was the same state as eighteenth-century
Austria. But what it had it used, and it sent back its armies in September.
This time they enjoyed a certain disgraceful advantage. During the first
invasion they had laid waste to the country, pillaging the crops, burning the
houses, murdering the civil population: at least three hundred and six women
are known to have been executed, as well as many people over eighty and
children under five. So the Serbian Army had this time to retreat over a
devastated countryside which could give it no food and offered it much
discouragement, not diminished by the floods of civilian refugees, some
Serbian, some from the Slav parts of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, all hungry
and footsore and with tales to tell of the enemy’s malign brutality. There
might have been panic had it not been for the spirit of the Karageorgevitches
and the higher command. King Peter hobbled up to some troops that were wavering
under an artillery fire to which their army had no answer, and said to them,
after the manner of a Homeric general, “Heroes, you have taken two oaths: one
to me, your king, and one to your country. From the first I release you, from
the second no man can release you. But if you decide to return to your homes,
and if we should be victorious, you shall not be made to suffer.”
They did not go. To lead them General Mishitch,
the grave and reluctant regicide whom King Peter had refused to dismiss, now
appointed fourteen hundred young students as non-commissioned officers. Of
these boys, who before the war had been studying at Belgrade, Vienna, Prague,
Berlin and Paris, one hundred and forty survived the war. Arms came suddenly to
this army, sent from England. These men who were so spent that they no longer
lived by their experience but what is known to our common human stock, these
boys who had no experience at all and therefore were also thrown back on that
same primitive knowledge, alike they forgot the usual prudent opinion that
dying is disagreeable, and valued death and life and honour as if they were
heroes who had died a thousand years before or gods who were under no necessity
to die. They flung themselves again on the Austrians. By the end of December
they had retaken Belgrade. They took down the Hungarian flag that had floated
above the palace and laid it on the steps of the Cathedral when King Peter went
with his generals to the mass of thanksgiving for victory. They had to thank
the Lord for a real suspension of natural law for when the Austrians had
withdrawn over the frontiers there remained behind rather more Austrian
prisoners of war than there were Serbian soldiers.”
Page 584
“In September the invasion began. By October the
Serbian Army which now numbered a quarter of a million men, was faced with
three hundred thousand Austro-German troops under the great strategist
Mackensen, and as many Bulgarians. It was now necessary for the country to die.
The soldiers retreated slowly, fighting a rearguard action, leaving the civil
population, that is to say their parents, wives, and children, in the night of
an oppression they knew to be frightful. Monks came out of the monasteries and
followed the soldiers, carrying on bullock-carts, and on their shoulders where
the roads were too bad, the coffined bodies of the medieval Serbian kings, the
sacred Nemanyas, which must not be defiled. So was carried King Peter, whose
rheumatic limbs were wholly paralysed by the cold of Autumn; and so too, before
the retreat was long on its way, was Prince Alexander. The internal pain that
had vexed him all year grew so fierce that he could no longer ride his horse.
Doctors took him to a cottage and he was operated on for appendicitis. Then he
was packed in bandages wound close as a shroud, and put on a stretcher and
carried in the procession of the troops. It is like some fantastic detail in a
Byzantine fresco, improbable, nearly impossible, yet a valid symbol of truth,
that a country which was about to die should bear with it on its journey to
death, its kings, living and dead, all prostrate, immobile.”
ITYM "prostrate" in the last line but I like it better this way.
ReplyDeleteThanks Adam
DeleteIn the grim darkness of the recent past, there is only war.
ReplyDelete