Under the gloomy despotism of the Turks, a man in any position
of responsibility is condemned almost as soon as accused; and if he is
not strong enough to inspire terror, his ruin is certain. Ali received
at Tepelen, where he had retired to more conveniently weave his
perfidious plots, an order to get rid of the pacha. At the receipt of the
firman of execution he leaped with joy, and flew to Delvino to seize the
prey which was abandoned to him.
The noble Selim, little suspecting
that his protege had become his accuser and was preparing to become his
executioner, received him with more tenderness than ever, and lodged him, as
heretofore, in his palace. Under the shadow of this hospitable roof, Ali
skilfully prepared the consummation of the crime which was for ever to draw
him out of obscurity. He went every morning to pay his court to the pacha,
whose confidence he doubted; then, one day, feigning illness, he sent
excuses for inability to pay his respects to a man whom he was accustomed
to regard as his father, and begged him to come for a moment into
his apartment. The invitation being accepted, he concealed assassins in
one of the cupboards without shelves, so common in the East, which
contain by day the mattresses spread by night on the floor for the slaves
to sleep upon. At the hour fixed, the old man arrived. Ali rose from
his sofa with a depressed air, met him, kissed the hem of his robe,
and, after seating him in his place, himself offered him a pipe-and
coffee, which were accepted. But instead of putting the cup in the
hand stretched to receive it, he let it fall on the floor, where it
broke into a thousand pieces. This was the signal. The assassins sprang
from their retreat and darted upon Selim, who fell, exclaiming, like
Caesar, "And it is thou, my son, who takest my life!"
At the sound of
the tumult which followed the assassination, Selim’s bodyguard, running up,
found Ali erect, covered with blood, surrounded by assassins, holding in his
hand the firman displayed, and crying with a menacing voice, "I have killed
the traitor Selim by the order of our glorious sultan; here is his imperial
command." At these words, and the sight of the fatal diploma, all prostrated
themselves terror-stricken. Ali, after ordering the decapitation of Selim,
whose head he seized as a trophy, ordered the cadi, the beys, and the Greek
archons to meet at the palace, to prepare the official account of the
execution of the sentence. They assembled, trembling; the sacred hymn of the
Fatahat was sung, and the murder declared legal, in the name of the merciful
and compassionate God, Lord of the world.
When they had sealed up the
effects of the victim, the murderer left the palace, taking with him, as a
hostage, Mustapha, son of Selim, destined to be even more unfortunate than
his father.
A few days afterwards, the Divan awarded to Ali Tepeleni, as
a reward for his zeal for the State and religion, the sanjak of Thessaly,
with the title of Dervendgi-pacha, or Provost Marshal of the roads.
This latter dignity was conferred on the condition of his levying a body
of four thousand men to clear the valley of the Peneus of a multitude
of Christian chiefs who exercised more power than the officers of the
Grand Seigneur. The new pacha took advantage of this to enlist a numerous
body of Albanians ready for any enterprise, and completely devoted to
him. With two important commands, and with this strong force at his back,
he repaired to Trikala, the seat of his government, where he
speedily acquired great influence.
His first act of authority was to
exterminate the bands of Armatolis, or Christian militia, which infested the
plain. He laid violent hands on all whom he caught, and drove the rest back
into their mountains, splitting them up into small bands whom he could deal
with at his pleasure. At the same time he sent a few heads to Constantinople,
to amuse the sultan and the mob, and some money to the ministers to
gain their support. "For," said he, "water sleeps, but envy never
does." These steps were prudent, and whilst his credit increased at
court, order was reestablished from the defiles of the Perrebia of Pindus
to the vale of Tempe and to the pass of Thermopylae.
These exploits of
the provost-marshal, amplified by Oriental exaggeration, justified the ideas
which were entertained of the capacity of Ali Pacha. Impatient of celebrity,
he took good care himself to spread his fame, relating his prowess to all
comers, making presents to the sultan’s officers who came into his
government, and showing travellers his palace courtyard festooned with
decapitated heads. But what chiefly tended to consolidate his power was the
treasure which he ceaselessly amassed by every means. He never struck for the
mere pleasure of striking, and the numerous victims of his proscriptions
only perished to enrich him. His death sentences always fell on beys
and wealthy persons whom he wished to plunder. In his eyes the axe was
but an instrument of fortune, and the executioner a
tax-gatherer.
CHAPTER III
Having governed Thessaly
in this manner during several years, Ali found himself in a position to
acquire the province of Janina, the possession of which, by making him master
of Epirus, would enable him to crush all his enemies and to reign supreme
over the three divisions of Albania.
But before he could succeed in this,
it was necessary to dispose of the pacha already in possession. Fortunately
for Ali, the latter was a weak and indolent man, quite incapable of
struggling against so formidable a rival; and his enemy speedily conceived
and put into execution a plan intended to bring about the fulfilment of his
desires. He came to terms with the same Armatolians whom he had formerly
treated so harshly, and let them loose, provided with arms and ammunition, on
the country which he wished to obtain. Soon the whole region echoed with
stories of devastation and pillage. The pacha, unable to repel the incursions
of these mountaineers, employed the few troops he had in oppressing
the inhabitants of the plains, who, groaning under both extortion
and rapine, vainly filled the air with their despairing cries. Ali
hoped that the Divan, which usually judged only after the event, seeing
that Epirus lay desolate, while Thessaly flourished under his
own administration, would, before long, entrust himself with the
government of both provinces, when a family incident occurred, which for a
time diverted the course of his political manoeuvres.
For a long time
his mother Kamco had suffered from an internal cancer, the result of a life
of depravity. Feeling that her end drew near, she despatched messenger after
messenger, summoning her son to her bedside. He started, but arrived too
late, and found only his sister Chainitza mourning over the body of their
mother, who had expired in her arms an hour previously. Breathing unutterable
rage and pronouncing horrible imprecations against Heaven, Kamco had
commanded her children, under pain of her dying curse, to carry out her last
wishes faithfully. After having long given way to their grief, Ali and
Chainitza read together the document which contained these commands. It
ordained some special assassinations, mentioned sundry villages which, some
day; were to be given to the flames, but ordered them most especially, as
soon as possible, to exterminate the inhabitants of Kormovo and Kardiki,
from whom she had endured the last horrors of slavery.
Then, after
advising her children to remain united, to enrich their soldiers, and to
count as nothing people who were useless to them, Kamco ended by commanding
them to send in her name a pilgrim to Mecca, who should deposit an offering
on the tomb of the Prophet for the repose of her soul. Having perused these
last injunctions, Ali and Chainitza joined hands, and over the inanimate
remains of their departed mother swore to accomplish her dying
behests.
The pilgrimage came first under consideration. Now a pilgrim can
only be sent as proxy to Mecca, or offerings be made at the tomb of Medina,
at the expense of legitimately acquired property duly sold for the
purpose. The brother and sister made a careful examination of the family
estates, and after long hunting, thought they had found the correct thing in
a small property of about fifteen hundred francs income, inherited
from their great-grandfather, founder of the Tepel-Enian dynasty. But
further investigations disclosed that even this last resource had been
forcibly taken from a Christian, and the idea of a pious pilgrimage and a
sacred offering had to be given up. They then agreed to atone for
the impossibility of expiation by the grandeur of their vengeance, and
swore to pursue without ceasing and to destroy without mercy all enemies
of their family.
The best mode of carrying out this terrible and
self-given pledge was that Ali should resume his plans of aggrandizement
exactly where he had left them. He succeeded in acquiring the pachalik of
Janina, which was granted him by the Porte under the title of "arpalik," or
conquest. It was an old custom, natural to the warlike habits of the Turks,
to bestow the Government provinces or towns affecting to despise the
authority of the Grand Seigneur on whomsoever succeeded in controlling them,
and Janina occupied this position. It was principally inhabited
by Albanians, who had an enthusiastic admiration for anarchy, dignified
by them with the name of "Liberty," and who thought themselves
independent in proportion to the disturbance they succeeded in making. Each
lived retired as if in a mountain castle, and only went out in order
to participate in the quarrels of his faction in the forum. As for
the pachas, they were relegated to the old castle on the lake, and there
was no difficulty in obtaining their recall.
Consequently there was a
general outcry at the news of Ali Pacha’s nomination, and it was unanimously
agreed that a man whose character and power were alike dreaded must not be
admitted within the walls of Janina. Ali, not choosing to risk his forces in
an open battle with a warlike population, and preferring a slower and safer
way to a short and dangerous one, began by pillaging the villages and farms
belonging to his most powerful opponents. His tactics succeeded, and the very
persons who had been foremost in vowing hatred to the son of Kamco and who
had sworn most loudly that they would die rather than submit to the
tyrant, seeing their property daily ravaged, and impending ruin if
hostilities continued, applied themselves to procure peace. Messengers were
sent secretly to Ali, offering to admit him into Janina if he would
undertake to respect the lives and property of his new allies. Ali
promised whatever they asked, and entered the town by night. His first
proceeding was to appear before the cadi, whom he compelled to register
and proclaim his firmans of investiture.
In the same year in which he
arrived at this dignity, really the desire and object of Ali’s whole life,
occurred also the death of the Sultan Abdul Hamid, whose two sons, Mustapha
and Mahmoud, were confined in the Old Seraglio. This change of rulers,
however, made no difference to Ali; the peaceful Selim, exchanging the prison
to which his nephews were now relegated, for the throne of their father,
confirmed the Pacha of Janina in the titles, offices, and privileges which
had been conferred on him.
Established in his position by this double
investiture, Ali applied himself to the definite settlement of his claims. He
was now fifty years of age, and was at the height of his intellectual
development: experience had been his teacher, and the lesson of no single
event had been lost upon him. An uncultivated but just and penetrating
mind enabled him to comprehend facts, analyse causes, and anticipate
results; and as his heart never interfered with the deductions of his
rough intelligence, he had by a sort of logical sequence formulated
an inflexible plan of action. This man, wholly ignorant, not only of
the ideas of history but also of the great names of Europe, had succeeded
in divining, and as a natural consequence of his active and
practical character, in also realising Macchiavelli, as is amply shown in
the expansion of his greatness and the exercise of his power. Without
faith in God, despising men, loving and thinking only of himself,
distrusting all around him, audacious in design, immovable in resolution,
inexorable in execution, merciless in vengeance, by turns insolent,
humble, violent, or supple according to circumstances, always and
entirely logical in his egotism, he is Cesar Borgia reborn as a Mussulman; he
is the incarnate ideal of Florentine policy, the Italian prince
converted into a satrap.
Age had as yet in no way impaired Ali’s
strength and activity, and nothing prevented his profiting by the advantages
of his position. Already possessing great riches, which every day saw
increasing under his management, he maintained a large body of warlike and
devoted troops, he united the offices of Pacha of two tails of Janina,
of Toparch of Thessaly, and of Provost Marshal of the Highway.
As influential aids both to his reputation for general ability and
the terror of his’ arms, and his authority as ruler, there stood by his
side two sons, Mouktar and Veli, offspring of his wife Emineh, both
fully grown and carefully educated in the principles of their
father.
Ali’s first care, once master of Janina, was to annihilate the
beys forming the aristocracy of the place, whose hatred he was well aware
of, and whose plots he dreaded. He ruined them all, banishing many
and putting others to death. Knowing that he must make friends to supply
the vacancy caused by the destruction of his foes, he enriched with
the spoil the Albanian mountaineers in his pay, known by the name
of Skipetars, on whom he conferred most of the vacant employments. But
much too prudent to allow all the power to fall into the hands of a
single caste, although a foreign one to the capital, he, by a
singular innovation, added to and mixed with them an infusion of Orthodox
Greeks, a skilful but despised race, whose talents he could use without
having to dread their influence. While thus endeavouring on one side to
destroy the power of his enemies by depriving them of both authority and
wealth, and on the other to consolidate his own by establishing a
firm administration, he neglected no means of acquiring popularity. A
fervent disciple of Mahomet when among fanatic Mussulmans, a materialist
with the Bektagis who professed a rude pantheism, a Christian among
the Greeks, with whom he drank to the health of the Holy Virgin, he
made everywhere partisans by flattering the idea most in vogue. But if
he constantly changed both opinions and language when dealing
with subordinates whom it was desirable to win over, Ali towards
his superiors had one only line of conduct which he never
transgressed. Obsequious towards the Sublime Porte, so long as it did not
interfere with his private authority, he not only paid with exactitude all
dues to the sultan, to whom he even often advanced money, but he also
pensioned the most influential ministers. He was bent on having no enemies
who could really injure his power, and he knew that in an
absolute government no conviction can hold its own against the power of
gold.
Having thus annihilated the nobles, deceived the multitude
with plausible words and lulled to sleep the watchfulness of the Divan,
Ali resolved to turn his arms against Kormovo. At the foot of its rocks
he had, in youth, experienced the disgrace of defeat, and during
thirty nights Kamco and Chainitza had endured all horrors of outrage at
the hands of its warriors. Thus the implacable pacha had a twofold wrong
to punish, a double vengeance to exact.
This time, profiting by
experience, he called in the aid of treachery. Arrived at the citadel, he
negotiated, promised an amnesty, forgiveness for all, actual rewards for
some. The inhabitants, only too happy to make peace with so formidable an
adversary, demanded and obtained a truce to settle the conditions. This was
exactly what Ali expected, and Kormovo, sleeping on the faith of the treaty,
was suddenly attacked and taken. All who did not escape by flight perished by
the sword in the darkness, or by the hand of the executioner the next
morning. Those who had offered violence aforetime to Ali’s mother and sister
were carefully sought for, and whether convicted or merely accused, were
impaled on spits, torn with redhot pincers, and slowly roasted between two
fires; the women were shaved and publicly scourged, and then sold as
slaves.
This vengeance, in which all the nobles of the province not yet
entirely ruined were compelled to assist, was worth a decisive victory to
Ali. Towns, cantons, whole districts, overwhelmed with terror,
submitted without striking a blow, and his name, joined to the recital of
a massacre which ranked as a glorious exploit in the eyes of this
savage people, echoed like thunder from valley to valley and mountain
to mountain. In order that all surrounding him might participate in the
joy of his success Ali gave his army a splendid festival. Of
unrivalled activity, and, Mohammedan only in name, he himself led the chorus
in the Pyrrhic and Klephtic dances, the ceremonials of warriors and of
robbers. There was no lack of wine, of sheep, goats, and lambs roasted
before enormous fires; made of the debris of the ruined city; antique games
of archery and wrestling were celebrated, and the victors received
their prizes from the hand of their chief. The plunder, slaves, and
cattle were then shared, and the Tapygae, considered as the lowest of the
four tribes composing the race of Skipetars, and ranking as the refuse of
the army, carried off into the mountains of Acroceraunia, doors,
windows, nails, and even the tiles of the houses, which were then all
surrendered to the flames.
However, Ibrahim, the successor and
son-in-law of Kurd Pacha, could not see with indifference part of his
province invaded by his ambitious neighbour. He complained and negotiated,
but obtaining no satisfaction, called out an army composed of Skipetars of
Toxid, all Islamites, and gave the command to his brother Sepher, Bey of
Avlone. Ali, who had adopted the policy of opposing alternately the Cross to
the Crescent and the Crescent to the Cross, summoned to his aid the Christian
chiefs of the mountains, who descended into the plains at the head of
their unconquered troops. As is generally the case in Albania, where war
is merely an excuse for brigandage, instead of deciding matters by
a pitched battle, both sides contented themselves with burning
villages, hanging peasants, and carrying off cattle.
Also, in
accordance with the custom of the country, the women interposed between the
combatants, and the good and gentle Emineh laid proposals of peace before
Ibrahim Pacha, to whose apathetic disposition a state of war was
disagreeable, and who was only too happy to conclude a fairly satisfactory
negotiation. A family alliance was arranged, in virtue of which Ali retained
his conquests, which were considered as the marriage portion of Ibrahim’s
eldest daughter, who became the wife of Ali’s eldest son, Mouktar.
It
was hoped that this peace might prove permanent, but the marriage which
sealed the treaty was barely concluded before a fresh quarrel broke out
between the pachas. Ali, having wrung such important concessions from the
weakness of his neighbour, desired to obtain yet more. But closely allied to
Ibrahim were two persons gifted with great firmness of character and unusual
ability, whose position gave them great influence. They were his wife Zaidee,
and his brother Sepher, who had been in command during the war just
terminated. As both were inimical to Ali, who could not hope to corrupt them,
the latter resolved to get rid of them.
Having in the days of his
youth been intimate with Kurd Pacha, Ali had endeavoured to seduce his
daughter, already the wife of Ibrahim. Being discovered by the latter in the
act of scaling the wall of his harem, he had been obliged to fly the country.
Wishing now to ruin the woman whom he had formerly tried to corrupt, Ali
sought to turn his former crime to the success of a new one. Anonymous
letters, secretly sent to Ibrahim, warned him that his wife intended to
poison him, in order to be able later to marry Ali Pacha, whom she had always
loved. In a country like Turkey, where to suspect a woman is to accuse her,
and accusation is synonymous with condemnation, such a calumny might easily
cause the death of the innocent Zaidee. But if Ibrahim was weak and indolent,
he was also confiding and generous. He took the letters; to his wife,
who had no difficulty in clearing herself, and who warned him against
the writer, whose object and plots she easily divined, so that this
odious conspiracy turned only to Ali’s discredit. But the latter was not
likely either to concern himself as to what others said or thought about him
or to be disconcerted by a failure. He simply turned his
machinations against his other enemy, and arranged matters this time so as to
avoid a failure.
He sent to Zagori, a district noted for its doctors,
for a quack who undertook to poison Sepher Bey on condition of receiving
forty purses. When all was settled, the miscreant set out for Berat, and
was immediately accused by Ali of evasion, and his wife and children
were arrested as accomplices and detained, apparently as hostages for
the good behaviour of their husband and father, but really as pledges
for his silence when the crime should have been accomplished. Sepher
Bey, informed of this by letters which Ali wrote to the Pacha of
Berat demanding the fugitive, thought that a man persecuted by his enemy
would be faithful to himself, and took the supposed runaway into his
service. The traitor made skilful use of the kindness of his too
credulous protector, insinuated himself into his confidence, became his
trusted physician and apothecary, and gave him poison instead of medicine on
the very first appearance of indisposition. As soon as symptoms of
death appeared, the poisoner fled, aided by the emissaries of All, with
whom the court of Berat was packed, and presented himself at Janina
to receive the reward of his crime. Ali thanked him for his zeal,
commended his skill, and referred him to the treasurer. But the instant the
wretch left the seraglio in order to receive his recompense, he was seized
by the executioners and hurried to the gallows. In thus punishing
the assassin, Ali at one blow discharged the debt he owed him, disposed
of the single witness to be dreaded, and displayed his own friendship
for the victim! Not content with this, he endeavoured to again
throw suspicion on the wife of Ibrahim Pacha, whom he accused of being
jealous of the influence which Sepher Pacha had exercised in the family. This
he mentioned regularly in conversation, writing in the same style to
his agents at Constantinople, and everywhere where there was any profit
in slandering a family whose ruin he desired for the sake of
their possessions. Before long he made a pretext out of the scandal started
by himself, and prepared to take up arms in order, he said, to avenge
his friend Sepher Bey, when he was anticipated by Ibrahim Pacha, who
roused against him the allied Christians of Thesprotia, foremost among
whom ranked the Suliots famed through Albania for their courage and
their love of independence.
After several battles, in which his
enemies had the a vantage, Ali began negotiations with Ibrahim, and finally
concluded a treaty offensive and defensive. This fresh alliance was, like the
first, to be cemented by a marriage. The virtuous Emineh, seeing her son Veli
united to the second daughter of Ibrahim, trusted that the feud between the
two families was now quenched, and thought herself at the summit of
happiness. But her joy was not of long duration; the death-groan was again to
be heard amidst the songs of the marriage-feast.
The daughter of
Chainitza, by her first husband, Ali, had married a certain Murad, the Bey of
Clerisoura. This nobleman, attached to Ibrahim Pacha by both blood and
affection, since the death of Sepher Bey, had, become the special object of
Ali’s hatred, caused by the devotion of Murad to his patron, over whom he had
great influence, and from whom nothing could detach him. Skilful in
concealing truth under special pretexts, Ali gave out that the cause of his
known dislike to this young man was that the latter, although his nephew by
marriage, had several times fought in hostile ranks against him. Therefore
the amiable Ibrahim made use of the marriage treaty to arrange an honourable
reconciliation between Murad Bey and his uncle, and appointed the former
"Ruler a the Marriage Feast," in which capacity he was charged to conduct the
bride to Janina and deliver her to her husband, the young Veli Bey. He
had accomplished his mission satisfactorily, and was received by Ali
with all apparent hospitality. The festival began on his arrival towards
the end of November 1791, and had already continued several days,
when suddenly it was announced that a shot had been fired upon Ali, who
had only escaped by a miracle, and that the assassin was still at
large. This news spread terror through the city and the palace, and
everyone dreaded being seized as the guilty person. Spies were
everywhere employed, but they declared search was useless, and that there
must bean extensive conspiracy against Ali’s life. The latter complained of
being surrounded by enemies, and announced that henceforth he would
receive only one person at a time, who should lay down his arms before
entering the hall now set apart for public audience. It was a chamber built
over a vault, and entered by a sort of trap-door, only reached by a
ladder.
After having for several days received his couriers in this sort
of dovecot, Ali summoned his nephew in order to entrust with him
the wedding gifts. Murad took this as a sign of favour, and
joyfully acknowledged the congratulations of his friends. He presented
himself at the time arranged, the guards at the foot of the ladder demanded
his arms, which he gave up readily, and ascended the ladder full of
hope. Scarcely had the trap-door closed behind him when a pistol ball,
fired from a dark corner, broke his shoulder blade, and he fell, but sprang
up and attempted to fly. Ali issued from his hiding place and sprang
upon him, but notwithstanding his wound the young bey defended
himself vigorously, uttering terrible cries. The pacha, eager to finish,
and finding his hands insufficient, caught a burning log from the
hearth, struck his nephew in the face with it, felled him to the ground,
and completed his bloody task. This accomplished, Ali called for help
with loud cries, and when his guards entered he showed the bruises he
had received and the blood with which he was covered, declaring that he
had killed in self-defence a villain who endeavoured to assassinate him.
He ordered the body to be searched, and a letter was found in a
pocket which Ali had himself just placed there, which purported to give
the details of the pretended conspiracy.
As Murad’s brother was
seriously compromised by this letter, he also was immediately seized, and
strangled without any pretence of trial. The whole palace rejoiced, thanks
were rendered to Heaven by one of those sacrifices of animals still
occasionally made in the East to celebrate an escape from great danger, and
Ali released some prisoners in order to show his gratitude to Providence for
having protected him from so horrible a crime. He received congratulatory
visits, and composed an apology attested by a judicial declaration by the
cadi, in which the memory of Murad and his brother was declared accursed.
Finally, commissioners, escorted by a strong body of soldiers, were sent to
seize the property of the two brothers, because, said the decree, it was
just that the injured should inherit the possessions of his
would-be assassins.
Thus was exterminated the only family capable of
opposing the Pacha of Janina, or which could counterbalance his influence
over the weak Ibrahim of Berat. The latter, abandoned by his brave defenders,
and finding himself at the mercy of his enemy, was compelled to submit
to what he could not prevent, and protested only by tears against
these crimes, which seemed to herald a terrible future for himself.
As
for Emineh, it is said that from the date of this catastrophe she separated
herself almost entirely from her blood-stained husband, and spent her life in
the recesses of the harem, praying as a Christian both for the murderer and
his victims. It is a relief, in the midst of this atrocious saturnalia to
encounter this noble and gentle character, which like a desert oasis, affords
a rest to eyes wearied with the contemplation of so much wickedness and
treachery.
Ali lost in her the guardian angel who alone could in any way
restrain his violent passions. Grieved at first by the withdrawal of the
wife whom hitherto he had loved exclusively, he endeavoured in vain to
regain her affection; and then sought in new vices compensation for
the happiness he had lost, and gave himself up to sensuality. Ardent
in everything, he carried debauchery to a monstrous extent, and as if
his palaces were not large enough for his desires, he assumed
various disguises; sometimes in order to traverse the streets by night in
search of the lowest pleasures; sometimes penetrating by day into churches
and private houses seeking for young men and maidens remarkable for
their beauty, who were then carried off to his harem.
His sons,
following in his footsteps, kept also scandalous households, and seemed to
dispute preeminence in evil with their father, each in his own manner.
Drunkenness was the speciality of the eldest, Mouktar, who was without rival
among the hard drinkers of Albania, and who was reputed to have emptied a
whole wine-skin in one evening after a plentiful meal. Gifted with the
hereditary violence of his family, he had, in his drunken fury, slain several
persons, among others his sword-bearer, the companion of his childhood and
confidential friend of his whole life. Veli chose a different course.
Realising the Marquis de Sade as his father had realised Macchiavelli, he
delighted in mingling together debauchery and cruelty, and his amusement
consisted in biting the lips he had kissed, and tearing with his nails the
forms he had caressed. The people of Janina saw with horror more than one
woman in their midst whose nose and ears he had caused to be cut off, and
had then turned into the streets.
It was indeed a reign of terror;
neither fortune, life, honour, nor family were safe. Mothers cursed their
fruitfulness, and women their beauty. Fear soon engenders corruption, and
subjects are speedily tainted by the depravity of their masters. Ali,
considering a demoralised race as easier to govern, looked on with
satisfaction.
While he strengthened by every means his authority from
within, he missed no opportunity of extending his rule without. In 1803 he
declared war against the Suliots, whose independence he had
frequently endeavoured either to purchase or to overthrow. The army sent
against them, although ten thousand strong, was at first beaten everywhere.
Ali then, as usual, brought treason to his aid, and regained the
advantage. It became evident that, sooner or later, the unhappy Suliots
must succumb.
Foreseeing the horrors which their defeat would entail,
Emineh, touched with compassion, issued from her seclusion and cast herself
at Ali’s feet. He raised her, seated her beside him, and inquired as to
her wishes. She spoke of, generosity, of mercy; he listened as if
touched and wavering, until she named the Suliots. Then, filled with fury,
he seized a pistol and fired at her. She was not hurt, but fell to
the ground overcome with terror, and her women hastily intervened
and carried her away. For the first time in his life, perhaps, Ali
shuddered before the dread of a murder.
It was his wife, the mother of
his children, whom he saw lying at his feet, and the recollection afflicted
and tormented him. He rose in the night and went to Emineh’s apartment; he
knocked and called, but being refused admittance, in his anger he broke open
the door. Terrified by the noise; and at the sight of her infuriated husband,
Emineh fell into violent convulsions, and shortly expired. Thus perished the
daughter of Capelan Pacha, wife of Ali Tepeleni, and mother of Mouktar and
Veli, who, doomed to live surrounded by evil, yet remained virtuous and
good.
Her death caused universal mourning throughout Albania, and
produced a not less deep impression on the mind of her murderer. Emineh’s
spectre pursued him in his pleasures, in the council chamber, in the hours
of night. He saw her, he heard her, and would awake, exclaiming, "my
wife! my wife!—It is my wife!—Her eyes are angry; she threatens me!—Save
me! Mercy!" For more than ten years Ali never dared to sleep
alone.
CHAPTER IV
In December, the Suliots,
decimated by battle, worn by famine, discouraged by treachery, were obliged
to capitulate. The treaty gave them leave to go where they would, their own
mountains excepted. The unfortunate tribe divided into two parts, the one
going towards Parga, the other towards Prevesa. Ali gave orders for the
destruction of both, notwithstanding the treaty.
The Parga division
was attacked in its march, and charged by a numerous body of Skipetars. Its
destruction seemed imminent, but instinct suddenly revealed to the ignorant
mountaineers the one manoeuvre which might save them. They formed a square,
placing old men, women, children, and cattle in the midst, and, protected by
this military formation, entered Parga in full view of the cut-throats sent
to pursue them.
Less fortunate was the Prevesa division, which, terrified
by a sudden and unexpected attack, fled in disorder to a Greek convent
called Zalongos. But the gate was soon broken down, and the unhappy
Suliots massacred to the last man.
The women, whose tents had been
pitched on the summit of a lofty rock, beheld the terrible carnage which
destroyed their defenders. Henceforth their only prospect was that of
becoming the slaves of those who had just slaughtered their husbands and
brothers. An heroic resolution spared them this infamy; they joined hands,
and chanting their national songs, moved in a solemn dance round the rocky
platform. As the song ended, they uttered a prolonged and piercing cry, and
cast themselves and their children down into the profound abyss
beneath.
There were still some Suliots left in their country when Ali
Pacha took possession of it. These were all taken and brought to Janina, and
their sufferings were the first adornments of the festival made for the
army. Every soldier’s imagination was racked for the discovery of
new tortures, and the most original among them had the privilege
of themselves carrying out their inventions.
There were some who,
having had their noses and ears cut off, were compelled to eat them raw,
dressed as a salad. One young man was scalped until the skin fell back upon
his shoulders, then beaten round the court of the seraglio for the pacha’s
entertainment, until at length a lance was run through his body and he was
cast on the funeral pile. Many were boiled alive and their flesh then thrown
to the dogs.
From this time the Cross has disappeared from the Selleid
mountains, and the gentle prayer of Christ no longer wakes the echoes of
Suli.
During the course of this war, and shortly after the death of
Emineh, another dismal drama was enacted in the pacha’s family, whose
active wickedness nothing seemed to weary. The scandalous libertinism of
both father and sons had corrupted all around as well as themselves.
This demoralisation brought bitter fruits for all alike: the subjects
endured a terrible tyranny; the masters sowed among themselves
distrust, discord, and hatred. The father wounded his two sons by turns in
their tenderest affections, and the sons avenged themselves by
abandoning their father in the hour of danger.
There was in Janina a
woman named Euphrosyne, a niece of the archbishop, married to one of the
richest Greek merchants, and noted for wit and beauty. She was already the
mother of two children, when Mouktar became enamoured of her, and ordered her
to come to his palace. The unhappy Euphrosyne, at once guessing his object,
summoned a family council to decide what should be done. All agreed that
there was no escape, and that her husband’s life was in danger, on account of
the jealousy of his terrible rival. He fled the city that same night, and his
wife surrendered herself to Mouktar, who, softened by her charms,
soon sincerely loved her, and overwhelmed her with presents and
favours. Things were in this position when Mouktar was obliged to depart on
an important expedition.
Scarcely had he started before his wives
complained to Ali that Euphrosyne usurped their rights and caused their
husband to neglect them. Ali, who complained greatly of his sons’
extravagance, and regretted the money they squandered, at once struck a blow
which was both to enrich himself and increase the terror of his
name.
One night he appeared by torchlight, accompanied by his guards,
at Euphrosyne’s house. Knowing his cruelty and avarice, she sought
to disarm one by gratifying the other: she collected her money and
jewels and laid them at Ali’s feet with a look of supplication.
"These
things are only my own property, which you restore," said he, taking
possession of the rich offering. "Can you give back the heart of Mouktar,
which you have stolen?"
Euphrosyne besought him by his paternal feelings,
for the sake of his son whose love had been her misfortune and was now her
only crime, to spare a mother whose conduct had been otherwise
irreproachable. But her tears and pleadings produced no effect on Ali, who
ordered her to be taken, loaded with fetters and covered with a piece of
sackcloth, to the prison of the seraglio.
If it were certain that
there was no hope for the unhappy Euphrosyne, one trusted that she might at
least be the only victim. But Ali, professing to follow the advice of some
severe reformers who wished to restore decent morality, arrested at the same
time fifteen ladies belonging to the best Christian families in Janina. A
Wallachian, named Nicholas Janco, took the opportunity to denounce his own
wife, who was on the point of becoming a mother, as guilty of adultery, and
handed her also over to the pacha. These unfortunate women were brought
before Ali to undergo a trial of which a sentence of death was the
foregone conclusion. They were then confined in a dungeon, where they spent
two days of misery. The third night, the executioners appeared to
conduct them to the lake where they were to perish. Euphrosyne, too exhausted
to endure to the end, expired by the way, and when she was flung with
the rest into the dark waters, her soul had already escaped from its
earthly tenement. Her body was found the next day, and was buried in
the cemetery of the monastery of Saints-Anargyres, where her tomb,
covered with white iris and sheltered by a wild olive tree, is yet
shown.
Mouktar was returning from his expedition when a courier from
his brother Veli brought him a letter informing him of these events.
He opened it. "Euphrosyne!" he cried, and, seizing one of his
pistols, fired it at the messenger, who fell dead at his
feet,—"Euphrosyne, behold thy first victim!" Springing on his horse, he
galloped towards Janina. His guards followed at a distance, and the
inhabitants of all the villages he passed fled at his approach. He paid no
attention to them, but rode till his horse fell dead by the lake which had
engulfed Euphrosyne, and then, taking a boat, he went to hide his grief and
rage in his own palace.
Ali, caring little for passion which
evaporated in tears and cries, sent an order to Mouktar to appear before him
at once. "He will not kill you," he remarked to his messenger, with a bitter
smile. And, in fact, the man who a moment before was furiously raging and
storming against his father, as if overwhelmed by this imperious message,
calmed down, and obeyed.
"Come hither, Mouktar," said the pacha,
extending his murderous hand to be kissed as soon as his son appeared. "I
shall take no notice of your anger, but in future never forget that a man who
braves public opinion as I do fears nothing in the world. You can go now;
when your troops have rested from their march, you can come and ask for
orders. Go, remember what I have said."
Mouktar retired as
submissively as if he had just received pardon for some serious crime, and
found no better consolation than to spend the night with Veli in drinking and
debauchery. But a day was to come when the brothers, alike outraged by their
father, would plot and carry out a terrible vengeance.
However, the
Porte began to take umbrage at the continual aggrandisement of the Pacha of
Janina. Not daring openly to attack so formidable a vassal, the sultan sought
by underhand means to diminish his power, and under the pretext that Ali was
becoming too old for the labour of so many offices, the government of
Thessaly was withdrawn from him, but, to show that this was not done in
enmity, the province was entrusted to his nephew, Elmas Bey, son of Suleiman
and Chainitza.
Chainitza, fully as ambitious as her brother, could not
contain her delight at the idea of governing in the name of her son, who was
weak and gentle in character and accustomed to obey her implicitly. She
asked her brother’s permission to go to Trikala to be present at
the installation, and obtained it, to everybody’s astonishment; for no
one could imagine that Ali would peacefully renounce so important
a government as that of Thessaly. However, he dissembled so skilfully
that everyone was deceived by his apparent resignation, and applauded
his magnanimity, when he provided his sister with a brilliant escort
to conduct her to the capital of the province of which he had just
been deprived in favour of his nephew. He sent letters of congratulation
to the latter as well as magnificent presents, among them a
splendid pelisse of black fox, which had cost more than a hundred thousand
francs of Western money. He requested Elmas Bey to honour him by wearing
this robe on the day when the sultan’s envoy should present him with
the firman of investiture, and Chainitza herself was charged to deliver
both gifts and messages.
Chainitza arrived safely at Trikala, and
faithfully delivered the messages with which she had been entrusted. When the
ceremony she so ardently desired took place, she herself took charge of all
the arrangements. Elmas, wearing the black fox pelisse, was proclaimed,
and acknowledged as Governor of Thessaly in her presence. "My son is
pacha!" she cried in the delirium of joy. "My son is pacha! and my nephews
will die of envy!" But her triumph was not to be of long duration. A few
days after his installation, Elmas began to feel strangely languid.
Continual lethargy, convulsive sneezing, feverish eyes, soon betokened a
serious illness. Ali’s gift had accomplished its purpose. The pelisse,
carefully impregnated with smallpox germs taken from a young girl suffering
from this malady, had conveyed the dreaded disease to the new pacha, who,
not having been inoculated, died in a few days.
The grief of Chainitza
at her son’s death displayed itself in sobs, threats, and curses, but, not
knowing whom to blame for her misfortune, she hastened to leave the scene of
it, and returned to Janina, to mingle her tears with those of her brother.
She found Ali apparently in such depths of grief, that instead of suspecting,
she was actually tempted to pity him, and this seeming sympathy soothed her
distress, aided by the caresses of her second son, Aden Bey. Ali, thoughtful
of his own interests, took care to send one of his own officers to Trikala,
to administer justice in the place of his deceased nephew, and the
Porte, seeing that all attempts against him only caused misfortune,
consented to his resuming the government of Thessaly.
This climax
roused the suspicions of many persons. But the public voice, already
discussing the causes of the death of Elinas, was stifled by the thunder of
the cannon, which, from the ramparts of Janina, announced to Epirus the birth
of another son to Ali, Salik Bey, whose mother was a Georgian
slave.
Fortune, seemingly always ready both to crown Ali’s crimes with
success and to fulfil his wishes, had yet in reserve a more precious gift
than any of the others, that of a good and beautiful wife; who
should replace, and even efface the memory of the beloved Emineh.
The
Porte, while sending to Ali the firman which restored to him the government
of Thessaly, ordered him to seek out and destroy a society of coiners who
dwelt within his jurisdiction. Ali, delighted to, prove his zeal by a service
which cost nothing but bloodshed; at once set his spies to work, and having
discovered the abode of the gang, set out for the place attended by a strong
escort. It was a village called Plikivitza.
Having arrived in the
evening, he spent the night in taking measures to prevent escape, and at
break of day attacked the village suddenly with his whole force. The coiners
were seized in the act. Ali immediately ordered the chief to be hung at his
own door and the whole population to be massacred. Suddenly a young girl of
great beauty made her way through the tumult and sought refuge at his feet.
Ali, astonished, asked who she was. She answered with a look of mingled
innocence and terror, kissing his hands, which she bathed with tears, and
said:
"O my lord! I implore thee to intercede with the terrible vizier
Ali for my mother and brothers. My father is dead, behold where he hangs at
the door of our cottage! But we have done nothing to rouse the anger of
our dreadful master. My mother is a poor woman who never offended
anyone, and we are only weak children. Save us from him!"
Touched in
spite of himself, the pacha took the girl in his arms, and answered her with
a gentle smile.
"Thou hast come to the wrong man, child: I am this
terrible vizier."
"Oh no, no! you are good, you will be our good
lord."
"Well, be comforted, my child, and show me thy mother and thy
brothers; they shall be spared. Thou hast saved their lives."
And as
she knelt at his feet, overcome with joy, he raised her and asked her
name. "Basilessa," she replied. |
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