"War is a cruelly destructive thing," said the Wanderer, dropping his newspaper
to the floor and staring reflectively into space.
"Ah, yes, indeed," said the Merchant, responding readily to what seemed like a
safe platitude; "when one thinks of the loss of life and limb, the desolated
homesteads, the ruined --"
"I wasn't thinking of anything of the sort," said the Wanderer; "I was thinking
of the tendency that modern war has to destroy and banish the very elements of
picturesqueness and excitement that are its chief excuse and charm. It is like a
fire that flares up brilliantly for a while and then leaves everything blacker
and bleaker than before. After every important war in South-East Europe in
recent times there has been a shrinking of the area of chronically disturbed
territory, a stiffening of the area of chronically disturbed territory, a
stiffening of frontier lines, an intrusion of civilised monotony. And imagine
what may happen at the conclusion of this war if the Turk should really be
driven out of Europe."
"Well, it would be a gain to the cause of good government, I suppose," said the
Merchant.
"But have you counted the loss?" said the other. "The Balkans have long been the
last surviving shred of happy hunting-ground for the adventurous, a playground
for passions that are fast becoming atrophied for want of exercise. In old
bygone days we had the wars in the Low Countries always at our doors, as it
were; there was no need to go far afield into malaria-stricken wilds if one
wanted a life of boot and saddle and licence to kill and be killed. Those who
wished to see life had a decent opportunity for seeing death at the same time."
"It is scarcely right to talk of killing and bloodshed in that way," said the
Merchant reprovingly; "one must remember that all men are brothers."
"One must also remember that a large percentage of them are younger brothers;
instead of going into bankruptcy, which is the usual tendency of the younger
brother nowadays, they gave their families a fair chance of going into mourning.
Every bullet finds a billet, according to a rather optimistic proverb, and you
must admit that nowadays it is becoming increasingly difficult to find billets
for a lot of young gentlemen who would have adorned, and probably thoroughly
enjoyed, one of the old-time happy-go-lucky wars. But that is not exactly the
burden of my complaint. The Balkan lands are especially interesting to us in
these rapidly-moving days because they afford us the last remaining glimpse of a
vanishing period of European history. When I was a child one of the earliest
events of the outside world that forced itself coherently under my notice was a
war in the Balkans; I remember a sunburnt, soldierly man putting little pin-
flags in a war-map, red flags for the Turkish forces and yellow flags for the
Russians. It seemed a magical region, with its mountain passes and frozen rivers
and grim battlefields, its drifting snows, and prowling wolves; there was a
great stretch of water that bore the sinister but engaging name of the Black Sea
-- nothing that I ever learned before or after in a geography lesson made the
same impression on me as that strangenamed inland sea, and I don't think its
magic has ever faded out of my imagination. And there was a battle called Plevna
that went on and on with varying fortunes for what seemed like a great part of a
lifetime; I remember the day of wrath and mourning when the little red flag had
to be taken away from Plevna -- like other maturer judges, I was backing the
wrong horse, at any rate the losing horse. And now to-day we are putting little
pin-flags again into maps of the Balkan region, and the passions are being
turned loose once more in their playground."
"The war will be localised," said the Merchant vaguely; "at least every one
hopes so."
"It couldn't wish for a better locality," said the Wanderer; "there is a charm
about those countries that you find nowhere else in Europe, the charm of
uncertainty and landslide, and the little dramatic happenings that make all the
difference between the ordinary and the desirable."
"Life is held very cheap in those parts," said the Merchant.
"To a certain extent, yes," said the Wanderer. "I remember a man at Sofia who
used to teach me Bulgarian in a rather inefficient manner, interspersed with a
lot of quite wearisome gossip. I never knew what his personal history was, but
that was only because I didn't listen; he told it to me many times. After I left
Bulgaria he used to send me Sofia newspapers from time to time. I felt that he
would be rather tiresome if I ever went there again. And then I heard afterwards
that some men came in one day from Heaven knows where, just as things do happen
in the Balkans, and murdered him in the open street, and went away as quietly as
they had come. You will not understand it, but to me there was something rather
piquant in the idea of such a thing happening to such a man; after his dullness
and his long-winded small-talk it seemed a sort of brilliant esprit d'esalier on
his part to meet with an end of such ruthlessly planned and executed violence."
The Merchant shook his head; the piquancy of the incident was not within
striking distance of his comprehension.
"I should have been shocked at hearing such a thing about any one I had known,"
he said.
"The present war," continued his companion, without stopping to discuss two
hopelessly divergent points of view, "may be the beginning of the end of much
that has hitherto survived the resistless creeping-in of civilisation. If the
Balkan lands are to be finally parcelled out between the competing Christian
Kingdoms and the haphazard rule of the Turk banished to beyond the Sea of
Marmora, the old order, or disorder if you like, will have received its death-
blow. Something of its spirit will linger perhaps for a while in the old charmed
regions where it bore sway; the Greek villagers will doubtless be restless and
turbulent and unhappy where the Bulgars rule, and the Bulgars will certainly be
restless and turbulent and unhappy under Greek administration, and the rival
flocks of the Exarchate and Patriarchate will make themselves intensely
disagreeable to one another wherever the opportunity offers; the habits of a
lifetime, of several lifetimes, are not laid aside all at once. And the
Albanians, of course, we shall have with us still, a troubled Moslem pool left
by the receding wave of Islam in Europe. But the old atmosphere will have
changed, the glamour will have gone; the dust of formality and bureaucratic
neatness will slowly settle down over the time-honoured landmarks; the Sanjak of
Novi Bazar, the Muersteg Agreement, the Komitadje bands, the Vilayet of
Adrianople, all those familiar outlandish names and things and places, that we
have known so long as part and parcel of the Balkan Question, will have passed
away into the cupboard of yesterdays, as completely as the Hansa League and the
wars of the Guises.
"They were the heritage that history handed down to us, spoiled and diminished
no doubt, in comparison with yet earlier days that we never knew, but still
something to thrill and enliven one little corner of our Continent, something to
help us to conjure up in our imagination the days when the Turk was thundering
at the gates of Vienna. And what shall we have to hand down to our children?
Think of what their news from the Balkans will be in the course of another ten
or fifteen years. Socialist Congress at Uskub, election riot at Monastir, great
dock strike at Salonika, visit of the Y.M.C.A. to Varna. Varna -- on the coast
of that enchanted sea! They will drive out to some suburb to tea, and write home
about it as the Bexhill of the East.
"Still, you must admit --" began the Merchant. But the Wanderer was not in the
mood to admit anything. He rose impatiently and walked to where the tape-machine
was busy with the news from Adrianople.