Friday, May 06, 2022

 

They Have Their Hate to Keep Them Warm

Patrick Leigh Fermor, The Broken Road: From the Iron Gates to Mount Athos, edd. Colin Thubron and Artemis Cooper (New York: New York Review Books, 2013), p. 82:
How the Bulgars hated the Byzantines, just as their descendants abominate the modern Greeks today — and how abundantly the hatred is returned! With what relish, in the Church of the Forty Martyrs, Gatcho translated the inscriptions commemorating the victory of Ivan Asen over the Byzantine host and the capture of Theodore Comnene! The hatred is epitomized on either side by the act of one Byzantine emperor, Basil the Bulgar-slayer, who totally blinded a captured Bulgarian army of ten thousand men, leaving a single eye to each hundredth soldier so that the rest might grope their way home to the czar: a spectacle so atrocious that the czar, when the pathetic procession arrived, died of grief and shock. This dark mediaeval deed is still a source of sombre pride to fierce rustic enemies of Bulgaria in Greece and, to judge by history, the Bulgars have been attempting to redress the balance ever since. For one reason or another, the Bulgars have always detested all their neighbours. They have their hate to keep them warm.



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