The Pacha of Many Tales. Фредерик Марриет

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       Frederick Marryat

      The Pacha of Many Tales

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066162535

       Volume One--Chapter One.

       Volume One--Chapter Two.

       Volume One--Chapter Three.

       Volume One--Chapter Four.

       Volume One--Chapter Five.

       Volume One--Chapter Six.

       Volume One--Chapter Seven.

       Volume Two--Chapter One.

       Volume Two--Chapter Two.

       Volume Two--Chapter Three.

       Volume Two--Chapter Four.

       Volume Two--Chapter Five.

       Volume Two--Chapter Six.

       Volume Two--Chapter Seven.

       Volume Two--Chapter Eight.

       Volume Three--Chapter One.

       Volume Three--Chapter Two.

       Volume Three--Chapter Three.

       Volume Three--Chapter Four.

       Volume Three--Chapter Five.

       Volume Three--Chapter Six.

       Volume Three--Chapter Seven.

       Table of Contents

      Every one acquainted with the manners and customs of the East must be aware that there is no situation of eminence more unstable, or more dangerous to its possessor, than that of a pacha. Nothing, perhaps, affords us more convincing proof of the risk which men will incur, to obtain a temporary authority over their fellow-creatures, than the avidity with which this office is accepted from the sultan who, within the memory of the new occupant, has consigned scores of his predecessors to the bow-string. It would almost appear, as if the despot but elevated a head from the crowd, that he might obtain a more fair and uninterrupted sweep for his scimitar, when he cut it off; only exceeded in his peculiar taste by the king of Dahomy, who is said to ornament the steps of his palace with heads, fresh severed, each returning sun, as we renew the decoration of our apartments from our gay parterres. I make these observations, that I may not be accused of a disregard to chronology, in not precisely stating the year, or rather the months, during which flourished one of a race, who, like the flowers of the cistus, one morning in all their splendour, on the next, are strewed lifeless on the ground to make room for their successors. Speaking of such ephemeral creations, it will be quite sufficient to say, “There was a Pacha.”

      Would you inquire by what means he was raised to the distinction? It is an idle question. In this world, pre-eminence over your fellow creatures can only be obtained, by leaving others far behind in the career of virtue or of vice. In compliance with the dispositions of those who rule, faithful service in the one path or the other will shower honour upon the subject, and by the breath of kings he becomes ennobled to look down upon his former equals.

      And as the world spins round, the why is of little moment. The honours are bequeathed, but not the good, or the evil deeds, or the talents by which they were obtained. In the latter we have but a life interest, for the entail is cut off by death. Aristocracy in all its varieties is as necessary for the well binding of society, as the divers grades between the general and the common soldier are essential in the field. Never then inquire, why this or that man has been raised above his fellows; but, each night as you retire to bed, thank Heaven that you are not a King.

      And if I may digress, there is one badge of honour in our country, which I never contemplate without serious reflection rising in my mind. It is the bloody hand in the dexter chief of a baronet—now often worn, I grant, by those who, perhaps, during their whole lives have never raised their hands in anger. But my thoughts have returned to days of yore—the iron days of ironed men, when it was the symbol of faithful service in the field—when it really was bestowed upon the “hand embrued in blood;” and I have meditated, whether that hand, displayed with exultation in this world, may not be held up trembling in the next—in judgment against itself.

      And I, whose memory stepping from one legal murder to another, can walk dry-footed over the broad space of five-and-twenty years of time—but the “damned spots” won’t come out—so I’ll put my hands in my pockets and walk on.

      Conscience, fortunately or unfortunately, I hardly can tell which, permits us to form political and religious creeds, most suited to disguise or palliate our sins. Mine is a military conscience; and I agree with Bates and Williams, who flourished in the time of Henry the Fifth, that it is “all upon the king:” that is to say, it was all upon the king; but now our constitution has become so incomparably perfect, that “the king can do no wrong;” and he has no difficulty in finding ministers, who voluntarily impignorating themselves for all his actions in this world, will, in all probability, not escape from the clutches of the great Pawnbroker in the next—from

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