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第3章

my name is red-我的名字叫红-第3章

小说: my name is red-我的名字叫红 字数: 每页3500字

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disappeared  in  ashes  and  smoke;  replaced  by  burnt  ruins  where  stray  dogs 
congregated and where mad transients frightened the local children。 In other 
areas razed by fire; large affluent houses had been built; and I was astonished 
by  their  extravagance;  by  windows  of  the  most  expensive  Veian  stained 
glass; and by lavish two…story residences with bay windows suspended above 
high walls。 
As in many other cities; money no longer had any value in Istanbul。 At the 
time  I  returned  from  the  East;  bakeries  that  once  sold  large  one…hundred 
drachma loaves of bread for one silver coin now baked loaves half the size for 
the  same  price;  and  they  no  longer  tasted  the  way  they  did  during  my 
childhood。 Had my late mother seen the day when she’d have to spend three 
silver pieces for a dozen eggs; she’d say; “We ought to leave before the chickens 
grow  so  spoiled  they  shit  on  us  instead  of  the  ground。”  But  I  knew  the 
problem  of  devalued  money  was  the  same  everywhere。  It  was  rumored  that 
Flemish  and  Veian  merchant  ships  were  filled  with  chests  of  counterfeit 
coin。  At  the  royal  mint;  where  five  hundred  coins  were  once  minted  from  a 
hundred  drachmas  of  silver;  now;  owing  to  the  endless  warring  with  the 
Persians;  eight  hundred  coins  were  minted  from  the  same  amount。  When 
Janissaries  discovered  that  the  coins  they’d  been  paid  actually  floated  in  the 
Golden Horn like the dried beans that fell from the vegetable…sellers pier; they 
rioted; besieging Our Sultan’s palace as if it were an enemy fortress。 
A cleric by the name of Nusret; who preached at the Bayazid Mosque and 
claimed to be descended from Our Glorious Prophet Muhammad; had made a 
name for himself during this period of immorality; inflation; crime and theft。 
This  hoja;  who  was  from  the  small  town  of  Erzurum;  attributed  the 
catastrophes  that  had  befallen  Istanbul  in  the  last  ten  years—including  the 
Bah?ekap?  and  Kazanj?lar  district  fires;  the  plagues  that  claimed  tens  of 
thousands;  the  endless  wars  with  the  Persians  at  a  cost  of  countless  lives;  as 
well  as  the  loss  of  small  Ottoman  fortresses  in  the  West  to  Christians  in 
revolt—to  our  having  strayed  from  the  path  of  the  Prophet;  to  disregard  for 
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the strictures of the Glorious Koran; to the tolerance toward Christians; to the 
open sale of wine and to the playing of musical instruments in dervish houses。 
The  pickle  seller  who  passionately  informed  me  about  the  cleric  from 
Erzurum  said  that  the  counterfeit  coins—the  new  ducats;  the  fake  florins 
stamped  with  lions  and  the  Ottoman  coins  with  their  ever…decreasing  silver 
content—that  flooded  the  markets  and  bazaars;  just  like  the  Circassians; 
Abkhazians;  Mingarians;  Bosnians;  Georgians  and  Armenians  who  filled  the 
streets; were dragging us toward an absolute degradation from which it would 
be difficult to escape。 I was told that scoundrels and rebels were gathering in 
coffeehouses  and  proselytizing  until  dawn;  that  destitute  men  of  dubious 
character;  opium…addicted  madmen  and  followers  of  the  outlawed  Kalenderi 
dervish  sect;  claiming  to  be  on  Allah’s  path;  would  spend  their  nights  in 
dervish  houses  dancing  to  music;  piercing  themselves  with  skewers  and 
engaging in all manner of depravity; before brutally fucking each other and any 
boys they could find。 
I didn’t know whether it was the melodious sound of a lute that pelled 
me to follow; or if in the muddle of my memories and desires; I could simply 
no longer endure the virulent pickle seller; and seized upon the music as a way 
out of the conversation。 I do; however; know this: When you love a city and 
have explored it frequently on foot; your body; not to mention your soul; gets 
to know the streets so well after a number of years that in a fit of melancholy; 
perhaps stirred by a light snow falling ever so sorrowfully; you’ll discover your 
legs   carrying   you   of   their   own   accord   toward   one   of   your   favorite 
promontories。 
This  was  how  I  happened  to  leave  the  Farrier’s  Market  and  ended  up 
watching  the  snow  as  it  fell  into  the  Golden  Horn  from  a  spot  beside  the 
Süleymaniye Mosque: Snow had already begun to accumulate on the rooftops 
facing north and on sections of the dome exposed to the northeasterly breeze。 
An  approaching  ship;  whose  sails  were  being  lowered;  greeted  me  with  a 
flutter of canvas。 The color of its sails matched the leaden and foggy hue of the 
surface  of  the  Golden  Horn。  The  cypress  and  plane  trees;  the  rooftops;  the 
heartache of dusk; the sounds ing from the neighborhood below; the calls 
of hawkers and the cries of children playing in mosque courtyards mingled in 
my  head  and  announced  emphatically  that;  hereafter;  I  wouldn’t  be  able  to 
live  anywhere  but  in  their  city。  I  had  the  sensation  that  my  beloved’s  face; 
which had escaped me for years; might suddenly appear to me。 
I  began  to  walk  down  the  hill  and  melded  into  the  crowds。  After  the 
evening  prayer  was  called;  I  filled  my  stomach  at  a  liver  shop。  In  the  empty 
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shop; I listened carefully to the owner; who fondly watched me eat each bite as 
if  he  were  feeding  a  cat。  Taking  his  cue  and  following  his  directions;  I  found 
myself turning down one of the narrow alleys behind the slave market—well 
after the streets had bee dark—and located the coffeehouse。 
Inside; it was crowded and warm。 The storyteller; the likes of whom I had 
seen  in  Tabriz  and  in  Persian  cities  and  who  was  known  thereabouts  as  a 
“curtain…caller;”  was  perched  on  a  raised  platform  beside  the  wood…burning 
stove。 He had unfolded and hung before the crowd a picture; the figure of a 
dog drawn on rough paper hastily but with a certain elegance。 He was giving 
voice to the dog; and pointing; from time to time; at the drawing。 
 
 
   
12 
 
I AM A DOG 
 
As  you  can  doubtless  tell;  dear  friends;  my  canines  are  so  long  and  pointed 
they barely fit into my mouth。 I know this gives me a menacing appearance; 
but it pleases me。 Noticing the size of my teeth; a butcher once had the gall to 
say; “My God; that’s no dog at all; it’s a wild boar!” 
I  bit  him  so  hard  on  the  leg  that  my  canines  sank  right  through  his  fatty 
flesh  to  the  hardness  of  his  thighbone。  For  a  dog;  you  see;  nothing  is  as 
satisfying as sinking his teeth into his miserable enemy in a fit of instinctual 
wrath。 When such an opportunity presents itself; that is; when my victim; who 
deserves  to  be  bitten;  stupidly  and  unknowingly  passes  by;  my  teeth  twinge 
and  ache  in  anticipation;  my  head  spins  with  longing  and  without  even 
meaning to; I emit a hair…raising growl。 
I’m a dog; and because you humans are less rational beasts than I; you’re 
telling yourselves; “Dogs don’t talk。” Nevertheless; you seem to believe a story 
in which corpses speak and characters use words they couldn’t possibly know。 
Dogs do speak; but only to those who know how to listen。 
Once upon a time; long; long ago; in a faraway land; a brash cleric from a 
provincial town arrived at one of the largest mosques in a capital city; all right; 
let’s call it the Bayazid Mosque。 It’d be appropriate to withhold his name; so 
let’s refer to him as “Husret Hoja。” But why should I cover up anything more: 
This  man  was  one  boneheaded  cleric。  He  made  up  for  the  modesty  of  his 
intellect  with  the  power  of  his  tongue;  God  bless  it。  Each  Friday;  he  so 
animated his congregation; so moved them to tears that some would cry until 
they fainted or dried up and withered away。 Don’t get me wrong; unlike other 
clerics  with  the  gift  of  preaching;  he  himself  didn’t  weep。  On  the  contrary; 
while  everyone  else  cried;  he  intensified  his  oration  without  a  blink  

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