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第2章

my name is red-我的名字叫红-第2章

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with  the  Koran—God  forbid  I’m  misunderstood—the  staggering  power  of 
such a book arises from the impossibility of its being depicted。 I doubt you’ve 
fully prehended this fact。 
Listen  to  me。  When  I  was  an  apprentice;  I  too  feared  and  thus  ignored 
underlying  truths  and  voices  from  beyond。  I’d  joke  about  such  matters。  But 
6 
 
I’ve ended up in the depths of this deplorable well! It could happen to you; be 
wary。 Now; I’ve nothing left to do but hope for my thorough decay; so they 
can find me by tracing my stench。 I’ve nothing to do but hope—and imagine 
the torture that some benevolent man will inflict upon that beastly murderer 
once he’s been caught。 
   
7 
 
I AM CALLED BLACK 
 
After  an  absence  of  twelve  years  I  entered  Istanbul  like  a  sleepwalker。  “The 
earth called to him;” they say of men who are about to die; and in my case; it 
was  death  that  drew  me  back  to  the  city  where  I’d  been  born  and  raised。 
When  I  first  returned;  I  thought  there  was  only  death;  later;  I  would  also 
encounter  love。  Love;  however;  was  a  distant  and  forgotten  thing;  like  my 
memories of having lived in the city。 It was in Istanbul; twelve years ago; that I 
fell helplessly in love with my young cousin。 
Four  years  after  I  first  left  Istanbul;  while  traveling  through  the  endless 
steppes;  snow…covered  mountains  and  melancholy  cities  of  Persia;  carrying 
letters  and  collecting  taxes;  I  admitted  to  myself  that  I  was  slowly  forgetting 
the  face  of  the  childhood  love  I’d  left  behind。  With  growing  panic;  I  tried 
desperately to remember her; only to realize that despite love; a face long not 
seen  finally  fades。  During  the  sixth  year  I  spent  in  the  East;  traveling  or 
working as a secretary in the service of pashas; I knew that the face I imagined 
was no longer that of my beloved。 Later; in the eighth year; I forgot what I’d 
mistakenly  called  to  mind  in  the  sixth;  and  again  visualized  a  pletely 
different countenance。 In this way; by the twelfth year; when I returned to my 
city at the age of thirty…six; I was painfully aware that my beloved’s face had 
long since escaped me。 
Many  of  my  friends  and  relatives  had  died  during  my  twelve…year  exile。  I 
visited the cemetery overlooking the Golden Horn and prayed for my mother 
and for the uncles who’d passed away in my absence。 The earthy smell of mud 
mingled  with  my  memories。  Someone  had  broken  an  earthenware  pitcher 
beside my mother’s grave。 For whatever reason; gazing at the broken pieces; I 
began to cry。 Was I crying for the dead or because I was; strangely; still only at 
the beginning of my life after all these years? Or was it because I’d e to the 
end  of  my  life’s  journey?  A  faint  snow  fell。  Entranced  by  the  flakes  blowing 
here and there; I became so lost in the vagaries of my life that I didn’t notice 
the black dog staring at me from a dark corner of the cemetery。 
My tears subsided。 I wiped my nose。 I saw the black dog wagging its tail in 
friendship   as   I   left   the   cemetery。   Sometime   later;   I   settled   into   our 
neighborhood; renting one of the houses where a relative on my father’s side 
once lived。 It seems I reminded the landlady of her son who’d been killed by 
Safavid Persian soldiers at the front and so she agreed to clean the house and 
cook for me。 
8 
 
I set out on long and satisfying walks through the streets as if I’d settled not 
in Istanbul; but temporarily in one of the Arab cities at the other end of the 
world。  The  streets  had  bee  narrower;  or  so  it  seemed  to  me。  In  certain 
areas;  on  roads  squeezed  between  houses  leaning  toward  one  another;  I  was 
forced  to  rub  up  against  walls  and  doors  to  avoid  being  hit  by  laden 
packhorses。 There were more wealthy people; or so it seemed to me。 I saw an 
ornate carriage; a citadel drawn by proud horses; the likes of which couldn’t 
be  found  in  Arabia  or  Persia。  Near  the  “Burnt  Column;”  I  saw  some 
bothersome  beggars  dressed  in  rags  huddling  together  as  the  smell  of  offal 
ing from the chicken…sellers market wafted over them。 One of them who 
was blind smiled as he watched the falling snow。 
Had  I  been  told  Istanbul  used  to  be  a  poorer;  smaller  and  happier  city;  I 
might  not  have  believed  it;  but  that’s  what  my  heart  told  me。  Though  my 
beloved’s house was where it’d always been among linden and chestnut trees; 
others  were  now  living  there;  as  I  learned  from  inquiring  at  the  door。  I 
discovered  that  my  beloved’s  mother;  my  maternal  aunt;  had  died;  and  that 
her  husband;  my  Enishte;  and  his  daughter  had  moved  away。  This  is  how  I 
came   to   learn   that   father   and   daughter   were   the   victims   of   certain 
misfortunes;  from  strangers  answering  the  door;  who  in  such  situations  are 
perfectly forthing; without the least awareness of how mercilessly they’ve 
broken your heart and destroyed your dreams。 I won’t describe all of this to 
you  now;  but  allow  me  to  say  that  as  I  recalled  warm;  verdant  and  sunny 
summer days in that old garden; I also noticed icicles the size of my little finger 
hanging from the branches of the linden tree in a place whose misery; snow 
and neglect now evoked nothing but death。 
I’d already learned about some of what had befallen my relatives through a 
letter  my  Enishte  sent  to  me  in  Tabriz。  In  that  letter;  he  invited  me  back  to 
Istanbul;  explaining  that  he  was  preparing  a  secret  book  for  Our  Sultan  and 
that he wanted my help。 He’d heard that for a period while in Tabriz; I made 
books for Ottoman pashas; provincial governors and Istanbulites。 What I did 
then  was  to  use  the  money  advanced  by  clients  who’d  placed  manuscript 
orders in Istanbul to locate miniaturists and calligraphers who were frustrated 
by  the  wars  and  the  presence  of  Ottoman  soldiers;  but  hadn’t  yet  left  for 
Kazvin  or  another  Persian  city;  and  it  was  these  masters—plaining  of 
poverty  and  neglect—whom  I  missioned  to  inscribe;  illustrate  and  bind 
the pages of the manuscripts I would then send back to Istanbul。 If it weren’t 
for  the  love  of  illustrating  and  fine  books  that  my  Enishte  instilled  in  me 
during my youth; I could have never involved myself in such pursuits。 
9 
 
At the market end of the street; where at one time my Enishte had lived; I 
found  the  barber;  a  master  by  trade;  in  his  shop  among  the  same  mirrors; 
straight razors; pitchers of water and soap brushes。 I caught his eye; but I’m 
not sure he recognized me。 It delighted me to see that the head…washing basin; 
which hung by a chain from the ceiling; still traced the same old arc; swinging 
back and forth as he filled it with hot water。 
Some  of  the  neighborhoods  and  streets  I’d  frequented  in  my  youth  had 
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;  

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