Ali thus at thirteen years
of age was free to indulge in the impetuosity of his character. From his early
youth he had manifested a mettle and activity rare in young Turks, haughty by
nature and self-restrained by education. Scarcely out of the nursery, he spent
his time in climbing mountains, wandering through forests, scaling precipices,
rolling in snow, inhaling the wind, defying the tempests, breathing out his
nervous energy through every pore. Possibly he learnt in the midst of every
kind of danger to brave everything and subdue everything; possibly in sympathy with
the majesty of nature, he felt aroused in him a need of personal grandeur which
nothing could satiate. In vain his father sought to calm his savage temper; and
restrain his vagabond spirit; nothing was of, any use. As obstinate as
intractable, he set at defiance all efforts and all precautions. If they shut
him up, he broke the door or jumped out of the window; if they threatened him,
he pretended to comply, conquered by fear, and promised everything that was
required, but only to break his word the first opportunity. He had a tutor
specially attached to his person and charged to supervise all his actions. He
constantly deluded him by fresh tricks, and when he thought himself free from
the consequences, he maltreated him with gross violence. It was only in his
youth, after his father's death, that he became more manageable; he even
consented to learn to read, to please his mother, whose idol he was, and to
whom in return he gave all his affection.
If Kamco had so strong a
liking for Ali, it was because she found in him, not only her blood, but also
her character. During the lifetime of her husband, whom she feared, she seemed
only an ordinary woman; but as soon as his eyes were closed, she gave free
scope to the violent passions which agitated her bosom. Ambitious, bold,
vindictive; she assiduously cultivated the germs of ambition, hardihood, and
vengeance which already strongly showed themselves in the young Ali. "My
son," she was never tired of telling him, "he who cannot defend his
patrimony richly deserves to lose it. Remember that the property of others is
only theirs so long as they are strong enough to keep it, and that when you
find yourself strong enough to take it from them, it is yours. Success
justifies everything, and everything is permissible to him who has the power to
do it."
Ali, when he reached the
zenith of his greatness, used to declare that his success was entirely his
mother's work. "I owe everything to my mother," he said one day to
the French Consul; "for my father, when he died, left me nothing but a den
of wild beasts and a few fields. My imagination, inflamed by the counsels of
her who has given me life twice over, since she has made me both a man and a
vizier, revealed to me the secret of my destiny. Thenceforward I saw nothing in
Tepelen but the natal air from which I was to spring on the prey which I
devoured mentally. I dreamt of nothing else but power, treasures, palaces, in
short what time has realised and still promises; for the point I have now
reached is not the limit of my hopes."
Kamco did not confine
herself to words; she employed every means to increase the fortune of her
beloved son and to make him a power. Her first care was to poison the children
of Veli's favourite slave, who had died before him. Then, at ease about the
interior of her family, she directed her attention to the exterior. Renouncing
all the habit of her sex, she abandoned the veil and the distaff, and took up
arms, under pretext of maintaining the rights of her children. She collected
round her her husband's old partisans, whom she attached to her, service, some
by presents, others by various favours, and she gradually enlisted all the
lawless and adventurous men in Toscaria. With their aid, she made herself all
powerful in Tepelen, and inflicted the most rigorous persecutions on such as
remained hostile to her.
But the inhabitants of the
two adjacent villages of Kormovo and Kardiki, fearing lest this terrible woman,
aided by her son, now grown into a man, should strike a blow against their
independence; made a secret alliance against her, with the object of putting
her out of the way the first convenient opportunity. Learning one day that Ali
had started on a distant expedition with his best soldiers; they surprised
Tepelen under cover of night, and carried off Kamco and her daughter Chainitza
captives to Kardiki. It was proposed to put them to death; and sufficient
evidence to justify their execution was not wanting; but their beauty saved
their lives; their captors preferred to revenge themselves by licentiousness
rather than by murder. Shut up all day in prison, they only emerged at night to
pass into the arms of the men who had won them by lot the previous morning. This
state of things lasted for a month, at the end of which a Greek of
Argyro-Castron, named G. Malicovo, moved by compassion for their horrible fate,
ransomed them for twenty thousand piastres, and took them back to Tepelen.
Ali had just returned. He
was accosted by his mother and sister, pale with fatigue, shame, and rage. They
told him what had taken place, with cries and tears, and Kamco added, fixing
her distracted eyes upon him, "My son! my son! my soul will enjoy no peace
till Kormovo and Kardikil destroyed by thy scimitar, will no longer exist to
bear witness to my dishonour."
Ali, in whom this sight and
this story had aroused, sanguinary passions, promised a vengeance proportioned
to the outrage, and worked with all his might to place himself in a position to
keep his word. A worthy son of his father, he had commenced life in the fashion
of the heroes of ancient Greece, stealing sheep and goats, and from the age of
fourteen years he had acquired an equal reputation to that earned by the son of
Jupiter and Maia. When he grew to manhood, he extended his operations. At the
time of which we are speaking, he had long practised open pillage. His plundering
expeditions added to his mother's savings, who since her return from Kardiki
had altogether withdrawn from public life, and devoted herself to household
duties, enabled him to collect a considerable force for am expedition against
Kormovo, one of the two towns he had sworn to destroy. He marched against it at
the head of his banditti, but found himself vigorously opposed, lost part of
his force, and was obliged to save himself and the rest by flight. He did not
stop till he reached Tepelen, where he had a warm reception from Kamco, whose
thirst for vengeance had been disappointed by his defeat. "Go!" said
she, "go, coward! go spin with the women in the harem! The distaff is a
better weapon for you than the scimitar! "The young man answered not a word,
but, deeply wounded by these reproaches, retired to hide his humiliation in the
bosom of his old friend the mountain. The popular legend, always thirsting for
the marvellous in the adventures of heroes, has it that he found in the ruins
of a church a treasure which enabled him to reconstitute his party. But he
himself has contradicted this story, stating that it was by the ordinary
methods of rapine and plunder that he replenished his finances. He selected
from his old band of brigands thirty palikars, and entered, as their
bouloubachi, or leader of the group, into the service of the Pacha of
Negropont. But he soon tired of the methodical life he was obliged to lead, and
passed into Thessaly, where, following the example of his father Veli, he
employed his time in brigandage on the highways. Thence he raided the Pindus
chain of mountains, plundered a great number of villages, and returned to
Tepelen, richer and consequently more esteemed than ever.
He employed his fortune and
influence in collecting a formidable guerilla force, and resumed his plundering
operations. Kurd Pacha soon found himself compelled, by the universal outcry of
the province, to take active measures against this young brigand. He sent
against him a division of troops, which defeated him and brought him prisoner
with his men to Berat, the capital of Central Albania and residence of the
governor. The country flattered itself that at length it was freed from its
scourge. The whole body of bandits was condemned to death; but Ali was not the
man to surrender his life so easily. Whilst they were hanging his comrades, he
threw himself at the feet of the pacha and begged for mercy in the name of his
parents, excusing himself on account of his youth, and promising a lasting
reform. The pacha, seeing at his feet a comely youth, with fair hair and blue
eyes, a persuasive voice, and eloquent tongue, and in whose veins flowed the
same blood as his own, was moved with pity and pardoned him. Ali got off with a
mild captivity in the palace of his powerful relative, who heaped benefits upon
him, and did all he could to lead him into the paths of probity. He appeared
amenable to these good influences, and bitterly to repent his past errors. After
some years, believing in his reformation, and moved by the prayers of Kamco,
who incessantly implored the restitution of her dear son, the generous pacha
restored him his liberty, only giving him to under stand that he had no more
mercy to expect if he again disturbed the public peace. Ali taking the threat
seriously; did not run the risk of braving it, and, on the contrary, did all he
could to conciliate the man whose anger he dared not kindle. Not only did he
keep the promise he had made to live quietly, but by his good conduct he caused
his, former escapades to be forgotten, putting under obligation all his
neighbours, and attaching to himself, through the services he rendered them, a
great number of friendly disposed persons. In this manner he soon assumed a
distinguished and honourable rank among the beys of the country, and being of
marriageable age, he sought and formed an alliance with the daughter of Capelan
Tigre, Pacha of Delvino, who resided at Argyro-Castron. This union, happy on
both sides, gave him, with one of the most accomplished women in Epirus, a high
position and great influence.
It seemed as if this
marriage were destined to wean Ali forever from his former turbulent habits and
wild adventures. But the family into which he had married afforded violent
contrasts and equal elements of good and mischief. If Emineh, his wife, was a
model of virtue, his father-in-law, Capelan, was a composition of every
vice--selfish, ambitious, turbulent, fierce. Confident in his courage, and
further emboldened by his remoteness from the capital, the Pacha of Delvino
gloried in setting law and authority at defiance.
Ali's disposition was too
much like that of his father-in-law to prevent him from taking his measure very
quickly. He soon got on good terms with him, and entered into his schemes,
waiting for an opportunity to denounce him and become his successor. For this
opportunity he had not long to wait.
Capelan's object in giving
his daughter to Tepeleni was to enlist him among the beys of the province to
gain independence, the ruling passion of viziers. The cunning young man
pretended to enter into the views of his father-in-law, and did all he could to
urge him into the path of rebellion.
An adventurer named
Stephano Piccolo, an emissary of Russia, had just raised in Albania the
standard of the Cross and called to arms all the Christians of the
Acroceraunian Mountains. The Divan sent orders to all the pachas of Northern
Turkey in Europe to instantly march against the insurgents and quell the rising
in blood.
Instead of obeying the
orders of the Divan and joining Kurd Pacha, who had summoned him, Capelan, at
the instigation of his son-in-law, did all he could to embarrass the movement
of the imperial troops, and without openly making common cause with the
insurgents, he rendered them substantial aid in their resistance. They were,
notwithstanding, conquered and dispersed; and their chief, Stephano Piccolo,
had to take refuge in the unexplored caves of Montenegro.
When the struggle was over,
Capelan, as Ali had foreseen, was summoned to give an account of his conduct
before the roumeli-valicy, supreme judge over Turkey in Europe. He was not only
accused of the gravest offences, but proofs of them were forwarded to the Divan
by the very man who had instigated them. There could be no doubt as to the
result of the inquiry; therefore, the pacha, who had no suspicions of his
son-in-law's duplicity, determined not to leave his pachalik. That was not in
accordance with the plans of Ali, who wished to succeed to both the government
and the wealth of his father-in-law. He accordingly made the most plausible
remonstrances against the inefficacy and danger of such a resistance. To refuse
to plead was tantamount to a confession of guilt, and was certain to bring on
his head a storm against which he was powerless to cope, whilst if he obeyed
the orders of the roumeli-valicy he would find it easy to excuse himself. To
give more effect to his perfidious advice, Ali further employed the innocent
Emineh, who was easily alarmed on her father's account. Overcome by the
reasoning of his son-in-law and the tears of his daughter, the unfortunate
pacha consented to go to Monastir, where he had been summoned to appear, and
where he was immediately arrested and beheaded.
Ali's schemes had
succeeded, but both his ambition and his cupidity were frustrated. Ali, Bey of
Argyro-Castron, who had throughout shown himself devoted to the sultan, was
nominated Pacha of Delvino in place of Capelan. He sequestered all the property
of his predecessor, as confiscated to the sultan, and thus deprived Ali
Tepeleni of all the fruits of his crime.
This disappointment kindled
the wrath of the ambitious Ali. He swore vengeance for the spoliation of which
he considered himself the victim. But the moment was not favourable for putting
his projects in train. The murder of Capelan, which its perpetrator intended
for a mere crime, proved a huge blunder. The numerous enemies of Tepeleni,
silent under the administration of the late pacha, whose resentment they had
cause to fear, soon made common cause under the new one, for whose support they
had hopes. Ali saw the danger, sought and found the means to obviate it. He
succeeded in making a match between Ali of Argyro-Castron, who was unmarried,
and Chainitza, his own sister. This alliance secured to him the government of
Tigre, which he held under Capelan. But that was not sufficient. He must put
himself in a state of security against the dangers he had lately, experienced,
and establish himself on a firm footing' against possible accidents. He soon
formed a plan, which he himself described to the French Consul in the following
words:--
"Years were
elapsing," said he, "and brought no important change in my position. I
was an important partisan, it is true, and strongly supported, but I held no
title or Government employment of my own. I recognised the necessity of
establishing myself firmly in my birthplace. I had devoted friends, and
formidable foes, bent on my destruction, whom I must put out of the way, for my
own safety. I set about a plan for destroying them at one blow, and ended by
devising one with which I ought to have commenced my career. Had I done so, I
should have saved much time and pains.
"I was in the habit of
going every day, after hunting, for a siesta in a neighbouring wood. A
confidential servant of mine suggested to my enemies the idea of surprising me
and assassinating one there. I myself supplied the plan of the conspiracy,
which was adopted. On the day agreed upon, I preceded my adversaries to the
place where I was accustomed to repose, and caused a goat to be pinioned and
muzzled, and fastened under the tree, covered with my cape; I then returned
home by a roundabout path. Soon after I had left, the conspirators arrived, and
fired a volley at the goat.
"They ran up to make
certain of my death, but were interrupted by a piquet of my men, who
unexpectedly emerged from a copse where I had posted them, and they were
obliged to return to Tepelen, which they entered, riotous with joy, crying 'Ali
Bey is dead, now we are free!' This news reached my harem, and I heard the
cries of my mother and my wife mingled with the shouts of my enemies. I allowed
the commotion to run its course and reach its height, so as to indicate which
were my friends and which my foes. But when the former were at the depth of
their distress and the latter at the height of their joy, and, exulting in
their supposed victory, had drowned their prudence and their courage in floods
of wine, then, strong in the justice of my cause, I appeared upon the scene. Now
was the time for my friends to triumph and for my foes to tremble. I set to
work at the head of my partisans, and before sunrise had exterminated the last
of my enemies. I distributed their lands, their houses, and their goods amongst
my followers, and from that moment I could call the town of Tepelen my
own."
A less ambitious man might
perhaps have remained satisfied with such a result. But Ali did not look upon
the suzerainty of a canton as a final object, but only as a means to an end;
and he had not made himself master of Tepelen to limit himself to a petty
state, but to employ it as a base of operations.
He had allied himself to
Ali of Argyro-Castron to get rid of his enemies; once free from them, he began
to plot against his supplanter. He forgot neither his vindictive projects nor
his ambitious schemes. As prudent in execution as bold in design, he took good
care not to openly attack a man stronger than himself, and gained by stratagem
what he could not obtain by violence. The honest and straightforward character
of his brother-in-law afforded an easy success to his perfidy. He began by
endeavouring to suborn his sister Chainitza, and several times proposed to her
to poison her husband; but she, who dearly loved the pacha, who was a kind husband
and to whom she had borne two children, repulsed his suggestions with horror,
and threatened, if he persisted, to denounce him. Ali, fearing the consequences
if she carried out her threat, begged forgiveness for his wicked plans,
pretended deep repentance, and spoke of his brother-in-law in terms of the
warmest affection. His acting was so consummate that even Chainitza, who well
knew her brother's subtle character, was deceived by it. When he saw that she
was his dupe, knowing that he had nothing more either to fear or to hope for
from that side, he directed his attention to another.
The pacha had a brother
named Soliman, whose character nearly resembled that of Tepeleni. The latter,
after having for some time quietly studied him, thought he discerned in him the
man he wanted; he tempted him to kill the pacha, offering him, as the price of
this crime, his whole inheritance and the hand of Chainitza, only reserving for
himself the long coveted sanjak. Soliman accepted the proposals, and the
fratricidal bargain was concluded. The two conspirators, sole masters of the
secret, the horrible nature of which guaranteed their mutual fidelity, and
having free access to the person of their victim; could not fail in their
object.
One day, when they were
both received by the pacha in private audience, Soliman, taking advantage of a
moment when he was unobserved, drew a pistol from his belt and blew out his
brother's brains. Chainitza ran at the sound, and saw her husband lying dead
between her brother and her brother-in-law. Her cries for help were stopped by
threats of death if she moved or uttered a sound. As she lay, fainting with
grief and terror, Ali made, a sign to Soliman, who covered her with his cloak,
and declared her his wife. Ali pronounced the marriage concluded, and retired
for it to be consummated. Thus was celebrated this frightful wedding, in the
scene of an awful crime; beside the corpse of a man who a moment before had
been the husband of the bride and the brother of the bridegroom.
The assassins published the
death of the pacha, attributing it, as is usual in Turkey, to a fit of cerebral
apoplexy. But the truth soon leaked out from the lying shrouds in which it had
been wrapped. Reports even exceeded the truth, and public opinion implicated
Chainitza in a crime of which she had been but the witness. Appearances
certainly justified these suspicions. The young wife had soon consoled herself
in the arms of her second husband for the loss of the first, and her son by him
presently died suddenly, thus leaving Soliman in lawful and peaceful possession
of all his brother's wealth. As for the little girl, as she had no rights and
could hurt no one, her life was spared; and she was eventually married to a bey
of Cleisoura, destined in the sequel to cut a tragic figure in the history of the
Tepeleni family.
But Ali was once more
deprived of the fruit of his bloody schemes. Notwithstanding all his intrigues,
the sanjak of Delvino was conferred, not upon him, but upon a bey of one of the
first families of Zapouria. But, far from being discouraged, he recommenced
with new boldness and still greater confidence the work of his elevation, so
often begun and so often interrupted. He took advantage of his increasing
influence to ingratiate himself with the new pasha, and was so successful in
insinuating himself into his confidence, that he was received into the palace
and treated like the pacha's son. There he acquired complete knowledge of the
details of the pachalik and the affairs of the pacha, preparing himself to
govern the one when he had got rid of the other.
The sanjak of Delvino was
bounded from Venetian territory by the district of Buthrotum. Selim, a better
neighbour and an abler politician than his predecessors, sought to renew and
preserve friendly commercial relations with the purveyors of the Magnificent
Republic. This wise conduct, equally advantageous for both the bordering
provinces, instead of gaining for the pacha the praise and favours which he
deserved, rendered him suspected at a court whose sole political idea was
hatred of the name of Christian, and whose sole means of government was terror.
Ali immediately perceived the pacha's error, and the advantage which he himself
could derive from it. Selim, as one of his commercial transactions with the
Venetians, had sold them, for a number of years, the right of felling timber in
a forest near Lake Reloda. Ali immediately took advantage of this to denounce
the pasha as guilty of having alienated the territory of the Sublime Porte, and
of a desire to deliver to the infidels all the province of Delvino. Masking his
ambitious designs under the veil of religion and patriotism, he lamented, in
his denunciatory report, the necessity under which he found himself, as a loyal
subject and faithful Mussulman, of accusing a man who had been his benefactor,
and thus at the same time gained the benefit of crime and the credit of virtue.
Under the gloomy despotism
of the Turks, a man in any position of responsibility is condemned almost as
soon as accused; and if he is not strong enough to inspire terror, his ruin is
certain. Ali received at Tepelen, where he had retired to more conveniently
weave his perfidious plots, an order to get rid of the pacha. At the receipt of
the firman of execution he leaped with joy, and flew to Delvino to seize the
prey which was abandoned to him.
The noble Selim, little
suspecting that his protege had become his accuser and was preparing to become
his executioner, received him with more tenderness than ever, and lodged him,
as heretofore, in his palace. Under the shadow of this hospitable roof, Ali
skilfully prepared the consummation of the crime which was for ever to draw him
out of obscurity. He went every morning to pay his court to the pacha, whose
confidence he doubted; then, one day, feigning illness, he sent excuses for
inability to pay his respects to a man whom he was accustomed to regard as his
father, and begged him to come for a moment into his apartment. The invitation
being accepted, he concealed assassins in one of the cupboards without shelves,
so common in the East, which contain by day the mattresses spread by night on
the floor for the slaves to sleep upon. At the hour fixed, the old man arrived.
Ali rose from his sofa with a depressed air, met him, kissed the hem of his
robe, and, after seating him in his place, himself offered him a pipe-and
coffee, which were accepted. But instead of putting the cup in the hand
stretched to receive it, he let it fall on the floor, where it broke into a
thousand pieces. This was the signal. The assassins sprang from their retreat
and darted upon Selim, who fell, exclaiming, like Caesar, "And it is thou,
my son, who takest my life!"
At the sound of the tumult
which followed the assassination, Selim's bodyguard, running up, found Ali
erect, covered with blood, surrounded by assassins, holding in his hand the
firman displayed, and crying with a menacing voice, "I have killed the
traitor Selim by the order of our glorious sultan; here is his imperial
command." At these words, and the sight of the fatal diploma, all prostrated
themselves terror-stricken. Ali, after ordering the decapitation of Selim,
whose head he seized as a trophy, ordered the cadi, the beys, and the Greek
archons to meet at the palace, to prepare the official account of the execution
of the sentence. They assembled, trembling; the sacred hymn of the Fatahat was
sung, and the murder declared legal, in the name of the merciful and
compassionate God, Lord of the world.
When they had sealed up the
effects of the victim, the murderer left the palace, taking with him, as a
hostage, Mustapha, son of Selim, destined to be even more unfortunate than his
father.
A few days afterwards, the
Divan awarded to Ali Tepeleni, as a reward for his zeal for the State and
religion, the sanjak of Thessaly, with the title of Dervendgi-pacha, or Provost
Marshal of the roads. This latter dignity was conferred on the condition of his
levying a body of four thousand men to clear the valley of the Peneus of a
multitude of Christian chiefs who exercised more power than the officers of the
Grand Seigneur. The new pacha took advantage of this to enlist a numerous body
of Albanians ready for any enterprise, and completely devoted to him. With two
important commands, and with this strong force at his back, he repaired to
Trikala, the seat of his government, where he speedily acquired great
influence.
His first act of authority
was to exterminate the bands of Armatolis, or Christian militia, which infested
the plain. He laid violent hands on all whom he caught, and drove the rest back
into their mountains, splitting them up into small bands whom he could deal
with at his pleasure. At the same time he sent a few heads to Constantinople,
to amuse the sultan and the mob, and some money to the ministers to gain their
support. "For," said he, "water sleeps, but envy never
does." These steps were prudent, and whilst his credit increased at court,
order was reestablished from the defiles of the Perrebia of Pindus to the vale
of Tempe and to the pass of Thermopylae.
These exploits of the
provost-marshal, amplified by Oriental exaggeration, justified the ideas which
were entertained of the capacity of Ali Pacha. Impatient of celebrity, he took
good care himself to spread his fame, relating his prowess to all comers,
making presents to the sultan's officers who came into his government, and
showing travellers his palace courtyard festooned with decapitated heads. But
what chiefly tended to consolidate his power was the treasure which he
ceaselessly amassed by every means. He never struck for the mere pleasure of
striking, and the numerous victims of his proscriptions only perished to enrich
him. His death sentences always fell on beys and wealthy persons whom he wished
to plunder. In his eyes the axe was but an instrument of fortune, and the
executioner a tax-gatherer.
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