ali pacha-第23节
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anced towards the shore of Saint…Nicolas; expecting to unite with the Suliots。 He stopped in the middle of the ruins to wait for sunrise; and while there heard that his troops had carried the battery of Ibrahim…Aga…Stamboul。 Overjoyed; he ordered them to press on to the second intrenchment; promising that in an hour; when he should have been joined by the Suliots; he would support them; and he then pushed forward; preceded by two field…pieces with their waggons; and followed by fifteen hundred men; as far as a large plateau on which he perceived at a little distance an encampment which he supposed to be that of the Suliots。 He then ordered the Mirdite prince; Kyr Lekos; to advance with an escort of twenty…five men; and when within hearing distance to wave a blue flag and call out the password。 An Imperial officer replied with the countersign 〃flouri;〃 and Lekos immediately sent back word to Ali to advance。 His orderly hastened back; and the prince entered the camp; where he and his escort were immediately surrounded and slain。
On receiving the message; Ali began to advance; but cautiously; being uneasy at seeing no signs of the Mirdite troop。 Suddenly; furious cries; and a lively fusillade; proceeding from the vineyards and thickets; announced that he had fallen into a trap;: and at the same moment Omar Pacha fell upon his advance guard; which broke; crying 〃Treason!〃。
Ali sabred the fugitives mercilessly; but fear carried them away; and; forced to follow the crowd; he perceived the Kersales and Baltadgi Pacha descending the side of Mount Paktoras; intending to cut off his retreat。 He attempted another route; hastening towards the road to Dgeleva; but found it held by the Tapagetae under the Bimbashi Aslon of Argyro…Castron。 He was surrounded; all seemed lost; and feeling that his last hour had come; he thought only of selling his life as dearly as possible。 Collecting his bravest soldiers round him; he prepared for a last rush on Omar Pacha; when; suddenly; with an inspiration born of despair; he ordered his ammunition waggons to be blown up。 The Kersales; who were about to seize them; vanished in the explosion; which scattered a hail of stones and debris far and wide。 Under cover of the smoke and general confusion; Ali succeeded in withdrawing his men to the shelter of the guns of his castle of Litharitza; where he continued the fight in order to give time to the fugitives to rally; and to give the support he had promised to those fighting on the other slope; who; in the meantime; had carried the second battery and were attacking the fortified camp。 Here the Seraskier Ismail met them with a resistance so well managed; that he was able to conceal the attack he was preparing to make on their rear。 Ali; guessing that the object of Ismail's manoeuvres was to crush those whom he had promised to help; and unable; on account of the distance; either to support or to warn them; endeavoured to impede Omar Pasha; hoping still that his Skipetars might either see or hear him。 He encouraged the fugitives; who recognised him from afar by his scarlet dolman; by the dazzling whiteness of his horse; and by the terrible cries which he uttered; for; in the heat of battle; this extraordinary man appeared to have regained the vigour and audacity; of his youth。 Twenty times he led his soldiers to the charge; and as often was forced to recoil towards his castles。 He brought up his reserves; but in vain。 Fate had declared against him。 His troops which were attacking the intrenched camp found themselves taken between two fires; and he could not help them。 Foaming with passion; he threatened to rush singly into the midst of his enemies。 His officers besought him to calm himself; and; receiving only refusals; at last threatened to lay hands upon him if he persisted in exposing himself like a private soldier。 Subdued by this unaccustomed opposition; Ali allowed himself to be forced back into the castle by the lake; while his soldiers dispersed in various directions。
But even this defeat did not discourage the fierce pasha。 Reduced to extremity; he yet entertained the hope of shaking the Ottoman Empire; and from the recesses of his fortress he agitated the whole of Greece。 The insurrection which he had stirred up; without foreseeing what the results might be; was spreading with the rapidity of a lighted train of powder; and the Mohammedans were beginning to tremble; when at length Kursheed Pasha; having crossed the Pindus at the head of an army of eighty thousand men; arrived before Janina。
His tent had hardly been pitched; when Ali caused a salute of twenty…one guns to be fired in his honour; and sent a messenger; bearing a letter of congratulation on his safe arrival。 This letter; artful and insinuating; was calculated to make a deep impression on Kursheed。 Ali wrote that; being driven by the infamous lies of a former servant; called Pacho Bey; into resisting; not indeed the authority of the sultan; before whom he humbly bent his head weighed down with years and grief; but the perfidious plots of His Highness's advisers; he considered himself happy in his misfortunes to have dealings with a vizier noted for his lofty qualities。 He then added that these rare merits had doubtless been very far from being estimated at their proper value by a Divan in which men were only classed in accordance with the sums they laid out in gratifying the rapacity of the ministers。 Otherwise; how came it about that Kursheed Pasha; Viceroy of Egyptafter the departure of the French; the conqueror of the Mamelukes; was only rewarded for these services by being recalled without a reason? Having been twice Romili…Valicy; why; when he should have enjoyed the reward of his labours; was he relegated to the obscure post of Salonica? And; when appointed Grand Vizier and sent to pacify Servia; instead of being entrusted with the government of this kingdom which he had reconquered for the sultan; why was he hastily despatched to Aleppo to repress a trifling sedition of emirs and janissaries? Now; scarcely arrived in the Morea; his powerful arm was to be employed against an aged man。
Ali then plunged into details; related the pillaging; avarice; and imperious dealing of Pacho Bey; as well as of the pachas subordinate to him; how they had alienated the public mind; how they had succeeded in offending the Armatolis; and especially the Suliots; who might be brought back to their duty with less trouble than these imprudent chiefs had taken to estrange them。 He gave a mass of special information on this subject; and explained that in advising the Suliots to retire to their mountains he had really only put them in a false position as long as he retained possession of the fort of Kiapha; which is the key of the Selleide。
The Seraskier replied in a friendly manner; ordered the military salute to be returned in Ali's honour; shot for shot; and forbade that henceforth a person of the valour and intrepidity of the Lion of Tepelen should be described by the epithet of 〃excommunicated。〃 He also spoke of him by his title of 〃vizier;〃 which he declared he had never forfeited the right to use; and he also stated that he had only entered Epirus as a peace…maker。 Kursheed's emissaries had just seized some letters sent by Prince Alexander Ypsilanti to the Greek captains at Epirus。 Without going into details of the events which led to the Greek insurrection; the prince advised the Polemarchs; chiefs of the Selleid; to aid Ali Pacha in his revolt against the Porte; but to so arrange matters that they could easily detach themselves again; their only aim being to seize his treasures; which might be used to procure the freedom of Greece。
These letters a messenger from Kursheed delivered to Ali。 They produced such an impression upon his mind that he secretly resolved only to make use of the Greeks; and to sacrifice them to his own designs; if he could not inflict a terrible vengeance on their perfidy。 He heard from the messenger at the same time of the agitation in European Turkey; the hopes of the Christians; and the apprehension of a rupture between the Porte and Russia。 It was necessary to lay aside vain resentment and to unite against these threatening dangers。 Kursheed Pacha was; said his messenger; ready to consider favourably any propositions likely to lead to a prompt pacification; and would value such a result far more highly than the glory of subduing by means of the imposing force at his command; a valiant prince whom he had always regarded as one of the strongest bulwarks of the Ottoman Empire。 This information produced a different effect upon Ali to that intended by the Seraskier。 Passing suddenly from the depth of despondency to the height of pride; he imagined that these overtures of reconciliation were only a proof of the inability of his foes to subdue him; and he sent the following propositions to Kursheed Pacha:
〃If the first duty of a prince is to do justice; that of his subjects is to remain faithful; and obey him in all things。 From this principle we derive that of rewards and punishments; and although my services might sufficiently justify my conduct to all time; I nevertheless acknowledge that I have deserved the wrath of the sultan; si