The Luck of Thirteen: Wanderings and Flight through Montenegro and Serbia
PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED LONDON AND BECCLES, ENGLAND
It is curious to follow anything right back to its inception, and to discover from what extraordinary causes results are due. It is strange, for instance, to find that the luck of the thirteen began right back at the time when Jan, motoring back from Uzhitze down the valley of the Morava, coming fastish round a corner, plumped right up to the axle in a slough of clinging wet sandy mud. The car almost shrugged its shoulders as it settled down, and would have said, if cars could speak, Well, what are you going to do about that, eh? It was about the 264th mud hole in which Jan's motor had stuck, and we sat down to wait for the inevitable bullocks. But it was a Sunday and bullocks were few; the wait became tedious, and in the intervals of thought which alternated with the intervals of exasperation, Jan realized that he needed a holiday.
To be explicit. Jan was acting as engineer to Dr. Berry's Serbian Mission from the Royal Free Hospital:—Jan Gordon, and Jo is his wife, Cora Josephine Gordon, artist, and V.A.D.
We had a six months of work behind us. We had seen the typhus, and had dodged the dreaded louse who carries the infection, we had seen the typhus dwindle and die with the onrush of summer. We had helped to clean and prepare six hospitals at Vrntze or Vrnjatchka Banja—whichever you prefer. We had helped Mr. Berry, the great surgeon, to ventilate his hospitals by smashing the windows—one had been a child again for a moment. Jo had learned Serbian and was assisting Dr. Helen Boyle, the Brighton mind specialist, to run a large and flourishing out-patient department to which tuberculosis and diphtheria—two scourges of Serbia—came in their shoals. We had endeavoured to ward off typhoid by initiating a sort of sanitary vigilance committee, having first sacked the chief of police: we had laid drains, which the chief Serbian engineer said he would pull up as soon as we had gone away. We had helped in the plans of a very necessary slaughter-house, which Mr. Berry was going to present to the town. There was an excuse for Jan's desire. The English papers had been howling about the typhus months after the disease had been chased out by English, French, and American doctors, who had disinfected the country till it reeked of formalin and sulphur; shoals of devoted Englishwomen were still pouring over, generously ready to risk their lives in a danger which no longer existed. Our own unit, which had dwindled to a comfortable—almost a family—number, with Mr. Berry as father, had been suddenly enlarged by an addition of ten. These ten complicated things, they all naturally wanted work, and we had cornered all the jobs.
Jan Gordon
Cora Gordon
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THE LUCK OF THIRTEEN
WANDERINGS AND FLIGHT THROUGH MONTENEGRO AND SERBIA
MR. AND MRS. JAN GORDON
CONTENTS
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
THE LUCK OF THIRTEEN
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER II
NISH AND SALONIKA
CHAPTER III
OFF TO MONTENEGRO
CHAPTER IV
ACROSS THE FRONTIER
CHAPTER V
THE MONTENEGRIN FRONT ON THE DRINA
CHAPTER VI
NORTHERN MONTENEGRO
CHAPTER VII
TO CETTINJE
CHAPTER VIII
THE LAKE OF SCUTARI
CHAPTER IX
SCUTARI
CHAPTER X
THE HIGHWAY OF MONTENEGRO
CHAPTER XI
IPEK, DECHANI AND A HAREM
CHAPTER XII
THE HIGHWAY OF MONTENEGRO—II
CHAPTER XIII
USKUB
CHAPTER XIV
MAINLY RETROSPECTIVE
CHAPTER XV
SOME PAGES FROM MR. GORDON'S DIARY
CHAPTER XVI
LAST DAYS AT VRNTZE
CHAPTER XVII
KRALIEVO
CHAPTER XVIII
THE FLIGHT OF SERBIA
CHAPTER XIX
NOVI BAZAR
CHAPTER XX
THE UNKNOWN ROAD
CHAPTER XXI
THE FLEA-PIT
CHAPTER XXII
ANDRIEVITZA TO POD
CHAPTER XXIII
INTO ALBANIA
CHAPTER XXIV
"ONE MORE RIBBER TO CROSS"
INDEX
THE END