Page:Destruction of the Greek Empire.djvu/242

 208 DE STEUCTION OF THE GEEEK EMPIRE bloodthirsty tyrant, a hunkiar or drinker of blood ; one who recked nothing of human slaughter and who seems even to have delighted in human suffering. Yet the two lives are inseparably blended. He would turn from study to slaughter, and after slaughter and torture would show himself to be full of pity for the sufferings of his victims. Nature had endowed him with intelligence far above the average of that possessed by men of his race He was the son of a slave, and probably of a Christian, and like so many of the sultans before his time and until the middle of the eighteenth century probably owed his intelligence to the non-Turkish blood in his veins. His early struggles while yet a lad, and the great responsibilities he had to assume in order to protect his very life, had quickened his faculties and had made him both suspicious and self-reliant. His environment, among men who were simply soldiers of the original Turkish type ; the tradition of his house and race, in accordance with which any slaughter or any cruelties might be committed ; the religion to which he belonged, which regarded all non-Mussulmans as enemies of the true faith, who were to be subdued : all tended to make him regardless of human life. But amid his cruelties his better nature and his more thoughtful side occasionally asserted itself. In one respect his characteristics are those of his race. No man can show himself more cruel and relentless in slaughter than the Turk whenever his religious sentiment comes into play. The unbeliever is an enemy of God and of Mahomet, and it is a sacred duty when he is fighting against the Moslem to slay him. Those who are at war against Islam must be utterly destroyed, root and branch, unless indeed they will accept the faith. Men, women, and children must alike suffer the penalty. But when no religious sentiment obscures the natural feelings of humanity, the same Turk is goodnatured and kindly. Probably no race is more charitable towards its own poor or treats animals with more kindness. Mahomet the Second both in his