“But they didn’t leave Kolokotronis alone either.
They convicted him of being a Russophile, the same way that one hundred years later they convicted the Russophiles of being part of the E.A.M6. It was the Germans now, the Bavarians then. Meanwhile, Bavaria had become part of Germany.”
“And what was Otto like, Grandfather?”
“He was pathetic. Not all there. He wasn’t a bad guy, but he had some kind of cerebral lesion. He couldn’t understand anything they told him. They would take him documents, and he would spend hours studying them, correcting the spelling mistakes and punctuation, and after he had gone over everything, he still hadn’t understood anything. His last word on any subject was, ‘We’ll see.’ As Claude Herve wrote, ‘
He saw himself ‘
Armansberg’s daughters, they thought it was the sultan and his harem, and that Armansberg and his aide-de-camp were the eunuchs. His case resembled that of a mentally handicapped child: you ask it what the time is, and it looks at the hands of the clock, and it tells you the minutes and seconds, but it never tells you what time it is.”
“Here we are,” said the taxi driver. “Isn’t this Othonos Street?”
The narrator got out on the side facing
Constitution Square, and crossed the street to the offices of Olympic Airways.
— 6-
The Captain, Suite: And End
“It was a harsh winter.”
“Which winter was that, Grandfather?”
“The one that marked the end of the first half of the century. It was very cold. Six below and even less.