Verhovayak Lapja, 1937. július-december (20. évfolyam, 27-53. szám)

1937-11-25 / 48. szám

Journal of Verhovc&y Fraternal Insurance Association VOLUME XX. NOVEMBER 25, 1937 ENGLISH EDITION No. 11. Kossuth, the leading genius of the War of Liberty in 1848-<5> Thanksgiving By—JOSEPH AUSLANDER Who among us can compute The number of his gifts? The golden bread, the ripened fruit, The bird’s quick song that lifts A heart grown dull and mute. What coin of Ceasar can redeem The common gift of prayer? The gift of faith that lights a beam? Courage that keeps it burning there? And the great gift of dream? O never let that moment by, Record that splendid hour Brief with the freckled butterfly, Bright with the falling flower, Brave with the wind and sky! <$>­-<s> (Cont’d from last month’s issue) Today’« installment, THE SECOND, continues with the story of the early life of Lajos Kossuth. ) . ..... In 1824, Kossuth was able to leave Eperjes a fully qualified lawyer, going at once to PEST — equipped with the good wishes of his parents. In those days, Pest was a fairly extensive industrial city, spreading far over the plain on the left bank of the. DANUBE. Opposite it proudly lay BUDA, stretch­ing a long way into the country behind the high rock that rose steeply from the right bank of the river. The town, and especially the promenade (the “Kor­zó”) along the Danube, pre­sented an animated picture. Kossuth stared in amaze­ment at the elegance of the women; this was what he had imagined Paris or the Glacis in Vienna would be like. The men, too, were dressed differently from what he had been accustom­ed, that is, in English fash­ion. Kossuth was anxious to do something to make him­self look a little less provinc­ial, and as he noticed that the people whom he saw strolling in the Hatvani ut­ca — which was later to bear his name — wore flowers in their buttonholes, he went into a flower shop and bought himself a dark red carnation. The ladies of Pest saw a dark, handsome young rqan with a strikingly high fore­head, who bore himself with a natural grace which made up for his lack of style. He was alone in wearing a red carnation in his buttonhole; his example was to create a fashion . . , “Many times he climbed the hill to the ‘palace of Bu­da’ ” — says Otto Zarek in his sensational German book: “Kossuth.” “ He knew that he had a right to offer himself; his diploma vouched for him as being a qualified lawyer, an original thinker, musically talented! And so he applied for an ap­pointment in the court chan­cellery : — that was the first step, afterwards he could re­ly upon himself to make a career!” “From the top of the pal­ace hill he looked down over the city of Pest, and the country stretching away be­yond. Here, in the palace and the ministries, sat the real rulers: ‘Hapsburg’s loy­al servants.’ They were Hungarians, like himself. He knew that from their names; Hungarians who kept Hungary in subjection. He was suddenly filled with melancholy, anger, glowing hatred. He was no longer the young ‘coxcomb’; there was a challenge in his earn­est face. He thought of Eperjes; of his ancestor, An­dreas, who died a martyr’s death; he thought of the gypsy woman’s prophecy — that he would be a ‘pertur­bator’ — he would drive out the taskmasters and create an independent Hungary.” .... He knocked on the doors of the Buda palace. He was not admitted. A Air. Kossuth from Monok, a DeUdvard, of an unknown and unlanded genteel family, had the presumption to de­sire to adopt a career as government official! Pie wished to serve the Emper­or .. . But what qualifica­tions had he? A diploma? That was not much. Let him become a lawyer. Who recommended him? Baron Pal Vécsey, of Zemplén, a man of influence, no doubt. But the authorities of Buda had a retentive memory. This Baron Vécsey, on whose recommendation young Kossuth relied, had been in league with the re­fractory Hungarians who had been imprisoned for an­ti-constitutional propaganda. And this man had the im­pudence to give an introduc­tion to an unknown Hun­garian? The recommenda­tion sufficed to settle Kos­­suth’s application : they were not such fools as to ask for trouble. „ Let this “provinc­ial” become a provincial law­yer. There was no room for young Kossuth in Buda. He departed sadly; he had breathed the air of the great world, if only for a few days, but he never forgot the sweetness of that tase of life! His fancy had new stuff to play with, his ambition a concrete goal: Buda ... Yes, this city which had so long fired his imagination closed its doors to him! . . . Back to the provinces! Back home to the county of Zem­plén, to his father’s home, to work in his office. He settled down in Sator­­alja-Ujhely. But now he saw the little town with other eyes. Was this a town? No “Korzó”, no promenade, no Platvani ut­ca .. . No palace, no govern­ment offices. But there were pretty women here, nevertheless . . , Kossuth was young, ex­tremely handsome, quite suf­ficiently smart — he had not failed to profit by his short stay in Budapest — a certain note of fashion, a red carna­tion in the buttonhole, for instance, transformed the raw youth of Monok into a man of the world. It was also a good thing that the old custom prescribed the wearing of uniform for a gentleman; in a tight-fitting, richly braided green tunic, or in a black “Atilla,” with the little dagger on the hip, the latest acquisition to the legal fraternity of Satoralia- Ujhely, Kossuth Junior, looked very fetching — as we seen on our next picture. (Cont’d in next month’s issue)

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