A conventional pair of Serbian tales worthy of the telling. Quaint, true love episodes that are difficult to render in any meaningful, contemporary form. They belong in an earlier age, something like that of the Troubadours. Roses, for heaven’s sake.
The simpler first. A tale with a simple, worthwhile moral, which always gives at least some justification for an author.
In the usual way, the girl here was a beauty, much sought after. The younger sister. The pair of girls were inseparable. Years later they would be run down by a taxi and the elder lose her life in the tragic accident. Then they were walking arm-in-arm across a pedestrian crossing, the younger having managed to half-mount the pavement. Thirty years before it was the same on the Corso in the centre of town, arm-in-arm.
At some point earlier in the evening an admirer had given the Pretty a rose. Sweet.
There was the old, unchanging problem of approaching a beauty. Always a challenge; always would be. Beauty daunting and defying even the most courageous hearts.
Rather easy to simply pass a rose over to a gal. Hi! There you go. Run off, stage left.
Rather lame in fact. You really do need to do better than that, chum. Yep.
Well, this first guy can manage only this and no more. That is, the first guy in this first tale. We are actually interested in a second chap watching the procession from the wings here.
The first managed the preliminary, the faint-hearted offering. Shy. Diffident. Success rating on its own perhaps no better than 25%. Here’s the simple moral, guys: you gotta be brave.
Bobo, the second lad in this first tale, late on the scene perhaps, standing some distance away from the approaching gal, finds himself trumped by the other, who got in first. Landed the offering with the girl, into her hot little hand, which he may have been lucky enough to lightly brush.
Fortune does favour the brave, at least in this episode.
Unlucky in the timing, what is left to Bobo this evening on the Corso?… Well, what about, without any further ado, simply go pluck that flower, that rose, for himself? The other had no right to treat his girl so. No. (Apart from some eyeing, no contact between this pair up to that point.)
Here he goes, bounding over. Pluck in one. Picks the pocket. I’ll have that, thank you.
Pretty impressive. No two ways about it. Gets him the girl in the end, in fact. You better believe.
A big talker when he gets rolling, Bob, full of rattle. Some months later the Beauty needs to tell him, Slow down, man. I can’t understand a thing you’re saying.
Didn’t matter. Guy was flying by then. At some point during the courtship the pair were observed by the Beauty’s brother, the big 195cm Centre-Forward, entwined on that Corso, close & snug. Something the big bro didn’t want to see again. Told his sis. Again, didn’t matter. Done and dusted. Fifty years later here in the flat (inherited from a Partizan officer father), slap bang in the centre of town, going strong as ever. Brilliant match. A joy to enter their domestic circle.
Part two. (The pair of tales received within the single week. A return to the town where one had been greeted in regal form forty-four years previously, by the previous generation.)
A rose-seller now involved. Roses specifically; not various flowers, as was first assumed on a casual survey at the initial meeting.
Two buckets or baskets were mounted somehow on an old bicycle, front & rear. An older man, mid-seventies was a correct guess.
Discoloured flannel shirt, worn jeans. A short, slight figure. Could have been a retired academic in a degraded tertiary sector. (Finance; economics grad. in fact.) Selling flowers, roses, in order to make-do, it looked.
Strange how some people can be prevailed upon to reveal a life history (in small) within two minutes of meeting. Ready with it a long time; telling it over and over across the term, perhaps. Still mystified themselves, possibly, the way it all panned out.
Venerable Chika Dobrosav had been in the line a good many years.
First the name, never encountered previously. Good -sav. Impossible to parse.
… Oh! Whole. Entire. Sav. Never previously in that conjunction.
The whole thing here beginning again with a first, single rose.
The gal who had overcome the lad in this second instance was a closer counterpart to the beau. Petite; Dobro hardly any bigger. Both would maintain the same profile for the next fifty years. Fine, delicate lines. Intelligent aspects.
They had met initially on a student flight in the old Yugoslavia. Dobro had captured a window seat for his camera; Lidia on her first flight denied.
A discerning type who had attended Art School in parallel to the more regular, lucrative arts, to Lid’s eye this lad looked the sort who might give up his seat for a lady. Sure.
Second step was the rose. At an arrangement to meet at a particular place, Dobrosav had prepared the ground. At one point along the route, in a hedge, Dobro had secreted the appropriate flower.
Onto it there. D. bending, plucks and delivers.
If you will allow, my dear lady.
Well, like the first, hardly able to decline. Granted the beau. Blushes raised. Shy averting of eyes. But granted.
Delighted by the success, Dobro with whatever words they were that bubbled out. A fine, thoughtful man; reader of poetry; from a loving family. Despite his struggles with words, as the says, something adequate and fitting can be assumed. Within a short time, even right then by the hedge, or shortly after, as a token of his true feeling, Dobro promises his Lidia he will present her ten thousand of this same flower.
Ah! What? Golly. What a blast. (A canny, sly kinda proposal, in fact.)
Currently forty-eight years and counting of roses every morning: on the pillow, in the bathroom, a kitchen vase, before proceeding out the door to his garden by the Ibar, Dobrosav, to await the dawn.
The reader can do the math. Add at the same time financial returns from the rose-garden. (More of which presently.)
In the report from Lidia herself the toilet-roll holder also received the flower, in addition to the small vase by the hand basin. There may have been a vase in the hall. Another the veranda. The number certainly does add up.
Now, procurement. Well, there were to be three rose-gardens in all over the forty odd years, all stemming of course from the single, venturesome one. The first rose-garden would be uprooted suddenly one afternoon following a municipal order for works. From his seat Dobro had watched the ghastly harrowing. Second removal came after some adjoining vegetable growers complained about whatnot. In the latter case, unlike the first devastation, the plants could be extracted and transported to the third garden for re-planting.
Further details contextualising: in the beginning Dobro had been completely ignorant of anything to do with produce from the soil.
You can’t hold a hoe, much less raise any kind of crop! The father.
Learnings. Failing better. Persistence. Always the rose; nothing without the memorable rose fixed in Dobrosav’s temporal lobe. Faithful lover that he be.
When Lidia was asked about the avalanche of flowers, the possible crushing, she replied, Far better that than the other kind of husband.
Glory. In both cases long-lasting marriages of a form that, hazard the guess, was rather less rare in that particular soil than in some other. Back in that generation, and possibly progressing even into the present too.