Grigor Parlichev
Appearance
Grigor Stavrev Parlichev (Bulgarian: Григор Ставрев Пърличев; Macedonian: Григор Ставрев Прличев; 18 January 1830 – 25 January 1893) was a Bulgarian writer, teacher and translator.
Quotes
[edit]- When […] we had crossed the border between Turkey and Greece, a Greek trader, my fellow traveler, dismounted from his horse and kissed the soil. “We have trodden upon Hellenic ground,” he said.—My God! How red this ground is!—Yes! Because it is saturated with blood! I immediately made some verses, which I also declaimed with a prophetic inspiration. My intoxication intensified when I first saw the famous Parthenon from a distance.
- Quoted in When in the Balkans, Do as the Romans Do—Or Why the Present is the Wrong Key to the Past (2012), p. 115. Originally in Autobiography (1894), p. 361.
- In Greek I sang like a swan, now in Slavic I cannot even sing like a donkey.
- Quoted in The Macedonian Conflict: Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World (1997), p. 62
- We, Bulgarians, have been so abused and despised by other nationalities that it is high time we regained our dignity. When one reads our folk songs, in which every beauty is called a Greek woman, then one will instinctively conclude that wretched self-contempt is a national characteristic of the Bulgarian. It is high time we prove ourselves men among men. Bulgarian industriousness is rarely to be found among other nationalities; it has ennobled us, and it will be our salvation. . . . Having listened to the abuses heaped upon all the Bulgarians, I have lived all my life with the idea that I was a nonentity. The same thought has kept me away from the highest circles of society without which no one has ever become a famous citizen, or a man of letters. It is true that a proud man comes to no good, but it is also true that he who despises himself is a suicide.
- Quoted in Blood Ties: Religion, Violence and the Politics of Nationhood in Ottoman Macedonia, 1878–1908 (2013), p. 73