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The black lamb and the grey falcon
The black lamb and the grey falcon









the black lamb and the grey falcon the black lamb and the grey falcon

West and Henry later discover that the Germans themselves only have second-class tickets. Discovering that another passenger has a second-class ticket, the Germans force him to leave the first-class carriage. On the train from Austria to Zagreb, Croatia, West and her husband, Henry, encounter some “disagreeable” Germans. It occurred to her then that World War I had begun in the Balkans, and that her ignorance of the region, therefore, might prove to be ignorance of her own destiny. She remembers learning in 1934 that King Alexander of Yugoslavia had been assassinated and realizing that she knew nothing about the region. In the prologue, West explains her interest in Yugoslavia while setting out one of its central themes: the interconnectedness of lives and events, and of place and history. It is widely regarded as one of the most important pieces of travel writing in the English language. Over more than a thousand pages, West recounts six weeks spent in the former Yugoslavia in 1937, interweaving her travel narrative with a thorough history and ethnography of the region, in an attempt to “show the past side by side with the present it created.” Published shortly after the Nazi invasion of Yugoslavia, Black Lamb and Grey Falcon is a portrait of European civilization on the brink of war. Black Lamb and Grey Falcon: A Journey Through Yugoslavia is a 1941 travel memoir by British author Rebecca West.











The black lamb and the grey falcon