Listen free for 30 days
Listen with offer
-
Pilgrim of Fate
- The Holy Trail of Brother Samuilo
- Narrated by: Brian Wiggins
- Length: 13 hrs and 14 mins
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
£0.00 for first 30 days
Buy Now for £18.99
No valid payment method on file.
We are sorry. We are not allowed to sell this product with the selected payment method
Summary
They named me Dino! I grew up among the loving idiots of my hometown as the Mute. Their only drawback was to give more than what they had. At the age of 14, I opened my mouth and released the avalanche of sounds that echoed across the Balkans. After it, I couldn’t stop talking.
Our national drink, the potent rectified spirits distilled from the purple plums, served for medicinal purposes to clear the cluttered minds of our townsfolk idiots. Never in the history of the kingdom of Biares, my home country did any of upheavals occurred within the Balkans. Only when the great powers meddled in our affairs, the people of Biares would sober up and fight. I never intended to be a musician, nor a monk, and not in the least to be a philosopher or a revolutionary, but my fate was merciless. In my turbulent life, I searched for answers from God, and as a good Christian, I figured He would listen to my prayers. Instead, He ignored me. In our Orthodox religion, we leave a little room for arguments. Of course, we would not argue with God, but we had open hands to blame the devil for everything. It never helped.
My time for maturity arrived before I could compete with provocations of natural laws. I became a man at 14 and wondered what does manhood mean to a boy who walked through childhood speechless. But my uncle Jonathan, who became a Buddhist, often said that muteness is a gift from God. The time on Mount Athos, as a preordained monk, taught me how to serve God without needs and wants. Then, by the strange turn in the course of my destiny, I became a soldier and entered the Balkan Wars unprepared for the responsibility given me as my first assignment. The care and safety of the female French War Correspondent and her companion fell into the realm of my squadron. To guard a female correspondent in the time of war would require a good deal of efforts, but a temperamental young cosset with a fire-spitting mouth in her French represented a greater challenge for the newly appointed captain of the guard, me, Dino Babic. If God works in mysterious ways, I would brave to believe that he planned a few steps ahead. For he sent beautiful Galia, the French interpreter, to accompany our escort in a futile endeavor to find the war front, long enough for me to fall in love and marry her.
Falling in love with Galia was the greatest revelation, but parting from her when the military duty calls broke my heart to pieces and sent me on a journey to the second phase of my life.