I read
this for the European
Reading Challenge 2026.
Through the Lands of the Serb - Mary Edith Durham
This 1904 travel narrative is a book that invites
comparison with the old, stern tradition in
which the road is a trial that tests patience
and endurance. Think Alexander William Kinglake’s Eothen,
or Impressions of Travel brought Home from the East. Durham’s
narrative possesses the same austere courage: she goes not to be pleased, but
to see; not to collect pretty impressions to describe prettily, but to learn
the stubborn contours of reality.
Durham travels among peoples whom Europe had reduced to
abstractions - “Balkan,” “bandits,” “tribal,” “victims of the Turk,” “turbulent” -
and she restores to them the dignity of complexity. Her Serb lands are not
arranged for the visitor’s comfort. The mountains oppose her, the tracks
dissolve into mud, and hospitality is generous yet nervous the spy-happy cops
will notice aid to the stranger. Violence lies close beneath the surface of
custom. In Čačak, a city in central Serbia, she is invited to the execution of
four killers:
Taken
aback, I listened, speechless, while the plan was unfolded. I was to rise very
early and to drive for three hours up the mountains with the condemned men and
the file of soldiers who were to carry out the sentence. The words called up
before me a picture of the grisly little procession crawling uphill in the grey
of the dawning. Adding up the pros and cons rapidly, I said to myself that it
was my duty to see everything, but searched my brains for a decent way out of
it. Then I recollected that if I went, for the next fifty years it would be
said that all Englishwomen were in the habit of seeing men shot before
breakfast. Gripping thankfully at this idea, I said I had rather not accept the
invitation; I had not come so far to see Servians killed. My reply caused
disappointment ….
Durham records these facts without sentimentality, and
this sensible restraint gives the book its authority. One senses, as in Eothen,
that the writer accepts discomfort of varying kinds and degrees as part of the travel experience.
The strength of the book lies in Durham’s eye for social
detail. She notes dress, gesture, and ritual with the exactness of an
ethnographer. A village council, a blood-feud recalled at supper, a roadside
inn filled with suspicion - such scenes are sketched briskly, yet they carry
the accumulated weight of credibility.
Kinglake often shields himself with irony and it took
being in the midst of plague to shake him out of it. Durham is not ironic. Durham allows
earnestness to appear. She feels no sense of disenchantment with European
civilization and progress.
Kragujevatz
otherwise is brand-new, and here as elsewhere it is easy to see that the
Servians have done more in fifty years for the improvement of the place and the
conditions of life than the Turk did in four centuries. Much yet remains to be
done, nevertheless a journey from Servia into Turkey is like stepping off the
pavement into the sewer.
Her sympathy for the Serbs, especially Serbian women, is
candid and at times severe in its judgments of Western ignorance and
indifference. This is travel narrative sharpened by conscience. She does not
merely observe injustice; she names it, plainly and without rhetorical
flourish.
At times, the prose hardens into documentary, and readers
seeking late Victorian ornament may find it spare and plodding. But this
bareness is integral to the book’s ethic. Durham writes as one who believes
that the traveler’s duty is neither to flatter the visited nor to entertain the
reader, but to instruct with the truth expressed faithfully.
She is deeply invested in questions of imperial pressure,
ethnic identity, and violence. Her advocacy for Balkan peoples encourages a
restrained, sincere tone. One place where dry English humor appears most
clearly is in Durham’s self‑presentation. She acknowledges her own cultural
naïveté. She occasionally casts herself as faintly ridiculous - out of place,
gamely handling endless ritual politeness, dealing with the chaos of travel
arrangements in three or four languages, all broken. This self‑deprecation is
modest but important; it softens what might otherwise seem like a purely anthropological
voice.
Through the Lands of the Serb remains a stimulating
work. In an Edwardian age inclined toward comfort, it stands, like Kinglake’s
best pages and in her memorable High Albania, as a reminder that travel,
pursued by dogged and unafraid people, is an encounter with difficulty, and
that difficulty forces us to face the world directly, not through filters of a
common language or routines where everybody knows their lines.