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<h2> CHAPTER IV FROM MOSCOW TO NIJNI-NOVGOROD </h2>
<p>THE distance between Moscow and Irkutsk, about to be traversed by Michael
Strogoff, was three thousand four hundred miles. Before the telegraph wire
extended from the Ural Mountains to the eastern frontier of Siberia, the
dispatch service was performed by couriers, those who traveled the most
rapidly taking eighteen days to get from Moscow to Irkutsk. But this was
the exception, and the journey through Asiatic Russia usually occupied
from four to five weeks, even though every available means of transport
was placed at the disposal of the Czar’s messengers.</p>
<p>Michael Strogoff was a man who feared neither frost nor snow. He would
have preferred traveling during the severe winter season, in order that he
might perform the whole distance by sleighs. At that period of the year
the difficulties which all other means of locomotion present are greatly
diminished, the wide steppes being leveled by snow, while there are no
rivers to cross, but simply sheets of glass, over which the sleigh glides
rapidly and easily.</p>
<p>Perhaps certain natural phenomena are most to be feared at that time, such
as long-continuing and dense fogs, excessive cold, fearfully heavy
snow-storms, which sometimes envelop whole caravans and cause their
destruction. Hungry wolves also roam over the plain in thousands. But it
would have been better for Michael Strogoff to face these risks; for
during the winter the Tartar invaders would have been stationed in the
towns, any movement of their troops would have been impracticable, and he
could consequently have more easily performed his journey. But it was not
in his power to choose either weather or time. Whatever the circumstances,
he must accept them and set out.</p>
<p>Such were the difficulties which Michael Strogoff boldly confronted and
prepared to encounter.</p>
<p>In the first place, he must not travel as a courier of the Czar usually
would. No one must even suspect what he really was. Spies swarm in a
rebellious country; let him be recognized, and his mission would be in
danger. Also, while supplying him with a large sum of money, which was
sufficient for his journey, and would facilitate it in some measure,
General Kissoff had not given him any document notifying that he was on
the Emperor’s service, which is the Sesame par excellence. He contented
himself with furnishing him with a “podorojna.”</p>
<p>This podorojna was made out in the name of Nicholas Korpanoff, merchant,
living at Irkutsk. It authorized Nicholas Korpanoff to be accompanied by
one or more persons, and, moreover, it was, by special notification, made
available in the event of the Muscovite government forbidding natives of
any other countries to leave Russia.</p>
<p>The podorojna is simply a permission to take post-horses; but Michael
Strogoff was not to use it unless he was sure that by so doing he would
not excite suspicion as to his mission, that is to say, whilst he was on
European territory. The consequence was that in Siberia, whilst traversing
the insurgent provinces, he would have no power over the relays, either in
the choice of horses in preference to others, or in demanding conveyances
for his personal use; neither was Michael Strogoff to forget that he was
no longer a courier, but a plain merchant, Nicholas Korpanoff, traveling
from Moscow to Irkutsk, and, as such exposed to all the impediments of an
ordinary journey.</p>
<p>To pass unknown, more or less rapidly, but to pass somehow, such were the
directions he had received.</p>
<p>Thirty years previously, the escort of a traveler of rank consisted of not
less than two hundred mounted Cossacks, two hundred foot-soldiers,
twenty-five Baskir horsemen, three hundred camels, four hundred horses,
twenty-five wagons, two portable boats, and two pieces of cannon. All this
was requisite for a journey in Siberia.</p>
<p>Michael Strogoff, however, had neither cannon, nor horsemen, nor
foot-soldiers, nor beasts of burden. He would travel in a carriage or on
horseback, when he could; on foot, when he could not.</p>
<p>There would be no difficulty in getting over the first thousand miles, the
distance between Moscow and the Russian frontier. Railroads,
post-carriages, steamboats, relays of horses, were at everyone’s disposal,
and consequently at the disposal of the courier of the Czar.</p>
<p>Accordingly, on the morning of the 16th of July, having doffed his
uniform, with a knapsack on his back, dressed in the simple Russian
costume—tightly-fitting tunic, the traditional belt of the Moujik,
wide trousers, gartered at the knees, and high boots—Michael
Strogoff arrived at the station in time for the first train. He carried no
arms, openly at least, but under his belt was hidden a revolver and in his
pocket, one of those large knives, resembling both a cutlass and a
yataghan, with which a Siberian hunter can so neatly disembowel a bear,
without injuring its precious fur.</p>
<p>A crowd of travelers had collected at the Moscow station. The stations on
the Russian railroads are much used as places for meeting, not only by
those who are about to proceed by the train, but by friends who come to
see them off. The station resembles, from the variety of characters
assembled, a small news exchange.</p>
<p>The train in which Michael took his place was to set him down at
Nijni-Novgorod. There terminated at that time, the iron road which,
uniting Moscow and St. Petersburg, has since been continued to the Russian
frontier. It was a journey of under three hundred miles, and the train
would accomplish it in ten hours. Once arrived at Nijni-Novgorod, Strogoff
would either take the land route or the steamer on the Volga, so as to
reach the Ural Mountains as soon as possible.</p>
<p>Michael Strogoff ensconced himself in his corner, like a worthy citizen
whose affairs go well with him, and who endeavors to kill time by sleep.
Nevertheless, as he was not alone in his compartment, he slept with one
eye open, and listened with both his ears.</p>
<p>In fact, rumor of the rising of the Kirghiz hordes, and of the Tartar
invasion had transpired in some degree. The occupants of the carriage,
whom chance had made his traveling companions, discussed the subject,
though with that caution which has become habitual among Russians, who
know that spies are ever on the watch for any treasonable expressions
which may be uttered.</p>
<p>These travelers, as well as the large number of persons in the train, were
merchants on their way to the celebrated fair of Nijni-Novgorod;—a
very mixed assembly, composed of Jews, Turks, Cossacks, Russians,
Georgians, Kalmucks, and others, but nearly all speaking the national
tongue.</p>
<p>They discussed the pros and cons of the serious events which were taking
place beyond the Ural, and those merchants seemed to fear lest the
government should be led to take certain restrictive measures, especially
in the provinces bordering on the frontier—measures from which trade
would certainly suffer. They apparently thought only of the struggle from
the single point of view of their threatened interests. The presence of a
private soldier, clad in his uniform—and the importance of a uniform
in Russia is great—would have certainly been enough to restrain the
merchants’ tongues. But in the compartment occupied by Michael Strogoff,
there was no one who seemed a military man, and the Czar’s courier was not
the person to betray himself. He listened, then.</p>
<p>“They say that caravan teas are up,” remarked a Persian, known by his cap
of Astrakhan fur, and his ample brown robe, worn threadbare by use.</p>
<p>“Oh, there’s no fear of teas falling,” answered an old Jew of sullen
aspect. “Those in the market at Nijni-Novgorod will be easily cleared off
by the West; but, unfortunately, it won’t be the same with Bokhara
carpets.”</p>
<p>“What! are you expecting goods from Bokhara?” asked the Persian.</p>
<p>“No, but from Samarcand, and that is even more exposed. The idea of
reckoning on the exports of a country in which the khans are in a state of
revolt from Khiva to the Chinese frontier!”</p>
<p>“Well,” replied the Persian, “if the carpets do not arrive, the drafts
will not arrive either, I suppose.”</p>
<p>“And the profits, Father Abraham!” exclaimed the little Jew, “do you
reckon them as nothing?”</p>
<p>“You are right,” said another; “goods from Central Asia run a great risk
in the market, and it will be the same with the tallow and shawls from the
East.”</p>
<p>“Why, look out, little father,” said a Russian traveler, in a bantering
tone; “you’ll grease your shawls terribly if you mix them up with your
tallow.”</p>
<p>“That amuses you,” sharply answered the merchant, who had little relish
for that sort of joke.</p>
<p>“Well, if you tear your hair, or if you throw ashes on your head,” replied
the traveler, “will that change the course of events? No; no more than the
course of the Exchange.”</p>
<p>“One can easily see that you are not a merchant,” observed the little Jew.</p>
<p>“Faith, no, worthy son of Abraham! I sell neither hops, nor eider-down,
nor honey, nor wax, nor hemp-seed, nor salt meat, nor caviare, nor wood,
nor wool, nor ribbons, nor, hemp, nor flax, nor morocco, nor furs.”</p>
<p>“But do you buy them?” asked the Persian, interrupting the traveler’s
list.</p>
<p>“As little as I can, and only for my own private use,” answered the other,
with a wink.</p>
<p>“He’s a wag,” said the Jew to the Persian.</p>
<p>“Or a spy,” replied the other, lowering his voice. “We had better take
care, and not speak more than necessary. The police are not
over-particular in these times, and you never can know with whom you are
traveling.”</p>
<p>In another corner of the compartment they were speaking less of mercantile
affairs, and more of the Tartar invasion and its annoying consequences.</p>
<p>“All the horses in Siberia will be requisitioned,” said a traveler, “and
communication between the different provinces of Central Asia will become
very difficult.”</p>
<p>“Is it true,” asked his neighbor, “that the Kirghiz of the middle horde
have joined the Tartars?”</p>
<p>“So it is said,” answered the traveler, lowering his voice; “but who can
flatter themselves that they know anything really of what is going on in
this country?”</p>
<p>“I have heard speak of a concentration of troops on the frontier. The Don
Cossacks have already gathered along the course of the Volga, and they are
to be opposed to the rebel Kirghiz.”</p>
<p>“If the Kirghiz descend the Irtish, the route to Irkutsk will not be
safe,” observed his neighbor. “Besides, yesterday I wanted to send a
telegram to Krasnoiarsk, and it could not be forwarded. It’s to be feared
that before long the Tartar columns will have isolated Eastern Siberia.”</p>
<p>“In short, little father,” continued the first speaker, “these merchants
have good reason for being uneasy about their trade and transactions.
After requisitioning the horses, they will take the boats, carriages,
every means of transport, until presently no one will be allowed to take
even one step in all the empire.”</p>
<p>“I’m much afraid that the Nijni-Novgorod fair won’t end as brilliantly as
it has begun,” responded the other, shaking his head. “But the safety and
integrity of the Russian territory before everything. Business is
business.”</p>
<p>If in this compartment the subject of conversation varied but little—nor
did it, indeed, in the other carriages of the train—in all it might
have been observed that the talkers used much circumspection. When they
did happen to venture out of the region of facts, they never went so far
as to attempt to divine the intentions of the Muscovite government, or
even to criticize them.</p>
<p>This was especially remarked by a traveler in a carriage at the front part
of the train. This person—evidently a stranger—made good use
of his eyes, and asked numberless questions, to which he received only
evasive answers. Every minute leaning out of the window, which he would
keep down, to the great disgust of his fellow-travelers, he lost nothing
of the views to the right. He inquired the names of the most insignificant
places, their position, what were their commerce, their manufactures, the
number of their inhabitants, the average mortality, etc., and all this he
wrote down in a note-book, already full.</p>
<p>This was the correspondent Alcide Jolivet, and the reason of his putting
so many insignificant questions was, that amongst the many answers he
received, he hoped to find some interesting fact “for his cousin.” But,
naturally enough, he was taken for a spy, and not a word treating of the
events of the day was uttered in his hearing.</p>
<p>Finding, therefore, that he could learn nothing of the Tartar invasion, he
wrote in his book, “Travelers of great discretion. Very close as to
political matters.”</p>
<p>Whilst Alcide Jolivet noted down his impressions thus minutely, his
confrère, in the same train, traveling for the same object, was devoting
himself to the same work of observation in another compartment. Neither of
them had seen each other that day at the Moscow station, and they were
each ignorant that the other had set out to visit the scene of the war.
Harry Blount, speaking little, but listening much, had not inspired his
companions with the suspicions which Alcide Jolivet had aroused. He was
not taken for a spy, and therefore his neighbors, without constraint,
gossiped in his presence, allowing themselves even to go farther than
their natural caution would in most cases have allowed them. The
correspondent of the <i>Daily Telegraph</i> had thus an opportunity of observing
how much recent events preoccupied the merchants of Nijni-Novgorod, and to
what a degree the commerce with Central Asia was threatened in its
transit.</p>
<p>He therefore noted in his book this perfectly correct observation, “My
fellow-travelers extremely anxious. Nothing is talked of but war, and they
speak of it, with a freedom which is astonishing, as having broken out
between the Volga and the Vistula.”</p>
<p>The readers of the <i>Daily Telegraph</i> would not fail to be as well informed
as Alcide Jolivet’s “cousin.” But as Harry Blount, seated at the left of
the train, only saw one part of the country, which was hilly, without
giving himself the trouble of looking at the right side, which was
composed of wide plains, he added, with British assurance, “Country
mountainous between Moscow and Wladimir.”</p>
<p>It was evident that the Russian government purposed taking severe measures
to guard against any serious eventualities even in the interior of the
empire. The rebel lion had not crossed the Siberian frontier, but evil
influences might be feared in the Volga provinces, so near to the country
of the Kirghiz.</p>
<p>The police had as yet found no traces of Ivan Ogareff. It was not known
whether the traitor, calling in the foreigner to avenge his personal
rancor, had rejoined Feofar-Khan, or whether he was endeavoring to foment
a revolt in the government of Nijni-Novgorod, which at this time of year
contained a population of such diverse elements. Perhaps among the
Persians, Armenians, or Kalmucks, who flocked to the great market, he had
agents, instructed to provoke a rising in the interior. All this was
possible, especially in such a country as Russia. In fact, this vast
empire, 4,000,000 square miles in extent, does not possess the
homogeneousness of the states of Western Europe. The Russian territory in
Europe and Asia contains more than seventy millions of inhabitants. In it
thirty different languages are spoken. The Sclavonian race predominates,
no doubt, but there are besides Russians, Poles, Lithuanians, Courlanders.
Add to these, Finns, Laplanders, Esthonians, several other northern tribes
with unpronounceable names, the Permiaks, the Germans, the Greeks, the
Tartars, the Caucasian tribes, the Mongol, Kalmuck, Samoid, Kamtschatkan,
and Aleutian hordes, and one may understand that the unity of so vast a
state must be difficult to maintain, and that it could only be the work of
time, aided by the wisdom of many successive rulers.</p>
<p>Be that as it may, Ivan Ogareff had hitherto managed to escape all search,
and very probably he might have rejoined the Tartar army. But at every
station where the train stopped, inspectors came forward who scrutinized
the travelers and subjected them all to a minute examination, as by order
of the superintendent of police, these officials were seeking Ivan
Ogareff. The government, in fact, believed it to be certain that the
traitor had not yet been able to quit European Russia. If there appeared
cause to suspect any traveler, he was carried off to explain himself at
the police station, and in the meantime the train went on its way, no
person troubling himself about the unfortunate one left behind.</p>
<p>With the Russian police, which is very arbitrary, it is absolutely useless
to argue. Military rank is conferred on its employees, and they act in
military fashion. How can anyone, moreover, help obeying, unhesitatingly,
orders which emanate from a monarch who has the right to employ this
formula at the head of his ukase: “We, by the grace of God, Emperor and
Autocrat of all the Russias of Moscow, Kiev, Wladimir, and Novgorod, Czar
of Kasan and Astrakhan, Czar of Poland, Czar of Siberia, Czar of the
Tauric Chersonese, Seignior of Pskov, Prince of Smolensk, Lithuania,
Volkynia, Podolia, and Finland, Prince of Esthonia, Livonia, Courland, and
of Semigallia, of Bialystok, Karelia, Sougria, Perm, Viatka, Bulgaria, and
many other countries; Lord and Sovereign Prince of the territory of
Nijni-Novgorod, Tchemigoff, Riazan, Polotsk, Rostov, Jaroslavl,
Bielozersk, Oudoria, Obdoria, Kondinia, Vitepsk, and of Mstislaf, Governor
of the Hyperborean Regions, Lord of the countries of Iveria, Kartalinia,
Grouzinia, Kabardinia, and Armenia, Hereditary Lord and Suzerain of the
Scherkess princes, of those of the mountains, and of others; heir of
Norway, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein, Stormarn, Dittmarsen, and Oldenburg.”
A powerful lord, in truth, is he whose arms are an eagle with two heads,
holding a scepter and a globe, surrounded by the escutcheons of Novgorod,
Wladimir, Kiev, Kasan, Astrakhan, and of Siberia, and environed by the
collar of the order of St. Andrew, surmounted by a royal crown!</p>
<p>As to Michael Strogoff, his papers were in order, and he was,
consequently, free from all police supervision.</p>
<p>At the station of Wladimir the train stopped for several minutes, which
appeared sufficient to enable the correspondent of the <i>Daily Telegraph</i> to
take a twofold view, physical and moral, and to form a complete estimate
of this ancient capital of Russia.</p>
<p>At the Wladimir station fresh travelers joined the train. Among others, a
young girl entered the compartment occupied by Michael Strogoff. A vacant
place was found opposite the courier. The young girl took it, after
placing by her side a modest traveling-bag of red leather, which seemed to
constitute all her luggage. Then seating herself with downcast eyes, not
even glancing at the fellow-travelers whom chance had given her, she
prepared for a journey which was still to last several hours.</p>
<p>Michael Strogoff could not help looking attentively at his newly-arrived
fellow-traveler. As she was so placed as to travel with her back to the
engine, he even offered her his seat, which he might prefer to her own,
but she thanked him with a slight bend of her graceful neck.</p>
<p>The young girl appeared to be about sixteen or seventeen years of age. Her
head, truly charming, was of the purest Sclavonic type—slightly
severe, and likely in a few summers to unfold into beauty rather than mere
prettiness. From beneath a sort of kerchief which she wore on her head
escaped in profusion light golden hair. Her eyes were brown, soft, and
expressive of much sweetness of temper. The nose was straight, and
attached to her pale and somewhat thin cheeks by delicately mobile
nostrils. The lips were finely cut, but it seemed as if they had long
since forgotten how to smile.</p>
<p>The young traveler was tall and upright, as far as could be judged of her
figure from the very simple and ample pelisse that covered her. Although
she was still a very young girl in the literal sense of the term, the
development of her high forehead and clearly-cut features gave the idea
that she was the possessor of great moral energy—a point which did
not escape Michael Strogoff. Evidently this young girl had already
suffered in the past, and the future doubtless did not present itself to
her in glowing colors; but she had surely known how to struggle still with
the trials of life. Her energy was evidently both prompt and persistent,
and her calmness unalterable, even under circumstances in which a man
would be likely to give way or lose his self-command.</p>
<p>Such was the impression which she produced at first sight. Michael
Strogoff, being himself of an energetic temperament, was naturally struck
by the character of her physiognomy, and, while taking care not to cause
her annoyance by a too persistent gaze, he observed his neighbor with no
small interest. The costume of the young traveler was both extremely
simple and appropriate. She was not rich—that could be easily seen;
but not the slightest mark of negligence was to be discerned in her dress.
All her luggage was contained in the leather bag which, for want of room,
she held on her lap.</p>
<p>She wore a long, dark pelisse, gracefully adjusted at the neck by a blue
tie. Under this pelisse, a short skirt, also dark, fell over a robe which
reached the ankles. Half-boots of leather, thickly soled, as if chosen in
anticipation of a long journey, covered her small feet.</p>
<p>Michael Strogoff fancied that he recognized, by certain details, the
fashion of the costume of Livonia, and thought his neighbor a native of
the Baltic provinces.</p>
<p>But whither was this young girl going, alone, at an age when the fostering
care of a father, or the protection of a brother, is considered a matter
of necessity? Had she now come, after an already long journey, from the
provinces of Western Russia? Was she merely going to Nijni-Novgorod, or
was the end of her travels beyond the eastern frontiers of the empire?
Would some relation, some friend, await her arrival by the train? Or was
it not more probable, on the contrary, that she would find herself as much
isolated in the town as she was in this compartment? It was probable.</p>
<p>In fact, the effect of habits contracted in solitude was clearly
manifested in the bearing of the young girl. The manner in which she
entered the carriage and prepared herself for the journey, the slight
disturbance she caused among those around her, the care she took not to
incommode or give trouble to anyone, all showed that she was accustomed to
be alone, and to depend on herself only.</p>
<p>Michael Strogoff observed her with interest, but, himself reserved, he
sought no opportunity of accosting her. Once only, when her neighbor—the
merchant who had jumbled together so imprudently in his remarks tallow and
shawls—being asleep, and threatening her with his great head, which
was swaying from one shoulder to the other, Michael Strogoff awoke him
somewhat roughly, and made him understand that he must hold himself
upright.</p>
<p>The merchant, rude enough by nature, grumbled some words against “people
who interfere with what does not concern them,” but Michael Strogoff cast
on him a glance so stern that the sleeper leant on the opposite side, and
relieved the young traveler from his unpleasant vicinity.</p>
<p>The latter looked at the young man for an instant, and mute and modest
thanks were in that look.</p>
<p>But a circumstance occurred which gave Strogoff a just idea of the
character of the maiden. Twelve versts before arriving at Nijni-Novgorod,
at a sharp curve of the iron way, the train experienced a very violent
shock. Then, for a minute, it ran onto the slope of an embankment.</p>
<p>Travelers more or less shaken about, cries, confusion, general disorder in
the carriages—such was the effect at first produced. It was to be
feared that some serious accident had happened. Consequently, even before
the train had stopped, the doors were opened, and the panic-stricken
passengers thought only of getting out of the carriages.</p>
<p>Michael Strogoff thought instantly of the young girl; but, while the
passengers in her compartment were precipitating themselves outside,
screaming and struggling, she had remained quietly in her place, her face
scarcely changed by a slight pallor.</p>
<p>She waited—Michael Strogoff waited also.</p>
<p>Both remained quiet.</p>
<p>“A determined nature!” thought Michael Strogoff.</p>
<p>However, all danger had quickly disappeared. A breakage of the coupling of
the luggage-van had first caused the shock to, and then the stoppage of,
the train, which in another instant would have been thrown from the top of
the embankment into a bog. There was an hour’s delay. At last, the road
being cleared, the train proceeded, and at half-past eight in the evening
arrived at the station of Nijni-Novgorod.</p>
<p>Before anyone could get out of the carriages, the inspectors of police
presented themselves at the doors and examined the passengers.</p>
<p>Michael Strogoff showed his podorojna, made out in the name of Nicholas
Korpanoff. He had consequently no difficulty. As to the other travelers in
the compartment, all bound for Nijni-Novgorod, their appearance, happily
for them, was in nowise suspicious.</p>
<p>The young girl in her turn, exhibited, not a passport, since passports are
no longer required in Russia, but a permit indorsed with a private seal,
and which seemed to be of a special character. The inspector read the
permit with attention. Then, having attentively examined the person whose
description it contained:</p>
<p>“You are from Riga?” he said.</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied the young girl.</p>
<p>“You are going to Irkutsk?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“By what route?”</p>
<p>“By Perm.”</p>
<p>“Good!” replied the inspector. “Take care to have your permit viséd, at
the police station of Nijni-Novgorod.”</p>
<p>The young girl bent her head in token of assent.</p>
<p>Hearing these questions and replies, Michael Strogoff experienced a
mingled sentiment both of surprise and pity. What! this young girl, alone,
journeying to that far-off Siberia, and at a time when, to its ordinary
dangers, were added all the perils of an invaded country and one in a
state of insurrection! How would she reach it? What would become of her?</p>
<p>The inspection ended, the doors of the carriages were then opened, but,
before Michael Strogoff could move towards her, the young Livonian, who
had been the first to descend, had disappeared in the crowd which thronged
the platforms of the railway station.</p>
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