THROUGH EUROPE. THE TRANS-SIBERIAN RAILWAY
The success of my recent land expedition
from Paris to New York is largely due to the fact
that I had previously essayed the feat in 1896 and
failed, for the experience gained on that journey was
well worth the price I paid for it. On that occasion
I attempted the voyage in an opposite direction viz.,
from America to France, but only half the distance
was covered. Alaska was then almost unexplored
and the now populous Klondike region only sparsely
peopled by poverty-stricken and unfriendly Indians.
After many dangers and difficulties, Alaska was crossed
in safety, and we managed to reach the Siberian shores
of Bering Straits only to meet with dire disaster
at the hands of the natives of that coast. For
no sooner had the American revenue cutter which landed
us steamed away than our stores were seized by the
villainous chief of the village (one Koari), who informed
us that we were virtually his prisoners, and that
the dog-sleds which, during the presence of the Government
vessel, he had glibly promised to furnish, existed
only in this old rascal’s fertile imagination.
The situation was, to say the least, unpleasant, for
the summer was far advanced and the ice already gathering
in Bering Straits. Most of the whalers had left
the Arctic for the southward, and our rescue seemed
almost impossible until the following year. When
a month here had passed away, harsh treatment and
disgusting food had reduced us to a condition of hopeless
despair. I was attacked by scurvy and a painful
skin disease, while Harding, my companion, contracted
a complaint peculiar to the Tchuktchis, which has
to this day baffled the wisest London and Paris physicians.
Fortunately we possessed a small silk Union Jack,
which was nailed to an old whale rib on the beach
(for there was no wood), much to the amusement of the
natives. But the laugh was on our side when, the
very next morning, a sail appeared on the horizon.
Nearer and nearer came the vessel, scudding close-reefed
before a gale which had raised a mountainous sea.
Would they see our signal? Would the skipper dare
to lay-to in such tempestuous weather, hemmed in as
he was by the treacherous ice? Had we known,
however, at the time that the staunch little Belvedere
was commanded by the late Capt. Joseph Whiteside,
of New Bedford, we should have been spared many moments,
which seemed hours, of intense anxiety. Without
a thought of his own safety, or a valuable cargo of
whales representing many thousands of pounds, this
gallant sailor stood boldly in shore, launched a boat,
which, after a scuffle with the natives and a scramble
over floating ice, we managed to reach, and hauled
us aboard the little whaler, more dead than alive.
A month later we were in San Francisco, far from the
fair French city we had hoped to reach, but sincerely
grateful for our preservation. For twenty-four
hours after our rescue no ship could have neared that
ice-bound coast, and we could scarcely have survived,
amidst such surroundings, until the following spring.
A glance at a map will show the route
which I had intended to pursue in 1896, although,
as this land journey has never before been accomplished
(or even attempted), I was unable to benefit by the
experience of previous explorers. From New York
we travelled to Vancouver, thence across the now famous
Chilkoot Pass to the Great Lakes and down the Yukon
River to the sea, crossing Bering Straits in an American
revenue cutter to the Siberian settlement of melancholy
memory. From here I hoped to reach the nearest
Russian outpost, Anadyrsk, by dog-sled, proceeding
thence along the western shores of the Okhotsk Sea
to Okhotsk and Yakutsk. The latter is within
a couple of thousand miles of civilisation, a comparatively
easy stage in this land of stupendous distances.
Had I been able on this occasion to reach Anadyrsk,
I could, all being well, have pushed on to Yakutsk,
for Cossacks carry a mail, once a year, between the
two places. But the connecting link between that
miserable Tchuktchi village and Anadyrsk was missing,
and so we had to submit to the will of fate.
Follow now on a map my itinerary upon
the last occasion, starting from Paris to Moscow,
and continuing from Moscow to Irkutsk by the Trans-Siberian
Railway. Here we strike in a north-easterly direction
to Yakutsk by means of horse-sleighs. Reindeer-sleighs
are procured at Yakutsk, and we then steer a north-westerly
course to Verkhoyansk. From Verkhoyansk we again
proceed (still with reindeer) in a north-easterly
direction to the tiny political settlement of Sredni-Kolymsk,
where we discard our deer (for there is no more moss)
and take to dog-sleds. A journey of nearly two
months, travelling almost due east, brings us to East
Cape Bering Straits, the north-easternmost point of
Asia, and practically half way from Paris to our destination.
From here the journey is fairly easy,
for the beaten tracks of Alaska now entail no great
hardships. Remote Eskimo settlements like that
at Cape Prince of Wales are naturally as primitive
as those on the Siberian side, but once Nome City
is reached, the traveller may proceed (in summer)
to New York solely by the aid of steam.
I shall not weary the reader with
details of my preparations. Suffice it to say
that, although the minutest care and attention were
lavished on the organisation of our food-supply, lack
of transport in the Far North compelled me to abandon
most of our provisions and trust to luck for our larder,
which was therefore frequently very meagrely stocked.
Indeed, more than once we were within measurable distance
of starvation, but this was the more unavoidable in
so far as, even at Moscow, I was compelled to abandon
several cases of provisions on account of a telegram
received from the Governor-General of Siberia.
The message informed me that reindeer were scarce,
dogs yet more so, and that, unless the expedition
travelled very light, it could not possibly
hope to reach even the shores of the Arctic Ocean,
to say nothing of Bering Straits. Nevertheless,
even at the outset of the journey I was blamed, and
that by totally inexperienced persons, for abandoning
stores so early in the day; a certain British merchant
in Moscow expressing surprise that I should have “made
such an egregious error” as to leave any provisions
behind. I fancy most explorers have met this type
of individual the self-complacent Briton,
who, being located for business or other purposes
in a foreign or colonial city, never leaves it, and
yet poses as an authority on the entire country, however
vast, in which he temporarily resides. I can
recall one of these immovable fixtures in India, who
had never stirred from Bombay save in a P. and O. liner,
but who was good enough to advise me how to travel
through Central Baluchistan, a country which I had
recently explored with some success! The Moscow
wiseacre was perhaps unaware that during hard seasons
in Arctic Siberia the outfit of an expedition must
be strictly limited to the carrying capacity of dogs
and reindeer. However, this gentleman’s
ignorance was perhaps excusable, seeing that his experience
of Russian travel had been solely gleaned in a railway
car between Moscow and the German frontier. I
am told that the same individual severely criticised
me for not travelling through Siberia in summer, thereby
avoiding the severe hardships arising from intense
cold. He was, of course, unaware that during
the open season the entire tract of country north-east
of Yakutsk is practically impassable owing to thousands
of square miles of swamp and hundreds of shallow lakes
which can only be crossed in a frozen condition on
a dog-sled. Even the natives of these regions
never attempt to travel between the months of May
and September.
Paris is my home, and I am not ashamed
to own that, like most Parisians, I suffer, when abroad,
from a nostalgia of the Boulevards that a traveller
were perhaps better without. It was therefore
as well that our departure for New York took place
on a dreary December day, when the beautiful city
lay listless and despondent, swept by a wintry gale
and lashed by gusts of driving sleet. The sky
was sunless, the deserted thoroughfares rivers of
mud mournfully reflecting bars of electric light from
either side of the street. As my cab splashed
wearily up the Rue Lafayette I thought that I had
never seen such a picture of desolation. And
yet it were better, perhaps, to remember Paris thus,
than to yearn through the long Arctic night for the
pleasant hours I had learned to love so well here
in leafy June. Bright days of sunshine and pleasure
in and around the “Ville Lumiere!” cool,
starlit nights at Armenonville and Saint Cloud!
Should I ever enjoy them again?
“The De Windt Expedition”
left Paris on December 19, 1901. Preliminary
notices of the journey in the French Press had attracted
considerable notice in Paris, and a small crowd of
journalists and others had assembled at the Gare
du Nord to wish us God-speed. We were
three in number myself, the Vicomte de
Clinchamp (a young Frenchman who acted as photographer),
and George Harding, my faithful companion on many
previous expeditions. The “Nord Express”
was on the point of departure, but a stirrup-cup was
insisted upon by some of De Clinchamp’s enthusiastic
compatriots, and an adjournment was made to the Buffet,
where good wishes were expressed for our safety and
success. After a hearty farewell the train steamed
out of the station amidst ringing cheers, which plainly
told me that Paris as well as London contained true
friends who would pray for our welfare in the frozen
North and welcome our safe return to “La Belle
France.”
Moscow was reached three days later,
and here commenced the first of a series of minor
but harassing delays which relentlessly pursued me
throughout the Asiatic portion of the journey.
While alighting from the train I was suddenly seized
with such severe internal pains, accompanied by faintness
and nausea, that on arrival at the Slaviansky Bazar
(the best Hotel, by the way, in the place), I was
carried to bed. The attack was inexplicable.
Harding, ever a pessimist, suggested appendicitis,
and a physician was hastily summoned. The medicine-man
gravely shook his head: “You are very ill,”
he said, and I did not dispute the fact. “Can
it be appendicitis?” I asked anxiously.
“Appendicitis,” replied the Doctor; “what
is that? I never heard of the disease!”
Morning brought me some relief, and
with a not unnatural distrust of Russian medical methods,
I resolved to return at once to Berlin and consult
Professor Bergmann. To abandon the journey was
now out of the question, but our medicine-chest was
up-to-date and I could at any rate ask the famous
surgeon how to treat the dread disease should it declare
itself in the wilds of Siberia. The next morning
saw me back in Berlin, and by midday my mind was at
rest. I was suffering from a simple rupture of
long standing, but hitherto quiescent, which only required
rest and proper treatment for at least a fortnight.
“Then it must be in the train,” I said,
explaining the situation and the priceless value of
time. So, after some discussion, I departed with
the Professor’s good wishes, which, however,
were conveyed with an ominous shake of the head.
Two days later I arrived in Moscow,
only to be confronted by another difficulty:
our rifles, revolvers and ammunition had been seized
at the Russian frontier, and at least a fortnight
must elapse before we could obtain them. Moscow
fortunately boasts of an excellent gun-maker, and I
was able to replace our armoury with English weapons,
though, of course, at a ruinous expense. But
time was too precious to waste. We had now but
a little over four months in which to reach Bering
Straits, for by the middle of May the bays and estuaries
of the Arctic begin to break up, and open water might
mean imprisonment (and worse) on these desolate shores
throughout the entire summer. So I purchased revolvers,
two rifles and a fowling-piece at about five times
their usual cost, and hoped that our troubles were
over, at least for the present. I should add
that the arms had left London six weeks previously,
and that I was furnished with a special permit to
introduce them into the country. But Russian
methods are peculiar, and fortunately unique, I was
unaware before our departure of the fact that if a
gun is consigned direct from its English maker to
a gunsmith in Russia it goes through without any trouble
whatsoever. Otherwise, it may take six months
or more to reach its destination.
The New Year was passed in Moscow,
and a gloomy one it was. From an historical and
picturesque point of view the city is intensely interesting,
but otherwise it is a dull, dreary place. Russian
cities, not excepting Petersburg, generally are, although
the English novelist generally depicts them as oases
of luxurious splendour, where love and Nihilism meet
one at every turn, and where palaces, diamonds and
silver sleigh-bells play an important part, to say
nothing of that journalistic trump card, the Secret
Police! I wish one of these imaginative scribes
could spend a winter evening (as I have so often done)
in a stuffy hotel reading-room, with a Times
five days old, wondering whether the Russians will
ever provide a theatre sufficiently attractive to tempt
a stranger out of doors after nightfall. In summer
it is less dismal; there are gardens and restaurants,
dancing gipsies and Hungarian Tziganes, but even
then the entertainment is generally so poor, and the
surroundings so tawdry, that one is glad to leave them
at an early hour and go sadly to bed.
The distance from Moscow to Irkutsk
is a little under 4000 English miles, the first-class
fare a little over a hundred roubles (or about L12),
which, considering the journey occupies nine days or
more, is reasonable enough. There are, or were,
two trains a week, the “State”
and Wagonlits expresses, which run alternately.
The former is a Government train, inferior in every
respect to the latter, which is quite as luxurious
in its service and appointments as the trains run by
the same company in Europe.
At 10 P.M., on January 4, we left
Moscow, in a blinding snowstorm, a mild foretaste
of the Arctic blizzards to come, which would be experienced
without the advantage of a warm and well-lit compartment
to view them from. For this train was truly an
ambulant palace of luxury. An excellent restaurant,
a library, pianos, baths, and last, but not least,
a spacious and well-furnished compartment with every
comfort, electric and otherwise (and without fellow
travellers), rendered this first “étape”
of our great land journey one to recall in after days
with a longing regret. But we had nearly a fortnight
of pleasant travel before us and resolved to make
the most of it. Fortunately the train was not
crowded. Some cavalry officers bound for Manchuria,
three or four Siberian merchants and their families,
and a few Tartars of the better class. The officers
were capital fellows, full of life and gaiety (Russian
officers generally are), the merchants and their women-folk
sociable and musically inclined. Nearly every
one spoke French, and the time passed pleasantly enough,
for although the days were terribly monotonous, evenings
enlivened by music and cards, followed by cheery little
suppers towards the small hours, almost atoned for
their hours of boredom.
Nevertheless, I cannot recommend this
railway journey, even as far as Irkutsk, to those
on pleasure bent, for the Trans-Siberian is no
tourist line, notwithstanding the alluring advertisements
which periodically appear during the holiday season.
Climatically the journey is a delightful one in winter
time, for Siberia is then at its best not
the Siberia of the English dramatist: howling
blizzards, chained convicts, wolves and the knout,
but a smiling land of promise and plenty even under
its limitless mantle of snow. The landscape is
dreary, of course, but most days you have the blue
cloudless sky and dazzling sunshine, so often sought
in vain on the Riviera. At mid-day your sunlit
compartment is often too warm to be pleasant, when
outside it is 10 deg. below zero. But the
air is too dry and bracing for discomfort, although
the pleasant breeze we are enjoying here will presently
be torturing unhappy mortals in London in the shape
of a boisterous and biting east wind. On the
other hand, the monotony after a time becomes almost
unbearable. All day long the eye rests vacantly
upon a dreary white plain, alternating with green
belts of woodland, while occasionally the train plunges
into dense dark pine forest only to emerge again upon
the same eternal “plateau” of silence
and snow. Now and again we pass a village, a brown
blur on the limitless white, rarely a town, a few
wooden houses clustering around a green dome and gilt
crosses, but it is all very mournful and depressing,
especially to one fresh from Europe. This train
has one advantage, there is no rattle or roar about
it, as it steals like a silent ghost across the desolate
steppes. As a cure for insomnia it would be invaluable,
and we therefore sleep a good deal, but most of the
day is passed in the restaurant. Here the military
element is generally engrossed in an interminable
game of Vint (during the process of which
a Jew civilian is mercilessly rooked), but our piano
is a godsend and most Russian women are born musicians.
So after dejeuner we join the fair sex, who
beguile the hours with Glinka and Tchaikovsky until
they can play and sing no more. By the way, no
one ever knows the time of day and no one particularly
wants to. Petersburg time is kept throughout
the journey and the result is obvious. We occasionally
find ourselves lunching at breakfast time and dining
when we should have supped, but who cares? although
in any other clime bottled beer at 8 A.M. might have
unpleasant results.
The Ural Mountains (which are merely
downs) are crossed. Here the stations are built
with some attempt at coquetry, for the district teems
with mineral wealth, and in summer is much frequented
by fashionable pleasure-seekers and invalids, for
there are baths and waters in the neighbourhood.
One station reminds me of Homburg or Wiesbaden with
its gay restaurant, flower-stall, and a little shop
for the sale of trinkets in silver and malachite,
and the precious stones found in this region Alexandrites,
garnets and amethysts. But beyond the Urals we
are once more lost in the desolate plains across which
the train crawls softly and silently at the rate of
about ten miles an hour. I know of only one slower
railway in the world, that from Jaffa to Jerusalem,
where I have seen children leap on and off the car-steps
of the train while in motion, and the driver alight,
without actually stopping his engine, to gather wildflowers!
We cross the great Obi and Yenisei rivers over magnificent
bridges of iron and Finnish granite, which cost millions
of roubles to construct. Krasnoyarsk is passed
by night, but its glittering array of electric lights
suggests a city many times the size of the tiny town
I passed through in a tarantass while travelling
in 1887 from Pekin to Paris. So the days crawl
wearily away. Passengers come and passengers
go, but this train, like the brook, goes on for ever.
Although the travelling was luxurious I can honestly
say that this was the most wearisome portion of the
entire journey. But all things must have an end,
even on the Trans-Siberian Railway, and on the
tenth day out from Moscow we reach (unconsciously)
our destination Irkutsk. For it is
two o’clock in the morning and we are aroused
from pleasant dreams in a warm and cosy bed to embark
upon a drive of about three miles through wind and
snow in an open droshky. But we are now
in Eastern Siberia, and comfort will soon be a thing
of the past.