THE PARIS OF SIBERIA
We arrived in Irkutsk on the eve of
the Russian New Year, when business throughout the
Empire comes to a standstill, and revelry amongst all
classes reigns supreme. It was, therefore, useless
to think of resuming our journey for at least a week,
for sleighs must be procured, to say nothing of that
important document, a special letter of recommendation,
which I was to receive from the Governor-General of
Siberia. But a resplendent aide-de-camp
called at the hotel and regretfully informed me that
State and social functions would keep his Excellency
fully occupied for several days. It was hopeless,
he added, to think of getting sleighs built while
vodka was running like water amongst the people.
So there was nothing for it but to await the end of
the festival with patience, without which commodity
no traveller should ever dream of visiting Asiatic
Russia. He is otherwise apt to become a raving
lunatic.
Irkutsk has several so-called hotels,
the only one in any way habitable being the “Hotel
Metropole,” a name which has become suggestive
of gold-laced porters and gilded halls. It was,
therefore, rather a shock to enter a noisome den,
suggestive of a Whitechapel slum, although its prices
equalled those of the Carlton in Pall Mall. The
house was new but jerry-built, reeked of drains, and
swarmed with vermin. Having kept us shivering
for half an hour in the cold, a sleepy, shock-headed
lad with guttering candle appeared and led the way
to a dark and ill-smelling sleeping-apartment.
The latter contained an iron bedstead (an unknown
luxury here a decade ago), but relays of guests had
evidently used the crumpled sheets and grimy pillows.
Bathroom and washstand were supplied by a rusty brass
tap, placed, pro bono publico, in the corridor.
Our meals in the restaurant were inferior to those
of a fifth-rate gargotte. And this was
the best hotel in the “Paris of Siberia,”
as enthusiastic Siberians have christened their capital.
Irkutsk now has a population of over
80,000. It stands on a peninsular formed by the
confluence of two rivers, the clear and swiftly-flowing
Angara (which rises in Lake Baikal to join the river
Yenisei just below Yeniseisk), and the small and unimportant
Irkut river. It is an unfinished, slipshod city,
a strange mixture of squalor and grandeur, with tortuous,
ill-paved streets, where the wayfarer looks instinctively
for the “No-thoroughfare” board. There
is one long straggling main street with fairly good
shops and buildings, but beyond this Irkutsk remains
much the same dull, dreary-looking place that I remember
in the early nineties, before the railway had aroused
the town from its slumber of centuries. Even
now, the place is absolutely primitive and uncivilised,
from an European point of view, and the yellow Chinese
and beady-eyed Tartars who throng the business quarters
are quite in keeping with the Oriental filth around,
unredeemed by the usual Eastern colour and romance.
On fine mornings the Market Place presents a curious
and interesting appearance, for here you may see the
Celestial in flowery silk elbowing the fur-clad Yakute
and Bokhara shaking hands with Japan. The Irkutsk
district is peopled by the Buriates, who originally
came from Trans-Baikalia, but who have now become
more Russianised than any other Siberian race.
The Buriat dialect is a kind of patois composed
of Mongolian and Chinese; the religion Buddhism.
About every fourth Buriat becomes a Lama, and takes
vows of celibacy. They are thrifty, industrious
people, ordinarily of an honest, hospitable disposition,
who number, perhaps, 300,000 in all. This is
probably the most civilised aboriginal race in Siberia,
and many Buriates now wear European dress, and are
employed as Government officials.
The climate of Irkutsk is fairly good;
not nearly so cold in winter as many places on the
same latitude; the summers are pleasant and equable;
but the fall of the year is generally unhealthy, dense
fogs occasioning a good deal of pulmonary disease
and rheumatism. The city, too, is so execrably
drained that severe epidemics occasionally occur during
the summer months, but in winter the dry cold air
acts as a powerful disinfectant. In spring-time,
when the river Angara is swollen by the break-up of
the ice, inundations are frequent, and sometimes cause
great destruction to life and property. Winter
is, therefore, the pleasantest season here, for during
dry warm weather the clouds of black gritty dust are
unbearable, especially on windy days. Indeed,
the dust here is almost worse than in Pekin, where
the natives say that it will work its way through
a watch-glass, no exaggeration, as I can, from personal
experience, testify.
There was little enough to do here
during our five days of enforced inactivity, and time
crawled away with exasperating slowness, the more
so that the waste of every hour was lessening our chance
of success. But although harassed myself by anxiety,
I managed to conceal the fact from de Clinchamp, whose
Gallic nature was proof against ennui, and who
managed to find friends and amusement even in this
dismal city. In summer we might have killed time
by an excursion to Lake Baikal, for I retain very
pleasant recollections of a week passed, some years
since, on the pine-clad margin of this the largest
lake in Asia, sixty-six times the area of the Lake
of Geneva. Now its wintry shores and frozen waters
possessed no attraction, save, perhaps, the ice-breaker
used by the Trans-Siberian Railway to carry passengers
across the lake, a passage of about twenty miles.
But even the ice-breaker had met with an accident,
and was temporarily disabled. So there was literally
nothing to do but to linger as long as possible over
the midday meal in the dingy little restaurant, and
then to stroll aimlessly up and down the “Bolshaya,”
the main thoroughfare aforementioned, until dusk.
This is the fashionable drive of the city, which on
bright days presented an almost animated appearance.
There is no lack of money in Irkutsk, for gold-mining
millionaires abound, and I generally spent the afternoon
watching the cavalcade of well-appointed sleighs dashing,
with a merry clash of bells, up and down the crowded
street, and sauntering amongst the groups of well-dressed
women and brilliant uniforms, until darkness drove
me back to our unsavoury quarters at the Metropole.
My companions generally patronised the skating rink,
a sign of advancing civilisation, for ten years ago
there was not a pair of skates to be found throughout
the length and breadth of Siberia. Thus passed
our days, and the evenings were even longer and more
wearisome. Once we visited the Opera, a new and
beautifully-decorated house, but the performance was
execrable, and “La Dame de Chez Maxim”
unrecognisable in Russian dress. There were also
other so-called places of amusement, which blazed with
electric light from dusk till dawn, where refreshments
were served at little wooden tables while painted
harridans from Hamburg cackled suggestive songs to
the accompaniment of a cracked piano. In these
establishments we used to see the local millionaires
(and there are many) taking their pleasure expensively,
but sadly enough, amidst surroundings that would disgrace
a dive in San Francisco. The company was
generally very mixed, soldiers and flashily-dressed
cocottes being alone distinguishable, by their
costume, from the rest of the audience. For although
the Siberian woman of the better class has learnt of
late years to dress well, wealth makes no difference
to the garb of mankind. All of the latter have
the same dirty, unkempt appearance; all wear the same
suit of shiny black, rusty high boots, and a shabby
slouch-hat or peaked cap. Furs alone denote the
difference of station, sable or blue fox denoting
the mercantile Croesus, astrachan or sheep-skin his
clerk. Otherwise all the men look (indoors) as
though they had slept in their clothes, which, by
the way, is not improbable, for on one occasion I
stayed with an Irkutsk Vanderbilt who lived in palatial
style. His house was a dream of beauty and millions
had been lavished on its ornamentation. Priceless
pictures and objets d’art, a Paris chef,
horses and carriages from London, and covered gardens
of rare orchids and exotics. No expense had been
spared to render life luxurious in this land of dirt
and discomfort. Even my host’s bedroom was
daintily furnished, a la Louis XV., by a French
upholsterer. And yet he slept every night, fully
dressed, on three chairs! There is no accounting
for tastes in Siberia!
Although the “Bolshaya,”
in which most of the cafe chantants are situated,
is bright with electric light, the back streets of
the city are lit by flickering oil-lamps, and here
the stranger must almost grope his way about after
dark. If wise he will stay at home, for robbery
and even murder are of frequent occurrence. A
large proportion of the population here consists of
time-expired convicts, many of whom haunt the night-houses
in quest of prey. During our short stay a woman
was murdered one night within a few yards of our hotel,
and a man was stabbed to death in broad daylight on
the busy “Bolshaya.” The Chief of
Police told me that there is an average of a murder
a day every year within the precincts of the city,
and warned us not to walk out unarmed after dark.
There was no incentive to drive, for the Irkutsk cab,
or droshky, is a terrible machine, something
like a hoodless bath-chair, springless, and constructed
to hold two persons (at a pinch) besides the driver.
There is no guard-rail, and it was sometimes no easy
matter to cling on as the vehicle bumped and bounded,
generally at full gallop, along the rough, uneven
streets.
Three days elapsed before the business
of the city was resumed and I was able to turn my
attention to the purchase of sleighs. Fur coats
and felt boots we were already provided with, but
I had determined to obtain the Arctic kit destined
to protect us from the intense cold north of Yakutsk
from the fur merchants of that place. Finally,
when the fumes of vodka had evaporated, at
least a dozen sleigh-builders invaded my bedroom early
one morning, for the Irkutsk papers had published our
needs. The whole day was passed in driving about
to the various workshops and examining sleighs, some
of which appeared to have been constructed about the
same period as the Ark. It was not easy to make
a selection from the score of ramshackle kibitkas
which were hauled out for my inspection, especially
as I had a very faint notion of the kind of sleigh
required for the work in hand. Fortunately, my
friend the Chief of Police, white with rage and blazing
with orders, burst into a yard as I was concluding
the purchase of a venerable vehicle, which bore a striking
resemblance to Napoleon’s travelling carriage
at Madame Tussaud’s, and which would probably
have come to pieces during the first stage.
“Son of a dog,” furiously
cried the official to the trembling coach-builder,
“don’t you know that this gentleman wishes
to go to Yakutsk, and you are trying to swindle him
into buying a ‘Bolshaya’ coupe!”
And in less than a minute I was being whirled away
towards the Police Station, where a number of the
peculiar sleighs required for this journey are kept
on hand for the convenience of travellers.
“That man is an infernal scoundrel,”
said the Chief of Police, when told that Napoleon’s
barouche was to have cost me 150 roubles.
“I will give you a couple of good Yakute sleighs
for half the money. You can only use them on
the Lena.” And when I saw the primitive
contrivances in question I no longer marvelled at
their low price.
Let me describe the comfortless conveyance
in which we accomplished the first two thousand miles
of the journey across Siberia. A Yakute sleigh
has a pair of runners, but otherwise totally differs
from any other sleigh in the wide world. Imagine
a sack of coarse matting about four feet deep suspended
from a frame of rough wooden poles in a horizontal
triangle, which also forms a seat for the driver.
Into this bag the traveller first lowers his luggage,
then his mattress, pillows, and furs, and finally
enters himself, lying at full length upon his belongings.
There is a thick felt apron which can be pulled completely
over its occupant at night-time or in stormy weather.
This sounds warm and comfortable, but is precisely
the reverse, for after a few hours the porous felt
becomes saturated with moisture (formed by bodily warmth
and external cold), rendering the traveller’s
heavy garments damp and chilly for the remainder of
the journey. There is nothing to prevent the
Koshma, as this covering is called (Cauchemar
would be a better name!), from resting upon the face
during sleep, and frost-bitten features are the natural
result. So far, therefore, as comfort is concerned
a Yakute sleigh is capable of some improvement, for,
even in fine weather, the occupant must raise himself
up on his elbows to see anything but the sky above
him, while in storms the damp, heavy covering casts
him into outer darkness. Under the most favourable
circumstances little is seen of the country travelled
through, but, as the Chief of Police consolingly remarked,
“Between here and Yakutsk there is nothing to
see!”
Provisions were the next consideration,
and these were obtained from a well-appointed store
on the “Bolshaya.” We now had but
a dozen cases of condensed foods, &c., left, and these
I wished to keep intact, if possible, for use in the
Arctic regions. On the Lena road the post-houses
were only from thirty to forty miles apart, but as
they only provide hot water and black bread for the
use of travellers, I laid in a good supply of canned
meats, sardines, and tea to carry us comfortably,
at any rate, through the first stage of the journey.
With months of desolation before us our English tobacco
was too precious to smoke in civilisation, so a few
hundred Russian cigarettes were added to the list.
At last came the welcome news that
the Governor-General would grant us an interview.
Accompanied by an aide-de-camp, we drove to
the Palace on the banks of the Angara, and were ushered
into the presence of the Tsar’s Viceroy, who
governs a district about the size of Europe. General
Panteleyeff was a middle-aged man, with white moustache,
light blue eyes, and a spare athletic figure, displayed
to advantage by a smart dark green uniform. The
General is a personal friend of the Emperor, and the
cross of St. Andrew and a tunic covered with various
orders bore witness to their wearer’s distinguished
career. He received me most cordially, and asked
many questions regarding the land-journey, which had
apparently aroused considerable interest in Russian
official circles. The General, however, had no
great faith in the proposed line to connect his country
with the New World.
“We have our hands too full
in the Far East for the next century,” he said,
with a smile, “to meddle with Arctic railways.”
His Excellency assured me of every
assistance as far as Nijni-Kolymsk, the most remote
Cossack outpost on the shores of the Polar Sea, on
ordinary occasions a year’s journey from St.
Petersburg. “Beyond Kolymsk,” he
added, “I fear I cannot help you. The Tchuktchi
region is nominally under my control, but even our
own officials rarely venture for any distance into
that desolate country. But you will first have
to reach Nijni-Kolymsk, and even that is a voyage
that few Russians would care to undertake; and beyond
Nijni-Kolymsk you will have yet another two thousand
miles to Bering Straits. Great Heavens! what a
terrible journey! But you English are a wonderful
people!” Here a secretary entered the apartment
with a document, which the Governor rapidly scanned
and then signed.
“Your Imperial passport,”
he said, placing the paper in my hand, “which
will ensure civility and assistance from all officials
you may meet as far as the Kolyma river. Beyond
that you must rely upon yourselves and the goodwill
of the natives, if you ever find them! May God
preserve you all.”
So saying, with a hearty shake of
the hand, the General touched a bell, the aide-de-camp
appeared, and I was re-conducted to my sleigh, rejoicing
that nothing could now retard our departure. Amongst
other privileges the passport ensured immediate relays
of horses at the post-stations. As there are
no less than one hundred and twenty-two of these (from
fifteen to twenty-five miles apart) between Irkutsk
and Yakutsk, and as the ordinary traveller is invariably
delayed by extortionate postmasters, this clause was
of the utmost importance. In many other ways
also the document was a priceless one, and without
it we could scarcely have reached the shores of America.
It may be that I have unduly underrated
the attractions of Irkutsk to the average public.
If so, the reader must remember that every hour of
delay here was of importance and meant endless worry
and vexation to the leader of an expedition which
had not an hour to lose. There is no doubt that
Irkutsk must in a few years become a teeming centre
of commercial activity. The social aspects of
the place will then no doubt improve under the higher
civilisation introduced by a foreign element.
The resources of this province are limitless, for
the soil has up till now, minerally speaking, only
been scratched by idle fingers. Further afield
we hear of important discoveries of valuable minerals
in Manchuria, while the output of gold in the Lena
district has been trebled by modern machinery within
the past four years. Coal has also been recently
discovered within a short distance of Lake Baikal,
and is already being exported in large quantities
to the Pacific ports. Irkutsk has, no doubt,
a great commercial future, but should I ever return
there I shall, personally speaking, be quite satisfied
to find a decent hotel. Such an establishment
run on modern lines would certainly yield fabulous
returns. At present the only available restaurant
is that of the grimy and verminous Metropole,
and even here the local millionaires cheerfully pay
prices for atrocious food and worse wines which would
open the eyes of a Ritz.
Perhaps the most pleasant memory which
I retain of Irkutsk is a cheery little supper which
was given in our honour by a Mr. Koenigswerther and
his wife and brother on the eve of our departure.
The travellers, who had only arrived that day, were
visiting the city on business connected with the purchase
of furs, and a chance word dropped in the purest French
by Madame at the dinner-table linked our parties inseparably
for the remainder of the evening; indeed, until the
next day. Madame Koenigswerther, an attractive
little Parisienne, seemed to cast a gleam of
sunshine over the gloomy dining-room in which we had
partaken of so many melancholy meals. The trip
here from Paris had already imbued her with a passion
for further exploration, and I verily believe that
she would have accompanied the expedition to Yakutsk
if not restrained by her less enthusiastic male companions.
Bed on such an occasion was not to be thought of,
so we visited the theatre and cafe chantants,
ending the evening with a supper at the Metropole
(previously ordered by the fur merchants) which proved
that money, even in Irkutsk, will convert a culinary
bungler into a very passable chef. Our
departure for the North took place very early on the
morning of January 19, and I have since heard that
nothing would induce our merry little hostess to seek
her couch until the tingle of our sleigh bells had
died out on the frosty air.
“A New York!” she cried,
as our horses sprang into their collars and dashed
away down the frosty, silent street.
“N’ayez pas peur!
Nous arriverons,” answered de Clinchamp, with
a cool assurance which at the time excited my envy,
if not admiration!