Nijni-Novgorod. — Hot Weather. — The River Volga. — Hundreds
of Steamers. — Great Annual Fair. — Peculiar Character of the
Trade. — Motley Collection of Humanity. — An Army of Beggars.
— Rare and Precious Stones. — The Famous Brick Tea. — A Costly
Beverage. — Sanitary Measures. — Disgraceful Dance Halls. —
Fatal Beauty. — A Sad History. — Light-Fingered Gentry. —
Convicts. — Facts About Siberia. — Local Customs. — Russian
Punishment.
A journey of about three hundred miles
(or as the Russians state it, four hundred and ten
versts) in a northeasterly direction from Moscow,
by way of the historic town of Vladimir, famous for
its battles with the Tartars, brings us to Nijni-Novgorod,—that
is, Lower Novgorod, being so called to distinguish
it from the famous place of the same name located
on the Volkhov, and known as Novgorod the Great.
It is older than Moscow, antedating it a century or
more, and is the capital of a province bearing the
same name. The residence of the governor of the
district, the courts of law, and the citadel are within
the Kremlin, where there is also a fine monument in
the form of an obelisk eighty feet high, erected to
the memory of Mininn and Pojarski, the two patriots
who liberated their country from the Poles in 1612.
This Kremlin, like that at Moscow, is situated on an
elevation overlooking the town and the broad valley
of the Volga. The site of the upper town, as
the older portion of the place situated about the
Kremlin is called, is quite remarkable, being a sort
of overhanging bluff, commanding a level view as far
as the eye can reach over an undulating country, through
which winds the noblest river of Russia. The
climate here is subject to great extremes of heat
and cold,—the mercury freezing, it is said,
in winter, and sometimes bursting in the heat of the
summer sun. As we stood upon this bluff enjoying
the comprehensive view, the heat of the mid-day hour
and the power of the sun were quite tropical.
Indeed, without the partial shelter of an umbrella
it would have been as insufferable as mid-day exposure
in Ceylon or Singapore. All animal life, so far
as possible, sought the shade; and the fine black horses
attached to the vehicle which had transported us from
the plain below, though driven at a quiet pace, were
flecked with foam and panted with distended nostrils.
The thermometer on the shady side of the governor’s
palace close at hand indicated 89 deg. Fahrenheit.
To the great extremes of overpowering cold and enervating
heat some of the apparent incongruities of the native
character may doubtless be attributed. For more
than half the year the people are as it were hermetically
sealed up by the frost, and in the brief but intense
heat of the summer they are rendered inert and slothful
by the effect of tropical heat.
We were told that there was here six
hundred years ago a very large city, but that to-day
the place cannot boast over forty-five thousand fixed
population. Thus the story of faded grandeur is
written all over the plains of northern Europe and
Asia. By ascending what is called Mininn’s
Tower, one of the finest panoramic views is obtained
which can well be conceived of. A vast alluvial
plain is spread out before the eye covered with fertile
fields and thrifty woods, through which from northwest
to southeast flows the Volga like a silver thread
upon a verdant ground, extending from horizon to horizon.
On this river, which is the main artery of central
Russia, are seen scores of swift-moving steamers bound
to Saratoff, Astrakhan, and the Caspian Sea, fourteen
hundred miles away, while a forest of shipping is
gathered about the shore of the lower town and covering
the Oka River, which here joins the Volga. From
this outlook the author counted over two hundred steamboats
in sight at the same time,—all side-wheelers
and clipper-built, drawn hither by the exigencies
of the local trade contingent upon the period of the
great annual fair. The first of these steamers
was built in the United States and transported at
great trouble and expense to these Russian waters,
and has served as the model of the hundreds now employed
on the river. The flat-boats which the steamers
had towed from various distant points, having been
unloaded, were anchored in a shallow bend of the river,
where they covered an area fully a mile square.
On many of these boats entire families lived, it being
their only home; and wherever freight was to be transported
thither they went: whether it was towards the
Ural Mountains or the Caspian Sea, it was all the
same to them.
The Volga has a course of over twenty-four
hundred, and the Oka of eight hundred and fifty miles.
As the Missouri and Mississippi rivers have together
made St. Louis, so these Russian rivers have made
Nijni. This great mart lies at the very centre
of the water communication which joins the Caspian
and the Black seas to the Baltic and White seas, besides
which it has direct railroad connection with Moscow
and thence with the entire east of Europe. The
Volga and its tributaries pour into its lap the wealth
of the Ural Mountains and that of the vast region
of Siberia and Central Asia. It thus becomes
very apparent why and how this ancient city of Nijni-Novgorod
is the point of business contact between European
industry and Asiatic wealth.
The attraction which draws the traveller
so far into the centre of European Russia, lies in
the novelty of the great annual fair held at Nijni
for a period of about eight weeks, and which gathers
for the time being some two hundred thousand people,—traders
and spectators,—who come from the most
distant provinces and countries, as well as from the
region round about. A smaller and briefer fair
is held upon the ice of the rivers Volga and Oka in
January, but is comparatively of little account; it
is called a horse-fair, being chiefly devoted to trade
in that animal. The merchandise accumulated and
offered for sale at the grand fair in August and September
is gathered principally from the two richest quarters
of the globe. It is of limitless variety, and
in quality varying from the finest to the coarsest.
As an example of this, jewelry was observed of such
texture and fashion as would have graced a store on
the Rue de la Paix, offered for sale close beside
the cheapest ornaments of tinsel manufactured by the
bushel-basketful at Birmingham and Manchester.
Choice old silver-ware was exposed side by side with
iron saucepans, tin-dippers, and cheap crockery utensils,—variety
and incongruity, gold and Brummagem everywhere in
juxtaposition. There is an abundance of iron
and copper from the Urals, dried fish in tall piles
from the Caspian Sea, tea from China, cotton from
India, silks and rugs from Persia, heavy furs and
sables from Siberia, wool in the raw state from Cashmere,
together with the varied products of the trans-Caucasian
provinces, even including wild horses in droves.
Fancy-goods from England as well as from Paris and
Vienna, toys from Nuremberg, ornaments of jade and
lapis-lazuli from Kashgar, precious stones from Ceylon,
and gems from pearl-producing Penang. Variety,
indeed! Then what a conglomerate of odors permeated
everything, dominated by the all-pervading musk, boiled
cabbage, coffee, tea, and tanned leather! Everything
seemed to loom up through an Oriental haze, a mirage
of fabulous merchandise. In the midst of the booths
and lanes there rose the tall, pointed spire of a mosque,
which we were told was the most northerly Mahometan
temple extant. If any business purpose actuates
the visitor, let him keep his wits about him, and
above all remain cool; for it will require an effort
not to be confused by the ceaseless buzzing of this
hive of human beings. Sharpers are not wanting,
but are here in force to take advantage of every opportunity
that offers. Many who come hither thrive solely
by dishonesty. It is a sort of thieves’
paradise,—and Asiatic thieves are by far
the most expert operators known in either hemisphere.
Most of them are itinerants, having no booth, table,
or fixed location, but yet carrying conspicuously
about them evidences of some special line of trade,
and evincing a desire to sell at remarkably low prices,—all
of which is a specious disguise under which to prosecute
their dishonest purposes.
The period of great differences in
prices in localities wide apart has, generally speaking,
passed away, and everywhere the true value of things
is known. Circumstances may favor sellers and
buyers by turns, but intrinsic values are nearly fixed
all over the world. Nothing is especially cheap
at this great Russo-Asiatic fair except such articles
as no one cares to purchase, though occasionally a
dealer who is particularly anxious to realize cash
will make a special sacrifice in the price demanded.
The Tartar merchant from the central provinces of
Asia knows the true value of his goods, though in
exchange he pays large prices for Parisian and English
luxuries. Gems so abundant here can only be bought
at a just approximation to their value in the markets
of the world; and unless one is willing to encounter
the risk of being grossly deceived in quality, and
to lose much time in bargaining, they had far better
be purchased elsewhere. All the tricks of trade
are known and resorted to at such a gathering.
The merchant begins by demanding a price ridiculously
above the amount for which he is willing eventually
to sell,—a true and never wanting characteristic
of Oriental trade. No dealer has a fixed price
at Nijni. The Asiatic enjoys dickering; it is
to him the life of his occupation, and adds zest if
not profit to his business transactions, and by long
practice he acquires great adroitness in its exercise.
The principal attraction to the traveller,
far above that of any articles which form the varied
collection of goods displayed for sale, is to observe
the remarkable distinction of races and nationalities
that are here mingled together. Tartars, Persians,
Cossacks, Poles, Egyptians, Finns, Georgians, with
many others, crowd and jostle one another upon the
narrow lanes and streets. Many of these are in
neat national costumes. We recall as we write
a group of Greeks in their picturesque attire, who
formed a theatrical picture by themselves; while others
were in such a mass of filthy rags as to cause one
to step aside to avoid personal contact and its possible
consequences. Though familiar with the Spanish
and Italian cities where they much abound, the author
has never before seen so many beggars—professional
beggars—congregated together. The variety
of features, of physical development, of dress, manners,
customs, and languages was infinite. It would
be impossible to convey an idea of the ceaseless Babel
of noise which prevailed,—the cries designating
certain goods, the bartering going on all about one
in shrill voices, laughter mingled with sportive exclamations,
and frequent trivial disputes which filled the air.
But there was no actual quarrelling,—the
Russian police are too vigilant, too much feared,
too summary for that; open violence is instantly suppressed,
and woe betide the culprit! Such is this unique
fair, which presents one of the rude and ancient forms
of trade that is rapidly disappearing by the introduction
of railroads. The glory of Nijni-Novgorod is,
we suspect, already beginning to wane; but it would
seem that the fair still represents all the gayest
features of the olden time, having been held here
annually since 1366, tradition pointing to even an
earlier date.
The site of the fair-grounds is triangular
in shape, and lies between the two rivers Volga and
Oka, forming yearly a large and populous temporary
town, with numerous streets of booths, restaurants,
small shops, bazaars, tents, and even minor theatres,
while the wharves of the rivers are crowded with bales
of rags, grain, hides, skins, casks of wine, madder,
and cotton. The aggregate value of the goods
disposed of at these yearly gatherings of traders is
enormous, being estimated as high as eighty millions
of dollars! Centuries since, the two extremes
of western Europe and China used also to meet at Kazan
to exchange merchandise; but long ago this trade was
transferred to Nijni, which is now the only notable
gathering-place of the sort in Russia. We were
told that the united length of the streets, lanes,
and alleys of the fair often reached a distance of
thirty miles, and this seemed to be rather an under
than an over estimate. Some idea may be formed
of the great distances which traders pass over to meet
here, from the fact that there were seen Bucharians
from the borders of China as well as merchants from
the north part of the Celestial Empire. The former
brought with them, in connection with other goods,
precious stones for sale. Some choice turquoises
were observed in their possession, such as one can
purchase nowhere else in first hands. Speaking
of gems, there were also fine specimens of the native
product offered by those who dealt in jewelry,—among
them some very fine Alexandrites, a comparatively
modern discovery from the Ural mines, which were named
after the Emperor Alexander I. The Alexandrite is
opaline, being dark green by daylight and ruby red
by artificial light at night, though strong artificial
light will bring out its peculiar properties at any
time. In hardness it seems to be of about the
same texture as the emerald, and when a clear, flawless
specimen is obtained, it is valued almost as highly
as that rare and beautiful gem. The story told
about the Alexandrite, and which we are inclined to
believe is true, is that only one “pocket,”
as it is technically designated, was ever discovered,
and that has long since been exhausted, all subsequent
search having utterly failed to produce a single specimen.
At first the value of this remarkable stone was not
realized, and it remained neglected upon the spot where
it was found, until a European geologist chanced to
see and explain its gem-like qualities, after which
it became much sought for and properly valued.
Very few are to be found for sale in Europe, and fewer
in America. The author saw one of these stones
at St. Petersburg which was exquisitely cut and clear
as a crystal, though green in color, for which the
sum of three thousand roubles was demanded. As
it weighed fifteen carats, this was at about the
rate of one hundred dollars per carat. At Nijni
or St. Petersburg one must pay nearly Paris and New
York prices for real gems.
Specimens of other gems from the Urals
though not abundant were still in considerable variety,—not
offered at the booths, but by itinerants who came
to our hotel, and displayed them in a somewhat secret
manner, being very particular to keep quite out of
sight of the crowd. One of these dealers took
from his bosom a small flat leather receptacle wherein
he showed some fine emeralds, colored diamonds, rubies,
and topazes. Of the latter gem there were
specimens in green, blue, yellow, and white, most
of them too poorly cut to show their fine beauty and
brilliancy to advantage. The Armenian who exhibited
this collection had also garnets of several distinct
colors, the finest of which was of a light cinnamon
hue. He had also tourmalines black
as jet, and pink rubellites with sapphires as
fine as those from Ceylon. All these precious
stones, he said, were from the Ural mines. The
same region furnishes also gold, silver, copper, and
platinum, the latter valuable product in larger quantities
than comes from any other part of the world.
An emerald mine was accidentally discovered in the
Ural range near Ekaterinburg so late as 1830.
A peasant who was passing through a wood chanced to
see an emerald gleaming among the upturned roots of
a fallen pine; and further research showed that many
precious gems of the same sort were mingled with the
surrounding soil. Such discoveries soon become
known. The peasant was enriched for life, but
Government as usual in such cases claimed the mine.
Thibet and North China merchants who
come to Nijni occupy nearly six months in travelling
to and from their native districts. They bring
their famous brands of “brick tea,” said
to be the finest produced, and of which the Russians
partake so liberally, paying more than double the
price per pound that is usually charged for the best
brands that reach the American market. One who
has travelled in Japan is impressed with the idea
that its people draw one half their sustenance from
tea-drinking, of which they partake many times each
day; but neither these Russians nor the Asiatics take
the decoction one quarter as strong as it is used
with us. An idea prevails here that the tea from
China which comes by the overland route is much superior
to that which reaches Southern Europe and America by
sea, and the price is gauged accordingly; but even
brick tea comes to Nijni half the distance and more
by water carriage, and if there is any deteriorating
effect traceable to that cause, it cannot be exempt.
There is a brand known as “yellow tea”
in great favor here,—a grade which we do
not see in this country at all. It is of a pale
color when steeped and of delicate flavor, being used
as an after-dinner beverage in Russia, as we employ
coffee. It is sold at the fair in small fancy
packages as put up in China, each containing one pound
of the leaves. Price six dollars for a package!
Where there is so large and promiscuous
an assemblage of human beings, sickness of an epidemic
character would be sure to break out were it not that
a most rigid sanitary system is established and enforced.
This precaution is especially important, as personal
cleanliness is a virtue little known and less practised
among Russians and Asiatics. In the large cities
the Russian takes his weekly bath of steaming water,
nearly parboiling his body; and that must last him
for seven days. The average citizen sleeps in
his clothes during the interim without change, satisfied
with bathing his face and hands in a pint or less
of water daily. The Nijni fair-grounds have open
canals in various parts to afford immediate access
to water in case of fire, and also ample underground
sewerage formed by stone-lined drains which extend
all over the place. These drains are flushed
several times daily during the season of the fair
by water pumped from the Volga.
The dance-halls, music-rooms, and
places of general amusement are of such a character
as might naturally be anticipated, presenting disgraceful
features of frailty and vice scarcely surpassed in
the large European capitals. One spacious square
of the grounds is occupied by four large three-story
houses, which are nothing less than acknowledged dens
of vice. From these houses, which are on the
four sides of the square, flags and streamers are all
day gayly flaunting, and fancy lanterns are grouped
at night. Bands of instrumental performers pour
forth from their several piazzas noisy refrains, while
parading hither and thither upon the broad verandas,
or looking out from the windows, many a prematurely
aged and saddened face appears,—faces,
alas! which assumed smiles and gayety of tone cannot
effectually disguise. The unfortunate girls who
are attached to these establishments are of varied
nationalities. Many are Russian, some are Poles,
others are from far-off Cashmere and Nepaul; even
the Latin Quarter of Paris has its representatives
here, as well as the demi-monde of Vienna.
One dark-eyed, handsome, even refined
appearing girl, who kept quite by herself, was detected
as being a quadroon. Observing that the author
was American, she acknowledged that she came from New
Orleans. The brief truthful history of this girl,
who possessed all the fatal beauty of her race, may
be found instructive. She had been the travelling
companion of a heartless titled Englishman, who had
induced her to run away from her respectable Louisiana
home, and had finally deserted her at St. Petersburg
after a year of travel in various parts of the world
and a considerable sojourn in India. Without
a guinea in her purse or the means of honestly earning
money, her fate seemed to be inevitable; and so she
had drifted she hardly knew how or where, until she
was here in this maelstrom of vice, Nijni-Novgorod.
One must have possessed a heart of stone to be able
to look unmoved into the tearful eyes of this poor
unhappy girl, who had bought her bitter experience
at such terrible cost. Quietly closing her hand
upon the gold that was offered her with some earnest,
well-meant advice, she said: “This shall
be the nucleus of a sum wherewith to return to my
mother and my Louisiana home, or it shall purchase
that which will end for me all earthly misery!”
Poor Marie Fleur! We shall probably never know
what fate has befallen her.
Interspersed about the lanes and streets
were many gay eating and drinking booths, cafes where
gypsy dancers and singing girls appeared in the evening.
With the close of the day the business of the fair
is mostly laid aside, and each nationality amuses
itself after its native fashion. Rude musical
instruments are brought forth, strange and not inharmonious
airs fall upon the ear, supplemented here and there
by songs the words of which are utterly unintelligible
except to a small circle of participants. The
whole scene forms a motley picture, as party-colored
as Harlequin’s costume, while the whole is shadowed
by the ever-present, vigilant Russian police.
Smoking is not permitted in the streets or among the
booths; to light a match even subjects one to a fine,
such is the great fear of fire; but still the unmistakable
fumes of tobacco which permeated the atmosphere showed
that within the walls of their own apartments smokers
were freely indulging in their wonted habit.
The governor’s business residence during the
fair is very near its centre. The lower portion
for the time being is transferred into a grand bazaar,
for the sale of the lighter and more choice fancy
articles, including European manufactured goods.
There is here also a large restaurant where a good
dinner may be had at a reasonable price, the bill of
fare embracing the peculiar dishes of many different
nationalities,—and though others did, the
author did not partake of Tartar horse-flesh.
A boulevard extends from behind the governor’s
house towards the cathedral and an Armenian church.
The shops along this thoroughfare are principally
occupied by goldsmiths and dealers in silver-ware.
Some apparently very ancient examples of the latter
would have delighted the eye of a curio hunter; they
were in the form of clasps, mugs, drinking-horns,
and spoons of quaint designs, no two alike, affording
an endless variety from which to choose.
We were told of some curious doings
of the light-fingered gentry who are naturally attracted
to the fair, and who drive a very successful business
during the few weeks of its continuance, provided they
be not detected and locked up. These rogues are
not confined to any one nationality, but are composed
of immigrants from far and near. They seem equally
adroit however, whether Asiatics or Europeans.
One was arrested during the late season at Nijni upon
whose person eleven purses and porte-monnaies
were found as the product of a single day’s
operation. The rascal was a Polish Jew, “childlike
and bland.” He was apparently a pedler,
dealing in tapes and shoestrings. Some London
thieves the year before the last, having heard of the
great Russian fair which continued so many weeks,
drawing together purchasers from many lands, who came
with well-lined pocket-books, accordingly resolved
to invade Nijni. They came, they saw, they conquered;
but it was a very brief triumph. The Asiatic
thieves “spotted” the English rogues at
sight, but let them operate until they had possessed
themselves of ample booty, while the local rogues remained
quiescent and watched the fun. Then the Eastern
experts picked their pockets of every farthing they
had stolen; having done which they adroitly drew the
attention of the police to them. The cockneys
were compelled to leave the place instantly, and to
beg their way to an English port where they sadly
embarked for home, wiser if not richer than when they
resolved to “raid” the great Oriental fair.
The numbers of persons arriving during
the fair is so great as to exhaust all reasonable
means of comfortable lodgement, and where the great
mass sleep is generally considered to be a mystery;
yet a stroll about the town at day-break will solve
it. Rolled up in their rags, thousands drop down
to rest like dogs upon the ground wherever fatigue
overtakes them. Other thousands sleep behind their
stalls and booths upon the softest place they can
find. Open sheds are utilized by hundreds, who
lie there upon the floor packed like herring under
a temporary roof. It may be safely stated that
not one person in fifty who attends the fair removes
his clothing from his body while he is there.
Even the weekly bath must be given up here, unless
it consists of a brief plunge into the Volga.
On the route to Nijni from Moscow,
at a station on the railway line, a bevy of convicts
was seen on their way to Siberia. They represented
all ages, from the lad of fifteen to the decrepit and
gray-haired old man of sixty or seventy. Condemned
people are now conveyed as far on their way as possible
by rail, and then begin their long journey upon foot
towards the region which according to popular belief
rarely fails to become their grave in a few brief
years. Some of these men—there were
no women among them—appeared to us as though
society were fortunate to be rid of them, and as if
they very likely deserved the fate which awaited them,
be it never so severe. There were others, however,
if the human countenance may be trusted, who seemed
to merit a better fate. Some of them had grossly
outraged the laws, and some few were political prisoners.
But be their condemnation upon what ground it may,
when once started upon this journey they left all
hope behind. The prisoners whom we saw did not
appear to be guarded with much strictness. They
were permitted to walk about freely within certain
lines; still, military espionage is so thorough and
complete that any attempt to escape would surely cost
the prisoner his life. None of these prisoners
were manacled or confined by bonds of any sort; and
though we watched them specially, no harshness was
exhibited by either soldiers or officers towards them.
The prisoners seemed to accept the position, and the
soldiers to be only performing routine duty.
Feeling more than ordinary interest in the subject,
we were led to seek for information touching this penal
servitude.
We were told by unprejudiced persons
that many of the current stories about Siberia were
pure fiction, and that not a few of the attributed
terrors relating to that district were without truth.
To sober, honest, industrious enterprise it was not
only a very habitable but even desirable locality,
undoubtedly with some drawbacks; but there is no limit
to its mineral wealth and other possibilities.
In spite of its climate, the soil under proper culture
is represented to be prodigiously fertile. Our
principal informant had been there several times,
and had mercantile interests in the country: he
was not of Russian but German birth. It seems
that many persons go to Siberia voluntarily every
year, some following closely in the track of each
lot of prisoners despatched thither. If what we
heard and have reason to believe is really true, Siberia
will eventually prove to Russia what Australia and
Van Diemen’s Land have to England.
The Russian travels with all his toilet
and sleeping necessaries with him. Towels, soap,
pillow, and blanket form a part of his regular outfit
when he travels by rail or otherwise at night.
Though one pays for sleeping-car accommodations, only
reclining seats are furnished, and not even a pitcher
of water or a towel can be found inside of the cars.
This seemed to be the more surprising because of the
excellence of the road-bed, the remarkable perfection
of the rolling stock, and the manifest desire upon
all hands, so far as the officials were concerned,
to render the passengers as comfortable as possible.
Anything like refreshing slumber was out of the question
in a half upright position, and after a night passed
in coquetting with sleep, at six or seven o’clock
in the morning the cars stopped at a way-station for
twenty-five minutes, both in coming from Moscow to
Nijni and in returning, the journey both ways being
made by the night-express. On the platform of
this station a line of peasant women stand behind
a series of basins placed temporarily upon a long
bench. One of these women pours a small stream
of water from a pitcher upon the traveller’s
hands, and he is thus enabled to make a partial toilet,
wiping his face upon a very suspicious-looking towel,
also furnished by the woman who supplies the water.
For this service she expects ten kopecks, the
smallest current silver coin. However, water
upon the face and temples even in limited quantity,
after a long dusty night-ride in the cars, is grateful
and refreshing, incomplete though the ablution may
seem, and one felt duly thankful. It was quite
as ample accommodation in that line as the average
Russian citizen required.
Before closing this chapter, and apropos
of the subject of Siberia, let us say a few words
more. It should be remembered as regards the
severity of punishment for crime in Russia, and particularly
as to banishment to Siberia, that the sentence of
death is now rarely inflicted in this country.
Persons who are condemned to expiate their crimes
by deportation to this penal resort, would in other
European countries be publicly executed. Nearly
all other nations punish undoubted treason with death.
Russia inflicts only banishment, where the convicted
party has at least air and light, his punishment being
also mitigated by obedience and good behavior.
This is paradise compared to Austrian, Spanish, German,
and Italian prisons, where the wretched dungeon existence
is only a living death. It is a fact that of
late years, and especially since the accession of Alexander
III. to the throne, so mild has the punishment of
banishment to Siberia come to be considered that it
has lost its terror to the average culprit. We
were assured that not one third of the convicts sent
thither for a limited term elect to return to their
former homes, but end by becoming free settlers in
the country, and responsible citizens.