Immagini della pagina
PDF
ePub

Isles, and lies in the same latitude, can but just feed its | mammoth were found in the greatest abundance throughmiserable population of four thousand persons. Keeping out all the north-western parts of Eastern Siberia. on through the land-locked and shallow sea of Ochotsk, Spring after spring, the alluvial banks of the lakes and Sir George Simpson reached the town which gives a name rivers, crumbling under the thaw, give up, as it were, to this sea. This is a station of the Russian Fur Com- their dead; and beyond the very verge of the inhabited pany, and was a few years since a penal settlement. The world, the islands lying opposite to the mouth of the eight hundred inhabitants of Ochotsk, have, it must be Yana, and, as there was reason for believing, even the admitted, few facilities for studying the beauties of the bed of the ocean itself, literally teemed with these most landscapes, for "a more dreary scene can scarcely be mysterious memorials of antiquity." How such bones conceived. Not a tree, and hardly a green blade, is to were scattered over these wastes we cannot stop to be seen within miles of the town; and in the midst of inquire, for such a course would lead us within the the disorderly collection of huts, is a stagnant marsh, fascinating circle of geological speculation. Yakutsk is which, unless when frozen, must be a nursery of all a striking illustration of the effects produced by human sorts of malaria and pestilence. The climate is at least wants and human industry; for this city of the waste on a par with the soil. Summer consists of three months is wholly dependent on the trade in ivory and fur, of damp and chilly weather, during great part of which which are sold at a vast annual fair, whither troops of the snow still covers the hills, and the ice chokes the dealers flock from all parts of Siberia and Russia. harbour; and this is succeeded by nine months of From Yakutsk Sir George Simpson departed for dreary winter, in which the cold, unlike that of more Irkutsk, the party being conveyed in boats up the inland spots, is as raw as it is intense. In summer, in magnificent river Lena, which is six miles wide at fact, nobody goes out of the house without necessity. If Yakutsk, though it is there eight hundred miles from the weather be fine, then the noxious vapours of the the sea. The route ran through the countries of the stagnant marsh are to be dreaded; and if the weather Yakuti and the Tungusi, two Siberian tribes, of which be not fine, then the rain and wind are to be avoided. the latter are the most determined and courageous race. In winter, again, the cold is too severe for much expo- The total number of the Yakuti is estimated at somesure, being of that raw, damp, disagreeable kind, which what less than 250,000, which, being spread over an no clothes can keep out." immense tract, are but lonely dwellers in a desolate land.

At Ochotsk, the long overland journey to St. Petersburgh begins, being performed partly on horseback, and partly in the boats of the Lena. Neither four-horse coaches nor railway engines offer their services to convey the traveller; but the richer natives keep large caravans of horses, and with one of those drovers named Jacob, a petty prince of the Yakuti tribe, Sir George Simpson contracted for a conveyance to Yakutsk in eighteen days. Some of these caravans present a singular spectacle, when six hundred horses, laden with valuable merchandize, pass in long file over the solitary wastes. The horse may indeed be said to be the life of the Yakuti. "The horse is to the Yakuti, what the walrus is to the Alentians, their best friend in a great variety of ways. Besides being sold for a price, his labour earns money for his owner; his flesh is used as food; the hides of the inner part of his thigh make water-proof boots, while the rest of his skin is formed into cap, shirt, and trousers; and lastly, as we have just seen, his mane and tail become the means of drawing fish out of the water."

The traveller found his title of "Governor," the highest in those regions, of essential use. "Our military guardian, who rode on a-head, had represented us as very great men indeed, in spite of our plain clothes; everybody was more obsequious than words could tell. The commissary, who met us in full uniform, talked to us for half an hour, uncovered in the open air, while all the subordinates doffed their caps at least a hundred yards before they reached us." At length, after seventeen days hard riding, the party entered Yakutsk, the capital of Eastern Siberia, and the monument of Cossack valour and perseverance,-for Russia owes Siberia to the daring courage of a Cossack chief in the sixteenth century. This rude soldier of the Don, who thus opened Western Asia to Europe, was named Yermac, and a monument in the ancient city of Tobolsk preserves the memory of his deeds. Far around Yakutsk stretches a lonely region, the dreary monotony of which is only broken by the footsteps of the hunters and ivory seekers. Whence does this ivory come? no animal is destroyed to enrich civilized man with the precious substance, for the bones of huge fossil creatures, of the extinct mammoth species, cover the plains of Eastern Siberia.

"Providence had seen fit, in some distant age, to deposit in the very coldest region on the face of the globe, an inexhaustible supply of an organic substance, which all previous experience would have expected to discover only in tropical climes. The bones of the

The

In Yakutsk are about four hundred houses, seven churches, a monastery, an hospital, and a barrack. varieties of the temperature in different seasons at this place are astonishing. "The extreme temperature of either season is almost incredible. The thermometer has stood in the shade at thirty-three degrees of Reaumur or one hundred and six degrees of Fahrenheit, while it has fallen in due time to fifty-one degrees of Reaumur or eighty-three degrees of Fahrenheit below Zero, the difference being one hundred and eighty-nine degrees of the latter standard, or nine degrees more than the whole distance between the freezing and the boiling points of water." The sub-soil is subjected to an eternal frost. "During the whole year the cellars are said to be in a frozen state, and the wells to send up newly formed ice, for the heat of the summer, excessive as it is, never lasts long enough to dissipate the effects of winter, to a depth of more than two or three feet." "There is, on the whole, little reason for doubting that the ground is frozen to an immense depth; for under the uppermost yard, the frost never loses in summer what it has gained in winter; even the ice of the sea, subjected as it is, every summer to the action of the sun and the water, grows thicker from year to year, the first winter producing about ten feet, the second about five, and so on."

The Cossacks are the great people-the nobility, in fact, of these regions-one of whom it is generally necessary for a traveller to have in his train, to rouse the indolence of the natives, or quicken the zeal of postmasters. This the Cossack is always ready to do by the summary application of his whip to the offender's body, a chastisement which the victim receives with due contrition, calling the castigator "his worship." The following little scene on the banks of the Lena, will illustrate the above remarks.

"Next day, being our seventh from Bestach, our Cossack gave us a specimen of his summary discipline. As the progress of the boat was not equal to the irascibility of his temper, the man of office went ashore in a small canoe to quicken the pace; and having made six of the miserable drivers, Russians and Yakuti, dismount at the word of command, he belaboured them in turn with a thick stick, apparently distributing his favours with impartiality. The unresisting wretches seemed to feel the wanton outrage far less than ourselves; they took the whole thing, in fact, as a matter of course. They were, perhaps, conscious of having in some degree deserved what they got; and I certainly

[ocr errors]

found, as Captain Cochrane had found before, that, top, and terminating at the bottom in a point so narunder the system of corporal chastisement, the people row, that any one shut up in it could neither sit nor lie had become so degraded as hardly to appreciate, at nor stand upright. The last mentioned cage was the least within the limits of a traveller's patience, the only one now remaining, of two, which had served, three force of any other motive." After a twenty days' voy- centuries before, as the prison of two young princes, age up the stream, Sir George Simpson found carriages Henri and François de Nemours, sons of Jacques waiting for him at a place bearing the musical name of d'Armagnac, who in the reign of Louis XI. was ConFigoloffskaya, whence he travelled to Irkutsk, over the stable of France. It is well known to any who have Bratsky steppe along a "whirling, jolting, thumping read French History, that d'Armagnac had leagued with road." This city, though presenting signs of magnifi- the Dukes of Burgundy and Brittany (Bretagne) to cence and wealth, and having a population of 20,000, deliver up France to the English. This plot, which gave, nevertheless, proofs of decay; the wide streets would have snatched the sceptre from the hands of the being almost deserted, and many of the houses tum- French monarch, was discovered to Louis when just bling into ruins." Want of space prevents us from fol- ripe for execution, and Jacques d'Armagnac was inlowing the governor to Lake Baikal, to which vast stantly arrested, and sentenced to be beheaded. He had inland sea he made a visit before leaving Irkutsk, and two sons so young at the time of his treason and its for the same reason, we can but glance at his journey punishment, that when these poor children were asked of 4,000 miles, from Irkutsk to St. Petersburgh. He if they had not been the accomplices of their father, was now accompanied by an officer of police, to secure they might have answered with the lamb in the fable: all necessaries for the journey, and therefore dashed "How could I, when I was not born?" Nevertheless, by along to Tomsk, a flourishing town on the Tom, having a refinement of cruelty, which even the barbarism of the a population of about 20,000. Thence he crossed the age cannot palliate, much less justify, Louis XI. ordered vast Barabinsky steppe with the utmost speed, fearful white robes to be put on the two boys, and thus attired, of being caught, like Napoleon, by the winter. So they were placed under the scaffold on which their rapidly did he advance, and so readily were horses pro- father was standing, and when he received the fatal vided at the post-houses, that he was amazed at the blow, the executioner sprinkled the white robes and unusual alacrity of the people. "The secret soon oozed their innocent heads with the blood of the criminal. out; our friends a-head, as much, perhaps, for their Nor was the vengeance of Louis satiated by the punishown convenience as for our glory, had insinuated that ment of the Constable. The two orhpans, dyed in a I was an ambassador from the Emperor of China to the father's blood, were taken to the Bastile, dragged to the Czar; while the simple peasants, according to the subterranean dungeons, and there put into the two iron natural growth of all marvellous stories, had, of their cages described before. Henri de Nemours was then own accord, pronounced me to be the brother of the eight years old, and his brother François very nearly sun and moon himself, pushing on to the capital with my interpreter and mandarins, in order to implore the assistance of the Russians against the English. Private accommodations were prepared for us at every station, and we were decidedly the greatest men that had ever been seen to the east of the Uralian mountains. As the roads were excellent, we enjoyed the joke, whirling at the rate of twelve or fifteen versts an hour."

With such helter skelter driving, the whole party reached Tobolsk in nineteen days from leaving Irkutsk. The author here takes a review of the history of Russia in Asia, the deeds of the Cossacks, the trade with China, and the gold mines of Siberia, which are the richest in the world. But, for all these digressions, we must, unwillingly, refer our readers to the book itself.

Moscow and St. Petersburgh, through which his journey now lay, are too well known to need remark here; it is only necessary to say, that Sir George Simpson reached England in safety, having performed his voyage round the world in nineteen months and twenty-six days.

Such travels undertaken by judicious and influential men, like Sir George Simpson, would soon open channels for that intercourse of nation with nation, which would, in the end, unite the world in one great family, and promote the civilisation of all people.

HENRI DE NEMOURS;
OR,

FRATERNAL AFFECTION.

W. D.

THE French people having in 1789 taken possession of the Bastile, that ancient state prison, where so many political crimes had been committed, where such fearful vengeance had been summarily and secretly executed, the whole edifice was ransacked, and totally destroyed. On that occasion, a great iron cage was found, which proved to be that in which the Cardinal de Balue, minister of Louis XI., had expiated for eleven years the atrocious guilt of being the inventor, but for other victims, of the instrument which thus served for his own punishment. In another dungeon was discovered a second iron cage, smaller, in the shape of a bowl, wide at

seven.

The unhappy children, thus condemned to continual torture, had no other consolation but putting their hands through the bars of the cages to grasp each that of the other. And all day long, and all night long the young brothers were hand in hand.

François, the younger of the two, was the most desponding. "I am so much hurt here," said he," surely we cannot live long this way." And he wept.

"Come, come," replied Henri, "a pretty fellow to ery at your age; besides you know papa never liked that we should cry. You see they are treating us like men of whom they are afraid, so we must not behave like children. Instead of crying, let us talk of poor dear

[merged small][ocr errors]

And then the poor victims of the cruel policy of Louis XI. talked of days gone by, and of the beautiful domain of Loctour, where they had passed the first years of infancy. Once again did they climb their own hills of Armagnac, once more wander in its thick woods, once more run races in the broad walks of the baronial park. But alas! it was only in imaginationyet the young prisoners found a momentary oblivion of their sufferings in that blessed magic of memory which makes the present cease to exist for us, by bringing us back into the past.

In

One other slight alleviation to their wretchedness was afforded to these infant martyrs by a very little mouse, which, having crept out of its hole one day, was at first so terrified by the sight of the young princes, that it ran back as fast as possible to its hiding-place. vain did the children try to coax it; it was not till the next day that, pressed by hunger, she ventured out to pick up some of the crumbs which they had purposely let fall from the cages. By degrees, however, she became accustomed to the voices of the children, and a few days after her first appearance, she grew so tame, that she climbed up to the cages of her patrons, and at length used to go from one to the other, and eat out of their hands.

But it was a small thing to the vindictive Louis that the blood of d'Armagnac had stained the fair hair and white robe of his children. He heard that the two little prisoners of the Bastile were enduring their

sufferings with fortitude, that, through custom's wondrous | power they had learned to sleep soundly in their iron cage, nay, even to awake with an almost cheerful "good morrow on their lips. He heard it can any heart that responds to one human feeling believe that it but impelled him to devise fresh torture for them? He issued orders that a tooth should be extracted every week from each of the children.

When the person appointed to this office, a man too long accustomed, as the minister of the king's savage cruelty, to the sight of suffering, to shrink from inflicting it, was introduced into the dungeon, he could not suppress an exclamation of pity at the spectacle of the two unhappy, yet patient little creatures. He was, however, obliged to tell the object of his visit, and when the brutal order of the king was announced, the little François uttered piercing cries, and Henri endeavoured to plead with the executioner. "Mamma," said he, "would die of grief if she heard of my little brother suffering so much. Oh! pray, Sir, spare himI entreat of you not to put him to such pain; you see how weak and ill he is already."

The executioner of the king's cruel purpose could no longer restrain his tears. "There is no alternative," he said, but he sobbed as he spoke, "I must obey; I risk my life even by delay. My orders are to hand the two teeth to the governor of the Bastile, in order that he may lay them before the king."

"In that case," said Henri, "you must only take two from me. I am strong and can bear it, but the least additional suffering would kill my brother." And now a long and touching contest arose between the children as to which should suffer for the other. Surprised and affected, the man hesitated for a few moments, and might, perhaps, have finally yielded to the dictates of pity, and have shrunk from executing his revolting office, had not a messenger come from the governor to inquire the cause of his dilatoriness. The messenger knew that longer delay would be regarded as a crime-he approached Henri and extracted a tooth: the child repressed every expression of pain, and seeing the man moving towards his brother's cage, he cried, "Stay, you are to take another from me-you know I am to pay for us both." And the heroic child' obtained his wish, and his self sacrifice gave to the governor of the Bastile the two teeth he was required to lay before the king.

The cruel order was executed in its utmost rigour; every week the minister of his barbarous will repaired to the dungeon, and every week Henri paid his own tax and that of his brother. But the strength of the noble boy was at last exhausted; a violent fever raged in his young veins; he gradually grew weaker, and his legs being unable to support him he was obliged to kneel in the cage. At length a day came when he felt that he had only a few minutes to live, and making a feeble effort to extend his hand once more to his brother, he said, "All is over, François, I shall never see mamma again, but, perhaps, you may yet be taken out of this horrible place. Tell my darling mother that I often spoke of her, and that I never loved her so much as now that I am dying. Farewell, François," gasped he, as his breath failed him, "you will give our poor little white mouse her crumbs every day. I depend upon you to take care of her; will you not, dear François?"

He heard not the answer of his brother, death snatched him from his sufferings, and he passed into that place "where the wicked cease from troubling and the weary are at rest." It may be presumed that Louis was softened in favour of the last of the Nemours, for, after the death of Henri, François was released from his iron cage and transferred to one of the ordinary dungeons.

At length the soul of the cruel monarch was required of him, and the reign of Charles VIII. began. His first act was to set at liberty all the victims of the suspicious and hateful policy of Louis XI. Among the rest, François de Nemours was released, permitted once

more to behold the sun, once more to lay his drooping head on the bosom of his mother; but the tortures he had undergone in the horrible cage left him all his life lame and deformed.

AN INCIDENT AT SEA.

FOR the first few days our voyage was remarkably prosperous; our ship, the barque Robert, of some 300 tons, was well found; her captain, an experienced hand, had been in the West Indian trade for upwards of twenty years, and the crew were as fine a set of men as could be desired; all hardy and thorough-going seamen. It was towards the end of February, and the weather had been for some days dry and open, with the wind at due east. We had a famous run down the channel, and were well clear of the Bay of Biscay on the fifth day, fully calculating to make Madeira on the twelfth.

However, the rapid falling of the glass, and certain atmospherical indications, led us soon to expect a change in these prospects, nor was it long before it was realized. Every thing had been done, in anticipation, to make the ship snug, by lowering our lighter spars, reducing the sails, and by shaping our course so as to have an abundance of sea room, so that, in fact, we were well prepared for the worst. The wind had entirely dropped, and the sails flapped heavily against the masts, as the ship rolled and pitched under the influence of a long and uneasy ground swell; the sun set angrily, and a low moaning sound, as of wind, created a feeling of discomfort, which was not allayed by an observation of the captain, that we should "catch it before morning."

I had retired to my berth, but I could not sleep, not so much from positive apprehension as from that fever of doubt which is more distressing. I soon felt that the captain's prognostication was about to be realized; the whistling of the wind through the rigging sounded like funeral wailings; the creaking of the masts, the straining and groaning of the bulk-heads, as the ship laboured in the weltering sea, were frightful. As I heard the waves rushing along the side of the ship, and roaring in my very ear, it seemed as if death were raging round the floating prison, seeking for his prey; the mere starting of a nail, the yawning of a seam, might give him entrance. Suddenly I was alarmed by the loud cry of the watch, "A sail a-head!" I was on deck in a moment, and saw distinctly a small schooner close a-head of us, with her broadside towards us; escape was hopeless,we struck her just a mid-ships The force, the size, and weight of our vessel bore her down below the waves; we passed over her, and were hurried on our course. As the cracking wreck was sinking beneath us. I had a glimpse of two or three wretched-looking beings, who, with frantic gestures for help, and shriek of terror, were swallowed by the waves. I heard their drowning cry mingling with the wind, as the blast that bore it to my ear swept us out of all further hearing. I shall never forget that cry! It was some time before we could put the ship about, she was under such head-way. We returned, as nearly as we could guess, to the place where the schooner had gone down; we cruised about for some time, and fired several guns, listening through the gale if we might hear the halloo of some survivor, but all was silent; we never saw nor heard any thing more of them.

The storm increased with the night. The sea was lashed into tremendous confusion. There was a fearful, sullen sound of rushing waves and broken surges. Deep called unto deep. At times the black volumes of cloud over head seemed rent asunder by flashes of lightning, that quivered along the foaming billows, and made the succeeding darkness doubly terrible. The thunder boomed and bellowed over the wild waste of waters, and were echoed and prolonged by the mountain wave. As I saw the ship staggering and plunging among those roaring caverns, it seemed miraculous that she regained

her balance, or preserved her buoyancy. Her yards would dip into the water; her bow was almost buried beneath the waves. Sometimes an impending surge appeared ready to overwhelm her, and nothing but a dexterous movement of the helm preserved her from the shock.

Morning at length broke, but the gale was unabated, and, with the exception of a mere storm stay-sail, we were scudding under bare poles. Heavy, leaden clouds hung like a dome over us, while a lighter fleecy scud was borne, as if on wings, beneath them. The aspect without was not cheering, and within it presented nothing but discomfort; the dead lights had been shipped, making the cabin, wet and slimy from the seas we had shipped, still more cheerless. For three days did this state of things continue, and we were driven helplessly along, our bulwarks stove in, our boats dashed to pieces, and leaving mere fragments hanging to the davits; the caboose gone, and the decks completely cleared. On the morning of the fourth day the weather moderated slightly, and the captain ventured to get a trysail set, but we were occasionally struck by some frightful seas, and many a time were the men saved by a life line.

a plank with a line attached to it was thrown overboard. I soon reached it; and, clinging with difficulty to it as it pitched and rolled, I succeeded in making the line fast beneath my shoulders. A loud shout from the ship proclaimed the delight of the crew, who began hauling me towards them with a good will that left me little to complain of beyond the stifling sensation of being dragged rapidly through the water, and the pain of the rope across my chest. Luckily they understood my signal, as the two latter causes prevented my speaking, and hauled me in over the stern, for in their zeal they would have pulled me up the side of the ship, against which, as she rolled and surged, I must infallibly have been killed. The congratulations of all the hands were most sincere; they refused all rewards, and would accept nothing but my thanks; they said they had given me up, being certain that no man could have kept himself afloat amidst such heavy seas for the hour and a half I had been exposed to them. We had a glass of grog all round; and, after I had changed my clothes and spent a short time in my cabin, I could have fancied the whole had been a dream, but for a painful stricture across the chest, which lasted for some days. In a week we were at Madeira, where we refitted before we proceeded on our voyage to the West Indies. E. P. T.

Poetry.

In Original Poetry, the Name, real or assumed, of the Author, is printed in Small Capitals under the title; in Selections, it is printed in Italics at the end.

THE SUMMER IS OVER.

[ocr errors]

**

THE Summer is over,
Too soon it is sped,
Its joys scarce returning
Before they are fled.

[ocr errors]

The leaves that once shaded
Our pathway, are o'er,
And the flower that is faded
Will blossom no more.

But past joys in remembrance
Still dwell in the heart,

Like the scent of sweet flowors,
They do not depart;
And the Robin is singing
Still on the bare bough,

A glad message bringing
Of joy even now.

I was, however, less fortunate, for a mountain wave striking us abaft the midships, knocked down the man at the wheel and carried me overboard with resistless force. Fortunately, I was immediately missed, and as I rose on the top of a sea, on which I was labouring, after having recovered from the first plunge, I was caught sight of. My shoes were soon kicked off, but my jacket, clinging to me from the wet it had imbibed, resisted all my efforts to strip it off. I felt that my chance was a small one, though not hopeless, for I had ingratiated myself with the men, and the captain was a fellow-townsman, and, therefore, I was persuaded that they would use every effort to save me; but, at the same time, I feared that they might not dare to wear the ship amidst so much danger. A moment's reflection convinced me that it would be useless to fatigue myself by swimming, and that my only chance lay in husbanding my power, by keeping myself collected, and by floating with the least possible exertion. I was soon far, far astern, anxiously watching the receding ship, when, borne to the crest of a giant wave, I caught a momentary glimpse of her; and I must confess, that when I was carried down again into the deep trough of the waves, I was assailed with the most painful qualms as to the possibility of succour being afforded to me in such a sea. Minutes seemed lengthened into interminable hours, but still I floated on, sometimes "carried up to heaven, and down again to the deep; my soul melting away because of the trouble." The sight of the ship always cheered me, and I waited anxiously for the wave that would bear me up and bring her within view, as it dispelled for the instant the dreadful feeling of desolation which oppressed me as I lay in the hollow seas. snatches of her were so momentary that I could form no idea whether any change had taken place in her position, yet once I thought I saw her broadside to me, and my heart bounded with delight; I hugged the idea, although the next glance at her did not bear out my hopes. Yes! it was no mistake; the distance between us was lessening, and they had succeeded in wearing the ship. But fresh doubts grew upon me; our positions were altered by the course she was forced to take to bear down upon me, and as I was sure that they could not have seen me for some time, they could neither tell where I was, nor whether I survived; and then I thought they might miss me, and I knew my voice could not be heard; and then I began to calculate as to the utility of further exertion on my own part, and how much longer I could keep myself afloat. The look out was, however, most vigilant, and a couple of men had stationed themselves in the fore-top to gain a wider field, PRINTED by RICHARD CLAY, of Nos. 7 and 8, Bread Street Hill, in the

These

and by them I was discovered. The course of the ship was shaped to me, and as she passed within a few yards,

Though the lost sun no longer
Shines through the long day,
And the leaves and the flowers
Are faded away :

Though the warm winds of even
No longer blow soft,

And the bright stars of heaven
Look cold from aloft:

Still, still in the bosom
Shall joy find a home,

And the heart shall look forward

To pleasures to come,

And the soul shall still cherish
Glad hopes of the Spring,

When the flowers shall all flourish
The birds shall all sing.

CONTENTS.
Page

The Butler's Fright on Hal-
loween, (with Illustration
by Scott)..
The Fascinating Power of
Serpents.......

Frank Fairlegh; or, Old

273

274

Companions in New
Scenes, Chap. XI.-The
Council of War.... ..... 276

Page

The Drama in the Middle
Ages, (Second Article).... 279
A Land Journey round the
World, (concluded)........ 281
Henri de Nemours; or, Fra-
ternal Affection.............. 286
An Incident at Sea............ 287
POETRY:-

The Summer is over...... 288

Parish of St. Nicholas Olave, in the City of London, at his Printing Office
at the same place, and published by THOMAS BOWDLER SHARPE, of No. 15,
Skinner Street, in the Parish of St. Sepulchre, in the City of London.-
Saturday, August 28, 1817.

[graphic]
« IndietroContinua »