<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</h2></div>
<p class="caption3">ENTERING THE LAND OF MYSTERY</p>
<p>Careering madly in a motor car behind a herd of antelope
fleeing like wind-blown ribbons across a desert
which isn't a desert, past caravans of camels led by
picturesque Mongol horsemen, the Twentieth Century
suddenly and violently interjected into the Middle Ages,
should be contrast and paradox enough for even the
most blase sportsman. I am a naturalist who has wandered
into many of the far corners of the earth. I have
seen strange men and things, but what I saw on the great
Mongolian plateau fairly took my breath away and left
me dazed, utterly unable to adjust my mental perspective.</p>
<p>When leaving Peking in late August, 1918, to cross
the Gobi Desert in Mongolia, I knew that I was to go
by motor car. But somehow the very names "Mongolia"
and "Gobi Desert" brought such a vivid picture
of the days of Kublai Khan and ancient Cathay that my
clouded mind refused to admit the thought of automobiles.
It was enough that I was going to the land of
which I had so often dreamed.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">- 2 -</span></p>
<p>Not even in the railway, when I was being borne
toward Kalgan and saw lines of laden camels plodding
silently along the paved road beside the train, or when
we puffed slowly through the famous Nankou Pass and
I saw that wonder of the world, the Great Wall,
winding like a gray serpent over ridge after ridge of the
mountains, was my dream-picture of mysterious Mongolia
dispelled. I had seen all this before, and had accepted
it as one accepts the motor cars beside the splendid
walls of old Peking. It was too near, and the
railroad had made it commonplace.</p>
<p>But Mongolia! That was different. One could not
go there in a roaring train. I had beside me the same
old rifle and sleeping bag that had been carried across
the mountains of far Yün-nan, along the Tibetan frontier,
and through the fever-stricken jungles of Burma.
Somehow, these companions of forest and mountain
trails, and my reception at Kalgan by two khaki-clad
young men, each with a belt of cartridges and a six-shooter
strapped about his waist, did much to keep me
in a blissful state of unpreparedness for the destruction
of my dream-castles.</p>
<p>That night as we sat in Mr. Charles Coltman's home,
with his charming wife, a real woman of the great outdoors,
presiding at the dinner table, the talk was all
of shooting, horses, and the vast, lone spaces of the Gobi
Desert—but not much of motor cars. Perhaps they
vaguely realized that I was still asleep in an unreal
world and knew that the awakening would come all
too soon.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">- 3 -</span></p>
<p>Yet I was dining that night with one of the men who
had destroyed the mystery of Mongolia. In 1916, Coltman
and his former partner, Oscar Mamen, had driven
across the plains to Urga, the historic capital of Mongolia.
But most unromantic and incongruous, most disheartening
to a dreamer of Oriental dreams, was what
I learned a few days later when the awakening had
really come—that among the first cars ever to cross
the desert was one purchased by the Hutukhtu, the
Living Buddha, the God of all the Mongols.</p>
<p>When the Hutukhtu learned of the first motor car
in Mongolia he forthwith demanded one for himself.
So his automobile was brought safely through
the rocky pass at Kalgan and across the seven hundred
miles of plain to Urga by way of the same old caravan
trail over which, centuries ago, Genghis Khan had sent
his wild Mongol raiders to conquer China.</p>
<p>We arose long before daylight on the morning of
August 29. In the courtyard lanterns flashed and disappeared
like giant fireflies as the <i>mafus</i> (muleteers)
packed the baggage and saddled the ponies. The cars
had been left on the plateau at a mission station called
Hei-ma-hou to avoid the rough going in the pass, and
we were to ride there on horseback while the food and
bed-rolls went by cart. There were five of us in the
party—Mr. and Mrs. Coltman, Mr. and Mrs. Lucander,
and myself. I was on a reconnaissance and Mr. Coltman's
object was to visit his trading station in Urga,
where the Lucanders were to remain for the winter.</p>
<p>The sun was an hour high when we clattered over the
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">- 4 -</span>
slippery paving stones to the north gate of the city.
Kalgan is built hard against the Great Wall of China—the
first line of defense, the outermost rampart in the
colossal structure which for so many centuries protected
China from Tartar invasion. Beyond it there was nothing
between us and the great plateau.</p>
<p>After our passports had been examined we rode
through the gloomy chasm-like gate, turned sharply to
the left, and found ourselves standing on the edge of a
half-dry river bed. Below us stretched line after line of
double-humped camels, some crowded in yellow-brown
masses which seemed all heads and curving necks, and
some kneeling quietly on the sand. From around a
shoulder of rock came other camels, hundreds of them,
treading slowly and sedately, nose to tail, toward the
gate in the Great Wall. They had come from the far
country whither we were bound. To me there is something
fascinating about a camel. Perhaps it is because
he seems to typify the great waste spaces which I love,
that I never tire of watching him swing silently, and
seemingly with resistless power, across the desert.</p>
<p>Our way to Hei-ma-hou led up the dry river bed, with
the Great Wall on the left stretching its serpentine
length across the hills, and on the right picturesque cliffs
two hundred feet in height. At their bases nestle mud-roofed
cottages and Chinese inns, but farther up the
river the low hills are all of <i>loess</i>—brown, wind-blown
dust, packed hard, which can be cut like cheese. Deserted
though they seem from a distance, they really
teem with human life. Whole villages are half dug, half
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">- 5 -</span>
built, into the hillsides, but are well-nigh invisible, for
every wall and roof is of the same brown earth.</p>
<p>Ten miles or so from Kalgan we began on foot the
long climb up the pass which gives entrance to the great
plateau. I kept my eyes steadily on the pony's heels
until we reached a broad, flat terrace halfway up the
pass. Then I swung about that I might have, all at
once, the view which lay below us. It justified my greatest
hopes, for miles and miles of rolling hills stretched
away to where the far horizon met the Shansi Mountains.</p>
<p>It was a desolate country which I saw, for every wave
in this vast land-sea was cut and slashed by the knives
of wind and frost and rain, and lay in a chaotic mass of
gaping wounds—cañons, ravines, and gullies, painted
in rainbow colors, crossing and cutting one another at
fantastic angles as far as the eye could see.</p>
<p>When, a few moments later, we reached the very summit
of the pass, I felt that no spot I had ever visited satisfied
my preconceived conceptions quite so thoroughly.
Behind and below us lay that stupendous relief map of
ravines and gorges; in front was a limitless stretch of
undulating plain, I knew then that I really stood upon
the edge of the greatest plateau in all the world and
that it could be only Mongolia.</p>
<p>We had tiffin at a tiny Chinese inn beside the road,
and trotted on toward Hei-ma-hou between waving
fields of wheat, buckwheat, millet, and oats—oats as
thick and "meaty" as any horse could wish to eat.</p>
<p>After tiffin Coltman and Lucander rode rapidly ahead
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">- 6 -</span>
while I trotted my pony along more slowly in the rear.
It was nearly seven o'clock, and the trees about the mission
station had been visible for half an hour. I was
enjoying a gorgeous sunset which splashed the western
sky with gold and red, and lazily watching the black
silhouettes of a camel caravan swinging along the summit
of a ridge a mile away. On the road beside me a
train of laden mules and bullock-carts rested for a moment—the
drivers half asleep. Over all the plain there
lay the peace of a perfect autumn evening.</p>
<p>Suddenly, from behind a little rise, I heard the whir
of a motor engine and the raucous voice of a Klaxon
horn. Before I realized what it meant, I was in the
midst of a mass of plunging, snorting animals, shouting
carters, and kicking mules. In a moment the caravan
scattered wildly across the plain and the road was clear
save for the author of the turmoil—a black automobile.</p>
<p>I wish I could make those who spend their lives within
a city know how strange and out of place that motor
seemed, alone there upon the open plain on the borders
of Mongolia. Imagine a camel or an elephant with all
its Oriental trappings suddenly appearing on Fifth
Avenue! You would think at once that it had escaped
from a circus or a zoo and would be mainly curious as
to what the traffic policeman would do when it did not
obey his signals.</p>
<p>But all the incongruity and the fact that the automobile
was a glaring anachronism did not prevent my
abandoning my horse to the <i>mafu</i> and stretching out
comfortably on the cushions of the rear seat. There I
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">- 7 -</span>
had nothing to do but collect the remains of my shattered
dream-castles as we bounced over the ruts and
stones. It was a rude awakening, and I felt half
ashamed to admit to myself as the miles sped by that
the springy seat was more comfortable than the saddle
on my Mongol pony.</p>
<p>But that night when I strolled about the mission
courtyard, under the spell of the starry, desert sky, I
drifted back again in thought to the glorious days of
Kublai Khan. My heart was hot with resentment that
this thing had come. I realized then that, for better or
for worse, the sanctity of the desert was gone forever.
Camels will still plod their silent way across the age-old
plains, but the mystery is lost. The secrets which were
yielded up to but a chosen few are open now to all, and
the world and his wife will speed their noisy course across
the miles of rolling prairie, hearing nothing, feeling
nothing, knowing nothing of that resistless desert charm
which led men out into the Great Unknown.</p>
<p>At daylight we packed the cars. Bed-rolls and cans
of gasoline were tied on the running boards and every
corner was filled with food. Our rifles were ready for
use, however, for Coltman had promised a kind of shooting
such as I had never seen before. The stories he told
of wild rides in the car after strings of antelope which
traveled at fifty or sixty miles an hour had left me mildly
skeptical. But then, you know, I had never seen a Mongolian
antelope run.</p>
<p>For twenty or thirty miles after leaving Hei-ma-hou
we bounced along over a road which would have been
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">- 8 -</span>
splendid except for the deep ruts cut by mule- and ox-carts.
These carts are the despair of any one who hopes
some time to see good roads in China. The spike-studded
wheels cut into the hardest ground and leave a
chaos of ridges and chasms which grows worse with
every year.</p>
<p>We were seldom out of sight of mud-walled huts or
tiny Chinese villages, and Chinese peddlers passed our
cars, carrying baskets of fruit or trinkets for the women.
Chinese farmers stopped to gaze at us as we bounded
over the ruts—in fact it was all Chinese, although we
were really in Mongolia. I was very eager to see Mongols,
to register first impressions of a people of whom
I had dreamed so much; but the blue-clad Chinaman was
ubiquitous.</p>
<p>For seventy miles from Kalgan it was all the same—Chinese
everywhere. The Great Wall was built to keep
the Mongols out, and by the same token it should have
kept the Chinese in. But the rolling, grassy sea of the
vast plateau was too strong a temptation for the Chinese
farmer. Encouraged by his own government, which
knows the value of just such peaceful penetration, he
pushes forward the line of cultivation a dozen miles or
so every year. As a result the grassy hills have given
place to fields of wheat, oats, millet, buckwheat, and
potatoes.</p>
<p class="tdr">PLATE I</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/plate_ia.png" width-obs="572" height-obs="451" alt="" /> <div class="caption4">ROY CHAPMAN ANDREWS on "KUBLAI KHAN"</div>
</div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/plate_ib.png" width-obs="628" height-obs="453" alt="" /> <div class="caption4">YVETTE BORUP ANDREWS, PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE EXPEDITION</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">- 9 -</span></p>
<p>The Mongol, above all things, is not a farmer; possibly
because, many years ago, the Manchus forbade him
to till the soil. Moreover, on the ground he is as awkward
as a duck out of water and he is never comfortable.
The back of a pony is his real home, and he will do wonderfully
well any work which keeps him in the saddle.
As Mr. F. A. Larsen in Urga once said, "A Mongol
would make a splendid cook if you could give him a
horse to ride about on in the kitchen." So he leaves to
the plodding Chinaman the cultivation of his boundless
plains, while he herds his fat-tailed sheep and goats and
cattle.</p>
<p>About two hours after leaving the mission station we
passed the limit of cultivation and were riding toward
the Tabool hills. There Mr. Larsen, the best known
foreigner in all Mongolia, has a home, and as we
swung past the trail which leads to his house we saw one
of his great herds of horses grazing in the distance.</p>
<p>All the land in this region has long, rich grass in
summer, and water is by no means scarce. There are
frequent wells and streams along the road, and in the
distance we often caught a glint of silver from the surface
of a pond or lake. Flocks of goats and fat-tailed
sheep drifted up the valley, and now and then a herd
of cattle massed themselves in moving patches on the
hillsides. But they are only a fraction of the numbers
which this land could easily support.</p>
<p>Not far from Tabool is a Mongol village. I jumped
out of the car to take a photograph but scrambled in
again almost as quickly, for as soon as the motor had
stopped a dozen dogs dashed from the houses snarling
and barking like a pack of wolves. They are huge
brutes, these Mongol dogs, and as fierce as they are big.
Every family and every caravan owns one or more, and
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">- 10 -</span>
we learned very soon never to approach a native encampment
on foot.</p>
<p>The village was as unlike a Chinese settlement as it
well could be, for instead of closely packed mud houses
there were circular, latticed frameworks covered with
felt and cone-shaped in the upper half. The <i>yurt</i>, as it
is called, is perfectly adapted to the Mongols and their
life. In the winter a stove is placed in the center, and
the house is dry and warm. In the summer the felt
covering is sometimes replaced by canvas which can be
lifted on any side to allow free passage of air. When
it is time for the semiannual migration to new grazing
grounds the <i>yurt</i> can be quickly dismantled, the framework
collapsed, and the house packed on camels or carts.</p>
<p>The Mongols of the village were rather disappointing,
for many of them show a strong element of Chinese
blood. This seems to have developed an unfortunate
combination of the worst characteristics of both races.
Even where there is no real mixture, their contact with
the Chinese has been demoralizing, and they will rob and
steal at every opportunity. The headdresses of the
southern women are by no means as elaborate as those
in the north.</p>
<p>When the hills of Tabool had begun to sink on the
horizon behind us, we entered upon a vast rolling plain,
where there was but little water and not a sign of human
life. It resembled nothing so much as the prairies of
Nebraska or Dakota, and amid the short grass larkspur
and purple thistles glowed in the sunlight like tongues
of flame.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">- 11 -</span></p>
<p>There was no lack of birds. In the ponds which we
passed earlier in the day we saw hundreds of mallard
ducks and teal. The car often frightened golden plover
from their dust baths in the road, and crested lapwings
flashed across the prairie like sudden storms of autumn
leaves. Huge, golden eagles and enormous ravens made
tempting targets on the telegraph poles, and in the
morning before we left the cultivated area we saw
demoiselle cranes in thousands.</p>
<p>In this land where wood is absent and everything
that will make a fire is of value, I wondered how it happened
that the telegraph poles remained untouched, for
every one was smooth and round without a splinter gone.
The method of protection is simple and entirely Oriental.
When the line was first erected, the Mongolian
government stated in an edict that any man who touched
a pole with knife or ax would lose his head. Even on
the plains the enforcement of such a law is not so difficult
as it might seem, and after a few heads had been
taken by way of example the safety of the line was assured.</p>
<p>Our camp the first night was on a hill slope about one
hundred miles from Hei-ma-hou. As soon as the cars
had stopped, one man was left to untie the sleeping bags
while the rest of us scattered over the plain to hunt material
for a fire. <i>Argul</i> (dried dung) forms the only
desert fuel and, although it does not blaze like wood, it
will "boil a pot" almost as quickly as charcoal. I was
elected to be the cook—a position with distinct advantages,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">- 12 -</span>
for in the freezing cold of early morning I could
linger about the fire with a good excuse.</p>
<p>It was a perfect autumn night. Every star in the
world of space seemed to have been crowded into our
own particular expanse of sky, and each one glowed like
a tiny lantern. When I had found a patch of sand and
had dug a trench for my hip and shoulder, I crawled
into the sleeping bag and lay for half an hour looking
up at the bespangled canopy above my head. Again
the magic of the desert night was in my blood, and I
blessed the fate which had carried me away from the
roar and rush of New York with its hurrying crowds.
But I felt a pang of envy when, far away in the distance,
there came the mellow notes of a camel-bell.
<i>Dong, dong, dong</i> it sounded, clear and sweet as cathedral
chimes. With surging blood I listened until I
caught the measured tread of padded feet, and saw the
black silhouettes of rounded bodies and curving necks.
Oh, to be with them, to travel as Marco Polo traveled,
and to learn to know the heart of the desert in the long
night marches! Before I closed my eyes that night I
vowed that when the war was done and I was free to
travel where I willed, I would come again to the desert
as the great Venetian came.</p>
<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">- 13 -</span></p>
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