<h2>CHAPTER XVI—SAFE ARRIVAL IN ENGLAND</h2>
<p>It was talking one night with a certain prince, one of the
banished ministers of state belonging to the Czar, that the
discourse of my particular case began. He had been telling
me abundance of fine things of the greatness, the magnificence,
the dominions, and the absolute power of the Emperor of the
Russians: I interrupted him, and told him I was a greater and
more powerful prince than ever the Czar was, though my dominion
were not so large, or my people so many. The Russian
grandee looked a little surprised, and, fixing his eyes steadily
upon me, began to wonder what I meant. I said his wonder
would cease when I had explained myself, and told him the story
at large of my living in the island; and then how I managed both
myself and the people that were under me, just as I have since
minuted it down. They were exceedingly taken with the
story, and especially the prince, who told me, with a sigh, that
the true greatness of life was to be masters of ourselves; that
he would not have exchanged such a state of life as mine to be
Czar of Muscovy; and that he found more felicity in the
retirement he seemed to be banished to there, than ever he found
in the highest authority he enjoyed in the court of his master
the Czar; that the height of human wisdom was to bring our
tempers down to our circumstances, and to make a calm within,
under the weight of the greatest storms without. When he
came first hither, he said, he used to tear the hair from his
head, and the clothes from his back, as others had done before
him; but a little time and consideration had made him look into
himself, as well as round him to things without; that he found
the mind of man, if it was but once brought to reflect upon the
state of universal life, and how little this world was concerned
in its true felicity, was perfectly capable of making a felicity
for itself, fully satisfying to itself, and suitable to its own
best ends and desires, with but very little assistance from the
world. That being now deprived of all the fancied felicity
which he enjoyed in the full exercise of worldly pleasures, he
said he was at leisure to look upon the dark side of them, where
he found all manner of deformity; and was now convinced that
virtue only makes a man truly wise, rich, and great, and
preserves him in the way to a superior happiness in a future
state; and in this, he said, they were more happy in their
banishment than all their enemies were, who had the full
possession of all the wealth and power they had left behind
them. “Nor, sir,” says he, “do I bring my
mind to this politically, from the necessity of my circumstances,
which some call miserable; but, if I know anything of myself, I
would not now go back, though the Czar my master should call me,
and reinstate me in all my former grandeur.”</p>
<p>He spoke this with so much warmth in his temper, so much
earnestness and motion of his spirits, that it was evident it was
the true sense of his soul; there was no room to doubt his
sincerity. I told him I once thought myself a kind of
monarch in my old station, of which I had given him an account;
but that I thought he was not only a monarch, but a great
conqueror; for he that had got a victory over his own exorbitant
desires, and the absolute dominion over himself, he whose reason
entirely governs his will, is certainly greater than he that
conquers a city.</p>
<p>I had been here eight months, and a dark, dreadful winter I
thought it; the cold so intense that I could not so much as look
abroad without being wrapped in furs, and a kind of mask of fur
before my face, with only a hole for breath, and two for sight:
the little daylight we had was for three months not above five
hours a day, and six at most; only that the snow lying on the
ground continually, and the weather being clear, it was never
quite dark. Our horses were kept, or rather starved,
underground; and as for our servants, whom we hired here to look
after ourselves and horses, we had, every now and then, their
fingers and toes to thaw and take care of, lest they should
mortify and fall off.</p>
<p>It is true, within doors we were warm, the houses being close,
the walls thick, the windows small, and the glass all
double. Our food was chiefly the flesh of deer, dried and
cured in the season; bread good enough, but baked as biscuits;
dried fish of several sorts, and some flesh of mutton, and of
buffaloes, which is pretty good meat. All the stores of
provisions for the winter are laid up in the summer, and well
cured: our drink was water, mixed with aqua vitae instead of
brandy; and for a treat, mead instead of wine, which, however,
they have very good. The hunters, who venture abroad all
weathers, frequently brought us in fine venison, and sometimes
bear’s flesh, but we did not much care for the last.
We had a good stock of tea, with which we treated our friends,
and we lived cheerfully and well, all things considered.</p>
<p>It was now March, the days grown considerably longer, and the
weather at least tolerable; so the other travellers began to
prepare sledges to carry them over the snow, and to get things
ready to be going; but my measures being fixed, as I have said,
for Archangel, and not for Muscovy or the Baltic, I made no
motion; knowing very well that the ships from the south do not
set out for that part of the world till May or June, and that if
I was there by the beginning of August, it would be as soon as
any ships would be ready to sail. Therefore I made no haste
to be gone, as others did: in a word, I saw a great many people,
nay, all the travellers, go away before me. It seems every
year they go from thence to Muscovy, for trade, to carry furs,
and buy necessaries, which they bring back with them to furnish
their shops: also others went on the same errand to
Archangel.</p>
<p>In the month of May I began to make all ready to pack up; and,
as I was doing this, it occurred to me that, seeing all these
people were banished by the Czar to Siberia, and yet, when they
came there, were left at liberty to go whither they would, why
they did not then go away to any part of the world, wherever they
thought fit: and I began to examine what should hinder them from
making such an attempt. But my wonder was over when I
entered upon that subject with the person I have mentioned, who
answered me thus: “Consider, first, sir,” said he,
“the place where we are; and, secondly, the condition we
are in; especially the generality of the people who are banished
thither. We are surrounded with stronger things than bars
or bolts; on the north side, an unnavigable ocean, where ship
never sailed, and boat never swam; every other way we have above
a thousand miles to pass through the Czar’s own dominion,
and by ways utterly impassable, except by the roads made by the
government, and through the towns garrisoned by his troops; in
short, we could neither pass undiscovered by the road, nor
subsist any other way, so that it is in vain to attempt
it.”</p>
<p>I was silenced at once, and found that they were in a prison
every jot as secure as if they had been locked up in the castle
at Moscow: however, it came into my thoughts that I might
certainly be made an instrument to procure the escape of this
excellent person; and that, whatever hazard I ran, I would
certainly try if I could carry him off. Upon this, I took
an occasion one evening to tell him my thoughts. I
represented to him that it was very easy for me to carry him
away, there being no guard over him in the country; and as I was
not going to Moscow, but to Archangel, and that I went in the
retinue of a caravan, by which I was not obliged to lie in the
stationary towns in the desert, but could encamp every night
where I would, we might easily pass uninterrupted to Archangel,
where I would immediately secure him on board an English ship,
and carry him safe along with me; and as to his subsistence and
other particulars, it should be my care till he could better
supply himself.</p>
<p>He heard me very attentively, and looked earnestly on me all
the while I spoke; nay, I could see in his very face that what I
said put his spirits into an exceeding ferment; his colour
frequently changed, his eyes looked red, and his heart fluttered,
till it might be even perceived in his countenance; nor could he
immediately answer me when I had done, and, as it were, hesitated
what he would say to it; but after he had paused a little, he
embraced me, and said, “How unhappy are we, unguarded
creatures as we are, that even our greatest acts of friendship
are made snares unto us, and we are made tempters of one
another!” He then heartily thanked me for my offers
of service, but withstood resolutely the arguments I used to urge
him to set himself free. He declared, in earnest terms,
that he was fully bent on remaining where he was rather than seek
to return to his former miserable greatness, as he called it:
where the seeds of pride, ambition, avarice, and luxury might
revive, take root, and again overwhelm him. “Let me
remain, dear sir,” he said, in conclusion—“let
me remain in this blessed confinement, banished from the crimes
of life, rather than purchase a show of freedom at the expense of
the liberty of my reason, and at the future happiness which I now
have in my view, but should then, I fear, quickly lose sight of;
for I am but flesh; a man, a mere man; and have passions and
affections as likely to possess and overthrow me as any man: Oh,
be not my friend and tempter both together!”</p>
<p>If I was surprised before, I was quite dumb now, and stood
silent, looking at him, and, indeed, admiring what I saw.
The struggle in his soul was so great that, though the weather
was extremely cold, it put him into a most violent heat; so I
said a word or two, that I would leave him to consider of it, and
wait on him again, and then I withdrew to my own apartment.</p>
<p>About two hours after I heard somebody at or near the door of
my room, and I was going to open the door, but he had opened it
and come in. “My dear friend,” says he,
“you had almost overset me, but I am recovered. Do
not take it ill that I do not close with your offer. I
assure you it is not for want of sense of the kindness of it in
you; and I came to make the most sincere acknowledgment of it to
you; but I hope I have got the victory over
myself.”—“My lord,” said I, “I hope
you are fully satisfied that you do not resist the call of
Heaven.”—“Sir,” said he, “if it had
been from Heaven, the same power would have influenced me to have
accepted it; but I hope, and am fully satisfied, that it is from
Heaven that I decline it, and I have infinite satisfaction in the
parting, that you shall leave me an honest man still, though not
a free man.”</p>
<p>I had nothing to do but to acquiesce, and make professions to
him of my having no end in it but a sincere desire to serve
him. He embraced me very passionately, and assured me he
was sensible of that, and should always acknowledge it; and with
that he offered me a very fine present of sables—too much,
indeed, for me to accept from a man in his circumstances, and I
would have avoided them, but he would not be refused. The
next morning I sent my servant to his lordship with a small
present of tea, and two pieces of China damask, and four little
wedges of Japan gold, which did not all weigh above six ounces or
thereabouts, but were far short of the value of his sables,
which, when I came to England, I found worth near two hundred
pounds. He accepted the tea, and one piece of the damask,
and one of the pieces of gold, which had a fine stamp upon it, of
the Japan coinage, which I found he took for the rarity of it,
but would not take any more: and he sent word by my servant that
he desired to speak with me.</p>
<p>When I came to him he told me I knew what had passed between
us, and hoped I would not move him any more in that affair; but
that, since I had made such a generous offer to him, he asked me
if I had kindness enough to offer the same to another person that
he would name to me, in whom he had a great share of
concern. In a word, he told me it was his only son; who,
though I had not seen him, was in the same condition with
himself, and above two hundred miles from him, on the other side
of the Oby; but that, if I consented, he would send for him.</p>
<p>I made no hesitation, but told him I would do it. I made
some ceremony in letting him understand that it was wholly on his
account; and that, seeing I could not prevail on him, I would
show my respect to him by my concern for his son. He sent
the next day for his son; and in about twenty days he came back
with the messenger, bringing six or seven horses, loaded with
very rich furs, which, in the whole, amounted to a very great
value. His servants brought the horses into the town, but
left the young lord at a distance till night, when he came
incognito into our apartment, and his father presented him to me;
and, in short, we concerted the manner of our travelling, and
everything proper for the journey.</p>
<p>I had bought a considerable quantity of sables, black
fox-skins, fine ermines, and such other furs as are very rich in
that city, in exchange for some of the goods I had brought from
China; in particular for the cloves and nutmegs, of which I sold
the greatest part here, and the rest afterwards at Archangel, for
a much better price than I could have got at London; and my
partner, who was sensible of the profit, and whose business, more
particularly than mine, was merchandise, was mightily pleased
with our stay, on account of the traffic we made here.</p>
<p>It was the beginning of June when I left this remote
place. We were now reduced to a very small caravan, having
only thirty-two horses and camels in all, which passed for mine,
though my new guest was proprietor of eleven of them. It
was natural also that I should take more servants with me than I
had before; and the young lord passed for my steward; what great
man I passed for myself I know not, neither did it concern me to
inquire. We had here the worst and the largest desert to
pass over that we met with in our whole journey; I call it the
worst, because the way was very deep in some places, and very
uneven in others; the best we had to say for it was, that we
thought we had no troops of Tartars or robbers to fear, as they
never came on this side of the river Oby, or at least very
seldom; but we found it otherwise.</p>
<p>My young lord had a faithful Siberian servant, who was
perfectly acquainted with the country, and led us by private
roads, so that we avoided coming into the principal towns and
cities upon the great road, such as Tumen, Soloy Kamaskoy, and
several others; because the Muscovite garrisons which are kept
there are very curious and strict in their observation upon
travellers, and searching lest any of the banished persons of
note should make their escape that way into Muscovy; but, by this
means, as we were kept out of the cities, so our whole journey
was a desert, and we were obliged to encamp and lie in our tents,
when we might have had very good accommodation in the cities on
the way; this the young lord was so sensible of, that he would
not allow us to lie abroad when we came to several cities on the
way, but lay abroad himself, with his servant, in the woods, and
met us always at the appointed places.</p>
<p>We had just entered Europe, having passed the river Kama,
which in these parts is the boundary between Europe and Asia, and
the first city on the European side was called Soloy Kamaskoy,
that is, the great city on the river Kama. And here we
thought to see some evident alteration in the people; but we were
mistaken, for as we had a vast desert to pass, which is near
seven hundred miles long in some places, but not above two
hundred miles over where we passed it, so, till we came past that
horrible place, we found very little difference between that
country and Mogul Tartary. The people are mostly pagans;
their houses and towns full of idols; and their way of living
wholly barbarous, except in the cities and villages near them,
where they are Christians, as they call themselves, of the Greek
Church: but have their religion mingled with so many relics of
superstition, that it is scarce to be known in some places from
mere sorcery and witchcraft.</p>
<p>In passing this forest (after all our dangers were, to our
imagination, escaped), I thought, indeed, we must have been
plundered and robbed, and perhaps murdered, by a troop of
thieves: of what country they were I am yet at a loss to know;
but they were all on horseback, carried bows and arrows, and were
at first about forty-five in number. They came so near to
us as to be within two musket-shot, and, asking no questions,
surrounded us with their horses, and looked very earnestly upon
us twice; at length, they placed themselves just in our way; upon
which we drew up in a little line, before our camels, being not
above sixteen men in all. Thus drawn up, we halted, and
sent out the Siberian servant, who attended his lord, to see who
they were; his master was the more willing to let him go, because
he was not a little apprehensive that they were a Siberian troop
sent out after him. The man came up near them with a flag
of truce, and called to them; but though he spoke several of
their languages, or dialects of languages rather, he could not
understand a word they said; however, after some signs to him not
to come near them at his peril, the fellow came back no wiser
than he went; only that by their dress, he said, he believed them
to be some Tartars of Kalmuck, or of the Circassian hordes, and
that there must be more of them upon the great desert, though he
never heard that any of them were seen so far north before.</p>
<p>This was small comfort to us; however, we had no remedy: there
was on our left hand, at about a quarter of a mile distance, a
little grove, and very near the road. I immediately
resolved we should advance to those trees, and fortify ourselves
as well as we could there; for, first, I considered that the
trees would in a great measure cover us from their arrows; and,
in the next place, they could not come to charge us in a body: it
was, indeed, my old Portuguese pilot who proposed it, and who had
this excellency attending him, that he was always readiest and
most apt to direct and encourage us in cases of the most
danger. We advanced immediately, with what speed we could,
and gained that little wood; the Tartars, or thieves, for we knew
not what to call them, keeping their stand, and not attempting to
hinder us. When we came thither, we found, to our great
satisfaction, that it was a swampy piece of ground, and on the
one side a very great spring of water, which, running out in a
little brook, was a little farther joined by another of the like
size; and was, in short, the source of a considerable river,
called afterwards the Wirtska; the trees which grew about this
spring were not above two hundred, but very large, and stood
pretty thick, so that as soon as we got in, we saw ourselves
perfectly safe from the enemy unless they attacked us on
foot.</p>
<p>While we stayed here waiting the motion of the enemy some
hours, without perceiving that they made any movement, our
Portuguese, with some help, cut several arms of trees half off,
and laid them hanging across from one tree to another, and in a
manner fenced us in. About two hours before night they came
down directly upon us; and though we had not perceived it, we
found they had been joined by some more, so that they were near
fourscore horse; whereof, however, we fancied some were
women. They came on till they were within half-shot of our
little wood, when we fired one musket without ball, and called to
them in the Russian tongue to know what they wanted, and bade
them keep off; but they came on with a double fury up to the
wood-side, not imagining we were so barricaded that they could
not easily break in. Our old pilot was our captain as well
as our engineer, and desired us not to fire upon them till they
came within pistol-shot, that we might be sure to kill, and that
when we did fire we should be sure to take good aim; we bade him
give the word of command, which he delayed so long that they were
some of them within two pikes’ length of us when we let
fly. We aimed so true that we killed fourteen of them, and
wounded several others, as also several of their horses; for we
had all of us loaded our pieces with two or three bullets apiece
at least.</p>
<p>They were terribly surprised with our fire, and retreated
immediately about one hundred rods from us; in which time we
loaded our pieces again, and seeing them keep that distance, we
sallied out, and caught four or five of their horses, whose
riders we supposed were killed; and coming up to the dead, we
judged they were Tartars, but knew not how they came to make an
excursion such an unusual length.</p>
<p>About an hour after they again made a motion to attack us, and
rode round our little wood to see where they might break in; but
finding us always ready to face them, they went off again; and we
resolved not to stir for that night.</p>
<p>We slept little, but spent the most part of the night in
strengthening our situation, and barricading the entrances into
the wood, and keeping a strict watch. We waited for
daylight, and when it came, it gave us a very unwelcome discovery
indeed; for the enemy, who we thought were discouraged with the
reception they met with, were now greatly increased, and had set
up eleven or twelve huts or tents, as if they were resolved to
besiege us; and this little camp they had pitched upon the open
plain, about three-quarters of a mile from us. I confess I
now gave myself over for lost, and all that I had; the loss of my
effects did not lie so near me, though very considerable, as the
thoughts of falling into the hands of such barbarians at the
latter end of my journey, after so many difficulties and hazards
as I had gone through, and even in sight of our port, where we
expected safety and deliverance. As to my partner, he was
raging, and declared that to lose his goods would be his ruin,
and that he would rather die than be starved, and he was for
fighting to the last drop.</p>
<p>The young lord, a most gallant youth, was for fighting to the
last also; and my old pilot was of opinion that we were able to
resist them all in the situation we were then in. Thus we
spent the day in debates of what we should do; but towards
evening we found that the number of our enemies still increased,
and we did not know but by the morning they might still be a
greater number: so I began to inquire of those people we had
brought from Tobolski if there were no private ways by which we
might avoid them in the night, and perhaps retreat to some town,
or get help to guard us over the desert. The young
lord’s Siberian servant told us, if we designed to avoid
them, and not fight, he would engage to carry us off in the
night, to a way that went north, towards the river Petruz, by
which he made no question but we might get away, and the Tartars
never discover it; but, he said, his lord had told him he would
not retreat, but would rather choose to fight. I told him
he mistook his lord: for that he was too wise a man to love
fighting for the sake of it; that I knew he was brave enough by
what he had showed already; but that he knew better than to
desire seventeen or eighteen men to fight five hundred, unless an
unavoidable necessity forced them to it; and that if he thought
it possible for us to escape in the night, we had nothing else to
do but to attempt it. He answered, if his lordship gave him
such orders, he would lose his life if he did not perform it; we
soon brought his lord to give that order, though privately, and
we immediately prepared for putting it in practice.</p>
<p>And first, as soon as it began to be dark, we kindled a fire
in our little camp, which we kept burning, and prepared so as to
make it burn all night, that the Tartars might conclude we were
still there; but as soon as it was dark, and we could see the
stars (for our guide would not stir before), having all our
horses and camels ready loaded, we followed our new guide, who I
soon found steered himself by the north star, the country being
level for a long way.</p>
<p>After we had travelled two hours very hard, it began to be
lighter still; not that it was dark all night, but the moon began
to rise, so that, in short, it was rather lighter than we wished
it to be; but by six o’clock the next morning we had got
above thirty miles, having almost spoiled our horses. Here
we found a Russian village, named Kermazinskoy, where we rested,
and heard nothing of the Kalmuck Tartars that day. About
two hours before night we set out again, and travelled till eight
the next morning, though not quite so hard as before; and about
seven o’clock we passed a little river, called Kirtza, and
came to a good large town inhabited by Russians, called Ozomys;
there we heard that several troops of Kalmucks had been abroad
upon the desert, but that we were now completely out of danger of
them, which was to our great satisfaction. Here we were
obliged to get some fresh horses, and having need enough of rest,
we stayed five days; and my partner and I agreed to give the
honest Siberian who conducted us thither the value of ten
pistoles.</p>
<p>In five days more we came to Veussima, upon the river
Witzogda, and running into the Dwina: we were there, very
happily, near the end of our travels by land, that river being
navigable, in seven days’ passage, to Archangel. From
hence we came to Lawremskoy, the 3rd of July; and providing
ourselves with two luggage boats, and a barge for our own
convenience, we embarked the 7th, and arrived all safe at
Archangel the 18th; having been a year, five months, and three
days on the journey, including our stay of about eight months at
Tobolski.</p>
<p>We were obliged to stay at this place six weeks for the
arrival of the ships, and must have tarried longer, had not a
Hamburgher come in above a month sooner than any of the English
ships; when, after some consideration that the city of Hamburgh
might happen to be as good a market for our goods as London, we
all took freight with him; and, having put our goods on board, it
was most natural for me to put my steward on board to take care
of them; by which means my young lord had a sufficient
opportunity to conceal himself, never coming on shore again all
the time we stayed there; and this he did that he might not be
seen in the city, where some of the Moscow merchants would
certainly have seen and discovered him.</p>
<p>We then set sail from Archangel the 20th of August, the same
year; and, after no extraordinary bad voyage, arrived safe in the
Elbe the 18th of September. Here my partner and I found a
very good sale for our goods, as well those of China as the
sables, &c., of Siberia: and, dividing the produce, my share
amounted to £3475, 17s 3d., including about six hundred
pounds’ worth of diamonds, which I purchased at Bengal.</p>
<p>Here the young lord took his leave of us, and went up the
Elbe, in order to go to the court of Vienna, where he resolved to
seek protection and could correspond with those of his
father’s friends who were left alive. He did not part
without testimonials of gratitude for the service I had done him,
and for my kindness to the prince, his father.</p>
<p>To conclude: having stayed near four months in Hamburgh, I
came from thence by land to the Hague, where I embarked in the
packet, and arrived in London the 10th of January 1705, having
been absent from England ten years and nine months. And
here, resolving to harass myself no more, I am preparing for a
longer journey than all these, having lived seventy-two years a
life of infinite variety, and learned sufficiently to know the
value of retirement, and the blessing of ending our days in
peace.</p>
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