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<h2> CHAPTER II RUSSIANS AND TARTARS </h2>
<p>THE Czar had not so suddenly left the ball-room of the New Palace, when
the fête he was giving to the civil and military authorities and principal
people of Moscow was at the height of its brilliancy, without ample cause;
for he had just received information that serious events were taking place
beyond the frontiers of the Ural. It had become evident that a formidable
rebellion threatened to wrest the Siberian provinces from the Russian
crown.</p>
<p>Asiatic Russia, or Siberia, covers a superficial area of 1,790,208 square
miles, and contains nearly two millions of inhabitants. Extending from the
Ural Mountains, which separate it from Russia in Europe, to the shores of
the Pacific Ocean, it is bounded on the south by Turkestan and the Chinese
Empire; on the north by the Arctic Ocean, from the Sea of Kara to
Behring’s Straits. It is divided into several governments or provinces,
those of Tobolsk, Yeniseisk, Irkutsk, Omsk, and Yakutsk; contains two
districts, Okhotsk and Kamtschatka; and possesses two countries, now under
the Muscovite dominion—that of the Kirghiz and that of the
Tshouktshes. This immense extent of steppes, which includes more than one
hundred and ten degrees from west to east, is a land to which criminals
and political offenders are banished.</p>
<p>Two governor-generals represent the supreme authority of the Czar over
this vast country. The higher one resides at Irkutsk, the far capital of
Eastern Siberia. The River Tchouna separates the two Siberias.</p>
<p>No rail yet furrows these wide plains, some of which are in reality
extremely fertile. No iron ways lead from those precious mines which make
the Siberian soil far richer below than above its surface. The traveler
journeys in summer in a kibick or telga; in winter, in a sledge.</p>
<p>An electric telegraph, with a single wire more than eight thousand versts
in length, alone affords communication between the western and eastern
frontiers of Siberia. On issuing from the Ural, it passes through
Ekaterenburg, Kasirnov, Tioumen, Ishim, Omsk, Elamsk, Kolyvan, Tomsk,
Krasnoiarsk, Nijni-Udinsk, Irkutsk, Verkne-Nertschink, Strelink, Albazine,
Blagowstenks, Radde, Orlomskaya, Alexandrowskoe, and Nikolaevsk; and six
roubles and nineteen copecks are paid for every word sent from one end to
the other. From Irkutsk there is a branch to Kiatka, on the Mongolian
frontier; and from thence, for thirty copecks a word, the post conveys the
dispatches to Pekin in a fortnight.</p>
<p>It was this wire, extending from Ekaterenburg to Nikolaevsk, which had
been cut, first beyond Tomsk, and then between Tomsk and Kolyvan.</p>
<p>This was why the Czar, to the communication made to him for the second
time by General Kissoff, had answered by the words, “A courier this
moment!”</p>
<p>The Czar remained motionless at the window for a few moments, when the
door was again opened. The chief of police appeared on the threshold.</p>
<p>“Enter, General,” said the Czar briefly, “and tell me all you know of Ivan
Ogareff.”</p>
<p>“He is an extremely dangerous man, sire,” replied the chief of police.</p>
<p>“He ranked as colonel, did he not?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sire.”</p>
<p>“Was he an intelligent officer?”</p>
<p>“Very intelligent, but a man whose spirit it was impossible to subdue; and
possessing an ambition which stopped at nothing, he became involved in
secret intrigues, and was degraded from his rank by his Highness the Grand
Duke, and exiled to Siberia.”</p>
<p>“How long ago was that?”</p>
<p>“Two years since. Pardoned after six months of exile by your majesty’s
favor, he returned to Russia.”</p>
<p>“And since that time, has he not revisited Siberia?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sire; but he voluntarily returned there,” replied the chief of
police, adding, and slightly lowering his voice, “there was a time, sire,
when NONE returned from Siberia.”</p>
<p>“Well, whilst I live, Siberia is and shall be a country whence men CAN
return.”</p>
<p>The Czar had the right to utter these words with some pride, for often, by
his clemency, he had shown that Russian justice knew how to pardon.</p>
<p>The head of the police did not reply to this observation, but it was
evident that he did not approve of such half-measures. According to his
idea, a man who had once passed the Ural Mountains in charge of policemen,
ought never again to cross them. Now, it was not thus under the new reign,
and the chief of police sincerely deplored it. What! no banishment for
life for other crimes than those against social order! What! political
exiles returning from Tobolsk, from Yakutsk, from Irkutsk! In truth, the
chief of police, accustomed to the despotic sentences of the ukase which
formerly never pardoned, could not understand this mode of governing. But
he was silent, waiting until the Czar should interrogate him further. The
questions were not long in coming.</p>
<p>“Did not Ivan Ogareff,” asked the Czar, “return to Russia a second time,
after that journey through the Siberian provinces, the object of which
remains unknown?”</p>
<p>“He did.”</p>
<p>“And have the police lost trace of him since?”</p>
<p>“No, sire; for an offender only becomes really dangerous from the day he
has received his pardon.”</p>
<p>The Czar frowned. Perhaps the chief of police feared that he had gone
rather too far, though the stubbornness of his ideas was at least equal to
the boundless devotion he felt for his master. But the Czar, disdaining to
reply to these indirect reproaches cast on his policy, continued his
questions. “Where was Ogareff last heard of?”</p>
<p>“In the province of Perm.”</p>
<p>“In what town?”</p>
<p>“At Perm itself.”</p>
<p>“What was he doing?”</p>
<p>“He appeared unoccupied, and there was nothing suspicious in his conduct.”</p>
<p>“Then he was not under the surveillance of the secret police?”</p>
<p>“No, sire.”</p>
<p>“When did he leave Perm?”</p>
<p>“About the month of March?”</p>
<p>“To go...?”</p>
<p>“Where, is unknown.”</p>
<p>“And it is not known what has become of him?”</p>
<p>“No, sire; it is not known.”</p>
<p>“Well, then, I myself know,” answered the Czar. “I have received anonymous
communications which did not pass through the police department; and, in
the face of events now taking place beyond the frontier, I have every
reason to believe that they are correct.”</p>
<p>“Do you mean, sire,” cried the chief of police, “that Ivan Ogareff has a
hand in this Tartar rebellion?”</p>
<p>“Indeed I do; and I will now tell you something which you are ignorant of.
After leaving Perm, Ivan Ogareff crossed the Ural mountains, entered
Siberia, and penetrated the Kirghiz steppes, and there endeavored, not
without success, to foment rebellion amongst their nomadic population. He
then went so far south as free Turkestan; there, in the provinces of
Bokhara, Khokhand, and Koondooz, he found chiefs willing to pour their
Tartar hordes into Siberia, and excite a general rising in Asiatic Russia.
The storm has been silently gathering, but it has at last burst like a
thunderclap, and now all means of communication between Eastern and
Western Siberia have been stopped. Moreover, Ivan Ogareff, thirsting for
vengeance, aims at the life of my brother!”</p>
<p>The Czar had become excited whilst speaking, and now paced up and down
with hurried steps. The chief of police said nothing, but he thought to
himself that, during the time when the emperors of Russia never pardoned
an exile, schemes such as those of Ivan Ogareff could never have been
realized. Approaching the Czar, who had thrown himself into an armchair,
he asked, “Your majesty has of course given orders so that this rebellion
may be suppressed as soon as possible?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered the Czar. “The last telegram which reached Nijni-Udinsk
would set in motion the troops in the governments of Yenisei, Irkutsk,
Yakutsk, as well as those in the provinces of the Amoor and Lake Baikal.
At the same time, the regiments from Perm and Nijni-Novgorod, and the
Cossacks from the frontier, are advancing by forced marches towards the
Ural Mountains; but some weeks must pass before they can attack the
Tartars.”</p>
<p>“And your majesty’s brother, his Highness the Grand Duke, is now isolated
in the government of Irkutsk, and is no longer in direct communication
with Moscow?”</p>
<p>“That is so.”</p>
<p>“But by the last dispatches, he must know what measures have been taken by
your majesty, and what help he may expect from the governments nearest
Irkutsk?”</p>
<p>“He knows that,” answered the Czar; “but what he does not know is, that
Ivan Ogareff, as well as being a rebel, is also playing the part of a
traitor, and that in him he has a personal and bitter enemy. It is to the
Grand Duke that Ogareff owes his first disgrace; and what is more serious
is, that this man is not known to him. Ogareff’s plan, therefore, is to go
to Irkutsk, and, under an assumed name, offer his services to the Grand
Duke. Then, after gaining his confidence, when the Tartars have invested
Irkutsk, he will betray the town, and with it my brother, whose life he
seeks. This is what I have learned from my secret intelligence; this is
what the Grand Duke does not know; and this is what he must know!”</p>
<p>“Well, sire, an intelligent, courageous courier...”</p>
<p>“I momentarily expect one.”</p>
<p>“And it is to be hoped he will be expeditious,” added the chief of police;
“for, allow me to add, sire, that Siberia is a favorable land for
rebellions.”</p>
<p>“Do you mean to say. General, that the exiles would make common cause with
the rebels?” exclaimed the Czar.</p>
<p>“Excuse me, your majesty,” stammered the chief of police, for that was
really the idea suggested to him by his uneasy and suspicious mind.</p>
<p>“I believe in their patriotism,” returned the Czar.</p>
<p>“There are other offenders besides political exiles in Siberia,” said the
chief of police.</p>
<p>“The criminals? Oh, General, I give those up to you! They are the vilest,
I grant, of the human race. They belong to no country. But the
insurrection, or rather, the rebellion, is not to oppose the emperor; it
is raised against Russia, against the country which the exiles have not
lost all hope of again seeing—and which they will see again. No, a
Russian would never unite with a Tartar, to weaken, were it only for an
hour, the Muscovite power!”</p>
<p>The Czar was right in trusting to the patriotism of those whom his policy
kept, for a time, at a distance. Clemency, which was the foundation of his
justice, when he could himself direct its effects, the modifications he
had adopted with regard to applications for the formerly terrible ukases,
warranted the belief that he was not mistaken. But even without this
powerful element of success in regard to the Tartar rebellion,
circumstances were not the less very serious; for it was to be feared that
a large part of the Kirghiz population would join the rebels.</p>
<p>The Kirghiz are divided into three hordes, the greater, the lesser, and
the middle, and number nearly four hundred thousand “tents,” or two
million souls. Of the different tribes some are independent and others
recognize either the sovereignty of Russia or that of the Khans of Khiva,
Khokhand, and Bokhara, the most formidable chiefs of Turkestan. The middle
horde, the richest, is also the largest, and its encampments occupy all
the space between the rivers Sara Sou, Irtish, and the Upper Ishim, Lake
Saisang and Lake Aksakal. The greater horde, occupying the countries
situated to the east of the middle one, extends as far as the governments
of Omsk and Tobolsk. Therefore, if the Kirghiz population should rise, it
would be the rebellion of Asiatic Russia, and the first thing would be the
separation of Siberia, to the east of the Yenisei.</p>
<p>It is true that these Kirghiz, mere novices in the art of war, are rather
nocturnal thieves and plunderers of caravans than regular soldiers. As M.
Levchine says, “a firm front or a square of good infantry could repel ten
times the number of Kirghiz; and a single cannon might destroy a frightful
number.”</p>
<p>That may be; but to do this it is necessary for the square of good
infantry to reach the rebellious country, and the cannon to leave the
arsenals of the Russian provinces, perhaps two or three thousand versts
distant. Now, except by the direct route from Ekaterenburg to Irkutsk, the
often marshy steppes are not easily practicable, and some weeks must
certainly pass before the Russian troops could reach the Tartar hordes.</p>
<p>Omsk is the center of that military organization of Western Siberia which
is intended to overawe the Kirghiz population. Here are the bounds, more
than once infringed by the half-subdued nomads, and there was every reason
to believe that Omsk was already in danger. The line of military stations,
that is to say, those Cossack posts which are ranged in echelon from Omsk
to Semipolatinsk, must have been broken in several places. Now, it was to
be feared that the “Grand Sultans,” who govern the Kirghiz districts would
either voluntarily accept, or involuntarily submit to, the dominion of
Tartars, Mussulmen like themselves, and that to the hate caused by slavery
was not united the hate due to the antagonism of the Greek and Mussulman
religions. For some time, indeed, the Tartars of Turkestan had endeavored,
both by force and persuasion, to subdue the Kirghiz hordes.</p>
<p>A few words only with respect to these Tartars. The Tartars belong more
especially to two distinct races, the Caucasian and the Mongolian. The
Caucasian race, which, as Abel de Remusat says, “is regarded in Europe as
the type of beauty in our species, because all the nations in this part of
the world have sprung from it,” includes also the Turks and the Persians.
The purely Mongolian race comprises the Mongols, Manchoux, and Thibetans.</p>
<p>The Tartars who now threatened the Russian Empire, belonged to the
Caucasian race, and occupied Turkestan. This immense country is divided
into different states, governed by Khans, and hence termed Khanats. The
principal khanats are those of Bokhara, Khokhand, Koondooz, etc. At this
period, the most important and the most formidable khanat was that of
Bokhara. Russia had already been several times at war with its chiefs,
who, for their own interests, had supported the independence of the
Kirghiz against the Muscovite dominion. The present chief, Feofar-Khan,
followed in the steps of his predecessors.</p>
<p>The khanat of Bokhara has a population of two million five hundred
thousand inhabitants, an army of sixty thousand men, trebled in time of
war, and thirty thousand horsemen. It is a rich country, with varied
animal, vegetable, and mineral products, and has been increased by the
accession of the territories of Balkh, Aukoi, and Meimaneh. It possesses
nineteen large towns. Bokhara, surrounded by a wall measuring more than
eight English miles, and flanked with towers, a glorious city, made
illustrious by Avicenna and other learned men of the tenth century, is
regarded as the center of Mussulman science, and ranks among the most
celebrated cities of Central Asia. Samarcand, which contains the tomb of
Tamerlane and the famous palace where the blue stone is kept on which each
new khan must seat himself on his accession, is defended by a very strong
citadel. Karschi, with its triple cordon, situated in an oasis, surrounded
by a marsh peopled with tortoises and lizards, is almost impregnable,
Is-chardjoui is defended by a population of twenty thousand souls.
Protected by its mountains, and isolated by its steppes, the khanat of
Bokhara is a most formidable state; and Russia would need a large force to
subdue it.</p>
<p>The fierce and ambitious Feofar now governed this corner of Tartary.
Relying on the other khans—principally those of Khokhand and
Koondooz, cruel and rapacious warriors, all ready to join an enterprise so
dear to Tartar instincts—aided by the chiefs who ruled all the
hordes of Central Asia, he had placed himself at the head of the rebellion
of which Ivan Ogareff was the instigator. This traitor, impelled by insane
ambition as much as by hate, had ordered the movement so as to attack
Siberia. Mad indeed he was, if he hoped to rupture the Muscovite Empire.
Acting under his suggestion, the Emir—which is the title taken by
the khans of Bokhara—had poured his hordes over the Russian
frontier. He invaded the government of Semipolatinsk, and the Cossacks,
who were only in small force there, had been obliged to retire before him.
He had advanced farther than Lake Balkhash, gaining over the Kirghiz
population on his way. Pillaging, ravaging, enrolling those who submitted,
taking prisoners those who resisted, he marched from one town to another,
followed by those impedimenta of Oriental sovereignty which may be called
his household, his wives and his slaves—all with the cool audacity
of a modern Ghengis-Khan. It was impossible to ascertain where he now was;
how far his soldiers had marched before the news of the rebellion reached
Moscow; or to what part of Siberia the Russian troops had been forced to
retire. All communication was interrupted. Had the wire between Kolyvan
and Tomsk been cut by Tartar scouts, or had the Emir himself arrived at
the Yeniseisk provinces? Was all the lower part of Western Siberia in a
ferment? Had the rebellion already spread to the eastern regions? No one
could say. The only agent which fears neither cold nor heat, which can
neither be stopped by the rigors of winter nor the heat of summer, and
which flies with the rapidity of lightning—the electric current—was
prevented from traversing the steppes, and it was no longer possible to
warn the Grand Duke, shut up in Irkutsk, of the danger threatening him
from the treason of Ivan Ogareff.</p>
<p>A courier only could supply the place of the interrupted current. It would
take this man some time to traverse the five thousand two hundred versts
between Moscow and Irkutsk. To pass the ranks of the rebels and invaders
he must display almost superhuman courage and intelligence. But with a
clear head and a firm heart much can be done.</p>
<p>“Shall I be able to find this head and heart?” thought the Czar.</p>
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