Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 299 pages of information about Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science.

Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 299 pages of information about Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science.
the sight of the uniform, shook his head.  The other flushed:  “You are a Pole, and do not understand our customs.  This is my birthday, and on this day, above all others, I should share what I have with the unfortunate.  Pray accept it in the name of my patron saint.”  He could not resist so Christian an appeal.  The parcel contained bread, salt and some money:  the last he handed over to the guards, who in any case would not have let him keep it:  he broke the bread with its donor.  His guards were almost the only persons with whom he had to do who showed themselves insensible to his pain and sorrow.  They were divided between their fears of not arriving on the day fixed, in which case they would be flogged, and of his dying of fatigue on the route, when they would fare still worse.  The apprehension of his suicide beset them:  at the ferries or fords which they crossed each of them held him by an arm lest he should drown himself, and all his meat was given to him minced, to be eaten with a spoon, as he was not to be trusted for an instant with a knife.  Thus they traveled night and day for three weeks, only stopping to change horses and take their meals; yet he esteemed himself lucky not to have been sent with a gang of convicts, chained to some atrocious malefactor, or to have been ordered to make the journey on foot, like his countryman, Prince Sanguzsko.  At last they reached Omsk, the head-quarters of Prince Gortchakoff, then governor-general of Western Siberia.  By some informality in the mode of his transportation, the interpretation of Piotrowski’s sentence depended solely on this man:  he might be sent to work in one of the government manufactories, or to the mines, the last, worst dread of a Siberian exile.  While awaiting the decision he was in charge of a gay, handsome young officer, who treated him with great friendliness, and in the course of their conversation, which turned chiefly on Siberia, showed him a map of the country.  The prisoner devoured it with his eyes, tried to engrave it on his memory, asked innumerable questions about roads and water-courses, and betrayed so much agitation that the young fellow noticed it, and exclaimed, “Ah! don’t think of escape.  Too many of your countrymen have tried it, and those are fortunate who, tracked on every side, famished, desperate, have been able to put an end to themselves before being retaken, for if they are, then comes the knout and a life of misery beyond words.  In Heaven’s name, give up that thought!” The commandant of the fortress paid him a short official visit, and exclaimed repeatedly, “How sad! how sad! to come back when you were free-in a foreign country!” The chief of police, a hard, dry, vulture-like man, asked why he had dared to return without the czar’s permission.  “I could not bear my homesickness,” replied the prisoner.  “O native country!” said the Russian in a softened voice, “how dear thou art!” After various official interviews he was taken to the governor-general’s ante-chamber,
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Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.