Overland through Asia; Pictures of Siberian, Chinese, and Tartar eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 652 pages of information about Overland through Asia; Pictures of Siberian, Chinese, and Tartar.

Overland through Asia; Pictures of Siberian, Chinese, and Tartar eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 652 pages of information about Overland through Asia; Pictures of Siberian, Chinese, and Tartar.

Behind the front rank were a dozen or more groomsmen and bridesmaids.  Behind these were the members of the families and the invited relatives, so that the cortege stretched to a considerable length.  Each of the groomsmen wore a bow of colored ribbon on his left arm and a smaller one in the button hole.  The children of the families—­quite a troop of juveniles—­brought up the rear.

The church is of logs, like the other buildings.  It is old, unpainted, and shaped like a cross, lacking one of the arms.  The doors are large and clumsy, and the entrance is through a vestibule or hall.  The roof had been recently painted a brilliant red at the expense of the Variag’s officers.  On the inside, the church has an antiquated appearance, but presents such an air of solidity as if inviting the earthquakes to come and see it.

There were no seats in the building, nor are there seats of any kind in the edifices of the same character in any part of Russia.  It is the theory of the Eastern Church that all are equal before God.  In His service, no distinction is made; autocrat and subject, noble and peasant, stand or kneel in the same manner while worshipping at His altars.

As we entered, we found the wedding party standing in the center of the church; the spectators were grouped nearer the door, the ladies occupying the front.  With the thermometer at seventy-two, I found the upright position a fatiguing one, and would have been glad to send for a camp stool.  Colonel Bulkley had undertaken to escort a lady, and as he stood in a conspicuous place, his uniform buttoned to the very chin and the perspiration pouring from his face, the ceremony appeared to have little charm for him.

The service began under the direction of two priests, each dressed in a long robe extending to his feet, and wearing a chapeau like a bell-crowned hat without a brim.  “The short one,” said a friend near me, pointing to a little, round, fat, oily man of God, “will get very drunk when he has the opportunity.  Watch him to-night and see how he leaves the dinner party.”

Priests of the Greek Church wear their hair very long, frequently below the shoulders, and parted in the middle, and do not shave the beard.  Unlike those of the Catholic Church, they marry and have homes and families, engaging in secular occupations which do not interfere with their religious duties.  During the evening after the wedding, I was introduced to “the pope’s wife;” and learned that Russian priests are called popes.  As the only pope then familiar to my thoughts is considered very much a bachelor, I was rather taken aback at this bit of information.  The drink-loving priest was head of a goodly sized family, and resided in a comfortable and well furnished dwelling.

[Illustration:  Russian marriage.]

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Overland through Asia; Pictures of Siberian, Chinese, and Tartar from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.