Beasts, Men and Gods eBook

Ferdynand Antoni Ossendowski
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about Beasts, Men and Gods.

Beasts, Men and Gods eBook

Ferdynand Antoni Ossendowski
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about Beasts, Men and Gods.
He instituted a search which disclosed suspicious documents in their baggage and in that of Michailoff and his wife the silver and other possessions taken from the Chinese.  From this group of sixteen he sent N. N. Philipoff to Baron Ungern, released three others and shot the remaining twelve.  Thus ended in Zain Shabi the life of one party of Uliassutai refugees and the activities of the group of Poletika.  In Uliassutai Bezrodnoff shot Chultun Beyli for the violation of the treaty with the Chinese, and also some Bolshevist Russian colonists; arrested Domojiroff and sent him to Urga; and . . . restored order.  The predictions about Chultun Beyli were fulfilled.

I knew of Domojiroff’s reports regarding myself but I decided, nevertheless, to proceed to Urga and not to swing round it, as Poletika had started to do when he was accidentally captured by Bezrodnoff.  I was accustomed now to looking into the eyes of danger and I set out to meet the terrible “bloody Baron.”  No one can decide his own fate.  I did not think myself in the wrong and the feeling of fear had long since ceased to occupy a place in my menage.  On the way a Mongol rider who overhauled us brought the news of the death of our acquaintances at Zain Shabi.  He spent the night with me in the yurta at the ourton and related to me the following legend of death.

“It was a long time ago when the Mongolians ruled over China.  The Prince of Uliassutai, Beltis Van, was mad.  He executed any one he wished without trial and no one dared to pass through his town.  All the other Princes and rich Mongols surrounded Uliassutai, where Beltis raged, cut off communication on every road and allowed none to pass in or out.  Famine developed in the town.  They consumed all the oxen, sheep and horses and finally Beltis Van determined to make a dash with his soldiers through to the west to the land of one of his tribes, the Olets.  He and his men all perished in the fight.  The Princes, following the advice of the Hutuktu Buyantu, buried the dead on the slopes of the mountains surrounding Uliassutai.  They buried them with incantations and exorcisings in order that Death by Violence might be kept from a further visitation to their land.  The tombs were covered with heavy stones and the Hutuktu predicted that the bad demon of Death by Violence would only leave the earth when the blood of a man should be spilled upon the covering stone.  Such a legend lived among us.  Now it is fulfilled.  The Russians shot there three Bolsheviki and the Chinese two Mongols.  The evil spirit of Beltis Van broke loose from beneath the heavy stone and now mows down the people with his scythe.  The noble Chultun Beyli has perished; the Russian Noyon Michailoff also has fallen; and death has flowed out from Uliassutai all over our boundless plains.  Who shall be able to stem it now?  Who shall tie the ferocious hands?  An evil time has fallen upon the Gods and the Good Spirits.  The Evil Demons have made war upon the Good Spirits.  What can man now do?  Only perish, only perish. . . .”

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Beasts, Men and Gods from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.