Rezanov disembarked from the Juno
at Okhotsk during the first days of October.
Had it not been for a touch of fever that had returned
in the filth and warm dampness of Sitka, he would
have felt almost as buoyant in mind and body as in
those days when California had gone to his head.
The Juno had touched at Kadiak, Oonalaska, and others
of the more important settlements, and he had found
his schools and libraries in good condition, seals
and otters rapidly increasing, in their immunity from
indiscriminate slaughter, new and stronger forts threatening
the nefarious Bostonian and Bri-ton. At Okhotsk
he learned that the embassy of Count Golofkin to China
had failed as signally as his own, and this alone
would have put him in the best of tempers even had
he not found his arma-ment and caravan awaiting him,
facilitating his im-mediate departure. He wrote
a gay letter to Con-cha, giving her the painful story
of the naturalist attached to the Golofkin embassy,
Dr. Redovsky, who had remained in the East animated
by the same scientific enthusiasm as that of his colleague,
the good Langsdorff; parted some time since from his
too exacting master. Rezanov had written Concha
many letters during his detention in Sitka, and left
them with Baranhov to send at the first opportun-ity.
The Chief-Manager, deeply interested in the romance
of the mighty Chamberlain with whom he alone dared
to take a liberty, vowed to guard all that came to
his care and sooner or later to send them to California.
Rezanov had also written com-prehensively to the
Tsar and the directors of the Russian-American Company,
adroitly placing his marriage in the light of a diplomatic
maneuver, and painting California in colors the more
vivid and en-ticing for the sullen clouds and roaring
winds, the dripping forests and eternal snows of that
derelict corner of Earth where he had been stranded
so long. He had also, when Langsdorff announced
his intention to start upon a difficult journey in
the in-terest of science, provided him not only with
letters of recommendation, but with all the comforts
pro-curable in a land where the word comfort was
the stock in trade of the local satirist. But
Langsdorff, although punctiliously acknowledging the
favors, never quite forgave the indifference of a
mere am-bassador and chamberlain, rejoicing in the
dignity of an honorary membership in the St. Petersburg
Academy of Sciences, to the supreme division of natural
history.
The first stage of the journey—from
Okhotsk to Yakutsk—was about six hundred
and fifty English miles, not as the crow flew, but
over the Stanovoi mountains in a southwesterly direction
to the Maya, by this river’s wavering course
to the Youdoma, then northwest to the Aldan, and south
beside the Lena. The beaten track lay entirely
alongside the rivers at this season, upon their surface
in winter; and in addition to these great streams
there were many too unimportant for the map, but as
erratic in course and as irresistible in energy after
the first rains of autumn.
Captain D’Wolf had proved himself
capable and faithful, and a caravan of forty horses
had been in Okhotsk a week; twenty for immediate use,
twenty for relief, or substitutes in almost certain
emer-gency. As there were but one or two stations
of any importance between Okhotsk and Yakutsk, and
as a week might pass without the shelter of so much
as a hut, it was necessary to take tents and bearskin
beds for the Chamberlain, his Cossack guard, valet-de-chambre,
cook and other servants, one set of fine blankets
and linen, cooking utensils, axes, arms, tinder-boxes,
provisions for the entire trip, besides a great quantity
of personal luggage.
Rezanov lost no time. He had
changed his origi-nal plan and dispatched Davidov
on the Avos from Oonalaska. Guns and provisions
awaited the Juno at Okhotsk, and in less than a week
after his ar-rival Rezanov was able to start on his
long journey with a mind at rest. Although the
almost extrava-gant delight that his body had taken
in the com-forts of his manager’s home, after
ten weeks on the Juno, warned him that he might be
in a better con-dition to begin a journey of ten
thousand versts, he hearkened neither to the hint
nor to the insistence of his host. His impatient
energy and stern will, combined with the passionate
wish to accomplish the double object of his journey,
returning in the least possible time to California
with his treaty and the consent of the Pope and King
to his marriage, would have carried him out of Okhotsk
in forty-eight hours had disease declared itself.
Nor were there any inducements aside from a comfortable
bed and refined fare, in the flat, unhealthy town
with its everlasting rattle of chains, and the hideous
physiognomies of criminals always at work to the rumbling
accompaniment of Cossack oaths.
For the first week the exercise he
loved best and the long days in the crisp open air
renewed his vigor, and he even looked forward to the
four months of what was then the severest traveling
in the world, in a boyish spirit of adventure.
He re-flected that he might as well give his brain
a relief from the constant revolving of schemes and
plans for the advancement of his country, his company,
and himself, and let his thoughts have their car-nival
of anticipation with the unparalleled happiness and
success that awaited him in the future. There
was no possible doubt of the acquiescence and assist-ance
of the Tsar, and no man ever looked down a fairer
perspective than he, as he galloped over the ugly
country, often far ahead of his caravan, splash-ing
through bogs and streams, fording rivers with-out
ferries, camping at night in forests so dense the
cold never escaped their embrace, muffled to the eyes
in furs as he made his way past valleys whose eter-nal
ice fields chilled the country for miles about; sometimes
able to procure a little fresh milk and butter, oftener
not; occasionally passing a caravan returning for
furs, generally seeing nothing but a stray reindeer
for hours together, once meeting the post and finding
much for himself that in nowise dampened his spirit.
But on the eighth day the rains began:
a fine steady mist, then in torrents as endless.
Wrapped in bearskins at night within the shelter
of a tent or of some wayside hut, and closely covered
by day, Rezanov at first merely cursed the inconvenience
of the rain; but while crossing the river Allach Juni,
his guides without consulting him having taken him
miles out of his way in order to avoid the hamlet of
the same name where the small-pox was raging, but
where there was a government ferry, his horse lost
his footing in the rapid, swollen current and fell.
Rezanov managed to retain his seat, and pulled the
frightened, plunging beast to its feet while his Cos-sacks
were still shouting their consternation. But
he was soaked to the skin, his personal luggage was
in the same condition, and they did not reach a hut
where a fire could be made until nine hours later.
It was then that the seeds of malaria, accumulated
during the last three years in unsanitary ports and
sown deep by exceptional hardships, but which he believed
had taken themselves off during his six weeks in California,
stirred more vigorously than in Sitka or Okhotsk.
He rode on the next day in a burning fever.
Jon, minding Langsdorff’s instruc-tions, doctored
him—not without difficulty—from
the medicine chest, and for a day or two the fever
seemed broken. But Jon, sick with apprehension,
implored him to turn back. He might as well have
implored the sky to turn blue.
“How do you think men accomplish
things in this world?” asked Rezanov angrily.
“By turning back and going to bed every time
they have a mi-graine?”
“No, Excellency,” said
the man humbly. “But health is necessary
to the accomplishment of every-thing, and if the
body is eaten up with fever—”
“What are drugs for? Give
me the whole damned pharmacopeia if you choose, but
don’t talk to me about turning back.”
“Very well, Excellency,”
said Jon, with a sigh.
The next day he and one of the Cossack
guard caught him as he fell from his horse unconscious.
A Yakhut hut, miserable as it was, offered in the
persistent downpour a better shelter than the tent.
They carried him into it, and his bedding at least
was almost as luxurious as had he been in St. Petersburg.
Jon, at his wits’ end, remembered the’
practice of Langsdorff in similar cases, and used
the lancet, a heroic treatment he would never have
accomplished had his master been conscious. The
fever ebbed, and in a few days Rezanov was able to
continue the journey by shorter stages, although heavy
with an intolerable lassitude. But his will
sustained him until he reached Yakutsk, not at the
end of twenty-two days, but of thirty-three.
Here he succumbed immediately, and although his sick-bed
was in the comfortable home of the agent of the Company,
and he had medical attendance of a sort, his fever
and convalescence lasted for eight weeks. Then,
in spite of the supplications of his friends, chief
among whom was his faithful Jon, and the prohibition
of the doctor, he began the sec-ond stage of his
journey.
The road from Yakutsk to Irkutsk,
some two thousand six hundred versts, or fifteen hundred
and fifty English miles, lay for the most part alternately
on and along the river Lena in a southeasterly di-rection;
there being no attempt to cross Siberia at any point
in a straight line. By this time the river was
frozen, and the only concession Rezanov would make
to his enfeebled frame was an arrangement to cover
the entire journey by private sledge instead of employing
the swifter course of post sledge on the long stretches
and horseback on the shorter cuts.
The weather was now intensely cold,
the river winding, the delays many, but there were
adequate stations for the benefit and accommodation
of trav-elers every hundred versts or less.
Rezanov felt so invigorated by the long hours in
the open after the barbarous closeness of his sick
room, that at the end of a fortnight he was again
possessed with all his old ardor of desire to reach
the end of his jour-ney. He vowed he was well
again, abandoned his comfortable sledge, and pushed
on in the common manner. In the wretched post
sledges he was often exposed to the full violence
of a Siberian winter, and although the horseback exercise
stirred his blood and refreshed him for the moment,
he suffered in reaction and was several times forced
to remain two nights instead of one at a station.
But he was muf-fled in sables to his very eyes,
and the road was diverting, often beautiful, with
its Gothic moun-tains, its white plains set with
villages and farms, the high thin crosses above the
open or swelling domes of the little churches.
Sometimes the Lena narrowed until its frozen surface
looked like a mass of ice that had ground its way
between perpendicu-lar walls or overhanging masses
of rock that awaited the next convulsion of nature
to close the pass alto-gether. Then the dogs
trotted past caves and grot-tos, left the abrupt
and craggy banks, crossed level plains once more;
where herds of cattle grazed in the summertime, now
a vast uncheckered expanse of white. The Government
and Company agents fawned upon him, the best of horses
and beds, food and wine, were eagerly placed at the
disposal of the favorite of the Tsar. Rezanov’s
spirit, always of the finest temper, suffered no eclipse
for many days. He reveled in the belief that
his sorely tried body was regenerating its old vigors.
From Wercholensk to Katschuk the journey
was so winding by river that it consumed more than
twice the time of the land route, which although only
thirty versts in extent was one of the most difficult
in Siberia. Rezanov chose the latter with-out
hesitation, and would listen to no discussion from
the Commissary of the little town or from his distracted
Jon: the journey from Yakutsk had now lasted
five weeks and the servant’s watchful eye noted
signs of exhaustion.
The hills were very high and very
steep, the roads but a name in summer. Had not
the snow been soft and thin, the horses could not
have made the ascent at all; and, as it was, the riders
were forced to walk the greater part of the way and
drag their unwilling steeds behind them. They
were twelve hours covering the thirty versts, and
at Katschuk Rezanov succumbed for two days, while
Jon scoured the country in search of a telega; as
sometimes hap-pened there was a long stretch of country
without snow, and sledges, by far the most comfortable
method of travel in Siberia, could not be used.
The rest of the journey, but one hundred and ninety-six
versts, must be made by land. Rezanov admit-ted
that he was too weary to ride, and refused to travel
in the post carriage. On the third day the servant
managed to hire a telega from a superior farmer and
they started immediately, the heavy lug-gage having
been consigned to a merchant vessel at Yakutsk.
Rezanov stood the telega exactly half
a day. Little larger than an armchair and far
lighter, it was drawn by horses that galloped up and
down hill and across the intervening valleys with
no change of gait, and over a road so rough that the
little vehicle seemed to be propelled by a succession
of earthquakes. Rezanov, in a fever which he
at-tributed to rage, dismissed the telega at a village
and awaited the coming of Jon, who followed on horseback
with the personal luggage.
It was a village of wooden houses
built in the Russian fashion, and inhabited by a dignified
tribe wearing long white garments bordered with fur.
They spoke Russian, a language little heard farther
north and east in Siberia, and when Rezanov de-clined
their hospitality they dispatched a courier at once
to the Governor-General of Irkutsk acquaint-ing him
with the condition of the Chamberlain and of his imminent
arrival. In consequence, when Rezanov drew rein
two days later and looked down upon the city of Irkutsk
with its pleasant squares and great stone buildings
beside the shining river, the gilded domes and crosses
of its thirty churches and convents glittering in
the sun, the whole pic-ture beckoning to the delirious
brain of the traveler like some mirage of the desert,
his appearance was the signal for a salute from the
fort; and the Gov-ernor-General, privy counselor
and senator de Pestel, accompanied by the civil governor,
the com-mandant, the archbishop, and a military escort,
sal-lied forth and led the guest, with the formality
of officials and the compassionate tenderness of men,
into the capital.
For three weeks longer Rezanov lay
in the pal-ace of the Governor. Between fever
and lassitude, his iron will seemed alternately to
melt in the fiery furnace of his body, then, a cooling
but still viscous and formless mass, sink to the utmost
depths of his being. But here he had the best
of nursing and attendance, rallied finally and insisted
upon continu-ing his journey. His doctor made
the less demur as the traveling was far smoother now,
in the early days of March, than it would be a month
hence, when the snow was thinner and the sledges were
no longer possible. Nevertheless, he announced
his intention to accompany him as far as Krasnoiarsk,
where the Chamberlain could lodge in the house of
the principal magistrate of the place, Counselor Kel-ler,
and, if necessary, be able to command fair nurs-ing
and medical attendance; and to this Rezanov indifferently
assented.
The prospect of continuing his journey
and the bustle of preparation raised the spirits of
the in-valid and gave him a fictitious energy.
He had fought depression and despair in all his conscious
moments, never admitted that the devastation in his
body was mortal. With but a remnant of his for-mer
superb strength, and emaciated beyond recog-nition,
he attended a banquet on the night preced-ing his
departure, and on the following morning stood up in
his sledge and acknowledged the God-speed of the
population of Irkutsk assembled in the square before
the palace of the Governor. All his life he
had excited interest wherever he went, but never to
such a degree as on that last journey when he made
his desperate fight for life and happiness.