[Michael Strogoff by Jules Verne]@TWC D-Link book
Michael Strogoff

CHAPTER II RUSSIANS AND TARTARS
2/15

The higher one resides at Irkutsk, the far capital of Eastern Siberia.

The River Tchouna separates the two Siberias.
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.
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.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books