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CHAPTER 1.

Tobolsk, though a Siberian metropolis, is really a very pleasant place to pass a winter in. Like the western American cities, where everybody has made his money easily and spends it easily, it positively bubbles over with bad champagne, choap culture, advanced thought, French romances, and all the other most recent products of human industry and ingenuity. Everybody eats pate do foic gras, quotes Hartmann and Herbert Spencer, uses electric bells, bolieves in woman's rights, possesses profound views about the future of Asia, and had a grandfather who was a savage Samoyede or an ignorant Buriat. Society is extremely cultivated, and if you scratch it ever so little, you see the Tartar. Nevertheless, it considers itself the only really polite and enlightened community on the whole face of this evolving terrestrial p'anet. The Davidoff ?>, however, who belonged to the most ads'anced section of mercantile society in all Tobolsk, were not originally Siberians, or even Russians, by birth or nationality. Old Mr Davidoff, the grandfather, who founded the fortunes of the family in St. Petersburg, was a Welsh Davids; and he had altered his name by the timely addition of a Slavonic suffix in order to conciliate the national susceptibilities of Orthodox Russia. His son, Diinitri, whom for the same roason ho had christened in honour of a Russian saint, removed the Russian branch of the house to Tobolsk (they were in the Siberian furtrade), and there marrying a German lady of the name of Prey tag, had one daughter and heiress, Olga Davidoff, the acknowledged belle of Tobolskan society. It was generally understood in Tobolsk that the Davidoffe were descended from Welsh princes (as may very likely have been the case—though one would really like to know what has become of all the descendants of Welsh subjects), if indeed they were not even remotely connected with the Prince of Wale? himself in peison. The winter of 1573 (as everybody will remember) was a very cold one throughout Siberia. The rivers froze unusually early, and troUas had entirely superseded torosses ' on all the roads as early as the very begin- ! ning of October. Still, Tobolsk was ex j cetdingly gay for all that; in the uarrn houses of the great merchants, w ith their tropical plants kept at summer heat b> stoves and flues all the year round, nobody noticed the exceptional rigour of that severe season. Balls and dances followed one another in quick succession, and Olga Davidoff, just twenty, enjoyed hersetf as she had never before done in all her lifetime It was such a change to come to the concentrated gaieties and delights of Tobolsk after six years of old Miss "Waterloo's Establishment for Young Ladies, at The Laurels, Clapham. That winter for the first time, Baron Niaz, the Buriat, came to Tobolsk. Exquisitely polished in manner?, and very handsome in face and bearing, there wa» nothing of the Tartar anywhere visible about Baron iSTiaz. He had been brought up in Paris, at a fashionable Lyceo, and he spoke French with perfect fluency, as well as with some native sparkle and genuine cleverness. His taste in music was unimpeachable ; even Madame Davidoif, n-c Freytag, candidly admitted that his performances upon the violin were singularly brilliant, profound, and appreciative. Moreover, though a Buriat chief, he was a j most undoubted nobleman ; at the Go vernor's parties he took rank, by patent of the Emperor Nicholas, a3 a real Russian baron of the first water. To be sure, ho was nominally a Tartar ; but what of that ? J His mother and his grandmother, he declared, had both been Russian ladies ; | and you had only to look at him to see that there was scarcely a drop of Tartar blood still remaining anywhere in him. If the half-caste negro i 3 a brown mulatto, the Quarter caste a light quadroon, and the next remove a practically Avhito octoroon, surely Baron Kiaz, in spite of his remote Buriat great grandfathers, might well pass for an ordinary every day civilised Russian. Oiga Davidoff wa3 fairly fascinated by the accomplished young baron. She met him everywhere, and he paid her always the most marked and flattering attention. He was a Buriat, to be sure ; but at Tobolsk, you know . Well, ono mustn't be too particular about these little questions of origin in an Asiatic city. It was at the Governor's dance, just before Christmas, that the Baron got his first eood chance of talking with her for ten minutes alone among the fan palms and yuccas in the big conservatory. There was a seat in the far corner bedde the flowering oleander, where the Baron led 'her after* the fourth waltz, and leant over her respectfully as she played with her Chinese fan, half trembling at the declaration she knett he was on the point of making to her. " Mademoiselle Davidoff," the Baron began in French, with a lingering cadence as he pronounced her name, and a faint tremor in his voice that thrilled respon- 1 sively through her inmost being ; " Mademoiselle Davidoff, I have been waiting long for this opportunity of speaking to°you alone, because I have something of some importance — to me at least, mademoiselle—about which I wish to confer with you. Mademoiselle, will you do me the honour to listen to me patiently a minute or two? The matter about which I wish to Bpeak to you is one that may concern yourself, too," more closely than you at first imagine." What a funny way to begin proposing to one ! Olga Davidoffs heart beat violently as -he answered as unconcernedly as possible, " I shall bo glad, M. le Baron, I'm sure, to listen to any communication that you may wish to make to me." *' Mademoiselle," the young man went on almost timidly— how handsome he looked as he stood there bending over her in his semi barbaric Tartar uniform !— "Mademoi eelle, the village where I live in our own country is a lonely one among the high mountains. You do not know the Buriat country— it is wild, savage, rugged, pineclad, snow-clad, solitary, inaccessible, but very beautiful. Even the Rus&ians do not love it ; but we love it, we others, who are to the manner born. We breathe there the air of liberty, and we prefer our own brawling streams and sheer precipices to all the artificial stifling civilisation of Paris and St. Petersburg." Olga looked at him and smiled quietly, She saw at once how he wished to break it to her, and held her peace like a wise maiden. "Yes, mademoiselle/ the young man went on, flooding her each moment with the flashing light from his great luminous hazel eyes ; "my village in the Buriat country lies high up beside the eternal

snows. But though we live alone there, so far from civilisation that we seldom see even a passing traveller, our life is not devoid of its own delights and its own interests. I have my own people all around me ; I live in my village as a little prince among his own subjects. My people are few, but they are very faithful. Mademoiselle has boon educated in England, I believe ?" "Yes," Olga answered. "In London, M. le Baron. lam of English parentage, and my father sent me there to keep up the connection with his old fatherland, whero one branch of our house is still established." '•Then, mademoiselle, you will doubtless havo read the tales of Walter Scott ?" Olga smiled curiously. " Yes," she said, amused at his naivctt, "I have certainly read them." She began to think that after all thohandsome young Buriat couldn't really mean to propose to her. " Well, you know, in that case, what was tho life of a Highland chieftain in Scotland, when the Highland chieftains were still practically all but independent. That, mademoiselle, is exactly the life of a modern Buriat nobleman under the Russian empire. He has his own little territory and his own little people, ho lives among them in his own little antiquated fortress, he acknowledges nominally tho sovereignty of tho most orthodox Czar, and even perhaps exchanges for a Russian titlo the Tartar chieftainship handed down to him in unbroken succession from his earliest forefathers. But in all the rest he still re mains essentially independent. He rules over a little principality of his own, and cares not a fig in his own heart for czar, or governor, or general, or minister." "This is rather treasonable talk for the Governor's palaco," Olga put in, smiling quietly. "If we were not already in Tobolsk we might both, perhaps, imagine we should be sent to Siberia." The Baron laughed, and showed his two rows of pearly white teeth to the best advantage. "They might send me to the mines," he said, " for aught I care, mademoiselle I could get away easily enough from village to village to my o\\ n country ; and once there, it would be easier for the Czar to take Constantinople and Bagdad and Calcutta than to track and dislodge Alexander Niaz in his mountain fortress." Alexandor Niaz ! Olga "noted tho name to herself hurriedly. Ho was convert oil then ! he was an 01 thodox Christian ! That at least was a good thing, for so many of these Buriats are still nothing more than the most degraded Schameni&ts and heathens ! "But, mademoiselle," the young man went on again, playing moro nervously now than ever with the jewelled hilt of his dress sword, " there is one thing still wanting to my happiness among our beautiful Siberian mountains. I have no lovely chatelaine to help me guard my little feudal castle. Mademoiselle ,the Buriat women are not fit allies for a man who has been brought up among tho civilisation of the great Western cities. Ha needs a companion who can sympathise with his higher tastes : who can speak with him of books, of life, of art, of music Our Buriat women are mere household drudges ; to marry one of thorn would bo utterly impossible. Mademoiselle, my father and my grandfather came away from their native wilds to seek a lady who would condescend to love them, in the polite society of Tobolsk. I havo gone farther abroad ; I have sought in Paris, Berlin, Vienna, St. Petersburg. But I saw no lady to whose heart my heart responded, till I came back once more to old Tobolsk. There, imdemoi=ello, there I saw one whom I recognised at once as fashioned for me by Heaven. MidcmoiscllcDavidoff — I tremble to ask you, but — I love you — will you shire my exile ?" Olga looked at the handsome young man with unconcealed joy and admiration. "Your exile, '' she murmured softly, to gain time for a moment. " i\nd why your exile, M. le Baron ?"' " Mademoiselle," the young Buriat continued, very earncssly, "I do not wish to woo or wed you under false pretences. Before you give me an answer, you must understand to what sort of life it is that I ventm-e to invite you. Our mountains aro very lonely ; to live there would be indeed an exile to you, accustomed to the gaieties and the vortex of London." (Olga smiled quietly to herself as she thought for a second of the little drawing-room at The Laurels, Clapham.) " But if you can consent to live in it with me, I will do my best to make it as easy for you as possible. You shall havo music, books, papers, amusements — but not society — during the six months of summer which we must necessarily pass at my mountain village ; you shall visit Tobolsk, Moscow, Petersburg, London — which you will— during the six months of holiday in winter ; above all, you shall have the undying love and devotion of one who has never loved another woman — Alexander Niaz. . . . Mademoiselle, you see the conditions. Can you accept them. Can you condescend of your goodness to love me ? to marry me ?" Olga Davidoff lifted her fan with an effort and answered faintly : "M. le Baron, you aro very flattering. I—lI — I will try my best to deserve your goodness." Niaz took her pretty little hand in his with old-fashioned politeness, and raised it chivalrously to his trembling lips. " Mademoiselle," ho said, " you have made me eternally happy. My life shall be passed in trying to prove my gratitudo to you for this condescension." "I think," Olga answered, shaking from head to foot, " I think, M. le Baron, you had better take me back into the next room to my mother."

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TAN18850214.2.21.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Te Aroha News, Volume II, Issue 89, 14 February 1885, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
2,084

CHAPTER 1. Te Aroha News, Volume II, Issue 89, 14 February 1885, Page 4

CHAPTER 1. Te Aroha News, Volume II, Issue 89, 14 February 1885, Page 4

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