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.

My friend, using his former terrifying care, began to untie them, repeating over and over:  “And I would have fed you to the fishes in the river!” Then we all returned to the town, leaving them to go their way.

Domojiroff continued to send envoys to Baron Ungern at Urga with requests for plenary powers and money and with reports about Michailoff, Chultun Beyli, Poletika, Philipoff and myself.  With Asiatic cunning he was then maintaining good relations with all those for whom he was preparing death at the hands of the severe warrior, Baron Ungern, who was receiving only one-sided reports about all the happenings in Uliassutai.  Our whole colony was greatly agitated.  The officers split into different parties; the soldiers collected in groups and discussed the events of the day, criticising their chiefs, and under the influence of some of Domojiroff’s men began making such statements as: 

“We have now seven Colonels, who all want to be in command and are all quarreling among themselves.  They all ought to be pegged down and given good sound thrashings.  The one who could take the greatest number of blows ought to be chosen as our chief.”

It was an ominous joke that proved the demoralization of the Russian detachment.

“It seems,” my friend frequently observed, “that we shall soon have the pleasure of seeing a Council of Soldiers here in Uliassutai.  God and the Devil!  One thing here is very unfortunate—­there are no forests near into which good Christian men may dive and get away from all these cursed Soviets.  It’s bare, frightfully bare, this wretched Mongolia, with no place for us to hide.”

Really this possibility of the Soviet was approaching.  On one occasion the soldiers captured the arsenal containing the weapons surrendered by the Chinese and carried them off to their barracks.  Drunkenness, gambling and fighting increased.  We foreigners, carefully watching events and in fear of a catastrophe, finally decided to leave Uliassutai, that caldron of passions, controversies and denunciations.  We heard that the group of Poletika was also preparing to get out a few days later.  We foreigners separated into two parties, one traveling by the old caravan route across the Gobi considerably to the south of Urga to Kuku-Hoto or Kweihuacheng and Kalgan, and mine, consisting of my friend, two Polish soldiers and myself, heading for Urga via Zain Shabi, where Colonel Kazagrandi had asked me in a recent letter to meet him.  Thus we left the Uliassutai where we had lived through so many exciting events.

On the sixth day after our departure there arrived in the town the Mongol-Buriat detachment under the command of the Buriat Vandaloff and the Russian Captain Bezrodnoff.  Afterwards I met them in Zain Shabi.  It was a detachment sent out from Urga by Baron Ungern to restore order in Uliassutai and to march on to Kobdo.  On the way from Zain Shabi Bezrodnoff came across the group of Poletika and Michailoff. 

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