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    Chapter 1 - Page 2

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    colors, with the wide open sleeves,
    their under skirts fitted to the figure, their winter cloak of velvet,
    trimmed with fur and silver gimp, their summer mantle of white cotton,
    the "tchadre," which they tie tight on the neck--all those fashions in
    fact so carefully entered in my notebook, what shall I say of them?

    Learn, then, that their national orchestras are composed of "zournas,"
    which are shrill flutes; "salamouris," which are squeaky clarinets;
    mandolines, with copper strings, twanged with a feather; "tchianouris,"
    violins, which are played upright; "dimplipitos," a kind of cymbals
    which rattle like hail on a window pane.

    Know that the "schaska" is a sword hung from a bandolier trimmed with
    studs and silver embroidery, that the "kindjall" or "kandijar" is a
    dagger worn in the belt, that the armament of the soldiers of the
    Caucasus is completed by a long Damascus gun ornamented with bands of
    chiseled metal.

    Know that the "tarantass" is a sort of berline hung on five pieces of
    rather elastic wood between wheels placed rather wide apart and of
    moderate height; that this carriage is driven by a "yemtchik," on the
    front seat, who has three horses, to whom is added a postilion, the
    "falétre," when it is necessary to hire a fourth horse from the
    "smatritel," who is the postmaster on the Caucasian roads.

    Know, then, that the verst is two-thirds of a mile, that the different
    nomadic people of the governments of Transcaucasia are composed of
    Kalmucks, descendants of the Eleuthes, fifteen thousand, Kirghizes of
    Mussulman origin eight thousand, Koundrof Tartars eleven hundred,
    Sartof Tartars a hundred and twelve, Nogais eight thousand five
    hundred, Turkomans nearly four thousand.

    And thus, after having so minutely absorbed my Georgia, here was this
    ukase obliging me to abandon it! And I should not even have time to
    visit Mount Ararat or publish my impressions of a journey in
    Transcaucasia, losing a thousand lines of copy at the least, and for
    which I had at my disposal the 32,000 words of my language actually
    recognized by the French Academy.

    It was hard, but there was no way out of it. And to begin with, at what
    o'clock did the train for Tiflis start from the Caspian?

    The station at Tiflis is the junction of three lines of railway: the
    western line ending at Poti on the Black Sea, where the passengers land
    coming from Europe, the eastern line which ends at Baku, where the
    passengers embark to cross the Caspian, and the line which the Russians
    have just made for a length of about a hundred miles between
    Ciscaucasia and Transcaucasia, from Vladikarkaz to Tiflis,
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