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    Chapter 10 - Page 2

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    abominable dust! The commercial town is built on the left of the
    river--a town in the American style, which would please Ephrinell, wide
    streets straight as a line crossing at right angles; straight
    boulevards with rows of trees; much bustle and movement among the
    merchants in Oriental costume, in Jewish costume, merchants of every
    kind; a number of camels and dromedaries, the latter much in request
    for their powers of withstanding fatigue and which differ in their
    hinder parts from their African congeners. Not many women along the
    sunny roads which seem white hot. Some of the feminine types are,
    however, sufficiently remarkable, dressed out in a quasi-military
    costume, wearing soft boots and a cartouche belt in the Circassian
    style. You must take care of the stray dogs, hungry brutes with long
    hair and disquieting fangs, of a breed reminding one of the dogs of the
    Caucasus, and these animals--according to Boulangier the engineer--have
    eaten a Russian general.

    "Not entirely," replies the major, confirming the statement. "They left
    his boots."

    In the commercial quarter, in the depths of the gloomy ground floors,
    inhabited by the Persians and the Jews, within the miserable shops are
    sold carpets of incredible fineness, and colors artistically combined,
    woven mostly by old women without any Jacquard cards.

    On both banks of the Mourgab the Russians have their military
    establishment. There parade the Turkoman soldiers in the service of the
    czar. They wear the blue cap and the white epaulettes with their
    ordinary uniform, and drill under the orders of Russian officers.

    A wooden bridge, fifty yards long, crosses the river. It is practicable
    not only for foot-passengers, but for trains, and telegraph wires are
    stretched above its parapets.

    On the opposite bank is the administrative town, which contains a
    considerable number of civil servants, wearing the usual Russian cap.

    In reality the most interesting place to see is a sort of annexe, a
    Tekke village, in the middle of Merv, whose inhabitants have retained
    the villainous characteristics of this decaying race, the muscular
    bodies, large ears, thick lips, black beard. And this gives the last
    bit of local color to be found in the new town.

    At a turning in the commercial quarter we met the commercials, American
    and English.

    "Mr. Ephrinell," I said, "there is nothing curious in this modern Merv."

    "On the contrary, Mr. Bombarnac, the town is almost Yankee, and it will
    soon see the day when the Russians will give it tramways and gaslights!"

    "That will come!"

    "I hope it will, and then Merv will have a right to call itself a city."

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