A Broken Journey / Wanderings from the Hoang-Ho to the Island of Saghalien and the Upper Reaches of the Amur River
CONTENTS
I have to thank my friend Mrs Lang for the drastic criticism which once more has materially helped me to write this book. Other people also have I to thank, but so great was the kindness I received everywhere I can only hope each one will see in this book some token of my sincere gratitude.
Mary Gaunt.
Mary Haven, New Eltham, Kent.
Each time I begin a book of travel I search for the reasons that sent me awandering. Foolishness, for I ought to know by this time the wander fever was born in my blood; it is in the blood of my sister and brothers. We were brought up in an inland town in Victoria, Australia, and the years have seen us roaming all over the world. I do not think any of us has been nearer the North Pole than Petropaulovski, or to the South Pole than Cape Horn—children of a sub-tropical clime, we do not like the cold—but in many countries in between have we wandered. The sailors by virtue of their profession have had the greater opportunities, but the other five have made a very good second best of it, and always there has been among us a very understanding sympathy 'with the desire that is planted in each and all to visit the remote corners of the earth.
Anybody can go on the beaten track. It only requires money to take a railway or steamer ticket, and though we by no means despise comfort—indeed, because we know something of the difficulties that beset the traveller beyond the bounds of civilisation, we appreciate it the more highly—still there is something else beyond comfort in life. Wherein lies the call of the Unknown? To have done something that no one else has done—or only accomplished with difficulty? Where lies the charm? I cannot put it into words—only it is there, the “something calling—beyond the mountains,” the “Come and find me” of Kipling. That voice every one of the Gaunts hears, and we all sympathise when another one goes.
Mary Gaunt
A BROKEN JOURNEY
Author Of “Alone In West Africa” “A Woman In China,” Etc.
1919
FOREWORD
A BROKEN JOURNEY
CHAPTER I—THE LURE OF THE UNKNOWN
CHAPTER II—TRUCULENT T'AI YUAN FU
CHAPTER III—THE FIRST SIGN OF UNREST
CHAPTER IV—A CITY UNDER THE HILLS
CHAPTER V—“MISERERE DOMINE!”
CHAPTER VI—BY MOUNTAIN AND RIVER
CHAPTER VII—CHINA'S SORROW
CHAPTER VIII—LAST DAYS IN CHINA
CHAPTER IX—KHARBIN AND VLADIVOSTOK
CHAPTER X—ONE OF THE WORLD'S GREAT RIVERS
CHAPTER XI—THE ENDS OF THE EARTH
CHAPTER XII—FACING WEST
CHAPTER XIII—THE UPPER REACHES OF THE AMUR
CHAPTER XIV—MOBILISING IN EASTERN SIBERIA
CHAPTER XV—ON A RUSSIAN MILITARY TRAIN
CHAPTER XVI—THE WAYS OF THE FINNS
CHAPTER XVII—CAPTURED BY GERMANS