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A34008 The present state of Russia in a letter to a friend at London / written by an eminent person residing at the great czars court at Mosco for the space of nine years : illustrated with many copper plates. Collins, Samuel, 1619-1670. 1671 (1671) Wing C5385; ESTC R17430 51,343 182

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Burials are strange as soon as the breath is out of the body as we commonly express it they carry the Corps into the Church where it abides not long before it be buried in the Church-yard The Wife of the deceased is obliged to howl most pitifully and hire others to do the like but little reason have they to do it considering their severe usage but custom not love may possibly incite them to do it Ut fleren● oculos erudiere suos is Ovid's genera● observation on the whole Sex The Russians count that the greatest Funeral where are most Women-mourners such were the Praeficae among the old Romans These therefore in a doleful tone cry out as the wild Irish do O hone Timminny Dooshinca Alas my Dear why hast thou left me was I not obedient to to thee in all things was I not careful of thy House did I not bring thee fine Children hadst thou not all things in abundance Or thus Why wouldst thou die hadst thou not a fair Wife pretty Children much Goods good Clothes and Brandy-wine enough As soon as any one is dead they open the windows and set a Bason of holy Water for the Soul to bath in and a Bowl of Wheat at the head of the Corps that he may eat having a long Journey to go After this they put on his feet a pair of black-shoes and some Copeakes or pieces of money in his Mouth with a Certificate in his hand from the Metropolite of the place to St. Nicholas of his life and conversation If any one dies without Confession and Extreme-Unction he is denied Christian burial Such as are kill'd or frozen to death are brought into the Zemzky precaus an Office for that and many other trials and there they are exposed to view three or four dayes if any own them they are carried away if not they are sent to the Bosky or Boghzi Dome i.e. God's House which is a great pit in the fields arched over wherein they put an hundred or two hundred and let them rest till Midsummer and then the Popes go and bury them and cover them with earth Thirty daies after burial they read the Psalter over daily upon the Grave having a little Booth made up of Mats to shelter them from the weather but what their meaning is in this I cannot understand In the Carnaval before Quadragessima or Lent they give themselves over to all manner of debauchery and luxury and in the last week they drink as if they were never to drink more Some drink Aqua-vitae four times distill'd until it fire in their mouths and kindle a flame not unlike that of Bocca di inferno which issues out at their throat if they have not milk given them to drink they presently die Much wiser in my judgment are our English Bully-rocks who love to keep fire at its due distance no less then a Pipes length off their Noses These drinking bouts are commonly attended with quarrels fightings and murthers This custom the Jovial Poet look'd upon no less then barbarous Inter potandum pugnare Thracum est barbarum tollite morem verecundumque rixis prohibete Bacchum Some of these going home drunk if not attended with a sober companion fall asleep upon the Snow a sad cold bed and there they are frozen to death If any of their acquaintance chance to pass by though they see them like to perish yet will they not assist them to avoid the trouble of examination if they should die in their hands For those of the Zemsky precaus will extort something out of every bodies purse who comes to their Office 'T is a sad sight to see a dozen people brought upright in a Sledge frozen to death some have their arms eaten off by Dogs others their faces and others have nothing left but Bones Two or three hundred have been brought after this manner in the time of Lent By this you may see the sad consequence of drunkenness the Epidemick distemper not only of Russia but of England also CHAP. V. Of their Imagery Pictures exchanged in the God market saved in Constagrations they highly prize them bestow Jewels on them The punishment of a Woman who stoll her pearl from an Image though in case of necessity Heresie punished Of their Friars and Nuns THeir Imagery is very pitiful painting flat and ugly after the Greek manner I asking why they made their God's so deformed they answered me they were not proud When a Picture is worn out they bring it into the God-market where laying it down they chuse out a new one and deposite money for the exchange for they must not be said to buy it if the money be not enough the God-maker shoves it back and then the Devoto adds more till the other be satisfied An obliterate Image they put into the River and crossing themselves bid it Prosti i. e. Farewell Brother And if any of their Brethren meets with Jove he turns into Neptune and they crossing themselves cry Prosty Bradt God be with you Brother In time of fire they strive above all things to save their Images but if they escape not the Conflagration they must not be said to be burnt but gone up If a Church be burn'd they say it is ascended they must not say burn'd These are their pretty ridiculous distinctions 't is wonder they do not with Anaxagoras affirm Snow to be black Sometimes they will hold their Gods to the fire trusting they can help them if they will A Fellow thinking to have staid the fire by that means held his Micola so long that he had like to have been burnt himself and seeing he did him no good he threw him into the midst of the fire with this curse Noo Chart. i. e. The Devil take thee They bestow Jewels upon them of a great value This year a Woman who had formerly adorn'd her Micola with some Pearl being necessitated came to the Church and pray'd Micola to lend her some of his Jewels for she was at present in great want the dumb brute not speaking any thing to the contrary she thinking silence gave consent made bold to take a Ruby or two off him but the Pope spying her complains to the Justice who commanded both her hands to be cut off which was done three months since In their private houses they do ordinarily give and take as they thrive in their business for if they have any great losses they will come home and rob Micola to his shirt Herosie among the Russes is punished with fire The Heretick goes up to the top of a little house and so jumps in and upon him they throw straw and Luchines which are dry splinters of Fir-wood these being fir'd soon soffocate him Satis superque severa est hac animadversio The Fryars and Nuns are not so strict as in the Roman Church The Fryars are great Traders in Malt Hops all sort of Corn Horses Cattle and whatsoever else may but enrich them The Nuns go
of Sables how kill'd The excessive coldness of this Countrey How they feed their Cows Of the River Ob. What Caviare is made of Of Samogeda their Dyet Sledges how drawn Hunting Indistinct habit Of their manners And oother remarkable observations concerning these Northernlings in general CHAP. XVIII Of the Southern parts of Syberia The Wilderness called Step full of Cherry-trees and fine Flowers Of Elks. Of the Koorick and Perivoshick The Countrey of Squirrels Of a little Bird like a Woodcock Another like a Hawk A third as big as a Swan The story of the Vegitable Lamb refuted CHAP. XI A brief account of Tartary It 's Metropolis To whom the Tartars pay Tribute The Muscovite formerly tributary to the Crim-Tartar How far they march in a day They eat horse-flesh but no bread nor salt the reason why They are very quick-sighted excellent horse-men Of the Colmack Tartars The Crim's describ'd they deride the Russian worship The grounds why they do it CHAP. XX. What the simpler sort of Russians are their Idolatry and ignorance what they think of St. Nicholas their high conceit of good works They are great Rogues Some are good among them The Poles are not so barbarous as the Russes The Poles characteriz'd their Laws their King how stiled he is very magnificent King Henry weary of the title How he made shift to get away out of Poland CHAP. XXI Of Lues Venerea Of the Polonian Plica a familiar distemper and very infectious yet they highly esteem it When hair first began to be powdred The Poles more honourable in keeping Articles than the Russes A comparison of the Polish and Russian Languages Their salutations are stately How the Tartars and Chircasses salute The Chircasses Religion CHAP. XXII Of the Present Czar his Father Grave Wolmer how disappointed in Marriage Czar Michaels death The story of Boris Juanoidg How the Czar elects a Wife Whom Boris preferr'd His height makes him envied Eliah exalted The Russians extol Marriage Eliah disabled Who succeeds him Nashokin a great Reformer Highly commended His words concerning the French and Danes supporting the Hollanders against England He is a great lover of the English How he censured a Bill of Mortality and some other discourse which he held CHAP. XXIII The Czars description His answer to a Stranger How he appears in publick He never visits any Subject His Court without noise He seldom dines publickly At Easter his Subjects kiss his hand How he pays his Strelsies What he has done to employ the poor The Czaritza governs the Women From whence the Emperour 's chief Revenues proceed CHAP. XXIV The Czar goes every year to a house of pleasure call'd Obrasawsky Of the curious tents erected there How cautious the Emperour is of letting the vulgar sort behold his pastimes This commended for several reasons None are to petition the Czar in the fields What hapned to a poor Russian Captain for so doing The Emperours resentment for his death Peter Solticove turn'd out of Office and banished the Court the cause why Nashockin put in his place The Czar in the night time visits his Chancellors desks He has Spyes in every corner 'T is death to reveal any thing spoken in the Court The Russians answer to inquisitive persons The Czars children how attended they are bound to keep secrecie CHAP. XXV The story of a Jew turn'd Mahometan he falsly accuses Nashockin and is lash'd for his pains Jews how crept into the Court. A Discourse of Bogdan Matfeidg the Czars great Favourite his Pandor and Amours His Ladies jealousie how she was made away The Czar reproves him He and Nashockin no good friends Of the Czars Religion vvherein he is very zealous and constant He fasts at several times eight months in a year disposes of all Ecclesiastical Preferments His high commendation CHAP. XXVI Trading in Russia very low English Cloth a drug why slighted The Authors Reflection If Persians trade there what English are like to suffer What the Russians are in general Concerning the Dutch what the English must do to out-vye them How much they abuse us to the Emperour 'T were convenient for England to undeceive the Czar How things should be represented to Nashockin and Bogdan The Russians mightily pleased with their peace with Poland CHAP. XXVII Of Caviare how and where made The length of the Fish Belluga Caviare of two sorts The Belluga swallows abundance of Pebbles it is an excellent meat Isinglass is made of his Sounds CHAP. X●X●●● Of several sorts of Mushrooms which grow in Russia their forms and qualities they are divided by Botanists into two kinds viz. Lethales and Salutiferae A SURVEY Of the present State of RUSSIA CHAP. I. Of the Russians nature in general their contempt of Learning their Clergy Liturgy Churches Ceremonies in Devotion hours of Prayer the Priests names Habit Wives Baptism The unnatural death of Apostates AS for the Situtaion of Russia it is so well known that it would be a needless labour for me to set it down my design at present is to Survey ●●e Religion and Manners of the Inhabitants And to this purpose I have made a slender Essay the truth whereof I hope will excuse the plainness of the dress the stuff is course and the thread not fine but the matter I conceive will be both pleasant and profitable Having had therefore fair opportunities and good intelligence I am the more willing to give you an account of this Empire Indeed hitherto no man of parts or abilities has been suffered to travel the Country For the people are very jealous and suspect those who ask them any questions concerning their Policy or Religion they being wholly devoted to their own Ignorance and Education which is altogether illiterate and rude both in Civil and Ecclesiastical Affairs look upon Learning as a Monster and fear it no less than a Ship of Wildfire and thus they verifie the old Saying Ars nullum habet inimicum praeter ignorantem In the year of our Lord 1560. the Art of Printing was brought in amongst them as Thevet relates in the life of Basil and a Latin School also was erected but the Tribe of Levi soon destroyed it Vi Armis I shall therefore commence my discourse with them who are not set apart for this Function as in other Nations but any Lay-man of a good life and conversation may take upon him the Priesthood This Nation received the Christian Faith about six hundred years since from a certain Priest of Chioff who is said to cure one of the Dukes of Musco by prayer upon which Miracle he and all his people were baptized They borrow their Liturgy from the Greek Church which is written in the Sclavonian Language and used in their devotion with as much knowledge as the Latin amongst the Papists They follow the Greeks though lamely in the Architecture of their Churches whose chief ornaments are Images adorned with rich Stones and Pearls wherein they admit no Sculpture but only painting for they
clothes is like that of 〈◊〉 Nobility but only richer That of ●he Empress is the like only the tire of 〈◊〉 head is higher and her smock-●●eeves longer about ten or twelve yards English and her upper most Gown has wide sleeves like our Batchelors of Arts which all her women of honour wear also Commonly her Imperial Majesty makes her Journeys in the night with most of her women in Waggons cover'd with red cloth viz. Chamber-women Ladies and Embroideresses Not long since they were use to ride on Horseback with white Hats a skain of silk about their Necks and As●ride Ri●um teneatis Amici The mode of men and women rich and poor are all one all over the Empire from the highest to the lowest and their Language one yea and Religion too which certainly must hugely tend to their peace and preservation Here I might make some Reflections upon our own unhappy divisions and differences in opinions but this perhaps might be censur'd as an unhistorical Action and therefore Cynthius aurem The Russians are a People who differ from all other Nations of the world in most of their Actions Their Shirt they wear over their Drawers girded under the Navel to which they think a Girdle adds strength None neither male nor female must go ungirt for fear of being unblest They whistle not with their lips that they count prophane but through the Teeth a strange way of whistling indeed Whe● they spit on any thing to wipe it as Shoes c. they do use an action no● unlike sneezing In cases of admiration or incredulity instead of a shrug they wave their heads from one shoulder to another Their very speech and acce●● also differs from other Nations 'T is 〈◊〉 grand Sin with them to omit lotionem ●●st mictum As we use paper in our ●acking-Office to clear accounts so Ju●● de Rusco uses a little Spade made of 〈◊〉 thin shaven like the Ivory Spatula's ●hich Merchants and Scriveners use to ●●ld up letters and smooth them In our Clock-Dyals the Finger moves 〈◊〉 the Figure In the Russian e contra 〈◊〉 Figures move to the Poynter One Mr. Holloway a very ingenious man contrived the first Dyal of that fashion ●ying because they acted contrary to 〈◊〉 men 't was fitting their work should ●e made suitable Because the Roman Catholicks kneel at their devotion they will stand for they look upon kneeling ●s an ignoble and barbarous Gesture ●ecause the Polonians shave their ●eards they count it sinful to cut them Because the Tartar abhors Swines-flesh ●●ey eat it rather than any other flesh ●●though its food is most Pogano or un●lean of any Beast They count it a ●●eat sin for a Russ to lye with a Dutch woman or English Woman but a ve●ial Piccadillo for a Russ woman to prostitute her self to a Stranger for they say her issue will be educated in the true ancient Faith but a Russ gets an uncircumcized child of a Stranger The pre●e● Rye above Wheat and stinking Fish above fresh They count their miles b●ninties and not by hundreds Thei● New years day is the first of September● From the Creation they reckon 706● and odd years To things improbabl● they easily give credit but hardly believe what is rational and probable In their salutes they kiss the woman● right cheek Lands 25 of Inheritance are entayl'd upon the youngest Brother They write upon their knees thoug● a table stand before them They sow with the needle toward● them and thrust it forward with thei● fore-finger it should seem they are ba● Taylors They know not how to eat Pease an● Carrets boyld but eat them shells an● all like Swine They do not pick thei● Pease but pull them up by the roots and carry them into the Market to b● sold They know not the name of Cornuto ●ut of a Cuckold they say He lyes under ●e Bench. They will sooner take the word of a ●●an who has a Beard than the oath of ●●ne who is Beardless The beauty of Women they place in ●●eir satness juxta illud ●●alicum Dio ●●i faccia grassa to mi faro bella God ●●ake me ●at and I 'le make my self beau●●ful Their painting is no better than that ●f our Chimneys in the Summer viz. ●●ed Oaker and Spanish White They paint or stain their teeth black ●●on the same design that our Ladies ●ear black patches Or it may be their ●●eth being spoil'd by mercurial paint●●g they make a vertue of necessity and ●●y up that for an Ornament which is ●●ally a Deformity Low foreheads ●●d long eyes are in fashion here to ●hich purpose they strain them up so ●●rd under their Tyres that they can 〈◊〉 ill shut them as our Ladies lift up ●●eir hands to their heads They have secret amongst them to stain the very ●lls of their eyes black Narrow 〈◊〉 and slender Wasts are alike ugly in the sight A lean Woman they account u● wholsom therefore they who are i●clined to leanness give themselves ov●● to all manner of Epicurism on pu●pose to fatten themselves and lye a be● all day long drinking Russian Bran● which will fatten extreemly the● they sleep and afterwards drink agai● liste Swine design'd to make Baco● These are their odd customs which 〈◊〉 may justly censure as the Satyrist d●● the debauch'd Romans in his time saying Dum vitant stulti vitia in contrar● currunt And indeed to say truth the● madness is so great that all the Hel●bore in Anticyra cannot purge it away CHAP. XVI Of their Judiciary proceedings Of murther how punish'd the accused must confess the fact Of their Executioner and cruel Torments The punishment of Coyners A Fellow that shot at a Jack●aw how punish'd Conspirators banished into Syberia c. Hanging lately used amongst them and how I Cannot at present give you an account of their Judiciary proceedings which are very confused and yet they have a method and every Province its Precause or Office wherein is a Bayor or Lord and a Chancellor call'd a Diac who hath many Clerks under him He represents the Boyar who is the Representative of his Imperial Majesty If there be a Suit in Law and no bribes on either side most commonly the Plaintiff gets the better for they presume he has most right Murther is here to be bought off with money If a Man kill his Slave or his Wife in correcting them there is no law against them Or if a man is murther'd and no body prosecured his murtherer the law takes no notice of his death The accused cannot be condemn'd although a thousand witnesses come in against him except he confesses the Fact and to this end they want not torments to extort Confessions For first they put them upon the Strappado if this does not they secondly whip them and herein their Hangmen are very exquisite For 't is said at six or seven lashes they are able to kill a man Sometimes the consederate will see the enemy to execute such a piece of
contracted in Marriage which they are at six or seven years old that they may be sure to have them Virgins they buy them of their Parents for so many head of Deer and take them home to their houses and lock them up al Italiano The men likewise serve their wives so when they go an hunting and 't is as ordinary as strings to a purse For they have a Proverb He that leaves his purse open invites a Thief to it such as have seen their Engines say they come not short of the Italian ones Their houses are only round tents made of Deer-skins and Matts with a fire in the midst and a hole at the top for the smoke about which they lye round and find themselves warm enough In the Summer they remove near the Rivers to fish which they dry and preserve against Winter they kill their fishes with arrows and most commonly eat them raw they eat young Puppies and count them a rare dish They are not thought worthy of a Governour by his Imperial Majesty nor so considerable as to be taxed only voluntarily they pay a few Deer None understand their barbarous language but themselves nor yet their Laws which they execute secretly When they sell a Deer to Strangers they are sure to indent to have the garbage which they eat after a slight squeezing out of the excrements He is best qualifi'd amongst them who knows most in Magick wherein they are excellent especially before Strangers but amongst the Russes they dare not play any feats least they should be accused At Archangelo divers of them being treated by an English Merchant one in the company being very drunk besoul'd himself and was as rude as a Bear or Tom a Bedlam Hereupon an old Woman was call'd in who whisper'd in his ear touch'd his forehead and the man became as sober as if he had drunk nothing CHAP. XVIII Of the Southern parts of Syberia The Wilderness called Step full of Cherry-trees and fine Flowers Of Elks. Of the Zoorick and Perivoshick The Countrey of Squirrels Of a little Bird like a Woodcock Another like an Hawk A third as big as a Swan The story of the Vegitable Lamb refuted GOing towards the more Southern parts of Syberia you shall see a Wilderness called the Step which is six or seven hundred Versts long most of it ●s Champain it has but few Rivers ●et the ground is incredibly fruitful There you may ride a days journey through a field of Cherry-trees not a●ove three quarters of a yard high the reason why they are such dwarffs is because they are so often burnt down by Strangers or Travellers who making fires in the Autumn catelesty depart and the grass being long and dry takes fire which sometimes has pursued them to death two or three hundred Furlongs have been burnt at a time These trees yield a sine red Cherry but very tart Such as have been transplanted have proved very good I have spoken with those who have seen here variety of Tulips Damask and red Roses Asparagus exceeding large Onions Marjoram Time Sage Chicory Endive Savory c. what else we carefully nourish in our Gardens Liquorish also in great plenty which invite thither Ursa major and Ursa minor lastly Pars●ips and Carrets Merchants fetch from thence much Salgemmar and Nitre Their Elks are the largest in the world they have also a little Beas● call'd a Zoorick about the bigness of a Badger but not of that make it has ● dark brindled fine smooth hide short legs a little head a back almost a spa● broad and is indeed a pretty plump creature They dwell under ground like Coneys When Colonel Crafords Regiment quarter'd near their cells they came out wondring at them and standing upon their hinder legs they made such a shrill and unexpected noise as put the men into such a fright and the horse grasing by them that some ran away ten Versts before they could be overtaken The Russes relate strange stories of their mutual Wars taking Prisoners and making Slaves to bring in their winter provision as Hay and Roots ●his may pass for a Russian Fable But ●or certain they say that their Burroughs are very finely contriv'd and that they are so neat and curious in their houses that if any of them dye in the Burrough they will carry them out and bury them ●n these parts there is another Beast call'd Perrivoshick whose furr is brown yel●ow mixed with a little white and black which shews well in a coat though little valued here because the ●urr is short and of little warmth this beast ●s said to be very civil in carrying Squirrels and Ermines over Rivers and this is the reason why he is called Perrivoshick i. e. the Ferry man or Transporter and the same word in the Russian tong●● signifies a Translator The Russes say these Beasts take great delight in transporting other creatures I never heard it from any eye-witness but this I have that whole Countreys of Squirrels having spent their provision on the one side the River will adventure over to the other using their tayls for their Masts Rudder and Sails and a small chip or stick for their Boat with a fore-wind which veering about hazards the whole Fleet for they cannot ●tack about and if once their sails take wet they are utterly undone and defunct About Cazan and Astracan there is a little Bird about the bigness of a Woodcock his legs and bill not unlike a Snipe but the feathers and neck like a Cock of the Game being cut and trimm'd they fight like Cocks sparring at one another and yet they have no● spurs They are in continual war i● kept in the house and will lie on their guards with their bills on the ground and at first advantage run a tilt with their single Rapiers as violently as any Duellist brusling up their neck-feathers a guissa di gallo they are meat beyond Quails and are also f●●nd about Archangelo with another B●●l as great as an Owzle made like an Hawk who flyes at smaller birds catches them sticks them on a thorn and picks them very clean before she eats them There ●s a Bird brought hither from Astracan ●as big as a Swan not unlike in his body and his feet but hath somewhat shorter and thicker neck he has also a very ●ide throat able to swallow down a fish ●ine inches adout Perhaps in some histories of these parts you may have ●eard of a vegitable Lamb which de●ours all the grass about it and then flyes but this is as true as the story of Monocular people in Sir John Mande●ils Travels and such like Fables which ●ave not the least shadow of truth CHAP. XIX A brief account of Tartary It 's Metropolis To whom the Tartars pay Tribute The Muscovite formerly tributary to the Crim-Tartar How far they march in a day They eat horse-flesh but no bread nor salt the reason why They are very quick sighted excellent horse-men of the
some of his handsome Tartar and Polish slaves he urged him being an old Widdower either to marry or refrain the Court. For the Russians highly extoll marriage partly to people their Territories and partly to prevent Sodomy and Buggery to which they are naturally inclined nor is it punished there with Death A lusty Fellow about eight years since being at this beastly sport with a Cow cry'd to one that saw him Ne Misheay do not interrupt me and now he is known by no other name over all Muscovy then Ne Misheai Eliah at present having had an Apoplectick fit is disabled in body and mind and knows no body without being told His miss had been the greater had not that great States-man Nashockin succeeded and suppli'd his place in many Offices It was this Nashockin who concluded the peace with Poland upon honourable terms and finished the League with Swedland He is now made Chancellor of the Embassadors Office Treasurer Lord of Russia minor and has several other Offices He contriv'd the Silk-trade through Russia and 't is thought all the Indian Trade will be drawn that way He is now about reforming the Russian Laws and new modelling all the Czardom There shall be no delatory Suites all Governours with their Assistants shall have power of life and death for before all Criminals were brought to Mosco with no less trouble than charge to the Czar This same counsel Jethro gave to Moses This Nashockin is one who will not be corrupted he is a very sober abstemious man indefatigable in business an admirer of Monarchs Speaking about the French and Dan● siding with the Hollander against England he brake forth into these words I wonder that these two King 's should have no more prudence or reason than to support or countenance such Boors against the Monarch of England who should rather joyn together with the rest of the Princes in Europe to destroy all Republicks which are no better than the Nurseries of Heresie and Rebellion I have heard him say that 't is the Czars interest to keep a good correspondence with the King of England above any other Christian Prince He is the only Patron the English have Being sollicited to admit of English goods he produced the London Bill of Mortality wherein very few dyed of the Plague notwithstanding said he how do we know but the Goods may be brought out of some of the infected houses and one spark of fire will kindle a whole sack of Charcoale 'T is a strange custom to publish your infirmities Beggars indeed expose their ulcers to to raise commiseration and get relief But they who proclaim the P●st give a caveat against all commerce of them as men set up lights to keep ships off their coasts Another thing seems strange unto us that Royal Letters are often sent privately to us in in behalf of private men to demand Justice as if our Czar had not made sufficient provision for Strangers as well as Natives We seldom have any such applications from any other Prince but that of Denmark where we hear they are purchas'd at a cheap rate What they cost in England we know not but what have we to do with the customs of other Nations Their clothes will not fit us nor our cloths them thus he ended his discourse abruptly and if he had spoken more then he had mind should be repeated But by this you may judge tanquam ex unque leonem that he is a great Politician and a very grave and wise Minister of State not inferiour peradventure to any one in Europe CHAP. XXIII The Czars description His answer to a Stranger How he appears in publick He never visits any Subject His Court without noise He seldom dines publickly At Easter his Subjects kiss his hand How he pays his Strelsies What he has done to employ the poor The Czaritza governs the Women From whence the Emperour 's chief Revenues proceed I shall now give you a further description of the Czar He is a goodly person about six foot high well set inclin'd to fat of a clear complexion lightish hair somewhat a low forehead of a stern countenance severe in his chastisements but very careful of his Subjects love Being urged by a Stranger to make it death for any man to desert his Colours he answer'd it was a hard case to do that for God has not given courage to all men alike He never appears to the people but in magnificence and on Festivals with wonderful splendor of Jewels and Attendant● He never went to any Subjects house but his Governours when he was thought past all recovery His Centinels and Guards placed round about his Court stand like silent and immoveable Statues No noise is heard in his Pallace no more than if uninhabited None but his Domesticks are suffer'd to approach the inward Court except the Lords that are in Office He never dines publickly but on Festivals and then his Nobility dine in his presence At Easter all the Nobility and Gentry and Courtiers kiss the Emperours hand and receive Eggs. Every meal he sends dishes of meat to his Favourites from his own Table His stores of Corn and dry'd flesh are very considerable with these he pays his Strelsies or Janzaries giving them some cloth but very little money for they have all Trades and great Priviledges The Emperour with his Pottash Wax and Honey he buys Velvet Sattin Damask cloth of Gold and Broad-cloth with which he gratifies his Officers for their service He hath now seven Versts off Mosco built Work-houses for Hemp and Flax in that good order beauty and capacity that they will employ all the poor in his Kingdom with work He hath allotted many miles of wast Land for that design The Czaritza is to govern the womens side for her use and profit Thus the Czar improves the Manufactures of his Countrey feeds all the Labourers as cheap as we do our Dogs And lays up the money that comes out of the Cabacks Bath stoves Tart Pitch Hemp Flax Honey Wax Caviare Sturgeon Bellusa and other salted and dry'd fish from Astracan Cazan the Lake Belsira and many other Lakes and Rivers with which the Countrey abounds especially Syberia in the latter CHAP. XXIV The Czar goes every year to a house of pleasure call'd Obrasawsky Of the curious tents erected there How cautious the Emperour is of letting the vulgar sort behold his pastimes This commended for several reasons None are to petition the Czar in the fields What hapned to a poor Russian Captain for so doing The Emperours resentment for his death Peter Solticove turn'd out of Office and banished the Court the cause why Nashockin put in his place The Czar in the night time visits his Chancellors desks He has Spyes in every corner 'T is death to reveal any thing spoken in the Court The Russians answer to inquisitive persons The Czars children how attended they are bound to keep secrecie EVery year towards the latter end of May the