
A determined traveler sets out from the bustling streets of Paris and heads eastward across the frozen expanses of European Russia, threading his way through the stark beauty of Siberia on a sturdy sledge. The journey soon shifts to the open steppe, where a caravan of camels carries him through Mongolia’s endless horizons, across the desolate Gobi, and finally to the imposing Great Wall that heralds the gateway to China. Along the way, he swaps sleds for mule‑drawn palanquins, each mode of transport offering a fresh perspective on the lands he traverses.
The narrative blends vivid personal impressions with practical observations, giving listeners a sense of both adventure and useful detail. Sketches and a detailed map punctuate the story, bringing distant villages, monasteries, and bustling markets to life. The author's straightforward, unadorned prose invites you to travel alongside him, feeling the chill of Siberian snows and the heat of the Asian deserts without ever leaving your seat.
Full title
From Paris to Pekin over Siberian Snows A Narrative of a Journey by Sledge over the Snows of European Russia and Siberia, by Caravan Through Mongolia, Across the Gobi Desert and the Great Wall, and by Mule Palanquin Through China to Pekin
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (483K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2015-02-27
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

A restless 19th-century French traveler, he turned demanding journeys into vivid books about Egypt, Nubia, Siberia, Mongolia, and the Caribbean. His work captures both the adventure of overland travel and the limits of the era that shaped his views.
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