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 would surely be enough to keep us from dying of 
 hunger for a week or fortnight and that on any supposition
whatever either the same or other men would 
 come to see what was become of us in that time.
We had not however  had  the pleasure of making our reflections
 in this situation above half an hour,  when  a glimmering light 
 appeared towards the way out.   In any country but this
 not exceprting England I should have been under 
 some anxiety as the instant of seeing the light  as doubting whether it 
 might be friends or foes who brought it.   It proved to be two
boys whose business had been to look after the horses which 
 were left near the mouth of the Cavern, and whom the men
 had sent to us in their    stead    we could learn nothing
from these boys  as to the reason why  why the men had left us:  all that they 
could tell us was that they were lain down to sleep 
on the outside  of the cavern by a good fire. Although I was determined
not to quit the place till I had explored 
all the turnings & windings in it, yet I thought the 
most certain way of getting the men back again was 
to go & fetch them:  therefore loading ourselves with some 
of the choicest stones we had collected we made our way 
out to the open air; there true enough we found the men all 
asleep before a large fire.   the reasons they gave  were 
for leaving us were simple enough.   They were too tired
to  another days fatigue without sleeping
and   not sleep in so cold a place.   You must
understand the Russian peasants are used to sleep in 
a degree of heat which would be very disagreeable to 
those not accustomed to it.   They said they had left 6
candles burning and had sent the 2 boys as soon as 
they could.   I staid half an hour by their fire
and in the mean time divided my company into 
3  fo <hirend="underline"> detatchments</hi> for the purpose of taking different 
courses for the better exploring all the parts of the 
cave.   I cut  a great number of  pieces of paper of 3 different figures 
of which each took detatchment took    a separate 
figure so as that by scattering these pieces of paper 
in the way one party might know where the other 
had been.   Thus prepared we returned to our subterraneous
 employment.   we were now so well exercised in 
the scrambling up & down the steep places that in about 
7 or 8 hours there was not  a hole but what some part
 of the company had been in: after which collecting together
the stones which we had chosen selected from different
parts we with no small pains made our  way  out with 
them, and set off on our return.   The colour of our
cloaths skins and everything we had about us, however
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different they might before have been were now all alike.
 After all then in this said Cave I could find no  ap 
indications of its ever having served for habitation for men
or beasts.   Nothing alive was to be found but Batts or winged mice and gnats.   The former were in great plenty
the latter who most likely had taken shelter there on 
the approach of the winter, were but in small quantity
and those though they settled on ones hands & face had
not seemingly strength enough to bite.
All I get then from  for  this my pains  were (besides
a good collection of the calcaneous chrystalizations 
 & stalactites   before  such as had already been  procured from this cave)
    were some specimens of  one or two sorts  of the same genus of which  
 such as  I had not seen in the possession of anybody else.
It was an affair of 5 days.
At my return I happened to come to 
on the day when the new  code of laws was promulgated  mode of Jurisprudence took 
 place in consequence of the opening  of  the new Government 
of Perme, of which this is one of the dependent towns.
There was no passing without spending that day 
and greatest part of the next there.  At this  place there is at present
the name, buildings, and th rich pontifical habits
only remaining of a very rich Monstaery founded
and kept up at an  enormous Expence
 by the gift of 
Strogonof's Grandfather.   The present Empress
has put all the monasteries into much  
 hands, and left the poor Archimandite to say 
his prayers on 300 roubles a year.   He pressed
me to come to his house which is nearly enough
furnished, and he gave us several sorts of wines:  
when he spoke of former times, he could not help 
fetching a sigh.
 Leaving Solikamskaja in 
about 3 hours we came to the Saltworks belonging
 to the Crown.   there I spent one whole 
day in informing myself of ad the whole of the 
process and discovering some writings about it.
Next day  I  crossed the water to Baron Strogonof's 
and spent 3 days there watching every part of 
the process and taking notes of it.   The mechanism
as well as Chemical operations are so unsatisfactorily
 executed, that the details are not worth telling
you.
 Holes are bored in the earth about 40 
fathoms deep, the lower parts of which are large enough
to admit the insertion of a wooden pipe about 4 inches diameter
inside.   These pipes grow larger as they are higher
up, and above the middle moves a piston.   A very strong
| Identifier: | JB/539/269/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 539. | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1782-01-02 | |||
| 539 | |||
| 269 | |||
| 001 | |||
| Correspondence | |||
| Samuel Bentham | |||