Irkútsk who had succeeded Major Pótulof in the command
of the political prison, consented to allow the prisoners to have bedding.
In the women's prison at Ust Kará the state of affairs was little better. The women, of course, had had nothing what- ever to do with the escape, nor with the artificially created "insurrection," but they had, nevertheless, to take their share of the consequences. The new commandant, Major Khaltúrin, believed in strict discipline with no favors; and he regarded the permission that had tacitly been given the women to wear their own dress instead of the prison cos- tume as an unnecessary concession to a foolish and senti- mental weakness. He therefore ordered that their own clothing be taken away from them, and that they be re- quired to put on the convict garb. Some of the women were sick and unable to change their dress, others did not believe that the order would really be enforced, and they refused to obey it, and finally the overseer of the prison re- sorted to violence. The scene that ensued produced such an effect upon Madam Léschern that she attempted to com- mit suicide.
Outside the political prison at the Lower Diggings were living a number of women who had voluntarily come to the mines in order to be near their husbands. Previous to the escape and the pogróm these women had been allowed to have interviews with their imprisoned husbands once or twice a week, and had received from the latter small sums of money, with the help of which they contrived to exist, After the prison had been "reduced to order" and the poli- tical convicts had been subjected to "dungeon conditions," interviews between husbands and wives were no longer per- mitted; and as the prisoners' money was all held in the possession of the authorities, the unfortunate women and children were soon reduced almost to starvation. Vera Rogatchóf, wife of Lieutenant Dmítri Rogatchóf, a young artillery officer then in penal servitude, was brought to