A brichka is in form just like a small English waggon, and upon wheels, about the height and size of the little Coleseed waggons; it is made with a calash, like our chariots, which can be thrown back occasionally; and an apron of leather fastening up to within a foot of the top of the head: withinside, two curtains of leather draw and shut you up completely from the cold.
Source: wiktionary
[I]t is clear that my uncle has guests. There is a dormeuse, a brichka, and it seems—yes, there it is!—the jaunty carriage of the ispravnik of Serdobsk.
Source: wiktionary
However, you would be hard put to find any travellers at all in the town of B—; only very rarely some squire owning eleven serfs and clad in his nankeen frock-coat clatters along the road in a contraption that is a cross between a brichka and a cart, peeping out from piles of flour sacks and lashing his bay mare with her following foal.
Source: wiktionary