Read The Romanov Sisters (Four Sisters) Online
Authors: Helen Rappaport
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Russia & the Former Soviet Union, #Biography & Autobiography, #Women's Studies, #Family & Relationships, #Royalty, #1910s, #Civil War, #WWI
that the ambitious Maria Pavlovna, wife of Grand Duke Vladimir
– and herself the mother of three boys – ‘had consulted a gypsy
fortune teller, who had predicted that one of her sons would sit on
the throne of Russia’.5
It is little wonder that Nicholas and Alexandra detached them-
selves from such insidious gossip and kept well out of sight at
Tsarskoe Selo. Alexandra was exhausted, though she recovered
from this pregnancy rather quicker than the first. Now that she
had two children to mother, the focal point of family life at the
Alexander Palace increasingly became her Meltzer-designed
mauve boudoir, the room where she spent most of her day. In it,
as her family grew, Alexandra accumulated an eclectic mix of
sentimental objects, and aside from occasional redecoration,
nothing in the room would be altered in the twenty-one years
that followed.
Two high windows looked east, out on to the Alexander Park
and the lakes beyond. Within and close to the windows was a
large wooden plant holder full of vases of freshly cut, heavily
scented flowers – in particular the lilac Alexandra adored. In
addition there were roses, orchids, freesias and lilies of the valley
– many specially grown for Alexandra in the palace hothouses –
and ferns, palms and aspidistras, and other flowers in abundance
filling vases of Sèvres and other china placed around the room.
Simple white-painted lemonwood furniture, cream wood panelling
and opalescent grey and mauve silk wall coverings and draped
curtains were all carefully chosen to match the lilac hues of
Alexandra’s upholstered chaise longue cum daybed with its lace
cushions. This bed was concealed behind a wooden screen to
keep away draughts. Further into the room were a white upright
piano and a writing desk, and the tsaritsa’s personal library of
favourite books. But always, too, a basket of toys and children’s
games were at hand, for this is where the family would usually
gravitate in the evenings.6
45
693GG_TXT.indd 45
29/10/2013 16:17
FOUR SISTERS
In August of 1897, on a reciprocal visit to Russia in furtherance
of the Franco-Russian alliance, President Faure was eager to see
‘La Grande Duchesse Olga’ once more. He took great delight in
dandling her on his knee – far longer, it was said, than ‘arranged
for by the Protocol’ – and he held baby Tatiana in his arms as well.7
The president brought with him an expensive gift of a Morocco
leather trunk emblazoned with Olga’s initials and coat of arms,
containing three exquisite French dolls.8 One of them had a
‘complete trousseau: dresses, lingerie, hats, slippers, the entire equipment of a dressing-table, all reproduced with remarkable art and
fidelity’.9 She was dressed in blue surah silk trimmed with the finest Valenciennes lace and when a spring was pressed on her chest her
waxen lips would open and say ‘
Bonjour ma chère, petite mama! As-tu
bien dormi cette nuit?
’10
President Faure was not the only person to be smitten with the
two little sisters: everyone found them the most sweet and winning
children. ‘Our little daughters are growing, and turning into
delightful happy little girls’, Nicholas told his mother that November.
‘Olga talks the same in Russian and in English and adores her little
sister. Tatiana seems to us, understandably, a very beautiful child,
her eyes have become dark and large. She is
always
happy and only cries once a day without fail, after her bath when they feed her.’11
Many were already beginning to note Olga’s precocious and friendly
manner, among them Princess Mariya Baryatinskaya who was invited
to Tsarskoe Selo to meet the tsaritsa by her niece and namesake,
who was a lady-in-waiting:
She had her little Olga by her side, who, when she saw me, said,
‘What are you?’ in English, and I said, ‘I am Princess Baryatinsky!’
‘Oh but you can’t be,’ she replied, ‘we’ve got one already!’ The
little lady regarded me with an air of great astonishment, then,
pressing close to her mother’s side, she adjusted her shoes, which
I could see were new ones. ‘New shoes,’ she said. ‘You like them?’
– this in English.12
Everyone remarked on Alexandra’s relaxed manner in the privacy
of their home with her children, but by November she was feeling
very sick again, could not eat and was losing weight. Maria
Feodorovna was swift to offer her own homespun medical advice:
46
693GG_TXT.indd 46
29/10/2013 16:17
MY GOD! WHAT A DISAPPOINTMENT! . . .
She ought to try eating raw ham in bed in the morning before
breakfast. It really does help against nausea . . . She must eat
something so as not to lose strength, and eat in small quantities
but often, say every other hour, until her appetite comes back.
It is your duty, my dear Nicky, to watch over her and to look
after her in every possible way, to see she keeps her feet warm
and above all that she doesn’t go out in the garden in shoes.
That is very bad for her.13
If another baby was on the way, nothing was said and the preg-
nancy did not progress. Alexandra’s English cousin Thora (daughter
of her aunt Princess Helena) was making a four-month visit to Russia
at the time and made no mention of it.14 Thora described Olga’s
second birthday that November in a letter to Queen Victoria: ‘there
was a short service in the morning . . . Alix took little Olga with us as it only last[ed] ten minutes or a quarter of an hour & she behaved beautifully & enjoyed the singing & tried to join in which nearly made us laugh.’15 Later that day they went to open an orphanage
for 180 6–15-year-old girls and boys established to commemorate
Olga’s birth, its upkeep personally funded by Alexandra.16 Life at
Tsarskoe Selo was, as Thora told Grandmama, modest and familial:
We lead a very quiet life here and one can scarcely realize that
they are an Emperor & Empress as there is, here in the country,
an entire absence of state. None of the gentlemen live in the
house & the one lady on duty takes her meals in her own room,
so one never sees any of the suite unless people come or there
is some function.17
The self-imposed isolation of her granddaughter clearly concerned
Queen Victoria (who had been through her own troubled period of
retreat from public view in the 1860s). Victoria demanded further
elaboration from Thora, who responded: ‘As to what you say about
Alix & Nicky seeing so few people . . . I think she quite knows how important it is she should get to know more of the society but the
truth is she & Nicky are so absolutely happy together that they do not like to have to give up their evenings to receiving people.’18
No one caught a glimpse of Alexandra that winter – even in St
Petersburg, and nothing was imparted to newspaper readers eager
47
693GG_TXT.indd 47
29/10/2013 16:17
FOUR SISTERS
to know something of the domestic life of their monarchs. ‘It was
almost a minor state secret to know if they took sugar with their
tea, or had mustard with their beef’, observed Anglo-Russian writer
Edith Almedingen.19 In any event, Alexandra seemed to be perpet-
ually ill or pregnant – or both. In February 1898 she went down
with a severe bout of measles – caught on a visit to one of the charity schools she supported – and suffered severe bronchial complications.20 The St Petersburg season was over by the time she recovered
and many of her royal relatives were beginning to worry. When the
Duchess of Coburg visited Russia in August that year she opted to
stay in St Petersburg rather than endure the domestic boredom of
the Alexander Palace. ‘It seems that Nicky and Alix shut themselves
up more than ever and never see a soul’, she told her daughter,
adding that ‘Alix is not a bit popular’.21 Alexandra for her part cared little. On 21 September when Nicholas unexpectedly had to go to
Copenhagen with his mother for the Queen of Denmark’s funeral
she was distraught: ‘I cannot bear to think what will become of me
without you – you who are my one and all, who make up all my
life’, the words eerily like those of her grandmother whenever she
was separated from Prince Albert. All Alexandra wanted was that
she and Nicky should ‘live a quiet life of love’; besides, she thought she might be pregnant again. ‘If I only knew whether something is
beginning with me or not’, she wrote to Nicky as he left. ‘God grant
it may be so, I long for it and so does my Huzy too, I think.’22
Alexandra spent Nicholas’s absence at Livadia in the Crimea,
where he rejoined her on 9 October, but it was the end of the month
before his mother heard the news: ‘I am now in a position to tell
you, dear Mama, that with God’s help – we expect a new happy
event next May.’ But, he added:
She begs you not to talk about it yet, although I think this is an
unnecessary precaution, because such news always spreads very
quickly. Surely everyone here is guessing it already, for we have
both stopped lunching and dining in the common dining room
and Alix does not go driving any more, twice she fainted during
Mass – everybody notices all this, of course.23
Privately, Alexandra was apprehensive not just about the sex of
her unborn child, but the physical suffering to come: ‘I never like
48
693GG_TXT.indd 48
29/10/2013 16:17
MY GOD! WHAT A DISAPPOINTMENT! . . .
making plans’, she told Grandmama in England. ‘God knows how
it will all end.’24 Fits of giddiness and severe nausea forced her to spend much of her third pregnancy lying down, or sitting on the
balcony of the palace at Livadia. Her husband’s devotion to her was
exemplary; he pushed his wife around in her bath chair and read to
her daily and at length: first
War and Peace
and then a history of Alexander I. They remained in Livadia until 16 December. Till now
managing only with a temporary nanny, Alexandra had set about
finding a permanent one. Her cousin Thora’s lady-in- waiting Emily
Loch had good contacts in England and knew whom to ask and in
December wrote to Alexandra recommending a Miss Margaretta
Eagar. The thirty-six-year-old Irish Protestant came with good
domestic skills as cook, housekeeper and needlewoman, as well as
considerable experience in looking after children. She had trained
as a medical nurse in Belfast and had worked as matron of a girls’
orphanage in Ireland and was the older sister of one of Emily Loch’s
friends. Emily sent a personal report on Miss Eagar to Alexandra,
emphasizing that she was straightforward and unsophisticated, with
no interest in court intrigues. When approached about the position,
Margaretta had hesitated at first, fearful of the responsibility of
looking after a newborn baby in addition to two small children. But
as one of ten herself – seven of them girls – she had had plenty of
experience looking after younger female siblings and took some
additional training with babies before travelling to Russia.25 Her life there would, however, be extremely sheltered. She would have no
opportunity of sharing her experiences with other British nannies
and governesses, of whom there were many in St Petersburg. Any
excursions with the children, and even on her own, would be strictly
monitored by the tsar’s security police, allowing her little or no
opportunity to see anything of ‘the land of the Czar’ beyond the
confines of the imperial residences.26
On 2 February 1899, Margaretta Eagar arrived at the Winter
Palace by train from Berlin. After resting, she was taken by Alexandra to see her new charges. It was the feast of the Purification of the
Virgin and Olga and Tatiana were exquisitely dressed ‘in transparent
white muslin dresses trimmed with Brussels lace, and worn over
pale-blue satin slips. Pale-blue sashes and shoulder ribbons completed
49
693GG_TXT.indd 49
29/10/2013 16:17
FOUR SISTERS
their costumes.’ ‘Innumerable Russian nurses and chambermaids’
would of course assist Margaretta in her duties, including trained
children’s nurse Mariya Vishnyakova who had been hired in May
1897. Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna
*
recalled how the nursery
staff at Tsarskoe Selo wore uniforms, ‘all in white, with small nurse-caps of white tulle. With this exception: two of their Russian nurses were peasants and wore the magnificent native peasant costumes.’27
Maria and her brother Dmitri (the children of Grand Duke Pavel
Alexandrovich), who were a few years older than Olga and Tatiana,
were among the first playmates the girls had within the Romanov
family. Maria remembered how pleasant the ambience of the girls’
apartments was: ‘The rooms, light and spacious, were hung with
flowered cretonne and furnished throughout with polished lemon-
wood’, which she found ‘luxurious, yet peaceful and comfortable’.
After playing upstairs, the children would have an early supper in
the nursery and then be taken down to see Nicholas and Alexandra,
where they would be greeted and kissed ‘and the Empress would