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
Word was by now leaking into the foreign press that Philippe’s
influence over the imperial couple went well beyond ‘psychical
methods of healing’ in the conception of a son and that Nicholas
had even subjected himself to ‘hypnotic experiments’, during which
Philippe ‘calls forth the spirit of Alexander III, foretells the future, and inspires the Czar with one or another decision concerning not
only his domestic, but also State affairs’.20 Philippe’s reputation took a dip and accusatory voices that he was a charlatan bent on meddling
in affairs of state mounted, making his position at the Russian court untenable. Nicholas and Alexandra were loath to part with him but
at the end of 1902 Philippe returned to France with gifts from his
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grateful imperial patrons including a Serpollet motor car.21 In return Philippe presented Alexandra with an icon with a small bell, which,
he told her, would ring to alert her should anyone meaning her
harm enter the room. She also kept a frame with dried flowers that
he gave her, which he claimed had been touched by the hand of the
saviour. Philippe departed, leaving one final, tantalizing prediction:
‘Someday you will have another friend like me who will speak to
you of God.’22
In the persisting climate of recrimination at the absence of an
heir to the throne, rumours began circulating after the ‘miscarriage’
of 1902 that Nicholas would be prevailed upon to divorce Alexandra
– much as Napoleon Bonaparte had divorced Empress Josephine in
1810, after fourteen years of marriage, for failing to provide him
with a son. There was even talk that the tsar would abdicate if his
next child was another daughter. Within Russia, the tsaritsa’s pos-
ition was growing ‘extremely precarious’. Rumour abounded that
she had become the victim of ‘profound and growing melancholy
since her hope of becoming a mother again was dashed’, so much
so that her desire to produce an heir had become ‘almost a mania
with her’.23 Meanwhile sympathy abroad grew for the four imperial
daughters so systematically marginalized in the Russian public’s
imagination, such as in this quip published in the Pittsburgh press
in November 1901:
Mrs Gaswell: The Czar of Russia has now four little daughters.
Mr Gaswell: Oh, the dear little Czardines.24
*
The year 1903 was an important one for the Romanov family, begin-
ning with the celebrations for the bicentenary of the foundation of
St Petersburg. In a rare court appearance – as it turned out, their
last for several years to come – Nicholas and Alexandra took centre
stage at what would be the last great costume ball held before the
revolution. Alexandra looked magnificent, if rather uncomfortable,
ornately dressed as the Tsaritsa Mariya Miloslavskaya in a heavy
gold brocade costume and unwieldy crown, with her husband at her
side and rather eclipsed by her, dressed as their favourite tsar, Alexey I. Alexandra seemed a beautiful vision, a ‘Byzantine Madonna come
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down from among the jewelled
ikons
of a cathedral’.25 But it was an image of autocratic remoteness that, seen at the centre of this
splendid gathering of St Petersburg’s wealthy aristocratic elite, served only to accentuate both her and Nicholas’s total isolation from the
ordinary Russian people. Later that summer, however, the Russian
people would be rewarded with a very rare glimpse of the royal
couple, in their continuing quest for a son.
Before Philippe had left for France he had recommended that
the imperial couple pray for the intercession of St Seraphim of
Sarov, and they would have a son. There was, however, a problem:
there was no official saint of that name in the Russian Orthodox
calendar. After a frantic search, it was eventually ascertained that a monk at the Diveevo Monastery at Sarov in the Tambov region,
250 miles (403 km) east of Moscow, had been revered locally for
performing miracles. But none of these had been officially verified
and Seraphim had been dead for seventy years. Nor had his body,
when his coffin was opened for inspection, passed the acid test of
sanctity by appearing miraculously uncorrupted. It was in an
advanced state of decay. As emperor, Nicholas nevertheless had the
power to order that this unknown miracle-worker be canonized,
whatever the state of his corpse. The Metropolitan of Moscow found
himself obliged to find a way of upholding Seraphim’s sanctity, as
being ‘fully established by the many miracles performed in connexion
with his remains, including the soil in which he lies buried, the
stone on which he prayed, and the water from the well which he
bored – by all of which many believers have been restored to health’.26
As Elizaveta Naryshkina noted, the contrivance of Seraphim’s saint-
hood was seen as a direct result of Alexandra’s involvement with her
new ‘friend’: ‘It would be difficult to know where Philippe ends and
Seraphim begins.’27 In February 1903 the Metropolitan finally sanc-
tioned the canonization.
Leaving their daughters behind in the care of Margaretta Eagar,
Nicholas and Alexandra travelled in intense heat to Sarov for the
formal ceremony, in the company of Nicholas’s sister Olga, Maria
Feodorovna, Ella and Sergey, and Militza and Stana. Nicholas was
well aware that the canonization ceremony would serve an important
purpose, as an act of collective religious faith underpinning his
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autocratic rule, for the imperial guests were joined by something
approaching 300,000 devout pilgrims, who descended on Sarov,
raising a huge cloud of dust in the process. Hordes of the blind,
the sick and the crippled, all seeking a miracle, tried to mob their
little father and kiss his hand, In an atmosphere saturated with
mystical religious fervour and the incessant ringing of bells, the
family attended three days of protracted church services, often of
over three hours’ duration, in the boiling heat.28 Despite the pain
in her legs, Alexandra endured the devotions on her feet, with deep
piety and without complaint. The intense faith manifested at Sarov
by the many pilgrims fuelled her own unshakeable belief in the
sacred, inviolable communion between tsar and people. Nicholas
helped carry the coffin containing Seraphim’s sacred relics on a litter during the ceremonies, culminating in its interment on 19 August
in a specially created shrine built in St Seraphim’s honour. That
evening, as an important, symbolic act of religious faith, Alexandra
and Nicholas went in private down to the nearby Sarova River,
where Seraphim himself had once bathed and – as Philippe had
instructed them – submerged themselves in its sacred waters in the
hope that they might be blessed with a son.
*
In the autumn of 1903 the Romanov family made a visit to Darmstadt
for the wedding of Princess Alice of Battenberg and Prince Andrew
of Greece.* Ernie and Ducky – a mismatched couple from the first
– had by now sadly separated and divorced, but Ernie was devoted
to their eight-year-old daughter Elisabeth, who spent six months of
the year with him. After the wedding, the two families travelled to
Wolfsgarten for a private holiday, where Olga and Tatiana played
happily with their cousin, riding bicycles and ponies and going out
mushroom-picking. Elisabeth was a strange, ethereal child with eyes
full of pathos and a halo of dark curly hair that contradicted her
warm and lively personality. She was greatly taken with her ‘tiny
cousin’ Anastasia, took to mothering her and wanted to take her
back home with her to Darmstadt.29
When the imperial family left Hesse, Ernie and Elisabeth travelled
on with them to the tsar’s hunting lodge on the imperial estate at
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Skierniewice near the Bialowieza Forest in today’s Poland, where
Nicholas went for regular hunting trips. But on the morning of 15
November, and without warning, Elisabeth suddenly fell sick. It
seemed at first to be a bad sore throat, but her temperature continued to rise and, lying dangerously ill, she begged Margaretta Eagar to
send for her mother. The illness, however, overwhelmed her and
there was nothing the doctors could do. Within forty-eight hours
Elisabeth was dead, carried off by a particularly virulent form of
typhoid that had caused heart failure.30 The sisters were greatly
distressed by their cousin’s sudden death and immediately afterwards
Margaretta took all four of them back to Tsarskoe Selo, so that their rooms at Skierniewice could be fumigated. Olga was bewildered:
‘What a pity that the dear God has taken away from me such a
good friend!’ she told Margaretta plaintively. Later, at Christmas,
she remembered Elisabeth again, wondering to Margaretta whether
God had purposely ‘sent for her to keep with him’ in Heaven.31
Almost immediately after Ernie took Elisabeth’s sad little coffin
back to Darmstadt, Alexandra fell ill with a severe ear infection and instead of travelling on to Elisabeth’s funeral, remained confined to bed at Skierniewice for six long weeks. The pain was so bad that
an ear specialist was called in from Warsaw. Desperate to be with
her children for Christmas and arrange the tree and presents for
them and the staff, Alexandra travelled back to Russia before she
was fully recovered.32 No sooner had she arrived at Tsarskoe Selo
than she went down with influenza and on Christmas Eve, as
Margaretta Eagar recalled, she was ‘very ill and could not see the
children’.33 Instead Nicholas supervised the tree and the distribution of presents. This was no mean task, for the family had eight large
trees brought in at Christmas – for themselves, the staff and even
the Tsar’s Escort. Alexandra liked to decorate them all herself, in
addition to laying out the huge array of presents for the household
on long tables covered with crisp white tablecloths – very much in
the German style adopted by her grandmother at Windsor. The
girls as usual took pride in making their own little gifts, but Christmas that year was a sad and subdued one, haunted by the death of their
cousin and with their mother confined to bed. ‘Wanting her, we
wanted more than half of our usual gaiety’, Margaretta remembered.
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The tsaritsa remained bedridden until mid-January and the family
did not transfer to St Petersburg for the winter season until the
following month.34 It was a difficult time to be laid so low by illness for Alexandra was pregnant again – her child probably conceived at
Skierniewice – and her illness only exacerbated her anxieties. Xenia
was sympathetic when she was finally told the news by Maria
Feodorovna on 13 March: ‘It’s become noticeable now, but she, poor
thing, had been concealing it as no doubt she was afraid that people
would find out about it too soon.’35
Alexandra was saved from further criticism when the St Petersburg
season was cut short with the outbreak in January 1904 of the
Russo-Japanese War, triggered by Nicholas’s expansionist policies
in southern Manchuria, a territory long contested by the Japanese.
Many at court believed it to be a direct result of the insidious influence of Philippe, who had assured the couple that a short, sharp
war would be a triumphant demonstration of Russian imperial might
that would underline the inviolability of their autocracy. But it was an ill-judged conflict for which Russia was not prepared, her troops
even less so, and the initial burst of patriotic fervour rapidly faded.
During the war, the little grand duchesses were inevitably suscep-
tible to the racist and xenophobic talk prevalent at court; Margaretta Eagar recalled that it was ‘very sad to witness the wrathful, vindic-tive spirit that the war raised in my little charges’. Maria and Anastasia were perplexed by images of the ‘queer little children’ of the Crown
Prince of Japan that they saw in magazines. ‘Horrid little people,’
exclaimed Maria, ‘they came and destroyed our poor little ships and
drowned our sailors.’ Mama had told them ‘the Japs were all only
little people’. ‘I hope the Russian soldiers will kill all of the Japanese’, exclaimed Olga one day, upon which Margaretta explained that the
Japanese women and children were not to blame. The bright and
opinionated Olga seemed satisfied after several of her questions had
been answered: ‘I did not know that the Japs were people like
ourselves. I thought they were only like monkeys.’36
The war, meanwhile, had galvanized Alexandra’s talent for phil-
anthropic work and despite her pregnancy, she had engaged in war
relief, sending portable field chapels to the troops and organizing
supplies and hospital trains. For the first time in years she was once
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