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
nursing of the wounded and founded the Frauenverein (Ladies’
Union) for the training of women nurses. ‘Life’, Alice resolutely
told her mother in 1866, ‘is meant for work, and not for pleasure.’8
The duty that had ruled her father’s life had become the watchword
of her own.
Alice produced seven children in rapid succession with the same
kind of stoicism with which her mother had given birth to her own
nine. But there the similarities ended; unlike Queen Victoria,
Princess Alice was a practical, hands-on mother who took an interest
in every aspect of her children’s daily lives, down to managing the
nursery accounts herself. And, like her elder sister Vicky – and much to Queen Victoria’s ‘insurmountable disgust for the process’ – Alice
insisted on breastfeeding several of her babies, causing the queen
to name one of her prize cows at Windsor after her.9 Alice also
studied human anatomy and childcare, in preparation for the inev-
itability of nursing her own brood through childhood illnesses. There seemed to be no limits to her devotion as a mother, but she did not
spoil her children; she allowed them only a shilling a week pocket
money until their confirmation, after which it was doubled. She was
an advocate of frugality, much like Queen Victoria, though in Alice’s case economizing was often out of brutal necessity. The house of
Hesse was far from wealthy and Alice often knew the ‘pinch of
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FOUR SISTERS
poverty’.10 But at the Neues Palais, built during 1864–6 with money
from her dowry, she created a warm home-from-home, furnished
with chintz fabrics and unremarkable pieces sent from England and
cluttered with family portraits and photographs.
Born on 6 June 1872, Princess Alix – the sixth child of the family
and future Empress of Russia – was a pretty, smiling, dimpled girl
who loved to play. They called her Sunny and from the start her
grandmother looked upon her as a golden child. Alicky was ‘too
beautiful . . . the handsomest child I ever saw’, thought Queen
Victoria, and she made no attempt to disguise her favouritism.11
Although Princess Alice was much more closely involved in her
children’s upbringing than many royal mothers, her various welfare
and charity projects consumed a lot of her time, and her children’s
day-to-day life was organized by their English head nurse Mrs
Orchard.
Victorian values reigned in the plainly furnished Darmstadt
nursery: duty, goodness, modesty, hygiene and sobriety, accompanied
by generous amounts of plain food, fresh air (whatever the weather),
long walks and pony rides. When she had time Alice walked with
her children, talked with them, taught them to paint, dressed their
dolls and sang and played the piano with them – even when little
fingers, as she laughingly complained, ‘thrust themselves under hers
on the keyboard to make music like big people’.12 She taught her
daughters to be self-sufficient and did not believe in spoiling them; their toys were unostentatious and brought from Osborne and
Windsor. Moments of idleness for the Hesse girls were always filled
by something their mother deemed useful – cake-making, knitting,
or some kind of handicraft or needlework. They made their own
beds and tidied their rooms and there was of course always regular,
obligatory letter-writing to
Liebe Grossmama
and regular visits to her at Balmoral, Windsor and Osborne. Other, more frugal family
seaside holidays – of donkey rides, paddling, shrimping and sand-
castles – were spent at Blankenberge on the treeless, winds -
wept North Sea coast of Belgium; or at Schloss Kranichstein, a
seventeenth-century hunting lodge on the edge of the Odenwald.
When it came to her children’s religious and moral development
Princess Alice took a very personal hand and inspired high ideals
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MOTHER LOVE
in them, her greatest wish being that they ‘should take nothing but
recollections of love and happiness from their home into the battle
of life’.13 Life’s battle included being taught to appreciate the sufferings of the sick and poor, visiting hospitals with armfuls of flowers every Saturday and at Christmas. But Alice’s own life was increasingly one of chronic pain – from headaches, rheumatism and
neuralgia, as well as overwhelming exhaustion brought on by her
commitment to so many worthy causes. The last child of the family,
May, was born two years after Alix in 1874, but by then the happy
childhood idyll at Darmstadt was over.
Gloom had irrevocably settled over the family, when at the age
of two Alice’s second son Frittie had, in 1872, shown the first
unmistakable signs of haemophilia; his godfather, Queen Victoria’s
fourth son Leopold, also was blighted by the disease. Barely a year
later, in May 1873, the bright and engaging little boy, on whom
Alice had absolutely doted, died of internal bleeding after falling 20
feet (6 metres) from a window. Alice’s consuming morbidity there-
after – a species of
douleur
so clearly in tune with that of her widowed mother – meant that a mournful dwelling on the dead, and on the
trials and tribulations rather than the pleasures of life, became part of the fabric of the young lives of the surviving siblings. ‘May we
all follow in a way as peaceful, and with so little struggle and pain, and leave an image of as much love and brightness behind’, Alice
told her mother after Frittie died.14
The loss of one of her ‘pretty pair’ of boys opened up a four-year
gap between the only other son, Ernie – who also was for ever
haunted by Frittie’s death – and his next sibling Alix.15 With her
three older sisters growing up and inevitably distancing themselves
from her, Alix instinctively gravitated to her younger sister May and they became devoted playmates. With time, Princess Alice took
solace in her ‘two little girlies’. They were ‘so sweet, so dear, merry, and nice. I don’t know which is dearest,’ she told Queen Victoria,
‘they are both so captivating.’16 Alix and May were indeed a conso-
lation, but the light had gone from Alice’s eyes with Frittie’s death and her health was collapsing. At a time when she and her husband
were also becoming sadly estranged, Alice retreated into a state of
settled melancholy and physical exhaustion. ‘I am good for next to
nothing,’ she told her mother, ‘I live on my sofa and see no one.’17
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The accession of Prince Louis to the throne of Hesse in 1877 and
her own promotion to grand duchess brought only despair at the
additional duties that would be placed upon her: ‘Too much is
demanded of me,’ she told her mother, ‘and I have to do with so
many things. It is more than my strength can stand in the long
run.’18 Only Alice’s faith and her devotion to her precious children
was keeping her going but her air of fatalistic resignation cast a
shadow over her impressionable daughter Alix.
In November 1878 an epidemic of diphtheria descended upon
the Hesse children; first Victoria, then Alix fell sick, followed by all the others bar Ella, and then their father too. Alice nursed each of
them in turn with absolute devotion; but even her best nursing skills could not save little May, who died on 16 November. By the time
she saw May’s little coffin taken off for burial Alice was in a state of collapse. For the next two weeks she struggled to keep the news
of May’s death from the other children, but a kiss of consolation
for Ernie on telling him the news may well have been enough for
the disease to be transmitted to Alice herself. Just as her children
were recovering Alice succumbed and she died on 14 December, at
the age of thirty-five, achieving the longed-for
Wiedersehen
with her precious Frittie.
The trauma for the six-year-old Alix of seeing both her mother
and her beloved little playmate May taken from her within days of
each other was profound. Her treasured childhood tokens were taken
from her too – her toys, books and games all destroyed for fear of
lingering infection. Ernie was the closest to her in age but now
under the separate control of tutors as heir to the throne, and she
felt her isolation acutely. Her eldest sister Victoria recalled happier times to their grandmother: ‘It sometimes seems as if it were only
yesterday that we were all romping about with May in Mama’s room
after tea – & now we are big girls & even Alix is serious & sensible
& the house is often very quiet.’19
It would be Grandmama, the solid and reassuring Mrs Orchard
– known to Alix as Orchie – and her governess Madgie (Miss Jackson)
who would fill the terrible void of her mother’s death, but the little girl’s sense of abandonment ran very deep. Her sunny disposition
began to fade into an increasing moroseness and introspection, laying the foundations of a mistrust of strangers that became ever more
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MOTHER LOVE
deeply engrained as the years went by. Queen Victoria was anxious
to act as a surrogate mother, for Alix had always been one of her
favourite granddaughters. Regular visits to England by Alix and her
siblings, especially to Balmoral in the autumn, had consoled Victoria in her own lonely widowhood, and such regular proximity allowed
her to supervise Alix’s education, her tutors in Hesse sending her
regular monthly reports. Alix herself seemed content to play the
role of the ‘very loving, dutiful and grateful Child’, as she so often signed her letters to the queen, and she never forgot a birthday or
an anniversary, sending numerous gifts of her own exquisite embroi-
dery and handiwork.20 England, which she visited often, became a
second home to her.
*
During her lifetime, Princess Alice had had strong feelings about
the future for her daughters; she wanted to do more than educate
them to be wives. ‘Life is also meaningful without being married’,
she had once told her mother, and marrying merely for the sake of
it was, in her view, ‘one of the greatest mistakes a woman can make’.21
As she grew into a teenager, the best that the beautiful but poor
Princess Alix of Hesse could have hoped for to relieve her from the
unchallenging tedium of Darmstadt provincialism was marriage to
a minor European princeling. But everything changed when on her
first visit to Russia in 1884 (for the marriage of her sister Ella to Grand Duke Sergey Alexandrovich), Alix’s third cousin, Nicholas
Alexandrovich, heir to the Russian throne, had taken a shine to her.
He was sixteen and she was only twelve, but thereafter Nicky, as
she would always call him, remained besotted. Five years later, when
Grand Duke Louis took Alix back to Russia on a six-week visit,
Nicky was still stubbornly determined to win her as his wife. The
shy schoolgirl had become a slender, ethereally beautiful young
woman and Nicky was deeply in love. But by now – 1889 – Alix
had been confirmed in the Lutheran faith prior to coming out, and
she made clear to Nicky that despite her deep feelings for him,
marriage was out of the question. Virtue prevailed. She could not
and would not change her religion, but she did agree to write to
him in secret, their letters being sent via Ella as intermediary.
The royal marriage stakes at that time were unforgiving to girls
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who did not grasp a golden opportunity when it presented itself; as
one contemporary newspaper observed, ‘Love in royal circles is not
an epidemic affection’.22 It seemed that Alix’s inflexibility was going to deprive her of the one thing so many of her young royal contemporaries craved – a marriage based on love and not expediency. To
a forlorn Nicky there seemed an insurmountable gulf between them
and he allowed himself to be temporarily distracted by other pretty
faces. For her own part, Alix was enjoying a degree of status back
home, as a big fish in the very small Hesse pond. Her widowed
father, whom she adored, increasingly depended upon her, as the
only unmarried daughter, to take on formal duties for him at the
Hesse court. Alix became his constant companion; the little time
she did not spend in her father’s company was devoted to study, to
painting and drawing, making and mending her own modest dresses,
playing the piano (at which she was most accomplished) and a great
deal of quiet, religious contemplation. And so, when Louis suddenly
collapsed and died aged only fifty-four in March 1892 ‘dear Alicky’s
grief’ was ‘terrible’, as Orchie confided to Queen Victoria. Worse,
it was ‘a silent grief, which she locked up within her’, as she did
most things.23 Alix’s concerned grandmama gathered her orphaned
granddaughter to her bosom, vowing that ‘while I live Alicky, till
she is married, will be
more
than
ever my own child
’.24 Alix joined her, in deep mourning, at Balmoral for several weeks of quiet,
womanly commiseration. But by this time the press, paying little