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
exchanged New Year greetings but Pierre Gilliard had no doubt
that they had all entered a period of ‘dreadful waiting for the disaster which there was no escaping’.30 A last gasp of imperial ceremonial
came during an official visit by Prince Carol of Romania and his
parents, their country having finally entered the war on the side of
Russia and its allies.31 Alexandra decided to take advantage of a rare state dinner – held in Carol’s honour on the 9th – to present Maria
officially to the court. She and Nicholas still viewed their third
daughter, albeit affectionately, as chubby and gawky; the previous
evening the girls had all been trying on dresses and according to
Tatiana ‘Maria had got so fat that she couldn’t get into any of them’.32
She had long taken her family’s teasing with good heart and this
occasion was no exception. ‘She looked extremely pretty in her pale
blue dress, wearing the diamonds that her parents gave to each of
their daughters on her sixteenth birthday’, recalled Iza Buxhoeveden, but unfortunately ‘Poor Maria slipped in her new high heels and
fell when entering the dining hall on the arm of a tall Grand Duke’.
‘On hearing the noise, the Emperor remarked jokingly, “Of course,
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A source of protection.
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fat Marie.”’ After her sister had ‘fallen over with a thud with all her might’, as Tatiana recalled, she had sat there on the floor laughing
‘to the point of embarrassment’. Indeed the whole occasion turned
out to be quite amusing: ‘After dinner papa slipped on the parquet
floor, [and] one of the Romanians knocked over a cup of coffee.’33
But it had all washed over Olga, who, still thinking of Mitya, had
noted her former patient’s twenty-fourth birthday in her diary.
Valentina Chebotareva thought she had seemed particularly sad of
late. ‘Is that the fault of your guests?’ Chebotareva had asked her.
‘Oh, there’s no threat of that now, while there’s a war’, Olga had
added, alluding to the unspoken suggestion of a marriage.34 Elizaveta Naryshkina had rather hoped that an engagement between Olga
and Carol still might take place, for she found him ‘charming’. But
Anna Vyrubova had noticed that Prince Carol’s ‘young man’s fancy
[had] rested on Marie’ at that dinner, despite her clumsy behaviour.
Before he left for Moscow on 26th January, Carol made a formal
proposal for her hand. Nicholas had ‘good-naturedly laughed the
Prince’s proposal aside’, saying that his seventeen-year-old daughter
‘was nothing more than a schoolgirl’.35 At Carol’s final lunch with
the family Elizaveta Naryshkina noticed how markedly the four
sisters kept their distance from him and only Nicholas made any
effort at conversation.36 Behind the scenes, however Carol’s mother,
Marie – now Queen of Romania – had had her hopes renewed the
day of their departure from Russia, when she and her husband King
Ferdinand had received ‘ciphered telegrams from Russia’. ‘It seems
they still think about a marriage for Carol with one of Nicky’s
daughters,’ she confided to her diary. She was surprised and grati-
fied; ‘one would have thought about it now when our poor little
Country hardly exists, now when we have not even a house of our
own left. But on the whole it is flattering and might be taken as a
good sign!’ the only problem was Carol himself: “I do not at all
know if he wants to marry.’37
Two of the last private visitors to the Alexander Palace were the
head of the Anglo-Russian Hospital, Lady Sybil Grey, and Dorothy
Seymour. Having been in Petrograd since September 1916, Dorothy
had been excited to be sent an official invitation to meet the tsaritsa,
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FOUR SISTERS
telling her mother that ‘It will be too annoying if they start a revolution before I have time to get down to see her’.38 When she and
Lady Sybil took the train out to Tsarskoe Selo, Dorothy found the
whole experience, despite the difficult times, an ‘amazing fairytale’.39
They were met at the station ‘by gorgeous officials, footmen, horses
all white and prancing – Great State – At the palace door two
glorious footmen with huge orange and red ostrich plumes on their
heads.’40After being entertained to lunch by Iza Buxhoeveden and
Nastenka Hendrikova the two women were taken ‘through miles of
palace and a huge banqueting room’ to a door that was opened ‘by
a huge negro’ and ushered in to meet Alexandra and Olga. The
empress, wearing purple velvet and ‘huge amethysts’, seemed to
Dorothy ‘quite lovely’ and ‘wonderfully graceful’. But there was
something haunted about her ‘desperately sad eyes’. Olga, in her
nurse’s uniform, seemed very plain in comparison. ‘Pretty eyes. Nice
little thing, very pleasant and informal’, recalled Dorothy. They sat and talked for almost two hours, at the end of which she came away
impressed by Olga’s spirituality and sensitivity. She was ‘evidently a pacifist, and the war and its horrors [were] on her nerves’. Dorothy
left with a sense of sadness and the overwhelming feeling that the
room they had sat in – and the palace itself – were already ‘heavy
with tragedy’.41
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The spectre of illness continued to dog the imperial family that
winter; Alexandra was still suffering with her heart and legs and
Alexey had recurring pain in his arm, and then swollen glands.
Shortly after Dorothy Seymour’s visit the still sickly Olga had gone
down with a painful ear infection. The two invalids had been sharing
the same room when, on 11 February, a couple of young cadets
whom Alexey had befriended at Stavka had been brought in to play
with him. Olga had remained in the room with them, and Alexandra
had noticed that one of the boys was coughing; the following day
he went down with measles.42 By 21 February, Olga and Alexey both
seemed unwell, but the doctors assured Nicholas that it was not
measles, and he began packing for a return to Stavka. He had not
wanted to leave Tsarskoe at this time, mindful of the gathering
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danger since Rasputin’s murder of a possible coup against him. The
warnings had been coming thick and fast from his own relatives,
including his brother-in-law Sandro, who visited and begged
Nicholas to concede to a proper, democratically elected Duma free
of imperial interference; ‘with a few words and a stroke of the pen,
you could calm everything and give the country what it yearns for’,
he urged. To Sandro it was clear that Alexandra’s constant meddling
in affairs of state was ‘dragging her husband into an abyss’. Even
now she bridled at any talk of capitulation: ‘Nicky is an autocrat.
How could he share his divine right with a parliament?’43 And now
Nicholas’s brother Grand Duke Mikhail was warning of imminent
mutiny in the army if the tsar did not immediately return to Stavka.
Nicholas listened to Sandro passively, as he always did, lighting one cigarette after another. He had no stomach for a fight, either with
his relatives, his wife, or his government. His life was in the hands of God and he had long since abandoned all responsibility for it.
Reluctant to leave the family, he nevertheless prepared to go. A
highly strained atmosphere prevailed over lunch the day he left.
Everyone seemed anxious and ‘wanted to think more than talk’.44
No sooner had a drawn and hollow-cheeked Nicholas said fare-
well than it became clear not only that Olga and Alexey were coming
down with measles, but that Anna Vyrubova too had been infected
– and seriously so. On 24 February Tatiana joined them in the
darkened sickroom, where their devoted mother wearing her Red
Cross nurse’s uniform nursed her three children.45 All had terrible
coughs and were suffering from headaches and earache as their
temperatures rocketed.46 Despite the seriousness of their condition
Nicholas was already discussing the children’s recuperation with Dr
Federov at Stavka. He wrote and told Alexandra that the doctor
considered it ‘absolutely necessary for the children and Aleksei
especially [to have] a change of climate after their complete recovery’.
Perhaps, soon after Easter, he told Alexandra, they could take them
to the Crimea? ‘We will think it over quietly when I come back.
. . . I won’t be long away – only to put all things as much as possible to rights here and then my duty will be done.’47
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FOUR SISTERS
In the grip of deep snow and remorseless sub-zero temperatures,
Petrograd that winter of 1916–17 was a desperate place. The trans-
port system was in disarray due to fuel shortages; a lack of labour,
horses and implements was affecting the production and transporta-
tion of food. There was no flour, and long queues could be seen
everywhere for what little bread was baked; virtually no meat was
to be had and sugar and butter could only be got on the black
market. There was no wood for fuel and the streets were piled high
with garbage. Talk of revolution was on everyone’s lips. Petrograd
was doomed, a
Chertograd –
‘Devil’s town’, as poet Zinaida Gippius wrote in her diary:
The most frightening and crude rumours are disturbing the
masses. It is a charged, neurotic atmosphere. You can almost
hear the laments of the refugees in the air. Each day is drenched
in catastrophes. What is going to happen? It is intolerable.
‘Things cannot go on like this’ an old cab-driver says.48
The ‘first claps of thunder’ were heard with riots and protests
in the workers’ districts of the Vyborg Side and Vasilievsky Island.49
Soon hungry crowds were marching along the Nevsky Prospekt as
bakeries and food shops came under attack. By 25 February, and
with a lift in the temperature, street disturbances were becoming
widespread and violent, with acts of arson, looting and the lynching
of policemen. The capital was seething with strikers. At the Alexandra Palace the tsaritsa remained convinced that none of this posed a
serious threat. Bread rationing was all that was needed to bring the
situation under control. ‘It’s a hooligan movement,’ she wrote to
Nicholas, ‘young boys and girls running about and screaming that
they have no bread; only to excite . . . if it were very cold they
would probably stay indoors. But this will all pass and quieten down, if the Duma would only behave itself.’50 Meanwhile she was proud
to tell him that his two youngest daughters ‘call themselves the
sick-nurses –
sidelki
– chatter without end and telephone right and left. They are most useful.’ The lift at the palace had stopped working and Alexandra was increasingly relying on Maria to do the running
around that she could not manage, affectionately calling her ‘my
legs’.51 But she was expecting both her younger daughters inevitably
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to succumb to the measles. Alexey was now covered in one great
ugly rash, ‘like a leopard – Olga has flat spots, Ania too all over, all their eyes and [their] throats ache’.52
By the 27th, a day of ‘street brawls, bombs, shootings and
numerous wounded and dead’, shouts of ‘Bread, victory!’ and ‘Down
with the War!’ could be heard everywhere on the streets of
Petrograd.53 Nicholas could not leave Stavka and meanwhile his
children’s temperatures had reached 39 degrees C (over 102 degrees
F) or more.54 With measles spreading at the Alexander Palace and
unrest raging in the city, Alexandra struggled to maintain her equi-
librium, still convinced that the disturbances, like the sickness, would pass; but the strain of it was ageing her and her hair was turning
grey. ‘Terrible things are going on in St Petersburg’, she confided
in her diary, shocked to hear that regiments she had always thought
loyal to the throne – the Preobrazhensk and the Pavlovsk Guards
– were even now mutinying.55 She was therefore greatly cheered by
the arrival of Lili Dehn who had bravely come out to Tsarskoe Selo
to offer moral support, leaving her son behind in the city with her
maid. But by 10 p.m. that evening a message came from Duma
chairman Mikhail Rodzianko advising that Alexandra and the chil-
dren be evacuated from the Alexander Palace immediately. ‘When
the house is burning,’ he had told Count Benkendorf, Minister of
the Court, ‘you take the children to safety, even if they are ill.’56
Benkendorf immediately telephoned Mogilev and informed Nicholas.
But the tsar was adamant: his family should stay put and wait until
he could get back, which he hoped would be on the morning of 1
March.57
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Many years later, Meriel Buchanan recalled the ‘deathlike stillness of Petrograd’ on the eve of revolution. ‘There were the same wide streets we knew so well, the same palaces, the same golden spires and domes
rising out of the pearl-coloured mists, and yet they all seemed unreal and strange as if I had never seen them before. And everywhere empti-ness: no long lines of carts, no crowded trams, no
isvostchiks
,
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no private