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
Alexandra, for the men of the Escort were to leave that afternoon.
They had all spent a sleepless night pondering their enforced depar-
ture and were intensely gloomy, unable to ‘understand or believe
that the situation was hopeless’.113 Shortly before they left the Escort asked Viktor Zborovsky to pass on their loyal sentiments to the
empress. It was with profound regret, Viktor told her, that they had
no option but to obey the order to leave. Alexandra asked him to
thank all the men on behalf of herself and the children for their
loyal service. ‘I ask you all to refrain from any kind of independent action that might only delay the emperor’s arrival and affect the fate of the children’, she said, adding, ‘Starting with myself, we must all submit to fate.’114
Zborovsky had found it hard to speak when Alexandra handed
him some small icons – her farewell gift to the Escort. She then
took him through to Olga and Tatiana’s room where both were still
ill in bed. It took all Zborovsky’s powers of self-control not to break down in front of the children. Silently, he bowed low to them, and
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then to Alexandra and kissed her hand. ‘I can’t remember how I
left’, he wrote in his diary later, ‘I went without turning round. In my hand I clutched the little icons, my chest felt tight, something
heavy was gathering in my throat that was about to break out into
a groan.’115
After the Escort rode away, all the entrances to the palace were
locked and sealed except for a single exit via the kitchen and the
main entrance for official visitors. ‘We were prisoners’, Pierre
Gilliard recorded starkly in his diary.116 Lili Dehn remembered a
very bright moon that night: ‘the snow lay like a pall on the frost-
bound Park. The cold was intense. The silence of the great Palace
was occasionally broken by snatches of drunken songs and the coarse
laughter of the soldiers’ (of the new palace guard). In the distance, they could all hear the intermittent firing of guns.117
A hundred or more miles (160 km) away to the south, as the
frost of another perishing winter night descended and the wind
gathered, the imperial train carrying Nicholas II, last tsar of Russia and now plain Colonel Romanov, was heading back towards
Tsarskoe Selo.
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N
Nicholas II’s return to Tsarskoe Selo on 9 March 1917 was the most
painful of rude awakenings: ‘sentries on the street and surrounding
the palace and inside the park, and inside the front entrance some
kind of officers’.1 Upstairs he found his wife sitting in a darkened
room with all their children; they were in good spirits, though Maria was very ill. Hugely relieved to be back home he soon discovered
that even his most innocuous daily habits were to be severely
restricted. That afternoon he was refused permission to go for his
usual long walk in the Alexander Park; his domain now comprised
a small recreation area cum garden at the immediate rear entrance
of the palace. Here he took up a spade and cleared the footpath
with his aide Prince Vasily Dolgorukov – the only officer allowed
to return with him from Stavka – their guards looking on with
amusement.2
Lili Dehn was shocked when she saw Nicholas. He was ‘deathly
pale, his face covered with innumerable wrinkles, his hair was quite
grey at the temples, and blue shadows encircled his eyes. He looked
like an old man.’3 To Elizaveta Naryshkina he seemed calm on the
surface and she admired his astonishing self- control and his apparent indifference to being addressed not as tsar but as an army officer,
which effectively was all he now was.4 Although the palace comman-
dant, Pavel Kotzebue, referred to him politely as ‘the ex-Emperor’
most of Nicholas’s captors called him Nikolay Romanov or even
‘little Nikolay’.5 He tried hard not to react to the petty humiliations from some of the more truculent guards: ‘They blew tobacco smoke
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in his face . . . A soldier grabbed him by the arm and pulled one
way, while others clutched him on the other side and pulled him in
an opposite direction. They jeered at him and laughed at his anger
and pain’, Anna Vyrubova later recalled.6 But Nicholas did not react:
‘Despite the circumstances in which we now find ourselves,’ he
wrote in his diary on the 10th, ‘the thought that we are all together cheers and comforts us.’7 Maria’s condition, however, was becoming
a serious cause for concern; her temperature was running at over
104 degrees F (40 degrees C). Alexandra and Lili moved her from
her small nickel campbed to a proper double bed, the better to nurse
her. With the exhausted girl drifting in and out of delirium they
spent their time constantly sponging her down, brushing her now
horribly tangled hair and changing her sweat-drenched nightdress
and bedding. To make matters worse, she had developed pneumonia
as well.8
*
Shortly after Nicholas’s return, during the days of uncertainty about where the family might eventually be allowed to live, Elizaveta
Naryshkina had suggested that Nicholas and Alexandra accept any
offer to leave the country; she and Count Benkendorf would look
after the children until they were well enough and then bring them
to them later.9 Thoughts of evacuating the children ahead of
Nicholas’s return had indeed been in Alexandra’s mind, even after
they fell sick, and she had discussed various options with her entou-
rage.10 Perhaps she could get them north into Finland; she asked
Dr Botkin if he thought ‘in their present physical condition’ they
could cope with the journey. Botkin’s response was unequivocal: ‘at
the moment I would be less afraid of measles than of the
revolutionaries.’11However, any thoughts Alexandra might have had
were abandoned when Nicholas countermanded her suggestion and
insisted they wait for his projected return on 1 March. Had he
arrived home then, the family might all have been speedily evacu-
ated, but once he was trapped at Stavka and Alexandra placed under
house arrest the whole situation dramatically changed. The British
ambassador, Sir George Buchanan, had been in an agony of frustra-
tion since the beginning of the year: ‘I shall not be happy till they
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are safely out of Russia’, he had said, but tentative negotiations with the British government for a possible refuge in England had quickly
stalled.12 The offer from George V, made on 9 March (22nd NS)
in response to a request from Russia’s Foreign Minister Pavel
Milyukov, had spoken only of asylum for the duration of the war.
Other options were quickly discussed and dropped: Denmark was
too close to Germany; France would not entertain the idea. Alexandra
had at one point said that she would prefer to go to Norway where
she felt the climate would suit Alexey, although she would certainly
be glad to see England again, should it come to it.13 But wherever
the family went, she and Nicholas both thought in terms only of a
temporary refuge until the situation eased and they could hopefully
be allowed to return and live quietly in Russia – preferably the
Crimea.14
The British government continued to discuss the issue throughout
March, while Alexander Kerensky pondered the family’s evacuation,
perhaps to Port Romanov (Murmansk), from where a British cruiser
could take them through German- patrolled waters to England
under a white flag. But then George V had had a change of heart.
The king was uneasy that the former tsar’s arrival in England would
create problems for his government – which had already acknowl-
edged the revolution – and in so doing threaten the safety of his
own throne. The most important thing was to keep the new revo-
lutionary Russia on side and in the war, and this transcended any
familial loyalty to Nicholas. By the time George’s Foreign Secretary
Arthur Balfour was instructed on 24 March (6 April NS) to suggest
that the Russian government ‘make some other plan for the future
residence of their imperial majesties’, far too much precious time
had been lost.15 A powerful, grassroots opposition to any evacuation
had escalated, particularly among the pro-Bolshevik executive
committees of the Petrograd and Moscow soviets.16 Any attempt to
get the family out by train would have been blocked by the heavily
politicized railwaymen of Petrograd, who, according to
Izvestiya
, the new organ of the Petrograd soviet, had already ‘wired along all
railway lines that every railway organization, each station-master,
every group of railway-workmen, is bound to detain Nicholas II’s
train whenever and wherever it may appear’.17
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Izvestiya
reflected the ugly mood building in the capital. An evacuation of the family could not be permitted, the paper railed,
for the ex-tsar was privy to all state secrets relating to the war and was ‘possessed of colossal wealth’ that he would be able to access
in the comfort of exile.18 Nicholas must be held under the strictest
isolation pending the meting out of a new, Soviet form of justice.
Yet amid so many accusations levelled against them Nicholas and
Alexandra had in fact remained intensely loyal to Russia and all talk of any political betrayal on their part was entirely unfounded; indeed, Nicholas had already been worrying that his abdication might
damage the allied offensive. As far as exile was concerned, neither
he nor Alexandra had any desire for the sybaritic ex-patriot lifestyle of ‘wandering about the Continent, and living at Swiss hotels as
ex-Royalties, snapshotted and paragraphed by representatives of the
picture papers’. They shrank from such ‘cheap publicity’, asserted
Lili Dehn, and considered it their duty to stand by Russia whatever
the cost.19
Arriving in Russia just after Nicholas’s return, the Anglo-Irish
journalist Robert Crozier Long was immediately struck by the ‘unex-
ampled reversal of ranks and conditions which . . . the Revolution
had brought about in the most despotic and class-crystallized country of Europe’. He travelled out to Tsarskoe Selo to report on the tsar’s incarceration and encountered an unnerving atmosphere. The town
was ‘a microcosm of the Revolution’; at the Alexandrovsky Station
he was greeted by ‘crowds of untidy revolutionary soldiers, all with
red badges’, the stationmaster was an army corporal and ‘portraits
of Nicholas II and his father Alexander III lay in tatters in a rubbish heap’. The authorities were finding it hard to keep the lid on
renegade elements in the town that resented any form of indulgence
shown to the prisoners and were keen to exert their own form of
rough justice on the tsar and tsaritsa. The railings of the Alexander Park had now become a public sideshow where people gathered in
order to catch a glimpse of the former tsar and his family whenever
they emerged in the garden.20
The family’s daily routine, having always been mundane, now
became even more predictable. They all got up early except
Alexandra and by 8 a.m. Nicholas was often seen walking outside
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with Dolgorukov, or undertaking some kind of physical work –
breaking the ice on the waterways and clearing the snow. It was all
too painful for Elizaveta Naryshkina to watch: ‘How far has he sunk
who once owned the riches of the earth and a devoted people! How
splendid his reign could have been, if he had only understood the
needs of the era!’21 After a plain lunch at 1 p.m., and as the weather improved and the girls recovered, the family worked outside digging
up the turf and preparing the ground for a vegetable garden to be
planted in the spring. When it was warm enough Alexandra would
join them in her wheelchair, where she sat embroidering or tatting.
In the afternoon the younger children had their lessons, and later,
if the weather continued fine, they returned to the garden until the
light began to fade. Much to their surprise, the guards found them-
selves watching over a family that was ‘quiet, unprovocative, unfail-
ingly polite to one another and to them, and whose occasional
sadness bore the stamp of a dignity their jailers could never emulate and were reluctantly compelled to admire’.22 Some of the sentries
exploited public curiosity by taking money from people wanting a
closer look at the tsar and his children. The family moved out of
sight as best they could when this happened, but even so they were
not immune to insult not just from onlookers but also from their
own guards. ‘When the young Grand Duchesses or the Empress
appeared at a window, the sentries made obscene gestures which
were greeted with shouts of laughter from their comrades.’23A few