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
teen years incarcerated in the notorious Shlisselburg Fortress and
from there was sent into exile in Yakutiya before being freed in the
political amnesty of 1905. His revolutionary career might have been
a textbook one but to Nicholas, Pankratov would be ‘the little man’.31
But adjust to him he did, for Pankratov, who did his best by the
family within the constraints placed upon him, would be their only
link with the outside world. During the weeks that followed, the
family, and Pankratov, would learn much about each other and
develop a polite, respectful relationship.
The first thing that had struck the new commissar was seeing
the family at prayer. He noted how devotedly Alexandra came and
arranged the temporary altar, covered it with her embroidery, the
candles and icons before the arrival of the priest and nuns for the
service. There was a punctiliousness to every aspect of the family’s
religious observance: after the entire suite and servants had all
assembled, in their designated places according to rank, the family
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entered through the side doors and everyone bowed to them. During
the service Pankratov noticed how frequently – and fervently – the
Romanovs crossed themselves. He could not but be impressed that
‘the whole family of the former tsar had given themselves up to a
truly religious state of mind and feeling’ – even if it was one that
was beyond his comprehension.32
With their lives so grounded in religious acceptance it took no
time at all for the family to slip back into the same kind of quiet,
uneventful routine that they had followed under house arrest at the
Alexander Palace. Having always been so physically active, Nicholas
was intensely frustrated by the lack of exercise and took to walking
up and down the yard forty or fifty times in an hour, though soon
he was able to busy himself sawing wood for the winter. Alexey’s
only outside interest, until the arrival of a playmate in the shape of Dr Derevenko’s son Kolya later that month, was in the dogs. Much
of the girls’ time was spent, when not helping their father saw logs, in chasing Joy and Ortipo away from the refuse tip at the back of
the yard, where they persisted in rootling around for food.33 The
heat was too much for Alexandra who would sometimes sit on the
balcony under a parasol sewing, before retiring indoors. She was
rarely up and out of her room before lunchtime and often remained
alone in the house when the others were outside – painting and
sewing, or playing the piano. Much of her time was spent in religious contemplation and reading the gospels, her thoughts on which she
continued to pour into long exhortatory letters to her friends, particularly Anna Vyrubova.
The food at the Governor’s House was surprisingly good and
plentiful in comparison with the desperate shortages now being
endured in Petrograd. Many of the locals looked favourably on the
former tsar and his family, and gifts of food began to arrive. Some
doffed their caps when passing by on the street; others occasionally
even kneeled down and crossed themselves. Old habits died hard,
even here, and Alexandra still wrote out menu cards for each day’s
modest meals. The atmosphere was less stressful too. Evenings were
spent playing the usual games of bezique and dominoes, or bumble
puppy and nain jaune, and Nicholas as always read aloud – his first
choice on arrival in Tobolsk being
The Scarlet Pimpernel
. He then
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FOUR SISTERS
set about revisiting the classics of Russian literature. ‘I have decided to re-read all our best writers from beginning to end (I’m reading
English and French books too)’, he told his mother.34 Having just
worked his way through Gogol, he moved on to Turgenev. But, as
Pankratov noted with amusement, the members of the entourage
often seemed to get bored with having to sit in silence as he read
and would begin to whisper among themselves or even nodded off
to the monotonous sound of his voice.35 Nevertheless, reading was
undoubtedly a boon for all the family. Sydney Gibbes soon arrived
with more favourite books for the children: English adventure stories such as Alexey’s great favourite
Cast Up by the Sea
by Sir Samuel Baker, the novels of Walter Scott (Tatiana and Anastasia loved
Ivanhoe
), Thackeray, Dickens and H. Rider Haggard. Such indeed was the hunger for reading material that Trina Schneider wrote to
PVP in Petrograd asking him to send more books – the stories of
Fonvizin, Derzhavin, Karamzin, which the children didn’t have, as
well as books on Russian grammar and literature.36 Tatiana wrote
too, asking him to send out her set of Alexey Tolstoy’s novels that
she had unfortunately not brought with her.
But even the best of books could not for long fend off the crip-
pling boredom that was infecting the entire entourage, which was
so clearly reflected in everyone’s diaries and letters. Alexey’s perfunc-tory diary contained nothing but repetitious complaints: ‘Today
passed just as yesterday . . . It is boring.’37 Even Alexandra could
write nothing but ‘I spent the day, as usual’ . . . ‘Everything was the same as yesterday’. And Nicholas echoed her: ‘The day passed as
always’ . . .‘The day passed as usual’.38 By 25 August he was already noting that ‘Walks in the garden are becoming incredibly tedious;
here the sense of sitting locked up is much stronger than it ever
was at Tsarskoe Selo.’39 To keep himself occupied he dug out a pond
in the garden, helped by Alexey, for the ducks and geese that had
been brought in, and he also built a wooden platform on the roof
of the greenhouse where he and the children could sit soaking up
the sunshine and watch the world go by below. The locals were
fascinated when they saw them there, or on the balcony, especially,
when they saw the girls: ‘Their hair was shorn like little boys’ . . .
We thought that was the fashion in Petrograd,’ recalled one local,
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‘later, people said they had been sick . . . still they were very pretty, very clean.’40
At midday on Friday 8 September – the Nativity of the Virgin
– the family was allowed out for the first time to attend service at
the nearby Blagoveshchensky Church. They went on foot, pushing
Alexandra in her wheelchair through the public garden where there
was no one around, but were greatly disconcerted to see a crowd
waiting for them outside the church. ‘The emperor was still the
emperor in Tobolsk’, it appeared.41 ‘It was very unpleasant’, Alexandra wrote, but she was ‘grateful that I had been in a real church for the first time in six months’.42
Pankratov noticed how much pleasure this small concession had
evoked:
As Nicholas II and the children walked through the public garden,
they looked this way and that, talking in French
*
about the
weather, the garden, as though they had never seen it before,
although the gardens were located directly opposite their balcony,
from where they could clearly see them every day. But it is one
thing to see something from a distance, from behind bars as it
were, and quite another to see it when almost at liberty. Every
tree, every twig and bush and bench acquired its own unique
charm . . . From the expression on their faces and the way they
moved one could tell they all undergone some particular personal
trial.43
On their way through the gardens Anastasia fell over while
craning her neck to look at things and her sisters and father laughed at her clumsiness. Alexandra did not react. ‘She sat there majestically in her wheelchair and said nothing.’ She hadn’t been sleeping at
night – tormented by another bout of neuralgia and toothache. Once
again, what most evoked public curiosity as the family passed was
the girls’ heads: ‘Why was their hair cut short like boys?’ people
asked.44 By the end of September, however, their hair was getting
quite long again, though Anastasia told Katya that it had been ‘such
a pleasure to have short hair’.45
* No doubt to prevent the guards understanding what they were talking about.
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On 14 September when they attended church a second time the
family went at 8 a.m. to avoid the crowds: ‘You can just imagine
how great our joy was,’ Tatiana wrote to her aunt Xenia, ‘as you
will remember how inconvenient our field chapel at Tsarskoe Selo
was.’46 But a chill autumnal rain the previous day had brought a
transformation in the surrounding streets, and they were now a sea
of mud: ‘If they hadn’t laid wooden boards on the road it would be
impossible to get through’, said Anna Demidova.47 Nicholas was
now spending as much time as he could outside sawing wood.
Pankratov was astonished at his prodigious energy. From time to
time Alexey, Tatishchev, Dolgorukov, and even an uncomfortable-
looking Pierre Gilliard (inappropriately dressed in trilby and wing
collar) were enlisted to help, but Nicholas wore them all out.
Pankratov sent word to the local authorities that the ex-tsar enjoyed sawing wood so much that in response they sent in great piles of
birch trunks for him to cut up.48 The whole family was counting its
luck at the continuing fine weather. ‘It’s so good that we sit in the garden a lot or in the courtyard in front of the house’, Tatiana told her aunt Xenia:
It’s terribly nice that we have a balcony, which the sun warms
from morning to evening. It’s good to sit there and watch people
coming and going on the street. It is our only entertainment . . .
We’ve managed to play skittles in front of the house and we play
a kind of tennis, though of course without a net, for the sake of
practice. Then we walk up and down, so we don’t forget how to
walk – 120 paces in all, which is considerably shorter than the
deck [of the
Shtandart
].49
Tatiana calculated that you could walk round the entire kitchen
garden in three minutes flat, but at least there was the livestock to look after, which now included five pigs housed in the former stables
– all no doubt destined to provide food during the winter to come.50
The beginning of October brought the long-awaited arrival from
Tsarskoe Selo of carpets, curtains and window blinds in time for the
approaching winter, but the wine brought from the imperial cellars
was confiscated by the guards and poured into the Irtysh.51 Far more
welcome, however, was Sydney Gibbes, who on 5 October arrived
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on the boat from Tyumen – one of the last before the ice made the
river impassable – along with a new tutor for the children, Klavdiya
Bitner. Gibbes brought cards and gifts from Anna Vyrubova, now
out of prison, including her favourite perfume which Maria said
reminded them all of her. How they missed her, she wrote to Anna:
‘It’s terribly sad that we don’t see each other, but God grant that
we shall meet again and what joy that will be.’52
It was not long before Sydney Gibbes found himself once more
having to contend with Anastasia’s quirky and inattentive behaviour
in class. On one occasion, having lost his temper, he told her to
‘shut up’; the next time she handed in her homework she had added
a new nameplate to her exercise book – ‘A. Romanova (Shut up!)’.53
Klavdiya Bitner found Anastasia a trial too – lazy in lessons and
often ill-mannered.54 She had been a teacher at the Mariinsky girls’
school at Tsarskoe Selo and during the war had volunteered as a
nurse at one of the hospitals where she had looked after Kobylinsky
who had been wounded at the front. A romance had developed
between them and when he was sent with the family to Tobolsk,
Kobylinsky had wangled a job for Klavdiya teaching Maria, Anastasia
and Alexey Russian language, literature and maths. Both she and
Pankratov remained distinctly unimpressed with the standard of the
children’s education, particularly Alexey’s, unaware perhaps that it
had been constantly interrupted through illness. Pankratov was
shocked at how little they, and their father for that matter, knew of Siberia, its geography and peoples.55 As winter set in, one of the
grand duchesses had been amazed at the sight of people on the
streets wearing ‘strange white and grey costumes trimmed with fur’.
Pankratov realized she was referring to the reindeer-skin traditional dress worn by Yakuts, Khanty and Samoyedic peoples living in the
region. Had the sisters never seen pictures of these inhabitants of
their father’s vast Russian Empire in their geography books, he
wondered? Such strangers from the ‘outside life’ were, for the girls, precisely the kind of people they had so longed to learn about, but
had never had a chance to discover. Pankratov found them at times
extremely naïve: you only had to talk to them about the most