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
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officers following in a rowing boat at a discreet distance. At other
times he would go on deck to check the weather, discuss navigation
with the flag captain and inspect the ship’s company, or simply sit
with Alexandra, cigarette in hand, reading a book or playing domi-
noes with his officers.
Day after tranquil day passed, the air clean and clear and the
September sun low in the sky, but soon the nights were gathering
in and the first frosts descending. On 21 September 1906 the family
enjoyed their last day of ‘wonderful free-and-easy life’, as Nicholas ruefully described it.9 He loved Virolahti more than anywhere and
would have liked to build a summer retreat there or buy one of the
small islands. After the yacht docked at Kronstadt and the time came
to leave and go ashore the girls clung to each other weeping at
having to say goodbye to their special ‘family’ on board. Before they left, as on every trip they made in the
Shtandart
, the family gave generous gifts to all the crew.
*
By November 1906 the family was once more ensconced at the
Alexander Palace and, as always the girls loved being out in
the park. They liked to skate on the frozen ponds and cross over
the ice to the little house built in 1830 for the children of Nicholas I in the middle of the Children’s Island, where they could enter
their own fantasy play world.10 But their favourite winter pursuit,
enjoyed from the moment they were big enough to sit on their
father’s knee, was sledging down ice hills specially made for them.
That particular winter, they had the pleasure of a newly constructed
‘American hill’ – a 200-foot-long (61-m-long) artificial toboggan
run. A reporter from the
Washington Post
was fortunate to catch sight of them on it when reporting on security arrangements at
Tsarskoe Selo. A group of red-coated officials ‘covered with so many
medals they overlapped’ solemnly inspected the construction,
followed by the girls’ nannies who tested the run, after which the
three older girls, wearing thick bearskin coats ‘appeared in such a
tremendous hurry that they nearly upset the officials . . . and
screamed so loudly in Russian that their governesses reprimanded
them’. They then took their seats ‘without regard to precedence’,
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and ‘while the officials’ attention was momentarily distracted, they
gave the toboggan a push and whizzed down the hill without any
attendants. The governess screamed with horror, the little grand
duchesses with delight. They had evidently played the trick before.’
Thereafter the officials insisted on keeping hold of the toboggan
much to the disgust of the girls, who kept trying to slide down
unguarded. ‘The tenth journey was signalized by the Grand Duchess
Marya flopping down on the ice brink of the chute and attempting
the feat known to Coney Islanders as “bumps”.’11
The long dark days were further enlivened that winter by regular
visits from their Aunt Olga, Nicholas’s younger sister. Every Saturday she would take the train out to Tsarskoe Selo from her home in St
Petersburg. ‘I think I can say that they were awfully pleased when
I visited them and brought some change into their daily lives’, she
later remarked. ‘The first thing I did was to run upstairs to the
nursery where I generally found Olga and Tatiana finishing their
last lesson before lunch . . . If I arrived before the professors had finished the morning’s work, they would be just as delighted to be
interrupted as I had once been.’12 At 1 o’clock they would ‘rush
down the staircase leading from the nursery to their mother’s room’,
after which they would all have lunch, and then sit and chat and
sew in the mauve boudoir. A walk in the Alexander Park would
follow; after changing out of their coats and boots Olga and the
girls would often indulge in a spate of high jinks on the stairs. The light would be turned off as they descended and ‘someone would
lie down on one of the steps and when I trod on her she would
grab me by the ankle and tickle me or think of other tricks. There
was much laughter and screaming as we all rolled down to the
bottom of the stairs in a heap – knocking our heads against the
bannister on the way.’13
Over the years the girls would become closer to Aunt Olga than
any of their other female relatives; she was like an older sister and frequently filled the breach when their mother was ill, accompanying
them to public functions. ‘Someone had to be there to ensure that
the children behaved properly, stood up when necessary and greeted
people as they should – and anything else there was to look out for’, she later recalled. ‘In the end, it was taken for granted that I always
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had to come along wherever they went.’14 Olga was closest to her
eldest niece and namesake, who was only thirteen years younger
than she. ‘She resembled me in character, and that was perhaps why
we understood each other so well.’ But as time went on she could
not disguise her special affection for the seductively engaging
Anastasia, whom she nicknamed Shvybzik (a German colloquialism
meaning ‘little mischief’) in recognition of her incorrigible behav-
iour. The child had such courage, such a fierce love of life, and
embraced everything as a great adventure; Olga had no doubt that
of the four she was the most intelligent.15
Those Saturday games with their aunt were a time to be treas-
ured: ‘this was how we appeared at the tea table every Saturday
afternoon, happy, laughing and squabbling about all the dreadful
things “the others” had thought of.’16 As dusk fell the family attended evensong together and Aunt Olga would stay till bedtime, after
which she travelled back to St Petersburg. At the end of that year,
she persuaded Nicholas and Alexandra to allow her to stay the night
and take the girls back with her the following morning for the day.17
Here after lunch with Grandmama, Maria Feodorovna, at the
Anichkov Palace – where even Anastasia would be on her best
behaviour – they would then go to Aunt Olga’s to meet their favourite officers from the entourage, have tea, play games, enjoy music – and
dance – before one of the ladies-in-waiting would come from
????????????? to take them back home.
In later life Olga Nikolaevna reflected on those happy ‘red-letter
Sundays’ with her nieces before the war. The extraordinary closeness
and self-sufficiency that was the mark of the four Romanov sisters
persisted, as too their touchingly childlike innocence about the
world. But it was a strange hothouse atmosphere in which to grow
up. ‘My nieces did not have any playmates,’ Grand Duchess Olga
wistfully observed, ‘but they had each other, and probably did not
miss them.’18
*
Over in England, although it was four years since she had left her
post, Margaretta Eagar had not forgotten her former charges. Now
living in straitened circumstances, running a boarding house in
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Holland Park, she still wrote to the girls from time to time and sent gifts on their birthdays. But sitting in her drawing room, as she
often did, gazing at the many treasured photographs in silver frames
that she had of them, she was pining for news. Margaretta hated
the London fogs; her life, she told Mariya Geringer, was ‘
horrible
. . . I wish I were returning to Russia. I do not think I shall ever
be happy in this country.’ Sending Tatiana birthday wishes in June
1908, she wistfully commented: ‘I suppose you still have cakes and
almond Toffee. How good they used to be!’19
No doubt the girls were missing her too, for since Margaretta’s
departure at the end of 1904, the absence of a governess’s discipline had begun to have a detrimental effect. With so much natural energy
and a huge curiosity about the world, the girls were increasingly
boisterous. Alexandra was often too busy or indisposed to supervise
her daughters herself, leaving them under the supervision of Trina
Schneider. Modest and devoted Trina might be but she was clearly
feeling the strain, as too was the girls’ exasperated general nursemaid, Mariya Vishnyakova, to whom they gave the constant run-around.20
In March 1907, therefore, Alexandra made the decision to appoint
Sofya Tyutcheva – who had served as a lady-in-waiting at Peterhof
the previous summer – as maid of honour cum governess to the
girls, with responsibility for helping them prepare their lessons and to chaperone them on walks and other excursions. Sofya came on
the recommendation of Grand Duchess Ella, and had an old-school
pedigree, as granddaughter of the famous Russian poet Fedor
Tyutchev, and a strong conservative streak. She was a stickler for
good behaviour and took her role very seriously, but it was a chal-
lenge: the girls ‘wouldn’t listen and tried every which way to test
my patience’, she recalled. She appealed to Olga: ‘You have an
influence over your sisters, you’re the eldest and can persuade them
to listen to me and not play up so much.’ ‘Oh no,’ Olga had replied,
‘then I would always have to behave myself, and that’s impossible!’
Sofya could not help thinking Olga was right, that it was hard for
one so young to have to be forever setting an example to her siblings, though she later overheard her reprimanding Anastasia for her
mischievous behaviour by saying ‘Stop it, or Savanna [Tyutcheva’s
pet name] will leave, and then it will be even worse for us!’21
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That same year another new female friend entered the girls’ lives
in the shape of Lili Dehn, whose husband, a lieutenant in the Guards
Equipage, was already a favourite with the family. The girls took to
Lili immediately, for just like Aunt Olga she was willing to join in
their often silly and very physical games, and would even race down
the slide in Alexey’s downstairs playroom with them. While others
outside the close family circle had already suggested that the four
sisters were ‘Cinderellas who were entirely subservient in family life owing to the attention paid the Tsarevitch’, Lili found this was far
from the truth.22 Alexandra loved her daughters; ‘they were her
inseparable companions’. But there was no denying that the lives of
the four sisters were very sheltered: ‘They had no idea of the ugly
side of life’, as Lili recalled. The general assumption of the world’s press certainly was that the Romanov children lived stunted lives,
hidden away for their own safety ‘in a land which resembles a great
powder-magazine’; that they had to be ‘guarded by regiments of
soldiers and thousands of highly paid spies’. Yet sufficient informa-
tion was emerging by 1908 for the world to have a sense that Olga
was ‘a very interesting girl, highly imaginative, and fond of reading’.23
More than that, she had a natural aptitude at arithmetic and read
better in English than in Russian.24
The four sisters in fact all spoke good English, and had received
additional tuition since 1905 from a Scotsman, John Epps.25 His
legacy, however, was a strange Scottish twang acquired by Olga and
Tatiana that their uncle Edward VII remarked on when the families
met briefly in 1908 (it has also been suggested they had an Irish
accent picked up from Margaretta Eagar).26 To replace Epps, Sofya
Tyutcheva suggested an Englishman named Charles Sydney Gibbes,
a Cambridge graduate who had been teaching in St Petersburg for
several years. She sent a note to Alexandra’s secretary, enclosing a
testimonial from the director of the Imperial School of Law where
Gibbes had lately been running courses in modern languages, and
which praised him as being ‘extremely talented’.27
When Gibbes took up his post with the imperial family in
November 1908, Sofya Tyutcheva introduced him to thirteen-year-
old Olga and eleven-year-old Tatiana. He thought them ‘good-
looking, high-spirited girls, simple in their tastes and very pleasant
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to deal with’. Although they could be inattentive at times, ‘they were quite clever, and quick when they gave their minds to it’, but the
atmosphere induced by the presence of Tyutcheva as chaperone
made those first lessons somewhat tense.28 Gibbes also gave occa-
sional, separate, tuition to Maria, who struck him as sweet and
compliant and with a gift for painting and drawing. The arrival in
his classroom in 1909 of the whirlwind that was eight-year-old
Anastasia changed everything. Gibbes later tactfully remarked that
she was not always an easy child to teach but like everyone else, he
was won over by her effervescent charm and her quirky intelligence.
Gibbes thought her ‘fragile and dainty . . . a little lady of great