Confessions of the Czarina. Princess Catherine Radziwill
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Princess Catherine Radziwill
Confessions of the Czarina
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4057664574046
Table of Contents
III MY COUNTRY, MY BELOVED COUNTRY, WHY AM I PARTED FROM THEE?
V DAUGHTERS, DAUGHTERS, AND NO SON
VI THE EMPRESS’S OPINIONS ABOUT RUSSIA
VII WHAT THE IMPERIAL FAMILY THOUGHT ABOUT THE EMPRESS
VIII SORROW AND UNEXPECTED CONSOLATION
X ANNA WYRUBEWA APPEARS ON THE SCENE AND HE SAW HER PASS
XIII HE DIED TO SAVE HER HONOR
XVII MY SON! I MUST SAVE MY SON!
XIX MY FATHERLAND, MUST I FORSAKE THEE?
XX IT IS YOUR HUSBAND WHO IS LOSING THE THRONE OF YOUR SON
XXII THE REMOVAL OF THE “PROPHET”
XXIII ANNA COMES TO THE RESCUE
XXIV YOU MUST BECOME THE EMPRESS
XXV THE NATION WANTS YOUR HEAD
XXVII A PRISONER AFTER HAVING BEEN A QUEEN
PUBLISHERS’ NOTE
A few months before the great war broke out, there appeared a book, which, under the title Behind the Veil of the Russian Court, bearing the signature of Count Paul Vassili, a name that had become famous through the publication of the volume called La Société de Berlin. A lively interest was aroused by Behind the Veil of the Russian Court, dealing as it did with the intimate existence of four Russian Sovereigns and their respective Courts. The author of this book was declared to be already dead, out of a very natural feeling of precaution for his personal safety. Count Vassili was living in Petrograd at the time, and most certainly would have been banished to Siberia, and perhaps tried for lèse-majesté, if that fact had been discovered. At the present moment the reasons for concealing it exist no longer, and Count Vassili is free to live once more and to publish another work of even greater interest—the life of the former Czarina Alexandra. In relating it, together with some most characteristic incidents which so far are but little known, Count Vassili remarks to the public what a small circle only have known; persons more or less interested in keeping the facts as secret as possible. Count Vassili had known the Empress personally, in fact was regularly and most exactly informed by numerous friends as to all that went on at the Russian Court, and with all manner of intimate details concerning the existence led by the Czar and by his Consort in their Palace of Tsarskoye Selo. It is interesting to note that in Behind the Veil of the Russian Court, written at a time when but few people foresaw the fall of the dynasty of Romanoff, Count Vassili declared the event bound to take place in the then very near future.
INTRODUCTION
I am not a coward, and it was not out of a feeling of uneasiness in regard to my personal safety, that I had not the courage to publish in my own name the book which, some thirty years ago, produced such a sensation when it appeared in the Nouvelle Revue of Madame Adam, under the title of “La Société de Berlin.” But I was living in Germany at the time, and though I would have felt delighted had the publication of this volume driven me out of the Prussian capital, from which I was to shake the dust from my shoes with such joy, a few years later, I had there relatives who would most undoubtedly have fared very badly at Bismarck’s hands, had my identity been disclosed. And once I am alluding to these distant times, it is just as well to say that the book in question had not at first been written for the benefit of the general public, but consisted of private letters addressed to Madame Adam, who, being happily still in the land of the living, can add many corroborative details. She suggested to me to publish some of these letters; I assented without suspecting