CHAPTER CCIII. AN IMPERIAL TRAGEDY
For the summer they went to Kaltenleutgeben,
just out of Vienna, where they had the Villa Paulhof,
and it was while they were there, September 10, 1898,
that the Empress Elizabeth of Austria was assassinated
at Geneva by an Italian vagabond, whose motive seemed
to have been to gain notoriety. The news was
brought to them one evening, just at supper-time,
by Countess Wydenbouck-Esterhazy.
Clemens wrote to Twichell:
That good & unoffending lady, the Empress,
is killed by a madman, & I am living in the midst
of world-history again. The Queen’s Jubilee
last year, the invasion of the Reichsrath by the police,
& now this murder, which will still be talked
of & described & painted a thousand years from
now. To have a personal friend of the wearer
of two crowns burst in at the gate in the deep
dusk of the evening & say, in a voice broken with
tears, “My God! the Empress is murdered,”
& fly toward her home before we can utter a question
why, it brings the giant event home
to you, makes you a part of it & personally interested;
it is as if your neighbor Antony should come flying
& say, “Cæsar is butchered the head
of the world is fallen!”
Of course there is no talk but of
this. The mourning is universal and genuine,
the consternation is stupefying. The Austrian
Empire is being draped with black. Vienna will
be a spectacle to see by next Saturday, when the funeral
cortege marches.
Clemens and the others went into Vienna
for the funeral ceremonies and witnessed them from
the windows of the new Krantz Hotel, which faces the
Capuchin church where the royal dead lie buried.
It was a grandly impressive occasion, a pageant of
uniforms of the allied nations that made up the Empire
of Austria. Clemens wrote of it at considerable
length, and sent the article to Mr. Rogers to offer
to the magazines. Later, however, he recalled
it just why is not clear. In one place he wrote:
Twice the Empress entered Vienna in
state; the first time was in 1854, when she was a
bride of seventeen, & when she rode in measureless
pomp through a world of gay flags & decorations down
the streets, walled on both hands with the press of
shouting & welcoming subjects; & the second time was
last Wednesday, when she entered the city in her coffin,
& moved down the same streets in the dead of night
under waving black flags, between human walls again,
but everywhere was a deep stillness now & a stillness
emphasized rather than broken by the muffled hoofbeats
of the long cavalcade over pavements cushioned with
sand, & the low sobbing of gray-headed women who had
witnessed the first entrance, forty-four years before,
when she & they were young & unaware.... She
was so blameless the Empress; & so beautiful
in mind & heart, in person & spirit; & whether with
the crown upon her head, or without it & nameless,
a grace to the human race, almost a justification of
its creation; would be, indeed, but that the animal
that struck her down re-establishes the doubt.
They passed a quiet summer at Kaltenleutgeben.
Clemens wrote some articles, did some translating
of German plays, and worked on his “Gospel,”
an elaboration of his old essay on contenting one’s
soul through selfishness, later to be published as
‘What is Man?’ A. C. Dunham and Rev. Dr.
Parker, of Hartford, came to Vienna, and Clemens found
them and brought them out to Kaltenleutgeben and read
them chapters of his doctrines, which, he said, Mrs.
Clemens would not let him print. Dr. Parker and
Dunham returned to Hartford and reported Mark Twain
more than ever a philosopher; also that he was the
“center of notability and his house a court.”