A momentary pause followed. Princess
Elizabeth silently motioned her friends to be seated,
and drew her favorite Alexis nearer to her.
Lestocq, her physician and confidant,
with a solemn countenance, took a place opposite her.
“We are ready to hear your bad news,”
said the princess.
“The regent, Anna Leopoldowna,
will have herself crowned as empress,” laconically
responded Lestocq.
Elizabeth looked at him interrogatively
and with curiosity for the continuation of his bad
news. But as Lestocq remained silent, she asked
with astonishment: “Is that all you have
to tell us?”
“Preliminarily, that is all,” answered
Lestocq.
Princess Elizabeth broke out with a joyous laugh.
“Well, this is, in fact, very
comic. With a real Job’s mien you announce
to us the worst news, and then inform us that Anna
Leopoldowna is to be crowned empress! Let her
be crowned! No one will interfere to prevent
it, and she will be none the happier for it. No
woman who has taken possession of the Russian throne
as an independent princess has ever yet been happy.
Or do you think that Catharine, my lofty step-mother,
was so? Believe me, upon the throne she trembled
with fear of assassins; for it is well known that
this Russian throne is surrounded by murderers, awaiting
only the favorable moment. Ah, whenever I have
stood in front of this imperial throne, it has always
seemed to me that I saw the points of a thousand daggers
peeping forth from its soft cushions! And you
would have me seat myself upon such a dagger-beset
throne? No, no, leave me my peace and repose.
Let Anna Leopoldowna declare herself empress what
should I care? I should have to bend before her
with my congratulations. That is all!”
And the princess, letting her head
glide upon Razumovsky’s shoulder, as if exhausted
by this long speech, closed her fatigued eyelids.
“Ah, if Czar Peter, your great
father, could hear you,” sadly said Lestocq,
“he would spurn you for such pusillanimity, princess.”
“It is, therefore, fortunate
for me that he is dead,” said the princess,
with a smile. “And now, my dear Lestocq,
if you know nothing further, let this suffice you:
I tell you, once for all, that I have no desire for
this imperial throne. I would crown my head with
roses and myrtles, but not with that golden circle
which would crush me to the earth. Therefore,
trouble me no more on this subject. Be content
with what I am, and if you cannot, well then
I must be reconciled to being abandoned by you!”
“I will never desert you, even
if I must follow you to suffering and death!”
exclaimed Alexis Razumovsky, casting himself at the
feet of the princess.
“We will remain true and faithful
to you unto death!” cried Woronzow and Grunstein.
“Well, and you alone remain
silent, Lestocq?” asked the princess, with tears
in her eyes.
“I have not yet come to the
end of my bad news,” said Lestocq, with a clouded
brow.
“Ah!” jestingly interposed
the princess, “you would, perhaps, as further
bad news, inform us that the Emperor Ivan has cut his
first tooth!”
“No,” said Lestocq, “I
would only say to you, that the 18th of December,
the day on which the regent is to be crowned as empress,
the 18th of December is the day assigned for the marriage
of Princess Elizabeth with Prince Louis of Brunswick,
the new Duke of Courland!”
The princess sprang up from her seat
as if stung by an adder. Alexis Razumovsky, who
still knelt at her feet, uttered loud lamentations,
in which Woronzow and Grunstein soon joined. With
calm triumph Lestocq observed the effect produced
by his words.
“What are you saying there?”
at length Elizabeth breathlessly asked.
“I say that on the 18th of December
the Princess Elizabeth is to be married to Prince
Louis of Brunswick, who has already come to St. Petersburg
for that purpose,” calmly answered Lestocq.
“And I say,” cried the
princess, “that no such marriage will ever take
place!”
Lestocq shrugged his shoulders.
“Princess Elizabeth is a gentle, peace-loving,
always suffering lamb,” he said.
“But Princess Elizabeth can
become a tigress when it concerns the defence of her
holiest rights!” exclaimed the princess, pacing
the room in violent excitement.
“Ah,” she continued, “they
are not then satisfied with delivering me over to
poverty and abandonment; it does not suffice them to
see me so deeply humiliated as to receive alms from
this regent who occupies the throne that belongs to
me. They would rob me of my last and only remaining
blessing, my personal freedom! They would make
my poor heart a prisoner, and bind it with the chains
and fetters of a marriage which I abhor! No,
no, I tell you that shall they never do.”
And the princess, quite beside herself
with rage, stamped her feet and doubled up her little
hands into fists. Now was she her father’s
real and not unworthy daughter; Czar Peter’s
bold and savage spirit flashed from her eyes, his
scorn and courageous determination spoke from her
wildly excited features. She saw not, she heard
not what was passing around her; she was wholly occupied
with her own angry thoughts, and with those dreadful
images which the mere idea of marriage had conjured
up.
Her four favorites stood together
at some distance, observing her with silent sympathy.
“It is now for you, Alexis Razumovsky,
to complete the work we have begun,” whispered
Lestocq to him. “Elizabeth loves you; you
must nourish in her this abhorrence of a marriage
with the prince. You must make yourself so loved,
that she will dare all rather than lose you! We
have long enough remained in a state of abjectness;
it is time to labor for our advancement. To the
work, to the work, Alexis Razumovsky! We must
make an empress of this Elizabeth, that she may raise
us to wealth and dignities!”
“Rely upon me,” whispered
Alexis, “she must and shall join in our plans.”
He approached the princess, who was
walking the room in a state of the most violent agitation,
giving vent to her internal excitement and anger in
loud exclamations and bitter curses.
“I must therefore die!”
sighed Alexis, pressing Elizabeth’s trembling
hand to his lips. “Kill me, princess, thrust
a dagger in my heart, that I at least may not live
to see you married to another!”
“No, you shall not die,”
cried Elizabeth, with fierce vehemence, throwing her
arms around Razumovsky’s neck. “I
will know how to defend you and myself, Alexis!
Ah, they would shackle me, they would force
me to marry, because they know I hate marriage.
Yes, I hate those unnatural fetters which could command
my heart, force it into obedience to an unnatural
law, and degrade divine free love, which would flutter
from flower to flower, into a necessity and a duty.
It is an unnatural law which would compel us forever
to love a man because he pleased us yesterday or may
please us to-day, and who perhaps may not please us
to-morrow, while on the next day he may excite only
repugnance! Would they forge these matrimonial
chains for me? Ah, Regent Anna, you are this
time mistaken; you may be all-powerful in this empire,
but you cannot and shall not extend that power over
me!”
“And how,” asked Lestocq,
shrugging his shoulders, “how will Princess
Elizabeth oppose the regent or empress? What weapon
has she with which to contend?”
“If it must be so, I will oppose
power to power!” passionately exclaimed the
princess. “Yes, when it comes to the defence
of my freedom and my personal rights I will then have
the courage to dare all, defy all; then will I shake
off the lethargy of contented mediocrity, and upon
the throne will find that freedom which Anna would
tread under foot!”
“Long live our future empress!
Long live Elizabeth!” cried the men with wild
excitement.
“I have long withstood you,
my friends,” said Elizabeth, “I have not
coveted this imperial Russian crown, but much less
have I desired that crown of thorns a compulsory marriage.
I am now ready for the struggle, and, if it must be
so, let a revolution, let streams of blood decide
whether the Regent Anna Leopoldowna or the daughter
of Peter the Great has the best right to govern this
land and prescribe its laws!”
“Ah, now are you really your
great father’s great daughter!” cried
Lestocq, and bending a knee before the princess, he
continued: “Let me be the first to pay
you homage, the first to swear eternal fidelity to
you, our Empress Elizabeth.”
“Receive also my oath, Empress
Elizabeth,” said Alexis, falling upon his knees
before her, “receive the oaths of your slaves
who desire nothing but to devote their bodies and
souls to your service!”
“Let me, also, do homage to
you, Empress Elizabeth!” exclaimed Woronzow,
falling to the earth.
“And I, too, will lie at your
feet and declare myself your slave, Empress Elizabeth!”
said Grunstein, kneeling with the others.
But Elizabeth’s anger was already
past; only a momentary storm-wind had lashed her gently
flowing blood into the high foaming waves of rage;
now all again was calm within her, and consequently
this solemn homage scene of her four kneeling friends
made only a comic impression upon her.
She burst into a loud laugh; astonished
and half angry, the kneeling men looked up to her,
and that only increased her hilarity.
“Ah, this is infinitely amusing,”
said the princess, continuing to laugh; “there
lie my vassals, and what vassals! Herr Lestocq,
a physician; Herr Grunstein, a bankrupt shopkeeper
and now under-officer; Herr Woronzow, chamberlain;
and Alexis Razumovsky, my private secretary.
And here I am, the empress of such vassals, and what
sort of an empress? An empress of four subjects,
an empress without a throne and without a crown, without
land and without a people an empress who
never was and never will be an empress! And in
this solemn buffoonery you cut such serious faces
as might make one die with laughter.”
The princess threw herself upon the
divan and laughed until the tears ran down her cheeks.
“Princess,” said Lestocq,
rising, “these four men, at whom you now laugh,
will make you empress, and then it will be in your
power to convert this chirurgeon into a privy councillor
and court physician, this bankrupt merchant into a
rich banker, this chamberlain into an imperial lord-marshal,
and your private secretary into a count or prince
of the empire.”
The eyes of the princess shone yet
brighter, and with a tender glance at Alexis Razumovsky
she said: “Yes, I will make him a prince
and overload him with presents and honors. Ah,
that is an object worth the pains of struggling for
an imperial crown.”
“No, no,” interposed Alexis,
kissing her hand, “I need neither wealth nor
titles; I need nothing, desire nothing but to be near
you, to be able to breathe the air that has fanned
your cheek. I desire nothing for myself, but
everything for my friends here, with whose faithful
aid we shall soon be enabled to greet you a real empress.”
Elizabeth’s brow beamed with
the purest blessedness. “You are as unselfish
as the angels in heaven, my Alexis,” said she.
“It suffices you that I am Elizabeth, you languish
not for this imperial title which these others would
force upon me.”
Alexis smilingly shook his fine head.
“You err, princess,” said he; “I
would freely and joyfully give my heart’s blood,
could I this day but salute you as empress! I
should then, at least, have no more to fear from this
strange prince whom they would compel you to marry!”
A cloud passed over the brow of the
princess. “Yes, you are right,” said
she, “we must avoid that at all events, and if
there are no other means, very well, I shall know
what to decide upon I shall venture an attempt
to dethrone the regent and make myself empress!
But, my friends, let that now suffice. I need
rest. Call my women to undress me, Woronzow.
Good-night, good-night, my high and lofty vassals,
your great and powerful empress allows you to kiss
her hand!”
With a pleasing graciousness she extended
her fair hands to her friends, who respectfully pressed
them to their lips and then departed.
“Alexis!” called the princess,
as Razumovsky was about to withdraw with the others “Alexis,
you will remain awhile. While my women are undressing
me, you shall sing me to sleep with that charming
slumber-song you sing so splendidly!”
Alexis smiled and remained.
A quarter of an hour later deep silence
prevailed in the dark palace of Elizabeth, and through
the stillness of the night was heard only the sweetly-melodious
voice of the handsome Alexis, who was singing his
slumber-song to the princess.
From this day forward her four trusted
friends left the princess no peace. They so stormed
her with prayers and supplications, Alexis so
well knew how to represent his despair at her approaching
and unavoidable marriage, that the amiable princess,
to satisfy her friends and be left herself at peace,
declared herself ready to sanction the plans of her
confidants and enter into a conspiracy against the
regent.
Soon a small party was formed for
the cause of the princess. Grunstein who,
as the princess had said, from a bankrupt merchant
had attained the position of subordinate officer Grunstein
had succeeded in winning for the cause of the princess
some fifty grenadiers of the Preobrajensky regiment,
to which he belonged; and these people, drunkards
and dissolute fellows, were the principal props upon
which Elizabeth’s throne was to be established!
They were neither particular about the means resorted
to for the accomplishment of the proposed revolution,
nor careful to envelop their movements in secrecy.
Elizabeth soon began to find pleasure
and distraction in exciting the enthusiasm of the
soldiers. She often repaired to the caserns of
the guards, and her mildness and affability won for
her the hearts of the rough soldiers accustomed to
slavish subjection. When she rode through the
streets, it was not an unusual occurrence to see common
soldiers approach her sledge and converse familiarly
with her. Wherever she showed herself, there
the soldiers received her with shouts, and the palace
of the princess was always open to them. In this
way Elizabeth made herself popular, and the Regent
Anna, who was informed of it, smiled at it with indifference.
Just as incautiously did Elizabeth’s
fanatical political manager, Lestocq, set about his
work. He made no secret of his intercourse with
the French ambassador, and in the public coffee-houses
he was often heard in a loud voice to prophesy an
approaching political change.
But with regard to all these imprudences
it seemed as if the court and the regent were blinded
by the most careless confidence, as if they could
not see what was directly before their eyes. It
was as if destiny covered those eyes with a veil,
that they might not see, and against destiny even
the great and the powerful of the earth struggle in
vain.