When Wilhelmine Encke first opened
her eyes on the world one day in the year 1754, he
would have been a bold prophet who would have predicted
that she would one day be the uncrowned Queen of the
Court of Russia, plus Reine que la Reine, and
that her children would have in their veins the proudest
blood in Europe. Such a prophecy might well have
been laughed to scorn, for little Wilhelmine had as
obscure a cradle as almost any infant in all Prussia.
Her father was an army bugler, who wore private’s
uniform in Frederick the Great’s army; and her
early years were to be spent playing with other soldiers’
children in the sordid environment of Berlin barracks.
When her father turned his back on
the army, while Wilhelmine was still nursing her dolls,
it was to play the humble rôle of landlord of a small
tavern, from which he was lured by the bait of a place
as French-horn player in Frederick’s private
band; and the goal of his modest ambition was reached
when he was appointed trumpeter to the King.
This was Herr Encke’s position
when the curtain rises on our story at Potsdam, and
shows us Wilhelmine, an unattractive maid of ten, the
Cinderella of her family, for whom there seemed no
better prospect than a soldier-husband, if indeed
she were lucky enough to capture him. She was,
in fact, the “ugly duckling” of a good-looking
family, removed by a whole world from her beautiful
eldest sister Charlotte, who counted among her many
admirers no less exalted a wooer than Prince Frederick
William, the King’s nephew and heir to his throne.
There was, indeed, no more beautiful
or haughty damsel in all Potsdam than this trumpeter’s
daughter who had caught the amorous fancy of the Prince,
then, as to his last day, the slave of every pretty
face that crossed his path. But Charlotte Encke
was much too imperious a young lady to hold her Royal
lover long in fetters. He quickly wearied of her
caprices, her petulances, and her exhibitions
of temper; and the climax came one day when in a fit
of anger she struck her little sister, in his presence,
and he took up the cudgels for Wilhelmine.
This was the last straw for the disillusioned
and disgusted Prince, who sent Charlotte off to Paris,
where as the Countess Matushke she played the fine
lady at her lover’s cost, while the Prince took
her Cinderella sister under his protection. He
took her education into his own hands, provided her
with masters to teach her a wide range of accomplishments,
from languages to dancing and deportment, while he
himself gave her lessons in history and geography.
Nor did he lack the reward of his benevolent offices;
for Wilhelmine, under his ministrations, not only
developed rare gifts and graces of mind, like many
another Cinderella before her; she blossomed into
a rose of girlhood, more beautiful even than her imperious
sister, and with a sweetness of character and a winsomeness
which Charlotte could never have attained.
On her part, gratitude to her benefactor
rapidly grew into love for the handsome and courtly
Prince; on his, sympathy for the ill-used Cinderella,
into a passion for the lovely maiden hovering on the
verge of a still more beautiful womanhood. It
was a mutual passion, strong and deep, which now linked
the widely contrasted lives of the King-to-be and
the trumpeter’s daughter a passion
which, with each, was to last as long as life itself.
Wilhelmine was now formally installed
in the place of the deposed Charlotte as favourite
of the heir to the throne; and idyllic years followed,
during which she gave pledges of her love to the man
who was her husband in all but name. That her
purse was often empty was a matter to smile at; that
she had to act as “breadwinner” to her
family, and was at times reduced to such straits that
she was obliged to pawn some of her small stock of
jewellery in order to provide her lover with a supper,
was a bagatelle. She was the happiest young woman
in Prussia.
Even what seemed to be a crowning
disaster, fortune turned into a boon for her.
When news of this unlicensed love-making came to the
King’s ears, he was furious. It was intolerable
that the destined ruler of a great and powerful nation
should be governed and duped by a woman of the people.
He gave his nephew a sound rating alike
for his extravagance and his amour; and packed off
Wilhelmine to join her sister in Paris.
But, for once, Frederick found that
he had made a mistake. The Prince, robbed of
the woman he loved, took the bit in his teeth, and
plunged so deeply into extravagant dallying with ballet-dancers
and stars of the opera that the King was glad to choose
the lesser evil, and to summon Wilhelmine back to
her Prince’s arms. One stipulation only
he made, that she should make her home away from the
capital and the dangerous allurements which his nephew
found there.
Now at last we find Cinderella happily
installed, with the King’s august approval,
in a beautiful home which has since blossomed into
the splendours of Charlottenburg. Here she gave
birth to a son, whom Frederick dubbed Count de la
Marke in his nurse’s arms, but who was fated
never to leave his cradle. This child of love,
the idol of his parents, sleeps in a splendid mausoleum
in the great Protestant Church of Berlin.
As a sop to Prussian morality and
to make the old King quite easy, a complaisant husband
was now found for the Prince’s favourite in his
chamberlain, Herr Rietz, son of a palace gardener;
and Frederick William himself looked on while the
woman he loved, the mother of his children, was converted
by a few priestly words into a “respectable married
woman” only to leave the altar on
his own arm, his wife in the eyes of the world.
The time was now drawing near when
Wilhelmine was to reach the zenith of her adventurous
life. One August day in 1786 Frederick the Great
drew his last breath in the Potsdam Palace, and his
nephew awoke to be greeted by his chamberlain as “Your
Majesty.” The trumpeter’s daughter
was at last a Queen, in fact, if not in name, more
secure in her husband’s love than ever, and
with long years of splendour and happiness before
her. That his fancy, ever wayward, flitted to
other women as fair as herself, did not trouble her
a whit. Like Madame de Pompadour, she was prepared
even to encourage such rivalry, so long as the first
place (and this she knew) in her husband’s heart
was unassailably her own.
Picture our Cinderella now in all
her new splendours, moving as a Queen among her courtiers,
receiving the homage of princes and ambassadors as
her right, making her voice heard in the Council Chamber,
and holding her salon, to which all the great
ones of the earth flocked to pay tribute to her beauty
and her gifts of mind. It was a strange transformation
from the barracks-kitchen to the Queendom of one of
the greatest Courts of Europe; but no Queen cradled
in a palace ever wore her honours with greater dignity,
grace, and simplicity than this daughter of an army
bandsman.
The days of the empty purse were,
of course, at an end. She had now her ten thousand
francs a month for “pin-money,” her luxuriously
appointed palace at Charlottenburg, and her Berlin
mansion, “Unter den Linden,” with its
private theatre, in which she and her Royal lover,
surrounded by their brilliant Court, applauded the
greatest actors from Paris and Vienna. It is
said that many of these stage-plays were of questionable
decency, with more than a suggestion of the garden
of Eden in them; but this is an aspersion which Madame
de Rietz indignantly repudiates in her “Memoirs.”
While Wilhelmine was thus happy in
her Court magnificence, varied by days of “delightful
repose,” at Charlottenburg, France was in the
throes of her Revolution, drenched with the blood
of her greatest men and fairest women; her King had
lost his crown and his head with it; and Europe was
in arms against her. When Frederick William joined
his army camped on the Rhine bank, Wilhelmine was
by his side to counsel him as he wavered between war
and peace. The fate of the coalition against
France was practically in the hands of the trumpeter’s
daughter, whose voice was all for peace. “What
matters it,” she said, “how France is
governed? Let her manage her own affairs, and
let Europe be saved from the horrors of bloodshed.”
In vain did the envoys of Spain and
Italy, Austria and England, practise all their diplomacy
to place her influence in the scale of war. When
Lord Henry Spencer offered her a hundred thousand guineas
if she would dissuade her husband from concluding
a treaty with France, she turned a deaf ear to all
his pleading and arguments. Such influence as
she possessed should be exercised in the interests
of peace, and thus it was that the vacillating King
deserted his allies, and signed the Treaty of Bale,
in 1795.
Such was the triumphant issue of Madame
Rietz’s intervention in the affairs of Europe;
such the proof she gave to the world of her conquest
of a King. It was thus with a light heart that
she turned her back on the Rhine camp; and with her
husband’s children and a splendid retinue set
out on her journey to Italy, to see which was the greatest
ambition of her life. At the Austrian Court she
was coldly received, it is true, thanks to her part
in the Treaty of Bale; but in Italy she was greeted
as a Queen. At Naples Queen Caroline received
her as a sister; the trumpeter’s daughter was
the brilliant centre of fêtes and banquets and receptions
such as might have gratified the vanity of an Empress:
while at Florence she spent days of ideal happiness
under the blue sky of Italy and among her beauties
of Nature and Art.
It was at Venice that she wrote to
her King lover, “Your Majesty knows well that,
for myself, I place no value on the foolish vanities
of Court etiquette; but I am placed in an awkward
position by my daughter being raised to the rank of
Countess, while I am still in the lowly position of
a bourgeoise.” She had, in fact, always
declined the honour of a title, which Frederick William
had so often begged her to accept; and it was only
for her daughter’s sake, when the question of
an alliance between the young Countess de la Marke
and Lord Bristol’s heir arose, that she at last
stooped to ask for what she had so long refused.
A few weeks later her brother, the
King’s equerry, placed in her hands the patent
which made her Countess Lichtenau, with the right to
bear on her shield of arms the Prussian eagle and
the Royal crown.
Wherever the Countess (as we must
now call her) went on her Italian tour she drew men
to her feet by the magnetism of her beauty, who would
have paid no homage to her as chère amie of
a King; for she was now in the early thirties, in
the full bloom of the loveliness that had its obscure
budding in the Potsdam barrack-rooms. Young and
old were equally powerless to resist her fascinations.
She had, indeed, no more ardent slave and admirer
than my Lord Bristol, the octogenarian Bishop of Londonderry,
whose passion for the Countess, young enough to be
his granddaughter, was that of a lovesick youth.
From “dear Countess and adorable
friend,” he quickly leaps in his letters to
“my dear Wilhelmine.” He looks forward
with the impatience of a boy to seeing her at “that
terrestrial paradise which is called Naples, where
we shall enjoy perpetual spring and spend delightful
days in listening to the divine Paesiello.
Do you know,” he adds, “I passed two hours
of real delight this morning in simply contemplating
your elegant bedroom where only the elegant sleeper
was missing.”
“It is in Crocelle,”
he writes a little later, “that you will make
people happy by your presence, and where you will recuperate
your health, regain your gaiety, and forget an Irishman;
and a holy Bishop, more worthy of your affection,
on account of the deep attachment he has for you,
will take his place.”
In June, 1796, this senile lover writes,
“In an hour I depart for Germany; and, as the
wind is north, with every step I take I shall say:
’This breeze comes perhaps from her; it has touched
her rosy lips and mingled its scent with the perfume
of her breath which I shall inhale, the perfume of
the breath of my dear Wilhelmine.’”
But these days of dallying with her
legion of lovers, of regal fêtes and pleasure-chasing,
were brought to an abrupt conclusion when news came
to her at Venice that her “husband,” the
King, was dying, with the Royal family by his bedside
awaiting the end. Such news, with all its import
of sorrow and tragedy, set the Countess racing across
the Continent, fast as horses could carry her, to
the side of her beloved King, whom she found, if not
in extremis, “very dangerously ill and
pitifully changed” from the robust man she had
left. Her return, however, did more for him than
all the skill of his doctors. It gave him a new
lease of life, in which her presence brought happiness
into days which, none knew better than himself, were
numbered.
For more than a year the Countess
was his tender nurse and constant companion, ministering
to his comfort and arranging plays and tableaux for
his entertainment. She watched over him as jealously
as any mother over her dying child; but all her devotion
could not stay the steps of death, which every day
brought nearer. As the inevitable end approached,
her friends warned her to leave Charlottenburg while
the opportunity was still hers to escape
with her jewels and her money (a fortune of L150,000) but
to all such urging she was deaf. She would stay
by her lover’s side to the last, though she
well knew the danger of delay.
One November day in 1797 Frederick
William made his last public appearance at a banquet,
with the Countess at his right hand; and seldom has
festival had such a setting in tragedy. “None
of the guests,” we are told, “uttered
a word or ate a mouthful of anything; the plates were
cleared at the hasty ringing of a bell. A convulsive
movement made by the sick man showed that he was suffering
agonies. Before half-past nine every guest had
left, greatly troubled. The majority of those
who had been present never saw the unfortunate monarch
again. They all shared the same presentiment
of disaster, and wept.”
From that night the King was dead,
even to his own Court. The gates of his palace
were closed against the world, and none were allowed
to approach the chamber in which his life was ebbing
away, save the Countess, his nurse, and his doctors.
Even his children were refused admittance to his presence.
As the Marquis de Saint Mexent said, “The King
of Prussia ends his days as though he were a rich benefactor.
All the relations are excluded by the housekeeper.”
A few days before the end came the
Countess was seen to leave the palace, carrying a
large red portfolio a suspicious circumstance
which the Crown Prince’s spies promptly reported
to their master. There could be only one inference she
had been caught in the act of stealing State papers,
a crime for which she would have to pay a heavy price
as soon as her protector was no more! As a matter
of fact the portfolio contained nothing more secret
or valuable than the letters she had written to the
King during the twenty-seven years of their romance,
letters which, after reading, she consigned to the
flames in her boudoir within an hour of the suspected
theft of State documents.
A few days later, on the night of
the 16th of November (1797), the King entered on his
“death agony,” one fit of suffocation succeeding
another, until the Countess, unable to bear any longer
the sight of such suffering, was carried away in violent
convulsions. She saw him no more; for by seven
o’clock in the morning Frederick William had
found release from his agony in death, and his son
had begun to reign in his stead.
At last the long-delayed hour of revenge
had come to Frederick William III., who had always
regarded his father’s favourite as an enemy;
and his vengeance was swift to strike. Before
the late King’s body was cold, his successor’s
emissaries appeared at the palace door, Unter den
Linden, with orders to search her papers and to demand
the keys of every desk and cupboard. Even then
she scorned to fly before the storm which she knew
was breaking. For three days and nights her carriage
stood at her gates ready to take her away to safety;
but she refused to move a step.
Then one morning, before she had left
her bed, a major of the guards, with a posse of soldiers,
appeared at her bedroom door armed with a warrant
for her arrest; and for many weeks she was a closely
guarded prisoner in her own house, subject to daily
insults and indignities from men who, a few weeks
earlier, had saluted her as a Queen.
At the trial which followed some very
grave indictments were preferred against her.
She was charged with having betrayed State secrets;
with having robbed the Royal Exchequer; stolen the
King’s portfolio; and removed the priceless
solitaire diamond from his crown, and the very rings
from his fingers as he lay dying. To these and
other equally grave charges the Countess gave a dignified
denial, which the evidence she was able to produce
supported. The diamond and the rings were, in
fact, discovered in places indicated by her where
they had been put, by the King’s orders, for
safe custody.
The trial had a happier ending than,
from the malignity of her enemies, especially of the
King, might have been expected. After three months
of durance she was removed to a Silesian fortress.
Her houses and lands were taken from her; but her
furniture and jewels were left untouched, and with
them she was allowed to enjoy a pension of four thousand
thalers a year. Such was the judgment of
a Court which proved more merciful than she had perhaps
a right to expect. And two months later, the
influence and pleading of her friends set her free
from her fortress-prison to spend her life where and
as she would.
The sun of her splendour had indeed
set, but many years of peaceful and not unhappy life
remained for our ex-Queen, who was still in the prime
of her womanhood and beauty and with the magnetism
that, to her last day, brought men to her feet.
At fifty she was able to inspire such passion in the
breast of a young artist, Francis Holbein, that he
asked and won her hand in marriage. But this
romance was short-lived, for within a year he left
her, to spend the remainder of her days in Paris,
Vienna, and her native Prussia. Here her adventurous
career closed in such obscurity, at the age of sixty-eight,
that even those who ministered to her last moments
were unaware that the dying woman was the Countess
who had played so dazzling a part a generation earlier,
as favourite of the King of Prussia and Queen of her
loveliest women.