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Untitled Document
You are filled with anguish
For the suffering of others
And no one's grief
Has ever passed you by.
You are relentless--
Only toward yourself
Forever cold and pitiless.
But if you could look upon
Your own sadness from a distance
Oh, how you would pity yourself
How sadly you would weep.
The third of November (or the fifteenth in the new calendar) 1895 was, for my papa Tsar Nicholas II, "a day I will remember for ever. At exactly nine o'clock a baby's cry was heard and we all breathed a sigh of relief! With a prayer we named the daughter sent to us by God Olga!" And that there is the start of my story of my life. Not very interesting, I'm sorry to say. I was quite the large baby, weighing ten pounds, and I had to be birthed with forceps. Poor, dear Mama! My great-grandmother Queen Victoria commented I was "splendid, in spite of the immense head". I think that's not something one would want to hear from their grandmother.
As a baby, I was watched over with a hawk's eye by my doting parents. Mama nursed me and clothed me, and Papa enjoyed bathing and playing with me. I was even taken to a state visit to France in 1896, where the people rejoiced at seeing the fat little highnesse impériale. In December of that same year I was sent to the nursery, and neither Mama or Papa really liked the idea much; about it, Papa wrote that "our daughter will have to be moved upstairs, which is a pity and rather a bore". The nanny even told Mama she popped in too often.
In 1897 I was joined in the nursery with best friend, Tatiana. We were named after Olga and Tatiana from the play Evgeny Onegin. We were so close, we shared rooms in the Alexander Palace, Peterhof Palace, Livadia Palace, our yacht, and, well, everywhere! In 1899 we were joined by sweet Maria, and in 1901 naughty Anastasia arrived. Although she loved us all very much, Mama was dismayed she didn't have a son to hold up the dynasty. Finally, we were joined by our brother Alexei in 1904. Although we had our squabbles as children we're all quite close. We call ourselves an acronym--OTMA--which we sign cards and whatnot for our many relatives, and it just goes to show how united we all are! Being the oldest, one would expect me to take the seat of authority with the little ones, but I most certainly don't hold that title, for Tatiana does. In fact, they call her The Governess.
 "Olga was perhaps the cleverest of them all, her mind being so quick to grasp ideas, so absorbent of knowledge that she learned almost without application or close study. Her chief characteristics, I should say, were a b will and a singularly straightforward habit of thought and action. Admirable qualities in a woman, these same characteristics are often trying in childhood, and Olga as a little girl sometimes showed herself willful and even disobedient. She had a hot temper which, however, she early learned to keep under control, and had she been allowed to live her natural life she would, I believe, have become a woman of influence and distinction."
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In the schoolroom, our tutors generally think of me as their best pupil, for learning is something I enjoy and not just slog through or completely ignore like my sisters and brother. In his memoirs, our French tutor Pierre Gilliard wrote I "possessed a remarkably quick brain" and I "had good reasoning powers as well as initiative". I am especially fond of reading--novels, plays, and poetry are among my favorites--and, when the mood strikes, I write poetry. Our poor Mama could sometimes find books missing and trace them right back to me, where I would tell her that she would have to wait, because I had to find out if it was proper for her to read. I also enjoyed critiquing others' work, including the son of Mama's physician, Dr. Botkin; jokingly, I called the doctor a "deep well of profound ideas" and thus addressed him in letters as "Dear Well".
There are many who say I am much like my father, as well as my mother, although I'm inclined to believe the former. I certainly see we look enough alike, although I have blonde hair; one wonders how in the world I got it, seeing as everyone has brown or dark hair in our family. I have cornflower blue eyes and the funny little Romanov nose that I call "my humble snub". I don't care much for appearances, although I think I could say I'm sort of pretty. Many say I am quite graceful and a good dancer and rider; both of those I enjoy very much. I am the colonel-in-chief of the 8th Elizavetgradsky Hussars, and often accompany Papa on military reviews in my uniform.
Among the sisters, I am the "disagreeable one," so to speak. I am terribly moody and sometimes bossy to my sisters. I often fight with Mama for we don't see eye-to-eye, and have to be calmed by dear, patient Tatiana. I am a sensitive person, sometimes too sensitive I think, and even the smallest thing--the wrong word, the wrong look--can make me cross and upset. However, don't think I'm all dull and serious and depressed; quite on the contrary! "She had great charm, and could be the merriest of the merry," wrote our friend Sophia (Isa) Buxhoeveden, and although I'm not so sure about how charming I am (I'm quite the good talker, though; people seem amused at my anecdotes!), I enjoy having fun. As a little girl I was very silly, much like Anastasia, and went around playing every imaginable prank on our poor tutors. As I got older I found myself ready to have any sort of amusement, as noted in a letter I sent to Papa in 1915 where Anastasia and I had locked one of the daughters of a lady-in-waiting in the water closet since she was quite the nasty little brat and had got me quite fed up!
"Olga was by nature a thinker and, as it later seemed to me, understood the general situation better than any member of her family, including even her parents. At least I had the impression that she had little illusions in regard to what the future held in store for them, and in consequence was often sad and worried. But there was a sweetness about her which prevented her from affecting anybody in a depressing manner, even when she herself felt depressed; she alone appeared to see clearly the tragic future." |
My sisters and I donated our modest allowance (about ten American dollars) to charities: to help orphanages, churches, hospitals, things that really matter. I once paid for a crippled child's medical treatment when I came into my fortune in 1916, when I turned twenty-one, and paid for the little girl's home since she also lived with her parents and grandparents and siblings, the poor thing. We are all very interested in helping as much as we can. Being a grand duchess, I was expected to attend functions and parties, although I did not due to the fact that Papa and Mama hated them, and that there weren't many to go around in the first place; we weren't welcome in the sociable circle much. Besides that, I was also expected to make myself a grand marriage: Edward (we all called him David), the Prince of Wales, was supposedly interested and our parents approved the match, but he was too busy getting shot at during the War, and it has been said that my cousin, Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich, was as well, along with Prince Carol of Romania and Grand Duke Boris Vladimirovich (how revolting!). I greatly wished for marriage and children, but it just wasn't to be. I was supposed to make my grand debut in 1914, but fate got in the way.
So in 1914 Papa went off to war, and Mama, Tatiana and I donned Red Cross nursing uniforms. We studied for two months for an exhausting exam, and the first day there we saw death and suffering first hand. It was a horrifying experience and terribly sad when one of these brave young men died, but it was rewarding when we could help someone overcome their wounds and rise up on their hospital beds from pain and terror. To cheer the soldiers up, we often held concerts in the Catherine Palace Hospital where we went every day, and I played the piano for them. The Little Pair and Alexei sometimes came to visit and laugh with the men, but I soon found myself stressed, nervous and anemic as the war dragged on. I had no stomach for blood, surgery and death, unlike Mama and Tanya who seemed born nurses. I took to the wards and just washed, cleaned and encouraged, taking no more part in surgeries where death on the operating table was a common occurance. All we saw forced the frivolous, moody Olga away and left in it's stead a shadow of the former Olga--an adult, a woman forced to grow up--who understood too much of the world Mama and Papa did not want us to see. They were not infallible in my eyes--eyes that were no longer a child's.
When the revolution came to Russia, we were all abed with the measles. The disease struck Maria and me the hardest; she had to be in bed with oxygen as she had double pneumonia on top of it, and I was almost blind for a period of time, as well as having peritonitis--the inflammation of the membrane around my abdomen. Alexei, thank the Lord, came through his measles fine. Papa came home, and was no longer tsar. I had to write it down for Tatiana, who couldn't hear due to the disease. We were given medication which eventually made out hair fall out. So Mama decided to have our heads shaved. As if we didn't have to suffer enough humiliation with Soviet guards constantly around!
Finally we were all allowed outside, and we began building a kitchen garden, believing we would be staying at our dear Alexander Palace through winter. We hoped we would get to England or, better yet, to our beloved Crimean estate called Livadia, where I had my coming out ball six years earlier. We were instead shipped like cattle to Siberia--Tobolsk, to be precise. Life there wasn't utterly horrible, although we all wished we could at least walk outside the gates that went 'round the house we all lived in. Everything got worse when, in November, we heard the news of a new revolution...the one where the Bolsheviks over-ran the weak Provisional Government and had taken control of our country. That sealed our fate.
"Her beautiful, gentle hands handle any job with ease and cleverness. She is so fragile and gentle as she bends with particular love and care over every soldier's shirt that she sews. Her musical voice, her graceful movements, her lovely, thin little figure--it is the essense of femininity and friendliness. She is so bright and joyful." |
Red Guards were ordered to take over our house; we had befriended the previous soldiers at Tobolsk with no one else to talk to. These men didn't seem too interested in our semi-friendly overtures. They told Papa and Mama that we all had to go to Moscow, but mainly our parents. Mama stressed over which one of us she should take, until Tatiana told her she must decide. She picked Maria, telling us I needed to take care of Alexei who had hurt himself yet again, and Tatiana needed to watch the household and be in charge. Anastasia was too young to be taken into account at sixteen. We bid tearful goodbyes, and were stunned when we heard they were taken to a house in Ekaterinburg, captured by the wild Ural Soviets. We all joined them weeks later.
Maria wasn't wrong when she wrote in her letter that things were terrible. Although we were together, our suffering increased tenfold, only comforted by the fact we were again one united family although the pressures of imprisonment weighed heavily on our minds. Some of the soldiers were my age and younger, caught up in the fervor of the Revolution and not so bad, but others were older and much more concerned with making us suffer. While my sisters socialized with the young men, I remained aloof and ignored them, too preoccupied with my thoughts and honestly too upset to even contemplate talking to those who helped bring down the Russia we knew.
According to one of these young soldiers in Ekaterinburg, I would often stand "gazing sadly into the distance making it easy to read [her] emotions"; the same man said I "was thin, pale and looked very ill". Another wrote that I preferred to be alone, away from my younger sisters; their attempts at being jovial made my heart break. I will be honest and say their attempts at flirting with these men who were our enemy infuriated me, and I didn't spend much time with Maria or Anastasia, who were the friendliest of us all. The nastier soldiers removed our doors and prowled about at night, watched us as we went to the lavatory, and wrote cruel things on the walls and forced us to play and sing revolutionary songs. In this sometimes oppressive and frightening environment, we trusted our lives in the hands of God, and Mama told me to wait for what He had in store for us in silence. He gives us suffering and then He delivers us from it and by suffering, we will be in Heaven; all this our mother told us. No, it wasn't the pleasantest thing to hear, but I had somewhat resigned myself to some awful fate. Here is a prayer I wrote in my diary during these months.
Give patience, Lord to us, Thy Children,
In these dark stormy days to bear
The persecution of our people,
The tortures falling to our shores.
Give strength, Just God, to us who need it,
The persecutors to forgive,
Our heavy, painful cross to carry
And Thy great meekness to achieve.
When we are plundered and insulted,
In days of mutinous unrest
We turn for help to Thee, Christ Savior,
That we may stand the bitter test.
Lord of the world, God of Creation,
Give us Thy blessing through our prayer
Give peace of heart to us, O Master,
This hour of utmost dread to bear.
And on the threshold of the grave,
Breathe power divine into our clay
That we, Thy children, may find strength
In meekness for our foes to pray.
I drew my strength from hymns, the Bible, from my prayers and in the end, we were all rewarded for our suffering and made Holy Imperial Martyrs by the Russian Orthodox Church.

In the What If? storyline...
On 15 April 1921, I was married (much against my own wishes) to Edward, the Prince of Wales, in quite the grand ceremony at St. Paul's Cathedral. It was a political match, thought by Papa and the Russian government as quite good for Russia since then they'd have a Grand Duchess as Queen-Empress in due time. Of course, the King and Queen seemed to like it since David (that's what we all call him en famille) is finally settled down--but their government didn't, thinking me narrow-minded since Papa was once an autocrat and some even wondering if I could speak English! Both mine and the government's protests meant little since here I am, taking up residence in London at Marlborough House (which is quite a nice place) and also taking care of my baby. Yes, I'm a mother! It is rather strange. On 22 January 1922 I gave birth to a little girl who we have decided to name Catherine; her full name is Catherine Alexandra Mary Victoria Anna (Anna for poor Anastasia who was not allowed to come when I gave birth to her; the other names are quite obvious as to who they are in honour of!). She came a few weeks early and caused quite a fuss, also taking so very long to get here once she announced she would be coming soon! We cannot tell who she looks like but it looks as if she has sadly inherited David's pointy short nose which is worse than my snub!My marriage is not exactly the greatest one that you can think of; the two of us were certainly not meant to be, we fight often and are so very different in everything so we cannot possibly see eye-to-eye, nor can I talk to him about books and music as I would like. The only thing we have in common are our awful tempers and Kate, who he dotes on incessantly. It's quite a sad state of affairs, my marriage, which keeps me quite melancholy most of the time...either that or terribly angry!
During the war we had corresponded a fair bit and by the time we visited England in 1920, I realized that my little cousin had grown up to be a handsome and apparently nice young man who seemed to like me. I fancied myself a little in love with him and apparently he did too, since he proposed and I accepted! Of course, this was all before I had known his more irritating personality traits which is what makes me miserable. Mama and Papa were pleased, as were his parents, since it was all their idea in the first place! At least Mama and Papa wanted me to at least feel vague affection for him, but nonetheless, it is what I feared would happen to me: an arranged marriage. I've got to make the best of it, I suppose. For our honeymoon we spent a few months in India, that was quite fun and terribly interesting, representing the British Empire there (needless to say most Indians couldn't give a whit about us!). I've been well-received into my new family though I drive the Queen crazy since I don't keep my mouth shut when I want to tell people what I think of them. She's very stiff, and the King who seems to despise his sons seems to adore me for some strange reason! Perhaps it's because he fancies himself Papa's "dear cousin". He also adores his little grand-daughter.
My darling little Kate is growing and is already one year old. She looks like a nice mix of myself and David, with his hair and certainly my dark blue Romanov eyes. David gloats that she will be so beautiful and we will have to murder any man who comes near her. Despite not being such a wonderful husband he is an attentive and doting father and we spend much time together helping her toddle around or encourage her to talk. She's going to turn into one spoiled little child, I'll tell you that! One nagging problem is everyone asking us about a second child, something I don't want until Katie is older. We don't seem to be as lucky like Maria and Ivashko...
As you probably know, two of my sisters are married--and it seems only Maria is truly happy with her husband! Tatiana married in 1919 Prince Christopher of Greece, who is a kindly sort who intended to propose to me in 1914! He's quite funny and is wonderful for four-hand on the piano, something Tatiana is not interested in at all. I feel bad for her but do not see why she has to be so difficult; she agreed to marry him only because she would still be near Mama and would not have to go to Greece very often...which they most certainly don't! In 1920, while we were on our American visit, she had her little girl Alexandra, whom we all call Sandra; she was named for our Mama and Christo's sister who died in 1891. Tanya has a son Mikhail, or Mikhos or Misha or whatever one wants to call him. He's much like Christopher with his big ears and is quite a darling, while Sandra is loud and haughty like her mama. Tanya is now the Queen of Lithuania and I am sure she shall become quite a star; she is already wishing to do a lot of charity work and create a branch of the Red Cross, schools, all sorts of wonderful things I hope to do when I become Queen of England.
Maria in 1918, not even nineteen, married her 'soldier boyfriend' we'd all teased her about--Ivashko Tarkhan, elevated to a Count since it'd make him look more proper--and is so happy one can't help but smile at the two of them! Admittedly I'm quite jealous. They have three children: Natalia, Nikolai and Grigory.She probably won't get her twenty, but they're sure working on their brood, aren't they?
Anastasia is now married, can you believe that? Her husband is the tall, dashing and quite intelligent Crown Prince Leopold of Belgium. Tanya must be insanely jealous, with the oldest and youngest to be Queens! They make each oter happy, which is utterly hilarious considering how mis-matched they are, just about as much as David and I are. She seems to lighten him up, and he's a good calming influence on her and I can tell they very much adore each other. She just had her first child, a baby boy they named Philippe. Perhaps motherhood will smooth out her rough edges, but I don't think so.
Alexei is courting Elizabeth of Greece, a cousin of ours through both of her parents. She's a lovely, quiet girl with a sweet, gentle disposition that is good for Baby. We'll see what becomes of this, as no one seems to be in any rush to marry them off except Elizabeth's mother and grandmother!
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