<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<br/>
<h1>LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE</h1>
<h1>COURTS OF EUROPE</h1>
<h3>BY</h3>
<h2>THORNTON HALL, F.S.A.,</h2>
<h3>Barrister-at-Law,<br/> </h3>
<br/>
<h3>Author of "Love romancies of the Aristocracy", <br/> </h3>
<h3>"Love intrigues of Royal Courts", etc., etc.</h3>
<hr style="width: 65%;">
<h3>TO</h3>
<h3>MY COUSIN,</h3>
<h3>LENORE</h3>
<hr style="height: 2px; width: 45%;">
<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
<p><br/></p>
I. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_I">A COMEDY QUEEN</SPAN><br/>
II. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_II">THE "BONNIE PRINCE'S" BRIDE</SPAN><br/>
III. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_III">THE PEASANT AND THE EMPRESS</SPAN><br/>
IV. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IV">A CROWN THAT FAILED</SPAN><br/>
V. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_V">A QUEEN OF HEARTS</SPAN><br/>
VI. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VI">THE REGENT'S DAUGHTER</SPAN><br/>
VII. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VII">A PRINCESS OF MYSTERY</SPAN><br/>
VIII. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VIII">THE KING AND THE "LITTLE DOVE"</SPAN><br/>
IX. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IX">THE ROMANCE OF THE BEAUTIFUL SWEDE</SPAN><br/>
X. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_X">THE SISTER OF AN EMPEROR</SPAN><br/>
XI. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XI">A SIREN OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY</SPAN><br/>
XII. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XII">THE CORSICAN AND THE CREOLE</SPAN><br/>
XIII. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIII">THE ENSLAVER OF A KING</SPAN><br/>
XIV. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIV">AN EMPRESS AND HER FAVOURITES</SPAN><br/>
XV. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XV">A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY CINDERELLA</SPAN><br/>
XVI. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVI">BIANCA, GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY</SPAN><br/>
XVII. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVII">RICHELIEU, THE ROUÉ</SPAN><br/>
XVIII. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS</SPAN><br/>
XIX. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIX">THE INDISCRETIONS OF A PRINCESS—<i>continued</i></SPAN><br/>
XX. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XX">THE LOVE-AFFAIRS OF A REGENT</SPAN><br/>
XXI. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXI">A DELILAH OF THE COURT OF FRANCE</SPAN><br/>
<SPAN name="Page_-1"></SPAN>XXII. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXII">THE "SUN-KING" AND
THE WIDOW</SPAN><br/>
XXIII. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">A THRONED BARBARIAN</SPAN><br/>
XXIV. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">A FRIEND OF MARIE ANTOINETTE</SPAN><br/>
XXV. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXV">THE RIVAL SISTERS</SPAN><br/>
XXVI. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">THE RIVAL SISTERS—<i>continued</i></SPAN><br/>
XXVII. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">A MISTRESS OF INTRIGUE</SPAN><br/>
XXVIII. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE</SPAN><br/>
XXIX. <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE—<i>continued</i></SPAN><br/>
<hr style="width: 65%;">
<br/>
<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
<br/>
<p><SPAN href="#img001">BIANCA CAPELLO BONAVENTURA GRAND DUCHESS OF TUSCANY</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#img002">CATHERINE THE SECOND OF RUSSIA</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#img003">COUNT GREGORY ORLOFF</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#img004">DESIRÉE CLARY</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#img005">JOSEPHINE DE BEAUHARNAIS, EMPRESS (BY PRUD'HON)</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#img006">LOLA MONTEZ, COUNTESS OF LANDSFELD</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#img007">LUDWIG I., KING OF BAVARIA</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#img008">FRANCESCO I., GRAND DUKE OF TUSCANY</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#img009">CAROLINE OF BRUNSWICK, WIFE OF GEORGE IV</SPAN><br/>
<br/></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;">
<br/>
<h2><SPAN name="Page_1"></SPAN>LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE COURTS</h2>
<h2>OF EUROPE</h2>
<br/>
<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
<SPAN name="CHAPTER_I"></SPAN>
<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
<h2>A COMEDY QUEEN</h2>
<br/>
<p>"It was to a noise like thunder, and close clasped in
a soldier's embrace, that Catherine I. made her first
appearance in Russian history."</p>
<p>History, indeed, contains few chapters more
strange, more seemingly impossible, than this which
tells the story of the maid-of-all-work—the red-armed,
illiterate peasant-girl who, without any dower
of beauty or charm, won the idolatry of an Emperor
and succeeded him on the greatest throne of Europe.
So obscure was Catherine's origin that no records
reveal either her true name or the year or place of
her birth. All that we know is that she was cradled
in some Livonian village, either in Sweden or
Poland, about the year 1685, the reputed daughter of
a serf-mother and a peasant-father; and that her
numerous brothers and sisters were known in later
years by the name Skovoroshtchenko or Skovronski.
The very Christian name by which she is
<SPAN name="Page_2"></SPAN>known to history was not hers until it was given
to
her by her Imperial lover.</p>
<p>It is not until the year 1702, when the future
Empress of the Russias was a girl of seventeen, that
she makes her first dramatic appearance on the stage
on which she was to play so remarkable a part.
Then we find her acting as maid-servant to the
Lutheran pastor of Marienburg, scrubbing his floors,
nursing his children, and waiting on his resident
pupils, in the midst of all the perils of warfare.
The Russian hosts had for weeks been laying siege
to Marienburg; and the Commandant, unable to
defend the town any longer against such overwhelming
odds, had announced his intention to blow up
the fortress, and had warned the inhabitants to
leave the town.</p>
<p>Between the alternatives of death within the walls
and the enemy without, Pastor Glück chose the
latter; and sallying forth with his family and maid-servant,
threw himself on the mercy of the Russians
who promptly packed him off to Moscow a prisoner.
For Martha (as she seems to have been known in
those days) a different fate was reserved. Her red
lips, saucy eyes, and opulent figure were too seductive
a spoil to part with, General Shérémétief
decided, and she was left behind, a by no means
reluctant hostage.</p>
<p>Peter's soldiers, now that victory was assured, were
holding high revel of feasting and song and dancing.
They received the new prisoner literally with open
arms, and almost before she had wiped the tears
from her eyes, at parting from her nurslings, she
<SPAN name="Page_3"></SPAN>was capering gaily to the music of hautboy and
fiddle,
with the arm of a stalwart soldier round her waist.</p>
<p>"Suddenly," says Waliszewski, "a fearful explosion
overthrew the dancers, cut the music short, and
left the servant-maid, fainting with terror, in the arms
of a dragoon."</p>
<p>Thus did Martha, the "Siren of the Kitchen,"
dance her way into Russian history, little dreaming,
we may be sure, to what dizzy heights her nimble feet
were to carry her. For a time she found her pleasure
in the attentions of a non-commissioned officer,
sharing the life of camp and barracks and making
friends by the good-nature which bubbled in her,
and which was always her chief charm. When her
sergeant began to weary of her, she found a humble
place as laundry-maid in the household of Menshikoff,
the Tsar's favourite, whose shirts, we are told,
it was her privilege to wash; and who, it seems, was
by no means insensible to the buxom charms of this
maid of the laundry. At any rate we find Menshikoff,
when he was spending the Easter of 1706 at
Witebsk, writing to his sister to send her to him.</p>
<p>But a greater than Menshikoff was soon to appear
on the scene—none other than the Emperor Peter
himself. One day the Tsar, calling on his favourite,
was astonished to see the cleanliness of his surroundings
and his person. "How do you contrive," he
asked, "to have your house so well kept, and to
wear such fresh and dainty linen?" Menshikoff's
answer was "to open a door, through which the
sovereign perceived a handsome girl, aproned, and
sponge in hand, bustling from chair to chair, and
<SPAN name="Page_4"></SPAN>going from window to window, scrubbing the
window-panes"—a vision of industry which made
such a powerful appeal to His Majesty that he
begged an introduction on the spot to the lady of
the sponge.</p>
<p>The most daring writer of fiction could scarcely
devise a more romantic meeting than this between
the autocrat of Russia and the red-armed, bustling
cleaner of the window-panes, and he would certainly
never have ventured to build on it the romance of
which it was the prelude. What it was in the young
peasant-woman that attracted the Emperor it is impossible
to say. Of beauty she seems to have had none—save
perhaps such as lies in youth and rude health.</p>
<p>We look at her portraits in vain to discover a trace
of any charm that might appeal to man. Her pictures
in the Romanof Gallery at St Petersburg show
a singularly plain woman with a large, round peasant-face,
the most conspicuous feature of which is a
hideously turned-up nose. Large, protruding eyes
and an opulent bust complete a presentment of the
typical household drudge—"a servant-girl in a
German inn." But Peter the Great, who was ever
abnormal in all his tastes and appetites, was always
more ready to make love to a woman of the people
than to the most beautiful and refined of his Court
ladies. His standard of taste, as of manners, has
not inaptly been likened to that of a Dutch sailor.</p>
<p>But whatever it was in the low-born laundry-woman
that attracted the Tsar of Russia, we know
that this first unconventional meeting led to many
others, and that before long Catherine (for we may
<SPAN name="Page_5"></SPAN>now call her by the name she made so famous) was
removed from his favourite's household and installed
in the Imperial harem where, for a time at least, she
seems to have shared her favours indiscriminately
between her old master and her new—"an obscure
and complaisant mistress"—until Menshikoff finally
resigned all rights in her to his sovereign.</p>
<p>When Catherine took up her residence in her new
home, Waliszewski tells us, "her eye shortly fell on
certain magnificent jewels. Forthwith, bursting into
tears, she addressed her new protector: 'Who put
these ornaments here? If they come from the other
one, I will keep nothing but this little ring; but if
they come from you, how could you think I needed
them to make me love you?'"</p>
<p>If Catherine lacked physical graces, this and many
another story prove that she had a rare gift of diplomacy.
She had, moreover, an unfailing cheerfulness
and goodness of heart which quickly endeared
her to the moody and capricious Peter. In his
frequent fits of nervous irritability which verged on
madness, she alone had the power to soothe him and
restore him to sanity. Her very voice had a magic
to arrest him in his worst rages, and when the fit of
madness (for such it undoubtedly was) was passing
away she would "take his head and caress it tenderly,
passing her fingers through his hair. Soon
he grew drowsy and slept, leaning against her breast.
For two or three hours she would sit motionless,
waiting for the cure slumber always brought him,
until at last he awoke cheerful and refreshed."</p>
<p>Thus each day the Livonian peasant-woman took
<SPAN name="Page_6"></SPAN>deeper root in the heart of the Emperor, until she
became indispensable to him. Wherever he went
she was his constant companion—in camp or on
visits to foreign Courts, where she was received with
the honours due to a Queen. And not only were
her presence and her ministrations infinitely pleasant
to him; her prudent counsel saved him from many a
blunder and mad excess, and on at least one occasion
rescued his army from destruction.</p>
<p>So strong was the hold she soon won on his affection
and gratitude that he is said to have married her
secretly within three years of first setting eyes on her.
Her future and that of the children she had borne
to him became his chief concern; and as early as
1708, when he was leaving Moscow to join his army,
he left behind him a note: "If, by God's will, anything
should happen to me, let the 3000 roubles
which will be found in Menshikoff's house be given
to Catherine Vassilevska and her daughter."</p>
<p>But whatever the truth may be about the alleged
secret marriage, we know that early in 1712, Peter,
in his Admiral's uniform, stood at the altar with the
Livonian maid-servant, in the presence of his Court
officials, and with two of her own little daughters as
bridesmaids. The wedding, we are told, was performed
in a little chapel belonging to Prince Menshikoff,
and was preceded by an interview with the
Dowager-Empress and his Princess sisters, in which
Peter declared his intention to make Catherine his
wife and commanded them to pay her the respect
due to her new rank. Then followed, in brilliant
sequence, State dinners, receptions, and balls, at all
<SPAN name="Page_7"></SPAN>of which the laundress-bride sat at her husband's
right hand and received the homage of his subjects
as his Queen.</p>
<p>Picture now the woman who but a few years earlier
had scrubbed Pastor Glück's floors and cleaned Menshikoff's
window-panes, in all her new splendours as
Empress of Russia. The portraits of her, in her
unaccustomed glories, are far from flattering and by
no means consistent. "She showed no sign of ever
having possessed beauty," says Baron von Pöllnitz;
"she was tall and strong and very dark, and would
have seemed darker but for the rouge and whitening
with which she plastered her face."</p>
<p>The picture drawn by the Margravine of Baireuth
is still less attractive: "She was short and huddled
up, much tanned, and utterly devoid of dignity or
grace. Muffled up in her clothes, she looked like a
German comedy-actress. Her old-fashioned gown,
heavily embroidered with silver, and covered with
dirt, had been bought in some old-clothes shop.
The front of her skirt was adorned with jewels,
and she had a dozen orders and as many portraits
of saints fastened all along the facings of her
dress, so that when she walked she jingled like
a mule."</p>
<p>But in the eyes of one man at least—and he
the greatest in all Russia—she was beautiful. His
allegiance never wavered, nor indeed did that of his
army, which idolised her to a man. She might have
no boudoir graces, but at least she was the typical
soldier's wife, and cut a brave figure, as she reviewed
the troops or rode at their head in her uniform and
<SPAN name="Page_8"></SPAN>grenadier cap. She shared all the hardships and
dangers of campaigns with a smile on her lips, sleeping
on the hard ground, and standing in the trenches
with the bullets whistling about her ears, and men
dropping to right and left of her.</p>
<p>Nor was there ever a trace of vanity in her. She
was as proud of her humble origin as if she had been
cradled in a palace. To princes and ambassadors
she would talk freely of the days when she was a
household drudge, and loved to remind her husband
of the time when his Empress used to wash shirts for
his favourite. "Though, no doubt, you have other
laundresses about you," she wrote to him once, "the
old one never forgets you."</p>
<p>The letters that passed between this oddly
assorted couple, if couched in terms which could
scarcely see print in our more restrained age, are
eloquent of affection and devotion. To Peter his
kitchen-Queen was "friend of my Heart," "dearest
Heart," and "dear little Mother." He complains
pathetically, when away with his army, "I am dull
without you—and there is nobody to take care of my
shirts." When Catherine once left him on a round
of visits, he grew so impatient at her absence that he
sent a yacht to bring her back, and with it a note:
"When I go into my rooms and find them deserted,
I feel as if I must rush away at once. It is all so
empty without thee."</p>
<p>And each letter is accompanied by a present—now
a watch, now some costly lace, and again a lock of
his hair, or a simple bunch of dried flowers, while she
returns some such homely gift as a little fruit or a
<SPAN name="Page_9"></SPAN>fur-lined waistcoat. On both sides, too, a vein of
jocularity runs through the letters, as when Catherine
addresses him as "Your Excellency, the very
illustrious and eminent Prince-General and Knight
of the crowned Compass and Axe"; and when
Peter, after the Peace of Nystadt, writes: "According
to the Treaty I am obliged to return all Livonian
prisoners to the King of Sweden. What is to
become of thee, I don't know." To which she
answers, with true wifely (if affected) humility: "I
am your servant; do with me as you will; yet I
venture to think you won't send <i>me</i> back."</p>
<p>Quite idyllic, this post-nuptial love-making between
the great Emperor and his low-born Queen,
who has so possessed his heart that no other woman,
however fair, could wrest it from her. And in her
exalted position of Empress she practised the same
diplomatic arts by which she had won Peter's devotion.
Politics she left severely alone; she turned a
forbidding back on all attempts to involve her in
State intrigues, but she was ever ready to protect
those who appealed to her for help, and to use her
influence with her husband to procure pardon or
lighter punishment for those who had fallen under
his displeasure.</p>
<p>Nor did she forget her poor relations in Livonia.
One brother, a postillion, she openly acknowledged,
introduced to her husband, and obtained a liberal
pension for him; and to her other brothers and
sisters she sent frequent presents and sums of
money. More she could not well do during her
husband's lifetime, but when she in turn came to
<SPAN name="Page_10"></SPAN>the throne, she brought the whole
family—postillion,
shoemaker, farm-labourer and serf, their wives and
families—to her capital, installed them in sumptuous
apartments in her palaces, decked them in the finest
Court feathers, and gave them large fortunes and
titles of nobility.</p>
<p>When the Tsar's quarrel with his eldest son came
to its tragic <i>dénouement</i> in Alexis' death, her own
son became heir presumptive to the throne of
Russia. And thus the chain that bound Peter to
his Empress received its completing link. It only
remained now to place the crown formally on the head
of the mother of the new heir, and this supreme
honour was hers in the month of May, 1729.</p>
<p>Wonderful tales are told of the splendours of
Catherine's coronation. No existing crown was
good enough for the ex-maid-of-all-work, so one of
special magnificence was made by the Court jewellers—a
miracle of diamonds and pearls, crowned by
a monster ruby—at a cost of a million and a half
roubles. The Coronation gown, which cost four
thousand roubles, was made at Paris; and from Paris,
too, came the gorgeous coach with its blaze of gold
and heraldry, in which the Tsarina made her triumphal
progress through the streets of the capital from
the Winter Palace. The culminating point of this
remarkable ceremony came when, after Peter had
placed the crown on his wife's head, she sank weeping
at his feet and embraced his knees.</p>
<p>Catherine, however, had not worn her crown many
months when she found herself in considerable
danger of losing not only her dignities but even her
<SPAN name="Page_11"></SPAN>liberty. For some time, it is said, she had been
engaged in a liaison with William Mons, a handsome,
gay young courtier, brother to a former mistress
of the Tsar. The love affair had been common
knowledge at the Court—to all but Peter himself,
and it was accident that at last opened his eyes to
his wife's dishonour. One moonlight night, so the
story is told, he chanced to enter an arbour in the
palace gardens, and there discovered her in the arms
of her lover.</p>
<p>His vengeance was swift and terrible. Mons
was arrested the same night in his rooms, and
dragged fainting into the Tsar's presence, where he
confessed his disloyalty. A few days later he was
beheaded, at the very moment when the Empress
was dancing a minuet with her ladies, a smile on her
lips, whatever grief was in her heart. The following
day she was driven by her husband past the scaffold
where her lover's dead body was exposed to public
view—so close, in fact, that her dress brushed against
it; but, without turning her head, she kept up a
smiling conversation with the perpetrator of this outrage
on her feelings.</p>
<p>Still not content with his revenge, Peter next
placed the dead man's head, enclosed in a bottle of
spirits of wine, in a prominent place in the Empress's
apartments; and when she still smilingly ignored
its horrible proximity, his anger, hitherto repressed,
blazed forth fiercely. With a blow of his strong fist
he shattered a priceless Venetian vase, shouting,
"Thus will I treat thee and thine"—to which she
calmly responded, "You have broken one of the
<SPAN name="Page_12"></SPAN>chief ornaments of your palace; do you think you
have increased its charm?"</p>
<p>For a time Peter refused to be propitiated; he
would not speak to his wife, or share her meals or
her room. But she had "tamed the tiger" many a
time before, and she was able to do it again. Within
two months she had won her way back into full
favour, and was once more the Tsar's dearest <i>Katiérinoushka.</i></p>
<p>A month later Peter was dead, carrying his love
for his peasant-Empress to the grave, and Catherine
was reigning in his stead, able at last to conduct her
amours openly—spending her nights in shameless
orgies with her lovers, and leaving the rascally
Menshikoff to do the ruling, until death brought her
amazing career to an end within sixteen months of
mounting her throne.</p>
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