<h2><SPAN name="Page_23"></SPAN>CHAPTER III</h2>
<h2>THE PEASANT AND THE EMPRESS</h2>
<br/>
Many an autocrat of Russia has shown a truly
sovereign contempt for convention in the choice of
his or her favourites, the "playthings of an hour";
and at least three of them have carried this contempt
to the altar itself.
<p>Peter, the first, as we have seen, offered a crown
to Martha Skovronski, a Livonian scullery-maid,
who succeeded him on the throne; the second
Catherine gave her hand as well as her heart to
Patiomkin, the gigantic, ill-favoured ex-sergeant of
cavalry; and Elizabeth, daughter of Peter and his
kitchen-Queen, proved herself worthy of her parentage
when she made Alexis Razoum, a peasant's son,
husband of the Empress of Russia. You will search
history in vain for a story so strange and romantic as
this of the great Empress and the lowly shepherd's
son, whom her love raised from a hovel to a palace,
and on whom one of the most amorous and fickle of
sovereign ladies lavished honours and riches and an
unwavering devotion, until her eyes, speaking their
love to the last, were closed in death.</p>
<p>It was in the humblest hovel of the village
<SPAN name="Page_24"></SPAN>of Lemesh that Alexis Razoum drew his first
breath
one day in 1709. His father, Gregory Razoum, was
a shepherd, who spent his pitiful earnings in drink—a
man of violent temper who, in his drunken rages,
was the terror not only of his home but of the entire
village. His wife and children cowered at his approach;
and on more than one occasion only accident
(or Providence) saved him from the crime of murder.
On one such occasion, we are told, the child Alexis,
who from his earliest years had a passion for reading,
was absorbed in a book, when his father, in ungovernable
fury, seized a hatchet and hurled it at
the boy's head. Luckily, the missile missed its mark,
and Alexis escaped, to find refuge in the house of a
friendly priest, who not only gave him shelter and
protection, but taught him to write, and, above all,
to sing—little dreaming that he was thus paving the
way which was to lead the drunken shepherd's lad
to the dizziest heights in Russia. For the boy had
a beautiful voice. When he joined the choir of his
village church, people flocked from far and near to
listen to the sweet notes that soared, pure and liquid
as a nightingale's song, above the rest. "It was,"
all declared, "the voice of an angel—and the face
of an angel," for Alexis was as beautiful in those days
as any child of picture or of dreams.</p>
<p>One day a splendidly dressed stranger chanced to
enter the Lemesh church during Mass—none other
than Colonel Vishnevsky, a great Court official, who
was on his way back to Moscow from a diplomatic
mission; and he listened entranced to a voice sweeter
than any he had ever heard. The service over, he
<SPAN name="Page_25"></SPAN>made the acquaintance of the young chorister,
interviewed
his guardian, the "good Samaritan" priest,
and persuaded him to allow the boy to accompany
him to the capital. Thus the shepherd's son took
weeping farewell of the good priest, of his mother,
and of his brothers and sisters; and a few weeks
later the Empress and her ladies were listening enchanted
to his voice in the Imperial choir at Moscow—but
none with more delight than the Princess
Elizabeth, daughter of Peter the Great, to whom
Alexis' beauty appealed even more strongly than his
sweet singing.</p>
<p>Elizabeth, true daughter of her father, had already,
young as she was, counted her lovers by the
score—lovers chosen indiscriminately, from Royal
princes to grooms and common soldiers. She was
already sated with the licence of the most dissolute
Court of Europe, and to her the young Cossack of
the beautiful face and voice, and rustic innocence,
opened a new and seductive vista of pleasure. She
lost her heart to him, had him transferred to her
own Court as her favourite singer, and, within a
few years, gave him charge of her purse and her
properties.</p>
<p>The shepherd's son was now not only lover-elect,
but principal "minister" to the daughter of an
Emperor, who was herself to wear the Imperial
crown. And while Alexis was thus luxuriating amid
the splendour of a Court, he by no means forgot the
humble relatives he had left behind in his native
village. His father was dead; his mother was reduced
for a time to such a depth of destitution that
<SPAN name="Page_26"></SPAN>she had to beg her bread from door to door. His
sisters had found husbands for themselves in their
own rank; and the favourite of an Imperial Princess
had for brothers-in-law a tailor, a weaver, and
a shepherd. When news came to Alexis of his
mother's destitution he had sent her a sum of money
sufficient to install her in comfort as an innkeeper:
the first of many kindnesses which were to work
a startling transformation in the fortunes of the
Razoum family.</p>
<p>Events now hurried quickly. The Empress Anna
died, and was succeeded on the throne by the infant
Ivan, her grand-nephew, who had been Emperor but
a few months when, in 1741, a <i>coup d'état</i> gave the
crown to Elizabeth, mistress of the Lemesh peasant.
Alexis was now husband in all but name of the
Empress of all the Russias; honours and riches
were showered on him; he was General, Grandmaster
of the Hounds, Chief Gentleman of the Bedchamber,
and lord of large estates yielding regal
revenues.</p>
<p>But all his grandeur was powerless to spoil the
man, who still remained the simple peasant who, so
many years earlier, had left his low-born mother
with streaming eyes. His great ambition now was
to share his good-fortune with her. She must
exchange her village inn for the luxuries and splendours
of a palace. And thus it was that one day
a splendid carriage, with gay-liveried postillions,
dashed up to the door of the Lemesh inn and carried
off the simple peasant woman, her youngest son,
Cyril, and one of her daughters, to the open-mouthed
<SPAN name="Page_27"></SPAN>amazement of the villagers. At the entrance to
the
capital she was received by a magnificently attired
gentleman, in whom she failed to recognise her son
Alexis, until he showed her a birthmark on his body.</p>
<p>Picture now the peasant-woman sumptuously
lodged in the Moscow palace, decked in all the finery
of silks and laces and jewels, receiving the respectful
homage of high Court officials, caressed and
petted by an Empress, while her splendid son looks
smilingly on, as proud of his cottage-mother as if she
were a Princess of the Blood Royal. That the innkeeper
was not happy in her gilded cage, that her
thoughts often wandered longingly to her cronies and
the simple life of the village, is not to be wondered at.</p>
<p>It was all very well for such a fine gentleman as
her son, Alexis; but for a poor, simple-minded
woman like herself—well, she was too old for such a
transplanting. And we can imagine her relief when,
on the removal of the Court to St Petersburg, she
was allowed to bring her visit to an end and to return
to her inn with wonderful stories of all she had seen.
Her son and daughter, however, elected to remain.
As for Cyril, a handsome youth, almost young
enough to be his brother's son, he was quick to win
his way into the favour of the Empress. Before he
had been many months at Court he was made
a Count and Gentleman of the Bedchamber. He
was given for bride a grand-niece of Elizabeth; and
at twenty-two he was Viceroy of the Ukraine, virtual
sovereign of a kingdom of his own, with his peasant-mother,
who declined to share his palace, comfortably
installed in a modest house near his gates.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_28"></SPAN>Cyril, in fact, was to his last day as
unspoiled by
his unaccustomed grandeur as his brother Alexis.
Each was ready at any moment to turn from the
obsequious homage of nobles to hobnob with a
peasant friend or relative. How utterly devoid of
false pride Alexis was is proved by the following
anecdote. One day when, in company with the
Empress, he was paying a visit to Count Löwenwolde,
he rushed from Elizabeth's side to fling his
arms round the neck of one of his host's footmen.
"Are you mad, Alexis?" exclaimed the Empress,
in her astonishment. "What do you mean by such
senseless behaviour?" "I am not mad at all,"
answered the favourite. "He is an old friend of
mine."</p>
<p>But although no man ever deposed the shepherd
from the first place in Elizabeth's favour, it must not
be imagined that he was her only lover. The daughter
of the hot-blooded Peter and the lusty scullery
wench had always as great a passion for men as the
second Catherine, who had almost as many favourites
in her boudoir as gowns in her wardrobes. She had
her lovers before she was emancipated from the
schoolroom; and not the least favoured of them, it is
said, was her own nephew, Peter the Second, whom
she would no doubt have married if it had been
possible.</p>
<p>She turned her back on one great alliance after
another, preferring her freedom to a wedding-ring
that brought no love with it; and she found her
pleasure alike among the gentlemen of the Court
and among her own servants. In the long list of her
<SPAN name="Page_29"></SPAN>favourites we find a General succeeded by a
Sergeant;
Boutourlin, the handsome courtier, giving
place to Lialin, the sailor; and Count Shouvalov
retiring in favour of Voytshinsky, the coachman.
Thus one liaison succeeded another from girlhood to
middle-age—indeed long after she had passed the
altar. But through all these varying attachments her
heart remained constant to her shepherd-lover, to
whom she was ever the devoted wife, and, when he
was ill, the tenderest of nurses. To please him, she
even accompanied him on a visit to his native village,
smiling graciously on his humble friends of other
days, and partaking of the hospitality of the
poorest cottagers; while on all who had befriended
him in the days of his obscurity she lavished her
favours.</p>
<p>Of one man who had been thus kind she made a
General on the spot; the friendly priest was given a
highly paid post at Court; high rank in the army
was given to many of his humble relatives; and a
husband was found for a favourite niece in Count
Ryoumin, the Chancellor's son.</p>
<p>As for Alexis himself, nothing was too good for
him. Although he had probably never handled a gun
in his life she made him Field-Marshal and head of
her army; and, at her request, Charles VII. dubbed
him Count of the Holy Roman Empire, a distinction
which Gregory Orloff in later years prized more than
all the honours Catherine II. showered on him; while
the estates of which she made him lord were a small
kingdom in themselves. Alexis, the shepherd's son,
was now, beyond any question, the most powerful
<SPAN name="Page_30"></SPAN>man in Russia. If he would, he might easily have
taken the sceptre from the yielding hands of the
Empress and played the autocrat, as Patiomkin
played it under similar circumstances in later years.
But Alexis cared as little for power as for rank and
wealth. He smiled at his honours. "Fancy," he
said, with his hearty laugh, "a peasant's son, a
Count; and a man who ought to be tending sheep, a
Field-Marshal!"</p>
<p>When courtly genealogists spread before him an
elaborate family-tree, proving that he sprang from
the princely stock of Bogdan, with many a Grand
Duke of Lithuania among his lineal ancestors, he
laughed loud and long at them for their pains.
"Don't be so ridiculous," he said. "You know as well
as I that my parents were simple peasants, honest
enough, but people of the soil and nothing else. If
I am Count and Field-Marshal and Viceroy, I owe
it all to the good heart of your Empress and mine,
whose humble servant I am. Take it away, and let
me hear no more of such foolery."</p>
<p>Such to the last was the unspoiled, child-like nature
of the man who so soon was to be not merely the
first favourite but husband of an Empress. Probably
Alexis would have lived and died Elizabeth's
unlicensed lover had it not been for the cunning of
the cleverest of her Chancellors, Bestyouzhev, who
saw in his mistress's infatuation for her peasant the
means of making his own position more secure.
Elizabeth was still a young and attractive woman,
who might pick and choose among some of the most
eligible suitors in Europe for a sharer of her throne;
<SPAN name="Page_31"></SPAN>for there were many who would gladly have
played consort to the good-looking autocrat of
Russia.</p>
<p>Such a husband, especially if he were a strong
man, might seriously imperil the Chancellor's position;
might even dispense with him altogether. On
the other hand, he was high in the favour of the
shepherd's son, who had such a contempt for power,
and who thus would be a puppet in his hands. Why
not make him husband in name as well as in fact?
It was, after all, an easy task the Chancellor thus set
himself. Elizabeth was by no means unwilling to
wear a wedding-ring for the man who had loved
her so loyally and so long; and any difficulties she
might raise were quickly disposed of by her father-confessor,
who was Bestyouzhev's tool. Thus it came
to pass that one day Elizabeth and Alexis stood side
by side before the village altar of Perovo; and the
words were spoken which made the shepherd's son
husband of the Empress. The secrecy with which
the ceremony was performed was but a fiction.
All the world knew that Alexis Gregorovitch
was Emperor by right of wedlock, and flocked to
pay homage to him in his new and exalted
character.</p>
<p>He now had sumptuous apartments next to those
of his wife; he sat at her right hand on all State occasions;
he was her shadow everywhere; and during
his frequent attacks of gout the Empress ministered
to him night and day in his own rooms with the
tender devotion of a mother to a child. Two children
were born to them, a son and a daughter, the latter
<SPAN name="Page_32"></SPAN>of whom, after a life of strange romance and
vicissitude,
ended her days in a loathsome dungeon of
the fortress of Saints Peter and Paul, the victim of
Catherine II.'s vengeance—miserably drowned, so
one story goes, by an inundation of her cell.</p>
<p>On Elizabeth's death, in the year 1762, her husband
was glad to retire from the Court in which he
had for so long played so splendid a part. "None
but myself," he said, "can know with what pleasure
I leave a sphere to which I was not born, and to
which only my love for my dear mistress made me
resigned. I should have been happier far with her
in some small cottage far removed from the gilded
slavery of Court life." He was happy enough now
leading the peaceful life of a country gentleman on
one of his many estates.</p>
<p>Catherine II. had mounted the throne of Russia—the
Empress who, according to Masson, had but two
passions, which she carried to the grave—"her love
of man, which degenerated into libertinage; and her
love of glory, which degenerated into vanity." A
woman with the brain of a man and the heart of
a courtesan, Catherine's fickle affection had flitted
from one lover to another, until now it had settled
on Gregory Orloff, the handsomest man in her
dominions, whom she was more than half disposed
to make her husband.</p>
<p>This was a scheme which commended itself
strongly to her Chancellor, Vorontsov. There was
a most useful precedent to lend support to it—the
alliance of the Empress Elizabeth with a man of
immeasurably lower rank than Catherine's favourite;
<SPAN name="Page_33"></SPAN>but it was important that this precedent should
be
established beyond dispute. Thus it was that one
day, when Count Alexis was poring over his Bible
by his country fireside, Chancellor Vorontsov made
his appearance with ingratiating words and promises.
Her Majesty, he informed the Count, was willing to
confer Imperial rank on him in return for one small
favour—the possession of the documents which
proved his marriage to her predecessor, Elizabeth.</p>
<p>On hearing the request, the ex-shepherd rose,
and, with words of quiet scorn, refused both the
request and the proffered honour. "Am not I," he
said, "a Count, a Field-Marshal, a man of wealth?
all of which I owe to the kindness of my dear,
dead mistress. Are not such honours enough
for the peasant's son whom she raised from the
mire to sit by her side, that I should purchase
another bauble by an act of treachery to her
memory?</p>
<p>"But wait one moment," he continued; and, leaving
the room, he returned carrying a small bundle of
papers, which he proceeded to examine one by one.
Then, collecting them, he placed the bundle in the
heart of the fire, to the horror of the onlooking Chancellor;
and, as the flames were reducing the precious
documents to ashes, he said, "Go now and tell those
who sent you, that I never was more than the slave
of my august benefactress, the Empress Elizabeth,
who could never so far have forgotten her position
as to marry a subject."</p>
<p>Thus with a lie on his lips—the last crowning evidence
of loyalty to his beloved Queen and wife—Alexis
<SPAN name="Page_34"></SPAN>Razoum makes his exit from the stage on
which he played so strangely romantic a part. A
few years later his days ended in peace at his
St Petersburg palace, with the name he loved best,
"Elizabeth," on his lips.</p>
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