<h2><SPAN name="Page_306"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
<h2>AN ILL-FATED MARRIAGE</h2>
<br/>
<p>Few Kings have come to their thrones under such
brilliant auspices as Milan I. of Servia; few have
abandoned their crowns to the greater relief of their
subjects, or have been followed to their exile by so
much hatred. But a fortnight before Milan's accession,
his cousin and predecessor, Prince Michael,
had been foully done to death by hired assassins as
he was walking in the park of Topfschider, with three
ladies of his Court; and the murdered man had been
placed in a carriage, sitting upright as in life, and
had been driven back to his palace through the
respectful greetings of his subjects, who little knew
that they were saluting a corpse.</p>
<p>There was good reason for this mockery of death,
for Prince Alexander Karageorgevitch had long set
ambitious eyes on the crown of Servia, and resolved
to wrest it by fair means or foul from the boy-heir to
the throne; and it was of the highest importance that
Michael's death, which he had so brutally planned,
should be concealed from him until the succession
had been secured to his young rival, Milan. And
thus it was that, before Karageorgevitch could bring
<SPAN name="Page_307"></SPAN>his plotting to the head of achievement, Milan
was
hailed with acclamation as Servia's new Prince, and,
on the 23rd June, 1868, made his triumphal entry
into Belgrade to the jubilant ringing of bells and the
thunderous cheers of the people.</p>
<p>Twelve days later, Belgrade was <i>en fête</i> for his
crowning, her streets ablaze with bunting and floral
decorations, as the handsome boy made his way
through the tumults of cheers and avenues of
fluttering handkerchiefs to the Metropolitan Church.
The men, we are told, "took off their cloaks and
placed them under his feet, that he might walk on
them; they clustered round him, kissing his garments,
and blessing him as their very own; they
worshipped his handsome face and loved his boyish
smile." And when his young voice rang clearly out
in the words, "I promise you that I shall, to my
dying day, preserve faithfully the honour and integrity
of Servia, and shall be ready to shed the last
drop of my blood to defend its rights," there was
scarcely one of the enthusiastic thousands that heard
him who would not have been willing to lay down his
life for the idolised Prince.</p>
<p>It was by strange paths that the fourteen-year-old
Milan had thus come to his Principality. The
son of Jefrenn Obrenovitch, uncle of the reigning
Michael, he was cradled one August day in 1854,
his mother being Marie Catargo, of the powerful
race of Roumanian "Hospodars," a woman of strong
passions and dissolute life. When her temper and infidelities
had driven her husband to the drinking that
put a premature end to his days, Marie transferred
<SPAN name="Page_308"></SPAN>her affection, without the sanction of a
wedding-ring,
to Prince Kusa, a man of as evil repute as
herself. In such a home and with such guardians
her only child, Milan, the future ruler of Servia,
spent the early years of his life—ill-fed, neglected,
and supremely wretched.</p>
<p>Thus it was that, when Prince Michael summoned
the boy to Belgrade, in order to make the acquaintance
of his successor, he was horrified to see an
uncouth lad, as devoid of manners and of education
as any in the slums of his capital. The heir to the
throne could neither read nor write; the only language
he spoke was a debased Roumanian, picked
up from the servants who had been his only associates,
while of the land over which he was to rule one
day he knew absolutely nothing. The only hope for
him was his extreme youth—he was at the time only
twelve years old—and Michael lost no time in
having him trained for the high station he was
destined to fill.</p>
<p>The progress the boy made was amazing. Within
two years he was unrecognisable as the half-savage
who had so shocked the Court of Belgrade.
He could speak the Servian tongue with fluency and
grace; he had acquired elegance of manners and
speech, and a winning courtesy of manner which to
his last day was his most marked characteristic; he
had mastered many accomplishments, and he excelled
in most manly exercises, from riding to swimming.
And to all this remarkable promise the
finishing touches were put by a visit to Paris under
the tutorship of a courtly and learned professor.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_309"></SPAN>Thus when, within two years of his
emancipation,
he came to his crown, the uncouth lad from Roumania
had blossomed into a Prince as goodly to look
on as any Europe could show—a handsome boy of
courtly graces and accomplishments, able to converse
in several languages, and singularly equipped in all
ways to win the homage of the simple people over
whom he had been so early called to rule. As
Mrs Gerard says, "They idolised their boy-Prince.
Every day they stood in long, closely packed lines
watching to see him come out of the castle to ride or
drive; as he passed along, smiling affectionately on
his people, blessings were showered on him. There
was, however, another side to this picture of devotion.
There were those who hated the boy because
he had thwarted their plans." And this hatred, as
persistent as it was malignant, was to follow him
throughout his reign, and through his years of
unhappy exile, to his grave.</p>
<p>But these days were happily still remote. After
four years of minority and Regency, when he was
able to take the reins of government into his own
hands, his empire over the hearts of his subjects
was more firmly based than ever. His youth, his
modesty, and his compelling charm of manner made
friends for him wherever his wanderings took him,
from Paris to Constantinople. He was the "Prince
Charming" of Europe, as popular abroad as he was
idolised at home; and when the time arrived to find
a consort for him he might, one would have thought,
have been able to pick and choose among the fairest
Princesses of the Continent.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_310"></SPAN>But handsome and gallant and popular as he
was,
the overtures of his ministers were coldly received
by one Royal house after another. Milan might be
a reigning Prince and a charming one to boot, but it
was not forgotten that the first of his line had been a
common herdsman, and the blood of Hapsburgs and
Hohenzollerns could not be allowed to mingle with
so base a strain. Even a mere Hungarian Count,
whose fair daughter had caught Milan's fancy,
frowned on the suit of the swineherd's successor.
But fate had already chosen a bride for the young
Prince, who was more than equal in birth to any
Count's daughter; who would bring beauty and
riches as her portion; and who, after many unhappy
years, was to crown her dower with tragedy.</p>
<p>It was at Nice, where Prince Milan was spending
the winter months of 1875, that he first set eyes on
the woman whose life was to be so tragically linked
with his own. Among the visitors there was the
family of a Russian colonel, Nathaniel Ketschko, a
man of high lineage and great wealth. He claimed,
in fact, descent from the Royal race of Comnenus,
which had given many a King to the thrones of
Europe, and whose sons for long centuries had won
fame as generals, statesmen, and ambassadors. And
to this exalted strain was allied enormous wealth, of
which the Colonel's share was represented by a regal
revenue of four hundred thousand roubles a year.</p>
<p>But proud as he was of his birth and his riches,
Colonel Nathaniel was still prouder of his two lovely
daughters, each of whom had inherited in liberal
measure the beauty of their mother, a daughter of
<SPAN name="Page_311"></SPAN>the princely house of Stourza; and of the two
the
more beautiful, by common consent, was Natalie,
whose charms won this spontaneous tribute from
Tsar Nicholas, when first he saw her, "I would I
were a beggar that I might every day ask your alms,
and have the happiness of kissing your hand." She
had, says one who knew her in her radiant youth,
"an irresistible charm that permeated her whole
being with such a harmony of grace, sweetness, and
overpowering attraction that one felt drawn to her
with magnetic force; and to adore her seemed the
most natural and indeed the only position."</p>
<p>Such was the high tribute paid to Servia's future
Queen at the first dawning of that beauty which was
to make her also Queen of all the fair women of
Europe, and which at its zenith was thus described
by one who saw her at Wiesbaden ten years or so
later: "She walked along the promenade with a
light, graceful movement; her feet hardly seemed to
touch the ground, her figure was elegant, her finely
cut face was lit up by those wonderful eyes, once
seen never forgotten—brilliant, tender, loving; her
luxuriant hair of raven black was loosely coiled
round the well-set head, or fell in curls on the beautifully
arched neck. For each one she had a pleasant
smile, a gracious bow, or a few words, spoken in a
musical voice." No wonder the Germans, who
looked at this apparition of grace and beauty,
"simply fell down and adored her."</p>
<p>Such was the vision of beauty of which Prince
Milan caught his first glimpse on the promenade at
Nice in the winter of 1875, and which haunted him,
<SPAN name="Page_312"></SPAN>day and night, until chance brought their paths
together again, and he won her consent to share his
throne. That such a high destiny awaited her,
Natalie had already been told by a gipsy whom she
met one day in the woods of her father's estate near
Moscow—a meeting of which the following story
is told.</p>
<p>At sight of the beautiful young girl the gipsy
stooped in homage and kissed the hem of her dress.
"Why do you do that?" asked Natalie, half in
alarm and half in pleasure. "Because," the woman
answered, "I salute you as the chosen bride of a
great Prince. Over your head I see a crown floating
in the air. It descends lower and lower until it
rests on your head. A dazzling brilliance adorns the
crown; it is a Royal diadem."</p>
<p>"What else?" asked Natalie eagerly, her face
flushed with excitement and delight. "Oh! do tell
me more, please!" "What more shall I say,"
continued the gipsy, "except that you will be a
Queen, and the mother of a King; but then—"</p>
<p>"But then, what? "exclaimed the eager and impatient
girl; "do go on, please. What then?" and
she held out a gold coin temptingly. "I see a large
house; you will be there, but—take care; you will
be turned out by force.... And now give me
the coin and let me go. More I must not tell you."</p>
<p>Such were the dazzling and mysterious words
spoken by the gipsy woman in the Russian forest, a
year or more before Natalie first saw the Prince who
was destined to make them true. But it was not at
Nice that opportunity came to Milan. It was an
<SPAN name="Page_313"></SPAN>accidental meeting in Paris, some months later,
that
made his path clear. During a visit to the French
capital he met a young Servian officer, a distant
kinsman, one Alexander Konstantinovitch, who
confided to him, over their wine and cigarettes, the
story of his infatuation for the daughter of a Russian
colonel, who at the time was staying with her aunt,
the Princess Murussi. He raved of her beauty and
her charm, and concluded by asking the Prince to
accompany him that he might make the acquaintance
of the Lieutenant's bride-to-be.</p>
<p>Arrived at their destination, the Prince and his
companion were graciously received by the Princess
Murussi, but Milan had no eyes for the dignified
lady who gave him such a flattering reception; they
were drawn as by a magnet to the girl by her side—"a
child with a woman's grace and an angel's soul
smiling in her eyes"; the incarnation of his dreams,
the very girl whose beauty, though he had caught
but one passing glimpse of it, had so intoxicated his
brain a few months earlier at Nice.</p>
<p>"Allow me," said the Lieutenant, "to introduce to
Your Highness Natalie Ketschko, my affianced wife."
Milan's face flushed with surprise and anger at the
words. What was this trick that had been played
on him? Had Konstantinovitch then brought him
here only to humiliate him? But before he could
recover from his indignation and astonishment, the
Princess said chillingly, "Pardon me, Monsieur
Konstantinovitch, you are not speaking the truth.
My niece, Colonel Ketschko's daughter, is not your
affianced wife. You are too premature."</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_314"></SPAN>Thus rebuffed, the Lieutenant was not
encouraged
to prolong his stay; and Milan was left, reassured,
to bask in the smiles of the Princess and her lovely
niece, and to pursue his wooing under the most
favourable auspices. This first visit was quickly
followed by others; and before a week had passed the
Prince had won the prize on which his heart was set,
and with it a dower of five million roubles. Now
followed halcyon days for the young lovers—long
hours of sweet communion, of anticipation of the
happy years that stretched in such a golden vista
before them. It was a love-idyll such as delighted
the romantic heart of Paris; and congratulations and
presents poured on the young couple; "the very
beggars in the streets," we are told, "blessing them
as they drove by."</p>
<p>"Happy is the wooing that is not long a-doing,"
and Milan's wooing was as brief as it was blissful.
He was all impatience to possess fully the prize he
had won; preparations for the nuptials were hastened,
but, before the crowning day dawned, once
more the voice of warning spoke.</p>
<p>A few days before the wedding, as Milan was
leaving the Murussi Palace, he was accosted by a
woman, who craved permission to speak to him, a
favour which was smilingly accorded. "I know
you," said the woman, thus permitted to speak,
"although you do not know me. You are the Prince
of Servia; I am a servant in the household of the
Princess Murussi. Your Highness, listen! I love
Natalie. I have known and loved her since she was
a child; and I beg of you not to marry her. Such a
<SPAN name="Page_315"></SPAN>union is doomed to unhappiness. You love to
rule,
to command. So does Natalie; and it is <i>she</i> who
will be the ruler. You are utterly unsuited for each
other, and nothing but great unhappiness can possibly
come from your union."</p>
<p>To this warning Milan turned a smiling face and
a deaf ear, as Natalie had done to the voice of the
gipsy. A fig for such gloomy prophecy! They
were ideally happy in the present, and the future
should be equally bright, however ravens might
croak. Thus, one October day in 1875, Vienna
held high holiday for the nuptials of the handsome
Prince and his beautiful bride; and it was through
avenues densely packed with cheering onlookers that
Natalie made her triumphal progress to the altar, in
her flower-garlanded dress of white satin, a tiara of
diamonds flashing from the blackness of her hair, no
brighter than the brilliance of her eyes, her face
irradiated with happiness.</p>
<p>That no Royalty graced their wedding was a
matter of no moment to Milan and Natalie, whose
happiness was thus crowned; and when at the
subsequent banquet Milan said, "I wish from my
very heart that every one of my subjects, as well as
everybody I know, could be always as happy as I am
this moment," none who heard him could doubt the
sincerity of his words, or see any but a golden future
for so ideal a union of hearts.</p>
<p>By Servia her young Princess was received with
open arms of welcome. "Her reception," we are
told, "was beyond description. The festivities
lasted three days, and during that time the love of
<SPAN name="Page_316"></SPAN>the people for their Prince, and their
admiration of
the beauty and charm of his bride, were beyond
words to describe." Never did Royal wedded life
open more full of bright promise, and never did
consort make more immediate conquest of the affections
of her husband's subjects. "No one could
have believed that this marriage, which was contracted
from love and love alone, would have ended
in so tragic a manner, or that hate could so quickly
have taken the place of love."</p>
<p>But the serpent was quick to show his head in
Natalie's new paradise. Before she had been many
weeks a wife, stories came to her ears of her husband's
many infidelities. Now the story was of one
lady of her Court, now of another, until the horrified
Princess knew not whom to trust or to respect.
Strange tales, too, came to her (mostly anonymously)
of Milan's amours in Paris, in Vienna, and half a
dozen of his other haunts of pleasure, until her love,
poisoned at its very springing, turned to suspicion
and distrust of the man to whom she had given
her heart.</p>
<p>Other disillusions were quick to follow. She discovered
that her husband was a hopeless gambler
and spendthrift, spending long hours daily at the
card-tables, watching with pale face and trembling
lips his pile of gold dwindle (as it usually did) to
its last coin; and often losing at a single sitting a
month's revenue from the Civil List. Her own
dowry of five million roubles, she knew, was safe
from his clutches. Her father had taken care to
make that secure, but Milan's private fortune, large
<SPAN name="Page_317"></SPAN>as it had been, had already been squandered in
this and other forms of dissipation; and even the
expenses of his wedding, she learned, had been
met by a loan raised at ruinous interest.</p>
<p>Such discoveries as these were well calculated to
shatter the dreams of the most infatuated of brides,
and less was sufficient to rouse Natalie's proud spirit
to rebellion. When affectionate pleadings proved
useless, reproaches took their place. Heated words
were exchanged, and the records tell of many violent
scenes before Natalie had been six months Princess
of Servia. "You love to rule," the warning voice
had told Milan—"to command. So does Natalie";
and already the clashing of strong wills and imperious
tempers, which must end in the yielding of one
or the other, had begun to be heard.</p>
<p>If more fuel had been needed to feed the flames of
dissension, it was quickly supplied by two unfortunate
incidents. The first was Milan's open dallying
with Fräulein S——, one of Natalie's maids-of-honour,
a girl almost as beautiful as herself, but with
the <i>beauté de diable</i>. The second was the appearance
in Belgrade of Dimitri Wasseljevitchca, who
was suspected of plotting to assassinate the Tsar.
Russia demanded that the fugitive should be given
up to justice, and enlisted Natalie's co-operation with
this object. Milan, however, was resolute not to
surrender the plotter, and turned a deaf ear to all
the Princess's pleadings and cajoleries. "The most
exciting scene followed. Natalie, abandoning entreaties,
threatened and even commanded her husband
to obey her"; and when threats and commands
<SPAN name="Page_318"></SPAN>equally failed, she gave way to a paroxysm of
rage
in which she heaped the most unbridled scorn and
contempt on her husband.</p>
<p>Thus jealousy, a thwarted will, and Milan's low
pleasures combined to widen the breach between the
Royal couple, so recently plighted to each other in
the sacred name of love, and to prepare the way for
the troubled and tragic years to come.</p>
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