The Empress remarked that not under a
monarchical government were high and noble impulses persecuted; not
there were the creations of intellect, poetry, and art contemned
and oppressed. On the other hand, monarchs alone were their
protectors. Shakespeare and Moliere flourished under their
magnanimous protection, while Dante could not find a corner in his
republican birthplace. She said that true geniuses arise at the
epoch of brilliancy and power in emperors and empires, but not in
the time of monstrous political apparitions and republican
terrorism, which, up to that time, had never given to the world a
single poet; that poet-artists should be marked out for favour,
since peace and divine quiet alone compose their minds, not
excitement and tumult; that learned men, poets, and all producers
of art are the pearls and diamonds in the imperial crown: by them
is the epoch of the great ruler adorned, and from them it receives
yet greater brilliancy.
"As the Empress uttered these words she was divinely beautiful
for the moment, and I remember old men who could not speak of the
occurrence without tears. All were interested in the affair. It
must be remarked, to the honour of our national pride, that in the
Russian's heart there always beats a fine feeling that he must
adopt the part of the persecuted. The dignitary who had betrayed
his trust was punished in an exemplary manner and degraded from his
post. But he read a more dreadful punishment in the faces of his
fellow-countrymen: universal scorn. It is impossible to describe
what he suffered, and he died in a terrible attack of raving
madness.
"Another striking example also occurred. Among the beautiful
women in which our northern capital assuredly is not poor, one
decidedly surpassed the rest. Her loveliness was a combination of
our Northern charms with those of the South, a gem such as rarely
makes its appearance on earth. My father said that he had never
beheld anything like it in the whole course of his life. Everything
seemed to be united in her, wealth, intellect, and wit. She had
throngs of admirers, the most distinguished of them being Prince
R., the most noble-minded of all young men, the finest in face, and
an ideal of romance in his magnanimous and knightly sentiments.
Prince R. was passionately in love, and was requited by a like
ardent passion.
"But the match seemed unequal to the parents. The prince's
family estates had not been in his possession for a long time, his
family was out of favour, and the sad state of his affairs was well
known to all. Of a sudden the prince quitted the capital, as if for
the purpose of arranging his affairs, and after a short interval
reappeared, surrounded with luxury and splendour. Brilliant balls
and parties made him known at court. The lady's father began to
relent, and the wedding took place. Whence this change in
circumstances, this unheard-of-wealth, came, no one could fully
explain; but it was whispered that he had entered into a compact
with the mysterious usurer, and had borrowed money of him. However
that may have been, the wedding was a source of interest to the
whole city, and the bride and bridegroom were objects of general
envy. Every one knew of their warm and faithful love, the long
persecution they had had to endure from every quarter, the great
personal worth of both. Ardent women at once sketched out the
heavenly bliss which the young couple would enjoy. But it turned
out very differently.
"In the course of a year a frightful change came over the
husband. His character, up to that time so noble, became poisoned
with jealous suspicions, irritability, and inexhaustible caprices.
He became a tyrant to his wife, a thing which no one could have
foreseen, and indulged in the most inhuman deeds, and even in
blows. In a year's time no one would have recognised the woman who,
such a little while before, had dazzled and drawn about her throngs
of submissive adorers. Finally, no longer able to endure her lot,
she proposed a divorce. Her husband flew into a rage at the very
suggestion. In the first outburst of passion, he chased her about
the room with a knife, and would doubtless have murdered her then
and there, if they had not seized him and prevented him. In a fit
of madness and despair he turned the knife against himself, and
ended his life amid the most horrible sufferings.
"Besides these two instances which occurred before the eyes of
all the world, stories circulated of many more among the lower
classes, nearly all of which had tragic endings.
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