Part 1 (1/2)
Secret Memoirs: The Story of Louise, Crown Princess.
by Henry W. Fischer.
THIS BOOK AND ITS PURPOSE
By Henry W. Fischer
Of Memoirs that are truly faithful records of royal lives, we have a few; the late Queen Victoria led the small number of crowned autobiographists only to discourage the reading of self-satisfied royal ego-portrayals forever, but in the Story of Louise of Saxony we have the main life epoch of a Cyprian Royal, who had no inducement to say anything false and is not afraid to say anything true.
For the Saxon Louise wrote not to guide the hand of future official historiographers, or to make virtue distasteful to some sixty odd grand-children, bored to death by the recital of the late ”Mrs. John Brown's” sublime goodness:--Louise wrote for her own amus.e.m.e.nt, even as Pepys did when he diarized the peccadilloes of the Second Charles'
English and French ”hures” (which is the estimate these ladies put upon themselves).[1]
The ex-Crown Princess of Saxony suffered much in her youth by a narrow-minded, bigoted mother, a s.a.d.i.s.t like the monstrous Torquemada; marriage, she imagined, spelled a rich husband, more lover than master; freedom from tyranny, paltry surroundings, interference. To her untutored mind, life at the Saxon Court meant right royal splendor, liberty to do as one pleases, the companions.h.i.+p of agreeable, amusing and ready-to-serve friends.
_The Sad Saxon Court_
Her experience? Instead of the Imperial mother who took delight in cutting her children's faces with diamonds and exposing her daughters to the foul machinations of worthless teachers--she acquired a father-in-law (Prince, afterwards King George) whose pretended affection was but a share of his all-encompa.s.sing hatred, whose breath was a serpent's, whose veins were flowing with gall; the supposed chevaleresque husband turned out a walking dictionary of petty indecencies and gross vulgarities when in a favorable mood, a brawler at other times, a coward always.
As to money--Louise wished for nothing better ”than to be an American multi-millionaire's daughter for a week”! Amus.e.m.e.nts were few and frowned upon.
Liberty? None outside of a general permit to eat, drink and couple like animals in pasture, was recognized or tolerated. Nor could the royal young woman make friends. Her relatives-by-marriage were mostly freaks, and all were unbearable; her entourage a collection of spies and flunkeys.
If charity-bazaars, pious palaver, and orphaned babies' diapers had not been the sole topic of conversation at court; if there had been intellectual enjoyment of any kind, Louise might never have taken up her pen. As it was: ”This Diary is intended to contain my innermost thoughts, my ambitions, my promises for the future, _Myself_. * * *
These pages are my Father-Confessor. I confess to myself. * * * And as I start in writing letters to myself, it occurs to me that my worse self may be corresponding with my better self, or vice-versa.”
At any rate she thinks ”this Diary business will be quite amusing.”
_Louise's Amusing Writings_
It is. The world always laughs at the--husband of a woman whose history isn't one long yawn.
Nor is Louise content with a bust picture.[2] She gives full length portraits of herself, family, friends, enemies, and lovers, which latter she picks hap-hazard among commoners and the n.o.bility. Only one of them was a prince of the blood, and he promptly proved the most false and dishonorable of the lot.
When Louise's pen-pictures do not deal with her _amororos_, they focus invariably emperors and princes, kings and queens,--contemporary personages whose acquaintance, by way of the newspapers and magazines, we all enjoy to the full, as ”stern rulers,” ”sacrificers to the public weal,” ”martyrs of duty,” ”indefatigable workers,” ”examples of abstinence,” and ”high-mindedness”--everything calculated to make life a burden to the ordinary mortal.
_Kings in Fiction and in Reality_
But kings and emperors, we are told by these _distant_ observers, are built that way; they would not be happy unless they made themselves unhappy for their people's sake. And as to queens and empresses,--they simply couldn't live if they didn't inspect their linen closets daily, stand over a broiling cook-stove, or knit socks for the offspring of inebriated bricklayers ”and sich.”
Witness Louise, Imperial and Royal Highness, Archd.u.c.h.ess of Austria, Princess of Hungary and Tuscany, Crown Princess of Saxony, etc., etc., smash these paper records of infallible royal rect.i.tude, and superhuman, almost inhuman, royal probity!
Had she castigated her own kind _after_ royalty unkenneled her, neck and crop, her story might admit of doubt, but she wrote these things while in the full enjoyment of her rank and station, before her t.i.tle as future queen was ever questioned or menaced.
Her Diary finishes with her last night in the Dresden palace. We do not hear so much as the clatter of the carriage wheels that carried her and ”Richard” to her unfrocking as princess of the blood,--in short, our narrator is not prejudiced, on the defensive, or soured by disfranchis.e.m.e.nt. She had no axes to grind while writing; for her all kings dropped out of the clouds; the l.u.s.tre that surrounds a king never dimmed while her Diary was in progress, and before she ceases talking to us she never ”ate of the fish that hath fed of that worm that hath eat of a king.”