summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--29167-8.txt9930
-rw-r--r--29167-8.zipbin0 -> 167310 bytes
-rw-r--r--29167-h.zipbin0 -> 414665 bytes
-rw-r--r--29167-h/29167-h.htm11095
-rw-r--r--29167-h/images/crown.jpgbin0 -> 38049 bytes
-rw-r--r--29167-h/images/fredaug.jpgbin0 -> 52862 bytes
-rw-r--r--29167-h/images/george.jpgbin0 -> 42844 bytes
-rw-r--r--29167-h/images/kingalbert.jpgbin0 -> 43195 bytes
-rw-r--r--29167-h/images/louisa.jpgbin0 -> 58111 bytes
-rw-r--r--29167.txt9930
-rw-r--r--29167.zipbin0 -> 167162 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
14 files changed, 30971 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/29167-8.txt b/29167-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fd27308
--- /dev/null
+++ b/29167-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9930 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Secret Memoirs: The Story of Louise, Crown
+Princess, by Henry W. Fischer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Secret Memoirs: The Story of Louise, Crown Princess
+
+Author: Henry W. Fischer
+
+Release Date: June 19, 2009 [EBook #29167]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SECRET MEMOIRS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Jane Hyland, Bill Tozier and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Secret Memoirs
+
+THE COURT OF ROYAL SAXONY
+
+1891-1902
+
+This edition, printed on Japanese vellum paper, is limited to two
+hundred and fifty copies.
+
+No. ________
+
+
+
+[Illustration: LOUISE, EX-CROWN-PRINCESS OF SAXONY
+
+Photo taken shortly before her flight from Dresden]
+
+Secret Memoirs
+
+THE COURT OF ROYAL SAXONY 1891-1902
+
+THE STORY OF LOUISE CROWN PRINCESS
+
+FROM THE PAGES OF HER DIARY, LOST AT THE TIME OF HER ELOPEMENT FROM
+DRESDEN WITH M. ANDRÉ ("RICHARD") GIRON
+
+BY HENRY W. FISCHER
+
+Author of "Private Lives of William II and His Consort," "Secret History
+of the Court of Berlin," etc., etc.
+
+Illustrated from Photographs
+
+BENSONHURST, NEW YORK FISCHER'S FOREIGN LETTERS, INC. PUBLISHERS
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1912
+BY HENRY W. FISCHER
+
+Copyright, 1912, applied for by Henry W. Fischer in Great Britain
+
+Copyright, 1912, by Henry W. Fischer, in Germany, France, Austria,
+Switzerland, and all foreign countries having international copyright
+arrangements with the United States
+
+[_All rights reserved, including those of translation_]
+
+
+
+
+EDITOR'S CARD
+
+
+This is to certify that the Ex-Crown Princess of Saxony, now called
+Countess Montiguoso, Madame Toselli by her married name, is in no way,
+either directly or indirectly, interested in this publication.
+
+There has been no communication of whatever nature, directly or through
+a third party, between this lady and the editor or publishers. In fact,
+the publication will be as much a surprise to her as to the general
+public.
+
+The Royal Court of Saxony, therefore, has no right to claim, on the
+ground of this publication, that Princess Louise violated her agreement
+with that court as set forth in the chapter on the _Kith and Kin of the
+ex-Crown Princess of Saxony_, under the heads of "_Louise's Alimony and
+Conditions_" and "_Allowance Raised and a Further Threat_."
+
+ HENRY W. FISCHER, _Editor_.
+ Fischer's Foreign Letters, Publishers
+
+
+
+
+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 amusement, 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 Sadist 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 companionship 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-encompassing 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"! Amusements 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 nobility. 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, Archduchess of Austria,
+Princess of Hungary and Tuscany, Crown Princess of Saxony, etc., etc.,
+smash these paper records of infallible royal rectitude, 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 title 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
+disfranchisement. She had no axes to grind while writing; for her all
+kings dropped out of the clouds; the lustre 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."
+
+Yet this large folio edition of _obscénités royale_, chock full, at the
+same time, of intensely human and interesting facts, notable and amusing
+things, as enthralling as a novel by Balzac,--Louise's life record in
+sum and substance, since her carryings-on _after_ she doffed her royal
+robes for the motley of the free woman are of no historical, and but
+scant human interest.
+
+The prodigality of the mass of indictments Louise launches against
+royalty as every-day occurrences, reminds one of the great Catharine
+Sforza, Duchess of Milan's clever _mot_. When the enemy captured her
+children she merely said, "I retain the oven for more."
+
+
+_Royal Scandals_
+
+Such scandalmongering! Only Her Imperial Highness doesn't see the
+obloquy,--sarcasm, cynicism and disparagement being royalty's every-day
+diet.
+
+Such gossiping! But what else was there to do at a court whose
+literature is tracts and whose theatre of action the drill grounds.
+
+But for all that, Louise's Diary is history, because its minute things
+loom big in connection with social and political results, even as its
+horrors and abnormalities help paint court life and the lives of kings
+and princes as they _are_, not as royalties' sycophants and apologizers
+would have us view them.
+
+There is a perfect downpour of books eulogizing monarchs and monarchy;
+royal governments spend millions of the people's money to uphold and
+aggrandize exalted kingship and seedy princeship alike; three-fourths of
+the press of Europe is swayed by king-worship, or subsidized to sing the
+praises of "God's Anointed," while in our own country the aping of
+monarchical institutions, the admiration for court life, the
+idealization of kings, their sayings, doings and pretended superiority,
+as carried on by the multi-rich, are undermining love for the Republic
+and the institutions our fathers fought and bled for.
+
+
+_Un-American Folly_
+
+It's the purpose of the present volume to show the guilty folly of such
+un-American, un-republican, wholly unjustifiable, reprehensible and
+altogether ridiculous King-worship, not by argument, or a more or less
+fanciful story, but by the unbiased testimony of an "insider."
+
+Let it be considered, above all, that a member of the proudest Imperial
+family in the wide, wide world demonstrates, by inference, the absurdity
+of King-worship!
+
+Of course, whether or not you'll obey the impassioned appeal of the
+corner sermonizer, who, espying a number of very décolletée ladies
+passing by in a carriage, cried out: "_Quand vous voyez ces tetons
+rebondies, qui se montrent avec tant d'impudence, bandez! bandez!
+bandez! vous--les yeux!_" is a matter for you to decide.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Seek not for descriptions of ceremonials and festivities in these pages;
+only imbeciles among kings are interested in such wearying spectacles,
+intended to dazzle the multitude. The Czar Paul, who became insane and
+had his head knocked off by his own officers, appeared upon the scene
+vacated by his brilliant mother, Catharine the Great, with a valise full
+of petty regulations, ready drawn up, by which, every day, every hour,
+every minute, he announced some foolish change, punishment or favor, but
+I often saw Kaiser Wilhelm and other kings look intensely bored and
+disgusted when obliged to attend dull and superfluous court or
+government functions.
+
+
+_Royalty's Loose Talk_
+
+But for genuine expressions of the royal self consult Louise. Those who
+think that royalty shapes its language in accordance with the plural of
+the personal pronoun, sometimes used in state papers, will be shocked at
+the "négligé talk" of one royal highness and the "rag-time" expressions
+of others. Louise, herself, assures us over and over again that she
+"_feels like a dog_," a statement no self-respecting publisher's reader
+would allow to pass, yet I was told by a friend of King Frederick of
+Denmark that he loved to compare his "all-highest person" to a "_mut_,"
+and I remember a letter from Victor Emanuel II to his great Minister,
+Count Cavour, solemnly protesting that he (the King) was "_no ass_."
+
+When the same Danish ruler, the seventh of his name, was asked why, in
+thunder, he married a common street walker (the Rasmussen, afterwards
+created Countess Danner), he cried out with every indication of gusto:
+"You don't know how deliciously common that girl is."
+
+Frederick's words explain the hostler marriages of several royal women
+mentioned by Louise, as well as her own and loving family's
+_broulleries_ of the fish-wife order, repeatedly described in the Diary.
+
+
+_Royalty Threatens a Royal Woman_
+
+It is safe to say that few $15 flats in all the United States witnessed
+more outrageous family jars than were fought out in the gilded halls of
+the Dresden palace between Louise and father-in-law and Louise and
+husband. Threats of violence are frequent; Prince George promises his
+daughter-in-law a sound beating at the hands of the Crown Prince and the
+Crown Princess confesses that she would rather go to bed with a drunken
+husband, booted and spurred, than risk a sword thrust.
+
+At the coronation of the present Czar, at Moscow, I mistook the Duke of
+Edinburgh, brother of the late King Edward, for a policeman attached to
+the British Ambassador, so exceedingly commonplace a person in
+appearance, speech and manner he seemed; Louise has a telling chapter on
+the mean looks of royalty, but fails to see the connection between that
+and royalty's coarseness.
+
+Perhaps it wasn't the "commonness" of Lady Emma Hamilton, child of the
+slums, impersonator of _risqué_ stage pictures, and mistress of the
+greatest naval hero of all times, that appealed primarily to Louise's
+grand-aunt, Queen Caroline of Naples, but the abandon of the beautiful
+Englishwoman, her reckless exposure of person, her freedom of speech,
+certainly sealed the friendship between the adventuress and the despotic
+ruler who deserved the epithet of "bloody" no less than Mary of England.
+
+
+_Covetous Royalty_
+
+Royal covetousness is another subject dwelt on by Louise. We learn that
+in money matters the kings and princes of her acquaintance--and her
+acquaintance embraces all the monarchs of Europe--are "dirty," that
+royal girls are given in marriage to the highest bidder, and that poor
+princes have no more chance to marry a rich princess than a drayman an
+American multi-millionaire's daughter.
+
+Louise gives us a curious insight into the Pappenheim-Wheeler marriage
+embroglio, and refers to some noble families that made their money in
+infamous trades; that the Kaiser adopted the title of one of these
+unspeakables ("Count of Henneberg") she doesn't seem to know.
+
+We hear of imperial and royal highnesses, living at public expense and
+for whom honors and lucrative employment are exacted from the people,
+who at home figure as poor relations, obliged to submit to treatment
+that a self-respecting "boots" or "omnibus" would resent.
+
+Here we have a royal prince of twenty-four or twenty-five subjected to
+kicks and cuffs by his uncle, who happens to be king--no indignity
+either to the slugged or the slugger in that--but when a pretty princess
+gets a few "_Hochs_" more than an ugly, mouse-colored majesty, she is
+all but flayed for "playing to the gallery."
+
+"High-minded" royalty robs widows and despoils orphans; re-introduces
+into the family obsolete punishments forbidden by law; maintains in the
+household a despicable spy system! Its respect for womanhood is on a par
+with a Bushman's; of authors, "lickspittles" only count; literature,
+unless it kowtows to the "all-highest" person, is the "trade of Jew
+scribblers."
+
+
+_Right Royal Manners_
+
+As to manners, what do you think of kings and princes and grand-dukes
+who, at ceremonial dinners, pound the table to "show that they are
+boss"?
+
+Louise tells of an emperor at a foreign court ignoring one of his
+hostesses absolutely, even refusing to acknowledge her salute by a nod.
+We hear of expectant royal heirs who engage in wild fandangoes of
+merriment while their father, brother or cousin lies dying.
+
+"Personal matter," you say? "A typical case," I retort.
+
+"Ask the _Duc du_ Maine to wait till I am dead before he indulges in the
+full extent of his joy," said the dying Louis XIV, when the _De
+Profundis_ in the death chamber was suddenly interrupted by the sound of
+violent laughter from the adjoining gallery. And the fact that almost
+every new king sets aside the testament of his predecessor,--is this not
+evidence of the general callowness of feeling prevailing in royal
+circles?
+
+
+_The Irish Famine and Royalty_
+
+In famine times, the kings and princes of old drove the starving out of
+town to die of hunger in the fields, and as late as 1772 one hundred and
+fifty thousand Saxons died of hunger under the "glorious reign" of
+Louise's grandfather-by-marriage, Frederick Augustus III. And the "Life
+of Queen Victoria," approved by the Court of St. James, unblushingly
+informs us that in 1847 "Her Most Gracious Majesty" was chiefly
+concerned about investing to good profit the revenues of the Prince of
+Wales, her infant son (about four hundred thousand dollars per annum).
+
+Yet, while Victoria pinched the boy's tenants to extort an extra penny
+for him, and "succeeded in saving all but four thousand pounds sterling"
+of his imperial allowance, the population of Ireland was reduced two
+millions by the most dreadful famine the world remembers!
+
+Before the famine Ireland had a population of 8,196,597, against a
+population of 15,914,148 in England and Wales, while Scotland's
+population was 2,620,184.
+
+Six years after the famine Ireland's population was 6,574,278,
+Scotland's 2,888,742, England and Wales' 17,927,609. Today Ireland's
+population is less than Scotland's, the exact figures being: Scotland
+4,759,445, Ireland 4,381,951, England and Wales 36,075,269.
+
+
+_Royalty Utterly Heartless_
+
+However, as the waste of two million human lives, the loss of four
+millions in population, subsequently enabled the Prince of Wales to tie
+the price of a dukedom[3] in diamonds around a French dancer's neck and
+to support a hundred silly harlots in all parts of Europe, who cares?
+
+According to Louise and--others, royalty is the meanest, the most
+heartless, the most faithless and the most unjust of the species--that
+in addition she herself disgraced its womanhood, after the famous Louise
+of Prussia rehabilitated queenship, is regrettable, but to call it
+altogether unexpected would be rank euphemism.
+
+
+_Louise's Character_
+
+If Louise had lived at the time of Phryne, the philosophers would have
+characterized her as "an animal with long hair"; if he had known her,
+the great Mirabeau might have coined his pet phrase, "a human that
+dresses, undresses and--talks" (or writes) for Louise; as a matter of
+fact, she is one of those "_Jansenists_" of love who believe in the
+utter helplessness of natural woman to turn down a good looking man.
+
+Her great grand-uncle, Emperor Francis, recorded on a pane of glass
+overlooking the courtyard of the Vienna _Hofburg_ his opinion of women
+in the brief observation: "_Chaque femme varie_" (Women always change).
+
+This is true of Louise and also untrue of her. While occupying her high
+position at the Saxon court she was fixed in the determination to make a
+cuckold of her husband, though Frederick Augustus, while a pumpkin,
+wasn't fricasseed in snow by any means.
+
+The process gave her palpitations, but, like Ninon, she was "_so_ happy
+when she had palpitations."
+
+
+_Changed Lovers Frequently_
+
+As to lovers, she changed them as often as she had to, never hesitating
+to pepper her _steady_ romances by playing "everybody's wife," chance
+permitting, as she intimates naïvely towards the close of the Diary.
+
+Qualms of conscience she knows not, but of pride of ancestry, of
+insistence on royal prerogatives, she has plenty and to spare.
+
+"My great grand-aunt, Marie Antoinette, did this"; "my good cousins
+d'Orleans" (three of them) "allowed themselves to be seduced"; "_ma
+cousine de_ Saxe-Coburg laughs at conventionalities,"--there you have
+the foundation of the iniquitous philosophy of the royal Lais. And for
+the rest--when she is queen, all will be well.
+
+
+_Her Court--A Seraglio_
+
+Louise's fixed idea was that, as Queen of Saxony, she had but to say the
+word to establish a court _à la_ Catharine II; time and again she refers
+to the great Empress's male seraglio, and to the enormous sums she
+squandered on her favorites. If the Diarist had known that Her Majesty
+of Russia, when in the flesh, never suffered to be longer than
+twenty-four hours without a lover, Louise, no doubt, would have made the
+most elaborate plans to prevent, in her own case, a possible
+_interregnum_ of five minutes even.
+
+She thought she held the whip hand because a king cannot produce princes
+without his wife, while the wife can produce princes without the king;
+besides Frederick Augustus was no paragon, and he who plants horns, must
+not grudge to wear them.
+
+A wanton's calculations, it will be argued,--but Louise's records show
+that her husband, the king-to-be, fell in with her main idea,--that he
+forgave the unfaithful wife, the disgraced princess, because, as Queen,
+her popularity would be "a great asset."
+
+And Americans, our women of whom we are so proud, are asked to bow down
+to such sorry majesties!
+
+
+_Sired and "Cousined" by Lunatics_
+
+And is there no excuse for so much baseness in high places? Our royal
+Diarist offers none, but her family history is a telling apology.
+
+Be it remembered that Louise is not so much an Austrian as a
+Wittelsbacher of the royal house of Bavaria that gave to the world two
+mad kings, Louis II and Otho, the present incumbent of the throne,
+besides a number of eccentrics, among others Louise's aunts, the Empress
+Elizabeth and the Duchess d'Alencon, both dead; Crown Prince Rudolph of
+Austria, her cousin, was also undoubtedly insane, the result of breeding
+in and in, Austrian, Bourbon and Wittelsbach stock, all practically of
+the same parentage, in a mad mix-up, the insane Wittelsbachers
+predominating.
+
+To cap the climax, Louise has eighteen or nineteen insane cousins on her
+mother's side!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Once upon a time Louise's prosaic and stupid great-uncle, as a young
+husband, felt dreadfully scandalized when his Queen, Marie Antoinette,
+bombarded him with spit-balls.
+
+"What can I do with her?" he asked "Minister Sans-culotte" Dumouriez.
+
+"I would spike the cannon, Sire," replied the courtier.
+
+"_Enclouer le canon_," if performed in time, might have saved Louise,
+but I doubt it.
+
+ HENRY W. FISCHER.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: "Be civil, good people, I am the English hure," said Nell
+Gwyn, addressing a London mob that threatened to storm her carriage,
+assuming that its occupant was the hated Frenchwoman.]
+
+[Footnote 2: "Your biography give a faithful portrait of self," said
+Fontenelle, the famous French Academician, to an 18th Century Marquise,
+"but I miss the record of your gallantries."
+
+"_Ah, Monsieur, c'est que je ne me suis peinte qu'en buste!_" replied
+her ladyship.]
+
+[Footnote 3: The Prince of Wales' revenue is derived from the Duchy of
+Cornwall, amounting to about half a million dollars per year.]
+
+
+
+
+KITH AND KIN OF THE EX-CROWN PRINCESS OF SAXONY
+
+
+_Louise's Own Family_
+
+The royal woman whose life's history is recorded in this volume was born
+Louise Antoinette, Daughter of the late Grand Duke Ferdinand IV of
+Tuscany (died January 17, 1908) and the Dowager Grand Duchess Alice,
+_née_ Princess Bourbon of Parma.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Louise has four brothers, among them the present head of the Tuscany
+family, Joseph Ferdinand, who dropped the obsolete title of Grand Duke
+and is officially known as Archduke of Austria-Hungary.
+
+He is a brigadier general, commanding the Fifth Austrian Infantry, and
+unmarried.
+
+Better known is Louise's older brother, the former Archduke Leopold, who
+dropped his title and dignities, and, as a Swiss citizen, adopted the
+name of Leopold Wulfling. This Leopold is generally regarded as a black
+sheep.
+
+Louise more often refers to him in the present volume than to any other
+member of her family.
+
+He is now a commoner by his own, more or less enforced, abdication, as
+Louise is a commoner by decree of her chief-of-family, the Austrian
+Emperor, Francis Joseph, dated Vienna, January 27, 1903.
+
+A month before above date the Saxon court had conferred on Louise the
+title of Countess Montiguoso, while, on her own part, she adopted the
+fanciful cognomen of Louise of Tuscany.
+
+Of Louise's two remaining brothers, one, Archduke Peter, serves in the
+Austrian army as Colonel of the Thirty-second Infantry, while Archduke
+Henry is Master of Horse in the Sixth Bavarian Dragoons.
+
+Only one of Louise's four sisters is married, the oldest, Anna, now
+Princess Johannes of Hohenlohe-Bartenstein.
+
+The unmarried sisters are Archduchesses Margareta (31 years old),
+Germana (28 years old), Agnes (22 years old).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Mother Comes of Mentally Tainted Stock_
+
+Louise's mother, _née_ Princess Alice of Parma, is the only surviving
+sister of the late Duke Robert, who left twenty children, all living,
+and of whom eighteen or nineteen are either imbeciles or raving
+lunatics, the present head of the house, Duke Henry, belonging to the
+first category of mentally unsound.
+
+Louise's first cousin, Prince Elias of Parma, the seventh son, is
+accounted sound, but Elias's sister, Zita (the twelfth child), developed
+maniacal tendencies since her marriage to Archduke Karl Francis Joseph,
+heir-presumptive to the crown of Austria-Hungary.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Francis Joseph's Autocratic Rule_
+
+_Louise Formerly in Line of Austrian Succession_
+
+Louise was in the line of the Austrian succession until, upon her
+marriage to the Crown Prince of Saxony (1891), she officially renounced
+her birthrights.
+
+Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria-Hungary is Louise's grand-uncle as
+well as chief of the imperial family of Austria, the royal family of
+Hungary, the Grand-ducal family of Tuscany (now extinct as far as the
+title goes), and of the Estes, which is the Ducal Line of Modena,
+extinct in the male line. Finally he is recognized as chief by the ducal
+family of Parma, descendants of the Spanish Hapsburgs.
+
+Emperor Francis Joseph rules all the Hapsburgers, Austrian, Hungarian,
+and those of Tuscany, of Este, of Modena and Parma, autocratically, his
+word being law in the family. Even titles conferred by birth can be
+taken away by him, as exemplified in the case of Louise and her brother
+Leopold.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Royal Saxons_
+
+As a member of the Austrian imperial family, the Hapsburgers, founded in
+883, Louise ranked higher than her husband, the Crown Prince of the
+petty Kingdom of Saxony, whose claim to the royal title dates from
+1806,--a gift of the Emperor Napoleon.
+
+She married Frederick Augustus November 21, 1891, while the latter's
+uncle reigned as King Albert of Saxony (1873 to 1902).
+
+Louise's father-in-law, up to then known as Prince George, succeeded his
+brother June 19, 1902. He was then a widower and his family consisted
+of:
+
+Princess Mathilde, unmarried,
+
+The Crown Prince Frederick Augustus, husband of Louise,
+
+Princess Marie-Josepha, wife of Archduke Otho of Austria,
+
+Prince Johann George, at that time married to Isabelle of Württemberg,
+and
+
+Prince Max. The latter subsequently shelved his title and entered the
+Church July 26, 1896. He is a professor of canonical law and slated for
+a German bishopric.
+
+At the time of Prince George's ascension, there was also living the late
+King Albert's widow, Queen Caroline, _née_ Princess of Wasa, since
+dead.
+
+The Marchesa Rapallo, _née_ Princess Elizabeth of Saxony, is a sister of
+the late King George.
+
+
+_Louise and Her Father-in-Law_
+
+During King George's short reign, Louise ran away from the Saxon court,
+end of November, 1902.
+
+On February 11, 1903, divorce was pronounced against her by a special
+court assembled by King George.
+
+Louise was adjudged the guilty party and deprived of the name and style
+of Crown Princess of Saxony. As previously (January 27) the Austrian
+Emperor had forbidden her to use the name and title of Austrian
+Archduchess and Imperial and royal Princess, Louise would have been
+nameless but for the rank and title of Countess Montiguoso, conferred
+upon her by King George.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Louise's Alimony Conditional_
+
+At the same time Louise accepted from the court of Saxony a considerable
+monthly allowance on condition that "she undertake nothing liable to
+compromise the reigning family, either by criticism or story, either by
+word, deed or in writing."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Frederick Augustus, King_
+
+Upon his father's death, Frederick Augustus succeeded King George
+October 15, 1904. He is now forty-seven years old, while Louise is
+forty-two.
+
+The King of Saxony has six children by Louise, three boys and three
+girls, five born in wedlock, the youngest born without wedlock. The
+children born in wedlock are:
+
+ The present Crown Prince, born 1893.
+ Frederick Christian, likewise born in 1893.
+ Ernest, born 1896.
+ Margaret, born 1900.
+ And Marie Alix, born 1901.
+
+The youngest Princess of Saxony, so called, Anna Monica, was born by
+Louise more than six months after she left her husband and nearly three
+months after her divorce.
+
+Louise desired to retain Anna Monica in her own custody, but though the
+child's fathership is in doubt, to say the least, Frederick Augustus
+insisted upon the little one's transference to his care.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Allowance Raised and a Further Threat_
+
+King Frederick Augustus raised Louise's allowance to $12,000 per year,
+"which alimony ceases if the said Countess Montiguoso shall commit,
+either personally, directly or indirectly, any act in writing or
+otherwise liable to injure the reputation of King Frederick Augustus or
+members of the royal family of Saxony, or if the said Countess
+Montiguoso contributes to any such libellous publication in any manner
+or form."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_The Divorce of Royal Couple Illegal_
+
+After divorce was pronounced against her, Louise declined to accept the
+decree of the court, pronouncing the proceedings illegal on the ground
+that both she and husband are Catholics and that the Roman Catholic
+Church, under no circumstances, recognizes divorce. Her protest gained
+importance from the fact that her marriage to Frederick Augustus was
+solemnized by the rites of the Roman Catholic Church. The Saxon court,
+on the other hand, justified its own decision by basing same on a
+certain civil ceremony entered into by Louise and Frederick Augustus
+previous to the church marriage.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Louise Marries a Second Time_
+
+When Louise realized in the course of years that Frederick Augustus
+would not take her back, she changed her mind as to the illegality of
+her divorce and married, September 25, 1907, Enrico Toselli, an Italian
+composer and pianist of small reputation.
+
+This marriage was performed civilly. They have one child, a boy, about
+whose custody the now legally separated parents have instituted several
+actions in law. The boy has now been allotted to the care of Toselli's
+mother.
+
+
+_King Did Not Marry Again_
+
+King Frederick Augustus, though by the laws of Saxony and Germany
+allowed to contract a second marriage, has not availed himself of the
+license, probably in deference to the wishes of the Vatican. At the same
+time he spurned all of Louise's attempts at reconciliation, the most
+dramatic of which was her _coup de tête_ of December, 1904, when she
+went to Dresden "to see her children," was arrested at the palace gate
+and conducted out of the kingdom by high police officials.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Other Royalties Mentioned in This Volume_
+
+Louise refers, in her Diary, to the Kaiser as "cousin." If there be any
+relationship between her and William, it is that imposed by the Saxon
+marriage, Saxon princes and princesses having frequently intermarried
+with the royal and princely Hohenzollerns, despite the differences of
+religion. There are four courts of Saxony despite that of Dresden:
+Weimar, Meiningen, Altenburg and Coburg and Gotha.
+
+The latter duchy's ruler, Karl Eduard, is of English descent, a son of
+the late Duke of Albany. Hence, Louise's cousinship with Victoria
+Melita, sometime Grand Duchess of Hesse, now Grand Duchess Kyril of
+Russia.
+
+Of course, Louise is closely related to all the Orleans and Bourbons.
+
+Marie Antoinette, Queen of France, who died on the scaffold at Paris,
+October 16, 1793, she calls her great-grand-aunt and namesake, claiming,
+at the same time, most of the Kings and princes of France of the
+seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as relatives.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+ MOTHERHOOD
+
+ PAGE
+
+ A sterile Royal Family once fruitful--Diary true record of
+ self--Long legs of Countess Solms--A child only because
+ he can't help it--Wet nurse to Socialist brat--Royal
+ permit for nursing--Royal negligee talk--A Saxon
+ failing 1
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+ THE SWEET FAMILY
+
+ Husband loving, but family nasty--Money considerations--Brutal
+ caresses in public--Pests in the family--Awful
+ serenity--Meddle with angels' or devils' affairs--Father-in-law's
+ gritty kiss 7
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+ WEEPING WILLOW--EMBLEM ROYAL
+
+ A pious fraud--Theresa Mayer--Character of the Queen--Mopishness
+ rampant 11
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+ MY UNPLEASANT YOUTH
+
+ Father hard to get along with--Royal imaginations--Kings
+ cursing other kings--Poverty and pretense--Piety that
+ makes children suffer--Up at five to pray on cold
+ stones--Chilblains and prayer 15
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+ A FIERCE DISCIPLINARIAN
+
+ Diamonds used to punish children--Face object of attacks--
+ Grunting and snorting at the royal table--Blood flowing
+ at dinner--My brother jumps out of a window 19
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+ LEOPOLD DEFENDS MY HONOR AT HIS PERIL
+
+ Punished for objecting to familiarities--Awful names I was
+ called--Locked in the room with wicked teacher--Defend
+ myself with burning lamp--My brother nearly kills
+ my would-be assailant 23
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+ PRINCES AND PRINCESSES DANCE TO THE TUNE OF THE WHIP
+
+ The result shows in the character of rulers--Why English
+ kings and princes are superior to the Continental kind--Leopold's
+ awful revenge--Mother acts the tigress--Her
+ mailed fist--"I forbid Your Imperial Highness to see
+ that dog" 27
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+ PLANNING TO GET A HUSBAND FOR ME
+
+ Dissecting possible wooers at Vienna--Royalty after money,
+ not character--"He is a Cohen, not a Coburg"--Prince
+ who looked like a Jew counter-jumper in his Sunday
+ best--Balkan princes tabooed by Francis Joseph--A
+ good time for the girls--Army men commanded to attend
+ us 35
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+ LOVE-MAKING
+
+ The fascinating Baron--The man's audacity--Putting the
+ question boldly--Real love-making--_Risqué_ stories for
+ royalty 41
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+ MY POPULARITY RENDERS GEORGE DYSPEPTIC
+
+ The Cudgel-Majesty--Prince George's intrigues--No four-horse
+ coach for Princess--Popular demonstration in my
+ favor--"All-highest" displeasure 45
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+ SCOLDED FOR BEING POPULAR
+
+ Entourage spied upon by George's minions--My husband
+ proves a weakling--I disavow the personal compliment--No
+ more intelligent than a king should be 53
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+ ROYAL DISGRACE--LIGHTNING AND SHADOWS
+
+ Ordered around by the Queen--Give thanks to a bully--Jealous
+ of the "mob's" applause--"The old monkey after
+ '_Hochs_'"--Criticizing the "old man"--Royalty's plea for
+ popularity--Proposed punishments for people refusing
+ to love royalty 57
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+ UNSPEAKABLE LITTLENESSES OF PETTY COURTS
+
+ Another quarrel with my husband--Personal attendant to a
+ corpse--Killing by pin pricks--The mythical three "_How
+ art thou's?_"--Unwanted sympathy from my inferiors--Pride
+ of the decapitated Queen of France is in me--Lovers
+ not impossible--Court to blame for them--My
+ husband acts cowardly--Brutalizes my household--I
+ lock myself in 63
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+ IMPERIAL RUSSIAN ETHICS TRANSFERRED TO DRESDEN
+
+ My husband's reported escapade--Did he give diamonds to a
+ dancing girl?--His foolish excuses--"I am your pal"--A
+ restaurant scene in St. Petersburg--The birthday
+ suit 71
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+ ROYALTY NOT PRETTY, AND WHY
+
+ Fecundity royal women's greatest charm--How to have
+ beautiful children 77
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+ MORE JEALOUSIES OF THE GREAT
+
+ Men and women caress me with their eyes--Some disrespectful
+ sayings and doings of mine--First decided quarrel
+ with Frederick Augustus--I go to the theatre in spite
+ of him 81
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+ THE ROYAL PRINCE, WHO BEHAVES LIKE A DRUNKEN BRICKLAYER
+
+ I face the music, but my husband runs away--Prince George
+ can't look me in the eye--He roars and bellows--Advocates
+ wife-beating--I defy him--German classics--"Jew
+ literature" _Auto da fé_ ordered 85
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+ I DEFY THEM
+
+ Laughter and pleasant faces for me--Frederick Augustus refuses
+ to back me, but I don't care--We quarrel about
+ my reading--He professes to gross ignorance 91
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+
+ ATTEMPTED VIOLENCE DEFEATED BY FIRMNESS
+
+ Frederick Augustus seeks to carry out his father's brutal
+ threats--Orders and threats before servants--I positively
+ refuse to be ordered about--Frederick Augustus
+ plays Mrs. Lot--Enjoying myself at the theatre 95
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+
+ TITLED SERVANTS LOW AND CUNNING
+
+ George tries to rob me of my confidante--Enter the King's
+ spy, Baroness Tisch in her true character--Punishment
+ of one royal spy 99
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+
+ BANISHMENT
+
+ I am ordered to repair to a country house with the hated spy
+ as my Grand Mistress--My first impulse to go home,
+ but afraid parents won't have me 103
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+
+ "POOR RELATIONS" IN ROYAL HOUSES
+
+ Myself and Frederick Augustus quarrel and pound table--The
+ Countess Cosel's golden vessel--Off to Brighton--Threat
+ of a beating--I provoke shadows of divorce--King
+ threatens force--More defiance on my part--I
+ humble the King and am allowed to invite my brother
+ Leopold 105
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+
+ A SERVANT-TYRANT
+
+ My correspondence is not safe from the malicious woman
+ appointed Grand Mistress--Lovers at a distance and by
+ correspondence--Fell in love with a leg 115
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+
+ MORE TYRANNY OF A TITLED SERVANT
+
+ My daily papers seized, and only milk-and-water clippings
+ are submitted--"King's orders"--Grand Mistress's veracity
+ doubted--My threats of suspension cow her 119
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+
+ THE TWO BLACK SHEEP OF THE FAMILY UNITED
+
+ Leopold upon my troubles and his own--Imperial Hapsburgs
+ that, though Catholics, got divorces or married
+ divorced women--Books that are full of guilty knowledge,
+ according to royalty--A mud-hole lodging for one
+ Imperial Highness--Leopold's girl--What I think of
+ army officers' wives--Their anonymous letters--Leopold's
+ money troubles--We will fool our enemies by
+ feigning obedience 123
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+
+ FREDERICK AUGUSTUS CONTINUES VERY RAW
+
+ Manners _à la_ barracks natural to royal princes--Names I
+ am called--My ladies scandalized--Leopold turned over
+ a new leaf, according to agreement, and is well treated--The
+ King grateful to me for having "influenced Leopold
+ to be good" 129
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+
+ PRINCE MAX MAKES LOVE TO ME
+
+ Wants me to consult him on all spiritual matters--Warns me
+ against the Kaiser, the heretic bishop--Princes as ill-mannered
+ as Russian-Jew up-starts 133
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+ THE SHAH OF PERSIA FALLS IN LOVE WITH ME
+
+ The "animal" and his show of diamonds and rubies--Overcome
+ by love he treats me like a lady of the harem--On
+ the defensive--The King of kings an ill-behaved
+ brute--Eats like a pig and affronts Queen--Wiped off
+ greasy hands on my state robe--When ten thousand
+ gouged-out eyes carpeted his throne--Offers of jewels--"Does
+ he take me for a ballet girl?"--The Shah almost
+ compromises me--King, alarmed, abruptly ends
+ dinner--I receive presents from him 135
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+
+ THE SHAH COMPROMISES ME IN PUBLIC
+
+ Has only eyes for me at the grand manoeuvres, and I can't
+ drive him from my carriage--Ignores the King and the
+ military spectacle--Calls me his adored one--Court in
+ despair--Shah ruins priceless carpets to make himself
+ a lamb stew 139
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+
+ MY LIFE AT COURT BECOMES UNBEARABLE
+
+ Laughter a crime--Disappointed Queen lays down the law
+ for my behavior--Frederick Augustus sometimes fighting
+ drunk--Draws sword on me--Prince George would have
+ me beaten--To bed with his boots on 143
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+
+ PRISON FOR PRINCES THAT OPPOSE THE KING
+
+ Duke of Saxony banished--Cut off from good literature
+ even--Anecdote concerning the Grand Dauphin and his
+ "kettledrums"--A royal prince's garrison life--His association
+ with lewd women 147
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+
+ PRINCE GEORGE SHOWN THE DOOR BY GRAND-DUCHESS MELITA
+
+ A royal lady who walks her garden attired in a single diaphanous
+ garment--Won't stand for any meddling--Called
+ impertinent--My virtuous indignation assumed--A
+ flirtation at a distance--An audacious lover--The
+ Grand Mistress hoodwinked--Matrimonial horns for
+ Kaiser--The banished Duke dies--Princes scolded like
+ school-boys 151
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+ MELITA'S LOVE AFFAIRS AND MINE
+
+ The Grand Duchess tells me how she cudgeled George--Living
+ dictaphone employed--Shows him who is mistress
+ of the house--Snaps fingers in Prince George's
+ face--Debate about titles--"A sexless thing of a husband"--Conference
+ between lover and husband--Grand
+ Duke doesn't object to his wife's lover, but lover objects
+ to "his paramour being married" 157
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+ MORE ABOUT THE SWEET ROYAL FAMILY LIFE
+
+ "Closed season" for petty meannesses--A prince who enjoys
+ himself like a pig--Why princes learn trades--A family
+ dinner to the accompaniment of threats and smashing of
+ table--The Duke's widow and children robbed of their
+ inheritance by royal family--King confiscates testament 163
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+
+ FLIRTATION DEVELOPS INTO LOVE
+
+ At the theatre--My adorer must have felt my presence--Forgot
+ his diplomacy--The mute salute--His good looks--His
+ mouth a promise of a thousand sweet kisses--Our
+ love won't be any painted business 169
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+ COUNT BIELSK MAKES LOVE TO THE CROWN PRINCESS
+
+ Fearless to indiscretion--He "thou's" me--Puts all his
+ chances on one card--Proposes a rendezvous--Shall I
+ go or shall I not go?--Peril if I go and peril if I don't 171
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+ RAPID LOVE MAKING IN THE BOIS
+
+ A discreet maid--"Remove thy glove"--Kisses of passion,
+ pure kisses, powerful kisses--I see my lover daily--Countess
+ Barnello offers "doves' nest"--Driving to
+ rendezvous in state--"Naughty Louise," who makes fun
+ of George 177
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+ "IN LOVE THERE ARE NO PRINCESSES, ONLY WOMEN"
+
+ A diplomatic trick--Jealous of Romano's past--The pact for
+ life and the talisman--If there were a theatre fire the
+ talisman would discover our love to the King--Some
+ ill-natured reflections--Bernhardt's escapades cover up
+ my tracks--The "black sheep" jumps his horse over a
+ coffin--King gives him a beating--Bernhardt's mess-room
+ lingo--Anecdotes of royal voluptuaries--Forces
+ animals to devour each other--Naked ballet-girls as
+ horses--Abnormals rule the world 183
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+ MY PUNISHMENT
+
+ I lose my lover--Quarrels with me because I did my duty
+ as a mother--Royalty extols me for the same reason---My
+ pride of kingship aroused by Socialist scribblers--Change
+ my opinion as to Duke's widow--Parents arrive--Father
+ and his alleged astrolatry--His finances disarranged
+ by alimony payments--My uncle, the Emperor,
+ rebukes mother harshly for complaining of _roué_
+ father 193
+
+ CHAPTER XL
+
+ A PLEBEIAN LOVER
+
+ In need of a friend--My physician offers his friendship--I
+ discover that he loves me, but he will never confess--I
+ give him encouragement--We manage to persuade
+ the King to further our intrigue--Not a bit repentant of
+ my peccadilloes--Very submissive--Introduced to my
+ lover's wife 199
+
+ CHAPTER XLI
+
+ AN ATROCIOUS ROYAL SCANDAL
+
+ A royal couple that shall be nameless--The voluptuous
+ Duchess--Her husband the worst of degenerates--"What
+ monsters these royalties be"--Nameless outrages--A
+ Duchess forced to have lovers--Ferdinand and I
+ live like married folk--Duchess feared for her life--Her
+ husband murdered her--I scold and humiliate my overbearing
+ Grand Mistress--The medical report too horrible
+ to contemplate 205
+
+ CHAPTER XLII
+
+ I LOSE ANOTHER OF MY LOVERS
+
+ Happily no scandal--Rewarded for bearing children--$1250--for
+ becoming a mother--Royal poverty--Bernhardt,
+ the black sheep, in hot water again--The King rebukes
+ me for taking his part 213
+
+ CHAPTER XLIII
+
+ THE CROWN PRINCESS QUELLS A RIOT
+
+ Asked to play the coward, and I refuse--A hostler who
+ would die for a look from me--Hostler marriages in
+ royal houses--Anecdotes and unknown facts concerning
+ royal ladies and their offspring--Refuse police escort
+ and rioters acclaim me--Whole royal family proud
+ of my feat 219
+
+ CHAPTER XLIV
+
+ THE NEW LOVER, AND "I PLAY THE HUSSY FOR FAIR"
+
+ Who is that most exquisite _Vortänzer?_--A lovely boy--"Blush,
+ good white paper"--I long for Henry--My eyes
+ reflect love--"I must see you tonight. Arrange with
+ Lucretia"--Sorry I ever loved a man before Henry--Poetry
+ even--I try to get him an office at court--Afraid
+ women will steal him 227
+
+ CHAPTER XLV
+
+ LOVE AND THE HAPPINESS IT CONVEYS
+
+ My Grand Mistress suspects because I am so amiable--Pangs
+ of jealousy--Every good-looking man pursued by women--A
+ good story of my cousin, the Duchess Berri--We
+ all go cycling together--The Vitzthums--Love making
+ on the street--A mud bath 233
+
+ CHAPTER XLVI
+
+ FEARS FOR MY LOVE
+
+ Some reflections on queens of old who punished recreant
+ lovers--Henry was in debt and I gave him money--Indignities
+ by which some of that money was earned--Husband
+ accompanies me to Loschwitz--Reflections on
+ Frederick Augustus's character 239
+
+ CHAPTER XLVII
+
+ LOVE'S INTERMEZZO
+
+ Bernhardt takes advantage of my day-dreams--My husband's
+ indolent _gaucherie_--Violent love-making--Ninon who
+ loved families, not men--Does Bernhardt really love me? 245
+
+ CHAPTER XLVIII
+
+ GRAND MISTRESS TELLS HUSBAND I KEEP A DIARY
+
+ He wants to see it, but seems unsuspecting--Grand Mistress
+ denies that she meant mischief, but I upbraid her
+ unmercifully--Threaten to dismiss her like a thieving
+ lackey 251
+
+ CHAPTER XLIX
+
+ ARISTOCRATIC VISITORS
+
+ I hear disquieting news about my lover's character--The
+ aristocracy a dirty lot--Love-making made easy by titled
+ friends--Anecdotes of Richelieu and the Duke of Orleans--The
+ German nobleman who married Miss Wheeler and
+ had to resign his birthright--The disreputable business
+ the Pappenheims and other nobles used to be in--I am
+ afraid to question my lover as to charges 255
+
+ CHAPTER L
+
+ TO LIVE UNDER KING'S AND PRINCE GEORGE'S EYE
+
+ Abruptly ordered to the royal summer residence--The Vitzthums
+ and Henry take flight--Enmeshed by Prince
+ George's intrigues--Those waiting for a crown have no
+ friends--What I will do when Queen--No wonder Kings
+ of old married only relatives--Interesting facts about
+ relative marriages furnished by scientist 261
+
+ CHAPTER LI
+
+ COLD RECEPTION--ENEMIES ALL AROUND
+
+ Frederick Augustus gives his views on adultery--Doesn't
+ care personally, but "the King knows"--"Thank God,
+ the King is ill"--I am deprived of my children--Have
+ I got the moral strength to defy my enemies? 265
+
+ CHAPTER LII
+
+ PRINCE GEORGE REVEALS TO ME THE DEPTH OF HIS HATRED
+
+ A terrible interview--"The devil will come to claim you"--Uncertain
+ how much the King and Prince George know--I
+ break into the nursery and stay with my children all
+ day--Prince George insults me in my own rooms and
+ threatens prison if I disobey him 269
+
+ CHAPTER LIII
+
+ REVOLVER IN HAND, I DEMAND AN EXPLANATION
+
+ An insolent Grand Mistress, but of wonderful courage--Imprisonment,
+ threats to kill have no effect on her--Disregards
+ my titles--My lover's souvenir and endearing
+ words--How she caused Henry to leave me--My paroxysms
+ of rage--Henry's complete betrayal of me 273
+
+ CHAPTER LIV
+
+ FORCED TO DO PENANCE LIKE A TRAPPIST-MONK
+
+ "By the King's orders"--I submit for the sake of my children--Must
+ fast as well as pray--In delicate health, I insist
+ upon returning to Dresden--Bernhardt, to avoid
+ being maltreated by King, threatens him with his sword--The
+ King's awful wrath--Bernhardt prisoner in Nossen--I
+ escape, temporarily, protracted _ennui_ 279
+
+ CHAPTER LV
+
+ FRANCIS JOSEPH JOINS MY SAXON ENEMIES
+
+ Cuts me dead before whole family--Everybody talks over
+ my head at dinner--I refuse to attend more court festivities--Husband
+ protests because I won't stand for insult
+ from Emperor--I give rein to my contempt for his
+ family--Hypocrites, despoilers, gamblers, religious maniacs,
+ brutes--Benign lords to the people, tyrants at home--I
+ cry for my children like a she-dog whose young
+ were drowned 285
+
+ CHAPTER LVI
+
+ I AM DETERMINED TO DO AS I PLEASE
+
+ I reject mother's tearful reproaches--I beard Prince George
+ in his lair despite whining chamberlains--I tell him what
+ I think of him, and he becomes frightened--Threatens
+ madhouse--"I dare you to steal my children"--I win my
+ point--and the children--"Her Imperial Highness regrets"--Lots
+ of forbidden literature--Precautions against
+ intriguing Grand Mistress--The affair with Henry--was
+ it a flower-covered pit to entrap me?--Castle Stolpen
+ and some of its awful history 291
+
+ CHAPTER LVII
+
+ I CONFESS TO PAPA
+
+ King Albert dies and King George a very sick man--Papa's
+ good advice--"You will be Queen soon"--A lovely old
+ man, very much troubled 301
+
+ CHAPTER LVIII
+
+ MONSIEUR GIRON--RICHARD, THE ARTIST
+
+ The King asks me to superintend lessons by M. Giron--A
+ most fascinating man--His Grecian eyes--He is a painter
+ as well as a teacher--In love--Careless whether I am
+ caught in my lover's arms--"Richard" talks anarchy to
+ me--Why I don't believe in woman suffrage--Characters
+ and doings of women in power 305
+
+ CHAPTER LIX
+
+ THE PEOPLE THINK ME A WANTON
+
+ Credit me with innumerable lovers, but don't disapprove--Glad
+ the King feels scandalized--Picture of the "she-monster"--Everybody
+ eager for love--I delight in Richard's
+ jealousy--Husband's indelicate announcement at
+ table--I rush from the royal opera to see my lover--A
+ threatening dream--Richard not mercenary like my noble
+ lovers 309
+
+ CHAPTER LX
+
+ THE DAY OF JUDGMENT LOOMS UP
+
+ My Grand Mistress shows her colors--Richard advises flight--I
+ hesitate on account of my children--My Grand Mistress
+ steals a letter from Richard to me--I opine that an
+ adulteress's word is as good as a thief's--I humble my
+ Grand Mistress, but it won't do me much good--Pleasant
+ hours at his studio 317
+
+ CHAPTER LXI
+
+ A MAD HOUSE FOR LOUISE--PROBABLY
+
+ My confidential maid, Lucretia, is banished--The new King
+ has got the incriminating letter, but Frederick Augustus
+ says nothing--On the eve of judgment the King falls ill 321
+
+ CHAPTER LXII
+
+ KING'S ILLNESS A BOON TO LOVERS
+
+ Prayers mixed with joy--Espionage disorganized, and I can
+ do as I please--Love-making in the school-room--Buying
+ a ring for Richard--"Wishing it on"--"Our marriage"--King's
+ life despaired of--My tormentors obsequious--Smile
+ at my peccadilloes--Husband proud of
+ me--My popularity a great asset--Frederick Augustus
+ delighted when he hears that King can't last long--The
+ joyous luncheon at Richard's studio--Making fun of
+ majesties--I expect to be Queen presently 325
+
+ CHAPTER LXIII
+
+ WHAT I WILL DO WHEN I AM QUEEN
+
+ A foretaste: titled servants put me _en route_ for lover--The
+ bargain I will propose to Frederick Augustus--Frederick
+ Augustus will be a complaisant King--To revive
+ _Petit Trianon_--I am addressed as Queen 331
+
+ CHAPTER LXIV
+
+ THE KING IS ALIVE AND PUNISHMENT NEAR
+
+ My queenship postponed--King George publicly acclaimed--Cuts
+ me dead in church--Frederick Augustus's disappointment--Terrible
+ power of a king over his family,
+ and no appeal--I am like the nude witch of old 335
+
+ CHAPTER LXV
+
+ FISTICUFFS DON'T SAVE MY CROWN
+
+ The attempted theft of my Diary--Grand Mistress discovered
+ after breaking open my desk--Reading Diary like
+ mad--Personal encounter between me and Grand Mistress--I
+ am the stronger, and carry off the manuscript,
+ but have to leave all my love letters, which go to the
+ King--I discover that they had stolen the key to my
+ Diary from my neck 339
+
+ CHAPTER LXVI
+
+ ABANDONED
+
+ My titled servants withdraw from me--An old footman my
+ sole support--Queen takes the children--Old Andrew
+ plays spy for me 343
+
+ CHAPTER LXVII
+
+ FAMILY COUNCIL AT CASTLE
+
+ Rendezvous at studio--State takes my children from me--Madhouse
+ or flight--I brought fifty-two trunks to the
+ palace--Depart with small satchel--If I attempt to see
+ my children I'll be seized as "mad woman"--Varying
+ emotions of the last ten minutes--Threatening shadows
+ thrown on a curtain decide me--Ready for flight--Diary
+ the last thing to go into the satchel 345
+
+
+[Illustration: FROM LOUISE'S DIARY]
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF LOUISE, CROWN PRINCESS OF SAXONY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MOTHERHOOD
+
+ A sterile Royal Family once fruitful--Diary true record of
+ self--Long legs of Countess Solms--A child only because he can't
+ help it--Wet nurse to Socialist brat--Royal permit for
+ nursing--Royal negligee talk--A Saxon failing.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _February 17, 1893_.
+
+I did my duty towards the Saxons. I gave them a Prince. The Royal House
+ought to be grateful to me:--I am helping to perpetuate it. Who would,
+if I didn't? My sister-in-law, Princess Mathilde, is an old maid. The
+other, Maria Josepha, as sterile as Sarah was before she reached the
+nineties. This applies also to Isabelle, the wife of brother-in-law,
+John-George. And Prince Max, tired of ballet girls, is about to take the
+soutane.
+
+There is just one more royal Saxon princess, Elizabeth, and she
+succeeded in having children neither with her husband _de jure_, the
+late Duke of Genoa, nor with her husband-lover, Marquis Rapallo.
+
+Louise, then, is the sole living hope of the royal Saxons that, only 160
+years ago, boasted of a sovereign having three hundred and fifty-two
+children to his credit, among them not a few subsequently accounted
+geniuses. Augustus, the Physical Strong (1670 to 1733), was the happy
+father, the _Maréshal de_ Saxe one of his numerous gifted offspring.
+
+Alas, since then the House of Wettin has declined not in numbers only.
+
+Poor baby is burdened with ten names in honor of so many ancestors. Why,
+in addition, they want to call him "Maria" I cannot for the life of me
+understand, for there never was a Saxon princess or queen that amounted
+to a row of pins.
+
+I wonder whether they will say the same of me after the crown of the
+Wettiners descended upon my brow. Those so inclined should consult these
+papers ere they begin throwing stones, for my Diary is intended to
+contain my innermost thoughts, my ambitions, my promises for the future,
+_Myself_, and let no one judge me by what I say other than what is
+recorded here.
+
+These pages are my Father Confessor. I confess to myself,--what a woman
+in my position says to members of her family or official and
+semi-official persons--her servants, so to speak--doesn't signify, to
+borrow a phrase from my good cousin, the Kaiser Wilhelm.
+
+Father-in-law George tells me to trust no one but him, my husband, and
+Frederick Augustus's sisters, cousins and aunts, and to rely on prayer
+only, yet, stubborn as nature made me, I prefer respectable white paper
+to my sweet relatives.
+
+Up to now my most ambitious literary attempts were intimate letters to
+my brother Leopold, the "Black Sheep." As I now start in writing letters
+to myself, it occurs to me that my worse self may be corresponding with
+my better self, or vice versa. If I was only a poet like Countess Solms,
+but, dear, no. All real bluestockings are ugly and emaciated. Solms is
+both, and her legs are as long and as thin as those of Diana, my English
+hunter.
+
+I think this Diary business will be quite amusing,--at any rate, it will
+be more so than the conversation of my ladies. Ah, those ladies of the
+court of Saxony! If they would only talk of anything else but orphans,
+sisters of charity and ballet girls. The latter always have one foot in
+Hades, while you can see the wings grow on the backs of the others.
+
+When the von Schoenberg struts in, peacock fashion, and announces "his
+royal Highness did himself the honor to soil his bib," I sometimes stare
+at her, not comprehending at the moment, and the fact that she is
+talking of my baby only gradually comes to mind. Isn't it ridiculous
+that a little squalling bit of humanity, whom the accident of birth
+planted in a palace, is royalty first and all the time, and a child only
+because he can't help it?
+
+As for me, I am a woman and mother first, and my child is an animated
+lump of flesh and blood--_my_ flesh and blood--first and all the time.
+Of course, when baby came I wanted to nurse it. You should have seen
+Frederick Augustus's face. If I had proposed to become a wet-nurse to
+some "socialist brat" he couldn't have been more astonished. Yet my
+great ancestress, the Empress Maria Theresa, nursed her babies "before a
+parquet of proletarians," at the theatre and at reviews, and thought
+nothing of giving the breast to a poor foundling left in the park of
+Schoenbrunn.
+
+Frederick Augustus recovered his speech after a while--though he never
+says anything that would seem to require reflection, he always acts the
+deep thinker. "Louise," he mumbled reproachfully,--"what will his
+Majesty say?"
+
+"I thought you were the father of the child," I remarked innocently.
+
+"No levity where the King is concerned," he corrected poor me. "You know
+very well that for an act of this kind a royal permit must be previously
+obtained."
+
+Followed a long pause to give his mental apparatus time to think some
+more. Then: "And, besides, it will hurt your figure."
+
+"Augusta Victoria" (the German Empress) "nursed half a dozen children,
+and her _décolleté_ is still much admired," I insisted.
+
+Frederick Augustus paid no attention to this argument. "Anyhow, I don't
+want the doctors to examine your breast daily," he said with an air of
+mixed sentimentality and brusqueness.
+
+These were not his own words, though. My husband, not content with
+calling a spade a spade, invariably uses the nastiest terms in the
+dictionary of debauchery. When he tells me of his love adventures before
+marriage it's always "I bagged that girl," or "I made something tender
+out of her," just as a hunter talks of game or a leg of venison.
+
+He doesn't want to be rude; he is so without knowing it. His indelicacy
+would be astounding in a man born on the steps of the throne, if the
+Princes of this royal house were not all inclined that way.
+
+Two weeks after my accouchement George and Isabelle called. Though
+brother and sister-in-law, we are not at all on terms of intimacy.
+Frederick Augustus made some remarks of a personal nature that sent all
+the blood to my head; Isabelle seemed to enjoy my discomfort, but George
+had the decency to go to the window and comment on the dirty boots of a
+guard lieutenant just entering the courtyard. Frederick Augustus
+thought he had made a hit with Isabelle and applauded his own effort
+with a loud guffaw, while pounding his thighs, which seems to give him
+particular satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE SWEET FAMILY
+
+ Husband loving, but family nasty--Money considerations--Brutal
+ caresses in public--Pests in the family--Awful serenity--Meddle with
+ angels' or devils' affairs--Father-in-law's gritty kiss.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _February 24, 1893_.
+
+I have been married some fifteen months and I love my husband. He is
+kind, not too inquisitive and passionate. I have better claims to
+domestic happiness than most of my royal sisters on or near the thrones
+of Europe. Of course when I married into the Saxon royal family I
+expected to be treated with ill-concealed enmity. Wasn't I young and
+handsome? Reason enough for the old maids and childless wives, my new
+sweet relatives, to detest me.
+
+Wasn't I poor? I brought little with me and my presence entailed a
+perpetual expense. Now in royal families money is everything, or nearly
+so, and the newcomer that eats but doesn't increase the family fortune
+is regarded as an interloper.
+
+If I hadn't "_made good_," that is if, in due time, I hadn't become a
+mother, my position among the purse-proud, rapacious and narrow-minded
+Wettiners would have become wellnigh intolerable. But I proved myself a
+_Holstein_. I rose superior to Queen Carola, who never had a child, and
+to Maria, Mathilda, Isabelle and Elizabeth, who either couldn't or
+didn't. But, to my mind, acting the _cow_ for the benefit of the race
+did not invite stable manners.
+
+I wasn't used to them. They hadn't figured in the dreams of my girlhood.
+I thought love less robust. I didn't expect to be squeezed before my
+ladies. Even the best beloved husband shouldn't take liberties with his
+wife's waist in the parlor.
+
+And Frederick Augustus's negligee talk is no less offensive than his
+manner of laying loving hands on my person. As a rule, he treats me like
+a third-row dancing girl that goes to petition the manager for a place
+nearer the footlights. There is no limit to his familiarities or to the
+license of his conversation. "_Fine wench_" is a term of affection he
+likes to bestow on his future queen; indeed, one of the less gross. He
+has the weakness to like epithets that, I am told, gentlemen sometimes
+use in their clubs, but never towards a mistress they half-way respect.
+
+My father-in-law, Prince George, is a pest of another kind. While
+Frederick Augustus is jovial and rude, George is rude and serene of a
+serenity that would make a Grand Inquisitor look gay.
+
+One of my famous ancestresses, the Princess-Palatine, sister-in-law of
+Louis the Fourteenth, once boxed the Dauphin's ears for a trick he
+played on her, by putting his upright thumb in the centre of an armchair
+which her royal highness meant to sit on.
+
+Whenever I behold George's funereal visage, I long to repeat the
+Dauphin's undignified offense. I would like to see this royal parcel of
+melancholy jump and dance; change that ever-frowning and mournful aspect
+of his. Indeed, I would like to treat him to one of the anecdotes that
+made the Duchess de Berri explode with laughter.
+
+Frederick Augustus lives in deadly fear of him, and never gets his hair
+cut without first considering whether his father will approve or not.
+George isn't happy unless he renders other people unhappy. I actually
+believe he would rather meddle with the angels' or devils' affairs than
+say his prayers, though he is a bigot of the most advanced stripe.
+
+Sometimes when the itch for meddling has hold of him, he cites all the
+married princes of the royal house and lectures them on the wickedness
+of having no children, winding up by commanding each one to explain, in
+detail, his failure to have offspring.
+
+Of course, these gentlemen put the blame on their wives, whereupon the
+ladies are forthwith summoned to be threatened and cajoled.
+
+Prince George had the great goodness to approve of my baby and to
+congratulate me, also to set me up as an example for Isabelle. When I
+return to Dresden I shall be made Colonel of Horse.
+
+Twice has George kissed me,--upon my arrival in Saxony and five days
+after the birth of my child. It felt like a piece of gritty ice rubbing
+against my forehead.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+WEEPING WILLOW--EMBLEM ROYAL
+
+ A pious fraud--Theresa Mayer--Character of the Queen--Mopishness
+ rampant.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _March 1, 1893_.
+
+Prince Max came unexpectedly. He is studying for the priesthood and
+looks more sour than his father even. I was in bed, nursing a sick
+headache, but presuming upon his future clerical dignity, he walked in
+without ceremony and sat down on a chair near my bed. Then he raised his
+hands in prayer and announced that he had come to assist in my
+devotions.
+
+"Forget that I am your brother-in-law and cousin," he said; "tell me
+what's in your heart, Louise, and I will pray to the good God for thee."
+
+"Don't trouble yourself," I replied, "I have a court chaplain charged
+with these affairs. Rather tell me about the latest comic opera."
+
+"Comic opera!" he stammered. "You don't intend to go to such worldly
+amusements now that you are a mother?"
+
+"Of course I do. The very day I return to Dresden I will take a look at
+your girl."
+
+"My--what?" gasped Max.
+
+"Your Theresa--Theresa Mayer. I understand she made a great hit in the
+_Geisha_, and everybody approves of your taste, Max."
+
+Max turned red, then green, and I thought to myself what a fool I was.
+He's a favorite with the King and Queen, and my father-in-law believes
+every word he says.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _March 10, 1893_.
+
+Queen Carola is a good soul though she doesn't dare call her soul her
+own. I never heard her say "_peep_" in the presence of his Majesty. She
+looks forlorn and frightened when King Albert is around.
+
+I like her better since I am a mother, for she loves baby. Yes, though
+she is a Queen, I saw her actually smile at the child once or twice.
+
+Poor woman, the point of her nose is always red, and, like Father-in-law
+George, she believes weeping willow the only fit emblem for royalty. The
+look of the whipped dog is always in her weak eyes.
+
+I am too young and--they _do_ say--too frivolous to stand so much
+mopishness. These mustard-pots, sedate, grave, wan and long-faced, make
+me mad. I don't know what to say,--all I can do is try to hide my
+"un-princess-like" cheerfulness when they are around.
+
+I wish I had an ounce or so of diplomacy in my composition. It might
+enable me to sympathize with the fancied troubles of the Queen and
+Prince George, but I am incorrigible.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+MY UNPLEASANT YOUTH
+
+ Father hard to get along with--Royal imaginations--Kings cursing
+ other kings--Poverty and pretense--Piety that makes children
+ suffer--Up at five to pray on cold stones--Chilblains and prayer.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _March 11, 1893_.
+
+It occurs to me that, if this is intended as a record of my
+life--somewhat after the fashion of the _Margravine_ of Bayreuth's
+Memoirs--I ought to tell about my girlhood.
+
+Let me admit at once that my marriage to the Crown Prince of Saxony was,
+politically speaking, a stroke of good luck. My father, the Grand-duke
+of Tuscany, had been deprived of land and crown ten years before I was
+born, and, though he likes to pose as a sovereign, he is, as a matter of
+fact, a mere private gentleman of limited resources, whom the head of
+the family, the Austrian Emperor, may coax or browbeat at his sweet
+pleasure. If papa had been able to save his thronelet, I have no doubt
+he would be a most agreeable man, open-handed and eager to enjoy life,
+but instead of making the best of a situation over which he has no
+control, he is forever fretting about his lost dignities and about "his
+dear people" that don't care a snap for his love and affection. This
+makes him a trying person to get along with,--mention a king or prince
+in the full enjoyment of power, and father gets melancholy and calls
+Victor Emanuel, the second of his name, a brigand.
+
+He seldom or never visits his _confrères_ in the capitals of Europe, but
+when I was a girl our gloomy palace at Salzburg saw much of the ghosts
+of decaying royalty. The Dukes of Modena and Parma, the King of Hanover,
+the _Kurfurst_ of Hesse, the King of Naples and other monarchs and
+toy-monarchs that were handed their walking papers by sovereigns
+mightier than themselves, visited us off and on, filling the air with
+lamentations and cursing their fate.
+
+And, like papa, all these _ex'es_ are ready to fly out of their very
+skins the moment they notice the smallest breach of etiquette concerning
+their august selves. If they had the power, the Imperial Highnesses
+would execute any man that called them "Royal Highness," while the Royal
+Highnesses would be pleased to send to the gallows persons addressing
+them as "Highness" only.
+
+And papa has other troubles, and the greatest of them, lack of money.
+Poverty in private life must be hard enough, but a poor king, obliged to
+keep up the pretense of a court, is to be pitied indeed.
+
+Add to what I have said, father's share of domestic unhappiness. Mother
+is a Bourbon of Parma, serious-minded and hard like my father-in-law,
+and almost as much of a religious fanatic.
+
+Oh, how we children suffered by the piety of our mother. There were
+eight of us, myself the oldest of five girls, and seven years older than
+my sister Anna. Yet this baby, as soon as she could walk, was obliged to
+rise, like myself, at five o'clock summer and winter to go to the chapel
+and pray. The chapel was lighted only by a few wax candles and, of
+course, was unheated like the corridors of the palace. And like them it
+was paved with stones. Many a chilblain I carried away from kneeling on
+those granite flags.
+
+And the stupidity of the thing! Instead of saying our prayers we
+murmured and protested, and as soon as we were old enough we slipped
+portions of novels in our prayer-books, which we read while mass was
+said. That trick was not unfraught with danger though, for mother's
+spies were always after us, and the bad light made reading difficult.
+
+I am sure that if mother had found us out, she would have whipped us
+within an inch of our lives.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+A FIERCE DISCIPLINARIAN
+
+ Diamonds used to punish children--Face object of attacks--Grunting
+ and snorting at the royal table--Blood flowing at dinner--My brother
+ jumps out of a window.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _April 1, 1893_.
+
+Nothing of consequence happened since my last entry, and I continue the
+story of my girlhood.
+
+Her Imperial Highness, my pious mother, had a terrible way of punishing
+her children. The face of the culprit was invariably the object of her
+attacks. She hit us with the flat of her bony hand, rendered more
+terrible by innumerable rings. The sharp diamonds cut into the flesh and
+usually made the blood flow freely.
+
+The court chaplain at Salzburg was a peasant's boy without manners or
+breeding of any kind. While the least violation of etiquette or
+politeness on the children's part was punished by a box on the ear, or
+by withholding the next meal, mother overlooked the swinishness of the
+chaplain simply because he wore a black coat.
+
+One of the chaplain's most offensive habits was to grunt and snort when
+eating. On one occasion my brother Leopold gave a somewhat exaggerated
+imitation of these disgusting practices at table, whereupon mother,
+blind with fury, for she thought a priest could do no wrong, struck
+Leopold in the face, causing the blood to gush from his lacerated cheek.
+
+Father immediately rose from table and savagely turning upon mother
+said, "Understand, Madame, that as a sovereign and head of the family I
+will have no one punished in my presence. If I think punishment
+necessary, I will inflict it myself in a dignified way."
+
+Mother immediately began to cry. She always had a flood of tears ready
+when father offered the slightest reprimand. Afterwards she upbraided
+father and us, the children. If it were not for her incessant prayers,
+she said, and for the Christian life she was leading, God would have
+destroyed the Tuscans long ago, and she wasn't sure that either of us
+would attain Paradise except for her intercession with the Almighty.
+
+This and similar scenes and incidents disgusted me with religion early
+in life. Myself and all my brothers and sisters hated the very sight of
+the court chaplain who licked our mother's boots, while heaping
+punishments and indignities upon us.
+
+At one time my brother Leopold didn't know his catechism. "I will teach
+your Imperial Highness to skip your lessons," said the court chaplain.
+"Kneel before me and read the passage over ten times as a punishment."
+
+Leopold promptly answered: "I won't."
+
+"Yes, you will, Imperial Highness, for such are my orders," cried the
+court chaplain.
+
+Leopold said doggedly, "I kneel before the altar and before the Emperor,
+if he demands it, not before such as you."
+
+"Suppose I call on your Imperial Highness's mother and ask her to forbid
+you to mount a horse for a month or so?" queried our tormentor.
+
+Horseback riding was Leopold's chief pleasure, and the chaplain had no
+sooner launched his threat, when Leopold opened the window and
+apparently jumped out. As the school-room was situated in the third
+story, the teacher thought his pupil dead on the pavement below, but
+Leopold was merely hanging on to the stone coping and shutters. That
+gave him the whip hand over the teacher. "I will let go if you don't
+promise not to inform mother," demanded the twelve-year-old boy.
+
+"I promise, only come in," moaned the teacher.
+
+"Promise furthermore there shall be no punishment whatever for what I
+did and said."
+
+"None whatever, your Imperial Highness."
+
+"Swear it on the cross."
+
+The chaplain did as ordered and Leopold crawled back to safety.
+
+Leopold is a good deal like me, and has been in hot water more or less
+all his life.
+
+When I was a girl of fifteen, he defended my honor at the risk of the
+fearful punishments my mother had in store for those children that
+wouldn't buckle down to the chaplain, but that is so sad a chapter of my
+girlhood days I cannot bring myself to put it down today.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+LEOPOLD DEFENDS MY HONOR AT HIS PERIL
+
+ Punished for objecting to familiarities--Awful names I was
+ called--Locked in the room with wicked teacher--Defend myself with
+ burning lamp--My brother nearly kills my would-be assailant.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _April 2, 1893_.
+
+I want to finish with evil recollections. Maybe I will be able to forget
+them, when I have done with this narrative. My mother, as pointed out,
+had more confidence in our rascally court chaplain than in her own
+children, and was far more concerned about the chaplain's dignity than
+ours. She never hesitated to doubt her children's veracity, but regarded
+all the chaplain said as gospel truth.
+
+About two weeks before Easter, 1885, the time when I was just budding
+into young womanhood, the chaplain began to pay me a great deal of
+attention. The lessons he gave me to learn were insignificant compared
+with those of my brothers and sisters, and it mattered not whether I
+came to school prepared or otherwise. The strict disciplinarian had all
+of a sudden turned lenient. He began to pat my hair, to give me friendly
+taps on the shoulder, and never took his eyes off me. I was too young
+and innocent to see the true significance of his strange behavior, but
+I woke up suddenly and ran crying to my mother, telling her what had
+happened.
+
+"I won't take another lesson from that man, unless my lady-in-waiting is
+present," I sobbed.
+
+"You are a malicious, lying, low-minded creature," hissed my mother, at
+the same time striking me in the face with her big diamonds. "It's
+mortal sin to throw suspicion on so holy a man, and I will not have him
+watched."
+
+I ran out of mother's room crying, intending to go to papa, but met the
+boys in the corridor, who told me that father had just departed for the
+chase. Then I took Leopold aside and told him everything. He was
+half-mad with rage and was hardly able to articulate when he rushed to
+mother's room demanding protection for me.
+
+"I will protect the holy man instead," answered my fanatic mother.
+"Louise shall be locked in the room with the chaplain while she has her
+lesson." And my mother actually carried out that wicked design inspired
+by fanaticism.
+
+Locked in a room with me, the chaplain was sweetness itself, but for a
+while at least remained at a distance. When he attempted to approach me,
+I seized the burning kerosene lamp, as Leopold had advised.
+
+"One step more," I cried excitedly, "and I will throw the lamp in your
+face."
+
+The coward stood still in his tracks, and began whispering to me in a
+hoarse voice things I hardly understood, but that nevertheless wounded
+me to the quick. I kept my hand at the burning lamp during the whole
+hour and was ready to faint when the fiend at last left me.
+
+As the door opened, I saw Leopold standing outside, an enormous dog whip
+in hand. Without a word he applied the whip to the chaplain's broad
+face, lashing him right and left. The scoundrel offered no resistance,
+but fled like the dog he was, Leopold after him through the long
+corridors, upstairs and downstairs, through the picture gallery and the
+state apartments, lashing him as he ran, the two of them filling the
+palace with cries of rage and pain. Only the fact that Leopold stumbled
+over a footstool, enabled the chaplain to reach his room alive, where he
+barricaded himself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+PRINCES AND PRINCESSES DANCE TO THE TUNE OF THE WHIP
+
+ The result shows in the character of rulers--Why English kings and
+ princes are superior to the Continental kind--Leopold's awful
+ revenge--Mother acts the tigress--Her mailed fist--"I forbid Your
+ Imperial Highness to see that dog."
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _April 21, 1893_.
+
+If my Diary ever fell into plebeian hands, I suppose such stories as the
+above would be branded as rank exaggerations.
+
+A Queen endangering life and health of her children by a form of
+punishment otherwise known only in the prize ring.
+
+An Imperial Highness using her diamonds to graft scars on the cheeks of
+a little girl!
+
+Royal children beaten worse than dogs, deprived of sleep, subjected to
+cold and damp and, withal, given over, bound hand and foot, so to speak,
+to the tender mercies of low-minded, unworthy, and even dangerous
+persons without manners or education.
+
+And, to cap the climax, a Royal maid in the first blush of budding
+womanhood grossly repulsed and physically attacked when she appeals to
+her mother for protection; that child locked in a room with her would-be
+ravisher and obliged to defend her honor by a threat of murder.
+
+Only the uninitiated--men and women living outside the pale of royal
+courts--will deem such things impossible. Let me tell these happy
+ignoramuses that all through the nineteenth century the princes and
+princesses of Europe were brought up to the tune of the whip and of
+physical and mental humiliation. It was the fashion.
+
+The only eminent monarch of the immediate past--Frederick the Great--was
+all but flayed alive by his father when a boy and young man,--emulate
+the second King of Prussia's brutalities and your offspring will be
+destined for greatness, argued princes.
+
+The first Emperor William of Germany had a gentle mother, my famous
+namesake; he was always a gentleman. The Russian Czars, Paul, Nicholas
+I, and Alexander III, were brought up with the knout, their preceptors
+used the boys at their sweet pleasure. The first turned out a madman;
+the second a brute; the third his people's executioner.
+
+Czar Paul would run a mile to cane a soldier who had a speck of dust on
+his boots. My grand-uncle, Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria, sometimes
+travels tens of miles to box the ears of a member of his family.
+
+Francis Joseph had a cruel bringing up.
+
+At the Royal Library in Berlin I saw the manuscript of _Les Mémoires de
+ma vie: la princesse de Prusse, Frederice Sophie Wilhelmine, qui epousa
+le Margrave de Bayreuth_,--the original, unedited save by the
+corrections of the authoress. A good many passages of this "most
+terrible indictment of royalty" reminded me of home. There is even a
+parallel, or a near-parallel, of my own case just recorded. The Princess
+Wilhelmina's all-powerful governess was Madame Leti, who pummelled the
+child "as if she had been her mother." This Leti was undoubtedly a
+Sadist; to inflict torture, to practice refined cruelties was a joy to
+her. Not content with whipping the little girl, she added, shortly
+before her dismissal, some poisonous matter to Wilhelmina's wash water
+"that gnawed the skin and made my face all coppery and inflamed my
+eyes." This species of wickedness, at last, resulted in the discharge of
+Leti, "but she decided to leave me a few souvenirs in the shape of
+fisticuffs and kicks. She had told my mother that I was suffering from
+nose bleed and punched my nose whenever she was unobserved. During the
+last week of her stay at the palace I sometimes bled like an ox, and my
+arms and legs were blue, green and yellow from her kicks and cuffs. I am
+sure if she could have broken my legs with impunity, she would not have
+hesitated a moment to do so."
+
+History and the court gossip of the day afford plenty of precedents for
+what happened to me and my brothers and sisters in Salzburg. Indeed,
+Prince Albert, Consort of the late Queen Victoria, was the only royal
+father of the first half of the century that used the rod in moderation.
+To my mind that is one of the reasons why English kings and princes are
+so far superior to the Continental kind.
+
+But to return to Salzburg.
+
+Leopold had it all his own way for a quarter of an hour, as none of the
+servants would interfere in favor of the hated chaplain and mother was
+engaged in her oratory in a far away part of the castle. So my brother
+kicked in the door and went for the cowering brute again, raining
+stripes on every part of his bloated body, alternately using the whip
+and the whip-end. Undoubtedly Leopold would have killed him then and
+there if his boy's strength had not given out. He left him more dead
+than alive, bleeding and moaning.
+
+I will never forget the spectacle when Leopold came down the stairs
+after leaving the chaplain's room. I and my brothers and sisters were
+huddled together behind our ladies in the blue ante-chamber. A dozen or
+more lackeys stood in the corridor, whispering.
+
+Leopold's face was deathly pale as he descended the stairs, and blood
+was dripping from his whip, reddening the white linen runners
+protecting the carpet. He wore his army uniform, that should have saved
+him from violence at any rate. At that moment I prayed my sincerest that
+father would come home. I would have thrown myself on my knees and told
+everything, servants or no servants. But mother came instead.
+
+She was fully informed and she sprang upon poor Leopold like a tigress,
+knocking him from one end of the corridor to the other with her
+diamond-mailed fist. It was terrible, and all of us children cried aloud
+with terror. But the more we cried and the more we begged for mercy, the
+harder were the blows mother rained upon poor Leopold's face and head.
+His blood spattered over the white enameled banisters and doors until
+finally he was dragged out of my mother's clutches by an old footman who
+placed his broad back between the Imperial Highness and her victim.
+
+Now, it was the rule in our house that the whipped child had to ask our
+mother's forgiveness for putting her to the trouble of wielding the
+terrible back of her hand.
+
+Six weeks Leopold stayed at Salzburg after the scene described, and
+daily my mother urged him to beg her forgiveness. The boy stood
+stockstill on these occasions, never twitching a muscle of his face and
+never saying a word in reply. During all these six weeks he waited on
+mother morning, noon and night, according to ceremony, but never a word
+escaped him, never did he look in her direction unless actually forced
+to do so. He played the deaf and dumb to perfection.
+
+Father must have thought that Leopold got enough punishment, for he
+never mentioned the matter to him and forbade the servants to even
+allude to the court chaplain. Mother, on her part, placed the chaplain
+in charge of two skilled surgeons and sent every little while to inquire
+how he was doing.
+
+On the third day she said to my father at table, that she was going to
+pay a visit to the court chaplain.
+
+"I forbid your Imperial Highness to see that dog," said my father in an
+icy voice that brooked no reply. "I will have his carcass thrown out of
+here as soon as his condition permits."
+
+That was the only time I heard father speak like a sovereign and man.
+
+That Leopold nearly killed the scoundrel, as he promised to do, is
+evident from the fact that the court chaplain lay in the castle three
+weeks before he could be transported to a monastery. Some monks--for
+none of the servants would lend a helping hand--carried him away by
+night and none of the children ever saw or heard of our tormentor again.
+
+The only sorry reminder of the episode is the estrangement of Leopold
+and our mother. Though mother tried her hardest to win back the boy's
+confidence and affection, he remained an iceberg towards her,
+ceremonious but cold, polite but wholly indifferent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+PLANNING TO GET A HUSBAND FOR ME
+
+ Dissecting possible wooers at Vienna--Royalty after money, not
+ character--"He is a Cohen, not a Coburg"--Prince who looked like a
+ Jew counter-jumper in his Sunday best--Balkan princes tabooed by
+ Francis Joseph--A good time for the girls--Army men commanded to
+ attend us.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _April 25, 1893_.
+
+A change of scene. I was eighteen and my parents were anxious to get a
+husband for me. Royalty marries off its princes at an early age to keep
+them out of mischief; its princesses as soon as a profitable suitor
+turns up or can be secured by politics, diplomacy, the exercise of
+parental wits or the powerful influence of the head of the House.
+
+Sister Anna, now Princess John of Hohenlohe, myself and mother were
+invited to Vienna. It was my introduction to royal pomp and
+circumstance. The _Hofburg_, our town lodging, seemed to me the first
+and also the last cry in sumptuousness--all that was beautiful and
+expensive in days gone by is there, and all that is new and desirable is
+there, too; Schoenbrunn, the Imperial summer residence, is a dream of
+loveliness wedded to grandeur. Between the Emperor and my mother and
+between her and the numerous archduchesses and archdukes every second
+word uttered referred to me as the possible wife of someone or another.
+And that someone was well dissected as to fortune, success in life and
+political exigencies.
+
+Whether he was good-looking or a monkey in face and figure mattered not.
+Health, good character, uprightness didn't count.
+
+Has he expectations for gaining a throne? Will he be wise enough to
+retain that throne? What kind of an establishment will he be able to set
+up? How long may his parents live, hanging on to the family
+fortune?--These were the only considerations deemed worthy of
+discussion.
+
+Three or four of the archduchesses seemed to be acting as marriage
+brokers for Ferdinand, just elected hereditary prince of Bulgaria, whose
+mother, Princess Clementine, a daughter of the dethroned King Louis
+Philippe of France, was reputed to be rolling in gold.
+
+Leopold irreverently called Ferdinand's partisans "_Fillons_" after
+famous "_La Fillon_," who supplied the harem of our jolly ancestor, the
+Regent of France, Duke of Orleans, and he insisted that Ferdinand was a
+_Cohen_, not a Coburg. As a matter of fact, Ferdinand's great fortune is
+derived from a Kohary, which is Hungarian for Cohen. The original Kohary
+was a cattle-dealer, who supplied the armies of the Allies during the
+Napoleonic wars. In this way he accumulated so much wealth that an
+impoverished Coburg prince fell in love with his daughter and made her
+his wife, after she exchanged the name of Rebecca for Antonie and the
+Mosaic faith for that of Rome.
+
+Young and proud and flippant as I was, Leopold's talk filled me with
+hearty contempt for the "Coburger" long before we were introduced. And
+as to his ambassador, who was forever dancing attendance upon me, I
+hated him. Yet the Imperial "_Fillons_" kept up their clatter, and one
+fine morning Prince Ferdinand was announced.
+
+He wasn't half bad looking, but struck me as too much of a mother's-boy.
+Princess Clementine seemed to decide everything for him. Anyhow, I
+wouldn't have him and he marched off again.
+
+I next reviewed, as another Balkan matrimonial possibility, Prince
+Danilo of Montenegro, a small, thin person, looking like a Jew
+counter-jumper in holiday dress--Vienna "store-clothes."
+
+Danilo spoke the worst _table d'hôte_ French I ever heard in my life,
+and I told mother I would rather marry a rich banker than this crowned
+idiot. For once she agreed with me and said his father was only a
+"mutton-thief," anyhow.
+
+Finally there was talk of King Alexander of Servia, six years younger
+than I. Queen Natalie, who a few days ago celebrated one of her several
+reunions with ex-King Milan, spoke feelingly of her "Sasha" to mother,
+lauding him as the best of sons and the most promising of sovereigns,
+but the oft-divorced Majesty was less communicative when mother asked
+how many millions she would pass over to Alexander on his marriage day.
+That settled "Sasha's" ambitions as far as my hand was concerned. Marry
+a Balkan King and the _née_ Keshko holding the purse-strings! Not for my
+father's daughter! I didn't want to marry into a Russian Colonel's
+family, anyhow. I believe Queen Natalie's father was a colonel, or was
+he only a lieutenant-colonel?
+
+These marriage negotiations aside, Anna and myself had a mighty good
+time in Vienna (I forgot to say that Emperor Francis Joseph agreed with
+me that Danilo and Alexander were quite impossible and that henceforth
+Balkan marriages should be taboo).
+
+"I have ordered a dozen young officers to report for tonight's dancing,"
+said my Imperial uncle one evening. "Select from among them your tennis
+partners, girls." Baron Cambroy of the Guards was my choice, and a
+mighty handsome fellow he is. He seemed pleased when I commanded him to
+tennis duty every afternoon during our stay. He is tall and spare in
+appearance and I might have fallen in love with him sooner, but for his
+dark skin. I am an Italian and, by way of contrast, prefer blondes to
+any other sort of man.
+
+Anna, myself and our ladies bicycled to the tennis court every
+afternoon, and on our way back to the castle were escorted by the Baron
+and the other officers.
+
+Trust a girl with a dress reaching an inch below her knees to find out
+scandals! On the second day after our meeting with the Baron, Anna told
+me that he was the lover of Draga Maschin, lady-in-waiting to Queen
+Natalie of Servia.[4]
+
+Draga was in attendance upon Queen Natalie when she called on us, a
+beautiful girl, somewhat too full-bosomed for an unmarried one, like my
+great-aunt, Catharine, who became the wife of that upstart, Jerome
+Napoleon. At home we have her picture, and mother, who was rather skinny
+as a girl, never failed to point out that it was painted before Queen
+Catharine's marriage, despite her voluptuous bust.
+
+If my Baron was really Draga's beloved, that would more than half
+explain mother's puzzle.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 4: The same who afterwards became the Queen of King Alexander
+of Servia and eventually the cause of his death and of the extinction of
+the Obrenovitsch dynasty. Alexander and Draga were both slaughtered in
+their beds May 29, 1903, ten years after the above was written.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+LOVE-MAKING
+
+ The fascinating Baron--The man's audacity--Putting the question
+ boldly--Real love-making--_Risqué_ stories for royalty.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _May 1, 1893_.
+
+I am in love but, like a prudent virgin, I admitted the fact to myself
+only shortly before we departed for Salzburg. After I put several
+hundred miles between me and my fascinating Baron, all's well again.
+
+My first love, and it was the man's audacity that won the day!
+
+Imagine an Imperial Highness, decidedly attractive, eighteen, and no
+tigress by any means, wheeling at the side of a mere lieutenant who has
+nothing but his pay to bless himself with and nothing but good looks to
+recommend him. And, as before stated, he wasn't even my style.
+
+Anna pedalled ahead some twenty-five paces; our ladies wheezed and
+snorted that many behind. This devil of a lieutenant took a chance.
+
+"Imperial Highness," he commenced, "I wager you don't know what love
+is."
+
+It was the one theme I was aching for, scenting, as I did, the odor of
+forbidden things. Never before had I the opportunity.
+
+"R-e-a-l love," he insisted.
+
+"Do you blame me?" I asked, vixen-like. "Would be a poor specimen of
+Guard officer who didn't know more about real love than a mere girl of
+eighteen and a princess at that."
+
+"Will your Imperial Highness allow me to explain?" This, oh so
+insinuatingly, from the gay seducer.
+
+"Why not?" I asked, with the air of a _roué_ and hating myself for
+blushing like a poppy--I felt it.
+
+"Charmed to enlighten you--with your Imperial Highness's permission,"
+whispered the Baron, his knee crowding mine as he drew nearer on his
+wheel.
+
+"Explain away."
+
+"Not until I have your Imperial Highness's express command and your
+promise not to get angry if I should offend."
+
+Anna, always an _enfant terrible_ and invariably in the way, was waiting
+for us in the shadow of a tree and now rode by the Baron's side. She had
+evidently heard part of our conversation.
+
+"Permission and pardon granted beforehand," she cried. "Go ahead."
+
+The Baron looked at me, and not to be outdone by the parcel of
+impudence in short petticoats, I said carelessly: "Oh, tell. I command."
+
+The Baron began to stroke his moustache and then related a story of
+Napoleon and our ancestress Marie Louise, the Austrian Archduchess, not
+found in school books.
+
+On the day before her entry into Paris, he said, and when they were
+destined to meet for the first time, Napoleon waylaid his bride-to-be at
+Courcelles and without ceremony entered her carriage. They rushed past
+villages, through towns _en fête_ and at last, at nine o'clock in the
+evening, reached the palace of Compiègne. There the Emperor cut short
+the addresses of welcome, presentations and compliments, and taking
+Marie Louise by the hand conducted her to his private apartments. Next
+morning they had breakfast in bed. The marriage ceremony took place a
+few days later.
+
+"That's love," said the Baron, shooting significant glances at me.
+
+"Henry _Quatre_ did the same to Marie de Medici--an Italian like you,
+Imperial Highness."
+
+Anna didn't know what to make of it, and as for me, my tongue stuck to
+the roof of my mouth.
+
+The impudent fellow seems to have misinterpreted our silence, for,
+brazen like the _Duc de_ Richelieu, who boasted of sleeping in the beds
+of queens, he continued:
+
+"Catharine the Great, too, knew what love was. One fine afternoon when
+she wasn't a day older than you, Imperial Highness, she looked out of
+the window of her room at Castle Peterhof. In the garden below a
+sentinel, very handsome, very Herculean, very brave, was pacing up and
+down. Catharine, then Imperial Grand-duchess and only just married, made
+a sign to the soldier. The giant, abandoning his rifle, jumped below the
+window and Catharine jumped onto his shoulders from the second story.
+
+"That's real love," concluded the Baron.
+
+Anna got frightened and fled down the avenue, but I had the weakness to
+remain at the Baron's side until we reached the palace.
+
+Alas, Frederick Augustus wasn't as good a talker as the Baron.
+
+[Illustration: FREDERICK AUGUSTUS, REIGNING KING OF SAXONY
+
+Louise's Ex-Husband]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+MY POPULARITY RENDERS GEORGE DYSPEPTIC
+
+ The Cudgel-Majesty--Prince George's intrigues--No four-horse coach
+ for Princess--Popular demonstration in my favor--"All-highest"
+ displeasure.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _September 1, 1893_.
+
+I haven't lived up to my promise to keep a daily record, or even a
+weekly one. Those tales of my girlhood days disgusted me with diary
+keeping as far as my early experiences at home went and I reflected that
+many of the subsequent happenings in my life might be safer in the
+shrine of memory, than spread over the pages of a blank-book, even
+though no one sees it and I carry its golden key on a chain around my
+neck.
+
+We are back in the capital now and things are moving. Great doings had
+been planned for our reception, for the re-entry of the little prince,
+my baby, and his mother who is expected to give another child to Saxony
+at the end of the year. Two babies in one year! I am going to beat the
+German Empress, and if Wilhelm doesn't send me a medal I will cut him
+dead the next time I see him!
+
+Well, about that reception. Flags, triumphal arches, speeches by the
+burgo-master, white-robed virgins at the station and all that sort of
+thing!
+
+But Father-in-law George said "no." Anything that gives joy to others
+goes against his royal grain, gives him politico-economic dyspepsia. He
+doesn't want me to be popular,--neither me, nor Frederick Augustus, nor
+the baby.
+
+George will be the next king, and if the Dresdeners or the Saxons want
+to "_Hoch the King_," they must "_Hoch_" George. They MUST. "It's their
+damned duty," says George the Pious, who never blasphemes on his own
+account, but allows himself some license concerning his subjects. His
+attitude recalls the story told of Frederick William the First of
+Prussia, whose appearance on the streets of Berlin used to cause
+passers-by to run to save their back. Upon one occasion His Majesty
+caught one of these fugitives, and whacking him over the head with his
+Spanish reed, cried angrily: "What do you want to run away from me for?"
+
+"Because I'm afraid of your Royal Majesty," stuttered the poor devil.
+
+"Afraid?" thundered Frederick William, giving the fellow another whack
+with his cane. "Afraid?"--the beating continuing--"when I, your King,
+commanded you to love me. Love me, you miserable coward, love God's
+Anointed." And the loving Majesty broke his cane on the unloving
+subject's back.
+
+Two days before our arrival Prince George sent his adjutant, Baron de
+Metsch-Reichenbeck, to the Mayor of Dresden, stopping all reception
+arrangements contemplated.
+
+To have children was a mere picnic to Her Imperial Highness, lied
+George's messenger,--if the physicians hadn't used chloroform I would
+have perished with the torture. Ovations intended as a sort of reward or
+recognition of my services to the country, then, would be entirely out
+of place, and must not be thought of.
+
+The municipality thereupon officially abandoned preparations. I was a
+little vexed when I first heard about George's meanness, yet again felt
+tickled that he went out of his way to intrigue against me, the despised
+little princess of a House that ceased to reign. And I had an idea that
+the Dresdeners would give us a good welcome anyhow.
+
+I had contemplated ordering my special train to leave in the early
+morning or at noon, but the Ministry of Railways informed me that it was
+impossible to accommodate me at the hours mentioned.
+
+"We will take the ordinary express, then, and will be in Dresden at four
+in the afternoon," I suggested.
+
+"According to the new schedule, the express doesn't stop in Dresden,"
+protested Frederick Augustus.
+
+"We will command it to stop," I cried.
+
+Frederick Augustus looked at me as if I had asked him to borrow twenty
+marks from the Kaiser. "For God's sake!" he cried, "don't you know what
+happened to John the other day?"
+
+I confessed my ignorance.
+
+"Well," said Frederick Augustus, "John ordered the Continental express
+to pick him up at his garrison, and he had no sooner arrived in Dresden
+than he was commanded by the King to appear before him. His Majesty
+walked all over John, accusing him of 'interfering with international
+traffic' and forbidding him to issue another order of that character."
+
+"Pshaw!" I said, "John is merely a childless princeling. I am the mother
+of Saxony's future king. The regeneration, the perpetuation of your race
+depends on me."
+
+It was a mere waste of breath, for at that moment came a telegram,
+announcing that our special was billed to leave at 3:30, getting us to
+Dresden at half-past five--King's orders.
+
+"Did you command the _Daumont_ coach-and-four to meet us at the
+station?" I asked.
+
+"My dear child, you are dreaming," replied Frederick Augustus. "The
+State carriages are the property of the Crown and we don't own a
+four-horse team in Dresden. They will send the ordinary royal carriage,
+I suppose."
+
+I was mad enough to wish my husband's family to Hades, the whole lot of
+them, but the people of Dresden took revenge in hand and dealt most
+liberally. Of course, having fixed our arrival at a late and unusual
+hour, George expected there would be no one to welcome us, but the great
+concourse of people that actually assembled at the station and in the
+adjacent streets, lining them up to the palace gates, was tremendous
+instead.
+
+One more disappointment. George had sent an inconspicuous, narrow
+_coupé_ to the station,--the Dresdeners shouldn't see more than the
+point of my nose. I saw through his scheme the moment I clapped eyes on
+that mouse-trap of a vehicle standing at the curb.
+
+And then I remembered the brilliant stagecraft of August the Physical
+Strong--he of the three hundred and fifty-two--and how he always managed
+to focus everybody's eyes on himself. And I stood stockstill on the
+broad, red-carpeted terrace when I walked out of the waiting room and
+held up my baby in the face of the multitude. You could hear the
+"_Hochs_" and Hurrahs all over town, they said. Hats flew in the air,
+handkerchiefs waved, flags were thrust out of the windows of the houses.
+
+"What are you doing, Imperial Highness?" whispered _Fräulein von_
+Schoenberg, my lady-in-waiting.
+
+"Never mind, I will carry the baby to the carriage," I answered curtly.
+
+"But the King and Prince George will be angry,--everything will be
+reported to them."
+
+"I sincerely hope it will," I said.
+
+And before I entered that petty _souricière_ of a royal coach, I danced
+the baby above my head time and again, giving everybody a chance to see
+him. And as I stood there in the midst of this tumult of applause, this
+waving sea of good-will, this thunder of jubilation, I felt proud and
+happy as I never did before. And when the thought struck me how mad
+George would feel about it all, I had to laugh outright.
+
+I was still grinning to myself when I heard Frederick Augustus's
+troubled voice: "Get in, what are you standing around here for?"--These
+manifestations of popularity spelt "all-highest" displeasure to him,
+poor noodle. He anticipated the scene at the palace, George fuming and
+charging "play to the gallery," the Queen in tears, the King threatening
+to banish us from Dresden.
+
+"Be it so," I said to myself, "we might as well be hanged for a sheep as
+a lamb." And I refused to enter the carriage until I had waved and
+smiled profound thanks to everybody in the square and in the windows and
+on the balconies of the surrounding houses.
+
+I saw the Master of Horse address the coachman and immediately divined
+his purpose. So I pulled at the rope and commanded the coachman to drive
+slowly. I said it in my most imperious manner, and the Master of Horse
+dared not give the counter order with which Prince George had charged
+him. Poor man, his failure to subordinate my will to his, or George's,
+cost him his job.
+
+And so we made our royal entry into Dresden amid popular rejoicings. I
+glued my face to the carriage window and smiled and smiled and showed
+the baby to everyone who asked for the boon.
+
+Baby took it all in a most dignified fashion. He neither squalled nor
+kicked, but seemed to enjoy the homage paid him.
+
+When we reached the palace there was another big crowd of well-wishers,
+who shouted themselves hoarse for Louise and the baby, and, malicious
+thing that I am, I noticed with pleasure that it all happened under
+George's windows.
+
+"This will give father-in-law jaundice," said baby's nurse in Italian.
+She is a girl from Tuscany and very devoted to me.
+
+"If he dies, I will be Queen the sooner," thought I,--but happily I
+didn't think aloud.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+SCOLDED FOR BEING POPULAR
+
+ Entourage spied upon by George's minions--My husband proves a
+ weakling--I disavow the personal compliment--No more intelligent
+ than a king should be.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _September 5, 1893_.
+
+I wrote the foregoing at one sitting, without interruption. It's not so
+easy a matter to put down the consequences of our triumph, or rather
+mine and baby's.
+
+When I entered my apartments, I met a whole host of long faces. The
+Commander of the Palace, in great gala, offered a most stiff and icy
+welcome. The adjutants, the chamberlains, the _maître d'Hôtel_, all
+looked ill at ease. They evidently felt the coming storm in their bones
+and didn't care to have it said of them, by George's spies, that they
+lent countenance, even in a most remote way, to my carryings-on. Even
+the Schoenberg--my own woman--shot reproachful glances at me when the
+Commander of the Palace happened to look her way.
+
+Frederick Augustus looked and acted as if he was to be deprived of all
+his military honors.
+
+"Your courage must have fallen into your _cuirassier_ boots, look for it
+there," I said to him in an undertone when he seemed ready to go to
+pieces at the entrance of the King's grand marshal, Count Vitzthum.
+
+With that I advanced towards His Excellency and, holding out my hand to
+be kissed, took care to say to him with my most winning smile,
+
+"I trust His Majesty will be pleased with me, for of course our grand
+reception was but a reflex of the love the people have for their King. I
+never for a moment took it as a personal compliment."
+
+My smart little speech disconcerted the official completely. Maybe he
+had orders to say something disagreeable, but my remark disarmed him,
+forestalled any quarrel that might have been in the King's or Prince
+George's mind.
+
+Frederick Augustus, who is no more intelligent than a future king should
+be, was so amazed, he had to think hard and long before he could even
+say "Good evening" to the Count. As for the latter, he hawed and coughed
+and stammered and cleared his throat until finally he succeeded in
+delivering himself of the following sublime effort:
+
+"I will have the honor to report to His Majesty that during the time of
+your Imperial Highness's entry, your Imperial Highness thought of
+naught but the all-highest approval of His Majesty."
+
+Whereupon I shook his hand again and dismissed him. "It will please me
+immensely, Count," I said, "immensely."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+ROYAL DISGRACE--LIGHTNING AND SHADOWS
+
+ Ordered around by the Queen--Give thanks to a bully--Jealous of the
+ "mob's" applause--"The old monkey after '_Hochs_'"--Criticizing the
+ "old man"--Royalty's plea for popularity--Proposed punishments for
+ people refusing to love royalty.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _September 8, 1893_.
+
+Thrice twenty-four hours of royal disgrace and I am--alive. This
+morning: "All-highest order," signed by Her Majesty's Dame of the
+Palace, Countess von Minckwitz: "The Queen is graciously pleased to
+invite your Imperial Highness to audience."
+
+Of course her pleasure is a command. I dressed in state and ordered all
+the ladies and gentlemen of my court to attend me to the royal chambers.
+
+Queen Carola was very nice, giving the impression that she would be more
+lovely still if she dared.
+
+"Prince George has just commanded your husband," she said,--"the King
+ordered this condescension on my brother-in-law's part. You will have to
+thank him for it."
+
+Isn't it amusing to be an Imperial Highness and a Crown Princess to be
+ordered around like a "boots" and to be "commanded" like an orphan
+child to say thanks to one's betters!
+
+I promised and the Queen, assuming that I intended to act the good
+little girl, took courage to say--for she is the biggest of
+cowards--"You are too popular, Louise. Such a reception as you had! All
+the papers, even the Jew-sheets, are full of it."
+
+And before I could make any excuses for my popularity she added in
+sorrowful, half-accusing tones: "I lived here ever so many years and the
+mob never applauded _me_."
+
+"It's so fickle," I quoted. I had to say something, you know.
+
+"And contemptible," added the Queen heartily. "But how is baby?"
+
+I begged permission to send for him. Her Majesty was pleased to play
+with the little one for a minute or two and that secured me a gracious
+exit. The Queen attended me to the door, opening it with her own royal
+hand, thereby rehabilitating me with my entourage waiting outside.
+
+Meanwhile Frederick Augustus had a "critical quarter of an hour" with
+father-in-law, who assumed to speak on behalf of the King.
+
+"The King," he said, "despised 'playing to the gallery' worse than the
+devil hated holy water." (This court is overrun with Jesuits, and we
+must needs adopt their vernacular.)
+
+The King, he repeated, thought it very bad taste for anyone to take the
+centre of the stage in these "popularity-comedies," and he told a lot
+more lies of the same character. Then he bethought himself of his own
+grieved authority.
+
+"Tell your wife," he said, "that I, her father-in-law, and next to the
+throne, do everything in my power to escape such turbulent scenes, and
+that I would rather ride about town in an ordinary _Droschke_ (cab) of
+the second class, preserving my incognito, than in a state carriage and
+be the object of popular acclamation."
+
+When Frederick Augustus repeated the above with the most solemn face in
+the world, I thought I would die with laughter and actually had to send
+for my tire-woman to let my corset out a few notches.
+
+"The old monkey," I cried--"as if he wasn't after '_Hochs_' morning,
+noon and night; as if he thought of anything else when he mounts a
+carriage or his horse."
+
+"You forget yourself, Louise," warned Frederick Augustus in the voice of
+an undertaker, and I really think he meant it. But I wasn't in the mood
+to be silenced.
+
+"And as if I didn't know that, like Kaiser Wilhelm, he keeps a record of
+towns and villages that were never honored by one of his visits,
+intending to make his ceremonial entry there at the first plausible
+opportunity."
+
+"It isn't true," insisted Frederick Augustus.
+
+Then I got angry. "It may be thought polite in the bosom of your family
+to call one another a liar," I retorted, "but don't you get into the
+habit of introducing those tap-room manners in the _ménage_ of an
+Imperial Highness of Austria. I forbid it."
+
+And then I gave rein to some of the bitterness that had accumulated in
+my heart against the old man. Didn't I know that George was mad enough
+to quarrel with his dinner when, on his drives about town, he observed a
+single person refusing to salute him? And wasn't it a fact that the
+Socialists had combined never more to raise their hats to him just
+because he insisted on it? And wasn't that one of the reasons why the
+government was more hard on them than happened to be politic?
+
+"You mustn't say these things," pleaded Frederick Augustus.
+
+I pretended to melt. "May I not quote your father's own words?"
+
+"What my father says is always correct," replied the dutiful son.
+
+"Well, then, this is what he told House Minister von Seydowitz a couple
+of weeks ago: 'When I see one of these intending destroyers of the state
+and social order staring at me, hat on head and cigar in face, I doubly
+regret the good old times when kings and princes were at liberty to yank
+a scoundrel of that ilk to jail and immure him for life, giving him
+twenty-five stripes daily to teach him the desirableness of rendering
+unto Cæsar that which is Cæsar's.'"
+
+Frederick Augustus was holding his hands to his ears when I finished. He
+ran out and slammed the door behind him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+UNSPEAKABLE LITTLENESSES OF PETTY COURTS
+
+ Another quarrel with my husband--Personal attendant to a
+ corpse--Killing by pin pricks--The mythical three "_How art
+ thou's?_"--Unwanted sympathy from my inferiors--Pride of the
+ decapitated Queen of France is in me--Lovers not impossible--Court
+ to blame for them--My husband acts cowardly--Brutalizes my
+ household--I lock myself in.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _December 1, 1893_.
+
+I saved myself the trouble to record events for two or three months. I
+expect my child by the end of the year and, believing in prenatal
+influence, it would be a shame, I think, to poison the unborn baby's
+mind by dwelling on the unspeakable littlenesses that make up and burden
+life at this petty court.
+
+But I may die in the attempt of presenting Saxony with another candidate
+for appanages and honors, and this threat, hanging over every expectant
+mother, makes me take up my pen again. If I perish, let there be a
+record of my sufferings and also of my defiance.
+
+It turned out that the Queen's and George's apparent acquiescence to my
+sinful popularity marked the deceitful calm before the storm. Frederick
+Augustus has not succeeded in gaining the King's and his father's
+forgiveness even now. As a military officer he is shunted from pillar to
+post, and the generals and high officials of the court treat him like a
+recruit in disgrace. Of course he blames me, shouting that I wrecked his
+career.
+
+As if a future king need care a rap whether, as prince, he got a
+regiment a few months earlier or later.
+
+"When you are King," I sometimes say to him, "you may nominate yourself
+Field-Marshal-General and Great-Admiral above and below the sea--what do
+you care?"
+
+"It isn't the same," he moans. "I would like to have my patents signed
+by uncle or father."
+
+"Antedate your papers," I advised, "who dare dispute the king? Didn't
+the Kaiser nominate himself Adjutant-General to his grand-dad long after
+William I lay mouldering in Charlottenburg?"
+
+But Frederick Augustus takes colonel-ships and his petty kingship of the
+future too seriously to see even the humor of appointing oneself
+personal attendant to a corpse.
+
+As for me, if I weren't _enceinte_, they would send me to some
+lost-in-the-woods country house to die of _ennui_. But respect for
+public opinion forbidding drastic measures, George relies on a Russian
+expedient to humble my proud self and force me to submit to his
+meddling.
+
+In the Czar's country, when a village resolves on the death of some
+obnoxious individual, they take him, or her, and bind the body naked to
+a tree. Then several papers of pins are distributed among the
+inhabitants, and each man, woman and child is asked to put a pin in the
+lady or gentleman, whom they must approach blindfolded. They stick the
+pin wherever they touch the body and if the thing leaks out are able to
+swear by all the saints that they don't know where it struck. The pin
+pricking is continued until the obnoxious one expires amid awful
+tortures and, while all contributed to the murder, none can be hanged
+for it.
+
+In like manner George and his minions are trying to reduce me to the
+position of social and political corpse.
+
+Court festivities and public acts, attended by the court, seem to be
+specially arranged to pillorize me and husband. We are invited, of
+course. We are next in importance to Prince George. Our entourage is
+more numerous and more richly costumed than that of the other princes.
+Four horse coaches for us; Ministers of State waiting on us. I have
+train-bearers, pages, what-not.
+
+But the King and Prince George cut me and Frederick Augustus in sight of
+the whole court, of the public in fact!
+
+I don't mean to say that the "All-highest Lords," as they call
+themselves, treat us as air, or offer insult plain to the ear and
+eye--they couldn't afford to--nevertheless the stigma of royal disfavor
+is stamped on us. This is the mode of proceedings: Ceremony obliges the
+King to address each member of the royal family with the words: "How do
+you do?", in the German fashion, "_How art thou?_"
+
+To princes and princesses that are in disgrace, this momentous question
+is put only once. Those in good standing are asked three times.
+
+Ever since that September day when all Dresden did me honor, the King
+and Prince George have said "_How art thou's?_" to me and mine but once,
+whenever and wherever we met, and be sure there were always listeners to
+report the double omission.
+
+At first it amused me; then enraged me; I don't care a fig now. But
+Frederick Augustus! Poor imbecile, he is eating his heart out about
+those two missing "_How art thou's?_" and though he looks splendid in
+gala uniform he acts in the royal, but ungracious, presence like a green
+recruit expecting to be kicked and cuffed by his noncommissioned officer
+on getting back to the barracks.
+
+As to my entourage, it surrenders to royal disfavor even as Frederick
+Augustus: depressed faces, pitying glances. I could box their ears for
+their sympathy.
+
+Am I not the great-granddaughter of that mighty Maria Theresa that ruled
+Austria and Hungary with an iron hand, lined with velvet. "_Moriamur pro
+rege nostro_" (We will die for our King), cried the Hungarians, when she
+appealed to their chivalry, her new-born babe at her breast. "_Rege_,"
+not "_Regina_." They called her King. They forgot the woman in the
+monarch, yet I am treated like an insipid female always, never as the
+Crown Princess!
+
+Let them beware. My full name is Louise Marie Antoinette. I was named
+after the Marie Antoinette of history--another ancestor of mine--and the
+pride of the decapitated Queen of France is in me! My namesake was
+satisfied when she read the Saint-Antoine placard of June 25, 1791:
+"Whosoever insults Marie Antoinette shall be caned, whosoever applauds
+her shall be hanged." Some day I will dismiss the cattle that now grudge
+me the people's applause and punish those that insult me.
+
+Come to think of it, Marie Antoinette had not only pride and defiance,
+she had lovers too. Well, some day this Marie Antoinette may have
+lovers, and if it's wrong, let the recording angel debit my sins to the
+Saxon court.
+
+Thank God, I am blessed with that truly royal attribute, ability to
+dissimulate. "_Qui nescit dissimulare nescit regnare_" was all the Latin
+Charles VIII knew, yet he made a pretty successful king for one who died
+at the age of twenty-seven.
+
+I always act as if the King, and father-in-law George, had asked me not
+once, or three times, but a dozen times "_How art thou?_" I don't know
+anything about being in disgrace, I don't anticipate being snubbed and
+when I am snubbed I don't see it.
+
+The "all-highest Lord" looks daggers at me--I curtsy and smile!
+
+Father-in-law Prince George exhibits the visage of a poisoned pole-cat
+at my table--I congratulate him on his good digestion!
+
+Majesty pays no more attention to my presence than if I was a pillar, or
+a lackey; I greet him with my most devoted genuflections, rise from the
+carpet smiling all over the face and begin a frivolous conversation with
+the nearest man at hand, who in his fright acts as if he had taken an
+overdose of physic.
+
+If Frederick Augustus only had an inch of backbone, a pinch of ginger in
+his constitution! But he always stands around with a red face and the
+mien of a penitent. No dog, accustomed to daily beatings, follows his
+master's movements with more anxious looks than the Crown Prince of this
+realm bestows upon the goings and sayings of the King and Prince George.
+
+Then, as recompense for his royal feast of toads, he plays the tyrant at
+home. Jellyfish in the state apartments, a brute in our own and--on the
+drill grounds, I am told! He is always finding fault with the servants,
+and cares not whether he calls his Court Marshal, or a groom,
+"_Lausbub_." Poor Chamberlain von Tumpling earned that scurvy epithet
+the other day and he prides himself on being a nobleman and an army
+officer! Only this morning the prince roared and bellowed at one of my
+ladies, I thought she would have a stroke from righteous anger and
+vexation.
+
+When he attempted to address me in the same fashion, I simply turned my
+back on him, went into my boudoir and locked the door. I will keep him
+"guessing" for two days, sending for the court physician every little
+while.
+
+When he has to eat his meals alone and sleep alone for twice twenty-four
+hours, it will occur even to him that Louise is not made of the stuff
+that stands for being bullied.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+IMPERIAL RUSSIAN ETHICS TRANSFERRED TO DRESDEN
+
+ My husband's reported escapade--Did he give diamonds to a dancing
+ girl?--His foolish excuses--"I am your pal"--A restaurant scene in
+ St. Petersburg--The birthday suit.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _December 3, 1893_.
+
+After all, Frederick Augustus has more spirit than I gave him credit
+for. Isabelle just told me that he has a new love, and a very appetizing
+piece of femininity she is, _Fräulein_ Dolores of the Municipal Theatre.
+
+"She's as well made as you, Louise, and rather more graceful," she said,
+"only her expression is somewhat inert. She lacks animation. Of course,
+she hasn't your attractive bust."
+
+That devilish Isabelle _sowed_ her poisonous information rather than
+pronounced it. "She has been seen with a new diamond-studded _bandeau_,"
+she added.
+
+At that moment the Schoenberg came to say that baby wants me. Isabelle
+went along to the nursery, but I managed to take the Schoenberg aside.
+
+"I must know, before dinner, who gave the Dolores woman the new jewelry
+she is displaying; likewise whether His Royal Highness is sweet on that
+hussy. No half-truths, if you please. I want to know the worst if there
+be any."
+
+The Schoenberg has a cousin who is a Councillor in the office of the
+police president, and the police president keeps a detailed record of
+the love affairs of all the actresses and singers employed in
+Dresden,--a relic of the time when stage folks, in European capitals,
+classed as "the King's servants."
+
+The Councillor came himself to report and, after listening to what he
+said, I raised the boycott on Frederick Augustus without further ado,
+inviting him to my bed and board once more.
+
+"So you went slumming with Kyril," I said after we had retired for the
+night.
+
+"Who told you?" stammered the big fellow, reddening to the roots of his
+hair.
+
+"Never mind. I know all! About the Dolores woman, her brand new
+diamonds, the pirouettes she did on the table and the many lace
+petticoats she wore."
+
+"My word, I didn't count them," vowed his Royal Highness.
+
+"Neither would I advise you to do so," I warned sternly, though as a
+matter of fact I was near exploding with laughter. "Now make a clean
+breast of it."
+
+"I swear I was only the elephant. The King himself would excuse me
+under the circumstances," whimpered my husband.
+
+"You big booby," I interposed, "can't you see that I'm not angry? I blab
+about you to the King? What do you take me for? I am your pal, now and
+always, in affairs liable to prove inartistic to the King's, or Prince
+George's, stomach. To begin with, what has an elephant to do with
+supping with a dancing girl?"
+
+Frederick Augustus explained that the name of the pachyderm applies to a
+third party, who attends a couple out for a lark until he proves a
+crowd. Our cousin, Grand-duke Kyril of Russia, visiting Dresden
+incognito, had prevailed on Frederick Augustus's good nature to serve
+him and the Dolores.
+
+"The Dolores is prettier than I?" I inquired.
+
+"Not at all. She has a black mole under her left bosom."
+
+"You saw that?"
+
+"How could I help it? Russian Grand-dukes never allow a girl to wear
+corsets at supper. Kyril says it interferes with digestion."
+
+How considerate of His Russian Imperial Highness!
+
+Well, they had a good time and I guess the Dolores earned her diamonds.
+A fair exchange is no robbery. "But in St. Petersburg," said Frederick
+Augustus, "they do these things better." And he gave an elaborate
+description of a famous restaurant there, where the princes of the
+imperial family hold high carnival occasionally.
+
+"The upper tier of dining rooms is reserved at night for any Grand-duke
+who promises his visit," quoted my husband, "and the broad marble stairs
+leading to them must not be used by others. Well, one fine evening
+Grand-duke Vladimir and a crowd of nobles and officers supped at the
+'_Ermitaj_' and when they were all good and drunk, one of Vladimir's
+guests, Prince Galitzin, bet the host the price of the supper and a
+champagne bath for all, that he could induce the famous _danseuse_
+Mshinskaya to descend the stairs stark naked and walk among the tables
+below without anyone offering her insult.
+
+"The bet was accepted and the girl sent for. She was found in a near-by
+theatre and rushed to the '_Ermitaj_'. Of course, seeing that His
+Imperial Highness wished it, she consented to pull off the trick
+and--her clothes, but she made a condition."
+
+"She demanded tights," I suggested.
+
+"Pshaw, she is a sport, says Kyril." This in a tone of disgust from
+Frederick Augustus. He continued: "She merely begged his Imperial
+Highness to have it announced that she, Mshinskaya, was acting under the
+Grand-duke's orders. Done. 'By His Imperial Highness's leave,' shouted
+the _Maître d'Hôtel_ from the top of the stairs, as _Mademoiselle_
+descended in her birthday suit. And the Mshinskaya made the tour of the
+restaurant as unconcernedly and as little subject to protests, or
+remarks, as if she had been muffled up to her ears.
+
+"That's what I call freedom--discipline," concluded Frederick Augustus.
+"Think of doing anything like that in a Dresden restaurant."
+
+"I would gladly give a year's allowance to the poor if you could manage
+it here while Prince George was masticating a Hamburg steak at a table
+opposite the grand staircase," said I.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+ROYALTY NOT PRETTY, AND WHY
+
+ Fecundity royal women's greatest charm--How to have beautiful
+ children.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _February 25, 1894_.
+
+Behold the mother of two boys in a twelve-month! Frederick came just in
+the nick of time, Sylvester Eve (December 31, 1893), to gain me a little
+brief renown, for royalty likes its women to be rabbits and, in the
+reigning houses at least, we are esteemed in proportion to our
+fecundity.
+
+"January 15--December 31," not half bad! Even Prince George had to admit
+that. And the Kaiser remarked: "Louise, if she keeps it up, bids fair to
+break de Villeneuve's record. Let me see, Sophie's first child was born
+January 9--a girl" (with a sneer); "her next, the Hereditary Count, on
+December 28th of the same year."
+
+The "de Villeneuve" is Sophie, Countess of Schlitz. Wilhelm made her
+celebrated by his gallantries and Lenbach by the great portrait he
+painted of her wondrous loveliness. If I ever have a daughter, I will
+have a copy of the Lenbach canvas placed in baby's room. Come to think
+of it, I will have one made right away to hang in my own boudoir.
+
+As stated, I believe in prenatal influence, and am more than convinced
+that the portraits of Saxon and Prussian princesses frowning from the
+walls of our palaces are calculated neither to promote beauty nor
+gentleness.
+
+If I had my way, I would send the whole lot to the store-room and fill
+the space they occupy with the present store-room treasures, old time
+portraits of August the Physical Strong's favorites, Aurora von
+Königsmark, Countess Cosel, Princess Lubomirska, Fatime, the Circassian,
+the Orselska and--who can remember their names?
+
+As a rule, queens and princesses are conspicuous for lack of beauty,
+while kings and princes cut most ordinary figures in _mufti_. Only their
+uniforms, the ribands and decorations, the _mise-en-scène_ render them
+tolerable imitations of the average military man.
+
+Why?
+
+Because their mothers and fathers, their sisters, cousins and aunts see
+nothing but painted and photographed and sculptured frights and
+grotesques. So much ugliness of the past must needs cause ugliness of
+the present and future.
+
+In a century the thrones of Europe have known but two beauties, both
+plebeians, the Empress Josephine and the Empress Eugenie. My aunt, the
+Empress Elizabeth, is only good-looking, the German Empress was just an
+ordinary German _Frau_ even in her salad-days.
+
+Well, my little girls, if I have any, shall profit by the lessons of the
+past. As expectant mothers in ancient Greece were wont to walk in the
+temple of _Athene Parthenos_, filled with the greatest sculptures the
+world has ever seen (ruins of them I admired in the British Museum), so
+I intend to have a gallery of my own for beauty's sake, even if every
+female figure be a harlot's likeness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+MORE JEALOUSIES OF THE GREAT
+
+ Men and women caress me with their eyes--Some disrespectful sayings
+ and doings of mine--First decided quarrel with Frederick Augustus--I
+ go to the theatre in spite of him.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 1, 1894_.
+
+I am afraid I wrote down some wicked things--wicked from the standpoint
+of the Saxon court--and though Queen Carola and father-in-law George
+know naught of my scribblings, punishment was meted out to me in full
+measure.
+
+Of course, it's my "damned popularity," as the King calls it, that got
+me into trouble again. My carriage happened to follow one occupied by
+the Queen at a distance of some hundred or more paces along the avenues
+of the _Grosser Garten_. I had no idea that Her Majesty was out at the
+time, and certainly was dressed to please the eye. I can't help it. It's
+a habit with me.
+
+Well, the optics of a good many of my future subjects grew long and
+cozening, like gipsies', when they beheld their queen-to-be; there was
+many a "flatteringly protracted, but never a wiltingly disapproving
+gaze," and those who liked me--and they all seemed to--shouted "Our
+Louise," and Hurrah. They shouted so loud that poor Queen Carola got
+plenty of auricular evidence of how her successor-to-be was loved by the
+people, by _her_, Carola's, people. And the poor old girl got so
+"peeved," she ordered her coachman to turn back and proceed to the
+palace by the shortest route, through the least frequented streets.
+
+Frederick Augustus knew all about it before I reached home and was in a
+terribly dejected state.
+
+"This has to stop," he said with a fine effort at imitating authority.
+"On Sunday, when we drove home from High Mass, you got an ovation while
+the King's carriage passed almost unnoticed. And now this affront to the
+Queen."
+
+"Bother the old girl," I replied, stamping my foot.
+
+Frederick Augustus got as white as a sheet. "That's the language of
+a--a--" He knew enough not to finish.
+
+"It's the title by which Queen Victoria is known to many of her
+subjects."
+
+"Who told you that?"
+
+"I often run across it in the English newspapers."
+
+"Jew-sheets!" roared Frederick Augustus.
+
+"Since you don't understand a word of English, you couldn't distinguish
+the London Times from the Hebrew At Work." After this sally, I added
+maliciously: "I'm going to the Opéra Comique tonight. Come along?"
+
+"You are _not_ going to the Opéra Comique," shouted Frederick Augustus.
+
+"You don't want me to go, papa don't want me to go, uncle and aunt and
+cousins don't? So many reasons more why I _shall_ go. I announced my
+coming and I will go, if I have to tear the ropes, by which you might
+bind me hand and foot, with my teeth."
+
+I rang the bell and ordered dinner served half an hour earlier than
+usual. Then I went to my dressing room to inspect the new gown that I
+intended to wear at the theatre.
+
+Girardi night! Girardi, the famous Vienna comedian! I never saw him. His
+humor will act as a tonic. Just what I need. I will die if I breathe
+none other but the air of this palace, that reeks with cheap
+pretensions, Jesuitical puritanism, envy and hatred, where every second
+person is a spy of either the King or George.
+
+I must escape the polluted atmosphere for a few hours, at least, and
+laugh, laugh, LAUGH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ 11:30 P.M.
+
+I have seen Girardi. I have laughed. I saw the Dolores. And I don't
+blame Kyril a bit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE ROYAL PRINCE, WHO BEHAVES LIKE A DRUNKEN BRICKLAYER
+
+ I face the music, but my husband runs away--Prince George can't look
+ me in the eye--He roars and bellows--Advocates wife-beating--I defy
+ him--German classics--"Jew literature" _Auto da fé_ ordered.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 2, 1894_.
+
+Chamberlain Baron Haugk, of the service of Prince George, called at nine
+A.M. and insisted upon seeing me. I sent out my Grand-Mistress, Baroness
+von Tisch, to tell him that "Her Imperial Highness would graciously
+permit him to wait upon her at half past ten."
+
+"But my all-highest master commands."
+
+I was listening in my boudoir and I went out to him only half-dressed, a
+powder-mantle over my shoulders.
+
+"Her Imperial Highness will not have her commands questioned by
+servants," I said in my most haughty style. The _Kammerherr_ knocked his
+heels together, bowed to the ground and retired. That's my way of
+dealing with royal flunkeys, no matter what their title of courtesy.
+
+He was back at the stroke of the clock to announce his "sublime master"
+for one in the afternoon.
+
+"I will be ready to receive his Royal Highness. My household shall be
+instructed," I answered coldly, though I dread that old man.
+
+"You are not wanted," I told Frederick Augustus. "Better make yourself
+scarce." He didn't need to be told twice. "Undress-uniform," he shouted
+to his valet. "And send somebody for a cab."
+
+"Why a cab?" I inquired.
+
+He looked at me in a pitying way. "Women are such geese," he made
+answer. "Don't you see, if I left the palace in one of our own
+carriages, the King, or father, might notice and call me back."
+
+"Oh, very well. And don't 'celebrate' too much while you are out."
+
+I had the lackeys line the staircase and corridors. My military
+household stood in the first ante-chamber, my courtiers in the second,
+my ladies in the third when Prince George walked into my parlor. At
+first he acted in no unfriendly manner. He kissed me on the forehead and
+asked after the babies, and if he hadn't riveted his eyes all the time
+into some corner of the room--his stratagem when in an ugly mood--I
+might have persuaded myself that he wasn't on mischief bent.
+
+But he soon began pouring out his bile. With a face like a wooden martyr
+he announced that he was not pleased with me.
+
+"You are too much of a light-weight, too vivacious, too attractive to
+the mob," he said in his bitterest tones. "You are forever seeking the
+public eye like--an actress."
+
+"I beg your Royal Highness to take notice that Imperial Princesses of
+Austria"--I put some emphasis on the Imperial--"while popular, never
+descend to jugglery," I answered politely, but firmly.
+
+"No offence to your Imperial Highness," said George, "but you must
+understand once and for all that Saxon princes and princesses are bound
+by our house laws to the strictest observance of precedence. The love of
+the people naturally goes out to the King and Queen. Junior members of
+the Royal House must not seek to divert to themselves the popularity
+that is the King's own."
+
+"I have always been taught to respond to popular greetings offered me.
+My aunt, the Empress Elizabeth, in particular instructed me to that
+effect," I submitted with great deference.
+
+"Her Majesty didn't instruct you to make a show of yourself every hour
+of the day," hissed George, his eyes devouring the stove.
+
+"I drive out twice, in the morning to go shopping, in the afternoon to
+air my babies."
+
+George, unable to dispute me, abandoned pretensions of politeness or
+manners. He fairly roared at me: "You are travelling the streets all the
+time. It has to stop."
+
+Whereupon I said in as sharp a voice as I could manage: "And Your Royal
+Highness has to stop bellowing at me. I'm not used to it. In Salzburg
+and Vienna gentlemen don't use that tone of voice and that sort of
+language to gentlewomen."
+
+"Salzburg," cried George, "in Salzburg you got your ears boxed, but it
+didn't do much good to all appearances."
+
+"Your Royal Highness," I answered, "my mother has her faults, but it's
+no one's business outside of her immediate family. And no one at this
+court has a mother's authority over me."
+
+I saw that George was beside himself with rage. "If your husband," he
+snarled, "was as free with his hand as your mother, there would be an
+end to your frivolities."
+
+"Your Royal Highness forgets what you admitted yourself, namely, that
+the indignities offered me while I was a child were bereft of beneficial
+results. And please take notice," I added, raising my voice, "I won't
+stand violence from anyone, neither from my husband--as you kindly
+suggest--nor from you, or the King."
+
+George was too surprised to even attempt a reply. He evidently didn't
+know what to say or do. To avoid my eyes that were seeking his, he
+turned his back on me and stepped up to a little table laden with books.
+He studied the titles for a while, then, turning suddenly, held a small
+volume towards me. His arm was out-stretched as if he feared to
+contaminate his uniform.
+
+"What have we got here?" he cried.
+
+It was my turn to be astonished. "Why, according to the binding, it must
+be Heine's _Atta Troll_."
+
+"_Atta Troll_," cried George, and opening the book at random he read
+half to himself:
+
+ "This bear-leader six Madonnas
+ Wears upon his pointed hat,
+ To protect his head from bullets
+ Or from lice, perchance, it may be."
+
+He fired the volume on the floor and grabbed another. "What's this?"
+
+"As the title will indicate to your Royal Highness, Nietzsche's
+Zarathustra." For the life of me I couldn't see any harm in this portion
+of my library.
+
+George continued to rummage among the books. He acted like a madman.
+"What's this, what's this?" he kept on saying, turning them over and
+over. I thought it beneath my dignity to answer. I just stared at the
+fanatic.
+
+After he finished his hurried examination, he took one book after the
+other and tossed it violently at my feet.
+
+"Heine, the Jew-scribbler," he cried, aiming a kick at Atta Troll.
+
+"Don't you dare," I said, "that book was given me by Her Majesty, the
+Empress of Austria."
+
+"I can't believe it," shouted George, "that Jew-scribbler, the reviler
+of kinship."
+
+"He never lampooned the kings of Saxony," I calmly remarked, picking up
+the volume. "Here is Her Majesty's dedication to me."
+
+"Everybody knows the eccentricities of Her Majesty of Austria," shouted
+George. "Anyhow, who gave you permission to read such rotten stuff as
+this at our court?"
+
+"Prince George," I answered, taking two steps towards him, "Duke of
+Saxony, the Archduchess of Austria takes pleasure to inform you that in
+her house she asks no one's permission what to read or do."
+
+At this he turned drill-ground bully. "You are in the King's house,"
+rang out his voice in cutting tones, "and at this moment I represent the
+King. And in the King's name I forbid you to read these obscenities, and
+in the King's name I hereby command that these books be destroyed at
+once."
+
+Well, since he talked in the King's name I had no leg to stand on. I
+merely bowed acquiescence and he strutted out, turning his back on me as
+he went without salutation of any sort. I ran into my room, locked the
+door and had a good cry.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+I DEFY THEM
+
+ Laughter and pleasant faces for me--Frederick Augustus refuses to
+ back me, but I don't care--We quarrel about my reading--He professes
+ to gross ignorance.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _May 1, 1894_.
+
+What's the use keeping a diary that is nothing but a record of quarrels
+and humiliations? After I finished the entry about my scene with Prince
+George, I felt considerably relieved. I had held my own, anyhow. But
+fighting is one thing and writing another. I am always ready for a
+fight, but "war-reporting" comes less easy.
+
+The unpleasantness with George brought in its wake, as a natural
+consequence so to speak, a whole lot of other squabbles and
+altercations, family jars and general rumpuses, which I cared not to
+embalm in these pages at the time. However, as they are part and parcel
+of my narrative, incomplete as it may be, I will insert them by and by
+according to their sequence.
+
+After George was gone I made up my mind that, his commands and threats
+notwithstanding, I must continue to live as I always did: joyful, free
+within certain limits and careless of puritan standards. If the rest of
+the royal ladies, and the women of the service, want to mope and look
+sour, that's their affair. Let them wear out their lives between
+confessional, knitting socks for orphan children, _Kaffe-klatsches,_
+spying and tale-bearing and prayer-meetings,--it isn't my style. I'm
+young, I'm pretty, I'm full of red blood, life means something to me. I
+want to live it my own way.
+
+I want to laugh; I have opinions of my own; I want to read books that
+open and improve the mind. I want to promote my education by attending
+lectures, by going to the theatre--in short, I don't want to become a
+dunce and a bell-jingling fool like the others.
+
+If that spells royal disgrace--be it so. Louise won't purchase two "_How
+art thou's?_" at the price their Majesties and Royal Highnesses ask.
+
+Of course, it would come easier with Frederick Augustus's help and
+support, but since he chooses to be bully-ragged and sat upon and,
+moreover, finds pleasure in licking the hand that strikes at his and his
+wife's dignity, I will go it alone.
+
+I defy them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 16, 1894_.
+
+I had another tiff with Frederick Augustus, but the cause is too
+insignificant to deserve record. I will rather tell about our grand
+quarrel following Prince George's visit. We dined alone that day, as he
+was eager to hear the news. The preliminaries didn't excite him much,
+but when I mentioned the book episode, he bristled up.
+
+"You won't allow the King, or Prince George, to dictate what I shall
+read or not read?" I demanded. "My house is my castle and I won't brook
+interference in my _ménage_."
+
+"Do you really suppose," replied Frederick Augustus, "that I'll court
+royal displeasure for the sake of those Jew-scribblers? I never read a
+book since I left school and can't make out what interest books can have
+to you or anyone else. Where did you get them, anyhow?"
+
+I told him that Leopold supplied my book wants. "My brother is a very
+intelligent man," I said, "and the books he gives me are all classics in
+their way."
+
+"Go to with your book-talk!" he mocked in his most contemptuous voice.
+"I asked the director of the royal library and was told that each of the
+books, to which father objects, was written by a Jew. Let Jews read
+them. It isn't decent for a royal princess to do so."
+
+"My brother isn't a Jew."
+
+"But in utter disgrace in Vienna. No one at court speaks to him. He is
+head over heels in debt and the next we know he will be borrowing from
+us. As to those books, don't bring any more into the house. Royal
+princes and princesses have better things to do than waste time on
+Jew-scribblers."
+
+With that he violently pushed back his chair and left me, a very much
+enraged woman. He didn't give me the chance to have the last word.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+ATTEMPTED VIOLENCE DEFEATED BY FIRMNESS
+
+ Frederick Augustus seeks to carry out his father's brutal
+ threats--Orders and threats before servants--I positively refuse to
+ be ordered about--Frederick Augustus plays Mrs. Lot--Enjoying myself
+ at the theatre.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 17, 1894_.
+
+The chance came later and with it the conviction that His Royal
+Highness, Prince George, didn't quite believe me when I told him that I
+wouldn't stand for violence, for tonight Frederick Augustus attempted
+something of the sort.
+
+I had ordered my carriage for seven o'clock to drive to the theatre, and
+had just finished dressing when he stormed into my boudoir and demanded
+to know if I had taken leave of my senses.
+
+"Not that I am aware of."
+
+"But I hear you intend to go to the theatre--a princess in disgrace
+going to the theatre!"
+
+"Aren't you coming along, Frederick Augustus?" I asked naïvely.
+
+"I have no desire to lose my regiment."
+
+"And I have no desire to sit at home and talk nothingnesses with the
+fools His Majesty appoints for my service."
+
+"Take a care," cried Frederick Augustus.
+
+"Don't be a noodle and a coward," I answered hotly.
+
+"Louise, remember that I am an army officer."
+
+"What has that to do with my going to the theatre?"
+
+"It's the height of audacity to defy the King."
+
+"It would be the depth of cowardice to stay at home."
+
+"Take back that word, or----"
+
+"I wish Your Royal Highness a very pleasant evening," I said, indulging
+in a low genuflexion.
+
+Frederick Augustus got blue with rage. I saw him clench his fists as I
+swept out of the room, making as much noise with my train as I could
+manage.
+
+"An out-rider," I commanded the Master of Horse who stood in the
+ante-chamber awaiting me.
+
+"At your Imperial Highness' commands," bowed the Baron with the most
+astonished face in the world. We use out-riders, that is grooms in
+livery, to ride ahead of the royal carriage, only on state occasions in
+Dresden. But, of course, my orders would be obeyed even if I had
+demanded twelve grooms to attend me.
+
+I was just going out, preceded by my Chamberlain and followed by my
+ladies, Baroness Tisch and _Fräulein_ von Schoenberg; there were two
+lackeys at the door and in the corridor stood the groom-in-waiting,
+holding several lap-robes for me to decide which to take, when the
+Prince caught up with me.
+
+"I forbid you to go to the theatre," he bawled in the presence of my
+titled entourage and three servants.
+
+I realized at once that this was the supreme moment of my life at the
+court of Saxony. Either bend or break. If I allowed myself to be roared
+at and ordered about like a servant-wench--goodbye the Imperial
+Highness! Enter the Jenny-Sneak German housewife, greedy for her
+master's smile and willing to accept an occasional kick. The Prince had
+begun this family brawl in public. I would finish.
+
+"I won't take orders," I held forth. "No commands, understand, princely,
+royal or otherwise. And be advised, now and for all time, that I will
+answer any attempt to brutalize me by immediate departure, or by seeking
+refuge with the Austrian Ambassador."
+
+If Frederick Augustus had suddenly become Mrs. Lot he wouldn't have been
+more conspicuous for utter petrification and silence. He stared at me
+with wide-open, bleary eyes and if I had taken him by the neck and feet
+and dropped him out of the window, as his ancestor Augustus of the
+three-hundred and fifty-two took the "spook" sent into his bedroom by
+Joseph the First, he wouldn't have offered the ghost of resistance, I
+dare say.
+
+"Your arm, Mr. Chamberlain, since His Royal Highness doesn't wish to
+accompany us." And I swept out of the ante-chamber and through the
+corridor, triumphant.
+
+"Gipsy Baron" was the bill of the play. I knew only a few of its waltzes
+and I drank in the comedy and the pretty music like one desperately
+athirst. Kyril's girl, the Dolores, was very chic and looked ravishingly
+pretty, and brother-in-law Max isn't the dunce I took him for.
+
+His Theresa is a droll dog, fair to look upon, dark and fat. It will
+take a lot of holy water to save her from purgatory.
+
+Girardi made me screech with laughter. He is as funny as my
+father-in-law is mournful--a higher compliment to his art I cannot pay.
+Of course, actor-like, he appreciated an Imperial Highness' applause and
+looked up to my box every little while. I wish, though, he hadn't
+acknowledged my plaudits by bowing to me. It attracted general attention
+and soon the whole house was staring and smiling. The people seemed to
+be glad that their Crown Princess was enjoying herself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+TITLED SERVANTS LOW AND CUNNING
+
+ George tries to rob me of my confidante--Enter the King's spy,
+ Baroness Tisch in her true character--Punishment of one royal spy.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _August 1, 1894_.
+
+Prince George is planning a devilish revenge. He threatens to separate
+me from my Secretary and confidante, little Baranello, whom I brought
+with me from Salzburg. She is an Italian, and, unlike most of them, as
+faithful as a dog. A connection of the Ruffo family, princes and dukes
+that gave the world more than one pope, the small fry Saxon nobility
+hate her, and George knows that he can't corrupt Lucretia by his paltry
+presents and ridiculous condescension.
+
+They would send her back to Salzburg, if they dared,--anyhow, Baroness
+von Tisch is to be both Chief Mistress and confidential secretary. If
+she died of the first confidence I make her, she wouldn't live five
+minutes.
+
+The King's House Marshal, Baron von Carlowitz, came to announce the
+change to me, but I knew, of course, that it was George's doings.
+
+"Tell Prince George," I said icily, "that I appreciate the fact of being
+deprived of the services of an honest woman in favor of a spy."
+
+I will "show" this Tisch woman, as my American friends say. Some three
+years ago Emperor Francis Joseph appointed a spy as attendant to my
+brother Leopold. Schoenstein, Baron or Count, was his name, I think.
+Schoenstein would rather bear evil tales of his young master to his old
+master than eat, and nothing would please him better than to meddle with
+Leopold's correspondence.
+
+He stole as many letters as he could lay his hands on. Fished them even
+from slop-pails, or pieced together such as Leopold tore up and dropped
+in the cuspidors. When brother observed this, he used to tear up bills
+and the most innocent writings of his own and other people into little
+bits and planted them in Schoenstein's hunting-grounds. Appropriate work
+for a _lick-spittle_ to pull them out. But Leopold got tired of playing
+with this vermin, and it tickled him to make an example of the scamp.
+Hence, he allowed it to be observed by Schoenstein when he, Leopold,
+locked a parcel of letters from his girl in the cash-box.
+
+The toad-eating Schoenstein burned with desire to copy these letters and
+send the transcript on to Emperor Francis Joseph. They would have made
+interesting reading to my old uncle who has given up cracking nuts since
+his teeth fell out. There is Kati Schratt, you say. Pshaw, Kati is as
+old, or nearly as old, as his Majesty and she isn't a Ninon de l'Enclos
+by any means.
+
+To cut a long story short, Schoenstein could see but one way for getting
+those compromising letters: steal the keys and borrow the parcel for a
+short while. That's what Leopold was waiting for. Not half an hour after
+the keys had been abstracted, he raised the alarm. He had been "robbed."
+The archducal safe had been rifled. And he managed to catch Schoenstein
+red-handed.
+
+"Send for the police," thundered my brother, "and meanwhile watch the
+thief well." Schoenstein was given no chance to explain and deemed
+himself lucky to escape arrest. My brother suspended him from service
+and made him go to a hotel while he telegraphed the story of the
+attempted theft to Vienna, asking the Count's immediate dismissal.
+
+Of course, Vienna disavowed the dunderhead--royalty has no use for
+persons that allow themselves to be compromised--and he has been in
+disgrace ever since. Nor can he get another courtly office, for Leopold
+threatened the moment he sees him with a Highness to warn everybody:
+"Look to your watch and purse, we have a thief with us."
+
+I jotted this down to remind me that Prince George's spy deserves no
+better than the Emperor's.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+BANISHMENT
+
+ I am ordered to repair to a country house with the hated spy as my
+ Grand Mistress--My first impulse to go home, but afraid parents
+ won't have me.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _August 10, 1894_.
+
+Order from the King that myself and children spend the rest of the
+summer at Villa Loschwitz, to remain until I get royal permission to
+return to Dresden,--the Tisch to act as chief of my household.
+
+Banished! I didn't know whether to laugh or cry. Smile, because I
+escaped the _ennui_ of attending court at the summer residence of
+Pillnitz; weep, because my absence from court would be interpreted as a
+disciplinary measure.
+
+I know Pillnitz is about as gay as a Trappist feast of carrion and ant's
+milk, but this princess doesn't want to be disciplined.
+
+I shall tell them that I want to go home, but will they have me in
+Salzburg? Papa, of course, but if mother hears of my acquaintance with
+Heine, "who doesn't love Jesus,"--her own words,--she will undoubtedly
+side with Prince George against her daughter. It was Heine who wrote of
+one of her ancestors, King Louis of Bavaria: "As soon as the monkeys and
+kangaroos are converted to Christianity, they'll make King Louis their
+guardian saint, in proof of their perfect sanity." And you don't suppose
+for a moment that mamma forgets a thing like that. As to Nietzsche, he
+will give her no conscientious qualms, for I'm sure she never heard of
+the gentleman, but my going to the Gipsy Baron "where two princely
+mistresses are gyrating"--horrible!
+
+I hear her say: "I think Prince George is most considerate sending our
+daughter to Loschwitz. She deserved to be put in a nunnery and made to
+kneel on unboiled peas three times a day." And when it comes to an
+_éclat_, even papa may have to abandon me. Emperor Francis Joseph holds
+the purse-strings; and papa always lives beyond his means and Francis
+Joseph, King Albert and Prince George are fast friends. If papa
+quarrelled with the two latter gentlemen, they would immediately
+denounce him to the Emperor. The rest can easily be guessed.
+
+Sorry, but papa is no hero in his daughter's eyes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+"POOR RELATIONS" IN ROYAL HOUSES
+
+ Myself and Frederick Augustus quarrel and pound table--The Countess
+ Cosel's golden vessel--Off to Brighton--Threat of a beating--I
+ provoke shadows of divorce--King threatens force--More defiance on
+ my part--I humble the King and am allowed to invite my brother
+ Leopold.
+
+
+ VILLA LOSCHWITZ, _September 1, 1894_.
+
+Father had to give in. He is the poor relation, and a poor relation in
+royal circles doesn't amount to more than one among well-to-do merchants
+and farmers. He has no rights that others need respect and if he shows
+backbone he is given to understand that the head of the family has other
+uses for the palace or hunting grounds lent him.
+
+"I would love to have you with me in Salzburg," he wrote, "but, dear
+child, it's for your best to learn to obey. Do it for your old father's
+sake."
+
+Still I wouldn't give in at once. "I won't go to Loschwitz," I declared.
+And gave a dozen reasons besides the paramount one that I wouldn't go,
+because Prince George wanted me.
+
+"I'm no trunk to be shipped hither and thither at someone's behest," I
+said.
+
+Frederick Augustus took umbrage at the "someone," which he pronounced
+_lèse majesté_, and to emphasise the fact hit the table with a bang,
+whereupon I pounded the table twice: bang-bang!
+
+It hurt my hand, and didn't do Frederick Augustus any good. Nor was the
+discussion advanced thereby. For the rest: an exchange of names and
+epithets that smacked of the kitchen rather than the _salon_.
+
+"Too bad you exhaust all your energy with me," I said among other
+things, "while in the royal presence you act the docile lamb's tail."
+
+He began prating about his character as an army officer again, and I
+reminded him that I wasn't the Countess Cosel.
+
+"Who's that?" asked the big ignoramus.
+
+"Never heard of the lady that refused to accompany Augustus to the Camp
+of Mühlberg unless he brought her a certain intimate golden vessel
+costing five thousand _Thalers_?"
+
+"A loving cup?" asked my husband.
+
+"If you like to call it so."
+
+"But why did you say you are no Cosel?"
+
+"I meant to imply that I am not a prisoner of state and don't want to be
+treated like one. Hence, since a visit to my parents would greatly
+embarrass them, I decided to go to Brighton for the season."
+
+"Brighton," he repeated, "and where will you get the spondulicks?"
+
+"I saved up quite a bit of money. Guess I can manage the expense
+alright."
+
+"Lip-music," cried Frederick Augustus in his polite way. "You have no
+idea what such a trip costs."
+
+I assured him that I had made every inquiry and was able to meet all
+expenses. "We will go incog.," I added, "the babies and nurse and
+Lucretia. The Tisch woman shall have a furlough even before she asks for
+it."
+
+"Is that so?" Frederick Augustus laughed brutally. "You seem to forget
+that you are subject to our house laws."
+
+"And you seem to forget that I have a will of my own," I almost shouted.
+
+Frederick Augustus jumped up. "Not another word on the subject," he
+commanded. "The incident is closed."
+
+It suddenly occurred to me that Prince George had been talking once more
+to Frederick Augustus about the pugilistic performances of my mother.
+Perhaps he was trying to pluck up courage to beat me, a diversion not
+altogether unknown in the House of Saxony, according to the Memoirs of
+the famous Baron Schweinichen, Court Marshal and _Chroniqueur_.
+
+His diaries, covering a number of years, have many such entries as this:
+"His Royal Highness hit the Princess a good one on the 'snout' by way
+of silencing her tongue." Doubtless George would be delighted to have me
+"shut up" by some such process, but Frederick Augustus lacks the sand.
+
+When he was gone, I indicted a letter to the King, advising him in oily,
+malicious, yet eminently respectful language that, not wishing to figure
+as a prisoner of state, I had decided to spend the rest of the summer
+abroad with my children. At the same time I intimated that I was well
+aware of being in disgrace and being regarded with ill favor by the
+several members of the royal family.
+
+"If it pleases your Majesty," I added, "I will relieve a most unhappy
+situation by giving back his liberty to Frederick Augustus. I'll promise
+not to oppose divorce, or allow my family to interfere."
+
+This letter I sent to the King, sealing it with my personal arms, of
+which there is no duplicate at court. After that I sent three telegrams.
+One to papa, announcing that I was going to Brighton; another to the
+Palace Hotel in Brighton; a third to the Minister of Railways,
+commanding that my saloon carriage be coupled to the Continental express
+night after next. I knew, of course, that the King would be informed of
+these messages in a twinkling.
+
+I waited an hour for the Powers to move; as a rule it takes them a week
+or ten days. Exactly sixty-five minutes after sending my letter to the
+King, Frederick Augustus rode into the courtyard like a madman. He had
+been hurriedly summoned from the drill-grounds, I heard afterwards. He
+dismounted at the stairs leading to the King's apartments. Half an hour
+later, he slunk into my room, as serious as a corpse. There wasn't a
+trace of brutality in his voice as he said:
+
+"A fine row you kicked up."
+
+I didn't favor him by questions, but kept looking out of the window. He
+walked up and down for five or six minutes, boring his eyes into the
+corners of the room. Suddenly, at a safe distance, he delivered himself
+of the following:
+
+"His Majesty interdicts your plans _in toto_. You will be conducted to
+Loschwitz tonight. Don't put yourself to the humiliation of trying to
+disobey. You are being watched."
+
+"His Majesty's own words?"
+
+"He refused to see me," answered Frederick Augustus, dejectedly. He
+acted as if pronouncing his own death warrant. "Baumann told me." (This
+is the King's Secretary.)
+
+I almost pitied the poor fellow, but I had to hold my own.
+
+"My dear Frederick Augustus," I said, "you can tell Baumann from me that
+I won't go to Loschwitz tonight; that for the present I intend to stay
+here and that, if they force me, they'll need plenty of rope, for I
+will holler and kick and do all I can to attract attention."
+
+Maybe Frederick Augustus wanted to say something in reply, but open his
+mouth was all he could manage. Seeing him so bamboozled, I continued:
+"It is decided, then, that I stay, but I give you fair warning that I
+will skip to England sooner or later. I don't want you to get into
+trouble, Frederick Augustus, therefore inform Baumann without delay."
+
+Frederick Augustus got blue in the face. He seemed ready to jump on me,
+crush me between his cuirassier fists. I held up my hand.
+
+"Did Baumann tell you that I offered to accept divorce if it pleases the
+King?"
+
+Frederick Augustus changed color. White as a ghost, he fixed his eyes
+upon mine, momentarily, and murmured: "Have we got to that point?"
+
+He ran out of the room and a minute later was tearing up the stairs
+leading to the King's apartments. Lucretia says he returned within a
+quarter of an hour and tried my door. But I had locked myself in and
+refused to open. We didn't meet until dinner. Neither of us ate a bite,
+or said a word. Baumann was announced with the ice. He was all smiles,
+all devotion.
+
+"His Majesty will be pleased to see your Imperial Highness in a quarter
+of an hour," he said sweetly.
+
+Frederick Augustus was a painted sepulchre when I coolly replied: "Pray
+inform His Majesty that I am not well and about to retire for the
+night."
+
+At this Baumann looked like a whipped dog. He probably thought it
+impossible for anyone to refuse to answer the summons of His Majesty.
+With the most downcast mien in the world, he seemed singularly anxious
+to render himself ridiculous. "Maybe the Crown Prince will do in my
+stead," I suggested maliciously.
+
+Baumann grabbed at the straw and withdrew. A little while later a lackey
+came, summoning Frederick Augustus to Prince George. When he came back,
+he was all undone.
+
+"Father treated me very well," he said. "He says the King regrets that
+your uncontrollable temper causes so many misunderstandings, and both
+His Majesty and father have no objection to your staying in Dresden if
+you like. Loschwitz was suggested because you and the children seem to
+need country air.
+
+"As to your proposed visit to England, the King begs you to consider
+that such a journey at this time is liable to provoke a scandal which
+would reflect not only on you, on us, but on your poor parents."
+
+The old story of the penurious relations, I thought bitterly, but on the
+whole I was well pleased. I had beaten and out-generaled them all.
+
+"If Loschwitz isn't meant for punishment, I accept with pleasure," I
+said. "It's a very pretty place." Poor Frederick Augustus' face lit up.
+"But there must be an end to the talk about I being in disgrace. If the
+King is as friendly to me as he makes out, let him come and see me and
+the babies. As to summonses by Baumann or others, I won't accept them."
+
+"Very well," said Frederick Augustus, and I saw that I had risen
+mile-high in his estimation, "when will it be your pleasure to leave for
+Loschwitz?"
+
+"Tonight, if I have permission to invite Leopold for a week or so."
+
+"Are you stark, staring mad?" shouted my husband,--"Impose conditions
+after the King moderated?"
+
+"Go and tell Baumann I'll have Leopold or all is off," I said.
+
+Next morning: Ceremonial visit from the Queen. The tip of her nose was
+redder than ever and she seemed prepared to weep at the flicking of an
+eye-lash. She gave me a list of her troubles, mental, physical,
+political, matrimonial and otherwise, since the day she was born, but
+said: "Obedience to my father, the King, and obedience to my husband,
+the King, has enabled me to weather all storms. You, too, must learn
+obedience, Louise. It's women's only salvation and especially a
+princess's."
+
+I answered that I fully recognized my obligations to the King. "I only
+object to being buffeted around like a piece of furniture."
+
+"I know, I know," said the Queen, "and hope all is arranged
+satisfactorily. The King will be glad if you invite your parents to
+Loschwitz."
+
+"I asked permission to invite Leopold."
+
+"But, no doubt, your parents would take more interest in the children
+than your brother."
+
+"I don't dispute that, Your Majesty. But if my parents joined me at the
+present time, people might think they came to condole with me or else to
+scold me. I want Leopold."
+
+The Queen said she wouldn't dare mention Leopold to His Majesty.
+
+"Well, then," I concluded, "I shall stay in Dresden, regarding Baumann's
+fine promises as mere talk."
+
+The Queen went away with the air of a martyr, but three days later
+Baumann came and said His Imperial Highness was welcome.
+
+A triumph all along the line. I left Dresden without seeing the King.
+
+Frederick Augustus is at the manoeuvres.
+
+The Baroness is acting as my Grand Mistress.
+
+I expect Leopold in a fortnight.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+A SERVANT-TYRANT
+
+ My correspondence is not safe from the malicious woman appointed
+ Grand Mistress--Lovers at a distance and by correspondence--Fell in
+ love with a leg.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _September 8, 1894_.
+
+Baroness Tisch, now that she attained the height of her ambition, is
+beginning to show her claws. She is an infernal cat. Her skinniness
+makes her repulsive to me and her face gives everyone the impression
+that she just sucked an enormous lemon. She lisps and that makes me
+nervous. I feel like aping her when she isn't around.
+
+She's after me like the devil chasing a poor soul and as I never address
+her except to command or reprimand, she tries to find out any secret
+doings, or thinkings, I may be guilty of by way of letters I write or
+receive.
+
+According to the laws of most countries private correspondence is
+sacred, legally and morally. The late Field-Marshal, Count Blumenthal,
+wrote to his wife of the Crown Prince, afterwards Emperor Frederick,
+that he was a "d----fool," but "as communications between husband and
+wife are privileged," no official cognizance was taken.
+
+Otherwise in this petty kingdom and, as already told, in Austria, whose
+monarch, in family matters at least, holds to the "_L'Etat c'est moi_"
+maxim.
+
+The King's spy, the Tisch, constituted herself post-office of Villa
+Loschwitz--a duty appertaining to her rank--and I wager she works the
+"_Black Cabinet_" to perfection. Of course, I am now careful in all I
+write and advise my friends to be, but I sometimes get letters from
+Unknowns, people that sympathize with me or have fallen in love with me.
+All women in high station have lovers among the lowly. I recall the
+Cardinal Dubois' yarn about Salvatico, envoy of the Prince of Modena, my
+kinsman of yore. The Italian was sent to Paris to conduct home his
+master's lovely intended, _Mademoiselle_ de Valois, daughter of the
+Regent. It happened that the emissary was introduced to _Mademoiselle's_
+room an hour before the time set, when she was lying on a lounge "with
+one leg, almost naked, hanging down." Salvatico fell in love with the
+leg and exhausted himself in so many "Ah, ah's" of admiration and other
+love-sick stunts that the Duke of Richelieu, having older rights, said
+to him: "Rogue, if you had your deserts I would cut off your two ears!"
+
+No man, except my husband, has seen my legs, which is a pity, perhaps,
+but the extreme _décolleté_ demanded at certain court functions,
+especially in Berlin, gained me many epistolary lovers, whose homage I
+accept gracefully, but in silence, of course.
+
+Still, a malicious thing like the Tisch, if one gives her enough rope,
+might arrange, on paper at least, to get me with child by a Lothario a
+hundred miles off, even as the children of Madame de Montespan and Louis
+XIV were credited to the Marquis, her husband, residing a hundred
+leagues away, at Guienne. Let me find her red-handed and she will fare
+even worse than Schoenstein.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+MORE TYRANNY OF A TITLED SERVANT
+
+ My daily papers seized, and only milk-and-water clippings are
+ submitted--"King's orders"--Grand Mistress's veracity doubted--My
+ threats of suspension cow her.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _September 10, 1894_.
+
+This morning there were no newspapers at the usual hour. Instead, the
+Tisch furnished a heap of clippings carefully pasted up--the veriest
+milk-and-water slush "ever." Instanter I sent for my tormentor.
+
+"What's this?" I demanded.
+
+"Today's papers, Your Imperial Highness."
+
+"You made these clippings?"
+
+"At Your Imperial Highness's commands."
+
+"And you think me ninny enough to be satisfied with reading no more than
+what you consider proper for me to see?"
+
+The Tisch wavered not a bit. "His Majesty the King is served the same
+fashion."
+
+"No matter. I want my papers whole, and don't you dare to mutilate
+them." By way of letting her down easier I added: "Don't give yourself
+the trouble."
+
+"No trouble, I assure your Imperial Highness. With your permission,
+then, I will continue to clip for Your Imperial Highness."
+
+I rose and, measuring her from head to toe with flaming eyes, I said:
+"You will do nothing of the kind, do you understand?"
+
+The impertinent cat insisted: "But I think it proper----"
+
+"Have you heard what I said or not, Baroness?"
+
+She tried to save her face by asserting, "I am acting by command of His
+Majesty."
+
+"I will ask His Majesty whether you spoke the truth," I said quick as a
+flash; "meanwhile you are suspended and will return to Dresden until
+recalled. Ring the bell and I will give orders to the Master of Horse to
+send you away."
+
+Of course Tisch couldn't afford such an inquiry to be made, which would
+have exposed her clumsy hand and, as remarked, royalty doesn't care to
+be found out. Defeat staring her in the face, Tisch wavered: "Of course,
+if your Imperial Highness chooses to take the responsibility, I will be
+most happy to submit the papers as they arrive."
+
+"In their wrappers," I commanded, as I dismissed her.
+
+By distributing a hundred marks in silver, I found out that the Tisch
+examines my body-servants daily and that, night after night, she sits
+up hours writing long-winded reports. She is the King's tool, but she
+let the cat out of the bag when cornered. That gives me the whip hand
+for the time being.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+THE TWO BLACK SHEEP OF THE FAMILY UNITED
+
+ Leopold upon my troubles and his own--Imperial Hapsburgs that,
+ though Catholics, got divorces or married divorced women--Books that
+ are full of guilty knowledge, according to royalty--A mud-hole
+ lodging for one Imperial Highness--Leopold's girl--What I think of
+ army officers' wives--Their anonymous letters--Leopold's money
+ troubles--We will fool our enemies by feigning obedience.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _September 15, 1894_.
+
+Leopold is with me, the brother two years older than I. They just made
+him a Major--a twelve-month later than his patent calls for.
+
+Like myself, he is almost permanently in disgrace with the head of the
+family, even as I am with the King and Prince George. We had no sooner
+embraced and kissed, than I asked him for the latest gossip concerning
+the Crown Princess of Saxony.
+
+"You are a tough one," he said, shaking his finger with amused mockery.
+According to Vienna court gossip, "I threw Prince George out of doors,"
+when he "raised his hand against me," Frederick Augustus and myself
+haven't been on speaking terms for six months; and the Saxe family was
+actually considering the advisability of divorce.
+
+Of course I told Leopold how things really are.
+
+"Then there will be no divorce?" he asked.
+
+"If the King and Prince George leave me alone,--no."
+
+"Too bad," he said with a laugh, "that knocks me out of the pleasure of
+maintaining my _thesis_ that the founder of the Christian religion
+didn't believe in indissoluble marriage, but, on the contrary, in
+divorce if such couldn't be avoided."
+
+"Who told you that?"
+
+"Professor Wahrmund is preparing a paper on the subject," said Leopold,
+who, as remarked, is a very well-read chap and a student. He named five
+or six emperors and kings, Catholics, some of them members of the
+Austrian Imperial family, who obtained divorces, or married divorced
+women. I jotted down the list.
+
+Lothair II divorced his wife Theutberga and married his love, Waldrade.
+
+Emperor Frederick I divorced the Empress Anna on the plea that she was
+sterile. She married a Count, with whom she had a dozen children.
+
+Margaret, a daughter of Leopold VI of Austria, was divorced by King
+Ottokar of Bohemia.
+
+John Henry, Prince of Bohemia, divorced his wife Margareta, who
+afterwards married an ancestor of the Kaiser, Ludwig of Brandenburg.
+
+King Ladislaus of Sicily divorced Queen Constance and forced his vassal,
+Andrea di Capua, to marry her against his will. Ten years later
+Ladislaus married Maria de Lusignan.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But a little knowledge is a terrible thing, if it happens to be acquired
+by a prince. Princes are supposed to know nothing but the art and the
+_finesses_ of destruction--war. Upbuilding is not in their line.
+
+"I hear you are exercising a bad influence on Louise," roared our uncle,
+the Emperor, at Leopold when the latter took leave from him. "You
+furnished to her those infernal books, sowing the seed of guilty
+knowledge?"
+
+Leopold so far forgot himself as to address a question to the
+"All-Highest": "What infernal books?"
+
+"Books full of indecencies and obscenities, in short pornographic
+literature," shouted the head of the family, turned his horse and rode
+away in high dudgeon. Royal arguments are nothing if not one-sided!
+
+Then Leopold told of himself. His garrison: a filthy mud-hole in Poland.
+One-story houses and everybody peeping into everybody else's windows.
+The few notables of the town and neighborhood tickled to death because
+they have an Imperial Highness with them, and the fool of an Imperial
+Highness goes and "besots himself with a mere country lass." He showed
+me her photograph. I like her looks. A pretty face, blonde hair and soft
+eyes. He was her first lover. On his account she left her family. She
+dotes on him as a dog dotes on his master.
+
+Leopold is eccentric enough to jeopardize his career for this poor
+thing. He rented a small house for her and spends much of his time there
+when not on the drill-grounds.
+
+Hence intense indignation among the "respectable ladies." An Imperial
+Highness within reach and he "doesn't come to our dances, he doesn't
+visit and sends his regrets when invited!"
+
+Poor Marja suffers especially from the venom of the officers'
+wives,--cattle I detest. No royal or imperial prince is safe from them
+except in his mother's womb.
+
+"From morn till night and half the night they do nothing but gossip
+about me and my girl," said Leopold,--"If the cats were only satisfied
+with that! But every little while I get an anonymous letter from one of
+them, denouncing her; Marja is favored in a similar way; so is my
+general and our uncle, the Emperor."
+
+And needless to say Leopold can't get along on his salary and appanage.
+Father can't give him much. The Emperor won't, because the clergy
+intrigues against him as a free-thinker and non-church-goer.
+
+We thought long and deep whether it wouldn't be possible to improve our
+position and we decided on this:
+
+We will keep up each other's spirits by clandestine correspondence,
+carried on with the aid of a mutual friend. At the same time we will,
+apparently, fall in with the ideas of "our masters" and endure a few
+pin-pricks rather than waste our strength in useless opposition.
+
+Let no one chide us for hypocrites, because our gentleness will be a
+mask, our submission a snare, our obedience a lie. It's all on the
+outside. Inwardly Leopold and Louise will remain true to themselves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+FREDERICK AUGUSTUS CONTINUES VERY RAW
+
+ Manners _à la_ barracks natural to royal princes--Names I am
+ called--My ladies scandalized--Leopold turned over a new leaf,
+ according to agreement, and is well treated--The King grateful to me
+ for having "influenced Leopold to be good."
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _October 1, 1894_.
+
+I have tried it a fortnight during Frederick Augustus' sojourn here,
+and, like the French Countess who fell in love with the strong man of
+the circus, I am disappointed. Frederick Augustus considers my
+tractability _carte blanche_ to carry into the boudoir of an Imperial
+Princess the license of the brothel. He treats me like a kept-woman--all
+with the utmost good-nature. I am called names such as the other
+Augustus bestowed on the mothers of his three hundred and fifty-two, and
+I daren't remind him that some day I'll be Queen of these realms.
+
+This prince, like the majority of them, hasn't the ghost of an idea of a
+sensitive woman's nature. He paws me over like a prize cow, and as the
+fourteenth Louis esteemed his mistress's chamber-women no more worthy of
+notice than her lap-dogs, so Frederick Augustus makes love _à la_
+barracks before the Schoenberg, Countess von Minckwitz, or whatever
+other lady is in attendance.
+
+Only when he does it before the Tisch I am inclined to be amused rather
+than incensed. Tisch, cadaverous beanpole, never felt a loving touch on
+her shoulder. The place where her bosom should be never experienced a
+friendly squeeze. No one ever cared whether she wore silk stockings or
+rubber boots--be amorous, Frederick Augustus, when the Tisch is 'round!
+Indulge your coarseness! Put twenty-mark pieces in my stockings for a
+kiss. Tell gay stories and don't forget playing with my corsage. It will
+make the old woman mad. It will remind her of what she missed--of what
+she will miss all her life!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _October 10, 1894_.
+
+Letter from Leopold. He is going to church and--they leave his mistress
+in peace.
+
+He is paying banal compliments to the noble-women of his garrison and
+pinches the officers' wives when he finds one in a corner--and they seem
+to live in corners when His Imperial Highness is around--hence, no more
+anonymous letters!
+
+The spy planted in his household by the Emperor is allowed to see much
+of the "innocent" correspondence passing between me and Leopold. He has
+reported to Francis Joseph that the Prince turned over a new leaf.
+
+Result: Leopold's debts have been paid and he got about two thousand
+marks over and above his wants.
+
+Further results: A gracious letter from the King's House Marshal, Baron
+Carlowitz, praising me for "the good influence I am exercising on
+Leopold."
+
+Truly the world wants to be deceived.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+PRINCE MAX MAKES LOVE TO ME
+
+ Wants me to consult him on all spiritual matters--Warns me against
+ the Kaiser, the heretic bishop--Princes as ill-mannered as
+ Russian-Jew up-starts.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 15, 1894_.
+
+Prince Max called on me the day of my arrival and promised me an
+armchair in Paradise for "reforming" Leopold. "I understand that your
+family life is ideal now," he added. "What bliss!"
+
+"Oh, Louise," he continued, with the face of a donkey withdrawing his
+nozzle from a syrup barrel, "whenever doubtful of the right way, of the
+Lord's way, come to me."
+
+It would have been un-politic to repulse the grotesque ape, and I said:
+"I will. I will even give you the preference over the Kaiser, who asked
+me the same thing--as _summus episcopus_, of course."
+
+Max looked about the room. We were alone, yet he lowered his voice to a
+faint whisper. "William is a heretic. Don't trust him in religious
+matters," he breathed stealthily. And this devilish Max began to stroke
+my hands and admire a bracelet I wore above the elbow.
+
+The Kaiser wouldn't have gone much further under the circumstances.
+Maybe he would have kissed my arm, though, from wrist to pit.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Tonight family tea in the Queen's _salon_. The King an icicle, but
+polite as a French marquis. He gave me the three "_How art thou's_" in
+the space of five minutes, asked after the babies and promised to come
+and look them over.
+
+Frederick Augustus, half insane with delight, pinched my arm and
+squeezed my leg under the table. I felt like boxing his ears.
+
+My father-in-law had to behave in the presence of the King and said a
+few commonplaces to me.
+
+Johann George and Isabella talked automobiles, not to let us forget they
+are millionaires.
+
+"How much did you pay for my blue car?" asked Isabella.
+
+"Not much," replied Johann George; "sixty thousand francs, if I
+recollect rightly."
+
+"My allowance for a whole year." I smiled my sweetest, and the King
+looked disapprovingly at the braggarts.
+
+For ill manners recommend me to a Russian-Jew upstart or to a Royal
+Highness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+THE SHAH OF PERSIA FALLS IN LOVE WITH ME
+
+ The "animal" and his show of diamonds and rubies--Overcome by love
+ he treats me like a lady of the harem--On the defensive--The King of
+ kings an ill-behaved brute--Eats like a pig and affronts
+ Queen---Wiped off greasy hands on my state robe--When ten thousand
+ gouged-out eyes carpeted his throne--Offers of jewels--"Does he take
+ me for a ballet girl?"--The Shah almost compromises me--King,
+ alarmed, abruptly ends dinner--I receive presents from him.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 20, 1894_.
+
+Lover No. two. Very much in earnest, like the first, but I--extremely
+distant this time, though I accepted some emeralds and sapphires as big
+as dove's eggs. The Shah of Persia is the happy-unhappy man.
+
+The King and all the Princes went to the railway station to receive him.
+The Queen and Princesses, our entourage behind us, assembled in the
+throne room to do honor to the "animal." To designate him otherwise
+would be callow flattery.
+
+But his diamonds and rubies fairly dazzled us. Nothing like it in
+Europe, and our gala uniforms, compared with his, like stage tiaras to
+the Russian Crown jewels!
+
+Though he had eyes for me only, I didn't like him a bit. He is a little
+fellow, unsecure on his pins. And like the Balkan princeling I met in
+Vienna, looks as though there was a strain of Jewish blood in his veins.
+
+Like a true Oriental potentate, he wasted not a minute's time on the
+Queen and my sisters-in-law, but began making love to me as soon as he
+entered. The King had to take him by the arm to remind him that his
+first greetings were due to her Majesty. Poor Carola! Her face looked
+like parchment, much interlined, and the point of her nose was as
+conspicuous as usual.
+
+There's nothing elegant about this "King of kings," and his French, like
+his manners, is atrocious. He addressed a few set phrases to the Queen,
+then attacked me--"attacked" is the right word. If I hadn't been on the
+defensive, I think he would have handled my charms as unceremoniously as
+Frederick Augustus when in his cups. As it was I escaped but by the
+length of an eye-lash.
+
+State dinner at five. I never saw such an ill-behaved brute, yet he
+intended to be most agreeable. We are very pious at this court, but on
+occasions like this even an old woman like the Queen is obliged to
+denude herself like a wet-nurse on duty.
+
+His Majesty had the Queen on one side; me on the left. The King of
+Saxony was opposite.
+
+After we sat down the Shah examined Queen Carola from the point of her
+chin to the edge of her desolate corsage and had the effrontery to
+express disapproval in all but words. Then he turned to me. His gaze
+became admiring. He was evidently delighted with his discoveries and,
+true despot that he is, turned his back on the Queen, while paying
+extravagant court to my charms.
+
+The King, the whole vast assembly, the surrounding splendor were lost on
+this mutton-eater of a barbarian. He saw only me, _m-e_, ME, and I'm
+sure would have consigned all the rest to some unspeakable Oriental
+death for five minutes' _tête-à-tête_ with Louise.
+
+"You are neglecting Her Majesty," I whispered to him over and over
+again. This seemed to enrage him, but at last he turned to the Queen,
+expecting her to begin a conversation with him. Of course, Her Majesty
+thought he would take the initiative, which led to mutual staring, the
+Shah's eyes growing wickeder every second. Then he began to devote
+himself to the food and, be sure, there was small pleasure in watching
+him. He fed more like a dog than a human being and actually had the
+effrontery to wipe his sauce-spattered hands in the lap of my state
+robe.
+
+Then, before his mouth was empty, he began talking again.
+
+"Which of the princes is your husband?"
+
+I singled out Frederick Augustus. "He isn't a beauty by any means," he
+said, after examining him like a horse for sale.
+
+The next second his eyes were wandering over my body; I felt as if I was
+being disrobed.
+
+"You will attend the opera?"
+
+"I'll have the honor."
+
+"I will send you a little present after dinner," he said. "If you wear
+it tonight, I will regard that as a sign of hope." The beast affected a
+sentimentality to which he must be a stranger.
+
+I recalled that he was the monster who carpeted the steps of his throne
+with the gouged-out eyes of ten thousand enemies of his régime when he
+was crowned. On twenty-thousand human eyes he trod with naked feet as he
+acclaimed himself "King of kings" and the "true son of God." And
+Juggernaut was in love with me!
+
+I was speechless. Did he take me for a dancing girl? I narrowed my
+shoulders and gave him a look of disdain. House Marshal Baron Carlowitz,
+standing behind the King's chair, took in the situation and whispered to
+King Albert.
+
+The King immediately rose from table and the state dinner came to an
+abrupt end.
+
+An hour later, while I was dressing for the theatre, a big jewel box was
+handed in. "From the Shah."
+
+Despite my disgust with the fellow, I opened it in feverish haste. There
+was a bracelet set with rubies, sapphires and emeralds of fabulous
+size.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+THE SHAH COMPROMISES ME IN PUBLIC
+
+ Has only eyes for me at the grand manoeuvres, and I can't drive
+ him from my carriage--Ignores the King and the military
+ spectacle--Calls me his adored one--Court in despair--Shah ruins
+ priceless carpets to make himself a lamb stew.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _December 1, 1894_.
+
+I am in disgrace again and that uncouth animal, the Shah, is
+responsible.
+
+The dinner episode was bad enough, but he carried on worse at the grand
+parade next day.
+
+Six or eight regiments, Horse, Foot and Artillery, had been moved to do
+him honor, but he flatly refused to accept a mount for the occasion.
+Like the ladies of the royal family, he drove to the parade field in a
+coach and four, and no sooner did he clap eyes on me at the rendezvous
+in another vehicle than he left his and shambled over to me. He stood at
+the carriage door, chanting love and devotion, and if I hadn't been all
+ice, I have no doubt he would have jumped in and ordered the coachman to
+drive to a hotel.
+
+Meanwhile the King trotted around the manoeuvre field in honor of his
+"sublime guest." Evolutions, _Parade-marsch_, attacks, saluting the
+colors, Persian and Saxon, what not? Imagine the feelings of the old
+King when he rode up to the Shah's gala coach and found it empty.
+
+The marching past had begun, and still the "King of kings" turned his
+back on it all, while trying to persuade me to be Queen of his seraglio.
+
+Our courtiers, the princes, the Queen, the generals were in despair.
+They took counsel with each other, disputed, advised, got red in the
+face. The Shah's gentlemen alone kept cool. They probably argued: If our
+master prefers the company of a pretty woman to looking at ten thousand
+men, he shows his good taste.
+
+I tried to shake him off. He stood his ground and smiled.
+
+"The Grand March has begun, Your Majesty."
+
+"Bother the Grand March."
+
+The King began to bombard me with ungracious, glances, and of course
+everybody stared. Three times I asked the big booby to return to his
+carriage to oblige his host. "Not while I may look at you, adored one."
+
+His love-making became desperate. The Crown Princess of Saxony, the
+Imperial Highness of Austria, the "adored one" of this butcher, who was
+ruining twenty-five thousand marks' worth of carpets in his apartments
+at our palace by using them as a shambles to prepare his breakfast of
+lamb stew. It was contemptible,--nay, ridiculous. Surely there was
+nothing to do but laugh. And I laughed and laughed again.
+
+Only when the last battalion had marched by and the music ceased, the
+"King of kings" returned to his carriage and drove back to Dresden with
+the most bored looking visage of the world.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+MY LIFE AT COURT BECOMES UNBEARABLE
+
+ Laughter a crime--Disappointed Queen lays down the law for my
+ behavior--Frederick Augustus sometimes fighting drunk--Draws sword
+ on me--Prince George would have me beaten--To bed with his boots on.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 5, 1895_.
+
+Ever since the Shah left I have been the object of criticism, suspicions
+and down-right attacks by the pretty family I married into. These pages
+witness that I tried to conform to the absurd notions and comply with
+the narrow-minded idiosyncrasies of the Royal Wettiners. I give it up.
+It can't be done, and I won't make another effort at pleasing my
+relatives-in-law, who adjudge laughter a crime and the desire to make
+friends a bid of lewdness.
+
+Prince George invented the phrase, "Louise is over-desirous to please,"
+and Queen Carola paid me a state visit to acquaint me with the new
+indictment.
+
+"Good gracious," I said to Her Majesty, "is that all? I thought of being
+accused of 'sassing' the Archangel Gabriel. As to desire to please,
+that's exactly what ails me. I love to please. I love to see people
+happy. I love to make friends."
+
+"My dear child," said the Queen, "you haven't the slightest notion of
+royal dignity. You talk like a _cocotte_. It's a Princess's place to be
+honored, to be held in supreme esteem."
+
+Poor old woman! She was never pretty, never was made love to, never had
+admirers, legitimate or otherwise; she thus became impregnated with the
+fixed idea that to be fair and to be loved for one's fairness is
+frivolous, if not altogether reprehensible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _March 10, 1895._
+
+Frederick Augustus drinks. He says I drive him to drink by my attitude
+towards his beloved family. What the beloved family does to me doesn't
+count, of course.
+
+Drinking was one of the vices of his youth. Love for me cured him of the
+dreadful habit. As this love wanes, the itch for alcohol increases.
+
+I can't do anything with him when he is drunk, and at such times I am
+afraid of him. He both nauseates me and frightens me. Sometimes he comes
+home "fighting drunk." The fumes of wine, beer and _Schnapps_, mixed
+with tobacco, upset my stomach and I try to avoid his coarse embrace as
+any decent woman would.
+
+What does this royal drill-ground bully do? He unsheathes his sword and
+threatens to cut my liver out, unless I instantly doff my clothes and go
+to bed with him.
+
+Prince George's evil counsel wasn't powerful enough to procure me
+beatings, but my husband's military education, his love of discipline,
+backed by alcohol, thrusts a sword into his hand, and, if I refuse to
+comply with his atrocious demands, I am liable to be treated like so
+many "mere" civilians that are sabred in the public streets for refusing
+to do some spurred and epauletted blackguard's bidding, or entertain his
+insults.
+
+If the Socialists, who are forever railing against these self-same army
+poltroons, only knew it! An Imperial Highness threatened like a small
+"cit" with a four-foot sword in the hand of a drunken Royal Highness and
+dragged to a couch with no more ceremony than a street-walker passing a
+Cossack barracks!
+
+The howl that would go up in the Diet, or the _Reichstag_, the fulminant
+denials by prince and king and government! And if I really did get hurt
+in one of these fracases, Frederick Augustus would be sure of a "severe
+reprimand" by father and uncle, and perhaps by the Kaiser, too, but
+would that heal my wounds, would it save me from death? Would it even
+prevent Prince George from saying that I myself was to blame?
+
+No, no, I like a whole skin and prefer an embrace to a sword-thrust any
+day, like my ancestress, the Queen of Naples, who consummated the
+marriage forced upon her on the spot and in sight of the army rather
+than have her head cut off. Too bad she was hanged in the end despite
+her complacency.[5]
+
+Indeed, if Frederick Augustus shows the mailed fist, I don't stand on
+ceremony, but I do wish he would take his boots off.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 5: Joanna I, Queen of Naples, a pupil of Petrarca and in many
+respects an enlightened ruler. She issued the first laws and regulations
+regarding prostitutes. Hanged by order of King Louis of Hungary, after
+her defeat in battle, July, 1381.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+PRISON FOR PRINCES THAT OPPOSE THE KING
+
+ Duke of Saxony banished--Cut off from good literature even--Anecdote
+ concerning the Grand Dauphin and his "kettledrums"--A royal prince's
+ garrison life--His association with lewd women.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _September 1, 1895_.
+
+I have once more come to the conclusion that the agreement I made with
+Leopold, to dissimulate my real feelings, was the sanest decision I ever
+formed, for, while _lettres de cachet_ are a dead measure as far as
+ordinary mortals go, kings still wield that awful and mysterious abuse
+of power in the family circle.
+
+There is a distant connection of our "sublime master," the King,
+lingering, without process of law, in a state prison. Duke of Saxony is
+his title, and he is quite rich in his own right. Some six or eight
+years ago he raised his hand against the King after the latter struck
+him.
+
+It was suggested that he had better make away with himself, and a
+revolver and poison were conspicuously displayed in the room where he
+was held captive.
+
+The Duke said "nay." He thought he could "brass" it out. But the
+assembled family council taught him that, while the world at large was
+_fin-de-siècle_, royalty still lived in the traditions of the eighteenth
+century. It empowered the King to banish his kinsman to a lonely country
+house, styled castle by courtesy, and he is confined there even today,
+with the proviso, though, that he may use the surrounding
+hunting-grounds. Otherwise he lives in complete seclusion, separated not
+only from all his friends, but from the very classes of society to which
+he belongs by birth and education. And he is still a young man.
+
+I believe they are trying to drive him mad, once as a punishment, and
+again to secure his fortune the quicker. To the latter end, he is denied
+all books that give him pleasure and are liable to improve his mind.
+Bibles, Christian Heralds, the Lives of the Martyrs, or the Popes,
+galore, but never a Carlyle, Shakespeare or Taine, which he demands
+regularly.
+
+The Duke is dying of _ennui_, they say, and to kill time engages in all
+sorts of manual labor. When he gets tired of that he blows the trombone.
+
+"Of course he would prefer a pair of kettledrums," said my cousin
+Bernhardt of Weimar, to whom I am indebted for the above.
+
+"Kettledrums?" I asked.
+
+"I mean those the Grand Dauphin, called 'Son of a king, father of a
+king, never a king,' was so fond of, and which he finally married in
+secret."
+
+I looked bewildered.
+
+"You are a very ignorant girl," said Bernhardt. "Never heard of the
+prodigious bosoms of _Mademoiselle_ Chouin?"
+
+"They won't let the Duke marry?" I queried.
+
+"Not even temporarily," said Bernhardt. "And they are trying the same
+game on me. My garrison--a dung-heap. The people there, males and
+females, entirely unacquainted with soap and water. Nothing in the world
+to do but drink and gamble."
+
+"That reminds me. What are you doing in Dresden?"
+
+"With Your Imperial Highness's permission, I came to see my girl."
+
+"Who is the lady?"
+
+"No lady at all. Just an ordinary servant-wench, but prettier and more
+devilish than a hundred of them."
+
+"Bernhardt!"
+
+"What would you have me do, Louise? I haven't money enough to keep a
+mistress, and King and Queen certainly won't keep one for me. I wish I
+had lived a hundred and fifty years ago, when every lady of the court
+was expected to entertain the royal princes, the Palace footing the
+bill."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+PRINCE GEORGE SHOWN THE DOOR BY GRAND-DUCHESS MELITA
+
+ A royal lady who walks her garden attired in a single diaphanous
+ garment--Won't stand for any meddling--Called impertinent--My
+ virtuous indignation assumed--A flirtation at a distance--An
+ audacious lover--The Grand Mistress hoodwinked--Matrimonial horns
+ for Kaiser--The banished Duke dies--Princes scolded like
+ school-boys.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _February 5, 1896_.
+
+At last Prince George got his deserts, and got 'em good and heavy. There
+had been rumors for some time that Grand-duke Ernest Ludwig and his
+bride, Victoria Melita of Saxe-Coburg, the English branch, didn't get
+along together. Ernest Ludwig is a serious-minded, modest and
+intelligent man, but a good deal of a sissy. Victoria Melita is a
+spit-fire, very good-looking and anxious to let people know about it.
+She rides horseback and fences to show off her figure, and someone
+called her a Centaur.
+
+"Be in the palace gardens tomorrow at eleven," answered Melita, "and you
+will be convinced that I am not half-horse, even if my husband is a
+ninny."
+
+She kept the _rendezvous_, attired in a single garment of diaphanous
+texture.
+
+When Prince George heard that she had a lover, he went to Darmstadt to
+"correct her," as he expressed himself with much self-satisfaction.
+
+But Victoria Melita proved to him that English princesses are made of
+sterner stuff than the German variety.
+
+"I will have none of your meddling," said the bride of two years.
+
+"I came here to make peace between you people."
+
+"Play the dove to your daughter-in-law," quoth the Grand-duchess. "I
+hear you are fighting like Kilkenny cats."
+
+"You are impertinent, Madame," cried George furiously.
+
+"You will oblige me by showing this man the door," demanded Victoria
+Melita, addressing her husband.
+
+"Not until I have explained the situation," answered Ernest Ludwig
+quietly. "Listen, then, cousin! While I am by principle opposed to
+divorce, I won't force my wife to live with me."
+
+"And now be so kind as to withdraw," said Victoria Melita, opening the
+door for Prince George. Poor as I am, I would have given five thousand
+marks to have seen the meddling pest exit in that fashion, and I love
+Victoria Melita for the spirit she displayed, even if I don't approve of
+her _liaisons_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _February 10, 1896_.
+
+A mighty virtuous remark escaped me on the last page, and I almost feel
+like asking the Grand-duchess's pardon, for, whatever I am, I'm no
+hypocrite. Melita is said to have a lover; I have an admirer. Up to now
+I don't care a rap for him, but who knows?
+
+It's Count Bielsk of the Roumanian Embassy. I can't remember whether he
+was ever introduced to me. Most probably he was, but I forgot.
+
+An elegant fellow--always looks as if he stepped out of a tailor's shop
+in Piccadilly.
+
+Every single night I go to the theatre the Count occupies an orchestra
+chair that affords the best possible view of the royal box. It happened
+too often and too persistently to be accidental. Moreover, I observe
+that he pays no attention to the play. He has eyes for me only.
+
+Impertinence? Decidedly, but I can't be angry with the fellow. On the
+contrary, I am flattered, and the kind face and the fine eyes he's got!
+
+Poor stupid Tisch doesn't approve of the theatre, of course, and usually
+begs to be excused on the plea of religious duties. "What a sinner you
+must be," I sometimes say, "when you are obliged to forever bother God
+with prayers."
+
+The Schoenberg I send into the next box, for she is no spy and never
+watches me. But if I must take Tisch, I always command her to sit
+behind me. Etiquette forbids her the front of the box and from the rear
+she can see only the stage.
+
+What fun to carry on a flirtation right under the nose of that
+acrid-hearted, snivelling bigot, who would mortgage part of the eternal
+bliss she promises herself for a chance to catch me at it!
+
+Am I flirting, then?
+
+To spite the Tisch I would plant horns on the very Kaiser.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _April 1, 1896._
+
+The Duke of Saxony is dead--the man who at one time offered violence to
+His Majesty. Bernhardt was mistaken; he left a wife and three children.
+Of course, no recognized wife. Just the woman he married. Unless you are
+of the blood-royal, you won't see the difference, but that is no concern
+of mine.
+
+Novels and story books have a good deal to say on the subject of
+inheritance-fights among the lowly. Greed, hard-heartedness,
+close-fistedness, treachery, cheating all around! See what will happen
+to the Duke's widow and her little ones.
+
+According to the house laws, a regular pirate's code, his late
+Highness's fortune reverts to the family treasury. Prince Johann George
+will derive the revenues from the real estate the Duke owned privately.
+He is already rich,--sufficient reason for his wanting more. I shudder
+when I think what they will do to the woman the Duke married.
+
+The most notable thing about the funeral was the "calling down" Prince
+Bernhardt got.
+
+"You will go to my valet and ask him to lend you one of my helmets.
+Yours is not the regulation form, I see," said the King to him in the
+voice of a drill-sergeant. And Bernhardt had to take to his heels like a
+school-boy caught stealing apples.
+
+I had to laugh when I observed the meeting between my erstwhile admirer,
+the Prince of Bulgaria, and His Majesty.
+
+Ferdinand's broad chest was ablaze with orders and decorations, but his
+valet had forgotten to pin onto him the Cross of the _Rautenkrone_, the
+Royal Saxe House decoration. There were plenty of others, but the King
+had eyes only for the one not dangling from a green ribbon.
+Consequently, Ferdinand, though a sovereign Prince, got only one "_How
+art thou?_" If we were living in the eighteenth, instead of the
+nineteenth, century, his valet's neglect would constitute a prime cause
+for war between the two countries.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+MELITA'S LOVE AFFAIRS AND MINE
+
+ The Grand Duchess tells me how she cudgeled George--Living
+ dictaphone employed--Shows him who is mistress of the house--Snaps
+ fingers in Prince George's face--Debate about titles--"A sexless
+ thing of a husband"--Conference between lover and husband--Grand
+ Duke doesn't object to his wife's lover, but lover objects to "his
+ paramour being married."
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 15, 1896_.
+
+Melita conducted herself at the funeral and in our palace as
+unconcernedly as if she and George were fast friends. She smiled every
+time she saw him, and he cut her dead to his heart's content. During the
+three days' stay of the Hesses, I had many a good talk and many a good
+laugh with Melita, and now I got a true and unabridged record of what
+happened at Darmstadt during George's meddling visit there.
+
+The Grand-duchess, who can be as catty as they make 'em, had her
+secretary sit behind a screen to take stenographic notes.
+
+Saxon kings and princes always roar and bellow when, in conversation or
+otherwise, things go against their "all-highest" grain. As soon as
+George felt that he was losing ground, he began to bark and yell,
+whereupon Melita interrupted him by saying, "I beg you to take notice
+that you are in _my_ house."
+
+George grew so red in the face, Melita hoped for an apoplectic fit. But
+after a few seconds he managed to blurt out: "It's your husband's
+house."
+
+"While I am Grand-duchess of Hesse it's my house, too. Moreover, this is
+my room and I forbid you to play the ruffian here."
+
+Prince George looked at the Grand-duke, but Ernest Ludwig said nothing.
+
+"I am here as the King's representative. I represent the chief of the
+Royal House of Saxony."
+
+"A fig for your Royal House of Saxony," said Melita, snapping her
+fingers in George's face. "Queen Victoria is my chief of family, and,
+that aside, Ludwig and I are sovereigns in Hesse and have no intention
+whatever to allow anyone----"
+
+"Anyone?" repeated George aghast. "You refer to me as anyone?"
+
+"In things matrimonial," said Melita, "only husband and wife count; all
+others are 'anyone.' You, too."
+
+"She calls me 'you,'" cried George, white with rage, looking helplessly
+at Ernest Ludwig. When the latter kept his tongue and temper, George
+addressed himself to Melita once more.
+
+"I want you to understand that my title is Royal Highness."
+
+"And I want you to understand that I am Her Royal Highness the
+Grand-duchess of Hesse, Royal Princess of Great Britain and Ireland,
+Duchess of Saxony," cried Melita, stamping her foot.
+
+With that she went to the door, opened it and said, "I request Your
+Royal Highness to leave my house this very second."
+
+And George went.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 1, 1896_.
+
+Poor virtuous me, to chide myself, and call myself names for flirting
+with Count Bielsk--at a distance of twenty feet or more! "I could kick
+my back," as the Duc de Richelieu--not the Cardinal, but the lover of
+the Regent's daughters and "every wife's husband"--used to say (only a
+bit more grossly) when I think what I miss in this dead-alive Dresden.
+
+Darmstadt isn't half as big a town, and the Hesse establishment doesn't
+compare with ours in magnitude, but what fun Melita is having!
+
+Of course, it isn't _all_ fun, for her husband is a "sexless" thing,
+and, like the Grand-duchess Serge of Russia, she would be a virgin,
+though married for years, if it wasn't for the other.
+
+"The other" is none other but Kyril, the lover of our Dolores,--Kyril
+isn't exactly pining away when separated from Melita.
+
+Well, Melita wants him all to herself. She wants a divorce. The
+complacent husband, who is no husband at all, doesn't suit her. Exit
+Ernest Ludwig--officially. Enter Kyril--legitimately.
+
+She made me reams of confidences, indulged in whole _brochures_ of
+dissertations on the question of sex. What an ignoramus I am! I didn't
+understand half she said and was ashamed to ask.
+
+Ernest Ludwig is the most accommodating of husbands. Knows all about
+Kyril and would gladly shut both eyes if they let him. Melita might, if
+pressed very hard, for adultery has no terrors for her, but Kyril
+affects the idealist. Sure sign that he really loves her. If he was
+mine, I would be afraid of this Kyril. No doubt he is jealous as a Turk.
+
+Last week the three of them had a conference. Lovely to see husband,
+wife and paramour "in peaceful meeting assembled" and talk over the
+situation as if it concerned the Royal stud or something of the sort.
+
+No recriminations, no threats, no heroics; only when Ernest Ludwig
+submitted that divorce be avoided to save his face as a sovereign, Kyril
+got a bit excited.
+
+"This is not a question of politics," he said, "or what the dear public
+thinks. Your wife don't want you; as a matter of fact, she isn't your
+wife, and since we are in love with each other, we ought to marry."
+
+"Marry, marry, why always marry?" demanded the Grand-duke. "I
+acknowledge that I haven't the right to interfere in my wife's
+pleasure--I am not built that way. Well, I _don't_ interfere. What more
+do you want? You don't deny that I am the chief person to be
+considered."
+
+"You?" mocked Kyril. "You with your sovereignty are not in it at all. If
+it wasn't for you, Melita and I could marry and say no more about it."
+
+"But I don't prevent your enjoyment of each other," pleaded the ruler of
+the Hessians.
+
+Now the idealistic Kyril got on his high horse. "Grand-duke," he said,
+"if you don't object to your wife having a lover, that's your business.
+For my part, I object to my paramour having a husband."
+
+And so on _ad infinitum_, and a goose like me abuses herself for a bit
+of goo-goo-eyeing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+MORE ABOUT THE SWEET ROYAL FAMILY LIFE
+
+ "Closed season" for petty meannesses--A prince who enjoys himself
+ like a pig--Why princes learn trades--A family dinner to the
+ accompaniment of threats and smashing of table--The Duke's widow and
+ children robbed of their inheritance by royal family--King
+ confiscates testament.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _September 13, 1896_.
+
+They are treating me like a laying hen. Expect another golden egg in
+December. Hence, "closed season" for imperious commands, "all-highest"
+orders and petty meannesses.
+
+When I learned that Bernhardt was in Dresden, I phoned him to come out
+and see me--without asking either royal, princely, or the Tisch's
+permission.
+
+A junior prince, without fortune or high protector, is really to be
+pitied. His title, the vague possibility that some day he may be called
+to the throne, stand between him and enjoyment of life as a man. Nothing
+left, but to enjoy himself like a pig.
+
+Bernhardt admits it. "They planted me in the God-forsakenest hole in the
+kingdom. If I saw a pretty woman in my garrison from one year's end to
+the other, I would die of joy. And the newspaper scribblers wonder why
+we are all Oscar Wildes.
+
+"Just to kill time, I am learning the carpenter's trade--this Royal
+Highness, you must know, lives in a carpenter's house, as innocent of
+sanitary arrangements as a Bushman's hut. Of course, I run away every
+little while to Dresden, incog. to pay my respects to Venus.
+
+"Louise," he cried with comic emphasis, "may the three hours you steal
+from my girl, by way of this visit, be deducted from your eternal
+beatitude."
+
+I lent the poor fellow five hundred marks and he rushed back to Dresden.
+
+Tonight I told Frederick Augustus of my interview with Bernhardt, not
+mentioning the five hundred, of course.
+
+He laughed. "He's no worse than the rest of us used to be," he said. "I
+did exactly like him, and father and uncle and brothers and cousins,
+ditto. Behold--your husband-locksmith! Max spent all his time reading
+the Lives of the Popes. That made him the dried-up mummy he is. But,
+believe me, I gave the girls many a treat. All the money I could beg,
+borrow or steal went for girls."
+
+Which explains Frederick Augustus's bedroom manners--sometime
+transplanted to the parlor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 1, 1897_.
+
+I gave Saxony a third prince on December 9, and really I wasn't quite in
+condition to be scolded at today's family dinner. But since, with three
+boys growing up, the succession is more than guaranteed, the season for
+insults is again open.
+
+His Majesty, our most gracious, sublime, etc., sovereign, sulks.
+Consequently the family looks glum, down in the mouth, utterly unhappy.
+
+Max gets up to make a speech and one could fairly see the lies wriggle
+out of his mouth full of defective teeth: exemplary family life;
+traditional friendship of all members for each other; perfect unity; the
+King and all the princes brave as lions; the Queen and all the
+princesses paragons of virtue. And the fatherly love with which the King
+embraces us all; his more than royal generosity; his mildness, his
+Christian virtues!
+
+The Queen is a goose. Max's lying commonplaces make her forget her many
+years of misery spent at this court, and she grows as sentimental as a
+kitten. Fat Mathilda, Isabelle and Johann George applaud Max despite
+their better understanding, and now the King rises to make his usual New
+Year's address.
+
+The gist of his long-winded remarks is this: "I am the lord, your
+master, and I will see to it that you--wife, brother, nephews and
+nieces--will dance as I whistle.
+
+"For obedience to the King is the highest law," he paraphrases
+Wilhelm,--"strictest, unconditional obedience" (and he gave me a
+poisoned look) "and let no one forget it, no one." With that he beat the
+table with his clenched fist, and the whole assemblage turns an accusing
+eye on me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 6, 1897_.
+
+They have driven the late Duke of Saxony's wife and children from house
+and home--put her on the high-road, piling her personal belongings,
+trunks, wardrobe and knick-knacks outside, too.
+
+She arrived in Dresden and sought refuge with her widowed mother. Her
+father, a Court-Councillor, dismissed because of the relations between
+the Duke and his daughter, died of grief and mortification, almost
+penniless. And the Ducal widow is as poor as the mother--and three
+children to bring up! Children of the royal blood of Saxony, children
+sanctioned by the Church of which they prate so much, for there is no
+doubt that the pair married in secret.
+
+The late Highness kept all his papers in a strong-box, and it's said the
+King's representative, who searched the safe by Royal orders, found
+neither acknowledgment of the marriage, nor a last will in favor of the
+widow and children. Hence, all the Duke's belongings revert to the
+royal family, and the estate he lived on goes to his next of kin, Johann
+George.
+
+Johann George, who has more money than he knows what to do with,
+promptly sent the bailiff after his cousin's wife and children.
+
+"_Noblesse oblige_,--the way you interpret the old saying, will advance
+the cause of monarchy immensely," I said to the official heir.
+
+"Is it any business of mine to support my relatives' mistresses?" I saw
+he was mad clean through.
+
+"You know very well that she was his wife."
+
+"There is apparently no official record of the marriage."
+
+"Maybe not in Dresden, as the nuptials were solemnized abroad. But what
+about the testament?"
+
+Johann George grew very red in the face. "If there is one, the King must
+have confiscated it. That often happens in royal houses."
+
+"And you mean to say that, with all your riches, you are heartless
+enough and contemptible enough----"
+
+"Take a care, Your Imperial Highness. The Duke's strumpet was today
+indicted for _lèse majesté_ in connection with the testament matter."
+This junior prince dared to speak thus to me, the Crown Princess.
+
+"Johann George," I cried, "forget not that sooner or later I will be at
+the head of the royal family of Saxony. I forbid you to introduce your
+mess-room jargon into my parlor; at the same time I am sincerely sorry
+that a Prince of Saxony should stoop to buy cigarettes and gasoline with
+the pittance stolen from his cousin's widow and her three little
+children."
+
+I went to the door and told the lackey on duty to fetch his Royal
+Highness's carriage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+FLIRTATION DEVELOPS INTO LOVE
+
+ At the theatre--My adorer must have felt my presence--Forgot his
+ diplomacy--The mute salute--His good looks--His mouth a promise of a
+ thousand sweet kisses--Our love won't be any painted business.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 6, Night, 1897_.
+
+The talk with Johann George had excited me so, I wanted a diversion.
+Frederick Augustus sent word that he wouldn't be home for dinner. Hence,
+I decided to go to the theatre after an absence of months. It was after
+six when I telephoned that I would occupy my box at the Royal Opera. If
+I should see Him there, in the absence of announcements in the
+newspapers!
+
+He was there. In his usual seat. I won't rest until I find out how he
+manages to get wind of my theatrical ventures at such short notice. The
+Opera, Faust, had been in progress for ten minutes when I arrived. I
+espied him at once, but kept well behind the curtains of the box for a
+second or two. Then, suddenly, I dropped into the gilded armchair and
+the very same moment our eyes met.
+
+I am sure he expected me; he must have known I was near when I entered
+the house. To his ears the hundred and one melodies of Gounod's
+masterpiece were naught compared with the music of my silken skirts.
+
+He was so overcome, he forgot his diplomacy. Twice he pressed his right
+hand to his heart, then bowed his head in a mute salute.
+
+Fortunately the house was dark at the time and the audience,
+unacquainted with my visit, paid strict attention to the stage. No one
+but him saw my heart leap within me and the blood mount to my cheeks.
+Presently his diplomatic tact got the upper hand again, and he fixed his
+eyes on the score. That afforded me the chance to take a pictorial
+inventory of my lover-at-a-distance. I used my opera-glasses
+unmercifully.
+
+He's a fine looking man--if he were a woman he would be hailed a beauty.
+His forehead is a dream of loveliness; his mouth a promise of a thousand
+sweet kisses.
+
+If this man wants me, I mean if he wants me badly, our love won't be any
+painted business, I assure you.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 25, 1897_.
+
+Ball at the Roumanian Embassy. Royal command to attend.
+
+As if it needed a command to throw me into the arms of Bielsk.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+COUNT BIELSK MAKES LOVE TO THE CROWN PRINCESS
+
+ Fearless to indiscretion--He "thou's" me--Puts all his chances on
+ one card--Proposes a rendezvous--Shall I go or shall I not
+ go?--Peril if I go and peril if I don't.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 26, 1897, Night_.
+
+We went to the ball as His Majesty's representatives, Frederick Augustus
+and I, and were obliged to say a few nothingnesses to a hundred paltry
+persons or more. When the Ambassador introduced Count Bielsk, I said in
+the most careless voice of the world, "I hear you love the theatre,
+Count."
+
+"I don't care a rap for the theatre," he replied. "I go to opera and
+operetta simply to see you, Imperial Highness."
+
+Such audacity! And he spoke quite loud.
+
+Frightened, I turned to the next person presented, saying something
+imbecile, no doubt.
+
+Later I withdrew upon the dais to watch the dancing, and at a moment
+when I was quite alone, he came up to me, making it appear as if I had
+commanded his attendance.
+
+"I have much to say to Your Imperial Highness."
+
+I didn't have my wits about me and didn't know how to act. He repeated
+twice or oftener: "Pray, Your Imperial Highness, I have something to say
+to you," until, at last, I threw etiquette to the winds and asked:
+
+"Why should you wish to talk to me in private, Count?" No royal woman
+indulging in lovers ever encouraged a rogue more carelessly.
+
+"Because my life and happiness depend on what I have to say to you."
+
+And, weaker still, I assented by the tone of my voice rather than words:
+"You make me curious, Count. Whatever you have to say, say it now."
+
+He raised his eyes to me, with a soul and reputation-destroying look.
+"Thanks!" Then wildly, clamorously: "Louise, I love you."
+
+Instinctively I thought of flight, but his eyes wouldn't let me rise.
+From that moment on he dropped my title.
+
+"Stay," he whispered, "I beseech you, stay. Don't you see that I love
+you to distraction? I have kept silent these many months. Now I must
+talk. I love thee, Louise."
+
+I tried in vain to collect my thoughts while his love talk fanned my
+blood. Finally I managed to say: "Can't you see that you are playing _va
+banque_?"
+
+"I know, but it doesn't interest me. Let my career be wrecked, I care
+not; I've got only one thought in the world--thee, only one wish--thee.
+And I must either love thee or die."
+
+I turned my eyes away and rose abruptly. As he bowed to kiss my hand, he
+whispered, still "_thou'ing_" me: "I expect you tomorrow at the end of
+the Grand Boulevard. Come when you please. I will wait all day."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And here I am thinking, thinking, thinking.
+
+"The end of the Boulevard" is the beginning of Dresden's _Bois_. Does
+this madman really suppose that Her Imperial Highness, the Crown
+Princess of this kingdom, will lower herself and respond to his demand
+for a rendezvous?
+
+Yet, how he must love me to risk saying what he did say to me. He is no
+ill-balanced youth; he is a man of ripe judgment. His passion got the
+better of him.
+
+I adore passion.
+
+I must go no more to the theatre. Impossible for me to see him nightly.
+
+But it's a fine thing to be loved as I am. The most beautiful thing in
+the wide, wide world!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 27, 1897. In the Morning._
+
+He is waiting. Doubtless he expects me. What a persuasive thing love
+is, to be sure! Because he loves me, he argues that the Crown Princess,
+the wife and mother, will rush to meet him, fall into his arms.
+
+Of course, he will be most unhappy if I don't go, for I am sure he is
+not your ordinary "petticoat-chaser." He will suffer, he is suffering
+now while I sit here quietly.
+
+Am I quiet? If I weren't determined to stay at home, I would half-admit
+to myself that my soul is obsessed with longing for this man.
+
+A diplomat, who has seen much of court life, assumes that a woman in my
+position is at liberty to keep rendezvous! Let's reason it out.
+
+To begin with, Lucretia has to be won over. That's easy enough, but the
+coachman and lackey! They must be told that Her Imperial Highness is
+graciously pleased to _walk_ in the _Bois_, the carriage waiting at the
+end of the Grand Boulevard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _After Luncheon._
+
+I ought to have said to him, I won't come. It's cruel to let him wait on
+a street corner and not even send notice, and to tip him off is
+impossible.
+
+And come to think of it, if Lucretia and I were promenading in the
+_Bois_ and met the Count by accident, where's the harm? And if I don't
+go--Good Lord, he might kill himself. He is desperate enough for that.
+And he might leave letters compromising me.
+
+I will go to give him a piece of my mind. I will be very harsh with him,
+very adamant.
+
+And I will try to find out how he manages to select always the same
+theatre as I.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+RAPID LOVE MAKING IN THE BOIS
+
+ A discreet maid--"Remove thy glove"--Kisses of passion, pure kisses,
+ powerful kisses--I see my lover daily--Countess Baranello offers
+ "doves' nest"--Driving to rendezvous in state--"Naughty Louise," who
+ makes fun of George.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 1, 1897._
+
+A month of untold happiness. I went to the _Bois_ and I am going there
+every afternoon.
+
+He was splendid; he was modest, quiet. He seemed to exude happiness.
+
+Lucretia is discretion itself. She kept behind us, but out of ear-shot.
+
+"I came to tell you that you acted like a madman last night, and that
+the offense must not be repeated," I said sternly to Bielsk.
+
+"I _am_ a madman--in love," he replied, looking at me with big, soulful
+eyes.
+
+I chattered a lot of nonsense, prohibitions, commands, entreaties.
+
+"Remove thy glove," he begged.
+
+"You mustn't 'thou' me."
+
+"Remove thy glove," he repeated.
+
+Why I complied, I don't know, but I ripped off my glove, and he held my
+hand in both his hands and kissed it and kissed it.
+
+"What right have you got to treat me like a woman unmindful of her
+duties?"
+
+"I know that thou art lonesome, forlorn, Louise."
+
+He struck at my heart as he spoke these words, and my eyes filled with
+tears. He pressed his warm, pulsating lips on the palm of my hand,
+covering it from wrist to finger-tips with wild kisses.
+
+We were standing among the trees, and Lucretia, at a little distance,
+was plucking flowers. The remnant of common sense I mustered told me:
+"He is dishonoring you, repulse him," but his "I love thee, Louise,"
+rang like music in my ears. However, I tore myself free at last.
+"Farewell, we must never meet again."
+
+And then I lay in his arms, on his broad chest, and he covered my face
+with kisses, not passionate or insulting kisses. His lips touched
+lightly my eyes, my cheeks, my own lips--recompense for the long fast he
+had endured during all the months he had loved me at a distance.
+
+Marvelous kisses kissed this man, pure kisses, lovely kisses, powerful
+kisses. And I thought the whole world was falling to pieces around me
+and I didn't care as long as only he and I were living. He himself freed
+me.
+
+"Tomorrow," he whispered.
+
+I awoke confused, ashamed of my weakness, trembling.
+
+"I'll never see you again. Never," I said as if I meant it.
+
+"Tomorrow, love," he repeated. And I ran and joined Lucretia.
+
+When we were riding home I told Lucretia to draw the curtains, and fell
+upon her neck and told her all.
+
+The good soul was nearly frightened to death and we cried a good deal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 5, 1898_.
+
+I neglected my diary, I neglect everything, for I'm in love. What care I
+for the King, Prince George and the rest who are trying to make life
+miserable for me? I laugh their pettinesses to scorn, for I have no
+other thought now but Romano Bielsk, no other interests. He is my all,
+my happiness.
+
+Of course, his "_Tomorrow, love_," prevailed and it has been "_Tomorrow,
+love_," ever since. On the day after our first meeting I actually
+thought I was warring against nature if I resisted his entreaties. It
+seemed to me that I had always known him, that we were predestined for
+each other. I still think so.
+
+Lucretia has a relative here, an aunt, member of the court set. Old
+Countess Baranello delights in intrigue and hates Prince George. When I
+told her of my affair, she placed her palace at our disposal, saying:
+
+"Bielsk shall have a key to the garden gate and to the pavilion inside
+the walls, which connects, through a subterranean passage, with my
+sun-parlor. You can meet your love there any time. I will see to it that
+none of the servants or workmen disturb you."
+
+A capital arrangement, worthy of an old lady who has seen many gallant
+days! There can be no possible objection to my visits at her palace, and
+the grounds to which Romano has the _entrée_ fronts on a street
+unfrequented by society or carriages.
+
+I descend from my carriage at the palace gate; a knot of people, a small
+crowd, perhaps, collects to salute me and gape at the horses and livery.
+I sweep up the stoop, lined by my own, and the Countess's, servants. The
+bronze doors open. The Countess advances with stately curtsy; a few
+words _sub rosa_, and I--fly into the arms of love, while faithful
+Lucretia mounts guard at the street side, and Her Ladyship's spy glasses
+cover the garden;--needless precautions, but----
+
+It's rare fun, and, after all, where's the harm?
+
+I made good as propagatrix of the royal race, and a union of soul such
+as exists between me and Romano never entered into my relations with
+Frederick Augustus.
+
+Romano is very intelligent. I can learn from him; Frederick Augustus
+taught me only coarseness, and if it came high, _double entendres_. Yet
+my lover is only a Councillor of Legation! Because his superiors,
+fearing his adroitness, keep him down.
+
+My children! Have I ever been allowed to be a real mother to them? The
+King, the nation, owns my little ones. I see them at stated intervals
+for half an hour or so, and romp with them as I do with my dogs.
+
+Still, I don't altogether approve of Louise, malicious girl! When I am
+at the top-gallant of my happiness I sometimes say to myself: "Oh, if
+only George could see me now!"
+
+Naughty Louise--it's unworthy of thee. What do I care for George, what
+do I care for the world?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+"IN LOVE THERE ARE NO PRINCESSES, ONLY WOMEN"
+
+ A diplomatic trick--Jealous of Romano's past--The pact for life and
+ the talisman--If there were a theatre fire the talisman would
+ discover our love to the King--Some ill-natured
+ reflections--Bernhardt's escapades cover up my tracks--The "black
+ sheep" jumps his horse over a coffin--King gives him a
+ beating--Bernhardt's mess-room lingo--Anecdotes of royal
+ voluptuaries--Forces animals to devour each other--Naked
+ ballet-girls as horses--Abnormals rule the world.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _May 20, 1898_.
+
+Romano learned about my theatre going by a diplomatic trick. He told one
+of the minor attaches of the Embassy that he had orders to watch
+me--"all-highest command." The official, consequently, negotiated with
+the box offices of all the theatres to phone him the moment Her Imperial
+Highness ordered seats.
+
+I am crazy to know how many women Romano loved in the twenty or more
+years since he grew to man's estate, and how many he seduced. It
+agitates and pains me to think of it, but all my questions are barren of
+results.
+
+Yesterday I asked him whether he ever knew a Princess of the Blood
+before me--"knew" in the biblical sense.
+
+"In love," he said, "there are no princesses, there are women only."
+
+He saw that I was hurt and added quickly: "Now don't be unreasonable,
+Louise--no prejudices. With the thought in my mind that you are an
+Imperial Highness, or that you consider yourself of better clay than I,
+I couldn't love you as I do."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 1, 1898_.
+
+We made a life-pact. Romano cut a gold piece in two and bored a hole in
+each half. He drew thin gold chains through the holes, gave me one of
+the amulets, and kept the other. Our combined monograms were already
+engraved on the bits of gold _en miniature_. Each swore to wear the
+talisman on the naked body for life, but we exchange amulets daily, or
+as often as we meet.
+
+When I am enthroned in the royal box and look down upon my lover below,
+I think all the time of this, our secret understanding, and it sometimes
+occurs to me, that the opera house might get on fire and both of us
+perish.
+
+Next day our bodies would be found. In or near the royal box, that of a
+woman, burned so as to be unrecognizable at first. ("We are all of the
+same clay," says Romano.)
+
+And down in the orchestra floor they would find Romano's body, likewise
+unrecognizable.
+
+And on my charred breast they would find the half of a twenty-mark
+piece. And on his charred chest they would find the half of a
+twenty-mark piece.
+
+And they would put the two together and discover that they match.
+
+Consternation, speculation!
+
+Someone suggests that the mysterious gold pieces be photographed for
+publication and the engraver who made the monogram, and the jeweler who
+sold the two chains come forward as witnesses.
+
+Meanwhile the identity of my body is established. That of Romano's
+follows. _Scandalum magnatum!_ But what are you going to do about it,
+_Messieurs_?
+
+If you had only known it a week ago! A prison _à la_ Princess Ahlden, or
+the Danish Queen Caroline Matilda, for me, disgraceful dismissal for
+Romano, for times are happily past when comely gentlemen, who have the
+wit to amuse royal ladies, durst be murdered in cold blood like
+Koenigsmarck, or be-handed, be-headed and cut into ninety-nine pieces as
+Struensee was in Copenhagen market-square.
+
+What are you going to do about it, King, George, Frederick Augustus?
+
+I'll tell you. You will bury me with the pomp of kings; and your
+sycophants will print beautiful stories about me, asserting that I died
+trying to rescue others, or did something of the sort; and your Court
+Chaplains will weep and pray and lie for me. And the tip of Queen
+Carola's nose will be redder than ever.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _September 1, 1898_.
+
+My young friend Bernhardt is doing me a great service and himself a lot
+of harm.
+
+A good-natured, tractable boy _au fond_, they made him a poltroon and
+worse by their persecutions, their meanness, their petty tyranny. He is
+proud, and they sent him to reside on a village manure heap; he is
+ambitious, and must drill raw recruits from morn till night; he is eager
+to learn and they try to embalm his intellect with tracts and kill his
+initiative by the endless, watery _ennui_ of tu-penny environment.
+
+Of course, he gets desperate and kicks over the traces, and while
+attracting the dear family's disapproving attention, I am more free than
+ever to devote myself to my Romano.
+
+Bernhardt's "latest" is really inexcusable. "I wonder we don't turn
+tigers with the education we receive," said one of the brothers of Louis
+XVI when upbraided for thoughtlessness and lack of consideration for the
+feelings of others--but Bernhardt seems to qualify for a vulture, and no
+original one at that, for a like offense as he is charged with was,
+several years ago, laid at the door of my cousin, Archduke Otho of
+Austria.
+
+Observe half a dozen young officers riding horseback in the neighborhood
+of their garrison town, Bernhardt at the head. At a bend in the road, a
+rural funeral _cortège_ hoves into sight: coffin borne on the shoulders
+of half a dozen peasants; weeping relatives; friends promising
+themselves a good time at the widow's expense on returning home. A black
+cross lifted high; priest and choir-boys in their robes.
+
+"Halt," thunders Bernhardt, blocking the way.
+
+The priest tries to expostulate with the half-drunken fellow.
+
+"Shut up, black-coat. I am His Royal Highness, Prince Bernhardt."
+
+Then--the devil must be riding him--he orders the coffin put down on the
+ground.
+
+"Out of the way, yokels."
+
+And he leaps his horse three or four times across the coffin.
+
+The outrage is duly reported in the newspapers and Bernhardt is summoned
+before the King. "Don't you dare to appear in uniform," Albert added in
+his own hand.
+
+"What has happened?" I asked the ne'er-do-well, when he begged for an
+audience after meeting the King.
+
+He pointed to a swollen cheek.
+
+"He hit me three times in _the eats_." (I beg the Diary's pardon for the
+language; I report literally.) "Three times," repeated Bernhardt,
+"that's the reason he wanted me to appear in mufti. As I went out one of
+the lackeys said: 'I never heard His Majesty rave so.'"
+
+"But why did you make a beast of yourself?" I asked.
+
+"To force the King to transfer me to another garrison, of course. I
+can't remain where I am, for the people are terribly incensed against
+me."
+
+"Did you tell His Majesty?"
+
+"Not on your life," answered Bernhardt. "If I did, I would have to stay
+there until my last tooth falls out. As things are, the Colonel will
+insist upon my speedy transference, and that's worth the three slams on
+the face I got in addition to the various _Lausbubs_."
+
+"He called you, an army officer, a '_Lausbub_.' Where is his vaunted
+respect for the uniform?"
+
+"Didn't he hit me in _the eats_?" lamented Bernhardt tragically in his
+terrible lingo. "I responded both to insult and injury by knocking my
+heels together and saying: 'At Your Majesty's commands.'"
+
+Of course, I told Romano. "Royalty," he said, "has only, on the face of
+it, advanced beyond the pirate and robber-baron period. _Au fond_ all
+princes and kings would be criminals if they happened not to be crowned
+heads."
+
+[Illustration: THE LATE KING ALBERT OF SAXONY
+
+Louise's Uncle by Marriage]
+
+He told me of a Balkan prince--young Alexander of Servia, the same mamma
+Natalie intended for my consort--whose chief amusement consists in
+having mice and rats chased by ferocious tom-cats in a big cage made for
+that purpose. Once, growing tired of that sport, he incarcerated ten
+tom-cats in the same cage without food many days in succession, visiting
+the prison hourly to see whether they wouldn't take to devouring each
+other.
+
+When, in the end, they did, tearing one another to pieces, His Majesty
+danced around the cage in high glee, pronouncing the battle of the poor
+beasts a bully spectacle.
+
+"You visited Castle Sibyllenort a week ago," continued Romano--"a most
+proper place, this royal residence, is it not? You ought to have seen it
+before your puritan King inherited it, ten years ago, upon the death of
+the last Duke of Brunswick. At that time it was a veritable museum of
+pornography, the apotheosis of Paphian voluptuousness. The palace, which
+has over four hundred rooms and halls--not one which a decent woman
+might enter without a blush--acquired its equipment as a _lupanar_ and
+its reputation for debauchery under the famous, or notorious, 'Diamond
+Duke,' a brother of the Highness who left the estate to King Albert.
+Both Dukes held high carnival in its gilded halls, but he of the
+diamonds rather outdid William in outraging decency.
+
+"One of his chief amusements was to hire a drove of ballet girls for
+parlor horses. He had a carriage constructed no bigger or heavier than
+a Japanese jinrickshaw, and to this hitched ten or twenty ballet girls
+in their birthday suits, walking on all fours, himself rider and driver.
+
+"Gracious--how he lashed his treble and quadruple teams of human flesh
+as they pulled him from room to room, and his was no make-belief
+ferocity, either. He was a niggardly rake, but in order to indulge his
+Sadist tendencies, agreed to pay one _Thaler_ (Seventy-five cents) for
+every drop of blood shed by the girls.
+
+"To make the count easier, white linen sheets were spread over the
+carpets, and the sum total was paid over to the two-legged horses after
+each entertainment, the girls showing the sorest stripes or wounds
+getting the larger share."
+
+Romano, who lived at half a dozen courts and is primed with the
+scandalous gossip of them all, could certainly write an entertaining
+book on the fallacies and vices of the world's Great.
+
+It's most indelicate, to be sure, but I laughed long and hard over the
+sexual specialty of my uncle, Archduke Karl Ludwig, who is bad, anyhow,
+as everybody knows.
+
+One morning His Highness rose at an unusually early hour, even before
+the scrub-women made their exit. In the corridors, in the parlors,
+everywhere blonde and dark percherons, cleaning away for dear life and
+courting housemaid's knee!
+
+Karl Ludwig has no more use for women than the late Chevalier de
+Lorraine, the President of the _Mignons_, but the exaggerated
+protuberances he met so unexpectedly on all sides, appealed to his sense
+of humor, or some other sense which I would hate to name. Anyhow, he ran
+into the garden and cut himself a switch. And ever since then his chief
+amusement is to switch scrubbing percherons. If he succeeds in dealing
+one a blow unforeseen by lying in wait for her, or coming upon her all
+of a sudden, he is particularly satisfied with his day's work and is
+liable to give a beggar a copper instead of the usual demi-copper.
+
+And of such abnormals the rulers of the world are recruited.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+MY PUNISHMENT
+
+ I lose my lover--Quarrels with me because I did my duty as a
+ mother--Royalty extols me for the same reason--My pride of kingship
+ aroused by Socialist scribblers--Change my opinion as to Duke's
+ widow--Parents arrive--Father and his alleged astrolatry--His
+ finances disarranged by alimony payments--My uncle, the Emperor,
+ rebukes mother harshly for complaining of _roué_ father.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _Christmas, 1898_.
+
+God punished me for my sins. My children, one after the other, were ill
+with scarlet fever, and the youngest is only now out of danger. Of
+course, I abandoned all my frivolities. I can say without boasting that
+the mother atoned for the short-comings of the wife and princess.
+
+Hence I thought justified to arrange for a right royal Christmas
+present: Romano.
+
+Lucretia went to see him. He received her coldly, hardly vouchsafed a
+word. From a secret drawer of his desk he took a letter, ready written,
+dated and gave it to Lucretia. "It explains," he said curtly, as he
+opened the door for her.
+
+He has abandoned me. Because I loved my children better than him,
+because I am a mother first, Lais second, he throws away his Imperial
+_fille de joie_ like a lemon sucked dry and prates of tendernesses and
+heavenly fancies that he alone feels, that are outside the pale of my
+understanding.
+
+He even refuses to thank me, this proud wooer of the royal bed. He "has
+given me the best that is in man to give to a woman," etc., etc.
+
+Be it so! God desired to punish me and, because I loved much, he meted
+out to me mild chastisement.
+
+He stole my lover, but I have my children.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 15, 1899_.
+
+The King, Prince George, my brothers-in-law, my cousins and aunts are
+trying to make a hero of me. Because I followed the inclinations of my
+heart and helped to save my children, there's no end of their praise and
+admiration. Did they take me for a raven? I am disgusted with so much
+unctuousness.
+
+Nevertheless I changed my mind about the Duke's widow. When I felt
+friendly towards her and quarrelled with Johann George for taking her
+money and with the King for embezzling the testament and offering
+accommodation at the poor-house for his kin's children, I thought it a
+family affair, but now that the Socialist papers meddle with the case,
+which concerns the royal house and the royal house alone, it's time for
+the Crown Princess to stand by her colors.
+
+Those Jews have actually the audacity to reprimand the King and the
+royal princes, to impute ignoble motives to us all! They talk of us as
+if we were _Messieurs_ and _Mesdames_ Jones or Browns, trying to enrich
+ourselves at the expense of a corpse!
+
+They call us "inheritance-chasers," "purloiners of pupillary funds,"
+"starvers of innocent children."
+
+The Duke's kept-woman is "a lady of the highest character" and we are
+not; her children are of the blood royal--only better for the dash of
+plebeian.
+
+It makes me boil to read such things; to see the reverence due the
+throne set aside, the royal banner dragged into the mire, and of course
+it's the kept-woman to whom we are indebted for this pretty kettle of
+fish. It is she who set the press against us, and it's me, Louise, who
+protests with all her might that her demands and petitions be denied.
+
+Let her starve with her brats. If she was sent to the poor-house she
+might make anarchists out of loyal paupers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 1, 1899_.
+
+My parents came to see the children and make merry because I am basking
+in the sun of royal grace. Mother has a new maid of honor, as ugly as
+the Tisch, and when we are _entre nous_ every second word is: "when
+Louise is Queen." They know to a penny what our inheritance from the
+King, the Queen and Prince George will amount to and are forever making
+plans and specifications how to spend the money for the glory of Saxony
+and of our own family.[6]
+
+Mother's scare-crow of a maid of honor had at least sense enough to tell
+Lucretia of a few scandals that happened at home, which mother never
+intended for my ears.
+
+It seems that papa, some few months ago, suddenly became possessed of
+the ambition to become an astronomer. Nothing would do, but he must buy
+a heap of instruments and set them up in a distant tower of Salzburg
+Castle. And there he spent all his evenings--star-gazing, he gave out.
+
+He seldom reached the nuptial couch before one or two in the
+morning,--utterly exhausted by the night's work.
+
+Well, mamma thought he labored too hard, and one forenoon when he had
+gone hunting, climbed up many stairs to investigate. Imagine her
+surprise when she found, in the astrolatry, a young lady in the act of
+getting out of bed, a girl, by the way, whom I used to know.
+
+Mamma had the _mauvais genre_ to report the case to Emperor Francis
+Joseph, while papa sought another climate, remaining away until mother
+begged him on her bended knees, so to speak, to come home. Nor did she
+get satisfaction from Vienna. That great moral teacher, the Emperor,
+told her not to make a scare-crow of herself, but on the contrary make
+herself pretty and agreeable for, and to, her lord and master. I
+understand now why mamma says: "All men stick together like gypsies."
+
+As a matter of fact father's limited resources are considerably affected
+by the various alimonies he has to pay to his own mistresses and those
+of my brothers. The third born of our boys, only a week ago, made too
+free with the _fiancée_ of the pastry-cook, who threatened to kill him.
+It cost father several thousand florins to appease the ruffian and
+Heinrich Ferdinand renewed acquaintance with mother's boxing
+proclivities.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 6: The fortune of the present King of Saxony (Louise's
+ex-husband) amounts to 25 million marks ($6,225,000)--no more than many
+an American parent paid for his daughter's seedy coronet. It will be
+remembered that Gladys Vanderbilt and Anna Gould brought to their
+husbands fifteen million dollars each, and the Castellanes and Szechenys
+are only nobles of the second class, their ancestors never having
+possessed ever so small a territory as sovereign lords. The bigger half
+of the Saxon King's fortune comes from the Brunswick inheritance already
+mentioned.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL
+
+A PLEBEIAN LOVER
+
+ In need of a friend--My physician offers his friendship--I discover
+ that he loves me, but he will never confess--I give him
+ encouragement--We manage to persuade the King to further our
+ intrigue--Not a bit repentant of my peccadilloes--Very
+ submissive--Introduced to my lover's wife.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _in May, 1899_.
+
+Privy Councillor von Barthels, my body physician, is a very agreeable
+man. I have no use for his services, _professional_ services at present,
+yet insist upon receiving him daily. Still I love him not. Only esteem
+him as a friend, I need a friend. Physicians can keep secrets, and I
+have many of them. I look upon Barthels as my Father-confessor.
+
+The tears came into his eyes when I told him, and he said: "Imperial
+Highness, this is the most beautiful hour of my life."
+
+He spoke with enthusiasm; there was fire in his eyes and in his voice,
+yet a moment later he was again the most reserved of men and
+conversation lagged.
+
+It happened three days ago. He has paid me four visits since and I
+notice with astonishment, with curiosity and with alarm, that this man
+is in love with me.
+
+How long has he loved me?
+
+His love is like a warm mantle 'round my shoulders on a chilly night. It
+exudes warmth, strength, beatitude, yet there is none of the animal.
+
+He is a good talker on a thousand and one subjects, a thinker and
+psychologist. Psychology is his strong point. He argues brilliantly on
+the subject, yet I need only look at him to upset his _thesis_, to make
+him stammer and redden.
+
+He's no Count Bielsk and will never tell me of his own accord that he
+loves me. Is his admiration greater than his love? Perhaps so. It gives
+me a feeling of security.
+
+Lucretia knows, but in the presence of the Tisch, he plays the servant,
+deeming himself thrice honored by being allowed to breathe the same air
+as her Imperial Highness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 15, 1899_.
+
+I frequently drive to the _Bois_ nowadays with the children, the _Bois_,
+where I was so happy with Him.
+
+Romano was right, a thousand times right, that he abandoned me when our
+love was at its zenith.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _At Midnight._
+
+It's done.
+
+Barthels came tonight. He was so feverish, so passionate, there was so
+much humble solicitation in his looks and manners, I was moved to pity.
+
+This man is too over-awed by my rank to ever permit himself to express
+his feelings by word of mouth. He talked of everything but love and was
+in the midst of a learned dissertation when I sunk my eyes in his and
+said:
+
+"Why do you try to hide things from me? Don't I know what's in your
+heart?"
+
+Like a little criminal--as my oldest boy does occasionally--he turned
+red, then white, then red again. He buried his face in his hands. He
+trembled. He seemed to be crying. I arose, and lightly laid my hand upon
+his blonde head.
+
+He's got the finest, silkiest hair in the world, shimmering like beaten
+gold.
+
+And then he lay at my feet, covering them with kisses. And instantly all
+his force, his courage, his eloquence returned.
+
+He went away like a man a-dreaming.
+
+I long for him; I confess I long for him. Whether I love him or not I
+don't know. But that I know, I _will_ love him.
+
+And if I cannot, what matters it? I don't have to love to be happy. To
+_be_ loved is enough. I want to be his Queen, his life.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 1, 1899_.
+
+Privy Councillor von Barthels told the King that my delicate condition
+needs constant watching. I go to his clinic every second day, while he
+visits me once or twice daily at the palace.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Like Melita I am never a bit repentant of my peccadilloes.
+
+If I don't want to do a thing, neither Kaiser, King, George, Frederick
+Augustus, my parents, the Pope, nor the whole world, can make me. But if
+I resolve to follow my sweet inclinations, rueing and pining are out of
+question.
+
+Ferdinand is the most devoted of lovers. He has unlimited
+tendernesses--a new experience for me.
+
+The lover of my girlhood days overwhelmed me by audacity. The Shah used
+me like a show-girl. Romano was imperious, super-mannish. For him I was
+only the female of the species.
+
+Sometimes, in the midst of an embrace, Ferdinand suddenly seems to
+recollect that a Queen trembles in his arms; the master turns _âme
+damnée_. I am Sultana, Louise-Catherine.
+
+Like Catherine the Great, I would throw millions to my favorites and
+millions more when I dismissed one. At any rate, I would give each a
+hundred thousand marks "to furnish himself with linen and silks,"--a
+_mot_ invented by the Semiramis of the North.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 5, 1899_.
+
+No more clinic for me. Ferdinand begged so hard, that I allowed him to
+introduce his wife. She came in after we finished our "consultation," a
+little heap of misfortune, execrably dressed, frightened, almost dead
+with submissiveness.
+
+And I am robbing this poor creature; it's like stealing pennies from a
+child. And under her own roof.
+
+It must not be. I am going to the country.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI
+
+AN ATROCIOUS ROYAL SCANDAL
+
+ A royal couple that shall be nameless--The voluptuous Duchess--Her
+ husband the worst of degenerates--"What monsters these royalties
+ be"--Nameless outrages--A Duchess forced to have lovers--Ferdinand
+ and I live like married folk--Duchess feared for her life--Her
+ husband murdered her--I scold and humiliate my overbearing Grand
+ Mistress--The medical report too horrible to contemplate.
+
+
+ ----R, _July 15, 1899_.
+
+I am afraid to date this entry. Another terrible indictment of royalty.
+And, as usual, things criminal are at the bottom of the abuse of
+sovereign power.
+
+The Duchess had a baby and asked me to be godmother to the little girl.
+The King, eager to oblige his rich cousin, favored the journey. I
+insisted that Ferdinand accompany me. "Marie," I said, "hates Tisch, and
+she must, under no circumstances, be commanded to attend me." Lucretia
+would do. It would be cheaper.
+
+The King first wouldn't hear of Dr. von Barthels going. People might
+think I had some chronic disease. But he finally gave in for the sake of
+the child I expect. "We need a few princes more from you," said His
+Majesty benignly. "When you got about a dozen boys, you can rest."
+Pleasant job, that of a Crown Princess.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ----R, _July 16, 1899_.
+
+The Duchess is a pretty woman, her face a lovely oval. She has small
+eyes, the color of amethysts. Her complexion is as white and harmonious
+as if she washed in sow's milk, like the late Ninon.
+
+Her mouth is sweet, but certain lines indicate that it can bite as well
+as smile. She has abundant hair, the color of Ferdinand's.
+
+This dainty, albeit voluptuous, little person, is mated to a bull-necked
+He, pompous, broad and full of the conceit of the _duodez_ satrap.
+
+Marie was forced to marry him; their honeymoon scarcely lasted a
+fortnight and he treated her shamefully after that. Of course, babies
+she must bear like any other "royal cow."
+
+Gradually, very gradually, she got over her disappointment and shyness,
+developing into a cunning, world-wise woman. Then came the man she was
+bound to love, even as the violet is bound to be kissed by the sun. She
+had no scruples about accepting him, thinking herself entitled to
+compensation for the sorrows of her married life. And revenge is sweet.
+
+The Duke found them out in the first month of their young love, walked
+into her boudoir one fine afternoon and remarked casually that none of
+his hats would fit him,--"on account of the horns you kindly planted on
+my forehead."
+
+Marie was more dead than alive when he asked her for the key of her
+writing desk. She lied and lied; to no purpose.
+
+He kicked open the writing desk, and with his iron fists broke the
+shelves and pigeon holes, laying bare a secret drawer and stacks of love
+letters it shielded. These he confiscated. Then locked himself into his
+room to enjoy his disgrace. This monster is a _Masochist_ and Sadist
+combined. He loves both to inflict suffering upon himself and upon
+others.
+
+What monsters royalties be!
+
+In the meanwhile Marie experienced all the tortures of purgatory; she
+thought of flight, of suicide. Before she could indulge in either her
+husband was back: Othello in the last act.
+
+Marie was frightened stiff, her brain a whirl, her limbs inert. Rape
+most foul this crowned satyr committed. "He fell upon me as a pack of
+hounds overwhelm a hunted, wounded she-stag," she said.
+
+Afterwards he commanded her to describe minutely every detail of her
+relations with the other. He was primed with the letter-accounts; he
+made her dot her amorous I's and cross her bawdry T's. And every attempt
+at omission he punished with kicks and cuffs; no drayman or brick-layer
+could give a more expert exhibition of woman-beating! And he violated
+her again.
+
+This was the beginning of a series of outrages of the same gross
+character. Marie suffered for years and years that His Royal Highness
+may gratify his unclean fancies: he the pander; she the Cyprian.
+
+"If I ceased having lovers, I think he would kill me," says Marie.
+
+Alas, such is the stuff "God's Anointed" are made of! In the face of
+such, we pronounce a hypocritical _j'accuse_ upon the Louis's and
+Pompadours, upon Marie Antoinette even.
+
+The Duchess, who knows, gave Ferdinand an apartment near my own. We are
+living here like man and wife. He sometimes calls me "_Frau Professor_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _July 19, 1899_.
+
+Marie is dead. "Died suddenly," said the telegram. I understand now why
+she begged me, with tears in her eyes, to remain at least two weeks. She
+was afraid that, though ill and suffering after the confinement, he
+would treat her as he did when he first found her unfaithful.
+
+"Don't go," she cried. "It will be my death." And when I showed her the
+King's letter commanding me to return at once, she made her confidential
+tire-woman swear on the Bible that she wouldn't leave her for a minute,
+day or night, until she herself released her from the promise.
+
+Private advices from ----r say His Highness brutally kicked the faithful
+maid out of his wife's bedroom and outraged his sick wife while the
+servant kept thundering at the door, denouncing her master a murderer.
+
+Ferdinand says the great majority of crowned heads are sexual
+voluptuaries, deserving of the penitentiary or the straight-jacket.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _August 1, 1899_.
+
+I caught the Tisch stealing one of my letters. Happily there was nothing
+incriminating in it, though addressed to Ferdinand,--just the letter the
+Crown Princess would write to a Privy Councillor. But the petty theft
+indicates that she suspects. Prince George, I am told, receives a report
+from her every few days.
+
+Well, I had my revenge. The Queen called today to see the children, and
+when Her Majesty and myself withdrew into my closet, the Tisch, who had
+been spying, didn't retire as promptly as she might.
+
+"Can't you see that you are _de trop_," I said sharply to her. "Please
+close the door from outside." The Baroness gave a cry of dismay and the
+Queen was scandalized.
+
+"Louise," she said, "that is no way to treat servants. You should always
+try to be kind and considerate with them."
+
+"I am, thanks, Your Majesty," I replied. "All the officials and servants
+love me, but I have very good reasons for treating the Tisch as I do."
+
+Of course, George will hear of this, and the Tisch will be reprimanded
+by him as well. Spies that compromise themselves, compromise their
+masters.
+
+The same evening I said to the Tisch in the presence of the nurses:
+
+"My dear Baroness, I wish you would display a little more tact. Listen
+at my doors as much as you like, but whatever you do, don't spy on Her
+Majesty in my house." She exuded a flood of tears and I sent her to her
+room. "Don't come back until you can show a pleasant face. I want to see
+none other around me."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _August 2, 1899_.
+
+Ferdinand received a medical report from ----r. My first private advices
+regarding Marie's death were correct, but the additional details given
+are too horrible to contemplate.
+
+The poor Duchess was brutally murdered. She died cursing her crowned
+murderer.
+
+The manner in which she was put to death can only be likened to that of
+the lover in Heinrich von Kleist's poetically sublime, but morally
+atrocious, tragedy, _Penthesilcia_, except that, in poor Marie's case,
+the _woman_ suffered from the awful frenzy of the male, in whom the
+"gentlest passion" degenerated in Saturnalia of revolting cruelty. The
+Duke killed Marie because _doing so gave him the most damnable
+pleasure,--her the most excruciating pain_.
+
+Yet the King's will is the highest law and criminals on thrones laugh at
+the criminal code.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII
+
+I LOSE ANOTHER OF MY LOVERS
+
+ Happily no scandal--Rewarded for bearing children--$1250--for
+ becoming a mother--Royal poverty--Bernhardt, the black sheep, in hot
+ water again--The King rebukes me for taking his part.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _August 10, 1899_.
+
+Frederick Augustus sent for Ferdinand and gave him to understand that he
+had received divers anonymous letters, connecting my name with that of
+the Privy Councillor. "Of course I don't believe a word of it," said my
+husband, "but one in my position cannot afford to flout public opinion.
+It will be for the best, if you cease your services to Her Imperial
+Highness."
+
+Upon the same day Ferdinand received orders from the King to stop his
+visits.
+
+The Baroness's doings, of course,--pin-pricks when she would like to
+shoot with sharp cartridges. She evidently doesn't know the full extent
+of our intimacy. As to Ferdinand, he acted the coward, left my letters
+unanswered and didn't make the slightest attempt to continue relations
+that might possibly turn out to his disadvantage.
+
+He is contemptible. My heart is unengaged, but my pride sadly humbled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _February 15, 1900_.
+
+The King sent me an emerald, one-twentieth the size of that given me by
+the Shah of Persia. Frederick Augustus did himself proud and, on his
+part, I gained a pearl necklace in acknowledgment of my renewed services
+to the state. Little Marguerite was born January 24.
+
+Frederick Augustus also gave me five thousand marks spending money. Not
+much for a multi-millionaire's wife or daughter, I reckon, but a
+terrible lot for an Imperial Highness.
+
+When I read of the sums the Vanderbilts, Astors, Goulds and other
+dollar-kings spend in Paris and London, and even with us in Dresden, I
+sometimes wish I could exchange places with an American Duchess or
+Countess long enough to buy all the things beautiful and pretty I would
+like to own. An awful thing is royal poverty, but the reputation of
+affluence and unlimited resources, stalking ahead of us, whenever we
+enter a store or bargain with a jeweler, is worse.
+
+"Your Imperial Highness is pleased to joke," says my man-milliner, when
+I admit, unblushingly, that I haven't the wherewithal to buy the things
+I dote on.
+
+Wait till I am Queen, modistes, store-keepers, jewelers! The new Majesty
+will show you that she cares for money only to get rid of it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _February 20, 1900_.
+
+This morning Lucretia came running to the nursery and whispered to me:
+"Imperial Highness, quick, to the boudoir. He begged so hard, I smuggled
+him in."
+
+She couldn't say more, for the Tisch was watching us. What new trouble
+was brewing? Could it be Romano, dare-devil, who had come back to me?
+
+If it was that poltroon, Ferdinand, I would have him thrown out by my
+lackeys.
+
+The mysterious visitor doffed wig and false moustache. "It's me," cried
+Bernhardt. "You are my only hope."
+
+"What have you been doing again?"
+
+"They threaten to banish my girl from the garrison and I won't stand for
+it. If they send her away or imprison her, I will kick up such a row,
+all Europe shall hear of it."
+
+"But why this masquerade?"
+
+"S-s-sh!" whispered the young prince. "I came without leave." Quickly,
+breathlessly, he continued: "I hear you are in His Majesty's good
+graces. Go and see him on my behalf. Persuade him to annul the order of
+banishment or render it ineffective."
+
+"Bernhardt," I said, "why don't you marry?"
+
+"If I could get a girl like you, Louise, I would--today, tomorrow, but
+the royal scare-crows that will have penniless me,--much obliged! You
+are a very exceptional woman," he added earnestly.
+
+We held a council of war, discussing the situation from every
+view-point, and finally I agreed to see Baumann.
+
+"I'll have to vouch for your future good conduct," I said.
+
+"On condition that they leave my girl alone."
+
+"Precisely. And on your part you give me your word of honor not to
+scandalize the people of your new garrison; to gradually break with the
+girl and, in the end, get married."
+
+"You are a brick, Louise," cried Bernhardt, and before I could shake him
+off, he was kissing me all over my face. No cousinly or brotherly
+kisses! His lips were apart, there was passion in his embrace. I
+struggled, but his hand pressed against my back. What strength the
+rascal's got!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _February 21, 1900_.
+
+The King is adamant. I no sooner mentioned Bernhardt's name than his
+face froze.
+
+"Does your husband know about your interference for that rake?"
+
+When I answered in the negative, he praised Frederick Augustus for
+strict submission to the royal will and upbraided me for "upholding
+Bernhardt in his wickedness."
+
+"The boy is desperate," I said.
+
+"If he is desperate," cried the King, "let him do the one reasonable and
+honorable thing: mend his evil ways. It will come easy if he seeks true
+strength in prayer, in fasting and religious discipline."
+
+"I submit to your Majesty that it might be well to send Bernhardt
+travelling."
+
+"On a tour of inspection of houses of ill-fame?" interrupted Albert
+coldly. "This is a mere waste of words," he added, looking towards the
+door, "and I'm sorry that Your Imperial Highness has the bad taste to
+take the part of this disobedient, immoral and altogether reprehensible
+_Lausbub_."
+
+That meant my dismissal. I shudder when I think of the consequences of
+the King's obstinacy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII
+
+THE CROWN PRINCESS QUELLS A RIOT
+
+ Asked to play the coward, and I refuse--A hostler who would die for
+ a look from me--Hostler marriages in royal houses--Anecdotes and
+ unknown facts concerning royal ladies and their offspring--Refuse
+ police escort and rioters acclaim me--Whole royal family proud of my
+ feat.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 3, 1900_.
+
+Behold Louise, a political personage!
+
+I was driving with my little ones in the _Bois_ yesterday afternoon. We
+occupied an open court carriage, conspicuous for livery and magnificent
+horse-flesh, for I love display and the children enjoy it. We were
+driving along leisurely enough when there was hasty clatter of hoofs and
+wheels behind. Presently a royal _coupé_ dashed up alongside.
+
+The Tisch stuck her head out:
+
+"Imperial Highness--the town's in revolt.--Socialist riot. They are
+marching upon the palace.--For the love of God, return at once. Your
+Imperial Highness must take a seat in this inconspicuous carriage. We
+will change to the first _Droschke_ we meet, going through
+side-streets."
+
+"My dear Baroness," I answered, "it's not in my nature to shirk peril.
+If I were to be hanged and quartered and could avoid that unpleasantness
+by changing from my carriage to a cab--I would be hanged and quartered.
+Take the children and return to the palace any way you like.
+
+"As for me, I'll go back as Her Imperial Highness, the Crown Princess of
+Saxony, and my coachman will drive slowly."
+
+I kissed the children, and the _coupé_ rolled away at a sharp clip.
+
+Calling the coachman by name, I commanded him: "You heard what my Grand
+Mistress said. Riot or no riot, I am solely responsible for my own
+safety. You will take orders from no one but me, neither from the mob
+nor the police."
+
+The coachman lifted his hat respectfully and bowed a submissive "At Your
+Imperial Highness's orders." The groom, a young, good-looking fellow,
+struck the broadsword at his side.
+
+"There is some good steel in this, Your Imperial Highness," he said with
+sparkling eyes. I believe this poor fellow would have died for a single
+look from me.
+
+Among royal servants, the most devoted are those connected with the
+_Marstall_. No wonder so many of my sisters born on the steps of the
+throne, fell in love with their Master of Horse or equerries; some with
+mere hostlers, like Queen Christina of Spain, the mother of my aunt
+Isabelle, of amorous memory. Her lover, Munoz, of the Body Guards, was
+a famous equestrian and two years younger than Christina. He managed
+horses so well, she thought it would be great fun to boss this giant.
+But it ended by the brute lording it over her, the "Catholic Majesty."
+By the way, I wonder what became of Christina's and Munoz's several
+children. While they lived together from 1833 to 1844 without the
+sanction of either law or church, they were "regularly married" in the
+end, the hostler, Munoz, metamorphosing into Duke Rianzares. Yet the
+_Almanach de Gotha_ knows not their progeny when, as "love children,"
+they should live long and happily.
+
+Another "hostler-marriage" occurred in the family of the proud Kaiser,
+the contracting parties being Princess Albrecht of Prussia and a groom,
+whose name I forget. This Princess, Marianne of the Netherlands, brought
+the first "real" money into the Hohenzollern family, and her husband,
+Albrecht, was long regarded the Croesus among German princes.
+
+After the divorce, His Royal Highness forced the ex-wife to marry the
+hostler, and the bloom of forbidden love having worn off in the
+meantime, Marianne seldom passed a day without being soundly beaten by
+the plebeian. Maybe she liked it. Some women do.
+
+Today her offspring with Master Fisticuffs are sturdy farmers in
+Silesia, but two of the three sons she had with the royal Prince, as
+well as the sons the royal Prince had with his second wife, Rosalie von
+Rauch, are degenerates. Rosalie's sons are known as Counts Hohenau and
+the wife of the elder, Fritz, is giving my astute and pious cousin, the
+Kaiserin, considerable heart-ache.
+
+Curious, isn't it? The children of the "adulteress" are successful men
+and women, aids in the progress of the world; those of the blood royal,
+in double or single doses, a menace to public morality. This much for
+your royal inbred custom.
+
+But back to Dresden. The order to drive slowly was soon rescinded, for I
+was burning to see a riot at close range. "_Plein carrière_," I
+commanded, and my fast _Carrossiers_ went at a tremendous rate for two
+miles. The moment I saw, in the distance, knots of people standing round
+or moving in the direction of the palace, I cried: "_Schritt_," and we
+proceeded as leisurely as if following a funeral.
+
+As we turned around a corner, a detachment of gendarmes, sent to watch
+for me, hove into sight. Their commanding officer signalled frantically
+to the coachman to stop, but George had his instructions and proceeded.
+
+The officer spurred his horse and rode up to me, questioning me with his
+eyes.
+
+"My orders," I explained.
+
+"Then I must escort Your Imperial Highness."
+
+"Don't."
+
+"Strict orders from my superior officer, Your Imperial Highness," and
+the gendarmes formed a _cordon_ around my carriage.
+
+I was furious. "Send for your commander."
+
+The captain of the gendarmes could not be found at once and joined my
+cavalcade only when we were opposite a living wall of excited people,
+nearly all of them workmen.
+
+"What is Your Imperial Highness's pleasure?" asked the captain, bending
+down from his horse.
+
+"Send your men away instantly."
+
+"But the responsibility?"
+
+"Rests with me and with me only. Send them away. Every one of them."
+
+The mob was watching us. I read suspicion in the eyes of those nearest.
+The captain gave the sign and the troopers turned their horses' heads,
+saluting me with their drawn swords.
+
+"May I act as Your Imperial Highness's out-rider?" asked the captain in
+a low voice.
+
+"Don't trouble yourself. I command you."
+
+The groom had been watching us. I gave the signal and we proceeded at a
+pace. The rampart of human bodies swung open and lined the sides of the
+streets. Someone cried: "Three cheers for the Crown Princess," and
+everyone responded.
+
+These Socialists, whom I had been taught to hate and despise, behaved
+in exemplary style. When I dismissed their tyrants, the gendarmes, they
+immediately took me under their protection. I am sure anyone daring to
+insult me, or raise a hand against me, would have fared badly at the
+hands of his fellows.
+
+I was all smiles, bowing right and left. Labor agitators raised their
+hats to me, mothers offered their children that I might pat their little
+hand, or lay mine on their head--a veritable triumph!
+
+When I drove into the palace yard, the Guards rushed out to do me honor.
+The Queen, the King and Prince George saluted me from the windows of
+their apartments.
+
+Frederick Augustus embraced me in front of everybody. In short I was
+made a hero of.
+
+I afterwards learned that as soon as the palace knew of the incipient
+riot, the King sent word to all members of the royal family, ordering
+them to stay in their apartments. They were even forbidden to show
+themselves at the windows overlooking the palace square.
+
+Learning that I had gone driving, mounted grooms were dispatched in all
+directions to intercept me. The Tisch, being responsible for the royal
+children, got the fastest team the court commands and started for the
+_Bois_.
+
+It gave me some satisfaction to observe that I arrived before her. Of
+course, I never doubted the children's safety.
+
+The evening papers devoted columns to the little incident and Prince
+George had the great sorrow to hear the King say: "A dare-devil, that
+Louise, but she did the right thing. By pretending confidence in the
+loyalty of the people, she successfully gulled them. The riot's back was
+broken when she showed a bold front."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV
+
+THE NEW LOVER, AND "I PLAY THE HUSSY FOR FAIR"
+
+ Who is that most exquisite _Vortänzer_?--A lovely boy--"Blush, good
+ white paper"--I long for Henry--My eyes reflect love--"I must see
+ you tonight. Arrange with Lucretia"--Sorry I ever loved a man before
+ Henry--Poetry even--I try to get him an office at court--Afraid
+ women will steal him.
+
+
+ PILLNITZ, _September 5, 1900_.
+
+Dance at the royal summer residence. Concentrated _ennui_ as a rule, but
+a complete success this time.
+
+I have seen Him,--capital "H." He is the one man for me.
+
+I am happy; I am myself again. All sorrows are forgotten. I am ten years
+younger.
+
+Love at first sight. I the aggressor. I must be getting very clever
+since I managed to hide it from hundreds of searching eyes, even from my
+entourage.
+
+"Lucretia," I whispered breathlessly to my confidante, "find out the
+name of the _Vortänzer_, quick."
+
+The _Vortänzer_, at royal courts, is a sort of official master of the
+dance, who sets the pace for the company, combining the duties of
+master of ceremonies and of dancing master.
+
+The more I looked at the _Vortänzer_, the more he enchanted me. Taller
+than any other man present, elegant, blonde, clean-shaven. Not an ounce
+of superfluous flesh, I judged. Might be the reincarnation of the _Duc_
+de Richelieu, who seduced my three cousins d'Orleans.
+
+His face is livid with white and carmine tints; his eyes glow with an
+irresistible charm. That figure of his! The elegance of the palm tree,
+both straight and flexible. And the infinity of grace as he waltzed that
+little Baroness around.
+
+"Baron Bergen, of the Guards," breathed Lucretia into my ear.
+
+"My Master of Ceremony will command Baron Bergen at the end of this
+dance."
+
+When he stood before me, bowing and smiling, the idea that he was
+Richelieu reincarnated became almost a certainty with me.
+
+Like Richelieu, his face has the refinement that we admire in women (I
+forgot to say that I became infatuated with him merely from seeing a
+back view of the man. When he turned around, I was lost).
+
+While he chanted the usual compliments, my eyes hung upon his cherry
+lips, reveled in his white, strong teeth. The man I want. I say it
+without shame, without care.
+
+Blush, good, white paper! I am giving an account of my feelings, and if
+they be impure, there's something wrong with nature.
+
+Even as I write, I tremble with longing, with desire for Henry.
+
+Ten days since we first met. It might have been this morning, so lively
+and overwhelming is the recollection. I am impatient for his kisses, for
+his blonde loveliness, for his whole self,--just as if we hadn't loved
+and kissed scarce an hour ago.
+
+"My horse, Lucretia. We'll go for a canter. I must have air and plenty
+of it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PILLNITZ, _September 10, 1900_.
+
+I must give some additional account of our first meeting at the court
+ball. Ah, I was the hussy for fair! He couldn't help seeing the
+impression he made upon me. My eyes must have reflected it in letters of
+flame. I wish he were as bold as the _Duc_, who slept on a pillow
+stuffed with the hair of his mistresses, past and present.
+
+I never made such advances to any man. I was gone clean off my head.
+
+When he reddened and when his left hand, resting on the hilt of his
+sword, trembled, I became intoxicated.
+
+And I danced with him, and I was angry with myself for lacking the
+courage to say: "Feel my heart beat." My great-great-aunt and namesake,
+Marie Antoinette, did and won the love of her life,--Fersen.
+
+But we _fin de siècle_ women are cowards. All I said to him was: "I must
+see you tonight. Arrange with Lucretia."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _September 30, 1900_.
+
+Summer heat continues, but no country-seat for me! The town is a much
+safer place for lovers, and old Countess Baranello keeps open house for
+us all the year round. We meet daily. I persuaded Henry's colonel that
+the lieutenant would never be a courtier unless he saw more of court
+life and was relieved, to a certain extent, of duties on the drill
+ground.
+
+We see each other mornings or afternoons at the Countess's. The evenings
+we spend at the theatre together, I in the box, he in the _fauteuil_
+once sacred to Romano. Every Saturday afternoon we concoct the
+repertoire for the week following, and he goes at once to secure tickets
+for the various entertainments I intend to visit for his sake.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 1, 1900_.
+
+I wish I had never loved any man before Henry. I wish he had known me as
+an innocent girl. I wish I wasn't royal. Then I could get a divorce and
+marry him, but now, if I got ten divorces, he would always be the
+insignificant Baron, I the Princess of the Blood.
+
+And I couldn't see my love humiliated!
+
+As a talisman he wears on his chest a golden locket with my miniature.
+In exchange he gave me a _Portebonheur_ with his picture and a few sweet
+words.
+
+So help me, God, I am in love with this man,--love him to the verge of
+poetry. Indeed, I am writing silly verse in his honor, and later haven't
+the courage to show it to him. _Par example_:
+
+ I want you most, dear, when the sunset bright
+ Makes of the hills a glorious funeral pyre,
+ So die the love-light in your eyes, if die it must,
+ And leave the wondrous, throbbing silence of the night.
+
+Henry isn't very intellectual, I am afraid, but he is the finest
+horseman in the world.
+
+If I were Queen, I would barter a regiment to have him appointed my
+Chief Master of Horse. Augustus of the three-hundred and fifty-two sold
+one for his first night with Cosel.
+
+I am racking my brains for a pretense to have him appointed to court
+duty,--anything to give him the _entrée_ to my apartments. But he is far
+too beautiful. The sanctimonious cats that envy me my happiness, that
+look upon love as a crime, would at once combine to destroy him.
+
+Well, we'll have to bear with the difficulties of the situation forced
+upon us by these moral busy-bodies. As for me, I'll be thrice careful,
+for if He was taken away from me, all the joy would go out of my life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV
+
+LOVE AND THE HAPPINESS IT CONVEYS
+
+ My Grand Mistress suspects because I am so amiable--Pangs of
+ jealousy--Every good-looking man pursued by women--A good story of
+ my cousin, the Duchess Berri--We all go cycling together--The
+ Vitzthums--Love making on the street--A mud bath.
+
+
+ _December 15, 1900._
+
+When one is in love and loved a-plenty, weeks and months roll by without
+notice by the happy ones.
+
+For my part I never thought there was so much happiness in the world as
+I am experiencing since the beginning of September. But I have my
+troubles, too. First, the Tisch. When a lady is well pleased by her
+lover, then her eyes are bright, her cheeks glow, her lips smile; she
+bears with her entourage; she is kind to her servants. The moment I
+treated the Tisch as a human being, she began to suspect, and I am sure
+she is eating her heart out fretting because God gave me both nuts and
+teeth to crack them.
+
+But I am qualifying as an expert deceiver, and my Grand Mistress won't
+catch me in a hurry.
+
+My other great trouble is: long separations from Henry, hours upon hours
+in daytime, half the nights.
+
+What is he doing when he is not with me? Of course he pretends to tell,
+but I am not goose enough to suppose that he would incriminate himself
+for the love of truth. He is hiding things from me, perhaps cheating me.
+I have to arm myself with all the faith loving woman commands to
+forestall occasional noisy out-breaks of jealousy.
+
+Was there ever a good-looking man, women didn't try to capture and
+seduce? Manly beauty is the red rag that enthralls and excites women and
+renders them dishonest, though their honor doesn't lodge at the point
+they designate as its _habitat_.
+
+Sometimes, when in these jealous frenzies, I wish Henry had a face like
+a Chinese kite, or like Riom, husband and lover of my ancestress, the
+Duchess du Berri.
+
+She was "_satisfied_" with him, but since her lady-in-waiting, too, was,
+I might, after all, fare no better than Berri, if Henry was a toad, "his
+skin spotted like a serpent's, oily like a negro's, changeable like a
+chameleon, with a turned up nose and disproportionate mouth." Yet I
+hardly believe that, like my cousin, I would say anent a rival: "Whoever
+would not be satisfied with him, would be hard to please."
+
+Alas, with women in love the extreme of ugliness counts as triumphantly
+as the charms of Adonis. Ever since I read certain passages of Faust,
+part II, Eduard von Hartmann's "Philosophy of the Unconscious," and
+Lermontoff's "Hero of our Times," I am convinced that to love a man very
+good-looking, or, on the contrary, a perfect horror, is no sinecure.
+
+Fortunately Henry is almost penniless.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 2, 1901_.
+
+Henry's sister married one of the numerous Vitzthums, of the family that
+furnished the Saxon court with titled servants and _maîtresses en titre_
+for the past several hundred years.
+
+I immediately sent word to her ladyship, that having taken up bicycling,
+I would be pleased to have her attend me on the wheel on the afternoon
+following. The invitation was issued from the office of my Court
+Marshal, which is controlled by the King's. Having thus secured
+beforehand His Majesty's approval, possible criticism was nipped in the
+bud. The bride asked permission to bring her husband.
+
+"Granted. Order of dress: _mufti_."
+
+This enabled us, myself and Henry, and the Count and Countess to ride
+all over town, unrecognized by either officials or the public at large.
+
+It was great fun, and I told the Vitzthums that I intended to wheel
+every morning at nine, immediately after breakfast. Count Vitzthum is
+Henry's colonel. Of course he granted both Henry and himself furlough
+for the time set.
+
+What happiness! Now I don't have to wait till afternoon and evening to
+see my lover.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 10, 1901_.
+
+I am so happy, I am growing careless.
+
+The Vitzthums, profiting by the fact that they are but recently married,
+prefer to travel in pairs, and always take the lead. Accordingly Henry
+and myself, incog. as far as my future subjects go, are free to indulge
+in occasional caresses and sweet nonsense-talk.
+
+I was pouring honeyed words into Henry's ears the other morning when my
+wheel skidded on the wet pavement, and before he, or I, could save me, I
+was down on my back in the mud.
+
+The fact that I was again _enceinte_, and the other fact that I was
+covered with dirt, ought to have prompted me to return to the palace at
+once, but how un-Louise-like the straight and sane course would have
+been.
+
+I allowed myself to be wiped off by Henry; then mounted my wheel anew
+and raced after the Vitzthums.
+
+Unfortunately, a reporter heard of the incident and, for the benefit of
+his pocket, made a column out of it.
+
+A few hours after the story appeared in the evening paper, the palace
+was in an uproar. The King wasn't well enough to scold me, so he
+delegated that pleasant duty to Prince George. His Royal Highness
+promptly informed me that the "damned bicycling had to stop."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVI
+
+FEARS FOR MY LOVE
+
+ Some reflections on queens of old who punished recreant
+ lovers--Henry was in debt and I gave him money--Indignities by which
+ some of that money was earned--Husband accompanies me to
+ Loschwitz--Reflections on Frederick Augustus's character.
+
+
+ _January 15, 1901._
+
+My love played the melancholy Dane for the last few days. His tenderness
+seemed labored, his spirits under a cloud. Every smile I got had to be
+coaxed from him.
+
+"The end of my happiness," I thought; "some chit of a girl dethroned
+me." And I cursed my birthday. "A kingdom for ten years off my age."
+
+And my thoughts of thoughts travelled back to the times when royal
+ladies had their rivals immured, as practiced by a Brandenburg princess
+at the Kaiser's hunting box at Grünewald, or made a head shorter, like
+Lady Jane Grey, who was far too pretty to please Elizabeth; or shot, as
+elected by Queen Christina, _tribade_ and nymphomaniac both.
+
+And the things Queen Bess did to her unfaithfuls and the crimes Mary
+Stuart perpetrated to cheat Jeannie Bothwell out of her doughty Hepburn!
+
+"If I were Queen," I thought, and I must have spoken aloud, for Henry
+said: "You would make me a great lord, love, wouldn't you, give me the
+best paying office at court, but that's small comfort to my creditors
+today."
+
+"It's creditors, mere creditors bothering you?" I almost shouted with
+joy. This man was still mine. No one had succeeded in luring him away
+from me. I threw myself upon him and nearly smothered him.
+
+Filthy lucre, or the want of it, oppressing my boy. Money, miserable
+money, caused me to doubt his very loyalty.
+
+"How much?"
+
+He stuttered and denied and swore it was all a mistake and that I had
+misunderstood him. "As an army officer----"
+
+"Don't talk like Frederick Augustus. It will give me the greatest
+pleasure in the world to arrange your affairs, dearest."
+
+I got him to name the sum after a while. What a pity I am not rich. As
+Catharine sent her Orloffs and Potemkins and Zoritchs to the State
+Treasury to help themselves as they saw fit, so I would gladly turn
+fortunes over to Henry, never asking for an accounting.
+
+But this Imperial Highness is wretchedly poor, like most royal women
+not actually seated on the throne. I can't offer my paramour financial
+independence, not even luxury, but, thank heaven, I saved up enough to
+provide for his present needs, even if my treasury be drained to the
+last twenty-mark piece, and I will have to cut short my charities for
+the next quarter of a year. But he must not know these sordid details.
+
+Some day I will be Queen. I will reimburse the poor and I will be a true
+Catharine to Henry.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 16, 1901_.
+
+I brought my mite to our rendezvous. Mostly in small bills and
+twenty-mark pieces. If Henry knew that many of these were earned in the
+right royal fashion of having them slipped down one's stocking by a
+husband, too drunk to distinguish a royal palace from a dance-hall!
+
+He told me honestly enough how he got into debt. "How can one lay by for
+a rainy day when one hasn't got anything?"
+
+I appreciate the play of words, for I am in the same predicament.
+
+Only once has Henry touched a card, but he lost considerably in horse
+deals, as most young army officers do.
+
+His sister made a rich marriage, but he wouldn't discover himself to
+her. If she asked money of her husband, there might be trouble, for
+Vitzthum is not a liberal man.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _April 1, 1901_.
+
+The children's health called for country air and I was quasi-forced to
+retire to Loschwitz, though I have a thousand and one reasons for
+remaining in Dresden. Frederick Augustus accompanies us. After the
+strenuous city life (in Dresden!), he needs a change and a long rest
+from drinking and carousing, he says boastingly.
+
+Of course, while he is here, I dare not invite the Vitzthums. But as
+soon as he is gone, they shall come for a couple of weeks, and their
+presence will make Henry's possible.
+
+It's dreadful the way I miss the sweet boy. I suffer like a dog, when
+the longing seizes me, suffer both in heart and body. When I contemplate
+his miniature, tears come into my eyes. I often cry for hours thinking
+of him.
+
+And to have to endure this great booby of a husband of mine day and
+night, especially nights. It's almost more than I can bear.
+
+The grossness of his egotism reminds me of the story told of King James,
+whom the English got rid of in 1689.
+
+The Dutch William, instead of waiting peacefully for the heritage of his
+father-in-law, went to claim it before his death, and James, pressed on
+all sides by enemies, decided upon flight.
+
+One Sunday, in the month of December, his devotions over, he dismissed
+all his servants and advised his last partisans to turn towards the
+rising sun.
+
+After which, he lay for an hour with his wife, the better to take leave
+of her."
+
+The very thing Frederick Augustus would do if war or revolution made us
+fugitives.
+
+I never realized the diversity in our natures as much as I do now, when
+all my thoughts go out to another, when even connubial tendernesses seem
+like whip-strokes.
+
+The further our souls draw apart, the more disgusting this forced
+intimacy, the prostitution under the marriage vow, which I detest and
+abhor.
+
+But what will I do? Shut my door to him? He would kick it in, or climb
+through the window. It's easier to submit to the violation of my person
+than to breaking of locks and furniture.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVII
+
+LOVE'S INTERMEZZO
+
+ Bernhardt takes advantage of my day-dreams--My husband's indolent
+ _gaucherie_--Violent love-making--Ninon who loved families, not
+ men--Does Bernhardt really love me?
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _April 10, 1901_.
+
+Fortunately Bernhardt came for a few days to relieve the monotony of my
+alcove life _par le droit du plus fort_.
+
+Tall stories of dissipation, indiscipline, scandal, had preceded the
+poor fellow. No doubt, his military superiors got orders to make his
+life as unhappy as they possibly can, and he retaliates.
+
+The Prince told me that, at last, he had succeeded arranging for an
+audience with the King. His Majesty had denied himself to Bernhardt for
+months past. He managed the coveted boon only by the intervention of
+various high generals and the threat to appeal to the Kaiser.
+
+The Royal House of Saxony, while compelled to recognize William as
+War-Lord, doesn't court his interference, or attempted interference, in
+matters military.
+
+Flushed with this initial success and expecting lots of good things in
+the future, Bernhardt was bent upon having a good time. He drank with
+Frederick Augustus, made love to Lucretia and squeezed the chambermaids
+on his floor to his heart's content.
+
+To me he was the most gallant of cousins and, glad to contribute to the
+happiness of the poor fellow, I gave him plenty of rope, perhaps too
+much.
+
+On the second day of his stay we had a very merry dinner, having
+dispensed for the time with titled servants.
+
+After dinner the three of us retired to the veranda. I was in a rocker,
+showing perhaps more of my ankles than was absolutely necessary.
+Frederick Augustus was smoking dreamily. Like an animal he likes to
+sleep after he has gorged himself.
+
+Bernhardt, with my permission, had thrown himself on a wicker lounge and
+was absorbing cigarettes at a killing rate. I bantered him on his
+laziness. But he only sighed.
+
+"You wish that audience was past and forgotten," I asked.
+
+"Pshaw, I'm thinking of something prettier than the King."
+
+Remembering Bernhardt's chief weakness, I indulged in the old joke,
+"_Cherchez la femme_."
+
+Bernhardt replied, with another succession of groans, "You are right,
+Louise; _parfaitement, cherchez la femme_."
+
+"Egads," grunted Frederick Augustus, glad for an excuse to go to his
+room, or play a game of pinochle with his aides, "egads, if you indulge
+in intellectualities, I had better go. A full stomach and French
+conversation--whew!"
+
+The Tisch was in Dresden; _Fräulein_ von Schoenberg with the children,
+Lucretia flirting somewhere at a neighboring country chalet. We were
+alone on the remote terrace and it was getting dark. Bernhardt sat up
+and looked at me with eyes of life-giving fire, but continued silent.
+
+"You want me to think that you command the rays of the sun stolen by
+Prometheus?"
+
+He answered not, but sought to burn the skin of my neck and bosom by
+those Prometheus rays.
+
+Now, in the morning I got a note from Henry, and I had been thinking of
+the dear boy every minute. I was longing for him; my heart, my senses
+were crying for him.
+
+I forgot Bernhardt; I forgot all around me. With my fancies focussed on
+my lover, I leaned back in my armchair, gazing at the rising moon. My
+word, at that moment I was lost to everything.
+
+I half-awoke from my dream when I heard Bernhardt rise. A moment later I
+felt his eyes prowling over my body. Then a shadow darkened my face and
+Bernhardt said with a strange quaver in his voice:
+
+"_Cherchez la femme._ You are the woman, Louise, you and none else."
+
+And wild, forbidden kisses burned on my face, on my neck, on my breasts.
+Both hands claimed a lover's liberties.
+
+I was taken completely unawares; in my mind of minds I was in the
+Countess's pavilion, receiving Henry's caresses. All sense of location
+had vanished. And, thinking of my lover, I clasped both arms about
+Bernhardt's neck and drew him to me. We kissed like mad. The love feast
+for Henry became Bernhardt's in the twinkling of an eye.
+
+Whether he felt like a thief, I don't know; for my part my senses
+responded to Henry, not to his substitute.
+
+How long this embrace lasted, I don't know. Somebody, or some noise,
+caused us to separate.
+
+I fled and locked myself in my room.
+
+"Tell His Royal Highness he must excuse me. I can't see him before he
+goes away. Say I have a headache, or the gout, I don't care which," I
+commanded Lucretia next morning.
+
+The previous night I had denied myself to Frederick Augustus, though he
+entreated and raved.
+
+While I appreciate the arch-Lais's _bon mot_ that "one can't judge of a
+family by a single specimen," which made Ninon talk of her lovers _not_
+as Coligny, Villarceau, Sévigné, Condé, d'Albret, etc., but as _les_
+Rochefoucaults, _les_ d'Effiats, _les_ Condés, _les_ Sévignés, etc., I
+was determined not to betray Henry by the whole House of Saxony in a
+single twelve-hours.
+
+I wonder whether this Bernhardt loves me? Perhaps, on his part, it was
+the longing for the girl he adores, as, on mine, it was longing for
+Henry that drew us together with electric force. And, of course,
+environment had something to do with it: moon, opportunity, Frederick
+Augustus's indolent _gaucherie_. Yes, why deny it, the good dinner we
+had, the champagne.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVIII
+
+GRAND MISTRESS TELLS HUSBAND I KEEP A DIARY
+
+ He wants to see it, but seems unsuspecting--Grand Mistress denies
+ that she meant mischief, but I upbraid her unmercifully--Threaten to
+ dismiss her like a thieving lackey.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _May 1, 1901_.
+
+Frederick Augustus leaves tomorrow. Forever, I thought, when he put this
+question to me:
+
+"You are keeping a Diary, Louise?"
+
+I was frightened dumb. I stared at him.
+
+"What's the matter," he laughed. "I'm not going to eat you." He didn't
+seem to be at all perturbed.
+
+"How do you know I keep a Diary?" I stuttered.
+
+Nonchalantly enough he made answer: "Your bag-of-bones Baroness told me.
+Full of forbidden things, I suppose, since you regard it a state secret.
+You often say that my education was sadly neglected. Maybe I can learn a
+thing or two from your scribblings. Let's look 'm over."
+
+By this time I had regained my composure. "Naturally," I said, "a Diary
+records thoughts and things intended for the writer only, but if you
+choose to be ungentlemanly enough to wish to peruse those pages more
+sacred than private letters, I suppose I will have to submit."
+
+Frederick Augustus changed the subject, but I felt instinctively that he
+was disappointed. Someone had played on his curiosity, and to go
+unsatisfied is not at all in this prince's line.
+
+Of course, the someone was the Tisch, but how did she know? I will ask
+her as soon as Frederick Augustus is gone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _May 2, 1901_.
+
+"Have you ever seen my Diary?" I asked the Tisch this morning.
+
+"Never, Your Imperial Highness."
+
+"Then how do you know I keep a Diary?"
+
+"I surmised it because I saw Your Imperial Highness write repeatedly in
+one and the same book." The hussy affected a humble tone, but the note
+of triumph and hatred underlying the creature's meekness did not escape
+me.
+
+"And the mere surmise prompted you to blab to my husband, arouse his
+suspicions?"
+
+"For Heaven's sake," cried my Grand Mistress, "I had no idea that His
+Royal Highness didn't know about the Diary. Secrets between the
+Prince-Royal and Your Imperial Highness--how dare I pre-suppose such a
+state of things? His Royal Highness casually asked how the Crown
+Princess killed time in Loschwitz. I mentioned riding, driving,
+bicycling, writing letters, writing in the Diary----"
+
+My fingers itched to slap her lying face, Grand-Duchess of Tuscany
+fashion, but I kept my temper.
+
+"Listen to me," I said. "While you have secret instructions to play the
+serpent in my household and to betray, for dirty money, your mistress of
+the Blood Imperial, your duties as a spy are confined to my going and
+coming, to my exterior conduct, to my visits outside the palace, to my
+friendships, perhaps.
+
+"They cannot possibly encompass my thoughts. And my Diary is the
+repository of my thoughts--thoughts that must not be defiled by your
+favor-seeking curiosity. Be warned. The next time you dare act the
+burglar--I say _burglar_--I will kick you out of doors like a thieving
+lackey."
+
+She got as white as a sheet and hissed back: "Your Imperial Highness
+can't dismiss me. Only His Majesty has power----"
+
+I interrupted her with an imperious gesture.
+
+"I said I will kick you out of doors like a thieving lackey," I
+repeated, "and I will do so this moment if you say another word. Whether
+or not His Majesty will punish me for the act, that's _my_ business. You
+will be on the street and will stay on the street."
+
+I pointed to the door: "I dismiss you now. You will keep to your room
+for the rest of the day."
+
+I saw the Tisch was near collapse.
+
+"Your Imperial Highness deigns to insult a defenseless woman," she
+breathed as she went out.
+
+Defenseless! So is the viper that attacks one's heel! First these
+"defenseless" creatures goad one to madness, then they appeal to our
+_noblesse oblige_. The enmity between the Tisch and I is more intense
+than ever.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIX
+
+ARISTOCRATIC VISITORS
+
+ I hear disquieting news about my lover's character--The aristocracy
+ a dirty lot--Love-making made easy by titled friends--Anecdotes of
+ Richelieu and the Duke of Orleans--The German nobleman who married
+ Miss Wheeler and had to resign his birthright--The disreputable
+ business the Pappenheims and other nobles used to be in--I am afraid
+ to question my lover as to charges.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _May 15, 1901_.
+
+The Vitzthums have been visiting for a week. Henry lodges in the
+village, but spends nearly all his time in the castle and grounds. We
+play tennis, polo, ball; we drive, ride, go bicycling, we dine and sup
+together.
+
+I ought to be the happiest woman in the world, but a shadow dims the
+ideal picture my mind's eye drew of the lover.
+
+I have it recorded somewhere--I wish I hadn't, so I might doubt my
+memory--that Henry told me he never borrowed from his sister. Countess
+Vitzthum's confidences to me show that he did repeatedly, that, in fact,
+he is forever trying to borrow.
+
+"He is a spendthrift; he cannot be trusted," said his sister, who loves
+him dearly. "He will wreck his career if he continues at the pace he is
+going. Some day we may hear of him as a waiter or cab-driver in New
+York."
+
+These disclosures frightened me. I might forgive him the lie, but what
+is he doing with the money?
+
+Spending it on lewd women like Bernhardt, I suppose.
+
+I said: "Oh," and Madame von Vitzthum seemed to catch its significance.
+It occurred to her at once that she had said too much and she tried to
+minimize her brother's delinquencies. But I know.
+
+Maybe some of my money went to pay hotel expenses for----
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _At Midnight._
+
+My cousin Richelieu caused his mistresses to be painted in all sorts of
+monastic garments and licentious devices, saying: "I have my saints and
+martyrs; they are all that; but, as for virgins, there are none outside
+of Paradise." Substitute _paillards_ for the holy ones and you have the
+situation in a nutshell.
+
+The Vitzthums are panderers. They always manage to leave me alone with
+Henry. When we are a-wheel, they ride a mile ahead; while playing tennis
+one or the other aims the ball, every little while, to enter the open
+window of a summer-house, where my lover and I can exchange a few rapid
+kisses. When we are driving, without coachman or groom, of course, they
+always "feel like walking a bit," while Henry and I remain in the
+carriage.
+
+The same at the house, on the veranda. They are always _de trop_.
+Vitzthum even sacrifices himself to the extent of paying court to the
+Tisch and engaging her entire attention, if it must be. He reminds me of
+a certain colonel of the French army during the Regency.
+
+"_Monseigneur_," said this gentleman to my cousin d'Orleans, "permit me
+to employ my regiment as a guard for my wife, and I swear to you that
+nobody shall go near her but Your Highness."
+
+Of course, it's very lovely of them, but rather emphasizes the poor
+opinion I have of the nobility.
+
+Your nobleman and noblewoman adopt all tones, all airs, all masks, all
+allures, frank and false, flattering and brutal, choleric or mild,
+virtuous or bawdy--anything as long as it makes for their profit. Some
+months ago I met at the Dresden court the Dowager Countess Julie
+Feodorowna of Pappenheim, who told everybody she could persuade to
+listen that her eldest son, Max Albrecht, had to resign the succession,
+because he married beneath him, an American heiress, Miss Wheeler of
+Philadelphia.
+
+"Then you despise money?" I queried with a malicious thought just
+entering my head.
+
+"Not exactly, Your Imperial Highness," she said, "but our house
+laws----"
+
+"Those funny house laws," I smiled, "you don't say they forbid a
+Pappenheim to accept half a dozen millions from his wife, when, in days
+gone by, the Counts of Pappenheim's chief income was the tax on harlotry
+in Franconia and Swabia."
+
+The Countess nearly dropped. "Don't be alarmed," I said. "See the
+pompous looking man in the corner yonder? It's Count Henneberg. His
+forbears held the fiefship of the Würzburg city brothel for many hundred
+years. That's where the family fortune came from."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _May 17, 1901_.
+
+I am an ingrate. I bit the hand that fed me. Noble iniquity that yields
+such delicious crumbs of love as Henry and I stole in moments of ecstasy
+in park and parlor, in pavilion and veranda, on our drives and rides, be
+blessed a hundred times. Ah, the harvest of little tendernesses, the
+sweet words I caught on the wing--recompense for the weeks of abstinence
+I suffered!
+
+Occasionally only, very occasionally, I feel like questioning Henry as
+to the lie he was guilty of. I quizzed his sister time and again about
+his relations with women. She always gives me a knowing laugh; I wonder
+whether she means to be impertinent, or is simply a silly goose.
+
+I won't ask him. If he is innocent, as I sincerely hope, he will be
+offended. If he is not, he will be ashamed of himself and will avoid me
+in future. It's "innocent," you lose, and "guilty," you don't win.
+
+And I love him. I want him, whether he lies to me or not.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER L
+
+TO LIVE UNDER KING'S AND PRINCE GEORGE'S EYE
+
+ Abruptly ordered to the royal summer residence--The Vitzthums and
+ Henry take flight--Enmeshed by Prince George's intrigues--Those
+ waiting for a crown have no friends--What I will do when Queen--No
+ wonder Kings of old married only relatives--Interesting facts about
+ relative marriages furnished by scientist.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _May 18, 1901_.
+
+All-highest order to proceed to Pillnitz, the royal summer residence,
+without delay--a command I cannot possibly evade. Conveyed in curt,
+almost insulting terms--the Tisch's work, no doubt.
+
+It came like lightning out of a blue sky, just when Henry and I had
+planned some real love-making _à la_ Dresden.
+
+The Vitzthums lost no time taking their leave when the scent of royal
+disgrace was in the air, and, as if to emphasize the obscene office they
+had assumed, they spirited Henry away ere we had time even to say
+goodbye.
+
+What a life I am leading with the ogre of the King's wrath forever
+hanging over me; Prince George's intrigues, octopus-like, enmeshing me!
+
+Ten years I have been Crown Princess of these realms. Three Princes and
+a Princess I gave to Saxony. A fifth child is trembling in my womb, yet
+every atom of happiness that falls to my lot is moulded into a strand of
+the rope fastening 'round my neck.
+
+I haven't a friend in the world. A most dangerous thing to be on good
+terms with the heirs to the crown. Makes the temporary incumbent of the
+bauble nervous, makes him jealous.
+
+When I am Queen, I will have friends in plenty. But then I won't need
+any. Immense wealth will be at my disposal. I will have offices to
+distribute, titles, crosses and stars.
+
+Instead of tolerating the serpents now coiling at my fireside ready to
+spring at a word from their master, I will appoint to court offices
+persons I love or esteem, at least.
+
+Henry shall be my Chief Equerry; the Tisch will be dismissed in
+disgrace--no pension.
+
+But I am day-dreaming again. I started out to say that I had no friends.
+Yet there's Bernhardt? Precisely--as long as I am his mistress.
+
+Marie is dead, Melita expects to be divorced before the end of the year.
+She will be a Russian Grand-Duchess, and the tedium of petty German
+court life will know her no longer.
+
+Aside from Lucretia, there isn't a man or woman at the Saxon court whom
+I can trust, for our high functionaries are only lackeys having a
+bathroom to themselves. In no other way do they differ from the servants
+who are allowed one bathroom per twenty-four heads.
+
+But the high aristocracy! Its men and women flatter us to get us into
+leading strings, try to make us pawns on the political or social
+chess-board. As a whole, they are a despicable lot.
+
+No wonder kings of old married members of their own family exclusively,
+even their sisters, _in re_ of which the learned Baron von Reitzenstein
+told me many interesting details.
+
+He copied especially from Egyptian records, but also from Armenian,
+Babylonian and Persian, to wit:
+
+Daranavausch married his niece, Phratunga.
+
+His son and successor married his niece Artayanta.
+
+Artaxerxes was also married to a niece of his.
+
+Darius II and Parysatis married their sisters.
+
+Kambyses married two of his sisters.
+
+Artachschasa II married his two daughters; Kobad his daughter Sambyke.
+
+Artaviraf, the founder of a great ancient religion, married no less than
+seven of his sisters--because "there were no other women worthy of the
+honor."
+
+According to that, the aristocracy of old must have been as rotten as
+that of our day.
+
+Lucretia is the only person I trust, and they would have robbed me of
+her services long ago if my marriage contract did not vest the power of
+dismissal in me.
+
+Unlike me, she can afford to defy the King's wrath.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LI
+
+COLD RECEPTION--ENEMIES ALL AROUND
+
+ Frederick Augustus gives his views on adultery--Doesn't care
+ personally, but "the King knows"--"Thank God, the King is ill"--I am
+ deprived of my children--Have I got the moral strength to defy my
+ enemies?
+
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 20, 1901_.
+
+I am undone. That malicious Tisch woman holds me in the hollow of her
+hand.
+
+I dropped into a sea of ice when I set foot in the castle. Long faces,
+suspicious looks, frigidity everywhere. The King treats me like a
+criminal. I wonder the guards don't refuse their _spiel_ at my coming
+and going.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 21, 1901_.
+
+Frederick Augustus arrived. He doesn't say for how long, and acts the
+icicle in the presence of others. At night he seeks his "rights," seeks
+them brutally.
+
+This afternoon he said to me:
+
+"That you made me a cuckold isn't exactly killing me; this sort of thing
+happened to better men than I, and--I was almost prepared for it. But to
+hear it announced from the King's lips----"
+
+Because His Majesty knows--Frederick Augustus raved and swore I had
+dishonored him.
+
+"If I wasn't a royal prince, I would be kicked out of the army," he
+whined.
+
+In short, adultery isn't so very reprehensible if the King doesn't know.
+
+Late tonight profound disquietude at court. The King is ill.
+
+Thank God, the audience I feared must be postponed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 22, 1901_.
+
+It wasn't. His Majesty appointed Prince George his representative, and I
+received a command to call on him at ten sharp.
+
+I wrote on the Court Marshal's brutal invitation: "I refuse to see His
+Royal Highness."
+
+Ten minutes later the Tisch entered my apartment with a look of triumph
+on her hateful face. She handed me a letter on a golden plate and
+waited.
+
+"Your Ladyship is dismissed," I snapped.
+
+She didn't move: "I expect your Imperial Highness's commands with
+respect to the royal children," she said. "May it please Your Imperial
+Highness to read Prince George's letter."
+
+I tore open the envelope. His Majesty's representative "graciously
+permits me to see my children at nine in the morning and between five
+and six in the afternoon. At no other time, and never unless Baroness
+Tisch is in attendance."
+
+I threw the letter on the floor and trampled on it. "Get out," I
+commanded the Baroness. If she hadn't gone instantly, I believe I would
+have choked her.
+
+So I am deemed unworthy to mother the children I bore; and a spy is
+officially appointed to watch my intercourse with the little ones lest I
+corrupt them. No other inference was to be drawn from the measure.
+
+"I will show them." But no sooner was the threat launched, than a great
+fear clutched at my heart.
+
+Was I in a position to defy them? To guard the purity of the royal
+children "is the King's first duty towards his family." If he had proof
+positive that I was an impure woman, there was no use quarrelling with
+his decision. Besides, moral delinquencies engender more than physical
+weakness. I felt my boasted energy ebbing away fast.
+
+"I am without strength, unnerved, because Henry left me," I lied to
+myself. The abandoned woman is either a tigress or a kitten. I happen to
+be no tigress.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LII
+
+PRINCE GEORGE REVEALS TO ME THE DEPTH OF HIS HATRED
+
+ A terrible interview--"The devil will come to claim you"--Uncertain
+ how much the King and Prince George know--I break into the nursery
+ and stay with my children all day--Prince George insults me in my
+ own rooms and threatens prison if I disobey him.
+
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 23, 1901_.
+
+I caught Prince George in the park after laying in wait for him three
+long hours.
+
+"Why does Your Royal Highness forbid me to see my children?" I demanded,
+every nerve aquiver.
+
+"His Majesty's orders. He thinks you are not fit company for growing
+children. You are leading a godless life."
+
+"What does Your Royal Highness mean?"
+
+"What I said. A godless life, such as you entered upon, is an invitation
+to the devil. Sins are the devil's envoys. When you are black with sin,
+the devil himself will come to claim you."
+
+He dropped his theological lingo and continued: "My fine daughter-in-law
+wants to be everybody's lady-love. If she had her sweet will, she would
+ruin every young chap in the residence and the surrounding country."
+
+He looked about him and, seeing we were unobserved, eased his bile in
+this pretty epigram as rank as a serpent's saliva: "An adulterous wife,
+that's what you are. Satan alone knows how many you seduced."
+
+It was more than I could stand and I burst into tears. In moments like
+this women always cry, but even if I hadn't felt like doing so, I would
+have cried because George hates it.
+
+"Prove to me, prove to the King that you are sorry for what you have
+done, return to the path of righteousness, to God, and we will see about
+the children," he whispered as he moved away.
+
+"What does he know?" "How much have they found out?" I kept saying to
+myself as I withdrew to my lonely apartments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 24, 1901_.
+
+No answer to the questions in my last entry. The silent persecution
+continues unabated. I am growing desperate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 25, 1901_.
+
+This morning at eight-thirty I went to the nursery.
+
+The Baroness tried to speak to me. I held up my hand. "Not a word from
+you, or something terrible will happen."
+
+_Fräulein_ von Schoenberg, who is really a sweet girl, offered some
+respectful advice. I begged her to be silent. If the door had been
+locked I would have forced it with the dagger I carried in my bosom.
+
+Lucretia came and whispered. "I have decided to stay, and stay I will.
+Let them do their worst if they dare," I told her.
+
+I changed the children's _curriculum_. "You can drive every day; you
+can't have mother every day. Let's have some games."
+
+I remained in the nursery till all the children were asleep. They
+partook of the breakfast, lunch and dinner I ordered for myself. A great
+treat for them. We were very happy.
+
+But I waited in vain for interference. Nothing happened to clear the
+situation. Those questions were still unanswered when I returned to my
+apartments.
+
+I had just sat down to read the evening papers, when Prince George
+entered unannounced.
+
+"If ever again you dare disobey my commands"--he shouted without
+preliminaries.
+
+I cut him short: "Are the children yours or mine?"
+
+"They belong to Saxony, to the Royal House," he bawled, and poured
+forth a torrent of abuse without giving me a chance to put in a word.
+"You shall be disciplined to the last extremity. We will imprison you in
+some lonely tower, without state or attendants. You shall not see your
+children from one year's end to the other."
+
+"Prison for the Crown Princess? Would you dare, Prince George?"
+
+"At the Tower of Nossen rooms are in readiness for your Imperial
+Highness," sneered my father-in-law as he walked out.
+
+Nossen! A ruined country-house, flanked by a mediæval tower in the midst
+of swamps. The nearest habitation miles away. Neither railway nor
+post-office, neither telegraph nor telephone--just the place to bury one
+alive. And I only thirty-one.
+
+Augustus the Physical Strong imprisoned Countess Cosel at Nossen six
+months before he sent her to her prison-grave in Stolpen. After Cosel's
+departure, another royal mistress was lodged in Nossen, and as she would
+neither commit suicide, nor succumb to the fever, they starved her to
+death. And it all happened in the eighteenth century.
+
+The word Nossen sent cold shivers down my spine. I am sure I won't sleep
+a wink.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIII
+
+REVOLVER IN HAND, I DEMAND AN EXPLANATION
+
+ An insolent Grand Mistress, but of wonderful courage--Imprisonment,
+ threats to kill have no effect on her--Disregards my titles--My
+ lover's souvenir and endearing words--How she caused Henry to leave
+ me--My paroxysms of rage--Henry's complete betrayal of me.
+
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 26, 1901_.
+
+This morning I awoke a mental and physical wreck, but determined to
+solve those vexatious questions: "What do the King and Prince George
+know?" "What have they found out?"
+
+I slipped on a dressing-gown, fetched my small revolver from its
+hiding-place in the boudoir and rang for the Tisch.
+
+I received her politely enough. I was quiet, cold, calculating. She gave
+a start as she observed my stony countenance.
+
+"Baroness," I said, motioning her to come nearer, "explain the attitude
+assumed by His Majesty, Prince George and the rest."
+
+She shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"I want to know. Do you hear, Grand Mistress? I command you to speak," I
+cried.
+
+A sneer of contempt hovered about her lips. She is a viper, this woman,
+but has the courage of the rattle-snake in action.
+
+I turned the keys in the several doors and threw them under the bed.
+From under the pillow I drew my revolver.
+
+I showed her the weapon and calmly announced, accentuating each word:
+"You won't leave this room alive until the question I put to you is
+answered to my satisfaction. I want the whole truth. You needn't excuse
+your own part in the business. As Henri _Quatre_ said to the lover of
+Diane de Poitiers, secreted under her bed, as he threw him half a cold
+bird: 'We all want to live, some honestly, some dishonestly.' You choose
+the dishonest road. Be it so.
+
+"But I want you to state what you accuse me of. Hurry," I added
+menacingly.
+
+The Tisch was unmoved. Either she thinks me a horrible dastard or is
+brave to madness. She looked at me fearlessly and smiled. She seemed to
+enjoy my rage.
+
+"Answer or I will shoot you like the dog you are."
+
+And then her cold and fearless voice rang out: "Put your revolver away.
+I am not afraid to tell you, and that thing might go off. Is it
+possible," she continued sarcastically, "you have to ask?"
+
+This woman dared to address me "you." "Tisch," I thundered, "my title
+reads Your Imperial Highness."
+
+Another contemptuous smile curled her thin lips as she answered
+insolently: "At your commands. But if you want me to talk, put away the
+weapon. I won't open my head while threatened."
+
+I threw the revolver into a drawer of my chiffonier and the Tisch
+approached me. "Do you know this?" she hissed, whipping from her desert
+bosom the golden _Portebonheur_, Henry's present.
+
+I had missed it for two days. Fear seized my throat.
+
+"Do you know this?" repeated the Tisch, pushing the button and
+disclosing Henry's miniature with the legend "To my sweetest Louise."
+
+"Where did you get it?" I asked, half-dead with shame and fear.
+
+"Never mind. It's the last piece of evidence that fell into my hands.
+The real facts I have known for a long while."
+
+"And sold that knowledge?"
+
+"I did my duty."
+
+"Report, then."
+
+And she told the story of her infamy--or mine?
+
+My true relations with Henry were discovered by her at Loschwitz. He is
+a distant relative of hers and she an intimate friend of his mother.
+Hence she took care not to compromise the young man. The entire blame
+was put on me.
+
+"Her Imperial Highness is indulging in a dangerous flirtation with Baron
+Bergen," she advised the King. "They must be separated at once lest that
+exemplary young man fall victim to her seductive wiles. I beseech Your
+Majesty to order the Crown Princess to Pillnitz and put a stop to her
+most reprehensible conduct."
+
+Hence the royal command to proceed to Pillnitz without a moment's delay.
+"The King and Prince George deem your honor unsafe unless you are under
+their watchful eyes," she had the effrontery to tell me.
+
+She drew a key from her pocket and opened one of the bedroom doors.
+
+With her hand on the knob, she said, bowing formally:
+
+"By Your Imperial Highness's leave, I will keep the _Portebonheur_ to
+use in case you are ever tempted again 'to throw me out of doors like a
+thieving lackey!'"
+
+A low bow, a sarcastic smile,--my executioner was gone. And I broke some
+priceless bric-a-brac, stamped my foot on the pearl necklace Frederick
+Augustus had given me, tore three or four lace handkerchiefs and stuffed
+the rags in my mouth to prevent me from crying aloud.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 27, 1901_.
+
+Lucretia finished the Tisch's report. The good soul hadn't had the
+courage to tell me before, but now that the Grand Mistress had spoken,
+considerations of delicacy no longer stood in the way.
+
+What a judge of character I am, to be sure: Henry, whom I raised from
+obscurity, whom I befriended, loved, advanced, rescued from the hands of
+usurers--a traitor, pshaw, worse,--I cannot write down the word, but
+it's in my mind.
+
+Henry, who hadn't the time to take leave from me, devoted an hour to the
+Tisch before he went away with the Vitzthums.
+
+He told her all and gave her his word of honor--the honor of a man who
+accepted money from the woman weak enough to love him--that, first, he
+would never see me again of his own accord and would reject both my
+entreaties and commands; secondly, that he would petition to be
+transferred to a distant garrison to be out of the path of temptation;
+thirdly, that he would burn my letters.
+
+The Tisch, on her part, promised to tell the King only half the
+truth--not for my sake, of course, but to shield her dear, seduced young
+relative.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIV
+
+FORCED TO DO PENANCE LIKE A TRAPPIST MONK
+
+ "By the King's orders"--I submit for the sake of my children--Must
+ fast as well as pray--In delicate health, I insist upon returning to
+ Dresden--Bernhardt, to avoid being maltreated by King, threatens him
+ with his sword--The King's awful wrath--Bernhardt prisoner in
+ Nossen--I escape, temporarily, protracted _ennui_.
+
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 28, 1901_.
+
+Though I am in delicate health, the King, having recovered from his
+illness, commanded me to do penance,--almost public penance.
+
+Fast and pray, pray and fast is the order of the day for the next two
+weeks.
+
+I arise every morning at five. At six a closed carriage takes me to a
+distant nunnery of the Ursulines, a good hour's travel. I am forced to
+attend mass, which also lasts an hour. Then a half-hour's sermon,
+dealing with fire and brimstone, hell and damnation.
+
+When that's over the Mother Superior kindly asks me to her cell and
+lectures me for an hour on the duties of a wife and mother, and on the
+terrors that follow in the wake of adultery.
+
+(I wonder where she gets her wisdom. She isn't married, she isn't
+supposed to have children, and she ought to know that the founder of her
+religion was most kind to the adulteress.)
+
+Then back to Pillnitz and breakfast, for it's the King's express command
+that I worship on an empty stomach; some Jesuit told George my sins
+would never be forgiven unless the torture of the fast was added to that
+of early rising, travel, prostration before the altar and listening to
+pious palaver.
+
+I stand it for my children's sake. They will be returned to me after I
+did penance full score. My only satisfaction: I compel the Tisch to
+attend me on my trips, and make her sit on the back seat of the
+carriage. I know this turns her stomach and watch her twitching face
+with devilish glee.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 15, 1901_.
+
+With the authority of the pregnant woman I demanded that I be allowed to
+return to town.
+
+"If compelled to see Prince George and the rest of my enemies daily, my
+child will be mal-formed, or I will suffer an _avortement_," I told the
+King.
+
+They let me go and I am breathing more freely. I still wear the chain
+and ball, but they don't cut into my flesh as in Pillnitz.
+
+Yesterday I learned that Bernhardt was in Dresden, and sent for him. He
+came in company of two army officers who remained in the anteroom.
+
+"I am a prisoner," he said resignedly, "those fellows outside will
+conduct me to Nossen."
+
+The audience granted him several months ago took place only after my
+departure from the summer residence, and developed into a fearful scene.
+
+"His Majesty," said Bernhardt, "was in a rage when I entered. 'State
+what you have to say,' said the King, 'and be brief.'
+
+"'If Your Majesty will graciously permit me to reside in Dresden, I will
+promise to lead a life in accordance with Your Majesty's intentions and
+will obey your slightest wish.'
+
+"'What?' cried the King, 'You dare name conditions for your good
+conduct?'"
+
+Bernhardt denied any intention to impose conditions, but begged to
+submit to His Majesty that he couldn't exist in those small garrisons.
+If in Dresden, it would come easier to him to turn over a new leaf.
+
+"Sure, all you young rakes want to live in the capital," sneered the
+King, "because it's easy in a big town to hide one's delinquencies."
+
+"Your Majesty," cried Bernhardt, "if I ever did a reprehensible thing,
+it was forced upon me by intolerable conditions."
+
+The King grew white with rage.
+
+"No excuses," he thundered. "You are a rip and ugly customer and you
+will stay in the garrison I designated."
+
+Even before the King had finished, Bernhardt interrupted him with a
+fierce: "Don't you call me names, Majesty. I won't stand for that."
+
+"Won't stand for anything that I think proper to mete out to you,
+rascal? I will make you." The King had risen and was about to box
+Bernhardt's ears.
+
+Bernhardt jumped back two paces and shouted like mad: "Don't you dare
+touch me. I will defend my honor sword in hand, even if I have to shoot
+myself on the spot."
+
+For several seconds the King stood speechless, then he reached out his
+hand and touched an electric button. Marshal Count Vitzthum responded.
+
+"Take him," said the King hoarsely--"he is your prisoner."
+
+Bernhardt drew his sword and threw it at the King's feet. He was
+conducted to a room, and sentinels were posted outside his door and
+under his windows. Presently the telephone called together a council of
+war and it was decided that Bernhardt go to Nossen during the King's
+pleasure, or rather displeasure.
+
+"The army officers that act as my guards are not allowed to speak to
+me," said Bernhardt, "and the garrison in Nossen will likewise be
+muzzled." He laughed as he added: "I suppose I shall have to make
+friends with the spirits of the great Augustus's mistresses haunting the
+old burg. They were gay ones! If the King remembered that, he would send
+me to the Trappists rather than to Nossen."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 1, 1901_.
+
+I never dreamt that science would come to my rescue, but a clever woman
+has more than one trick up her sleeve. On a visit to a book store I
+happened to see a new publication on the Hygienics of Pregnancy and had
+it sent to the palace.
+
+Last night, when nearly dead with _ennui_, I turned over the leaves of
+the volume and came across an article advising women in my condition to
+seek plenty of merry company. My mind was made up at once.
+
+First thing in the morning I sent for the Court Physician, and with many
+a sigh and groan gave him to understand that I feared to have melancholy
+if I continued the monotonous life I was leading.
+
+I happened to strike one of the doctor's pet theories, and he recited
+whole pages from the book I had been reading. Then he asked me a hundred
+questions, and rest assured that my answers were in accordance with my
+wishes.
+
+"I will have the honor to report to His Majesty at once," said the
+Councillor at the end of the examination, "that some diversion is
+imperative in Your Imperial Highness's case. Would Your Imperial
+Highness be pleased to visit the theatre or the Opera if the King
+approves?"
+
+The King did approve, and the Crown Princess of Saxony is once more
+permitted the privilege of _Frau_ Schmidt and _Frau_ Müller; namely, to
+go to the theatre when she feels like it.
+
+[Illustration: THE LATE KING GEORGE OF SAXONY
+
+Louise's Father-in-Law]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LV
+
+FRANCIS JOSEPH JOINS MY SAXON ENEMIES
+
+ Cuts me dead before whole family--Everybody talks over my head at
+ dinner--I refuse to attend more court festivities--Husband protests
+ because I won't stand for insult from Emperor--I give rein to my
+ contempt for his family--Hypocrites, despoilers, gamblers, religious
+ maniacs, brutes--Benign lords to the people, tyrants at home--I cry
+ for my children like a she-dog whose young were drowned.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 2, 1901_.
+
+Great family concourse to look my new baby over, dear Marie Alix, born
+at Wachwitz, September 27.
+
+Emperor Francis Joseph was first to arrive, the Majesty who is forever
+posing as the family's good genius, as upholder of peace and amity among
+his countless cousins and nieces, and the many uncles and aunts and
+other relatives of his grand-children.
+
+Behold how he lived up to this reputation!
+
+I had been commanded to attend the reception in the Queen's _salon_, and
+made my bow to him. He bowed all around, looking at each present, but
+managed to overlook me.
+
+Then he commenced a long and weary conversation with the Queen, at
+whose elbow I sat, and when his stock of platitudes was exhausted,
+turned to fat Mathilde, congratulating her on the possession of the
+_Stern Kreuz_ decoration, an Austrian order which I likewise wore at my
+corsage. It was none other than the late Empress Elizabeth who pinned it
+on me.
+
+Presently dinner was announced. The Emperor took in Her Majesty, the
+King, _nolens, volens_, had to conduct me, but gave me neither word nor
+look. Nor did the others. I couldn't have been more isolated on a desert
+island, than at this royal board.
+
+They talked and cracked their silly jokes, and paid compliments to each
+other and were careful not to let their tongues run away with their
+intriguing minds, but all went above my head. No one spoke to me but the
+lackeys: "If it please Your Imperial Highness----"
+
+Frederick Augustus tore into my bedroom some little time after I had
+retired. Picture of the offended gentleman, if you please. I got no more
+than I deserve, but it "reflected on him, h-i-m, HIM." Though it was a
+"family dinner," he, the Crown Prince of Saxony, was "publicly"
+disgraced. The Emperor had treated the Crown Princess as air. He had not
+deigned to address a single word to her. The Crown Princess was a
+trollop in the Imperial eyes--it was enough to drive the Crown Prince to
+drink.
+
+"Drink yourself to death then," I shrieked.
+
+During the night I speculated what to do: ask a private audience of the
+Emperor, state my side of the case and beg his forgiveness and
+protection, beg, especially, for better treatment at his hands?
+
+And if he refused?
+
+Francis Joseph is a good deal of a Jesuit. When he hates, he never lets
+it come to a break; when he loves, he never attaches himself.
+
+If I stooped to humiliate myself, he might choose to debase me still
+more. It was entirely probable that he would betray my confidences to
+the King and Prince George.
+
+I will defy him and--all of them!
+
+"Her Imperial Highness regrets----" my Court Marshal wrote in answer to
+all invitations or rather "commands" for the next three days. When I
+refused to participate in the "grand leave-taking," Frederick Augustus
+came post-haste to expostulate with me.
+
+"You must. It would be an affront without precedent."
+
+"Take leave of a man who didn't say good-day to me on his arrival, and
+who probably intends to slight me in similar fashion on going away----"
+
+In lieu of argument the Prince Royal abused me like a pick-pocket; I had
+waited for it and now I let loose.
+
+"You are like the rest of your family," I shouted: "ignorant,
+thoughtless, brutal _en venerie_, sanctimonious in dotage. I know few
+people for whom I have so great a detestation as for the Royal Saxons.
+Look at your father, there is no more jesuitical a Jesuit, the inward
+man as hideous as the outward. He would be an insolent lackey, if he
+didn't happen to be a prince.
+
+"And Johann George--a shameless inheritance-chaser, despoiler of
+pupillary funds, gambler at the _bourse_, who whines like a whipped dog
+when he loses.
+
+"The royal Bernhardt, companion of street-walkers!
+
+"Prince Max, who talks theology, but keeps his eye on Therese.
+
+"Your Queen, a victim of religious madness, your King and his
+system--organized selfishness. Chicanery for those dependent upon him,
+ruin for all more gifted than the average Wettiner.
+
+"While living here I have learned to look upon my father's discrowning
+as a stroke of good luck for, since kings can no longer indulge their
+brutalities against their subjects, they turned tyrants at home.
+
+"If your father did to the humblest of his subjects what he did to me,
+he would be chased from home and country. The people, the parliament,
+his own creatures would rise against him and blot his name from the
+royal roster.
+
+"In the palace, in boudoirs, in the nurseries, he plays the
+prince--extortioner--executioner. To the public he is the benign lord,
+whining for paltry huzzas."
+
+Frederick Augustus was so dumfounded, he could only grind his teeth.
+
+I continued: "You prate of respect due the Majesty. There's nothing to
+induce feelings of that sort. Round me there is naught but weakness,
+hypocrisy, pettiness. I see shame and thievery stalking side by side in
+these gilded halls--gilded for show, but pregnant with woe.
+
+"Fie on you, Prince Royal, who allows his wife to be dogged by spies.
+Thieves, paid by your father, steal my souvenirs; a burglar's kit hidden
+in their clothes, they besiege my writing table. Jailers stand between
+me and my children.
+
+"My children!
+
+"Like a she-dog,[7] whose young were drowned, I cry for my babies--I,
+the Crown Princess of Saxony, who saved your family from dying out, a
+degenerate, depraved, demoralized, decadent race."
+
+When I had said this and more I fell down and was seized by crying
+convulsions.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 7: Queens seem to like this unseemly comparison:
+
+"Am I a kennel-dog in the estimation of the Bastard of England?" cried
+Mary of Scots, when Queen Elizabeth refused her safe-conduct through
+England upon her departure from France (Summer 1561).]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVI
+
+I AM DETERMINED TO DO AS I PLEASE
+
+ I reject mother's tearful reproaches--I beard Prince George in his
+ lair despite whining chamberlains--I tell him what I think of him,
+ and he becomes frightened--Threatens madhouse--"I dare you to steal
+ my children"--I win my point--and the children--"Her Imperial
+ Highness regrets"--Lots of forbidden literature--Precautions against
+ intriguing Grand Mistress--The affair with Henry--was it a
+ flower-covered pit to entrap me?--Castle Stolpen and some of its
+ awful history.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 5, 1901_.
+
+Patience ceased to be a virtue. Tolerance would be a crime against
+myself. I am determined to do as I please in future. If it upsets the
+King's, Prince George's and the rest's delicate digestion, so much the
+better.
+
+The newspapers are hinting about my troubles with Prince George and the
+King. When I go driving or appear at the theatre, the public shows its
+sympathy in many ways. Sometimes I am acclaimed to the echo.
+
+Mamma wrote me a tearful letter. She spent six hours in prayers for
+"sinful Louise" and sends me the fruits of her meditations: six pages of
+close script, advising me how to regain the King's and Prince George's
+favor.
+
+Never before have I failed in outward respect to my mother, but this
+time I wrote to her: "Pray attend to your own affairs. Don't meddle in
+mine which you are entirely unable to understand."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 6, 1901_.
+
+Bernhardt was sent to Sonnenstein. Whether he became insane at Nossen,
+or whether it is the family's intention to drive him mad among the
+madmen of Sonnenstein, I don't know, but it behooves me to be careful.
+
+Sonnenstein has accommodation for both sexes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _November 15, 1901_.
+
+I sent a letter to the King, asking him to have Loschwitz Castle
+prepared for my reception. His Majesty didn't deign to answer, but
+Prince George commanded me in writing to stay at Dresden "under his
+watchful eye."
+
+I immediately proceeded to his apartments in my morning undress, without
+hat, gloves or wrap. As I rushed through the anteroom, Adjutant von
+Metsch begged me with up-lifted hands not to force His Royal Highness's
+door, Prince George being too ill to receive me, etc., etc. I paid no
+attention to his mournful whinings. At that moment I had courage enough
+to stock a regiment.
+
+"So you won't allow me to go to Loschwitz," I addressed George as I
+suddenly bobbed up at the side of his desk.
+
+My father-in-law looked at me as if I were a spook, emerged from a
+locked closet.
+
+"Who let you in?" he managed to say after a while.
+
+"I didn't come here to answer questions," I replied. "I came to announce
+that if you don't let me go to Loschwitz, there will be a scandal that
+will resound all over Christendom and make you impossible in your own
+capital."
+
+"Why do you want to leave Dresden?" he insisted.
+
+"Because I want to be alone. Because I am tired of hateful faces.
+Because I refuse to accept orders and insults from people that are
+beneath an Imperial Princess of Austria."
+
+Prince George turned pale.
+
+"Am I one of those beneath Your Imperial Highness?" he queried stupidly.
+
+"Decidedly so."
+
+A long pause. Then Prince George shouted: "To the devil with you. I
+don't care whether you stay in Loschwitz, or Dresden, or on the
+Vogelwiese."
+
+The Vogelwiese is an amusement park, respectable enough, but the word or
+name, as used by George, reeked with sinister and insulting meaning.
+
+Trembling with rage, I replied: "Right royal language you royal Saxons
+use. From time to time, I suppose, you refresh your fish-wife
+vocabulary in the annals of Augustus the Physical Strong, than whom a
+more gross word-slinger did not walk the history of the eighteenth
+century."
+
+I believe Prince George was frightened by my violence. Assuming a
+haughty tone he said formally: "Your Imperial Highness is at liberty to
+travel whenever you please, but you will be so good as to leave your
+children in Dresden."
+
+I stepped up to the white-livered coward and hissed in his face: "Steal
+my children if you dare, and I will go to France, or Switzerland and ask
+a republican President to interfere for humanity's sake."
+
+"And--land yourself in an insane asylum," sneered George.
+
+"An old trick of the Royal House of Saxony, I know," I shouted back.
+"Bernhardt is saner than you, yet the King sent him to Sonnenstein. If
+such a crime had been perpetrated by one not a king, he would go to
+jail."
+
+Prince George pointed a trembling finger towards the door. "Out with
+you!" he bawled hoarsely. "Out!"
+
+I stood my ground. "May I take my children? Yes or no?"
+
+He rang the bell and repeated mechanically: "Out with you, out!"
+
+I had another fit of crying convulsions. Doctors, maids and lackeys were
+summoned in numbers. They bedded me on the couch and six men-servants
+carried me to my apartments.
+
+Two days later I went to Loschwitz with my children.
+
+I had defied the King. Prince George was humbled. I carried my point,
+and the Dresden court will not see me again in a hurry.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _Christmas, 1901_.
+
+I refused to spend Christmas at Court. Frederick Augustus planned a stay
+of a couple of weeks. "Not a single night," I wrote back.
+
+They parleyed; they begged. "The Crown Prince desires to spend Christmas
+with the children. In the interests of public opinion, it's absolutely
+necessary that he does."
+
+"But not--that I submit to prostitution. I will give him a dinner, but
+he will drive back to Dresden immediately afterwards."
+
+Frederick Augustus brought numerous presents for me. "You may place them
+under the Christmas tree," I ordered the Tisch.
+
+"Oh, Your Imperial Highness, look," cried the Tisch, holding up
+something or other.
+
+I turned my back on her and looked out of the window. I never went near
+my end of the Christmas table. "You will send the things brought by His
+Royal Highness to the bazaar for crippled children," I told the House
+Marshal. "They shall be sold for the benefit of the poor."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _January 1, 1902_.
+
+"Her Imperial Highness regrets."
+
+I refused the invitations to today's family dinner; the grand reception,
+_Te Deum_ and parade. "Unprecedented affront!" What do I care!
+
+I have eighteen horses, half-a-dozen carriages, I drive, I ride, I hunt,
+I give the Tisch palpitation daily by the literature I affect: _Zola_,
+_Flaubert_, _M'lle Paul_, _Ma Femme_, _M'lle de Maupin_, _Casanova_,
+_M'me Bovary_. And the periodicals I subscribed for! _Simplicissimus_,
+Harden's _Zukunft_, all the _double entendre_ weeklies and monthlies of
+Paris. May Prince George and Mathilde burst with rage and envy when they
+hear of my excursions in the realms of the literary Satans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _January 15, 1902_.
+
+The Tisch is beginning to treat me like a person irresponsible for her
+doings. Sonnenstein is looming up anew. But I am going to fool her. As I
+will hold no more speech with her, there will be no occasion for turning
+my own words against me.
+
+If I have to give a command, or answer a question, I ask Lucretia or
+_Fräulein_ von Schoenberg to convey my orders.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _March 20, 1902_.
+
+An uneventful winter is drawing to a close. By banishing myself to this
+quiet place I raised a barrier against quarrels, against harsh orders,
+against humiliations. And the barrier also shuts out: love, happiness.
+
+Sometimes, when the Tisch's hateful mouth spouts honeyed platitudes, I
+ask myself whether the affair with Henry wasn't, after all, a
+flower-covered pit dug for me by my enemies.
+
+It was the Tisch who had Henry appointed _Vortänzer_.
+
+Maybe, knowing my inflammable heart, she offered the tempting bait
+solely to the end of getting me into her power?
+
+Far from impossible.
+
+I curse the day when I entered Dresden, joined this court and family.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _May 15, 1902_.
+
+Royal command to join the court at Pillnitz June 1. The King, who has
+been ailing for some time, is anxious to be reunited with the children,
+and, as a necessary evil, I must go along.
+
+I replied that I would prefer Nossen, or even Stolpen, if it pleases His
+Majesty.
+
+Castle Stolpen is an old-time stronghold of the bishops of Meissen, and
+its very ruins are pregnant with reminiscences of a barbaric age. The
+apartments once occupied by the Countess Cosel, as a prison first, as a
+residence after the death of Augustus, might be made habitable even now.
+Exceedingly interesting are the old-time torture chambers and the
+subterranean living rooms of the "sworn torturer" and the dogs,
+man-shaped, that served him.
+
+Sanct. Donatus Tower, a wing of the great, black pile, was the ancient
+_habitat_ of these worthies, and the torture chamber, still extant, is a
+hall almost as big as the Dresden throne-room. In an inscription hewn in
+the basalt, the sovereign bishop, Johannes VI, poses as builder and
+seems proud of the damnable fact. Other princes of the Church let us
+know in high-sounding Latin script that they created the "Monk hole" and
+the "stairless prison" respectively.
+
+The latter is a vast subterranean vault, never reached by sunshine or
+light of any kind. Its victims were made to descend some twenty feet
+below the surface of the earth on a ladder. When near the bottom, the
+ladder was pulled up and--stayed up. The prisoners were fed once every
+twenty-four hours, when a leather water pouch and some pounds of black
+bread were sent down on a rope.
+
+Of course only the strongest got a morsel, or a drink of water. The
+others died of starvation and the survivors lived only until there were
+new arrivals, stronger than themselves. The dead bodies were never
+removed, and horrible stories of necrophily smudge the records of this
+awful prison and cover its princely keepers with infamy.
+
+The "Monk's hole" was called officially "Obey Your Judge." It is a sort
+of chimney, just large enough to take the body of a man.
+
+When a monk or other prisoner refused to confess, he was let down into
+the hole in the wall to starve, while tempting dishes, meat, wine and
+bread, were dangled over his head, almost within reach of his hands.
+
+Of course, after enduring this torture for several days, the delinquent
+was glad enough to "Obey His Judge."
+
+By offering to go to this abode of horror and to take the place of
+Cosel, I meant to show my utter contempt for the royal favor
+vouchsafed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVII
+
+I CONFESS TO PAPA
+
+ King Albert dies and King George a very sick man--Papa's good
+ advice--"You will be Queen soon"--A lovely old man, very much
+ troubled.
+
+
+ CASTLE SIBYLLENORT, _June 19, 1902_.
+
+King Albert is dead. George is King, and may God have mercy upon my
+soul.
+
+Of course the demise of His Majesty changed all my plans of defiance and
+otherwise. I am once more an official person, even an important one, for
+the new King can't last long. He is a very sick man, in fact. Perhaps
+that is the reason why he wants to hear himself addressed "Your Majesty"
+all the time. Petty souls like to be called "great."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 21, 1902_.
+
+I intended to return at once to Loschwitz, but the King, hearing of my
+intention and not wishing to provoke another scene, invited my father to
+come to Dresden "in the interests of his daughter."
+
+The same evening I received a wire from papa, saying that he would be in
+Dresden within twenty-four hours.
+
+My own arrival in the capital was kept secret by the King's order, but
+next afternoon, when I drove to the station to welcome my father, I got
+my reception just the same. The people wildly cheered their Crown
+Princess and thousands of sympathizing eyes followed me from the palace
+to the depot.
+
+I was almost overcome by so much sympathy and when at last I saw father,
+I threw myself on his neck, crying aloud.
+
+The King was standing by, impatiently waiting to conduct his grand-ducal
+guest before the guard of honor had drawn up. "Later, later," whispered
+papa, patting me on the cheek.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 22, 1902_.
+
+I had an hour's talk with father. I bared my heart to him. I reported my
+own faults along with those of the others.
+
+Papa understands me. He sympathizes with me, but help me he cannot.
+
+"These are only passing shadows," he said. "Look boldly into the future.
+You will soon be Queen."
+
+And he told me of his financial difficulties and of the misfortune of
+being a sovereign lord without either land or money.
+
+"The Emperor ordered me to scold you hard," he continued, "and mamma
+wants me to be very severe. As to King George, he said he would thank
+God if I succeeded in breaking your rebellious spirit. 'If you don't, I
+will,' added his Majesty."
+
+Then father kissed me more lovingly than ever and asked, half
+apologetically: "Is it true, Louise, that you had a lover?"
+
+"I thought I had one, but he was unworthy of me," I replied without
+shame.
+
+My confession seemed to frighten him.
+
+"It's sad, sad," he said. "Royal blood is dangerous juice. It brought
+Mary of Scots to the scaffold; it caused your great-aunt Marie
+Antoinette to lose her head, only to save the old monarchies a few years
+later, when we inveigled the enemy of legitimate kingship into a
+marriage with another of your relatives. But for Marie, Louise, the
+descendants of the Corsican might still sit on a dozen thrones."
+
+Father forgot his daughter's disgrace when he mounted this historic
+hobby-horse and, needless to say, I did not recall the original text.
+
+Only when, three days later, he took leave of me, holding my head long
+between his two trembling hands and kissing me again and again, I felt
+that the poor, old man's heart was oppressed with shame and torn by
+fears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVIII
+
+MONSIEUR GIRON--RICHARD, THE ARTIST
+
+ The King asks me to superintend lessons by M. Giron--A most
+ fascinating man--His Grecian eyes--He is a painter as well as a
+ teacher--In love--Careless whether I am caught in my lover's
+ arms--"Richard" talks anarchy to me--Why I don't believe in woman
+ suffrage--Characters and doings of women in power.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 1, 1902_.
+
+King George is determined I shall stay in Dresden to end the newspaper
+talk about trouble in the bosom of the royal family.
+
+He engaged a new head-tutor for my little brood. Monsieur Giron, a
+Belgian of good family.
+
+"I would be pleased if you attended the children's lessons and reported
+to me on the method of the new man," he said. "You are so intellectual,
+Louise, you will find out quickly if M. Giron is not what he is
+represented to be."
+
+I promised, for, after all, I owed so much to the King and my children.
+
+Alas, it was fate!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 1, After Midnight_.
+
+He is tall, well made, and his wild, Grecian eyes fascinate me. He is
+conscious of self, but modest. His voice is sweet and sonorous, his eyes
+are bright with intellect. Speaking eyes!
+
+I asked him to visit my apartments at the conclusion of school hours. He
+told me he was a painter as well as a teacher of languages.
+
+"Would you like to paint me?"
+
+"I am dying for a chance to reproduce your loveliness as far as my poor
+art permits."
+
+He told me he had a studio in town, where he is known under his artist's
+_pseudonyme_, Richard.
+
+"How romantic! I'd like to see it," I said impulsively.
+
+"Several ladies and gentlemen of society sat for portraits at my studio
+here and at home."
+
+In short we arranged that he paint my picture and that I should go to
+his studio, where the light is excellent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 15, 1902_.
+
+I am happy once more. Those hours at Richard's studio are the sweetest
+of my life.
+
+Lucretia acts the protecting angel as usual. Richard calls her Justice
+because she is "blind." When she is along, I drive boldly up to the
+door in one of the court carriages. Sometimes, when I can sneak out of
+the palace for a little while unobserved, I go alone in a cab.
+
+How long this sort of thing can go on without discovery, I know not. As
+to what will happen afterwards, I care not.
+
+If I was told that tomorrow I would be caught in my lover's arms and
+banished to a lone island for life, I would go to his studio just the
+same.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _August 1, 1902_.
+
+Richard is moulding my character. I, once so proud of rank and station,
+I, who upheld the Wettiners' robbery of a poor, defenseless woman, the
+Duke's wife, because Socialistic papers spoke in her favor,--Louise now
+allows anarchistic tendencies to be poured in her ears. She almost
+applauds them.
+
+This easy change from one extreme to the other at a lover's behest is
+one of the things that make woman's rule--or co-rule--as the male's
+political equal--impossible. It's a sort of _Phallus_ worship that
+always was and always will be.
+
+"Though women have not unfrequently been the holders of temporary and
+precarious power, there are not many instances where they have held
+secure and absolute dominion," says Dr. William W. Ireland in his
+famous "Blot upon the Brain."
+
+Because they were swayed by the male of the species, of course!
+
+Though the characters of the world's female sovereigns differed as to
+blood, race, education, environment and personal traits, neither showed
+any inclination to resist the allurements of irregular _amours_.
+
+Think of Semiramis, of Mary of Scots, of Elizabeth, Catherine I, of the
+Tsaritzas Elizabeth and the second Catherine--under the temptations of
+Power, they recruited paramours for themselves in all ranks of society.
+
+Agrippina was more licentious than Caligula; Messalina's infamy
+surpassed Nero's, and the furthest reaching, the one irresistible Power
+swaying them all was MAN.
+
+Augustus of the three hundred and fifty-four emphasized this in the
+negative and, in his own uncouth way, by "postering" the Countess
+Cosel's chief charm on penny coins.
+
+"She cost Saxony twenty millions in gold--behold the penny's worth she
+gave in return."
+
+When the beauty who had brought the richest German kingdom to the verge
+of state bankruptcy died February 2, 1765, four hundred of Augustus's
+infamous medals were found hidden in her favorite armchair. She paid
+three or four times their weight in gold for each.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIX
+
+THE PEOPLE THINK ME A WANTON
+
+ Credit me with innumerable lovers, but don't disapprove--Glad the
+ King feels scandalized--Picture of the "she-monster"--Everybody
+ eager for love--I delight in Richard's jealousy--Husband's
+ indelicate announcement at table--I rush from the royal opera to see
+ my lover--A threatening dream--Richard not mercenary like my noble
+ lovers.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _August 10, 1902_.
+
+This is the kind of speech Richard holds with me and--I enjoy:
+
+"Every working-girl, every poor woman who suckles her own children and
+helps her husband in the fight for existence, stands mountain high above
+royal ladies like you.
+
+"None of you royal ladies are their moral equals.
+
+"In no distant time," he says, "they will chase you from your thrones,
+even as your relatives had to evacuate France by tumbril, post-chaise or
+train."
+
+Richard's ethical and intellectual valuation of royal princes coincides
+with my own. He has rare insight into our family life.
+
+However, these disclosures both amazed and alarmed me when I first
+heard them pronounced. I never dreamt that opinions of that kind
+prevailed among the masses.
+
+"But why am I acclaimed whenever I show myself?"
+
+"Because you are pretty, because you impersonate the one thing all are
+desirous to embrace: affluence, kindness, youth and beauty. Because you
+are a treat to the senses and because sensuality is the paramount thing
+in life, whether we admit it or not."
+
+"Who's 'we'?"
+
+"Kings and anarchists, princesses of the Blood and laundresses, royal
+princes and cab drivers, empresses, street-walkers, society ladies,
+big-wigs and _sabretasches_. The draggled Menads and the helpful
+Lafayette, the Jacobins, Charlotte Corday and the man she killed--all
+were, and are, on similar pleasure bent."
+
+And he added quickly: "As to the Dresdeners, they are tickled because,
+every time they applaud you, the King is scandalized."
+
+"How do they know that I am not on good terms with the King?"
+
+"The very children in arms understand."
+
+All Dresden, says Richard, is talking about me. Everybody assumes to
+know the number and qualities of my lovers. "Louise," they argue, "knows
+how to enjoy herself, but, though it serves the King right, we wouldn't
+have her for a daughter-in-law, either."
+
+According to the masses, I visit the Vogelwiese at night, ride on the
+flying horses and solicit men and boys that please my fancy. Like a
+gigantic she-monster, I drag them to my lair--"some to vanish forever."
+(No doubt, I eat them.)
+
+"Unwashed soldiers and clerks reeking with cheap perfume, actors and
+students, draymen and generals, it's all the same to the Crown Princess.
+
+"Sometimes, when the spirit moves her, the Crown Princess issues from
+her gilded apartments in the palace and seizes the sentinel patrolling
+the corridors. Or she visits the guard-room _en déshabille_ and selects
+the youngest and best looking officer for her prey.
+
+"Generous, too. She thinks nothing of handing a pension of ten thousand
+marks per year to a chap that pleased her once."
+
+"Is that all they say about me?"
+
+"Not one-half. Poor devils that can't afford ten marks per year for
+their fun, Cit's wives that know only their ill-kempt husbands, factory
+girls that sell their virtue for a supper or a glass of beer--though
+afterwards they claim it was champagne--all take delight in
+contemplating that you, or any other good looking royal woman, are
+Frankenstein's succuba or worse. Didn't they accuse your grand-aunt,
+Marie Antoinette, of incest with her son and gave him to the cobbler to
+thrash the immorality out of him?"
+
+"And they give names?"
+
+"Strings of them"--among them several I never heard mentioned before.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _August 15, 1902_.
+
+Richard is jealous--jealous of the men I did love and the regiments that
+public opinion give me credit for. He must needs think I have loins of
+steel.
+
+He tells me he suffers agonies by what I confessed, and still more by
+what I hide. To see him thus unhappy gives me intense pleasure, for it
+shows that the boy loves me to distraction.
+
+ _Midnight._
+
+M. Giron was very cold and distant during the afternoon's lessons.
+
+I had previously lunched with him at his studio and we were very gay
+then. I teased him unmercifully about "his royal _demi-mondaine_," as
+the masses painted me.
+
+Frederick Augustus was very gallant at dinner and told me, before a
+table full of people, that he would take pleasure in sleeping with me
+tonight. I have too bad a conscience to deny myself to him. But I ran
+over to the opera for half an hour and ordered M. Giron to my box.
+
+"I got over my vexation," he said,--"got over it because I reflected
+that you are the Princess Royal and that I would be a fool to take your
+love seriously. Henceforth I will regard it a passing adventure and let
+it go at that, for if I thought it the great passion of my life, I would
+despair, indeed."
+
+"Find a closed cab," I whispered, my heart in my mouth; "I must see you
+alone. I will be at the northern side-exit in five minutes."
+
+Cabby was ordered to drive slowly along unfrequented side streets. We
+lowered the curtains.
+
+"So you don't love me?" I wailed. Burying my face on Richard's chest I
+cried as if my heart would break.
+
+"Not love you?" he breathed. "If I loved you not, I would die, Louise."
+
+"Then why those cruel words?"
+
+"Good heavens," he cried, "haven't I the right to be jealous? I said
+what I said to hear you say that you love me."
+
+"And you will always love me?"
+
+"Always, dearest," and he covered my face and neck with burning kisses.
+
+Ten minutes later I was again seated at the opera.
+
+I hear Frederick Augustus in the corridor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _August 16, 1902_.
+
+A horrible night. Lucky that Frederick Augustus was more than half drunk
+when he sought "His Imperial Pleasure-trove," as he likes to call me,
+for I often talk in my sleep and--I dreamt of Richard. I dreamt of my
+enemies, too.
+
+They stole him from me. He was of the past like Henry, Romano and the
+rest.
+
+In a second dream he jilted me--cast me off like a garment, old or out
+of fashion.
+
+Lucretia, who sleeps in the next room, heard me cry out in terror, heard
+me denounce the King, Tisch--everybody.
+
+And Frederick Augustus snored.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 1, 1902_.
+
+Princes and noblemen have ever sought their own advantage of me. To them
+I was always the milch-cow, or Phryne, outright.
+
+Richard is poor. I offered him a considerable sum for one of his
+paintings.
+
+"Never again mention the matter," he said curtly.
+
+"But it would give me much pleasure to be of assistance to you."
+
+"Louise, we must separate if you don't stop that line of talk," he
+replied.
+
+And he means it.
+
+A day or two later I let fall, casually, that Frederick Augustus might
+buy the portrait of myself that was nearing completion under his
+skillful brush.
+
+"His Royal Highness won't have the chance," he cried fiercely. "I will
+tell him it isn't finished, or doesn't come up to my artistic standard,
+or something of the sort."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LX
+
+THE DAY OF JUDGMENT LOOMS UP
+
+ My Grand Mistress shows her colors--Richard advises flight--I
+ hesitate on account of my children--My Grand Mistress steals a
+ letter from Richard to me--I opine that an adulteress's word is as
+ good as a thief's--I humble my Grand Mistress, but it won't do me
+ much good--Pleasant hours at his studio.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 15, 1902_.
+
+That dreadful dream is becoming a heart-breaking reality.
+
+The Tisch entered my boudoir last night in her mantilla, emblem of her
+office as Grand Mistress.
+
+Some dirty business on hand, I surmised at once.
+
+"Imperial Highness," she said, genuflexing ceremoniously, "I submit that
+your artist takes too long about the portrait. Your Imperial Highness's
+visits to the studio must cease."
+
+"Since when do you give orders here, Baroness?"
+
+"His Majesty empowered me," answered the Grand Dame.
+
+"In that case, do as you like, but don't bother me," I cried bravely
+enough, but trembling in every limb. The Tisch, no doubt, is preparing
+to deal me another blow.
+
+When I told Richard that henceforth we would have to exercise extra
+care, he was beside himself with rage.
+
+"Why stand such tyranny?" he cried. "No self-respecting woman, other
+than royal, would submit for a single week to be bullied and intrigued
+against and threatened and browbeaten as you are, and they have ill-used
+you for eleven years. If you were a simple Cit's daughter, instead of
+the descendant of a decrepit, bloodless family, yclept royal, you would
+make an end now, leave them to their shabby kingship and be a free
+woman--free and happy."
+
+My lover forgets the children, but the picture of the free life he draws
+is most attractive.
+
+"And would you go with me to the end of the earth, as the story books
+put it?" I asked tremblingly.
+
+"Louise," he answered, "if you are brave enough and strong enough to
+throw away a crown, I will be your slave for life."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 20, 1902_.
+
+"Your Imperial Highness was pleased to call me a thief once," said the
+Tisch early this morning as she entered my boudoir, triumph written all
+over her yellow countenance. "You repeated that calumny to the Prince
+Royal and doubtless to many other persons. Today came the opportunity
+to live up to my reputation. I stole a letter addressed to you by your
+present lover, and as Your Imperial Highness is pleased to doubt my
+authority, immediately sent it to His Majesty. It makes highly
+interesting reading."
+
+The blow made my knees tremble, but pain and rage came to my assistance,
+effacing the momentary weakness.
+
+"Don't think for a moment to frighten me," I cried. "I say to your face
+that I have a lover--a gentleman, not an unspeakable, like your nephew.
+And now listen: I will tell the King and the press of Europe, if it must
+be, that it was you, my Grand Mistress, who 'pandered' me to
+Henry--for--revenue. I will have him whipped out of the army----"
+
+"You don't suppose for a moment that the word of an adulteress would
+prove acceptable either to His Majesty or anyone else?" hissed the
+insolent creature.
+
+"My word will be accepted all around," I shouted back, "for I have the
+proofs, proofs that you smuggled this unspeakable into my household,
+proofs that you lied to the King in order not to disrupt your nephew's
+career.
+
+"And I will cry from the house-tops that you discovered my relations
+with Henry only _after_ I had paid his debts, _after_ I had financed his
+excursions to gambling-houses and to usurers' dens. Ah, I paid his
+tailors and glove-makers, his board and lodging, his laundry bills. I
+paid the alimony due his strumpets, and _after_ all was done, _after_
+his lieutenantship had again a clean bill of health, financially
+speaking, then, and not a moment before, did you step in and make an end
+of the farce, wherein I played the part of 'angel,' or pay-master."
+
+The Tisch got visibly smaller under my lash. The air of triumph she bore
+when entering the room gave way to an expression of despair. If she
+hadn't sent the letter to the King, I believe she would have given it up
+after I was half through with her.
+
+Once more I hold the whip hand, but what good will it do me since I am
+condemned to lose the man I love?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Midnight._
+
+Richard approved of all I said and did. We were unspeakably happy this
+afternoon, despite the storm threatening us.
+
+I fear neither the King nor Frederick Augustus now, but the fear of
+Sonnenstein I can't shake off.
+
+If the King takes it upon himself to say that I'm mad, there will be
+plenty of medical authorities to bear him out, none to oppose him.
+
+Of course, they will separate me from my children and will do their
+utmost to drive me mad between now and the time when I should be
+proclaimed Queen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXI
+
+A MAD HOUSE FOR LOUISE--PROBABLY
+
+ My confidential maid, Lucretia, is banished--The new King has got
+ the incriminating letter, but Frederick Augustus says nothing--On
+ the eve of judgment the King falls ill.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 21, 1902_.
+
+This morning, at six, Lucretia rushed into my room. She was in her
+night-gown. Her hair was loose. No color in her face.
+
+And between sobs and curses she told me that she had orders to leave by
+ten sharp. "If you dare stay over the appointed time, you will be
+transported to the frontier on foot, between gendarmes."
+
+"Von Baumann shall come."
+
+I threw a loose wrapper over my night-gown and received him at once.
+
+"My marriage contract provides that no one but I have the right of
+dismissal with respect to Countess Baranello," I said sharply.
+
+"As long as the lady keeps within the law," replied Baumann with just a
+trace of insolence in his voice.
+
+I looked at him in astonishment.
+
+"The Countess is guilty of a crime, of a succession of crimes,"
+continued Baumann, "but His Majesty, not wishing to be harsh, decided to
+treat her merely as an obnoxious foreigner. She has forfeited her right
+to live in Saxony, and will do well to obey."
+
+I helped poor Lucretia pack. I gave her a handful of jewels, I paid her
+a year's salary in advance and ordered the treasury to procure
+first-class passage for her to Rome.
+
+I sent her to the station in my own carriage, and wired to our Rome
+representative to show her every courtesy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Afternoon._
+
+Frederick Augustus hasn't said a word to me about the affair with
+Richard. We have our meals together and his attitude in no wise differs
+from that usually maintained. Yet I am convinced he knows.
+
+The last service rendered me by Lucretia, gave me great relief. She
+found out that neither the Tisch, nor Frederick Augustus, nor the King
+know who "Richard" is. Fortunately his letter was typewritten, signature
+and all.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Six o'clock._
+
+The King announced his visit for eight o'clock.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Nine o'clock._
+
+The King had a fall in his apartments shortly after he sent me notice of
+his coming. He was unconscious for two hours.
+
+Safe for the time being!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXII
+
+KING'S ILLNESS A BOON TO LOVERS
+
+ Prayers mixed with joy--Espionage disorganized, and I can do as I
+ please--Love-making in the school-room--Buying a ring for
+ Richard--"Wishing it on"--"Our marriage"--King's life despaired
+ of--My tormentors obsequious--Smile at my peccadilloes--Husband
+ proud of me--My popularity a great asset--Frederick Augustus
+ delighted when he hears that King can't last long--The joyous
+ luncheon at Richard's studio--Making fun of majesties--I expect to
+ be Queen presently.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 22, 1902_.
+
+He is dangerously ill. It may be weeks and months before the King
+recovers--if he recovers at all.
+
+I feel like praying, crying, shouting with joy.
+
+When Richard folded his arms about me this afternoon, I said to myself:
+"God doesn't begrudge me a lover as kind and good as Richard."
+
+The King's illness has disorganized the espionage, my coming and going
+are no longer controlled. The body-groom brings in my letters as
+delivered at the gate.
+
+In the school room, while the children are writing or studying, Richard
+and I find time to exchange kind words and even an occasional caress.
+When I "command" the tutor to my apartments, we need fear no surprise.
+
+The utmost quiet prevails in the palace. The courtyard is sanded foot
+high and strewn with straw to deaden the sound of wheels and horses'
+hoofs. No more mounting of the guard with fife and drum.
+
+I suggested that the children be sent to the _Grosser Garten_ to play.
+The Tisch agreed with enthusiasm. This yields us--Richard and
+myself--two hours of love-making.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 25, 1902_.
+
+The King continues ill.
+
+I went into a cheap jeweler's this afternoon and bought an inexpensive
+ring with a ruby no larger than a pin head. When I gave it to Richard,
+he grew red with joy.
+
+Strange, he bought a similar ring for me. I shall never wear another
+ring in my life but Richard's. I pulled my rings off one after the other
+and threw them on the bed.
+
+I kissed the larger ring and "wished" it on Richard's finger. He did the
+same with the ring intended for me. And we said, as with a common
+breath, "Our wedding."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 1, 1902_.
+
+A bulletin, by the King's physicians, holds out scant hopes for George's
+life.
+
+I am watching the palace yard. The Archbishop of Dresden, attended by
+two court chaplains and a host of other clerics, is just mounting the
+stairs to administer the last rites of the Church. The next minute may
+see me Queen of Saxony. I may even be Queen now. I wish I had the
+effrontery to promise the lackey or official, announcing my
+enthronization, a handful of gold, as George did, when King Albert was
+dying.
+
+Even so, I have risen immeasurably in everybody's esteem. The sweet
+family knows me again. Johann George, Mathilde, Isabelle and Max are
+kotowing to me. Bernhardt sent me a telegram of condolence--condolence!
+He is a humorist, that boy.
+
+Minister of the Royal House, Baron Seydwitz, called twice. The Royal
+Adjutant, General von Carlowitz, spoke of the possibility of giving
+Bernhardt a command in Dresden. Von Baumann says it was the President of
+the Police who insisted upon Lucretia's hasty departure. If he, Baumann,
+had his way, my maid of honor would have got off with a warning.
+
+And you should see the Tisch. She must have spent a month's salary on
+flowers for me, which I promptly sent to the nearest pauper hospital.
+She smiles, she nearly breaks her back genuflexing. Her every second
+word is "most submissive," "will the Imperial Highness deign to do
+this," that, or the other thing.
+
+The terror got into her old bones and she trembles for her pension,
+for, of course, she knows that instant dismissal will be her portion.
+
+Frederick Augustus talks of having some more princes and--acts
+accordingly. Perish the thought that his Louise is an adulteress, that
+she ever had a lover, has one now!
+
+He is haunting my room, running from door to window, from window to
+door. Every little while he opens the _portières_ to see if no one's
+coming to address him "Your Majesty."
+
+"Your popularity with the public is a great asset," he says over and
+over again. "Lucky devil I, to have a wife as smart as you."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 2, 1902_.
+
+Frederick Augustus came running into my room and gave me a bear-hug.
+
+"The doctors say the King is lost. Impossible to keep him alive any
+longer."
+
+He rushed out.
+
+I am Queen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _After Lunch._
+
+Just back from Richard's studio. We had lunch together. We laughed, we
+danced, we sang. We bombarded one another with pillows.
+
+We acted the jubilant heirs. I recalled Sybillenort at the time King
+Albert died. In Saxony, when man or woman shuffles off this mortal coil,
+there's always a good "feed" at the corpse's expense. At the late King's
+castle a "mourning breakfast" was served upon the royal family's arrival
+from Dresden--a most magnificent repast in the matter of plate and
+victuals offered, but each had to serve himself or herself, as servants
+were dispensed with.
+
+This by the new King's special orders--that he might hear himself
+addressed "Your Majesty" by his kith and kin, a formality usually
+neglected in the family circle except when two or more of the big-wigs
+are warring against each other.
+
+"Will Your Majesty have one or two lumps of sugar?"
+
+"May it please Your Majesty--some steak?"
+
+"I hope Your Majesty will allow me to peel an orange for Your Majesty."
+
+Thus at Sybillenort. And at Richard's:
+
+"Will Your Greatness (Majesty) deign to take Your Greatness's feather
+out of my eye?"
+
+Or: "May it never please Your Transparency (_Durchlaucht_, German for
+Highness) to let _His_ Greatness see through you."
+
+I am several times a Countess besides a Princess, Duchess, etc., and
+Richard continued with his paraphrasing of titles:
+
+"Your Illuminatedness[8] makes lights quite unnecessary," and he
+switched them off in a room already darkened by blinds and shades and
+curtains.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 8: "Illuminated" is the proper title for German counts of the
+higher class.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXIII
+
+WHAT I WILL DO WHEN I AM QUEEN
+
+ A foretaste: titled servants put me _en route_ for lover--The
+ bargain I will propose to Frederick Augustus--Frederick Augustus
+ will be a complaisant King--To revive _Petit Trianon_--I am
+ addressed as Queen.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 3, 1902_.
+
+Though still styled Crown Princess, I am already revelling in the
+delights and perquisites of queenship: I do as I please, go where I
+please, I would think aloud, as I please, if anyone dared me.
+
+For all my enemies of a week ago turned flatterers and flunkeys, bowing,
+grovelling, fawning, contemptible in their self-abasement, but quite
+useful to my purposes.
+
+Like most royal palaces, ours at Dresden has a secret staircase and exit
+for emergencies. It is never used by ladies; only the princes have
+recourse to it, occasionally, to drop out of sight in _mufti_, for, of
+course, royal incognito is more or less legitimate.
+
+ "In the evening, after our card party was over, Catherine was seen
+ to dismiss her court and retire to her private apartments with the
+ new favorite," say the Secret Memoirs of the Court of St.
+ Petersburg.
+
+Less publicly, perhaps, but even more illegitimately, I walk the secret
+staircase _en route_ for my lover whenever I please nowadays.
+
+I go veiled and--make the Grand Mistress open the door for me. She knows
+that I am on sweet pleasure bent and--smiles.
+
+"When will Your Imperial Highness deign to return?"
+
+I name the hour and she is there to receive me--smirking, blind, deaf
+and dumb.
+
+A foretaste of my queenship paradise! No one will boss me, no one will
+dare talk about me, everything I do will be good, even sublime.
+
+I made up my mind as to Frederick Augustus.
+
+"Frederick Augustus," I will say to him, "now that we are King and
+Queen, let's enjoy to the full the thing's emoluments; otherwise, what's
+the use? You will allow me to go my way and I will certainly shut both
+eyes as to your doings, even if you follow in the footsteps of your
+namesake of the three-hundred-and-fifty-two."
+
+Of course, I will say it differently, but my husband will understand.
+The main thing: the royal family and court must stop hurling at me the
+long, watery _haussez les mains_ of narrow-minded, provincial
+inquisitiveness, which both oppresses and goads me.
+
+Frederick Augustus has too much respect for the kingly dignity to impugn
+his partner, the Queen.
+
+Will I revive, then, the seraglios of the Russian Anns and Elizabeths,
+or start a new _Parc aux Cerfs_ with strong men and Marathon winners for
+inmates? Thank you, a miniature _Petit Trianon_ will be good enough for
+me.
+
+The Tisch entered a minute ago and respectfully remains at the door,
+though she sees I am engaged on my Diary. I watch her in the mirror. She
+would travel bare-foot to Kevlaar, of which Heinrich Heine sung, for a
+glimpse of what I wrote. Her variegated grimaces give her the appearance
+of a carved wooden devil, sprinkled with holy water.
+
+At last I deign to inquire: "What is it, Baroness?"
+
+"The Crown Prince wants to see Your Imperial Highness. May he come in?"
+
+"Since when does my husband send you to announce him?"
+
+"Pardon, Your Imperial Highness, I meant Prince George."
+
+Designating my first-born Prince Royal, means recognizing me as Queen.
+
+And, but ten days ago, this same viper refused to address me by my
+_proper_ title.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXIV
+
+THE KING IS ALIVE AND PUNISHMENT NEAR
+
+ My queenship postponed--King George publicly acclaimed--Cuts me dead
+ in church--Frederick Augustus's disappointment--Terrible power of a
+ king over his family, and no appeal--I am like the nude witch of
+ old.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 10, 1902_.
+
+The King has taken nourishment. The King will not die--he will live and
+punish me. Still, I must not complain. I had a respite and Richard says,
+"when one rises from the dead, one is less inclined to be severe with
+the living." But he grew rather despondent immediately.
+
+"_La liberté est une garce, qui ne se laisse monter que sur des matelas
+des cadavres humains!_" he quoted _Comte_ Mirabeau. Our corpse was
+alive, our liberty is dead for the time being.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 15, 1902_.
+
+The King went driving this morning and I am told that he came home well
+pleased, for there was lusty cheering along the line. Frederick Augustus
+hasn't mentioned my affair at all. Disappointment made him rather gloomy
+and he begins to treat me again in the right royal Saxon fashion: I am
+air for His Highness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _After Supper._
+
+The family will wait upon His Majesty in a body tomorrow, to
+congratulate him on his recovery. After that, _Te Deum_ in the
+cathedral, which the court and authorities must attend by command.
+
+"Your Imperial Highness's pew will be in readiness, but my sublime
+master has not deigned to graciously announce that he wishes to receive
+Your Imperial Highness,"--this from the toad Baumann, who but yesterday
+licked my boots.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 16, 1902_.
+
+Another straw indicating the direction of the wind--the ill-wind.
+
+King George commanded Bernhardt to be madman no longer and come and live
+in Dresden. Since his arrival he has paid assiduous court to all members
+of the royal family, but me. He called on the royal ministers, the
+courtiers, the high civil authorities, but my apartments have seen him
+not. I don't blame the boy for making the best of the situation, but was
+it really necessary to offer gratuitous insult to the only relative that
+stood by him when in trouble?
+
+Doubtless, he took his cue from the King, who cut me dead while, with
+the rest, I thanked God for his recovery.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _November 20, 1902._
+
+The Tisch is openly talking Sonnenstein. "The royal apartments are ready
+for her reception," she let fall yesterday.
+
+Old Andrew, my confidential servant, told me.
+
+She shows me the face of a bull-dog about to spring at a victim, a
+sea-green devil filled with vinegar and gall, but affects icy courtesy.
+
+Frederick Augustus is down in the mouth. If he knows of any evil
+intention against me, he evidently made up his mind to hold his tongue
+and avoid scenes.
+
+Richard keeps on saying: "Don't worry. After all, what can they do to
+you?" He doesn't know, or doesn't want to understand that, while the law
+holds out protection for all, from pedlars and vagabonds to and
+including prime ministers, royalty itself is only technically above the
+law; in _praxis_ we are beyond the benefits of all law, human and
+otherwise.
+
+To be sure, a Cit is sometimes unjustly treated, but with tenacity and a
+small amount of courage, he finds his remedy in the courts and in the
+press.
+
+To royal princes and princesses the King is both judge and executioner,
+as the cases of the Duke of Saxony and Bernhardt show. Maybe it pleases
+His Majesty to cloak his tyranny by convoking a commission, but what of
+it, since the commission is invariably made up of his creatures,
+trained, if not commanded, to do the all-highest will and nothing but
+the all-highest will?
+
+As in days gone by, the poor "witch"--if she be young and comely--must
+face her accusers naked, the sworn torturer at her elbow, so I have no
+standing in law or decency before the Powers over social life or death
+in our sphere of society.
+
+If there be blemishes in my character, the King sees them magnified by
+the sharp tongues of evil creatures, his spies. There is no privacy. I
+must submit to be stared at, to have my flesh lacerated by curious eyes,
+and, as in the case of the old-time "witches," the handsomest were
+condemned the quicker because "the devil was more liable to choose them
+for an abode than ugly ones," so my very beauty will hasten my
+destruction.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXV
+
+FISTICUFFS DON'T SAVE MY CROWN
+
+ The attempted theft of my Diary--Grand Mistress discovered after
+ breaking open my desk--Reading Diary like mad--Personal encounter
+ between me and Grand Mistress--I am the stronger, and carry off the
+ manuscript, but have to leave all my love letters, which go to the
+ King--I discover that they had stolen the key to my Diary from my
+ neck.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 27, 1902_.
+
+I am undone.
+
+They tried to obtain a picture of Louise _in the nude_--Louise as she
+paints _Herself_--this Diary, in fact--and, though I foiled them, the
+King now has in his hands my entire correspondence--every letter from
+every man that ever approached or possessed me.
+
+And be sure he won't use them for curl papers as did the Duke of
+Richelieu with the remnants of his ladyloves' _billets doux_ that
+escaped confiscation.
+
+"My collection is incomplete. I have to begin another," he said.
+
+Alas, my collection was only _too_ complete!
+
+This is how it came about:
+
+As I was in the act of retiring last night, a clairvoyant's vision
+seized me. "Somebody meddling with your papers!" "They are breaking into
+your _secrétaire_," the voices said.
+
+I slipped on a pair of bath sandals and stealthily opened the door of my
+boudoir.
+
+My writing desk was open, all the drawers ajar and in disorder; the
+Baroness bending over this, my Diary. She was reading like mad, her eyes
+danced with lust of revenge.
+
+With one bound I was at her side and she was so frightened at first, I
+thought she would drop. Her chest seemed to draw inward; she swayed to
+and fro. But only for a second or two. Then, recovering her
+self-possession, her fighting harness was in place again.
+
+"Go to your room, Royal Highness," she said in a tone of command. "These
+papers are confiscated in the name of the King."
+
+I was beside myself with rage. "My Diary," I cried; "instantly return it
+to me."
+
+More I couldn't say, for I had neither breath nor voice. My right hand
+was on the book when she attempted to seize it.
+
+I struck her hand with Richard's ring--I wish it was bigger, I wish it
+had a good diamond point--but she wouldn't let go. Then, before one
+could count one, two, three, I had hold of her--Heaven, how I enjoyed
+it; the satisfaction I had in giving rein to my passion, for all was up
+now, anyhow.
+
+With the left hand I caught her by the throat, while my good right boxed
+her ears after the homely manner mamma had taught me. Good, sound cuffs,
+I assure you, each liable to dislocate a tooth.
+
+"_Canaille_," I cried, "_miserable canaille_." I pushed her into a
+corner and recovered the Diary, folding it up quickly. I was holding the
+book close to my bosom when I crossed the room to regain my bedchamber.
+
+The Tisch after me, trying to snatch it back. I caught her on the chest
+and sent her flying. Then, with the manuscript, I made good my escape,
+leaving for the contemptible bird of prey all my love letters, reams of
+them, the oldest fifteen or more years old, the latest bearing
+yesterday's date.
+
+Once in my room, I recollected and made a grab at my throat. The key to
+my Diary was gone. They stole it, chain and all, while I was asleep, no
+doubt.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 28, 1902_.
+
+Awakening, I find myself seated at the little table near the window.
+Both my hands are ink-spotted. So is my night-dress.
+
+I see, I have written an account of the battle. I must have done so
+some time after I returned from the field. It's well, for at the moment,
+I don't remember a thing.
+
+The palace clock strikes seven.
+
+The day of my doom.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVI
+
+ABANDONED
+
+ My titled servants withdraw from me--An old footman my sole
+ support--Queen takes the children--Old Andrew plays spy for me.
+
+
+ _Afternoon._
+
+No one has come to see me. My household, my adjutants, marshal,
+chamberlains, equerries, the ladies of my entourage are on duty, but
+since I ordered my meals brought to the room, they pretend to assume
+that I'm too ill to see anyone. There may be no truth in the saying that
+rats leave the ship destined to sink, but the titled vermin royalty
+surrounds itself with certainly knows when to avoid dangerous craft.
+
+I rang for Andrew. The good, old man wouldn't put me to the humiliation
+of asking questions.
+
+"Your Imperial Highness's children are with Her Majesty," he said; and,
+coming a step nearer, he added in an undertone: "Baroness Tisch has been
+with His Majesty since nine in the morning."
+
+"You are a kind and brave man." I held out my hand.
+
+"If Your Imperial Highness has no immediate orders for me," continued
+the good soul, "I beg to be allowed to visit my friend, Hans, the King's
+body-servant."
+
+I thanked Andrew for his good intentions. "Wait in the ante-chamber
+until I am dressed."
+
+I donned a forty-mark costume that I keep on hand for the purpose; it
+didn't take me more than six or seven minutes.
+
+"I will have to leave by the secret staircase, Andrew."
+
+He understood and cleared the way for me.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVII
+
+FAMILY COUNCIL AT CASTLE
+
+ Rendezvous at studio--State takes my children from me--Madhouse or
+ flight--I brought fifty-two trunks to the palace--Depart with small
+ satchel--If I attempt to see my children I'll be seized as "mad
+ woman"--Varying emotions of the last ten minutes--Threatening
+ shadows thrown on a curtain decide me--Ready for flight--Diary the
+ last thing to go into the satchel.
+
+
+ _At Night. Eleven O'clock._
+
+They went into family council at six tonight and are still deliberating,
+Andrew reports. The Tisch, he says, acts as secretary; His Majesty, of
+course, presides.
+
+Present are the Dowager Queen, Mathilde and Isabelle. Then Frederick
+Augustus, Johann George, Max and Bernhardt. Baron George von Metzsch, a
+high government and court functionary and my enemy, attends as legal
+adviser to the King.
+
+It's in the nature of things that the Baron will do his worst to destroy
+me, but Bernhardt! Bernhardt, who held me in his arms, now one of my
+judges! He will have to be especially severe with his _quondam_ mistress
+lest the King suspect.
+
+While the sweet family bent over those love letters--I bet the Tisch
+withheld Henry's--I sat in Richard's studio, advising with him.
+
+"There are only two things to be considered: the madhouse or instant
+flight."
+
+"You dare advise me to leave my children?"
+
+"There are no nurseries in madhouses. Your children are lost to you,
+anyhow. If you remain, as an alleged insane person, you 'can't be
+trusted,' they'll argue, for you are helpless, legally, morally and
+physically.
+
+"If you run away to Switzerland, on the other hand, you are a free
+woman, under the protection of a republican government.
+
+"Switzerland, I needn't tell you, will not go to war to wrest your
+children from the royal family, but will afford you personally every
+advantage, legal and otherwise.
+
+"Decide quickly: are you going to make King George a present of yourself
+as well as of the five children you bore for the benefit of the
+Wettiners?"
+
+"Never."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My mind is made up. My few belongings are packed. I, who came to Dresden
+with fifty-two trunks, leave the palace with a satchel, easy to carry. I
+take nothing but my personal jewels, the little money I own and some
+changes of linen.
+
+If I could only see my children for a moment or two, but the Queen has
+them in her keeping, and I might be seized as a "mad woman" if I dared
+leave my apartments and cross to those occupied by Her Majesty.
+
+And Frederick Augustus! He will miss me in his way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ten more minutes. I hear the distant clatter of a carriage. Richard
+driving to our rendezvous, two streets north of the palace gate.
+
+Will my limbs carry me to him and liberty? I pace the room to test their
+strength.
+
+"Louise," says the voice within,--"your last chance. Your good-natured
+husband, your darling children, your old parents, pomp and state and
+circumstance, indeed, a crown, you are going to abandon for--what?"
+
+A man whose carnal side only you know, a poor man, an artist without
+fame, a professional without future.
+
+Sadly perturbed in mind, I walk to the window. Those of His Majesty's
+cabinet, where the family council is in progress, are directly opposite.
+
+Shadows of men and women, rising from a sitting position, are thrown on
+the curtains.
+
+One of the shades slowly ascends.
+
+I see the Tisch pointing a bony finger to the windows of my boudoir.
+Von Metzsch stands by her side. They grin.
+
+You triumph, wretch and Jezebel?
+
+But when your _sbirri_, in an hour from now, or tomorrow morning early,
+invade my rooms, instructed to carry me away--bound hand and foot to a
+sofa, or in a straight jacket, perhaps--they will find the Crown
+Princess gone--her and her Diary.
+
+Both will be safe on foreign soil ere you can make arrangements for
+organized pursuit, for Richard and I will travel by carriage to a
+distant suburb, there mount the fast express and keep to our state room,
+engaged under an assumed name, until without the sphere of Saxon or
+German influence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A discreet knock. Andrew, my liberator! In his hand a tallow dip to
+light this Imperial Highness down back stairs to the new life of her
+choice.
+
+"One moment, old man, this book goes into the valise.
+
+"Hand me the blotter, please. Tears won't do.
+
+"And a couple more handkerchiefs from the top of the chiffonier,
+please."
+
+
+FINIS
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Secret Memoirs: The Story of Louise,
+Crown Princess, by Henry W. Fischer
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SECRET MEMOIRS ***
+
+***** This file should be named 29167-8.txt or 29167-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/2/9/1/6/29167/
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Jane Hyland, Bill Tozier and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/29167-8.zip b/29167-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3d66c06
--- /dev/null
+++ b/29167-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/29167-h.zip b/29167-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0acb4b9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/29167-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/29167-h/29167-h.htm b/29167-h/29167-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9cea237
--- /dev/null
+++ b/29167-h/29167-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,11095 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Secret Memoirs, by Henry W. Fischer.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+ p { margin-top: .75em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .75em;
+ }
+ h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ clear: both;
+ }
+ hr { width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ clear: both;
+ }
+
+ table {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;}
+
+ body{margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ }
+
+ .pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
+ visibility: hidden;
+ position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: smaller;
+ text-align: right;
+ } /* page numbers */
+
+ .linenum {position: absolute; top: auto; left: 4%;} /* poetry number */
+ .blockquot{margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%;}
+
+ .bb {border-bottom: solid 2px;}
+ .bl {border-left: solid 2px;}
+ .bt {border-top: solid 2px;}
+ .br {border-right: solid 2px;}
+ .bbox {border: solid 2px;}
+
+ .center {text-align: center;}
+ .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+ .u {text-decoration: underline;}
+
+ .caption {font-weight: bold;}
+
+ .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;}
+
+ .figleft {float: left; clear: left; margin-left: 0; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-top:
+ 1em; margin-right: 1em; padding: 0; text-align: center;}
+
+ .figright {float: right; clear: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;
+ margin-top: 1em; margin-right: 0; padding: 0; text-align: center;}
+
+ .footnotes {border: dashed 1px;}
+ .footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;}
+ .footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
+ .fnanchor {vertical-align: super; font-size: .8em; text-decoration: none;}
+
+
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Secret Memoirs: The Story of Louise, Crown
+Princess, by Henry W. Fischer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Secret Memoirs: The Story of Louise, Crown Princess
+
+Author: Henry W. Fischer
+
+Release Date: June 19, 2009 [EBook #29167]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SECRET MEMOIRS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Jane Hyland, Bill Tozier and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h1>Secret Memoirs</h1>
+
+<h3>THE COURT OF ROYAL SAXONY</h3>
+
+<h3>1891-1902</h3>
+
+<p class="center">This edition, printed on Japanese vellum paper,
+is limited to two hundred and fifty copies.</p>
+
+<p class="center">No. ________</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 456px;">
+<img src="images/louisa.jpg" width="456" height="600" alt="LOUISE, EX-CROWN-PRINCESS OF SAXONY
+
+Photo taken shortly before her flight from Dresden" title="" />
+<span class="caption">LOUISE, EX-CROWN-PRINCESS OF SAXONY<br />
+
+Photo taken shortly before her flight from Dresden</span>
+<br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<h3>THE STORY OF LOUISE
+CROWN PRINCESS</h3>
+
+<p class="center">FROM THE PAGES OF HER DIARY, LOST AT THE TIME OF
+HER ELOPEMENT FROM DRESDEN WITH
+M. ANDR&Eacute; ("RICHARD") GIRON</p>
+
+<p class="center">BY</p>
+<h3>HENRY W. FISCHER</h3>
+
+<p class="center">Author of "Private Lives of William II and His Consort,"
+"Secret History of the Court of Berlin," etc., etc.</p>
+
+<p class="center">Illustrated from Photographs</p>
+
+<p class="center">BENSONHURST, NEW YORK
+FISCHER'S FOREIGN LETTERS, INC.
+PUBLISHERS</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1912</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">By HENRY W. FISCHER</span><br />
+<br />
+Copyright, 1912, applied for by Henry W. Fischer in Great Britain<br />
+<br />
+Copyright, 1912, by Henry W. Fischer, in Germany, France, Austria,<br />
+Switzerland, and all foreign countries having international copyright<br />
+arrangements with the United States<br />
+<br />
+[<i>All rights reserved, including those of translation</i>]<br />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[Pg i]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>EDITOR'S CARD</h3>
+
+
+<p>This is to certify that the Ex-Crown Princess of Saxony,
+now called Countess Montiguoso, Madame Toselli
+by her married name, is in no way, either directly or indirectly,
+interested in this publication.</p>
+
+<p>There has been no communication of whatever nature,
+directly or through a third party, between this lady and
+the editor or publishers. In fact, the publication will be
+as much a surprise to her as to the general public.</p>
+
+<p>The Royal Court of Saxony, therefore, has no right
+to claim, on the ground of this publication, that Princess
+Louise violated her agreement with that court as set forth
+in the chapter on the <i>Kith and Kin of the ex-Crown
+Princess of Saxony</i>, under the heads of "<i>Louise's Alimony
+and Conditions</i>" and "<i>Allowance Raised and a Further
+Threat</i>."</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap">Henry W. Fischer</span>, <i>Editor</i>.<br />
+Fischer's Foreign Letters, Publishers<br />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[Pg ii-iii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>THIS BOOK AND ITS PURPOSE</h3>
+
+<p class="center">By Henry W. Fischer</p>
+
+
+<p>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.</p>
+
+<p>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:&mdash;Louise
+wrote for her own amusement, 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).<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
+
+<p>The ex-Crown Princess of Saxony suffered much in
+her youth by a narrow-minded, bigoted mother, a Sadist
+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<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</a></span>
+splendor, liberty to do as one pleases, the companionship
+of agreeable, amusing and ready-to-serve friends.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>The Sad Saxon Court</i></p>
+
+<p>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&mdash;she acquired a father-in-law (Prince,
+afterwards King George) whose pretended affection was
+but a share of his all-encompassing 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.</p>
+
+<p>As to money&mdash;Louise wished for nothing better "than
+to be an American multi-millionaire's daughter for a week"!
+Amusements were few and frowned upon.</p>
+
+<p>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.</p>
+
+<p>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<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</a></span>
+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, <i>Myself</i>. * * * 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."</p>
+
+<p>At any rate she thinks "this Diary business will be
+quite amusing."</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Louise's Amusing Writings</i></p>
+
+<p>It is. The world always laughs at the&mdash;husband of a
+woman whose history isn't one long yawn.</p>
+
+<p>Nor is Louise content with a bust picture.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> She gives
+full length portraits of herself, family, friends, enemies, and
+lovers, which latter she picks hap-hazard among commoners
+and the nobility. Only one of them was a prince of the
+blood, and he promptly proved the most false and dishonorable
+of the lot.</p>
+
+<p>When Louise's pen-pictures do not deal with her
+<i>amororos</i>, they focus invariably emperors and princes, kings
+and queens,&mdash;contemporary personages whose acquaintance,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</a></span>
+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"&mdash;everything calculated
+to make life a burden to the ordinary mortal.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Kings in Fiction and in Reality</i></p>
+
+<p>But kings and emperors, we are told by these <i>distant</i>
+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,&mdash;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."</p>
+
+<p>Witness Louise, Imperial and Royal Highness, Archduchess
+of Austria, Princess of Hungary and Tuscany,
+Crown Princess of Saxony, etc., etc., smash these paper
+records of infallible royal rectitude, and superhuman, almost
+inhuman, royal probity!</p>
+
+<p>Had she castigated her own kind <i>after</i> 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 title as future queen
+was ever questioned or menaced.</p>
+
+<p>Her Diary finishes with her last night in the Dresden
+palace. We do not hear so much as the clatter of the car<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span>riage
+wheels that carried her and "Richard" to her unfrocking
+as princess of the blood,&mdash;in short, our narrator is
+not prejudiced, on the defensive, or soured by disfranchisement.
+She had no axes to grind while writing; for her all
+kings dropped out of the clouds; the lustre 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."</p>
+
+<p>Yet this large folio edition of <i>obsc&eacute;nit&eacute;s royale</i>, chock
+full, at the same time, of intensely human and interesting
+facts, notable and amusing things, as enthralling as a novel
+by Balzac,&mdash;Louise's life record in sum and substance, since
+her carryings-on <i>after</i> she doffed her royal robes for the
+motley of the free woman are of no historical, and but scant
+human interest.</p>
+
+<p>The prodigality of the mass of indictments Louise
+launches against royalty as every-day occurrences, reminds
+one of the great Catharine Sforza, Duchess of Milan's clever
+<i>mot</i>. When the enemy captured her children she merely
+said, "I retain the oven for more."</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Royal Scandals</i></p>
+
+<p>Such scandalmongering! Only Her Imperial Highness
+doesn't see the obloquy,&mdash;sarcasm, cynicism and disparagement
+being royalty's every-day diet.</p>
+
+<p>Such gossiping! But what else was there to do at a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span>
+court whose literature is tracts and whose theatre of action
+the drill grounds.</p>
+
+<p>But for all that, Louise's Diary is history, because its
+minute things loom big in connection with social and political
+results, even as its horrors and abnormalities help
+paint court life and the lives of kings and princes as they
+<i>are</i>, not as royalties' sycophants and apologizers would have
+us view them.</p>
+
+<p>There is a perfect downpour of books eulogizing monarchs
+and monarchy; royal governments spend millions of
+the people's money to uphold and aggrandize exalted kingship
+and seedy princeship alike; three-fourths of the press
+of Europe is swayed by king-worship, or subsidized to sing
+the praises of "God's Anointed," while in our own country
+the aping of monarchical institutions, the admiration for
+court life, the idealization of kings, their sayings, doings
+and pretended superiority, as carried on by the multi-rich,
+are undermining love for the Republic and the institutions
+our fathers fought and bled for.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Un-American Folly</i></p>
+
+<p>It's the purpose of the present volume to show the
+guilty folly of such un-American, un-republican, wholly unjustifiable,
+reprehensible and altogether ridiculous King-worship,
+not by argument, or a more or less fanciful story,
+but by the unbiased testimony of an "insider."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Let it be considered, above all, that a member of the
+proudest Imperial family in the wide, wide world demonstrates,
+by inference, the absurdity of King-worship!</p>
+
+<p>Of course, whether or not you'll obey the impassioned
+appeal of the corner sermonizer, who, espying a number of
+very d&eacute;collet&eacute;e ladies passing by in a carriage, cried out:
+"<i>Quand vous voyez ces tetons rebondies, qui se montrent
+avec tant d'impudence, bandez! bandez! bandez! vous&mdash;les
+yeux!</i>" is a matter for you to decide.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Seek not for descriptions of ceremonials and festivities
+in these pages; only imbeciles among kings are interested
+in such wearying spectacles, intended to dazzle the multitude.
+The Czar Paul, who became insane and had his head knocked
+off by his own officers, appeared upon the scene vacated by
+his brilliant mother, Catharine the Great, with a valise full
+of petty regulations, ready drawn up, by which, every day,
+every hour, every minute, he announced some foolish change,
+punishment or favor, but I often saw Kaiser Wilhelm and
+other kings look intensely bored and disgusted when obliged
+to attend dull and superfluous court or government functions.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Royalty's Loose Talk</i></p>
+
+<p>But for genuine expressions of the royal self consult
+Louise. Those who think that royalty shapes its language<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span>
+in accordance with the plural of the personal pronoun, sometimes
+used in state papers, will be shocked at the "n&eacute;glig&eacute;
+talk" of one royal highness and the "rag-time" expressions
+of others. Louise, herself, assures us over and over again
+that she "<i>feels like a dog</i>," a statement no self-respecting
+publisher's reader would allow to pass, yet I was told by a
+friend of King Frederick of Denmark that he loved to compare
+his "all-highest person" to a "<i>mut</i>," and I remember
+a letter from Victor Emanuel II to his great Minister, Count
+Cavour, solemnly protesting that he (the King) was "<i>no
+ass</i>."</p>
+
+<p>When the same Danish ruler, the seventh of his name,
+was asked why, in thunder, he married a common street
+walker (the Rasmussen, afterwards created Countess Danner),
+he cried out with every indication of gusto: "You
+don't know how deliciously common that girl is."</p>
+
+<p>Frederick's words explain the hostler marriages of several
+royal women mentioned by Louise, as well as her own
+and loving family's <i>broulleries</i> of the fish-wife order, repeatedly
+described in the Diary.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Royalty Threatens a Royal Woman</i></p>
+
+<p>It is safe to say that few $15 flats in all the United
+States witnessed more outrageous family jars than were
+fought out in the gilded halls of the Dresden palace between
+Louise and father-in-law and Louise and husband.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span>
+Threats of violence are frequent; Prince George promises
+his daughter-in-law a sound beating at the hands of the
+Crown Prince and the Crown Princess confesses that she
+would rather go to bed with a drunken husband, booted and
+spurred, than risk a sword thrust.</p>
+
+<p>At the coronation of the present Czar, at Moscow, I
+mistook the Duke of Edinburgh, brother of the late King
+Edward, for a policeman attached to the British Ambassador,
+so exceedingly commonplace a person in appearance,
+speech and manner he seemed; Louise has a telling chapter
+on the mean looks of royalty, but fails to see the connection
+between that and royalty's coarseness.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it wasn't the "commonness" of Lady Emma
+Hamilton, child of the slums, impersonator of <i>risqu&eacute;</i> stage
+pictures, and mistress of the greatest naval hero of all
+times, that appealed primarily to Louise's grand-aunt, Queen
+Caroline of Naples, but the abandon of the beautiful Englishwoman,
+her reckless exposure of person, her freedom
+of speech, certainly sealed the friendship between the adventuress
+and the despotic ruler who deserved the epithet
+of "bloody" no less than Mary of England.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Covetous Royalty</i></p>
+
+<p>Royal covetousness is another subject dwelt on by
+Louise. We learn that in money matters the kings and
+princes of her acquaintance&mdash;and her acquaintance em<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span>braces
+all the monarchs of Europe&mdash;are "dirty," that royal
+girls are given in marriage to the highest bidder, and that
+poor princes have no more chance to marry a rich princess
+than a drayman an American multi-millionaire's daughter.</p>
+
+<p>Louise gives us a curious insight into the Pappenheim-Wheeler
+marriage embroglio, and refers to some noble
+families that made their money in infamous trades;
+that the Kaiser adopted the title of one of these unspeakables
+("Count of Henneberg") she doesn't seem to
+know.</p>
+
+<p>We hear of imperial and royal highnesses, living at
+public expense and for whom honors and lucrative employment
+are exacted from the people, who at home figure as
+poor relations, obliged to submit to treatment that a self-respecting
+"boots" or "omnibus" would resent.</p>
+
+<p>Here we have a royal prince of twenty-four or twenty-five
+subjected to kicks and cuffs by his uncle, who happens
+to be king&mdash;no indignity either to the slugged or the slugger
+in that&mdash;but when a pretty princess gets a few "<i>Hochs</i>"
+more than an ugly, mouse-colored majesty, she is all but
+flayed for "playing to the gallery."</p>
+
+<p>"High-minded" royalty robs widows and despoils
+orphans; re-introduces into the family obsolete punishments
+forbidden by law; maintains in the household a despicable
+spy system! Its respect for womanhood is on a par with
+a Bushman's; of authors, "lickspittles" only count; litera<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[Pg xiii]</a></span>ture,
+unless it kowtows to the "all-highest" person, is the
+"trade of Jew scribblers."</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Right Royal Manners</i></p>
+
+<p>As to manners, what do you think of kings and princes
+and grand-dukes who, at ceremonial dinners, pound the
+table to "show that they are boss"?</p>
+
+<p>Louise tells of an emperor at a foreign court ignoring
+one of his hostesses absolutely, even refusing to acknowledge
+her salute by a nod. We hear of expectant royal heirs
+who engage in wild fandangoes of merriment while their
+father, brother or cousin lies dying.</p>
+
+<p>"Personal matter," you say? "A typical case," I retort.</p>
+
+<p>"Ask the <i>Duc du</i> Maine to wait till I am dead before
+he indulges in the full extent of his joy," said the dying
+Louis XIV, when the <i>De Profundis</i> in the death chamber
+was suddenly interrupted by the sound of violent laughter
+from the adjoining gallery. And the fact that almost every
+new king sets aside the testament of his predecessor,&mdash;is this
+not evidence of the general callowness of feeling prevailing
+in royal circles?</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>The Irish Famine and Royalty</i></p>
+
+<p>In famine times, the kings and princes of old drove the
+starving out of town to die of hunger in the fields, and as
+late as 1772 one hundred and fifty thousand Saxons died<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[Pg xiv]</a></span>
+of hunger under the "glorious reign" of Louise's grandfather-by-marriage,
+Frederick Augustus III. And the "Life
+of Queen Victoria," approved by the Court of St. James,
+unblushingly informs us that in 1847 "Her Most Gracious
+Majesty" was chiefly concerned about investing to good
+profit the revenues of the Prince of Wales, her infant son
+(about four hundred thousand dollars per annum).</p>
+
+<p>Yet, while Victoria pinched the boy's tenants to extort
+an extra penny for him, and "succeeded in saving all but
+four thousand pounds sterling" of his imperial allowance,
+the population of Ireland was reduced two millions by the
+most dreadful famine the world remembers!</p>
+
+<p>Before the famine Ireland had a population of 8,196,597,
+against a population of 15,914,148 in England and Wales,
+while Scotland's population was 2,620,184.</p>
+
+<p>Six years after the famine Ireland's population was
+6,574,278, Scotland's 2,888,742, England and Wales' 17,927,609.
+Today Ireland's population is less than Scotland's,
+the exact figures being: Scotland 4,759,445, Ireland 4,381,951,
+England and Wales 36,075,269.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Royalty Utterly Heartless</i></p>
+
+<p>However, as the waste of two million human lives, the
+loss of four millions in population, subsequently enabled the
+Prince of Wales to tie the price of a dukedom<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> in diamonds<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[Pg xv]</a></span>
+around a French dancer's neck and to support a hundred
+silly harlots in all parts of Europe, who cares?</p>
+
+<p>According to Louise and&mdash;others, royalty is the meanest,
+the most heartless, the most faithless and the most
+unjust of the species&mdash;that in addition she herself disgraced
+its womanhood, after the famous Louise of Prussia rehabilitated
+queenship, is regrettable, but to call it altogether unexpected
+would be rank euphemism.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Louise's Character</i></p>
+
+<p>If Louise had lived at the time of Phryne, the philosophers
+would have characterized her as "an animal with
+long hair"; if he had known her, the great Mirabeau might
+have coined his pet phrase, "a human that dresses, undresses
+and&mdash;talks" (or writes) for Louise; as a matter
+of fact, she is one of those "<i>Jansenists</i>" of love who believe
+in the utter helplessness of natural woman to turn
+down a good looking man.</p>
+
+<p>Her great grand-uncle, Emperor Francis, recorded
+on a pane of glass overlooking the courtyard of the
+Vienna <i>Hofburg</i> his opinion of women in the brief
+observation: "<i>Chaque femme varie</i>" (Women always
+change).</p>
+
+<p>This is true of Louise and also untrue of her. While
+occupying her high position at the Saxon court she was
+fixed in the determination to make a cuckold of her hus<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[Pg xvi]</a></span>band,
+though Frederick Augustus, while a pumpkin, wasn't
+fricasseed in snow by any means.</p>
+
+<p>The process gave her palpitations, but, like Ninon, she
+was "<i>so</i> happy when she had palpitations."</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Changed Lovers Frequently</i></p>
+
+<p>As to lovers, she changed them as often as she had
+to, never hesitating to pepper her <i>steady</i> romances by
+playing "everybody's wife," chance permitting, as she intimates
+na&iuml;vely towards the close of the Diary.</p>
+
+<p>Qualms of conscience she knows not, but of pride of
+ancestry, of insistence on royal prerogatives, she has plenty
+and to spare.</p>
+
+<p>"My great grand-aunt, Marie Antoinette, did this";
+"my good cousins d'Orleans" (three of them) "allowed
+themselves to be seduced"; "<i>ma cousine de</i> Saxe-Coburg
+laughs at conventionalities,"&mdash;there you have the foundation
+of the iniquitous philosophy of the royal Lais. And for
+the rest&mdash;when she is queen, all will be well.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Her Court&mdash;A Seraglio</i></p>
+
+<p>Louise's fixed idea was that, as Queen of Saxony, she
+had but to say the word to establish a court <i>&agrave; la</i> Catharine
+II; time and again she refers to the great Empress's male
+seraglio, and to the enormous sums she squandered on her
+favorites. If the Diarist had known that Her Majesty of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[Pg xvii]</a></span>
+Russia, when in the flesh, never suffered to be longer than
+twenty-four hours without a lover, Louise, no doubt, would
+have made the most elaborate plans to prevent, in her own
+case, a possible <i>interregnum</i> of five minutes even.</p>
+
+<p>She thought she held the whip hand because a king
+cannot produce princes without his wife, while the wife can
+produce princes without the king; besides Frederick Augustus
+was no paragon, and he who plants horns, must not
+grudge to wear them.</p>
+
+<p>A wanton's calculations, it will be argued,&mdash;but Louise's
+records show that her husband, the king-to-be, fell in with
+her main idea,&mdash;that he forgave the unfaithful wife, the disgraced
+princess, because, as Queen, her popularity would be
+"a great asset."</p>
+
+<p>And Americans, our women of whom we are so proud,
+are asked to bow down to such sorry majesties!</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Sired and "Cousined" by Lunatics</i></p>
+
+<p>And is there no excuse for so much baseness in high
+places? Our royal Diarist offers none, but her family history
+is a telling apology.</p>
+
+<p>Be it remembered that Louise is not so much an Austrian
+as a Wittelsbacher of the royal house of Bavaria that
+gave to the world two mad kings, Louis II and Otho, the
+present incumbent of the throne, besides a number of eccentrics,
+among others Louise's aunts, the Empress Elizabeth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[Pg xviii]</a></span>
+and the Duchess d'Alencon, both dead; Crown Prince Rudolph
+of Austria, her cousin, was also undoubtedly insane,
+the result of breeding in and in, Austrian, Bourbon and
+Wittelsbach stock, all practically of the same parentage, in
+a mad mix-up, the insane Wittelsbachers predominating.</p>
+
+<p>To cap the climax, Louise has eighteen or nineteen
+insane cousins on her mother's side!</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Once upon a time Louise's prosaic and stupid great-uncle,
+as a young husband, felt dreadfully scandalized when
+his Queen, Marie Antoinette, bombarded him with spit-balls.</p>
+
+<p>"What can I do with her?" he asked "Minister Sans-culotte"
+Dumouriez.</p>
+
+<p>"I would spike the cannon, Sire," replied the courtier.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Enclouer le canon</i>," if performed in time, might have
+saved Louise, but I doubt it.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Henry W. Fischer.</span><br />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">[Pg xix]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> "Be civil, good people, I am the English hure," said Nell
+Gwyn, addressing a London mob that threatened to storm her
+carriage, assuming that its occupant was the hated Frenchwoman.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> "Your biography give a faithful portrait of self," said
+Fontenelle, the famous French Academician, to an 18th Century
+Marquise, "but I miss the record of your gallantries."
+</p><p>
+"<i>Ah, Monsieur, c'est que je ne me suis peinte qu'en buste!</i>"
+replied her ladyship.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> The Prince of Wales' revenue is derived from the Duchy of
+Cornwall, amounting to about half a million dollars per year.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>KITH AND KIN OF THE EX-CROWN PRINCESS OF
+SAXONY</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Louise's Own Family</i></p>
+
+<p>The royal woman whose life's history is recorded in
+this volume was born Louise Antoinette, Daughter of the
+late Grand Duke Ferdinand IV of Tuscany (died January
+17, 1908) and the Dowager Grand Duchess Alice, <i>n&eacute;e</i> Princess
+Bourbon of Parma.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Louise has four brothers, among them the present head
+of the Tuscany family, Joseph Ferdinand, who dropped the
+obsolete title of Grand Duke and is officially known as
+Archduke of Austria-Hungary.</p>
+
+<p>He is a brigadier general, commanding the Fifth Austrian
+Infantry, and unmarried.</p>
+
+<p>Better known is Louise's older brother, the former
+Archduke Leopold, who dropped his title and dignities, and,
+as a Swiss citizen, adopted the name of Leopold Wulfling.
+This Leopold is generally regarded as a black sheep.</p>
+
+<p>Louise more often refers to him in the present volume
+than to any other member of her family.</p>
+
+<p>He is now a commoner by his own, more or less en<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">[Pg xx]</a></span>forced,
+abdication, as Louise is a commoner by decree of
+her chief-of-family, the Austrian Emperor, Francis Joseph,
+dated Vienna, January 27, 1903.</p>
+
+<p>A month before above date the Saxon court had conferred
+on Louise the title of Countess Montiguoso, while,
+on her own part, she adopted the fanciful cognomen of
+Louise of Tuscany.</p>
+
+<p>Of Louise's two remaining brothers, one, Archduke
+Peter, serves in the Austrian army as Colonel of the Thirty-second
+Infantry, while Archduke Henry is Master of Horse
+in the Sixth Bavarian Dragoons.</p>
+
+<p>Only one of Louise's four sisters is married, the oldest,
+Anna, now Princess Johannes of Hohenlohe-Bartenstein.</p>
+
+<p>The unmarried sisters are Archduchesses Margareta
+(31 years old), Germana (28 years old), Agnes (22 years
+old).</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Mother Comes of Mentally Tainted Stock</i></p>
+
+<p>Louise's mother, <i>n&eacute;e</i> Princess Alice of Parma, is the
+only surviving sister of the late Duke Robert, who left
+twenty children, all living, and of whom eighteen or nineteen
+are either imbeciles or raving lunatics, the present
+head of the house, Duke Henry, belonging to the first category
+of mentally unsound.</p>
+
+<p>Louise's first cousin, Prince Elias of Parma, the sev<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xxi" id="Page_xxi">[Pg xxi]</a></span>enth
+son, is accounted sound, but Elias's sister, Zita (the
+twelfth child), developed maniacal tendencies since her marriage
+to Archduke Karl Francis Joseph, heir-presumptive
+to the crown of Austria-Hungary.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Francis Joseph's Autocratic Rule</i></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Louise Formerly in Line of Austrian Succession</i></p>
+
+<p>Louise was in the line of the Austrian succession until,
+upon her marriage to the Crown Prince of Saxony (1891),
+she officially renounced her birthrights.</p>
+
+<p>Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria-Hungary is Louise's
+grand-uncle as well as chief of the imperial family of
+Austria, the royal family of Hungary, the Grand-ducal family
+of Tuscany (now extinct as far as the title goes), and
+of the Estes, which is the Ducal Line of Modena, extinct
+in the male line. Finally he is recognized as chief by the
+ducal family of Parma, descendants of the Spanish Hapsburgs.</p>
+
+<p>Emperor Francis Joseph rules all the Hapsburgers, Austrian,
+Hungarian, and those of Tuscany, of Este, of Modena
+and Parma, autocratically, his word being law in the
+family. Even titles conferred by birth can be taken away
+by him, as exemplified in the case of Louise and her brother
+Leopold.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xxii" id="Page_xxii">[Pg xxii]</a></span></p><hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Royal Saxons</i></p>
+
+<p>As a member of the Austrian imperial family, the Hapsburgers,
+founded in 883, Louise ranked higher than her
+husband, the Crown Prince of the petty Kingdom of Saxony,
+whose claim to the royal title dates from 1806,&mdash;a gift
+of the Emperor Napoleon.</p>
+
+<p>She married Frederick Augustus November 21, 1891,
+while the latter's uncle reigned as King Albert of Saxony
+(1873 to 1902).</p>
+
+<p>Louise's father-in-law, up to then known as Prince
+George, succeeded his brother June 19, 1902. He was then
+a widower and his family consisted of:</p>
+
+<p>Princess Mathilde, unmarried,</p>
+
+<p>The Crown Prince Frederick Augustus, husband of
+Louise,</p>
+
+<p>Princess Marie-Josepha, wife of Archduke Otho of
+Austria,</p>
+
+<p>Prince Johann George, at that time married to Isabelle
+of W&uuml;rttemberg, and</p>
+
+<p>Prince Max. The latter subsequently shelved his
+title and entered the Church July 26, 1896. He is
+a professor of canonical law and slated for a German
+bishopric.</p>
+
+<p>At the time of Prince George's ascension, there was
+also living the late King Albert's widow, Queen Caroline,
+<i>n&eacute;e</i> Princess of Wasa, since dead.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xxiii" id="Page_xxiii">[Pg xxiii]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Marchesa Rapallo, <i>n&eacute;e</i> Princess Elizabeth of Saxony,
+is a sister of the late King George.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Louise and Her Father-in-Law</i></p>
+
+<p>During King George's short reign, Louise ran away
+from the Saxon court, end of November, 1902.</p>
+
+<p>On February 11, 1903, divorce was pronounced against
+her by a special court assembled by King George.</p>
+
+<p>Louise was adjudged the guilty party and deprived of
+the name and style of Crown Princess of Saxony. As previously
+(January 27) the Austrian Emperor had forbidden
+her to use the name and title of Austrian Archduchess
+and Imperial and royal Princess, Louise would have been
+nameless but for the rank and title of Countess Montiguoso,
+conferred upon her by King George.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Louise's Alimony Conditional</i></p>
+
+<p>At the same time Louise accepted from the court of
+Saxony a considerable monthly allowance on condition that
+"she undertake nothing liable to compromise the reigning
+family, either by criticism or story, either by word, deed
+or in writing."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Frederick Augustus, King</i></p>
+
+<p>Upon his father's death, Frederick Augustus succeeded<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xxiv" id="Page_xxiv">[Pg xxiv]</a></span>
+King George October 15, 1904. He is now forty-seven
+years old, while Louise is forty-two.</p>
+
+<p>The King of Saxony has six children by Louise, three
+boys and three girls, five born in wedlock, the youngest
+born without wedlock. The children born in wedlock
+are:</p>
+
+<p>
+The present Crown Prince, born 1893.<br />
+Frederick Christian, likewise born in 1893.<br />
+Ernest, born 1896.<br />
+Margaret, born 1900.<br />
+And Marie Alix, born 1901.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The youngest Princess of Saxony, so called, Anna
+Monica, was born by Louise more than six months after
+she left her husband and nearly three months after her
+divorce.</p>
+
+<p>Louise desired to retain Anna Monica in her own custody,
+but though the child's fathership is in doubt, to say
+the least, Frederick Augustus insisted upon the little one's
+transference to his care.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Allowance Raised and a Further Threat</i></p>
+
+<p>King Frederick Augustus raised Louise's allowance to
+$12,000 per year, "which alimony ceases if the said Countess
+Montiguoso shall commit, either personally, directly or
+indirectly, any act in writing or otherwise liable to injure
+the reputation of King Frederick Augustus or members of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xxv" id="Page_xxv">[Pg xxv]</a></span>
+the royal family of Saxony, or if the said Countess Montiguoso
+contributes to any such libellous publication in any
+manner or form."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>The Divorce of Royal Couple Illegal</i></p>
+
+<p>After divorce was pronounced against her, Louise declined
+to accept the decree of the court, pronouncing the
+proceedings illegal on the ground that both she and husband
+are Catholics and that the Roman Catholic Church,
+under no circumstances, recognizes divorce. Her protest
+gained importance from the fact that her marriage to Frederick
+Augustus was solemnized by the rites of the Roman
+Catholic Church. The Saxon court, on the other hand,
+justified its own decision by basing same on a certain civil
+ceremony entered into by Louise and Frederick Augustus
+previous to the church marriage.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Louise Marries a Second Time</i></p>
+
+<p>When Louise realized in the course of years that Frederick
+Augustus would not take her back, she changed her
+mind as to the illegality of her divorce and married, September
+25, 1907, Enrico Toselli, an Italian composer and
+pianist of small reputation.</p>
+
+<p>This marriage was performed civilly. They have one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xxvi" id="Page_xxvi">[Pg xxvi]</a></span>
+child, a boy, about whose custody the now legally separated
+parents have instituted several actions in law. The boy
+has now been allotted to the care of Toselli's mother.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>King Did Not Marry Again</i></p>
+
+<p>King Frederick Augustus, though by the laws of Saxony
+and Germany allowed to contract a second marriage,
+has not availed himself of the license, probably in deference
+to the wishes of the Vatican. At the same time he spurned
+all of Louise's attempts at reconciliation, the most dramatic
+of which was her <i>coup de t&ecirc;te</i> of December, 1904, when
+she went to Dresden "to see her children," was arrested at
+the palace gate and conducted out of the kingdom by high
+police officials.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Other Royalties Mentioned in This Volume</i></p>
+
+<p>Louise refers, in her Diary, to the Kaiser as "cousin."
+If there be any relationship between her and William, it is
+that imposed by the Saxon marriage, Saxon princes and
+princesses having frequently intermarried with the royal
+and princely Hohenzollerns, despite the differences of religion.
+There are four courts of Saxony despite that of
+Dresden: Weimar, Meiningen, Altenburg and Coburg and
+Gotha.</p>
+
+<p>The latter duchy's ruler, Karl Eduard, is of English<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xxvii" id="Page_xxvii">[Pg xxvii]</a></span>
+descent, a son of the late Duke of Albany. Hence, Louise's
+cousinship with Victoria Melita, sometime Grand Duchess
+of Hesse, now Grand Duchess Kyril of Russia.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, Louise is closely related to all the Orleans
+and Bourbons.</p>
+
+<p>Marie Antoinette, Queen of France, who died on the
+scaffold at Paris, October 16, 1793, she calls her great-grand-aunt
+and namesake, claiming, at the same time, most
+of the Kings and princes of France of the seventeenth and
+eighteenth centuries as relatives.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xxviii" id="Page_xxviii">[Pg xxviii]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xxix" id="Page_xxix">[Pg xxix]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='center'><h2>CONTENTS</h2></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#I">CHAPTER I</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>MOTHERHOOD</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>A sterile Royal Family once fruitful&mdash;Diary true record of self&mdash;Long legs of Countess Solms&mdash;A child only because he can't help it&mdash;Wet nurse to Socialist brat&mdash;Royal permit for nursing&mdash;Royal negligee talk&mdash;A Saxon failing</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#II">CHAPTER II</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>THE SWEET FAMILY</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Husband loving, but family nasty&mdash;Money considerations&mdash;Brutal caresses in public&mdash;Pests in the family&mdash;Awful serenity&mdash;Meddle with angels' or devils' affairs&mdash;Father-in-law's gritty kiss</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#III">CHAPTER III</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>WEEPING WILLOW&mdash;EMBLEM ROYAL</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>A pious fraud&mdash;Theresa Mayer&mdash;Character of the Queen&mdash;Mopishness rampant</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#IV">CHAPTER IV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>MY UNPLEASANT YOUTH</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Father hard to get along with&mdash;Royal imaginations&mdash;Kings cursing other kings&mdash;Poverty and pretense&mdash;Piety that makes children suffer&mdash;Up at five to pray on cold stones&mdash;Chilblains and prayer</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#V">CHAPTER V</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>A FIERCE DISCIPLINARIAN</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Diamonds used to punish children&mdash;Face object of attacks&mdash; Grunting and snorting at the royal table&mdash;Blood flowing at dinner&mdash;My brother jumps out of a window</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#VI">CHAPTER VI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>LEOPOLD DEFENDS MY HONOR AT HIS PERIL</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Punished for objecting to familiarities&mdash;Awful names I was called&mdash;Locked in the room with wicked teacher&mdash;Defend myself with burning lamp&mdash;My brother nearly kills my would-be assailant</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#VII">CHAPTER VII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>PRINCES AND PRINCESSES DANCE TO THE TUNE OF THE WHIP</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The result shows in the character of rulers&mdash;Why English kings and princes are superior to the Continental kind&mdash;Leopold's awful revenge&mdash;Mother acts the tigress&mdash;Her mailed fist&mdash;"I forbid Your Imperial Highness to see that dog"</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#VIII">CHAPTER VIII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>PLANNING TO GET A HUSBAND FOR ME</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Dissecting possible wooers at Vienna&mdash;Royalty after money, not character&mdash;"He is a Cohen, not a Coburg"&mdash;Prince who looked like a Jew counter-jumper in his Sunday best&mdash;Balkan princes tabooed by Francis Joseph&mdash;A good time for the girls&mdash;Army men commanded to attend us</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#IX">CHAPTER IX</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>LOVE-MAKING</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The fascinating Baron&mdash;The man's audacity&mdash;Putting the question boldly&mdash;Real love-making&mdash;<i>Risqu&eacute;</i> stories for royalty</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#X">CHAPTER X</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>MY POPULARITY RENDERS GEORGE DYSPEPTIC</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Cudgel-Majesty&mdash;Prince George's intrigues&mdash;No four-horse coach for Princess&mdash;Popular demonstration in my favor&mdash;"All-highest" displeasure</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XI">CHAPTER XI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>SCOLDED FOR BEING POPULAR</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Entourage spied upon by George's minions&mdash;My husband proves a weakling&mdash;I disavow the personal compliment&mdash;No more intelligent than a king should be </td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XII">CHAPTER XII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>ROYAL DISGRACE&mdash;LIGHTNING AND SHADOWS</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Ordered around by the Queen&mdash;Give thanks to a bully&mdash;Jealous of the "mob's" applause&mdash;"The old monkey after '<i>Hochs</i>'"&mdash;Criticizing the "old man"&mdash;Royalty's plea for popularity&mdash;Proposed punishments for people refusing to love royalty</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XIII">CHAPTER XIII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>UNSPEAKABLE LITTLENESSES OF PETTY COURTS</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Another quarrel with my husband&mdash;Personal attendant to a corpse&mdash;Killing by pin pricks&mdash;The mythical three "<i>How art thou's?</i>"&mdash;Unwanted sympathy from my inferiors&mdash;Pride of the decapitated Queen of France is in me&mdash;Lovers not impossible&mdash;Court to blame for them&mdash;My husband acts cowardly&mdash;Brutalizes my household&mdash;I lock myself in</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XIV">CHAPTER XIV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>IMPERIAL RUSSIAN ETHICS TRANSFERRED TO DRESDEN</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>My husband's reported escapade&mdash;Did he give diamonds to a dancing girl?&mdash;His foolish excuses&mdash;"I am your pal"&mdash;A restaurant scene in St. Petersburg&mdash;The birthday suit</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XV">CHAPTER XV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>ROYALTY NOT PRETTY, AND WHY</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Fecundity royal women's greatest charm&mdash;How to have beautiful children </td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XVI">CHAPTER XVI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>MORE JEALOUSIES OF THE GREAT</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>Men and women caress me with their eyes&mdash;Some disrespectful sayings and doings of mine&mdash;First decided quarrel with Frederick Augustus&mdash;I go to the theatre in spite of him</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XVII">CHAPTER XVII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>THE ROYAL PRINCE, WHO BEHAVES LIKE A DRUNKEN BRICKLAYER</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>I face the music, but my husband runs away&mdash;Prince George can't look me in the eye&mdash;He roars and bellows&mdash;Advocates wife-beating&mdash;I defy him&mdash;German classics&mdash;"Jew literature" <i>Auto da f&eacute;</i> ordered</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>I DEFY THEM</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Laughter and pleasant faces for me&mdash;Frederick Augustus refuses to back me, but I don't care&mdash;We quarrel about my reading&mdash;He professes to gross ignorance</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XIX">CHAPTER XIX</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>ATTEMPTED VIOLENCE DEFEATED BY FIRMNESS</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Frederick Augustus seeks to carry out his father's brutal threats&mdash;Orders and threats before servants&mdash;I positively refuse to be ordered about&mdash;Frederick Augustus plays Mrs. Lot&mdash;Enjoying myself at the theatre </td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XX">CHAPTER XX</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>TITLED SERVANTS LOW AND CUNNING</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>George tries to rob me of my confidante&mdash;Enter the King's spy, Baroness Tisch in her true character&mdash;Punishment of one royal spy</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXI">CHAPTER XXI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>BANISHMENT</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>I am ordered to repair to a country house with the hated spy as my Grand Mistress&mdash;My first impulse to go home, but afraid parents won't have me</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXII">CHAPTER XXII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>"POOR RELATIONS" IN ROYAL HOUSES</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Myself and Frederick Augustus quarrel and pound table&mdash;The Countess Cosel's golden vessel&mdash;Off to Brighton&mdash;Threat of a beating&mdash;I provoke shadows of divorce&mdash;King threatens force&mdash;More defiance on my part&mdash;I humble the King and am allowed to invite my brother Leopold</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>A SERVANT-TYRANT</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>My correspondence is not safe from the malicious woman appointed Grand Mistress&mdash;Lovers at a distance and by correspondence&mdash;Fell in love with a leg</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>MORE TYRANNY OF A TITLED SERVANT</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>My daily papers seized, and only milk-and-water clippings are submitted&mdash;"King's orders"&mdash;Grand Mistress's veracity doubted&mdash;My threats of suspension cow her</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXV">CHAPTER XXV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>THE TWO BLACK SHEEP OF THE FAMILY UNITED</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Leopold upon my troubles and his own&mdash;Imperial Hapsburgs that, though Catholics, got divorces or married divorced women&mdash;Books that are full of guilty knowledge, according to royalty&mdash;A mud-hole lodging for one Imperial Highness&mdash;Leopold's girl&mdash;What I think of army officers' wives&mdash;Their anonymous letters&mdash;Leopold's money troubles&mdash;We will fool our enemies by feigning obedience</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>FREDERICK AUGUSTUS CONTINUES VERY RAW</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Manners <i>&agrave; la</i> barracks natural to royal princes&mdash;Names I am called&mdash;My ladies scandalized&mdash;Leopold turned over a new leaf, according to agreement, and is well treated&mdash;The King grateful to me for having "influenced Leopold to be good"</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>PRINCE MAX MAKES LOVE TO ME</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Wants me to consult him on all spiritual matters&mdash;Warns me against the Kaiser, the heretic bishop&mdash;Princes as ill-mannered as Russian-Jew up-starts </td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>THE SHAH OF PERSIA FALLS IN LOVE WITH ME</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The "animal" and his show of diamonds and rubies&mdash;Overcome by love he treats me like a lady of the harem&mdash;On the defensive&mdash;The King of kings an ill-behaved brute&mdash;Eats like a pig and affronts Queen&mdash;Wiped off greasy hands on my state robe&mdash;When ten thousand gouged-out eyes carpeted his throne&mdash;Offers of jewels&mdash;"Does he take me for a ballet girl?"&mdash;The Shah almost compromises me&mdash;King, alarmed, abruptly ends dinner&mdash;I receive presents from him</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>THE SHAH COMPROMISES ME IN PUBLIC</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Has only eyes for me at the grand man&oelig;uvres, and I can't drive him from my carriage&mdash;Ignores the King and the military spectacle&mdash;Calls me his adored one&mdash;Court in despair&mdash;Shah ruins priceless carpets to make himself a lamb stew</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXX">CHAPTER XXX</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>MY LIFE AT COURT BECOMES UNBEARABLE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Laughter a crime&mdash;Disappointed Queen lays down the law for my behavior&mdash;Frederick Augustus sometimes fighting drunk&mdash;Draws sword on me&mdash;Prince George would have me beaten&mdash;To bed with his boots on </td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>PRISON FOR PRINCES THAT OPPOSE THE KING</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Duke of Saxony banished&mdash;Cut off from good literature even&mdash;Anecdote concerning the Grand Dauphin and his "kettledrums"&mdash;A royal prince's garrison life&mdash;His association with lewd women</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>PRINCE GEORGE SHOWN THE DOOR BY GRAND-DUCHESS MELITA</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>A royal lady who walks her garden attired in a single diaphanous garment&mdash;Won't stand for any meddling&mdash;Called impertinent&mdash;My virtuous indignation assumed&mdash;A flirtation at a distance&mdash;An audacious lover&mdash;The Grand Mistress hoodwinked&mdash;Matrimonial horns for Kaiser&mdash;The banished Duke dies&mdash;Princes scolded like school-boys</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>MELITA'S LOVE AFFAIRS AND MINE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Grand Duchess tells me how she cudgeled George&mdash;Living dictaphone employed&mdash;Shows him who is mistress of the house&mdash;Snaps fingers in Prince George's face&mdash;Debate about titles&mdash;"A sexless thing of a husband"&mdash;Conference between lover and husband&mdash;Grand Duke doesn't object to his wife's lover, but lover objects to "his paramour being married"</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>MORE ABOUT THE SWEET ROYAL FAMILY LIFE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>"Closed season" for petty meannesses&mdash;A prince who enjoys himself like a pig&mdash;Why princes learn trades&mdash;A family dinner to the accompaniment of threats and smashing of table&mdash;The Duke's widow and children robbed of their inheritance by royal family&mdash;King confiscates testament</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>FLIRTATION DEVELOPS INTO LOVE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>At the theatre&mdash;My adorer must have felt my presence&mdash;Forgot his diplomacy&mdash;The mute salute&mdash;His good looks&mdash;His mouth a promise of a thousand sweet kisses&mdash;Our love won't be any painted business</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>COUNT BIELSK MAKES LOVE TO THE CROWN PRINCESS</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Fearless to indiscretion&mdash;He "thou's" me&mdash;Puts all his chances on one card&mdash;Proposes a rendezvous&mdash;Shall I go or shall I not go?&mdash;Peril if I go and peril if I don't</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>RAPID LOVE MAKING IN THE BOIS</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>A discreet maid&mdash;"Remove thy glove"&mdash;Kisses of passion, pure kisses, powerful kisses&mdash;I see my lover daily&mdash;Countess Barnello offers "doves' nest"&mdash;Driving to rendezvous in state&mdash;"Naughty Louise," who makes fun of George </td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>"IN LOVE THERE ARE NO PRINCESSES, ONLY WOMEN"</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>A diplomatic trick&mdash;Jealous of Romano's past&mdash;The pact for life and the talisman&mdash;If there were a theatre fire the talisman would discover our love to the King&mdash;Some ill-natured reflections&mdash;Bernhardt's escapades cover up my tracks&mdash;The "black sheep" jumps his horse over a coffin&mdash;King gives him a beating&mdash;Bernhardt's mess-room lingo&mdash;Anecdotes of royal voluptuaries&mdash;Forces animals to devour each other&mdash;Naked ballet-girls as horses&mdash;Abnormals rule the world</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>MY PUNISHMENT</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>I lose my lover&mdash;Quarrels with me because I did my duty as a mother&mdash;Royalty extols me for the same reason&mdash;-My pride of kingship aroused by Socialist scribblers&mdash;Change my opinion as to Duke's widow&mdash;Parents arrive&mdash;Father and his alleged astrolatry&mdash;His finances disarranged by alimony payments&mdash;My uncle, the Emperor, rebukes mother harshly for complaining of <i>rou&eacute;</i> father</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XL">CHAPTER XL</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>A PLEBEIAN LOVER</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>In need of a friend&mdash;My physician offers his friendship&mdash;I discover that he loves me, but he will never confess&mdash;I give him encouragement&mdash;We manage to persuade the King to further our intrigue&mdash;Not a bit repentant of my peccadilloes&mdash;Very submissive&mdash;Introduced to my lover's wife</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XLI">CHAPTER XLI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>AN ATROCIOUS ROYAL SCANDAL</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>A royal couple that shall be nameless&mdash;The voluptuous Duchess&mdash;Her husband the worst of degenerates&mdash;"What monsters these royalties be"&mdash;Nameless outrages&mdash;A Duchess forced to have lovers&mdash;Ferdinand and I live like married folk&mdash;Duchess feared for her life&mdash;Her husband murdered her&mdash;I scold and humiliate my overbearing Grand Mistress&mdash;The medical report too horrible to contemplate</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XLII">CHAPTER XLII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>I LOSE ANOTHER OF MY LOVERS</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Happily no scandal&mdash;Rewarded for bearing children&mdash;$1250&mdash;for becoming a mother&mdash;Royal poverty&mdash;Bernhardt, the black sheep, in hot water again&mdash;The King rebukes me for taking his part</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XLIII">CHAPTER XLIII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>THE CROWN PRINCESS QUELLS A RIOT</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Asked to play the coward, and I refuse&mdash;A hostler who would die for a look from me&mdash;Hostler marriages in royal houses&mdash;Anecdotes and unknown facts concerning royal ladies and their offspring&mdash;Refuse police escort and rioters acclaim me&mdash;Whole royal family proud of my feat</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XLIV">CHAPTER XLIV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>THE NEW LOVER, AND "I PLAY THE HUSSY FOR FAIR"</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Who is that most exquisite <i>Vort&auml;nzer?</i>&mdash;A lovely boy&mdash;"Blush, good white paper"&mdash;I long for Henry&mdash;My eyes reflect love&mdash;"I must see you tonight. Arrange with Lucretia"&mdash;Sorry I ever loved a man before Henry&mdash;Poetry even&mdash;I try to get him an office at court&mdash;Afraid women will steal him</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XLV">CHAPTER XLV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>LOVE AND THE HAPPINESS IT CONVEYS</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>My Grand Mistress suspects because I am so amiable&mdash;Pangs of jealousy&mdash;Every good-looking man pursued by women&mdash;A good story of my cousin, the Duchess Berri&mdash;We all go cycling together&mdash;The Vitzthums&mdash;Love making on the street&mdash;A mud bath</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XLVI">CHAPTER XLVI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>FEARS FOR MY LOVE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Some reflections on queens of old who punished recreant lovers&mdash;Henry was in debt and I gave him money&mdash;Indignities by which some of that money was earned&mdash;Husband accompanies me to Loschwitz&mdash;Reflections on Frederick Augustus's character</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XLVII">CHAPTER XLVII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>LOVE'S INTERMEZZO</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Bernhardt takes advantage of my day-dreams&mdash;My husband's indolent <i>gaucherie</i>&mdash;Violent love-making&mdash;Ninon who loved families, not men&mdash;Does Bernhardt really love me? </td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XLVIII">CHAPTER XLVIII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>GRAND MISTRESS TELLS HUSBAND I KEEP A DIARY</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>He wants to see it, but seems unsuspecting&mdash;Grand Mistress denies that she meant mischief, but I upbraid her unmercifully&mdash;Threaten to dismiss her like a thieving lackey</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#XLIX">CHAPTER XLIX</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>ARISTOCRATIC VISITORS</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>I hear disquieting news about my lover's character&mdash;The aristocracy a dirty lot&mdash;Love-making made easy by titled friends&mdash;Anecdotes of Richelieu and the Duke of Orleans&mdash;The German nobleman who married Miss Wheeler and had to resign his birthright&mdash;The disreputable business the Pappenheims and other nobles used to be in&mdash;I am afraid to question my lover as to charges</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#L">CHAPTER L</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>TO LIVE UNDER KING'S AND PRINCE GEORGE'S EYE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Abruptly ordered to the royal summer residence&mdash;The Vitzthums and Henry take flight&mdash;Enmeshed by Prince George's intrigues&mdash;Those waiting for a crown have no friends&mdash;What I will do when Queen&mdash;No wonder Kings of old married only relatives&mdash;Interesting facts about relative marriages furnished by scientist</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LI">CHAPTER XLI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>COLD RECEPTION&mdash;ENEMIES ALL AROUND</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Frederick Augustus gives his views on adultery&mdash;Doesn't care personally, but "the King knows"&mdash;"Thank God, the King is ill"&mdash;I am deprived of my children&mdash;Have I got the moral strength to defy my enemies?</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LII">CHAPTER LII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>PRINCE GEORGE REVEALS TO ME THE DEPTH OF HIS HATRED</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>A terrible interview&mdash;"The devil will come to claim you"&mdash;Uncertain how much the King and Prince George know&mdash;I break into the nursery and stay with my children all day&mdash;Prince George insults me in my own rooms and threatens prison if I disobey him</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LIII">CHAPTER LIII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>REVOLVER IN HAND, I DEMAND AN EXPLANATION</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>An insolent Grand Mistress, but of wonderful courage&mdash;Imprisonment, threats to kill have no effect on her&mdash;Disregards my titles&mdash;My lover's souvenir and endearing words&mdash;How she caused Henry to leave me&mdash;My paroxysms of rage&mdash;Henry's complete betrayal of me</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LIV">CHAPTER LIV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>FORCED TO DO PENANCE LIKE A TRAPPIST-MONK</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>"By the King's orders"&mdash;I submit for the sake of my children&mdash;Must fast as well as pray&mdash;In delicate health, I insist upon returning to Dresden&mdash;Bernhardt, to avoid being maltreated by King, threatens him with his sword&mdash;The King's awful wrath&mdash;Bernhardt prisoner in Nossen&mdash;I escape, temporarily, protracted <i>ennui</i> </td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LV">CHAPTER LV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>FRANCIS JOSEPH JOINS MY SAXON ENEMIES</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Cuts me dead before whole family&mdash;Everybody talks over my head at dinner&mdash;I refuse to attend more court festivities&mdash;Husband protests because I won't stand for insult from Emperor&mdash;I give rein to my contempt for his family&mdash;Hypocrites, despoilers, gamblers, religious maniacs, brutes&mdash;Benign lords to the people, tyrants at home&mdash;I cry for my children like a she-dog whose young were drowned</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LVI">CHAPTER LVI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>I AM DETERMINED TO DO AS I PLEASE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>I reject mother's tearful reproaches&mdash;I beard Prince George in his lair despite whining chamberlains&mdash;I tell him what I think of him, and he becomes frightened&mdash;Threatens madhouse&mdash;"I dare you to steal my children"&mdash;I win my point&mdash;and the children&mdash;"Her Imperial Highness regrets"&mdash;Lots of forbidden literature&mdash;Precautions against intriguing Grand Mistress&mdash;The affair with Henry&mdash;was it a flower-covered pit to entrap me?&mdash;Castle Stolpen and some of its awful history</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LVII">CHAPTER LVII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>I CONFESS TO PAPA</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>King Albert dies and King George a very sick man&mdash;Papa's good advice&mdash;"You will be Queen soon"&mdash;A lovely old man, very much troubled </td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LVIII">CHAPTER LVIII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>MONSIEUR GIRON&mdash;RICHARD, THE ARTIST</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The King asks me to superintend lessons by M. Giron&mdash;A most fascinating man&mdash;His Grecian eyes&mdash;He is a painter as well as a teacher&mdash;In love&mdash;Careless whether I am caught in my lover's arms&mdash;"Richard" talks anarchy to me&mdash;Why I don't believe in woman suffrage&mdash;Characters and doings of women in power</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LIX">CHAPTER LIX</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>THE PEOPLE THINK ME A WANTON</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Credit me with innumerable lovers, but don't disapprove&mdash;Glad the King feels scandalized&mdash;Picture of the "she-monster"&mdash;Everybody eager for love&mdash;I delight in Richard's jealousy&mdash;Husband's indelicate announcement at table&mdash;I rush from the royal opera to see my lover&mdash;A threatening dream&mdash;Richard not mercenary like my noble lovers</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LX">CHAPTER LX</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>THE DAY OF JUDGMENT LOOMS UP</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>My Grand Mistress shows her colors&mdash;Richard advises flight&mdash;I hesitate on account of my children&mdash;My Grand Mistress steals a letter from Richard to me&mdash;I opine that an adulteress's word is as good as a thief's&mdash;I humble my Grand Mistress, but it won't do me much good&mdash;Pleasant hours at his studio </td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LXI">CHAPTER LXI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>A MAD HOUSE FOR LOUISE&mdash;PROBABLY</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>My confidential maid, Lucretia, is banished&mdash;The new King has got the incriminating letter, but Frederick Augustus says nothing&mdash;On the eve of judgment the King falls ill</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LXII">CHAPTER LXII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>KING'S ILLNESS A BOON TO LOVERS</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Prayers mixed with joy&mdash;Espionage disorganized, and I can do as I please&mdash;Love-making in the school-room&mdash;Buying a ring for Richard&mdash;"Wishing it on"&mdash;"Our marriage"&mdash;King's life despaired of&mdash;My tormentors obsequious&mdash;Smile at my peccadilloes&mdash;Husband proud of me&mdash;My popularity a great asset&mdash;Frederick Augustus delighted when he hears that King can't last long&mdash;The joyous luncheon at Richard's studio&mdash;Making fun of majesties&mdash;I expect to be Queen presently</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LXIII">CHAPTER LXIII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>WHAT I WILL DO WHEN I AM QUEEN</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>A foretaste: titled servants put me <i>en route</i> for lover&mdash;The bargain I will propose to Frederick Augustus&mdash;Frederick Augustus will be a complaisant King&mdash;To revive <i>Petit Trianon</i>&mdash;I am addressed as Queen</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LXIV">CHAPTER LXIV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>THE KING IS ALIVE AND PUNISHMENT NEAR</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>My queenship postponed&mdash;King George publicly acclaimed&mdash;Cuts me dead in church&mdash;Frederick Augustus's disappointment&mdash;Terrible power of a king over his family, and no appeal&mdash;I am like the nude witch of old </td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LXV">CHAPTER LXV</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>FISTICUFFS DON'T SAVE MY CROWN</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The attempted theft of my Diary&mdash;Grand Mistress discovered after breaking open my desk&mdash;Reading Diary like mad&mdash;Personal encounter between me and Grand Mistress&mdash;I am the stronger, and carry off the manuscript, but have to leave all my love letters, which go to the King&mdash;I discover that they had stolen the key to my Diary from my neck</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LXVI">CHAPTER LXVI</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>ABANDONED</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>My titled servants withdraw from me&mdash;An old footman my sole support&mdash;Queen takes the children&mdash;Old Andrew plays spy for me</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#LXVII">CHAPTER LXVII</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>FAMILY COUNCIL AT CASTLE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Rendezvous at studio&mdash;State takes my children from me&mdash;Madhouse or flight&mdash;I brought fifty-two trunks to the palace&mdash;Depart with small satchel&mdash;If I attempt to see my children I'll be seized as "mad woman"&mdash;Varying emotions of the last ten minutes&mdash;Threatening shadows thrown on a curtain decide me&mdash;Ready for flight&mdash;Diary the last thing to go into the satchel<br /></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 20%">
+<img src="images/crown.jpg" width="100%" alt="FROM LOUISE&#39;S DIARY" title="" />
+<span class="caption">FROM LOUISE&#39;S DIARY</span>
+<br /><br /></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<h2>THE STORY OF LOUISE,
+CROWN PRINCESS
+OF SAXONY</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="I" id="I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h4>MOTHERHOOD</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>A sterile Royal Family once fruitful&mdash;Diary true record of self&mdash;Long
+legs of Countess Solms&mdash;A child only because he can't
+help it&mdash;Wet nurse to Socialist brat&mdash;Royal permit for nursing&mdash;Royal
+negligee talk&mdash;A Saxon failing.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 33em;">Castle Wachwitz</span>, <i>February 17, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I did my duty towards the Saxons. I gave them a
+Prince. The Royal House ought to be grateful to me:&mdash;I
+am helping to perpetuate it. Who would, if I didn't?
+My sister-in-law, Princess Mathilde, is an old maid. The
+other, Maria Josepha, as sterile as Sarah was before she
+reached the nineties. This applies also to Isabelle, the wife
+of brother-in-law, John-George. And Prince Max, tired of
+ballet girls, is about to take the soutane.</p>
+
+<p>There is just one more royal Saxon princess, Elizabeth,
+and she succeeded in having children neither with her hus<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>band
+<i>de jure</i>, the late Duke of Genoa, nor with her husband-lover,
+Marquis Rapallo.</p>
+
+<p>Louise, then, is the sole living hope of the royal Saxons
+that, only 160 years ago, boasted of a sovereign having
+three hundred and fifty-two children to his credit, among
+them not a few subsequently accounted geniuses. Augustus,
+the Physical Strong (1670 to 1733), was the happy
+father, the <i>Mar&eacute;shal de</i> Saxe one of his numerous gifted
+offspring.</p>
+
+<p>Alas, since then the House of Wettin has declined not
+in numbers only.</p>
+
+<p>Poor baby is burdened with ten names in honor of so
+many ancestors. Why, in addition, they want to call him
+"Maria" I cannot for the life of me understand, for there
+never was a Saxon princess or queen that amounted to a
+row of pins.</p>
+
+<p>I wonder whether they will say the same of me after
+the crown of the Wettiners descended upon my brow.
+Those so inclined should consult these papers ere they begin
+throwing stones, for my Diary is intended to contain
+my innermost thoughts, my ambitions, my promises for the
+future, <i>Myself</i>, and let no one judge me by what I say
+other than what is recorded here.</p>
+
+<p>These pages are my Father Confessor. I confess to
+myself,&mdash;what a woman in my position says to members of
+her family or official and semi-official persons&mdash;her servants,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+so to speak&mdash;doesn't signify, to borrow a phrase from my
+good cousin, the Kaiser Wilhelm.</p>
+
+<p>Father-in-law George tells me to trust no one but him,
+my husband, and Frederick Augustus's sisters, cousins and
+aunts, and to rely on prayer only, yet, stubborn as nature
+made me, I prefer respectable white paper to my sweet
+relatives.</p>
+
+<p>Up to now my most ambitious literary attempts were
+intimate letters to my brother Leopold, the "Black Sheep."
+As I now start in writing letters to myself, it occurs to me
+that my worse self may be corresponding with my better
+self, or vice versa. If I was only a poet like Countess
+Solms, but, dear, no. All real bluestockings are ugly and
+emaciated. Solms is both, and her legs are as long and as
+thin as those of Diana, my English hunter.</p>
+
+<p>I think this Diary business will be quite amusing,&mdash;at
+any rate, it will be more so than the conversation of my
+ladies. Ah, those ladies of the court of Saxony! If they
+would only talk of anything else but orphans, sisters of
+charity and ballet girls. The latter always have one foot
+in Hades, while you can see the wings grow on the backs
+of the others.</p>
+
+<p>When the von Schoenberg struts in, peacock fashion,
+and announces "his royal Highness did himself the honor
+to soil his bib," I sometimes stare at her, not comprehending
+at the moment, and the fact that she is talking of my baby<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+only gradually comes to mind. Isn't it ridiculous that a
+little squalling bit of humanity, whom the accident of birth
+planted in a palace, is royalty first and all the time, and a
+child only because he can't help it?</p>
+
+<p>As for me, I am a woman and mother first, and my
+child is an animated lump of flesh and blood&mdash;<i>my</i> flesh and
+blood&mdash;first and all the time. Of course, when baby came
+I wanted to nurse it. You should have seen Frederick
+Augustus's face. If I had proposed to become a wet-nurse
+to some "socialist brat" he couldn't have been more astonished.
+Yet my great ancestress, the Empress Maria Theresa,
+nursed her babies "before a parquet of proletarians,"
+at the theatre and at reviews, and thought nothing of giving
+the breast to a poor foundling left in the park of Schoenbrunn.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus recovered his speech after a while&mdash;though
+he never says anything that would seem to require
+reflection, he always acts the deep thinker. "Louise,"
+he mumbled reproachfully,&mdash;"what will his Majesty
+say?"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you were the father of the child," I remarked
+innocently.</p>
+
+<p>"No levity where the King is concerned," he corrected
+poor me. "You know very well that for an act of this
+kind a royal permit must be previously obtained."</p>
+
+<p>Followed a long pause to give his mental apparatus time<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+to think some more. Then: "And, besides, it will hurt
+your figure."</p>
+
+<p>"Augusta Victoria" (the German Empress) "nursed
+half a dozen children, and her <i>d&eacute;collet&eacute;</i> is still much admired,"
+I insisted.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus paid no attention to this argument.
+"Anyhow, I don't want the doctors to examine your breast
+daily," he said with an air of mixed sentimentality and
+brusqueness.</p>
+
+<p>These were not his own words, though. My husband,
+not content with calling a spade a spade, invariably uses
+the nastiest terms in the dictionary of debauchery. When
+he tells me of his love adventures before marriage it's always
+"I bagged that girl," or "I made something tender out
+of her," just as a hunter talks of game or a leg of venison.</p>
+
+<p>He doesn't want to be rude; he is so without knowing
+it. His indelicacy would be astounding in a man born on
+the steps of the throne, if the Princes of this royal house
+were not all inclined that way.</p>
+
+<p>Two weeks after my accouchement George and Isabelle
+called. Though brother and sister-in-law, we are not
+at all on terms of intimacy. Frederick Augustus made
+some remarks of a personal nature that sent all the blood
+to my head; Isabelle seemed to enjoy my discomfort, but
+George had the decency to go to the window and comment
+on the dirty boots of a guard lieutenant just entering the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+courtyard. Frederick Augustus thought he had made a
+hit with Isabelle and applauded his own effort with a loud
+guffaw, while pounding his thighs, which seems to give him
+particular satisfaction.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="II" id="II"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h4>THE SWEET FAMILY</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Husband loving, but family nasty&mdash;Money considerations&mdash;Brutal
+caresses in public&mdash;Pests in the family&mdash;Awful serenity&mdash;Meddle
+with angels' or devils' affairs&mdash;Father-in-law's gritty
+kiss.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 33em;">Castle Wachwitz</span>, <i>February 24, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I have been married some fifteen months and I love
+my husband. He is kind, not too inquisitive and passionate.
+I have better claims to domestic happiness than most of my
+royal sisters on or near the thrones of Europe. Of course
+when I married into the Saxon royal family I expected to
+be treated with ill-concealed enmity. Wasn't I young and
+handsome? Reason enough for the old maids and childless
+wives, my new sweet relatives, to detest me.</p>
+
+<p>Wasn't I poor? I brought little with me and my presence
+entailed a perpetual expense. Now in royal families
+money is everything, or nearly so, and the newcomer that
+eats but doesn't increase the family fortune is regarded as
+an interloper.</p>
+
+<p>If I hadn't "<i>made good</i>," that is if, in due time, I
+hadn't become a mother, my position among the purse-proud,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+rapacious and narrow-minded Wettiners would have become
+wellnigh intolerable. But I proved myself a <i>Holstein</i>. I
+rose superior to Queen Carola, who never had a child, and
+to Maria, Mathilda, Isabelle and Elizabeth, who either
+couldn't or didn't. But, to my mind, acting the <i>cow</i> for
+the benefit of the race did not invite stable manners.</p>
+
+<p>I wasn't used to them. They hadn't figured in the
+dreams of my girlhood. I thought love less robust. I
+didn't expect to be squeezed before my ladies. Even the
+best beloved husband shouldn't take liberties with his wife's
+waist in the parlor.</p>
+
+<p>And Frederick Augustus's negligee talk is no less
+offensive than his manner of laying loving hands on my
+person. As a rule, he treats me like a third-row dancing
+girl that goes to petition the manager for a place nearer
+the footlights. There is no limit to his familiarities or to
+the license of his conversation. "<i>Fine wench</i>" is a term of
+affection he likes to bestow on his future queen; indeed,
+one of the less gross. He has the weakness to like epithets
+that, I am told, gentlemen sometimes use in their clubs, but
+never towards a mistress they half-way respect.</p>
+
+<p>My father-in-law, Prince George, is a pest of another
+kind. While Frederick Augustus is jovial and rude, George
+is rude and serene of a serenity that would make a Grand
+Inquisitor look gay.</p>
+
+<p>One of my famous ancestresses, the Princess-Palatine,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+sister-in-law of Louis the Fourteenth, once boxed the
+Dauphin's ears for a trick he played on her, by putting his
+upright thumb in the centre of an armchair which her royal
+highness meant to sit on.</p>
+
+<p>Whenever I behold George's funereal visage, I long to
+repeat the Dauphin's undignified offense. I would like to
+see this royal parcel of melancholy jump and dance; change
+that ever-frowning and mournful aspect of his. Indeed, I
+would like to treat him to one of the anecdotes that made
+the Duchess de Berri explode with laughter.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus lives in deadly fear of him, and
+never gets his hair cut without first considering whether
+his father will approve or not. George isn't happy unless
+he renders other people unhappy. I actually believe he
+would rather meddle with the angels' or devils' affairs than
+say his prayers, though he is a bigot of the most advanced
+stripe.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes when the itch for meddling has hold of
+him, he cites all the married princes of the royal house
+and lectures them on the wickedness of having no children,
+winding up by commanding each one to explain, in detail,
+his failure to have offspring.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, these gentlemen put the blame on their
+wives, whereupon the ladies are forthwith summoned to
+be threatened and cajoled.</p>
+
+<p>Prince George had the great goodness to approve of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+my baby and to congratulate me, also to set me up as an
+example for Isabelle. When I return to Dresden I shall
+be made Colonel of Horse.</p>
+
+<p>Twice has George kissed me,&mdash;upon my arrival in Saxony
+and five days after the birth of my child. It felt like
+a piece of gritty ice rubbing against my forehead.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="III" id="III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h4>WEEPING WILLOW&mdash;EMBLEM ROYAL</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>A pious fraud&mdash;Theresa Mayer&mdash;Character of the Queen&mdash;Mopishness
+rampant.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 33em;">Castle Wachwitz</span>, <i>March 1, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Prince Max came unexpectedly. He is studying for the
+priesthood and looks more sour than his father even. I was
+in bed, nursing a sick headache, but presuming upon his
+future clerical dignity, he walked in without ceremony and
+sat down on a chair near my bed. Then he raised his hands
+in prayer and announced that he had come to assist in my
+devotions.</p>
+
+<p>"Forget that I am your brother-in-law and cousin," he
+said; "tell me what's in your heart, Louise, and I will pray
+to the good God for thee."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't trouble yourself," I replied, "I have a court
+chaplain charged with these affairs. Rather tell me about
+the latest comic opera."</p>
+
+<p>"Comic opera!" he stammered. "You don't intend to
+go to such worldly amusements now that you are a mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I do. The very day I return to Dresden
+I will take a look at your girl."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"My&mdash;what?" gasped Max.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Theresa&mdash;Theresa Mayer. I understand she
+made a great hit in the <i>Geisha</i>, and everybody approves of
+your taste, Max."</p>
+
+<p>Max turned red, then green, and I thought to myself
+what a fool I was. He's a favorite with the King and
+Queen, and my father-in-law believes every word he says.</p>
+
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 33em;">Castle Wachwitz</span>, <i>March 10, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Queen Carola is a good soul though she doesn't dare
+call her soul her own. I never heard her say "<i>peep</i>" in
+the presence of his Majesty. She looks forlorn and frightened
+when King Albert is around.</p>
+
+<p>I like her better since I am a mother, for she loves
+baby. Yes, though she is a Queen, I saw her actually smile
+at the child once or twice.</p>
+
+<p>Poor woman, the point of her nose is always red, and,
+like Father-in-law George, she believes weeping willow the
+only fit emblem for royalty. The look of the whipped dog
+is always in her weak eyes.</p>
+
+<p>I am too young and&mdash;they <i>do</i> say&mdash;too frivolous to
+stand so much mopishness. These mustard-pots, sedate,
+grave, wan and long-faced, make me mad. I don't know
+what to say,&mdash;all I can do is try to hide my "un-princess-like"
+cheerfulness when they are around.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I wish I had an ounce or so of diplomacy in my composition.
+It might enable me to sympathize with the fancied
+troubles of the Queen and Prince George, but I am
+incorrigible.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="IV" id="IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h4>MY UNPLEASANT YOUTH</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Father hard to get along with&mdash;Royal imaginations&mdash;Kings
+cursing other kings&mdash;Poverty and pretense&mdash;Piety that makes
+children suffer&mdash;Up at five to pray on cold stones&mdash;Chilblains
+and prayer.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 33em;">Castle Wachwitz</span>, <i>March 11, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>It occurs to me that, if this is intended as a record of
+my life&mdash;somewhat after the fashion of the <i>Margravine</i>
+of Bayreuth's Memoirs&mdash;I ought to tell about my girlhood.</p>
+
+<p>Let me admit at once that my marriage to the Crown
+Prince of Saxony was, politically speaking, a stroke of
+good luck. My father, the Grand-duke of Tuscany, had
+been deprived of land and crown ten years before I was
+born, and, though he likes to pose as a sovereign, he is, as
+a matter of fact, a mere private gentleman of limited resources,
+whom the head of the family, the Austrian Emperor,
+may coax or browbeat at his sweet pleasure. If
+papa had been able to save his thronelet, I have no doubt he
+would be a most agreeable man, open-handed and eager to
+enjoy life, but instead of making the best of a situation
+over which he has no control, he is forever fretting about<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+his lost dignities and about "his dear people" that don't
+care a snap for his love and affection. This makes him a
+trying person to get along with,&mdash;mention a king or prince
+in the full enjoyment of power, and father gets melancholy
+and calls Victor Emanuel, the second of his name, a brigand.</p>
+
+<p>He seldom or never visits his <i>confr&egrave;res</i> in the capitals
+of Europe, but when I was a girl our gloomy palace at
+Salzburg saw much of the ghosts of decaying royalty. The
+Dukes of Modena and Parma, the King of Hanover, the
+<i>Kurfurst</i> of Hesse, the King of Naples and other monarchs
+and toy-monarchs that were handed their walking papers
+by sovereigns mightier than themselves, visited us off and
+on, filling the air with lamentations and cursing their fate.</p>
+
+<p>And, like papa, all these <i>ex'es</i> are ready to fly out of
+their very skins the moment they notice the smallest breach
+of etiquette concerning their august selves. If they had
+the power, the Imperial Highnesses would execute any man
+that called them "Royal Highness," while the Royal Highnesses
+would be pleased to send to the gallows persons addressing
+them as "Highness" only.</p>
+
+<p>And papa has other troubles, and the greatest of them,
+lack of money. Poverty in private life must be hard enough,
+but a poor king, obliged to keep up the pretense of a court,
+is to be pitied indeed.</p>
+
+<p>Add to what I have said, father's share of domestic
+unhappiness. Mother is a Bourbon of Parma, serious-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>minded and
+hard like my father-in-law, and almost as much
+of a religious fanatic.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, how we children suffered by the piety of our
+mother. There were eight of us, myself the oldest of five
+girls, and seven years older than my sister Anna. Yet this
+baby, as soon as she could walk, was obliged to rise, like
+myself, at five o'clock summer and winter to go to the
+chapel and pray. The chapel was lighted only by a few
+wax candles and, of course, was unheated like the corridors
+of the palace. And like them it was paved with stones.
+Many a chilblain I carried away from kneeling on those
+granite flags.</p>
+
+<p>And the stupidity of the thing! Instead of saying our
+prayers we murmured and protested, and as soon as we
+were old enough we slipped portions of novels in our prayer-books,
+which we read while mass was said. That trick
+was not unfraught with danger though, for mother's spies
+were always after us, and the bad light made reading difficult.</p>
+
+<p>I am sure that if mother had found us out, she would
+have whipped us within an inch of our lives.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="V" id="V"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h4>A FIERCE DISCIPLINARIAN</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Diamonds used to punish children&mdash;Face object of attacks&mdash;Grunting
+and snorting at the royal table&mdash;Blood flowing at
+dinner&mdash;My brother jumps out of a window.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 33em;">Castle Wachwitz</span>, <i>April 1, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Nothing of consequence happened since my last entry,
+and I continue the story of my girlhood.</p>
+
+<p>Her Imperial Highness, my pious mother, had a terrible
+way of punishing her children. The face of the culprit
+was invariably the object of her attacks. She hit us with
+the flat of her bony hand, rendered more terrible by innumerable
+rings. The sharp diamonds cut into the flesh
+and usually made the blood flow freely.</p>
+
+<p>The court chaplain at Salzburg was a peasant's boy
+without manners or breeding of any kind. While the
+least violation of etiquette or politeness on the children's
+part was punished by a box on the ear, or by
+withholding the next meal, mother overlooked the swinishness
+of the chaplain simply because he wore a black
+coat.</p>
+
+<p>One of the chaplain's most offensive habits was to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+grunt and snort when eating. On one occasion my brother
+Leopold gave a somewhat exaggerated imitation of these
+disgusting practices at table, whereupon mother, blind with
+fury, for she thought a priest could do no wrong, struck
+Leopold in the face, causing the blood to gush from his
+lacerated cheek.</p>
+
+<p>Father immediately rose from table and savagely turning
+upon mother said, "Understand, Madame, that as a
+sovereign and head of the family I will have no one punished
+in my presence. If I think punishment necessary, I
+will inflict it myself in a dignified way."</p>
+
+<p>Mother immediately began to cry. She always had a
+flood of tears ready when father offered the slightest reprimand.
+Afterwards she upbraided father and us, the children.
+If it were not for her incessant prayers, she said,
+and for the Christian life she was leading, God would have
+destroyed the Tuscans long ago, and she wasn't sure that
+either of us would attain Paradise except for her intercession
+with the Almighty.</p>
+
+<p>This and similar scenes and incidents disgusted me with
+religion early in life. Myself and all my brothers and sisters
+hated the very sight of the court chaplain who licked
+our mother's boots, while heaping punishments and indignities
+upon us.</p>
+
+<p>At one time my brother Leopold didn't know his
+catechism. "I will teach your Imperial Highness to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+skip your lessons," said the court chaplain. "Kneel before
+me and read the passage over ten times as a punishment."</p>
+
+<p>Leopold promptly answered: "I won't."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you will, Imperial Highness, for such are my
+orders," cried the court chaplain.</p>
+
+<p>Leopold said doggedly, "I kneel before the altar and
+before the Emperor, if he demands it, not before such as
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose I call on your Imperial Highness's mother and
+ask her to forbid you to mount a horse for a month or so?"
+queried our tormentor.</p>
+
+<p>Horseback riding was Leopold's chief pleasure, and the
+chaplain had no sooner launched his threat, when Leopold
+opened the window and apparently jumped out. As the
+school-room was situated in the third story, the teacher
+thought his pupil dead on the pavement below, but Leopold
+was merely hanging on to the stone coping and shutters.
+That gave him the whip hand over the teacher. "I will
+let go if you don't promise not to inform mother," demanded
+the twelve-year-old boy.</p>
+
+<p>"I promise, only come in," moaned the teacher.</p>
+
+<p>"Promise furthermore there shall be no punishment
+whatever for what I did and said."</p>
+
+<p>"None whatever, your Imperial Highness."</p>
+
+<p>"Swear it on the cross."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The chaplain did as ordered and Leopold crawled back
+to safety.</p>
+
+<p>Leopold is a good deal like me, and has been in hot
+water more or less all his life.</p>
+
+<p>When I was a girl of fifteen, he defended my honor
+at the risk of the fearful punishments my mother had in
+store for those children that wouldn't buckle down to the
+chaplain, but that is so sad a chapter of my girlhood days
+I cannot bring myself to put it down today.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="VI" id="VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h4>LEOPOLD DEFENDS MY HONOR AT HIS PERIL</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Punished for objecting to familiarities&mdash;Awful names I was
+called&mdash;Locked in the room with wicked teacher&mdash;Defend
+myself with burning lamp&mdash;My brother nearly kills my
+would-be assailant.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 33em;">Castle Wachwitz</span>, <i>April 2, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I want to finish with evil recollections. Maybe I will
+be able to forget them, when I have done with this narrative.
+My mother, as pointed out, had more confidence in
+our rascally court chaplain than in her own children, and
+was far more concerned about the chaplain's dignity than
+ours. She never hesitated to doubt her children's veracity,
+but regarded all the chaplain said as gospel truth.</p>
+
+<p>About two weeks before Easter, 1885, the time when I
+was just budding into young womanhood, the chaplain
+began to pay me a great deal of attention. The lessons he
+gave me to learn were insignificant compared with those of
+my brothers and sisters, and it mattered not whether I came
+to school prepared or otherwise. The strict disciplinarian
+had all of a sudden turned lenient. He began to pat my
+hair, to give me friendly taps on the shoulder, and never
+took his eyes off me. I was too young and innocent to see<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+the true significance of his strange behavior, but I woke
+up suddenly and ran crying to my mother, telling her what
+had happened.</p>
+
+<p>"I won't take another lesson from that man, unless my
+lady-in-waiting is present," I sobbed.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a malicious, lying, low-minded creature,"
+hissed my mother, at the same time striking me in the face
+with her big diamonds. "It's mortal sin to throw suspicion
+on so holy a man, and I will not have him watched."</p>
+
+<p>I ran out of mother's room crying, intending to go to
+papa, but met the boys in the corridor, who told me that
+father had just departed for the chase. Then I took Leopold
+aside and told him everything. He was half-mad with
+rage and was hardly able to articulate when he rushed to
+mother's room demanding protection for me.</p>
+
+<p>"I will protect the holy man instead," answered my
+fanatic mother. "Louise shall be locked in the room
+with the chaplain while she has her lesson." And my
+mother actually carried out that wicked design inspired by
+fanaticism.</p>
+
+<p>Locked in a room with me, the chaplain was sweetness
+itself, but for a while at least remained at a distance.
+When he attempted to approach me, I seized the burning
+kerosene lamp, as Leopold had advised.</p>
+
+<p>"One step more," I cried excitedly, "and I will throw
+the lamp in your face."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The coward stood still in his tracks, and began whispering
+to me in a hoarse voice things I hardly understood, but
+that nevertheless wounded me to the quick. I kept my
+hand at the burning lamp during the whole hour and was
+ready to faint when the fiend at last left me.</p>
+
+<p>As the door opened, I saw Leopold standing outside,
+an enormous dog whip in hand. Without a word he applied
+the whip to the chaplain's broad face, lashing him
+right and left. The scoundrel offered no resistance, but
+fled like the dog he was, Leopold after him through the long
+corridors, upstairs and downstairs, through the picture gallery
+and the state apartments, lashing him as he ran, the
+two of them filling the palace with cries of rage and pain.
+Only the fact that Leopold stumbled over a footstool,
+enabled the chaplain to reach his room alive, where he
+barricaded himself.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="VII" id="VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h4>PRINCES AND PRINCESSES DANCE TO THE TUNE OF THE WHIP</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The result shows in the character of rulers&mdash;Why English kings
+and princes are superior to the Continental kind&mdash;Leopold's
+awful revenge&mdash;Mother acts the tigress&mdash;Her mailed fist&mdash;"I
+forbid Your Imperial Highness to see that dog."</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 33em;">Castle Wachwitz</span>, <i>April 21, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>If my Diary ever fell into plebeian hands, I suppose
+such stories as the above would be branded as rank exaggerations.</p>
+
+<p>A Queen endangering life and health of her children
+by a form of punishment otherwise known only in the prize
+ring.</p>
+
+<p>An Imperial Highness using her diamonds to graft
+scars on the cheeks of a little girl!</p>
+
+<p>Royal children beaten worse than dogs, deprived of
+sleep, subjected to cold and damp and, withal, given over,
+bound hand and foot, so to speak, to the tender mercies of
+low-minded, unworthy, and even dangerous persons without
+manners or education.</p>
+
+<p>And, to cap the climax, a Royal maid in the first blush<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+of budding womanhood grossly repulsed and physically attacked
+when she appeals to her mother for protection; that
+child locked in a room with her would-be ravisher and
+obliged to defend her honor by a threat of murder.</p>
+
+<p>Only the uninitiated&mdash;men and women living outside
+the pale of royal courts&mdash;will deem such things impossible.
+Let me tell these happy ignoramuses that all through the
+nineteenth century the princes and princesses of Europe
+were brought up to the tune of the whip and of physical
+and mental humiliation. It was the fashion.</p>
+
+<p>The only eminent monarch of the immediate past&mdash;Frederick
+the Great&mdash;was all but flayed alive by his father
+when a boy and young man,&mdash;emulate the second King of
+Prussia's brutalities and your offspring will be destined for
+greatness, argued princes.</p>
+
+<p>The first Emperor William of Germany had a gentle
+mother, my famous namesake; he was always a gentleman.
+The Russian Czars, Paul, Nicholas I, and Alexander
+III, were brought up with the knout, their preceptors used
+the boys at their sweet pleasure. The first turned out a
+madman; the second a brute; the third his people's executioner.</p>
+
+<p>Czar Paul would run a mile to cane a soldier who
+had a speck of dust on his boots. My grand-uncle, Emperor
+Francis Joseph of Austria, sometimes travels tens of
+miles to box the ears of a member of his family.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Francis Joseph had a cruel bringing up.</p>
+
+<p>At the Royal Library in Berlin I saw the manuscript
+of <i>Les M&eacute;moires de ma vie: la princesse de Prusse, Frederice
+Sophie Wilhelmine, qui epousa le Margrave de Bayreuth</i>,&mdash;the
+original, unedited save by the corrections of
+the authoress. A good many passages of this "most terrible
+indictment of royalty" reminded me of home. There is
+even a parallel, or a near-parallel, of my own case just
+recorded. The Princess Wilhelmina's all-powerful governess
+was Madame Leti, who pummelled the child "as if
+she had been her mother." This Leti was undoubtedly a
+Sadist; to inflict torture, to practice refined cruelties was
+a joy to her. Not content with whipping the little girl, she
+added, shortly before her dismissal, some poisonous matter
+to Wilhelmina's wash water "that gnawed the skin and
+made my face all coppery and inflamed my eyes." This
+species of wickedness, at last, resulted in the discharge of
+Leti, "but she decided to leave me a few souvenirs in the
+shape of fisticuffs and kicks. She had told my mother that
+I was suffering from nose bleed and punched my nose whenever
+she was unobserved. During the last week of her
+stay at the palace I sometimes bled like an ox, and my
+arms and legs were blue, green and yellow from her kicks
+and cuffs. I am sure if she could have broken my legs
+with impunity, she would not have hesitated a moment to
+do so."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>History and the court gossip of the day afford plenty
+of precedents for what happened to me and my brothers
+and sisters in Salzburg. Indeed, Prince Albert, Consort of
+the late Queen Victoria, was the only royal father of the
+first half of the century that used the rod in moderation.
+To my mind that is one of the reasons why English
+kings and princes are so far superior to the Continental
+kind.</p>
+
+<p>But to return to Salzburg.</p>
+
+<p>Leopold had it all his own way for a quarter of an
+hour, as none of the servants would interfere in favor of
+the hated chaplain and mother was engaged in her oratory
+in a far away part of the castle. So my brother kicked in
+the door and went for the cowering brute again, raining
+stripes on every part of his bloated body, alternately using
+the whip and the whip-end. Undoubtedly Leopold would
+have killed him then and there if his boy's strength had
+not given out. He left him more dead than alive, bleeding
+and moaning.</p>
+
+<p>I will never forget the spectacle when Leopold came
+down the stairs after leaving the chaplain's room. I and
+my brothers and sisters were huddled together behind our
+ladies in the blue ante-chamber. A dozen or more lackeys
+stood in the corridor, whispering.</p>
+
+<p>Leopold's face was deathly pale as he descended the
+stairs, and blood was dripping from his whip, reddening the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+white linen runners protecting the carpet. He wore his
+army uniform, that should have saved him from violence
+at any rate. At that moment I prayed my sincerest that
+father would come home. I would have thrown myself on
+my knees and told everything, servants or no servants.
+But mother came instead.</p>
+
+<p>She was fully informed and she sprang upon poor Leopold
+like a tigress, knocking him from one end of the corridor
+to the other with her diamond-mailed fist. It was
+terrible, and all of us children cried aloud with terror. But
+the more we cried and the more we begged for mercy, the
+harder were the blows mother rained upon poor Leopold's
+face and head. His blood spattered over the white enameled
+banisters and doors until finally he was dragged out
+of my mother's clutches by an old footman who placed
+his broad back between the Imperial Highness and her
+victim.</p>
+
+<p>Now, it was the rule in our house that the whipped
+child had to ask our mother's forgiveness for putting her
+to the trouble of wielding the terrible back of her
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>Six weeks Leopold stayed at Salzburg after the scene
+described, and daily my mother urged him to beg her forgiveness.
+The boy stood stockstill on these occasions, never
+twitching a muscle of his face and never saying a word in
+reply. During all these six weeks he waited on mother<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+morning, noon and night, according to ceremony, but never
+a word escaped him, never did he look in her direction unless
+actually forced to do so. He played the deaf and
+dumb to perfection.</p>
+
+<p>Father must have thought that Leopold got enough
+punishment, for he never mentioned the matter to him and
+forbade the servants to even allude to the court chaplain.
+Mother, on her part, placed the chaplain in charge of two
+skilled surgeons and sent every little while to inquire how
+he was doing.</p>
+
+<p>On the third day she said to my father at table, that she
+was going to pay a visit to the court chaplain.</p>
+
+<p>"I forbid your Imperial Highness to see that dog,"
+said my father in an icy voice that brooked no reply. "I
+will have his carcass thrown out of here as soon as his
+condition permits."</p>
+
+<p>That was the only time I heard father speak like a
+sovereign and man.</p>
+
+<p>That Leopold nearly killed the scoundrel, as he promised
+to do, is evident from the fact that the court chaplain
+lay in the castle three weeks before he could be transported
+to a monastery. Some monks&mdash;for none of the
+servants would lend a helping hand&mdash;carried him away by
+night and none of the children ever saw or heard of our
+tormentor again.</p>
+
+<p>The only sorry reminder of the episode is the estrange<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>ment
+of Leopold and our mother. Though mother tried her
+hardest to win back the boy's confidence and affection, he
+remained an iceberg towards her, ceremonious but cold,
+polite but wholly indifferent.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="VIII" id="VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h4>PLANNING TO GET A HUSBAND FOR ME</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Dissecting possible wooers at Vienna&mdash;Royalty after money, not
+character&mdash;"He is a Cohen, not a Coburg"&mdash;Prince who
+looked like a Jew counter-jumper in his Sunday best&mdash;Balkan
+princes tabooed by Francis Joseph&mdash;A good time
+for the girls&mdash;Army men commanded to attend us.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 33em;">Castle Wachwitz</span>, <i>April 25, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>A change of scene. I was eighteen and my parents
+were anxious to get a husband for me. Royalty marries
+off its princes at an early age to keep them out of mischief;
+its princesses as soon as a profitable suitor turns up or can
+be secured by politics, diplomacy, the exercise of parental
+wits or the powerful influence of the head of the House.</p>
+
+<p>Sister Anna, now Princess John of Hohenlohe, myself
+and mother were invited to Vienna. It was my introduction
+to royal pomp and circumstance. The <i>Hofburg</i>, our
+town lodging, seemed to me the first and also the last cry
+in sumptuousness&mdash;all that was beautiful and expensive in
+days gone by is there, and all that is new and desirable is
+there, too; Schoenbrunn, the Imperial summer residence, is
+a dream of loveliness wedded to grandeur. Between the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+Emperor and my mother and between her and the numerous
+archduchesses and archdukes every second word uttered
+referred to me as the possible wife of someone or
+another. And that someone was well dissected as to fortune,
+success in life and political exigencies.</p>
+
+<p>Whether he was good-looking or a monkey in face
+and figure mattered not. Health, good character, uprightness
+didn't count.</p>
+
+<p>Has he expectations for gaining a throne? Will he
+be wise enough to retain that throne? What kind of an
+establishment will he be able to set up? How long may his
+parents live, hanging on to the family fortune?&mdash;These
+were the only considerations deemed worthy of discussion.</p>
+
+<p>Three or four of the archduchesses seemed to be acting
+as marriage brokers for Ferdinand, just elected hereditary
+prince of Bulgaria, whose mother, Princess Clementine, a
+daughter of the dethroned King Louis Philippe of France,
+was reputed to be rolling in gold.</p>
+
+<p>Leopold irreverently called Ferdinand's partisans "<i>Fillons</i>"
+after famous "<i>La Fillon</i>," who supplied the harem
+of our jolly ancestor, the Regent of France, Duke of
+Orleans, and he insisted that Ferdinand was a <i>Cohen</i>, not
+a Coburg. As a matter of fact, Ferdinand's great fortune
+is derived from a Kohary, which is Hungarian for Cohen.
+The original Kohary was a cattle-dealer, who supplied the
+armies of the Allies during the Napoleonic wars. In this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+way he accumulated so much wealth that an impoverished
+Coburg prince fell in love with his daughter and made her
+his wife, after she exchanged the name of Rebecca for
+Antonie and the Mosaic faith for that of Rome.</p>
+
+<p>Young and proud and flippant as I was, Leopold's talk
+filled me with hearty contempt for the "Coburger" long
+before we were introduced. And as to his ambassador,
+who was forever dancing attendance upon me, I hated him.
+Yet the Imperial "<i>Fillons</i>" kept up their clatter, and one
+fine morning Prince Ferdinand was announced.</p>
+
+<p>He wasn't half bad looking, but struck me as too much
+of a mother's-boy. Princess Clementine seemed to decide
+everything for him. Anyhow, I wouldn't have him and
+he marched off again.</p>
+
+<p>I next reviewed, as another Balkan matrimonial possibility,
+Prince Danilo of Montenegro, a small, thin person,
+looking like a Jew counter-jumper in holiday dress&mdash;Vienna
+"store-clothes."</p>
+
+<p>Danilo spoke the worst <i>table d'h&ocirc;te</i> French I ever heard
+in my life, and I told mother I would rather marry a rich
+banker than this crowned idiot. For once she agreed with
+me and said his father was only a "mutton-thief," anyhow.</p>
+
+<p>Finally there was talk of King Alexander of Servia,
+six years younger than I. Queen Natalie, who a few days
+ago celebrated one of her several reunions with ex-King
+Milan, spoke feelingly of her "Sasha" to mother, lauding<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+him as the best of sons and the most promising of sovereigns,
+but the oft-divorced Majesty was less communicative
+when mother asked how many millions she would
+pass over to Alexander on his marriage day. That settled
+"Sasha's" ambitions as far as my hand was concerned.
+Marry a Balkan King and the <i>n&eacute;e</i> Keshko holding the purse-strings!
+Not for my father's daughter! I didn't want to
+marry into a Russian Colonel's family, anyhow. I believe
+Queen Natalie's father was a colonel, or was he only a lieutenant-colonel?</p>
+
+<p>These marriage negotiations aside, Anna and myself
+had a mighty good time in Vienna (I forgot to say that
+Emperor Francis Joseph agreed with me that Danilo and
+Alexander were quite impossible and that henceforth Balkan
+marriages should be taboo).</p>
+
+<p>"I have ordered a dozen young officers to report for
+tonight's dancing," said my Imperial uncle one evening.
+"Select from among them your tennis partners, girls."
+Baron Cambroy of the Guards was my choice, and a mighty
+handsome fellow he is. He seemed pleased when I commanded
+him to tennis duty every afternoon during our
+stay. He is tall and spare in appearance and I might have
+fallen in love with him sooner, but for his dark skin. I
+am an Italian and, by way of contrast, prefer blondes to
+any other sort of man.</p>
+
+<p>Anna, myself and our ladies bicycled to the tennis<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+court every afternoon, and on our way back to the castle
+were escorted by the Baron and the other officers.</p>
+
+<p>Trust a girl with a dress reaching an inch below her
+knees to find out scandals! On the second day after our
+meeting with the Baron, Anna told me that he was the
+lover of Draga Maschin, lady-in-waiting to Queen Natalie
+of Servia.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
+
+<p>Draga was in attendance upon Queen Natalie when
+she called on us, a beautiful girl, somewhat too full-bosomed
+for an unmarried one, like my great-aunt, Catharine, who
+became the wife of that upstart, Jerome Napoleon. At
+home we have her picture, and mother, who was rather
+skinny as a girl, never failed to point out that it was painted
+before Queen Catharine's marriage, despite her voluptuous
+bust.</p>
+
+<p>If my Baron was really Draga's beloved, that would
+more than half explain mother's puzzle.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p><div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> The same who afterwards became the Queen of King Alexander
+of Servia and eventually the cause of his death and of the
+extinction of the Obrenovitsch dynasty. Alexander and Draga
+were both slaughtered in their beds May 29, 1903, ten years after
+the above was written.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="IX" id="IX"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h4>LOVE-MAKING</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The fascinating Baron&mdash;The man's audacity&mdash;Putting the question
+boldly&mdash;Real love-making&mdash;<i>Risqu&eacute;</i> stories for royalty.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 33em;">Castle Wachwitz</span>, <i>May 1, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am in love but, like a prudent virgin, I admitted the
+fact to myself only shortly before we departed for Salzburg.
+After I put several hundred miles between me and
+my fascinating Baron, all's well again.</p>
+
+<p>My first love, and it was the man's audacity that won
+the day!</p>
+
+<p>Imagine an Imperial Highness, decidedly attractive,
+eighteen, and no tigress by any means, wheeling at the
+side of a mere lieutenant who has nothing but his pay to
+bless himself with and nothing but good looks to recommend
+him. And, as before stated, he wasn't even my
+style.</p>
+
+<p>Anna pedalled ahead some twenty-five paces; our ladies
+wheezed and snorted that many behind. This devil of
+a lieutenant took a chance.</p>
+
+<p>"Imperial Highness," he commenced, "I wager you
+don't know what love is."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was the one theme I was aching for, scenting, as I
+did, the odor of forbidden things. Never before had I the
+opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>"R-e-a-l love," he insisted.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you blame me?" I asked, vixen-like. "Would be
+a poor specimen of Guard officer who didn't know more
+about real love than a mere girl of eighteen and a princess
+at that."</p>
+
+<p>"Will your Imperial Highness allow me to explain?"
+This, oh so insinuatingly, from the gay seducer.</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" I asked, with the air of a <i>rou&eacute;</i> and hating
+myself for blushing like a poppy&mdash;I felt it.</p>
+
+<p>"Charmed to enlighten you&mdash;with your Imperial Highness's
+permission," whispered the Baron, his knee crowding
+mine as he drew nearer on his wheel.</p>
+
+<p>"Explain away."</p>
+
+<p>"Not until I have your Imperial Highness's express
+command and your promise not to get angry if I should
+offend."</p>
+
+<p>Anna, always an <i>enfant terrible</i> and invariably in the
+way, was waiting for us in the shadow of a tree and now
+rode by the Baron's side. She had evidently heard part
+of our conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"Permission and pardon granted beforehand," she
+cried. "Go ahead."</p>
+
+<p>The Baron looked at me, and not to be outdone by the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+parcel of impudence in short petticoats, I said carelessly:
+"Oh, tell. I command."</p>
+
+<p>The Baron began to stroke his moustache and then
+related a story of Napoleon and our ancestress Marie
+Louise, the Austrian Archduchess, not found in school
+books.</p>
+
+<p>On the day before her entry into Paris, he said, and
+when they were destined to meet for the first time, Napoleon
+waylaid his bride-to-be at Courcelles and without
+ceremony entered her carriage. They rushed past villages,
+through towns <i>en f&ecirc;te</i> and at last, at nine o'clock in the
+evening, reached the palace of Compi&egrave;gne. There the
+Emperor cut short the addresses of welcome, presentations
+and compliments, and taking Marie Louise by the hand
+conducted her to his private apartments. Next morning
+they had breakfast in bed. The marriage ceremony took
+place a few days later.</p>
+
+<p>"That's love," said the Baron, shooting significant
+glances at me.</p>
+
+<p>"Henry <i>Quatre</i> did the same to Marie de Medici&mdash;an
+Italian like you, Imperial Highness."</p>
+
+<p>Anna didn't know what to make of it, and as for me,
+my tongue stuck to the roof of my mouth.</p>
+
+<p>The impudent fellow seems to have misinterpreted our
+silence, for, brazen like the <i>Duc de</i> Richelieu, who boasted
+of sleeping in the beds of queens, he continued:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Catharine the Great, too, knew what love was. One
+fine afternoon when she wasn't a day older than you, Imperial
+Highness, she looked out of the window of her room
+at Castle Peterhof. In the garden below a sentinel, very
+handsome, very Herculean, very brave, was pacing up and
+down. Catharine, then Imperial Grand-duchess and only
+just married, made a sign to the soldier. The giant, abandoning
+his rifle, jumped below the window and Catharine
+jumped onto his shoulders from the second story.</p>
+
+<p>"That's real love," concluded the Baron.</p>
+
+<p>Anna got frightened and fled down the avenue, but I
+had the weakness to remain at the Baron's side until we
+reached the palace.</p>
+
+<p>Alas, Frederick Augustus wasn't as good a talker as
+the Baron.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 484px;">
+<img src="images/fredaug.jpg" width="484" height="600" alt="FREDERICK AUGUSTUS, REIGNING KING OF SAXONY
+
+Louise&#39;s Ex-Husband" title="" />
+<span class="caption">FREDERICK AUGUSTUS, REIGNING KING OF SAXONY<br />
+
+Louise&#39;s Ex-Husband</span>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="X" id="X"></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h4>MY POPULARITY RENDERS GEORGE DYSPEPTIC</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The Cudgel-Majesty&mdash;Prince George's intrigues&mdash;No four-horse
+coach for Princess&mdash;Popular demonstration in my favor&mdash;"All-highest"
+displeasure.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>September 1, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I haven't lived up to my promise to keep a daily record,
+or even a weekly one. Those tales of my girlhood
+days disgusted me with diary keeping as far as my early
+experiences at home went and I reflected that many of
+the subsequent happenings in my life might be safer in the
+shrine of memory, than spread over the pages of a blank-book,
+even though no one sees it and I carry its golden
+key on a chain around my neck.</p>
+
+<p>We are back in the capital now and things are moving.
+Great doings had been planned for our reception, for the
+re-entry of the little prince, my baby, and his mother who
+is expected to give another child to Saxony at the end of
+the year. Two babies in one year! I am going to beat
+the German Empress, and if Wilhelm doesn't send me a
+medal I will cut him dead the next time I see him!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Well, about that reception. Flags, triumphal arches,
+speeches by the burgo-master, white-robed virgins at the
+station and all that sort of thing!</p>
+
+<p>But Father-in-law George said "no." Anything that
+gives joy to others goes against his royal grain, gives him
+politico-economic dyspepsia. He doesn't want me to be
+popular,&mdash;neither me, nor Frederick Augustus, nor the
+baby.</p>
+
+<p>George will be the next king, and if the Dresdeners
+or the Saxons want to "<i>Hoch the King</i>," they must "<i>Hoch</i>"
+George. They MUST. "It's their damned duty," says
+George the Pious, who never blasphemes on his own account,
+but allows himself some license concerning his subjects.
+His attitude recalls the story told of Frederick William
+the First of Prussia, whose appearance on the streets
+of Berlin used to cause passers-by to run to save their
+back. Upon one occasion His Majesty caught one of
+these fugitives, and whacking him over the head with his
+Spanish reed, cried angrily: "What do you want to run
+away from me for?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I'm afraid of your Royal Majesty," stuttered
+the poor devil.</p>
+
+<p>"Afraid?" thundered Frederick William, giving the
+fellow another whack with his cane. "Afraid?"&mdash;the beating
+continuing&mdash;"when I, your King, commanded you to
+love me. Love me, you miserable coward, love God's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+Anointed." And the loving Majesty broke his cane on
+the unloving subject's back.</p>
+
+<p>Two days before our arrival Prince George sent his
+adjutant, Baron de Metsch-Reichenbeck, to the Mayor of
+Dresden, stopping all reception arrangements contemplated.</p>
+
+<p>To have children was a mere picnic to Her Imperial
+Highness, lied George's messenger,&mdash;if the physicians
+hadn't used chloroform I would have perished with the
+torture. Ovations intended as a sort of reward or
+recognition of my services to the country, then,
+would be entirely out of place, and must not be
+thought of.</p>
+
+<p>The municipality thereupon officially abandoned preparations.
+I was a little vexed when I first heard about
+George's meanness, yet again felt tickled that he went out
+of his way to intrigue against me, the despised little princess
+of a House that ceased to reign. And I had an idea
+that the Dresdeners would give us a good welcome anyhow.</p>
+
+<p>I had contemplated ordering my special train to leave
+in the early morning or at noon, but the Ministry of Railways
+informed me that it was impossible to accommodate
+me at the hours mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>"We will take the ordinary express, then, and will be
+in Dresden at four in the afternoon," I suggested.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"According to the new schedule, the express doesn't
+stop in Dresden," protested Frederick Augustus.</p>
+
+<p>"We will command it to stop," I cried.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus looked at me as if I had asked
+him to borrow twenty marks from the Kaiser. "For God's
+sake!" he cried, "don't you know what happened to John
+the other day?"</p>
+
+<p>I confessed my ignorance.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Frederick Augustus, "John ordered the
+Continental express to pick him up at his garrison, and he
+had no sooner arrived in Dresden than he was commanded
+by the King to appear before him. His Majesty walked
+all over John, accusing him of 'interfering with international
+traffic' and forbidding him to issue another order
+of that character."</p>
+
+<p>"Pshaw!" I said, "John is merely a childless princeling.
+I am the mother of Saxony's future king. The regeneration,
+the perpetuation of your race depends on me."</p>
+
+<p>It was a mere waste of breath, for at that moment
+came a telegram, announcing that our special was billed
+to leave at 3:30, getting us to Dresden at half-past five&mdash;King's
+orders.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you command the <i>Daumont</i> coach-and-four to
+meet us at the station?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, you are dreaming," replied Frederick
+Augustus. "The State carriages are the property of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+Crown and we don't own a four-horse team in Dresden.
+They will send the ordinary royal carriage, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>I was mad enough to wish my husband's family to
+Hades, the whole lot of them, but the people of Dresden
+took revenge in hand and dealt most liberally. Of course,
+having fixed our arrival at a late and unusual hour, George
+expected there would be no one to welcome us, but the
+great concourse of people that actually assembled at the
+station and in the adjacent streets, lining them up to the
+palace gates, was tremendous instead.</p>
+
+<p>One more disappointment. George had sent an inconspicuous,
+narrow <i>coup&eacute;</i> to the station,&mdash;the Dresdeners
+shouldn't see more than the point of my nose. I saw
+through his scheme the moment I clapped eyes on that
+mouse-trap of a vehicle standing at the curb.</p>
+
+<p>And then I remembered the brilliant stagecraft of
+August the Physical Strong&mdash;he of the three hundred and
+fifty-two&mdash;and how he always managed to focus everybody's
+eyes on himself. And I stood stockstill on the
+broad, red-carpeted terrace when I walked out of the waiting
+room and held up my baby in the face of the multitude.
+You could hear the "<i>Hochs</i>" and Hurrahs all over town,
+they said. Hats flew in the air, handkerchiefs waved, flags
+were thrust out of the windows of the houses.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing, Imperial Highness?" whispered
+<i>Fr&auml;ulein von</i> Schoenberg, my lady-in-waiting.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, I will carry the baby to the carriage," I
+answered curtly.</p>
+
+<p>"But the King and Prince George will be angry,&mdash;everything
+will be reported to them."</p>
+
+<p>"I sincerely hope it will," I said.</p>
+
+<p>And before I entered that petty <i>sourici&egrave;re</i> of a royal
+coach, I danced the baby above my head time and again,
+giving everybody a chance to see him. And as I stood
+there in the midst of this tumult of applause, this waving
+sea of good-will, this thunder of jubilation, I felt proud
+and happy as I never did before. And when the thought
+struck me how mad George would feel about it all, I had
+to laugh outright.</p>
+
+<p>I was still grinning to myself when I heard Frederick
+Augustus's troubled voice: "Get in, what are you standing
+around here for?"&mdash;These manifestations of popularity
+spelt "all-highest" displeasure to him, poor noodle. He
+anticipated the scene at the palace, George fuming and
+charging "play to the gallery," the Queen in tears, the
+King threatening to banish us from Dresden.</p>
+
+<p>"Be it so," I said to myself, "we might as well be
+hanged for a sheep as a lamb." And I refused to enter
+the carriage until I had waved and smiled profound thanks
+to everybody in the square and in the windows and on
+the balconies of the surrounding houses.</p>
+
+<p>I saw the Master of Horse address the coachman and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+immediately divined his purpose. So I pulled at the rope
+and commanded the coachman to drive slowly. I said it
+in my most imperious manner, and the Master of Horse
+dared not give the counter order with which Prince George
+had charged him. Poor man, his failure to subordinate my
+will to his, or George's, cost him his job.</p>
+
+<p>And so we made our royal entry into Dresden amid
+popular rejoicings. I glued my face to the carriage window
+and smiled and smiled and showed the baby to everyone
+who asked for the boon.</p>
+
+<p>Baby took it all in a most dignified fashion. He
+neither squalled nor kicked, but seemed to enjoy the homage
+paid him.</p>
+
+<p>When we reached the palace there was another big
+crowd of well-wishers, who shouted themselves hoarse for
+Louise and the baby, and, malicious thing that I am, I
+noticed with pleasure that it all happened under George's
+windows.</p>
+
+<p>"This will give father-in-law jaundice," said baby's
+nurse in Italian. She is a girl from Tuscany and very
+devoted to me.</p>
+
+<p>"If he dies, I will be Queen the sooner," thought I,&mdash;but
+happily I didn't think aloud.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XI" id="XI"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h4>SCOLDED FOR BEING POPULAR</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Entourage spied upon by George's minions&mdash;My husband proves
+a weakling&mdash;I disavow the personal compliment&mdash;No more
+intelligent than a king should be.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>September 5, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I wrote the foregoing at one sitting, without interruption.
+It's not so easy a matter to put down the consequences
+of our triumph, or rather mine and baby's.</p>
+
+<p>When I entered my apartments, I met a whole host of
+long faces. The Commander of the Palace, in great gala,
+offered a most stiff and icy welcome. The adjutants, the
+chamberlains, the <i>ma&icirc;tre d'H&ocirc;tel</i>, all looked ill at ease.
+They evidently felt the coming storm in their bones and
+didn't care to have it said of them, by George's spies, that
+they lent countenance, even in a most remote way, to my
+carryings-on. Even the Schoenberg&mdash;my own woman&mdash;shot
+reproachful glances at me when the Commander of the
+Palace happened to look her way.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus looked and acted as if he was
+to be deprived of all his military honors.</p>
+
+<p>"Your courage must have fallen into your <i>cuirassier</i>
+boots, look for it there," I said to him in an undertone when
+he seemed ready to go to pieces at the entrance of the
+King's grand marshal, Count Vitzthum.</p>
+
+<p>With that I advanced towards His Excellency and,
+holding out my hand to be kissed, took care to say to
+him with my most winning smile,</p>
+
+<p>"I trust His Majesty will be pleased with me, for of
+course our grand reception was but a reflex of the love
+the people have for their King. I never for a moment took
+it as a personal compliment."</p>
+
+<p>My smart little speech disconcerted the official completely.
+Maybe he had orders to say something disagreeable,
+but my remark disarmed him, forestalled any quarrel
+that might have been in the King's or Prince George's
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus, who is no more intelligent than
+a future king should be, was so amazed, he had to think
+hard and long before he could even say "Good evening" to
+the Count. As for the latter, he hawed and coughed and
+stammered and cleared his throat until finally he succeeded
+in delivering himself of the following sublime effort:</p>
+
+<p>"I will have the honor to report to His Majesty that
+during the time of your Imperial Highness's entry, your<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+Imperial Highness thought of naught but the all-highest
+approval of His Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon I shook his hand again and dismissed
+him. "It will please me immensely, Count," I said, "immensely."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XII" id="XII"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h4>ROYAL DISGRACE&mdash;LIGHTNING AND SHADOWS</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Ordered around by the Queen&mdash;Give thanks to a bully&mdash;Jealous
+of the "mob's" applause&mdash;"The old monkey after
+'<i>Hochs</i>'"&mdash;Criticizing the "old man"&mdash;Royalty's plea for
+popularity&mdash;Proposed punishments for people refusing to love royalty.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>September 8, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Thrice twenty-four hours of royal disgrace and I am&mdash;alive.
+This morning: "All-highest order," signed by
+Her Majesty's Dame of the Palace, Countess von Minckwitz:
+"The Queen is graciously pleased to invite your
+Imperial Highness to audience."</p>
+
+<p>Of course her pleasure is a command. I dressed in
+state and ordered all the ladies and gentlemen of my court
+to attend me to the royal chambers.</p>
+
+<p>Queen Carola was very nice, giving the impression
+that she would be more lovely still if she dared.</p>
+
+<p>"Prince George has just commanded your husband,"
+she said,&mdash;"the King ordered this condescension on my
+brother-in-law's part. You will have to thank him for it."</p>
+
+<p>Isn't it amusing to be an Imperial Highness and a
+Crown Princess to be ordered around like a "boots" and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+to be "commanded" like an orphan child to say thanks to
+one's betters!</p>
+
+<p>I promised and the Queen, assuming that I intended
+to act the good little girl, took courage to say&mdash;for she
+is the biggest of cowards&mdash;"You are too popular, Louise.
+Such a reception as you had! All the papers, even the
+Jew-sheets, are full of it."</p>
+
+<p>And before I could make any excuses for my popularity
+she added in sorrowful, half-accusing tones: "I
+lived here ever so many years and the mob never applauded
+<i>me</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"It's so fickle," I quoted. I had to say something, you
+know.</p>
+
+<p>"And contemptible," added the Queen heartily. "But
+how is baby?"</p>
+
+<p>I begged permission to send for him. Her Majesty
+was pleased to play with the little one for a minute or
+two and that secured me a gracious exit. The Queen
+attended me to the door, opening it with her own royal
+hand, thereby rehabilitating me with my entourage waiting
+outside.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Frederick Augustus had a "critical quarter
+of an hour" with father-in-law, who assumed to speak on
+behalf of the King.</p>
+
+<p>"The King," he said, "despised 'playing to the gallery'
+worse than the devil hated holy water." (This court is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+overrun with Jesuits, and we must needs adopt their vernacular.)</p>
+
+<p>The King, he repeated, thought it very bad taste for
+anyone to take the centre of the stage in these "popularity-comedies,"
+and he told a lot more lies of the same character.
+Then he bethought himself of his own grieved
+authority.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell your wife," he said, "that I, her father-in-law,
+and next to the throne, do everything in my power to
+escape such turbulent scenes, and that I would rather ride
+about town in an ordinary <i>Droschke</i> (cab) of the second
+class, preserving my incognito, than in a state carriage
+and be the object of popular acclamation."</p>
+
+<p>When Frederick Augustus repeated the above with
+the most solemn face in the world, I thought I would die
+with laughter and actually had to send for my tire-woman
+to let my corset out a few notches.</p>
+
+<p>"The old monkey," I cried&mdash;"as if he wasn't after
+'<i>Hochs</i>' morning, noon and night; as if he thought of
+anything else when he mounts a carriage or his horse."</p>
+
+<p>"You forget yourself, Louise," warned Frederick
+Augustus in the voice of an undertaker, and I really
+think he meant it. But I wasn't in the mood to be
+silenced.</p>
+
+<p>"And as if I didn't know that, like Kaiser Wilhelm,
+he keeps a record of towns and villages that were never<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+honored by one of his visits, intending to make his ceremonial
+entry there at the first plausible opportunity."</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't true," insisted Frederick Augustus.</p>
+
+<p>Then I got angry. "It may be thought polite in the
+bosom of your family to call one another a liar," I retorted,
+"but don't you get into the habit of introducing those tap-room
+manners in the <i>m&eacute;nage</i> of an Imperial Highness of
+Austria. I forbid it."</p>
+
+<p>And then I gave rein to some of the bitterness that
+had accumulated in my heart against the old man. Didn't
+I know that George was mad enough to quarrel with his
+dinner when, on his drives about town, he observed a single
+person refusing to salute him? And wasn't it a fact
+that the Socialists had combined never more to raise their
+hats to him just because he insisted on it? And wasn't
+that one of the reasons why the government was more
+hard on them than happened to be politic?</p>
+
+<p>"You mustn't say these things," pleaded Frederick
+Augustus.</p>
+
+<p>I pretended to melt. "May I not quote your father's
+own words?"</p>
+
+<p>"What my father says is always correct," replied the
+dutiful son.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, this is what he told House Minister von
+Seydowitz a couple of weeks ago: 'When I see one of these
+intending destroyers of the state and social order staring<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+at me, hat on head and cigar in face, I doubly regret the
+good old times when kings and princes were at liberty
+to yank a scoundrel of that ilk to jail and immure him
+for life, giving him twenty-five stripes daily to teach him
+the desirableness of rendering unto C&aelig;sar that which is
+C&aelig;sar's.'"</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus was holding his hands to his ears
+when I finished. He ran out and slammed the door behind
+him.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XIII" id="XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<h4>UNSPEAKABLE LITTLENESSES OF PETTY COURTS</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Another quarrel with my husband&mdash;Personal attendant to a
+corpse&mdash;Killing by pin pricks&mdash;The mythical three "<i>How
+art thou's?</i>"&mdash;Unwanted sympathy from my inferiors&mdash;Pride
+of the decapitated Queen of France is in me&mdash;Lovers not
+impossible&mdash;Court to blame for them&mdash;My husband acts
+cowardly&mdash;Brutalizes my household&mdash;I lock myself in.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>December 1, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I saved myself the trouble to record events for two or
+three months. I expect my child by the end of the year
+and, believing in prenatal influence, it would be a shame,
+I think, to poison the unborn baby's mind by dwelling on
+the unspeakable littlenesses that make up and burden life
+at this petty court.</p>
+
+<p>But I may die in the attempt of presenting Saxony
+with another candidate for appanages and honors, and
+this threat, hanging over every expectant mother, makes
+me take up my pen again. If I perish, let there be a record
+of my sufferings and also of my defiance.</p>
+
+<p>It turned out that the Queen's and George's apparent
+acquiescence to my sinful popularity marked the deceitful
+calm before the storm. Frederick Augustus has not suc<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>ceeded
+in gaining the King's and his father's forgiveness
+even now. As a military officer he is shunted from pillar
+to post, and the generals and high officials of the court
+treat him like a recruit in disgrace. Of course he blames
+me, shouting that I wrecked his career.</p>
+
+<p>As if a future king need care a rap whether, as
+prince, he got a regiment a few months earlier or later.</p>
+
+<p>"When you are King," I sometimes say to him, "you
+may nominate yourself Field-Marshal-General and Great-Admiral
+above and below the sea&mdash;what do you care?"</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't the same," he moans. "I would like to have
+my patents signed by uncle or father."</p>
+
+<p>"Antedate your papers," I advised, "who dare dispute
+the king? Didn't the Kaiser nominate himself Adjutant-General
+to his grand-dad long after William I lay mouldering
+in Charlottenburg?"</p>
+
+<p>But Frederick Augustus takes colonel-ships and his
+petty kingship of the future too seriously to see even the
+humor of appointing oneself personal attendant to a corpse.</p>
+
+<p>As for me, if I weren't <i>enceinte</i>, they would send me to
+some lost-in-the-woods country house to die of <i>ennui</i>. But
+respect for public opinion forbidding drastic measures,
+George relies on a Russian expedient to humble my proud
+self and force me to submit to his meddling.</p>
+
+<p>In the Czar's country, when a village resolves on the
+death of some obnoxious individual, they take him, or her,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+and bind the body naked to a tree. Then several papers
+of pins are distributed among the inhabitants, and each
+man, woman and child is asked to put a pin in the lady or
+gentleman, whom they must approach blindfolded. They
+stick the pin wherever they touch the body and if the thing
+leaks out are able to swear by all the saints that they don't
+know where it struck. The pin pricking is continued until
+the obnoxious one expires amid awful tortures and, while
+all contributed to the murder, none can be hanged for it.</p>
+
+<p>In like manner George and his minions are trying
+to reduce me to the position of social and political corpse.</p>
+
+<p>Court festivities and public acts, attended by the court,
+seem to be specially arranged to pillorize me and husband.
+We are invited, of course. We are next in importance to
+Prince George. Our entourage is more numerous and more
+richly costumed than that of the other princes. Four
+horse coaches for us; Ministers of State waiting on us.
+I have train-bearers, pages, what-not.</p>
+
+<p>But the King and Prince George cut me and Frederick
+Augustus in sight of the whole court, of the public
+in fact!</p>
+
+<p>I don't mean to say that the "All-highest Lords," as
+they call themselves, treat us as air, or offer insult plain
+to the ear and eye&mdash;they couldn't afford to&mdash;nevertheless
+the stigma of royal disfavor is stamped on us. This is the
+mode of proceedings: Ceremony obliges the King to ad<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>dress
+each member of the royal family with the words:
+"How do you do?", in the German fashion, "<i>How art thou?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>To princes and princesses that are in disgrace, this
+momentous question is put only once. Those in good
+standing are asked three times.</p>
+
+<p>Ever since that September day when all Dresden did
+me honor, the King and Prince George have said "<i>How
+art thou's?</i>" to me and mine but once, whenever and wherever
+we met, and be sure there were always listeners to
+report the double omission.</p>
+
+<p>At first it amused me; then enraged me; I don't care
+a fig now. But Frederick Augustus! Poor imbecile, he
+is eating his heart out about those two missing "<i>How art
+thou's?</i>" and though he looks splendid in gala uniform
+he acts in the royal, but ungracious, presence like a green
+recruit expecting to be kicked and cuffed by his noncommissioned
+officer on getting back to the barracks.</p>
+
+<p>As to my entourage, it surrenders to royal disfavor
+even as Frederick Augustus: depressed faces, pitying
+glances. I could box their ears for their sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>Am I not the great-granddaughter of that mighty Maria
+Theresa that ruled Austria and Hungary with an iron
+hand, lined with velvet. "<i>Moriamur pro rege nostro</i>" (We
+will die for our King), cried the Hungarians, when she
+appealed to their chivalry, her new-born babe at her breast.
+"<i>Rege</i>," not "<i>Regina</i>." They called her King. They for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>got
+the woman in the monarch, yet I am treated like an
+insipid female always, never as the Crown Princess!</p>
+
+<p>Let them beware. My full name is Louise Marie Antoinette.
+I was named after the Marie Antoinette of history&mdash;another
+ancestor of mine&mdash;and the pride of the decapitated
+Queen of France is in me! My namesake was
+satisfied when she read the Saint-Antoine placard of June
+25, 1791: "Whosoever insults Marie Antoinette shall be
+caned, whosoever applauds her shall be hanged." Some
+day I will dismiss the cattle that now grudge me the people's
+applause and punish those that insult me.</p>
+
+<p>Come to think of it, Marie Antoinette had not only
+pride and defiance, she had lovers too. Well, some day
+this Marie Antoinette may have lovers, and if it's wrong,
+let the recording angel debit my sins to the Saxon
+court.</p>
+
+<p>Thank God, I am blessed with that truly royal attribute,
+ability to dissimulate. "<i>Qui nescit dissimulare nescit
+regnare</i>" was all the Latin Charles VIII knew, yet he made
+a pretty successful king for one who died at the age of
+twenty-seven.</p>
+
+<p>I always act as if the King, and father-in-law George,
+had asked me not once, or three times, but a dozen times
+"<i>How art thou?</i>" I don't know anything about being in
+disgrace, I don't anticipate being snubbed and when I am
+snubbed I don't see it.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The "all-highest Lord" looks daggers at me&mdash;I curtsy
+and smile!</p>
+
+<p>Father-in-law Prince George exhibits the visage of a
+poisoned pole-cat at my table&mdash;I congratulate him on his
+good digestion!</p>
+
+<p>Majesty pays no more attention to my presence than
+if I was a pillar, or a lackey; I greet him with my most
+devoted genuflections, rise from the carpet smiling all over
+the face and begin a frivolous conversation with the nearest
+man at hand, who in his fright acts as if he had taken
+an overdose of physic.</p>
+
+<p>If Frederick Augustus only had an inch of backbone,
+a pinch of ginger in his constitution! But he always stands
+around with a red face and the mien of a penitent. No
+dog, accustomed to daily beatings, follows his master's
+movements with more anxious looks than the Crown Prince
+of this realm bestows upon the goings and sayings of the
+King and Prince George.</p>
+
+<p>Then, as recompense for his royal feast of toads, he
+plays the tyrant at home. Jellyfish in the state apartments,
+a brute in our own and&mdash;on the drill grounds, I am told!
+He is always finding fault with the servants, and cares
+not whether he calls his Court Marshal, or a groom, "<i>Lausbub</i>."
+Poor Chamberlain von Tumpling earned that scurvy
+epithet the other day and he prides himself on being a
+nobleman and an army officer! Only this morning the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+prince roared and bellowed at one of my ladies, I thought
+she would have a stroke from righteous anger and vexation.</p>
+
+<p>When he attempted to address me in the same fashion,
+I simply turned my back on him, went into my boudoir
+and locked the door. I will keep him "guessing" for two
+days, sending for the court physician every little while.</p>
+
+<p>When he has to eat his meals alone and sleep alone for
+twice twenty-four hours, it will occur even to him that
+Louise is not made of the stuff that stands for being bullied.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XIV" id="XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<h4>IMPERIAL RUSSIAN ETHICS TRANSFERRED TO DRESDEN</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>My husband's reported escapade&mdash;Did he give diamonds to a
+dancing girl?&mdash;His foolish excuses&mdash;"I am your pal"&mdash;A
+restaurant scene in St. Petersburg&mdash;The birthday suit.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>December 3, 1893</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>After all, Frederick Augustus has more spirit than I
+gave him credit for. Isabelle just told me that he has a
+new love, and a very appetizing piece of femininity she is,
+<i>Fr&auml;ulein</i> Dolores of the Municipal Theatre.</p>
+
+<p>"She's as well made as you, Louise, and rather more
+graceful," she said, "only her expression is somewhat inert.
+She lacks animation. Of course, she hasn't your attractive
+bust."</p>
+
+<p>That devilish Isabelle <i>sowed</i> her poisonous information
+rather than pronounced it. "She has been seen with a new
+diamond-studded <i>bandeau</i>," she added.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the Schoenberg came to say that baby
+wants me. Isabelle went along to the nursery, but I managed
+to take the Schoenberg aside.</p>
+
+<p>"I must know, before dinner, who gave the Dolores
+woman the new jewelry she is displaying; likewise whether<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+His Royal Highness is sweet on that hussy. No half-truths,
+if you please. I want to know the worst if there
+be any."</p>
+
+<p>The Schoenberg has a cousin who is a Councillor in
+the office of the police president, and the police president
+keeps a detailed record of the love affairs of all the
+actresses and singers employed in Dresden,&mdash;a relic of the
+time when stage folks, in European capitals, classed as
+"the King's servants."</p>
+
+<p>The Councillor came himself to report and, after listening
+to what he said, I raised the boycott on Frederick
+Augustus without further ado, inviting him to my bed and
+board once more.</p>
+
+<p>"So you went slumming with Kyril," I said after we
+had retired for the night.</p>
+
+<p>"Who told you?" stammered the big fellow, reddening
+to the roots of his hair.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind. I know all! About the Dolores woman,
+her brand new diamonds, the pirouettes she did on the
+table and the many lace petticoats she wore."</p>
+
+<p>"My word, I didn't count them," vowed his Royal
+Highness.</p>
+
+<p>"Neither would I advise you to do so," I warned sternly,
+though as a matter of fact I was near exploding with
+laughter. "Now make a clean breast of it."</p>
+
+<p>"I swear I was only the elephant. The King himself<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+would excuse me under the circumstances," whimpered my
+husband.</p>
+
+<p>"You big booby," I interposed, "can't you see that I'm
+not angry? I blab about you to the King? What do you
+take me for? I am your pal, now and always, in affairs
+liable to prove inartistic to the King's, or Prince George's,
+stomach. To begin with, what has an elephant to do with
+supping with a dancing girl?"</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus explained that the name of the
+pachyderm applies to a third party, who attends a couple
+out for a lark until he proves a crowd. Our cousin, Grand-duke
+Kyril of Russia, visiting Dresden incognito, had prevailed
+on Frederick Augustus's good nature to serve him
+and the Dolores.</p>
+
+<p>"The Dolores is prettier than I?" I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all. She has a black mole under her left
+bosom."</p>
+
+<p>"You saw that?"</p>
+
+<p>"How could I help it? Russian Grand-dukes never
+allow a girl to wear corsets at supper. Kyril says it interferes
+with digestion."</p>
+
+<p>How considerate of His Russian Imperial Highness!</p>
+
+<p>Well, they had a good time and I guess the Dolores
+earned her diamonds. A fair exchange is no robbery.
+"But in St. Petersburg," said Frederick Augustus, "they do
+these things better." And he gave an elaborate description<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+of a famous restaurant there, where the princes of the
+imperial family hold high carnival occasionally.</p>
+
+<p>"The upper tier of dining rooms is reserved at night
+for any Grand-duke who promises his visit," quoted my
+husband, "and the broad marble stairs leading to them
+must not be used by others. Well, one fine evening Grand-duke
+Vladimir and a crowd of nobles and officers supped
+at the '<i>Ermitaj</i>' and when they were all good and drunk,
+one of Vladimir's guests, Prince Galitzin, bet the host the
+price of the supper and a champagne bath for all, that he
+could induce the famous <i>danseuse</i> Mshinskaya to descend
+the stairs stark naked and walk among the tables below
+without anyone offering her insult.</p>
+
+<p>"The bet was accepted and the girl sent for. She was
+found in a near-by theatre and rushed to the '<i>Ermitaj</i>'.
+Of course, seeing that His Imperial Highness wished it,
+she consented to pull off the trick and&mdash;her clothes, but she
+made a condition."</p>
+
+<p>"She demanded tights," I suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"Pshaw, she is a sport, says Kyril." This in a tone of
+disgust from Frederick Augustus. He continued: "She
+merely begged his Imperial Highness to have it announced
+that she, Mshinskaya, was acting under the Grand-duke's
+orders. Done. 'By His Imperial Highness's leave,' shouted
+the <i>Ma&icirc;tre d'H&ocirc;tel</i> from the top of the stairs, as
+<i>Mademoiselle</i> descended in her birthday suit. And the Mshinskaya<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+made the tour of the restaurant as unconcernedly and as
+little subject to protests, or remarks, as if she had been
+muffled up to her ears.</p>
+
+<p>"That's what I call freedom&mdash;discipline," concluded
+Frederick Augustus. "Think of doing anything like that
+in a Dresden restaurant."</p>
+
+<p>"I would gladly give a year's allowance to the poor
+if you could manage it here while Prince George was masticating
+a Hamburg steak at a table opposite the grand
+staircase," said I.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XV" id="XV"></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<h4>ROYALTY NOT PRETTY, AND WHY</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Fecundity royal women's greatest charm&mdash;How to have beautiful
+children.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>February 25, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Behold the mother of two boys in a twelve-month!
+Frederick came just in the nick of time, Sylvester Eve
+(December 31, 1893), to gain me a little brief renown, for
+royalty likes its women to be rabbits and, in the reigning
+houses at least, we are esteemed in proportion to our fecundity.</p>
+
+<p>"January 15&mdash;December 31," not half bad! Even Prince
+George had to admit that. And the Kaiser remarked:
+"Louise, if she keeps it up, bids fair to break de Villeneuve's
+record. Let me see, Sophie's first child was born January
+9&mdash;a girl" (with a sneer); "her next, the Hereditary Count,
+on December 28th of the same year."</p>
+
+<p>The "de Villeneuve" is Sophie, Countess of Schlitz.
+Wilhelm made her celebrated by his gallantries and Lenbach
+by the great portrait he painted of her wondrous
+loveliness. If I ever have a daughter, I will have a copy
+of the Lenbach canvas placed in baby's room. Come to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+think of it, I will have one made right away to hang in my
+own boudoir.</p>
+
+<p>As stated, I believe in prenatal influence, and am more
+than convinced that the portraits of Saxon and Prussian
+princesses frowning from the walls of our palaces are calculated
+neither to promote beauty nor gentleness.</p>
+
+<p>If I had my way, I would send the whole lot to the
+store-room and fill the space they occupy with the present
+store-room treasures, old time portraits of August the
+Physical Strong's favorites, Aurora von K&ouml;nigsmark, Countess
+Cosel, Princess Lubomirska, Fatime, the Circassian,
+the Orselska and&mdash;who can remember their names?</p>
+
+<p>As a rule, queens and princesses are conspicuous for
+lack of beauty, while kings and princes cut most ordinary
+figures in <i>mufti</i>. Only their uniforms, the ribands and decorations,
+the <i>mise-en-sc&egrave;ne</i> render them tolerable imitations
+of the average military man.</p>
+
+<p>Why?</p>
+
+<p>Because their mothers and fathers, their sisters, cousins
+and aunts see nothing but painted and photographed and
+sculptured frights and grotesques. So much ugliness of
+the past must needs cause ugliness of the present and
+future.</p>
+
+<p>In a century the thrones of Europe have known but
+two beauties, both plebeians, the Empress Josephine and
+the Empress Eugenie. My aunt, the Empress Elizabeth, is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+only good-looking, the German Empress was just an ordinary
+German <i>Frau</i> even in her salad-days.</p>
+
+<p>Well, my little girls, if I have any, shall profit by the
+lessons of the past. As expectant mothers in ancient Greece
+were wont to walk in the temple of <i>Athene Parthenos</i>, filled
+with the greatest sculptures the world has ever seen (ruins
+of them I admired in the British Museum), so I intend
+to have a gallery of my own for beauty's sake, even if
+every female figure be a harlot's likeness.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XVI" id="XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<h4>MORE JEALOUSIES OF THE GREAT</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Men and women caress me with their eyes&mdash;Some disrespectful
+sayings and doings of mine&mdash;First decided quarrel with
+Frederick Augustus&mdash;I go to the theatre in spite of him.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>April 1, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am afraid I wrote down some wicked things&mdash;wicked
+from the standpoint of the Saxon court&mdash;and though Queen
+Carola and father-in-law George know naught of my scribblings,
+punishment was meted out to me in full measure.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, it's my "damned popularity," as the King
+calls it, that got me into trouble again. My carriage happened
+to follow one occupied by the Queen at a distance
+of some hundred or more paces along the avenues of the
+<i>Grosser Garten</i>. I had no idea that Her Majesty was out
+at the time, and certainly was dressed to please the eye.
+I can't help it. It's a habit with me.</p>
+
+<p>Well, the optics of a good many of my future subjects
+grew long and cozening, like gipsies', when they beheld
+their queen-to-be; there was many a "flatteringly protracted,
+but never a wiltingly disapproving gaze," and those
+who liked me&mdash;and they all seemed to&mdash;shouted "Our<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+Louise," and Hurrah. They shouted so loud that poor
+Queen Carola got plenty of auricular evidence of how her
+successor-to-be was loved by the people, by <i>her</i>, Carola's,
+people. And the poor old girl got so "peeved," she
+ordered her coachman to turn back and proceed to
+the palace by the shortest route, through the least frequented
+streets.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus knew all about it before I reached
+home and was in a terribly dejected state.</p>
+
+<p>"This has to stop," he said with a fine effort at imitating
+authority. "On Sunday, when we drove home from
+High Mass, you got an ovation while the King's carriage
+passed almost unnoticed. And now this affront to the
+Queen."</p>
+
+<p>"Bother the old girl," I replied, stamping my foot.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus got as white as a sheet. "That's
+the language of a&mdash;a&mdash;" He knew enough not to finish.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the title by which Queen Victoria is known to
+many of her subjects."</p>
+
+<p>"Who told you that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I often run across it in the English newspapers."</p>
+
+<p>"Jew-sheets!" roared Frederick Augustus.</p>
+
+<p>"Since you don't understand a word of English, you
+couldn't distinguish the London Times from the Hebrew
+At Work." After this sally, I added maliciously: "I'm
+going to the Op&eacute;ra Comique tonight. Come along?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You are <i>not</i> going to the Op&eacute;ra Comique," shouted
+Frederick Augustus.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't want me to go, papa don't want me to
+go, uncle and aunt and cousins don't? So many reasons
+more why I <i>shall</i> go. I announced my coming and I will
+go, if I have to tear the ropes, by which you might bind
+me hand and foot, with my teeth."</p>
+
+<p>I rang the bell and ordered dinner served half an
+hour earlier than usual. Then I went to my dressing room
+to inspect the new gown that I intended to wear at the
+theatre.</p>
+
+<p>Girardi night! Girardi, the famous Vienna comedian!
+I never saw him. His humor will act as a tonic. Just what
+I need. I will die if I breathe none other but the air of
+this palace, that reeks with cheap pretensions, Jesuitical
+puritanism, envy and hatred, where every second person is a
+spy of either the King or George.</p>
+
+<p>I must escape the polluted atmosphere for a few hours,
+at least, and laugh, laugh, LAUGH.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p style="margin-left: 36em;">11:30 P.M.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I have seen Girardi. I have laughed. I saw the Dolores.
+And I don't blame Kyril a bit.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XVII" id="XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<h4>THE ROYAL PRINCE, WHO BEHAVES LIKE A DRUNKEN BRICKLAYER</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I face the music, but my husband runs away&mdash;Prince George
+can't look me in the eye&mdash;He roars and bellows&mdash;Advocates
+wife-beating&mdash;I defy him&mdash;German classics&mdash;"Jew literature"
+<i>Auto da f&eacute;</i> ordered.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>April 2, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Chamberlain Baron Haugk, of the service of Prince
+George, called at nine A.M. and insisted upon seeing me.
+I sent out my Grand-Mistress, Baroness von Tisch, to tell
+him that "Her Imperial Highness would graciously permit
+him to wait upon her at half past ten."</p>
+
+<p>"But my all-highest master commands."</p>
+
+<p>I was listening in my boudoir and I went out to him
+only half-dressed, a powder-mantle over my shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Her Imperial Highness will not have her commands
+questioned by servants," I said in my most haughty style.
+The <i>Kammerherr</i> knocked his heels together, bowed to the
+ground and retired. That's my way of dealing with royal
+flunkeys, no matter what their title of courtesy.</p>
+
+<p>He was back at the stroke of the clock to announce his
+"sublime master" for one in the afternoon.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I will be ready to receive his Royal Highness. My
+household shall be instructed," I answered coldly, though
+I dread that old man.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not wanted," I told Frederick Augustus.
+"Better make yourself scarce." He didn't need to be told
+twice. "Undress-uniform," he shouted to his valet. "And
+send somebody for a cab."</p>
+
+<p>"Why a cab?" I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me in a pitying way. "Women are such
+geese," he made answer. "Don't you see, if I left the
+palace in one of our own carriages, the King, or father,
+might notice and call me back."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, very well. And don't 'celebrate' too much while
+you are out."</p>
+
+<p>I had the lackeys line the staircase and corridors. My
+military household stood in the first ante-chamber, my
+courtiers in the second, my ladies in the third when Prince
+George walked into my parlor. At first he acted in no
+unfriendly manner. He kissed me on the forehead and
+asked after the babies, and if he hadn't riveted his eyes all
+the time into some corner of the room&mdash;his stratagem when
+in an ugly mood&mdash;I might have persuaded myself that he
+wasn't on mischief bent.</p>
+
+<p>But he soon began pouring out his bile. With a face
+like a wooden martyr he announced that he was not pleased
+with me.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You are too much of a light-weight, too vivacious, too
+attractive to the mob," he said in his bitterest tones. "You
+are forever seeking the public eye like&mdash;an actress."</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your Royal Highness to take notice that Imperial
+Princesses of Austria"&mdash;I put some emphasis on the
+Imperial&mdash;"while popular, never descend to jugglery," I
+answered politely, but firmly.</p>
+
+<p>"No offence to your Imperial Highness," said George,
+"but you must understand once and for all that Saxon
+princes and princesses are bound by our house laws to
+the strictest observance of precedence. The love of the
+people naturally goes out to the King and Queen. Junior
+members of the Royal House must not seek to divert to
+themselves the popularity that is the King's own."</p>
+
+<p>"I have always been taught to respond to popular
+greetings offered me. My aunt, the Empress Elizabeth, in
+particular instructed me to that effect," I submitted with
+great deference.</p>
+
+<p>"Her Majesty didn't instruct you to make a show of
+yourself every hour of the day," hissed George, his eyes
+devouring the stove.</p>
+
+<p>"I drive out twice, in the morning to go shopping,
+in the afternoon to air my babies."</p>
+
+<p>George, unable to dispute me, abandoned pretensions
+of politeness or manners. He fairly roared at me: "You
+are travelling the streets all the time. It has to stop."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Whereupon I said in as sharp a voice as I could manage:
+"And Your Royal Highness has to stop bellowing at
+me. I'm not used to it. In Salzburg and Vienna gentlemen
+don't use that tone of voice and that sort of language
+to gentlewomen."</p>
+
+<p>"Salzburg," cried George, "in Salzburg you got your
+ears boxed, but it didn't do much good to all appearances."</p>
+
+<p>"Your Royal Highness," I answered, "my mother has
+her faults, but it's no one's business outside of her immediate
+family. And no one at this court has a mother's
+authority over me."</p>
+
+<p>I saw that George was beside himself with rage.
+"If your husband," he snarled, "was as free with his
+hand as your mother, there would be an end to your frivolities."</p>
+
+<p>"Your Royal Highness forgets what you admitted yourself,
+namely, that the indignities offered me while I was a
+child were bereft of beneficial results. And please take
+notice," I added, raising my voice, "I won't stand violence
+from anyone, neither from my husband&mdash;as you kindly suggest&mdash;nor
+from you, or the King."</p>
+
+<p>George was too surprised to even attempt a reply. He
+evidently didn't know what to say or do. To avoid my
+eyes that were seeking his, he turned his back on me and
+stepped up to a little table laden with books. He studied
+the titles for a while, then, turning suddenly, held a small<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+volume towards me. His arm was out-stretched as if he
+feared to contaminate his uniform.</p>
+
+<p>"What have we got here?" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>It was my turn to be astonished. "Why, according to
+the binding, it must be Heine's <i>Atta Troll</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Atta Troll</i>," cried George, and opening the book at
+random he read half to himself:</p>
+
+<p>
+"This bear-leader six Madonnas<br />
+Wears upon his pointed hat,<br />
+To protect his head from bullets<br />
+Or from lice, perchance, it may be."<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>He fired the volume on the floor and grabbed another.
+"What's this?"</p>
+
+<p>"As the title will indicate to your Royal Highness,
+Nietzsche's Zarathustra." For the life of me I couldn't
+see any harm in this portion of my library.</p>
+
+<p>George continued to rummage among the books. He
+acted like a madman. "What's this, what's this?" he kept
+on saying, turning them over and over. I thought it beneath
+my dignity to answer. I just stared at the fanatic.</p>
+
+<p>After he finished his hurried examination, he took one
+book after the other and tossed it violently at my feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Heine, the Jew-scribbler," he cried, aiming a kick
+at Atta Troll.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you dare," I said, "that book was given me by
+Her Majesty, the Empress of Austria."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I can't believe it," shouted George, "that Jew-scribbler,
+the reviler of kinship."</p>
+
+<p>"He never lampooned the kings of Saxony," I calmly
+remarked, picking up the volume. "Here is Her Majesty's
+dedication to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Everybody knows the eccentricities of Her Majesty
+of Austria," shouted George. "Anyhow, who gave you permission
+to read such rotten stuff as this at our court?"</p>
+
+<p>"Prince George," I answered, taking two steps towards
+him, "Duke of Saxony, the Archduchess of Austria takes
+pleasure to inform you that in her house she asks no one's
+permission what to read or do."</p>
+
+<p>At this he turned drill-ground bully. "You are in the
+King's house," rang out his voice in cutting tones, "and at
+this moment I represent the King. And in the King's name
+I forbid you to read these obscenities, and in the King's
+name I hereby command that these books be destroyed at
+once."</p>
+
+<p>Well, since he talked in the King's name I had no
+leg to stand on. I merely bowed acquiescence and he
+strutted out, turning his back on me as he went without
+salutation of any sort. I ran into my room, locked the
+door and had a good cry.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XVIII" id="XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<h4>I DEFY THEM</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Laughter and pleasant faces for me&mdash;Frederick Augustus refuses
+to back me, but I don't care&mdash;We quarrel about my reading&mdash;He
+professes to gross ignorance.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>May 1, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>What's the use keeping a diary that is nothing but a
+record of quarrels and humiliations? After I finished the
+entry about my scene with Prince George, I felt considerably
+relieved. I had held my own, anyhow. But fighting
+is one thing and writing another. I am always ready for
+a fight, but "war-reporting" comes less easy.</p>
+
+<p>The unpleasantness with George brought in its wake,
+as a natural consequence so to speak, a whole lot of other
+squabbles and altercations, family jars and general rumpuses,
+which I cared not to embalm in these pages at the
+time. However, as they are part and parcel of my narrative,
+incomplete as it may be, I will insert them by and by
+according to their sequence.</p>
+
+<p>After George was gone I made up my mind that, his
+commands and threats notwithstanding, I must continue to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+live as I always did: joyful, free within certain limits and
+careless of puritan standards. If the rest of the royal ladies,
+and the women of the service, want to mope and look sour,
+that's their affair. Let them wear out their lives between
+confessional, knitting socks for orphan children, <i>Kaffe-klatsches,</i>
+spying and tale-bearing and prayer-meetings,&mdash;it
+isn't my style. I'm young, I'm pretty, I'm full of red blood,
+life means something to me. I want to live it my own way.</p>
+
+<p>I want to laugh; I have opinions of my own; I want
+to read books that open and improve the mind. I want
+to promote my education by attending lectures, by going
+to the theatre&mdash;in short, I don't want to become a dunce
+and a bell-jingling fool like the others.</p>
+
+<p>If that spells royal disgrace&mdash;be it so. Louise won't
+purchase two "<i>How art thou's?</i>" at the price their Majesties
+and Royal Highnesses ask.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, it would come easier with Frederick Augustus's
+help and support, but since he chooses to be bully-ragged
+and sat upon and, moreover, finds pleasure in licking
+the hand that strikes at his and his wife's dignity, I
+will go it alone.</p>
+
+<p>I defy them.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>June 16, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I had another tiff with Frederick Augustus, but the
+cause is too insignificant to deserve record. I will rather<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+tell about our grand quarrel following Prince George's visit.
+We dined alone that day, as he was eager to hear the
+news. The preliminaries didn't excite him much, but when
+I mentioned the book episode, he bristled up.</p>
+
+<p>"You won't allow the King, or Prince George, to dictate
+what I shall read or not read?" I demanded. "My
+house is my castle and I won't brook interference in my
+<i>m&eacute;nage</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you really suppose," replied Frederick Augustus,
+"that I'll court royal displeasure for the sake of those Jew-scribblers?
+I never read a book since I left school and can't
+make out what interest books can have to you or anyone
+else. Where did you get them, anyhow?"</p>
+
+<p>I told him that Leopold supplied my book wants. "My
+brother is a very intelligent man," I said, "and the books
+he gives me are all classics in their way."</p>
+
+<p>"Go to with your book-talk!" he mocked in his most
+contemptuous voice. "I asked the director of the royal
+library and was told that each of the books, to which father
+objects, was written by a Jew. Let Jews read them. It
+isn't decent for a royal princess to do so."</p>
+
+<p>"My brother isn't a Jew."</p>
+
+<p>"But in utter disgrace in Vienna. No one at court
+speaks to him. He is head over heels in debt and the next
+we know he will be borrowing from us. As to those books,
+don't bring any more into the house. Royal princes and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+princesses have better things to do than waste time on Jew-scribblers."</p>
+
+<p>With that he violently pushed back his chair and left
+me, a very much enraged woman. He didn't give me the
+chance to have the last word.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XIX" id="XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+<h4>ATTEMPTED VIOLENCE DEFEATED BY FIRMNESS</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Frederick Augustus seeks to carry out his father's brutal threats&mdash;Orders
+and threats before servants&mdash;I positively refuse to
+be ordered about&mdash;Frederick Augustus plays Mrs. Lot&mdash;Enjoying
+myself at the theatre.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>June 17, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The chance came later and with it the conviction that
+His Royal Highness, Prince George, didn't quite believe
+me when I told him that I wouldn't stand for violence, for
+tonight Frederick Augustus attempted something of the
+sort.</p>
+
+<p>I had ordered my carriage for seven o'clock to drive
+to the theatre, and had just finished dressing when he
+stormed into my boudoir and demanded to know if I had
+taken leave of my senses.</p>
+
+<p>"Not that I am aware of."</p>
+
+<p>"But I hear you intend to go to the theatre&mdash;a princess
+in disgrace going to the theatre!"</p>
+
+<p>"Aren't you coming along, Frederick Augustus?" I
+asked na&iuml;vely.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no desire to lose my regiment."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And I have no desire to sit at home and talk nothingnesses
+with the fools His Majesty appoints for my
+service."</p>
+
+<p>"Take a care," cried Frederick Augustus.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be a noodle and a coward," I answered hotly.</p>
+
+<p>"Louise, remember that I am an army officer."</p>
+
+<p>"What has that to do with my going to the theatre?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's the height of audacity to defy the King."</p>
+
+<p>"It would be the depth of cowardice to stay at home."</p>
+
+<p>"Take back that word, or&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I wish Your Royal Highness a very pleasant evening,"
+I said, indulging in a low genuflexion.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus got blue with rage. I saw him
+clench his fists as I swept out of the room, making as much
+noise with my train as I could manage.</p>
+
+<p>"An out-rider," I commanded the Master of Horse who
+stood in the ante-chamber awaiting me.</p>
+
+<p>"At your Imperial Highness' commands," bowed the
+Baron with the most astonished face in the world. We use
+out-riders, that is grooms in livery, to ride ahead of the
+royal carriage, only on state occasions in Dresden. But,
+of course, my orders would be obeyed even if I had demanded
+twelve grooms to attend me.</p>
+
+<p>I was just going out, preceded by my Chamberlain and
+followed by my ladies, Baroness Tisch and <i>Fr&auml;ulein</i> von
+Schoenberg; there were two lackeys at the door and in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+the corridor stood the groom-in-waiting, holding several
+lap-robes for me to decide which to take, when the Prince
+caught up with me.</p>
+
+<p>"I forbid you to go to the theatre," he bawled in the
+presence of my titled entourage and three servants.</p>
+
+<p>I realized at once that this was the supreme moment
+of my life at the court of Saxony. Either bend or break.
+If I allowed myself to be roared at and ordered about like
+a servant-wench&mdash;goodbye the Imperial Highness! Enter
+the Jenny-Sneak German housewife, greedy for her master's
+smile and willing to accept an occasional kick. The
+Prince had begun this family brawl in public. I would
+finish.</p>
+
+<p>"I won't take orders," I held forth. "No commands,
+understand, princely, royal or otherwise. And be advised,
+now and for all time, that I will answer any attempt to
+brutalize me by immediate departure, or by seeking refuge
+with the Austrian Ambassador."</p>
+
+<p>If Frederick Augustus had suddenly become Mrs. Lot
+he wouldn't have been more conspicuous for utter petrification
+and silence. He stared at me with wide-open, bleary
+eyes and if I had taken him by the neck and feet and
+dropped him out of the window, as his ancestor Augustus
+of the three-hundred and fifty-two took the "spook" sent
+into his bedroom by Joseph the First, he wouldn't have
+offered the ghost of resistance, I dare say.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Your arm, Mr. Chamberlain, since His Royal Highness
+doesn't wish to accompany us." And I swept out of
+the ante-chamber and through the corridor, triumphant.</p>
+
+<p>"Gipsy Baron" was the bill of the play. I knew only
+a few of its waltzes and I drank in the comedy and the
+pretty music like one desperately athirst. Kyril's girl, the
+Dolores, was very chic and looked ravishingly pretty, and
+brother-in-law Max isn't the dunce I took him for.</p>
+
+<p>His Theresa is a droll dog, fair to look upon, dark
+and fat. It will take a lot of holy water to save her from
+purgatory.</p>
+
+<p>Girardi made me screech with laughter. He is as funny
+as my father-in-law is mournful&mdash;a higher compliment to
+his art I cannot pay. Of course, actor-like, he appreciated
+an Imperial Highness' applause and looked up to my box
+every little while. I wish, though, he hadn't acknowledged
+my plaudits by bowing to me. It attracted general attention
+and soon the whole house was staring and smiling.
+The people seemed to be glad that their Crown Princess
+was enjoying herself.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XX" id="XX"></a>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+<h4>TITLED SERVANTS LOW AND CUNNING</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>George tries to rob me of my confidante&mdash;Enter the King's spy,
+Baroness Tisch in her true character&mdash;Punishment of one
+royal spy.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>August 1, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Prince George is planning a devilish revenge. He
+threatens to separate me from my Secretary and confidante,
+little Baranello, whom I brought with me from Salzburg.
+She is an Italian, and, unlike most of them, as faithful as
+a dog. A connection of the Ruffo family, princes and dukes
+that gave the world more than one pope, the small fry
+Saxon nobility hate her, and George knows that he can't
+corrupt Lucretia by his paltry presents and ridiculous condescension.</p>
+
+<p>They would send her back to Salzburg, if they dared,&mdash;anyhow,
+Baroness von Tisch is to be both Chief Mistress
+and confidential secretary. If she died of the first confidence
+I make her, she wouldn't live five minutes.</p>
+
+<p>The King's House Marshal, Baron von Carlowitz, came
+to announce the change to me, but I knew, of course, that
+it was George's doings.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Tell Prince George," I said icily, "that I appreciate
+the fact of being deprived of the services of an honest
+woman in favor of a spy."</p>
+
+<p>I will "show" this Tisch woman, as my American
+friends say. Some three years ago Emperor Francis Joseph
+appointed a spy as attendant to my brother Leopold.
+Schoenstein, Baron or Count, was his name, I think.
+Schoenstein would rather bear evil tales of his young master
+to his old master than eat, and nothing would please
+him better than to meddle with Leopold's correspondence.</p>
+
+<p>He stole as many letters as he could lay his hands on.
+Fished them even from slop-pails, or pieced together such
+as Leopold tore up and dropped in the cuspidors. When
+brother observed this, he used to tear up bills and the most
+innocent writings of his own and other people into little
+bits and planted them in Schoenstein's hunting-grounds.
+Appropriate work for a <i>lick-spittle</i> to pull them out. But
+Leopold got tired of playing with this vermin, and it
+tickled him to make an example of the scamp. Hence, he
+allowed it to be observed by Schoenstein when he, Leopold,
+locked a parcel of letters from his girl in the cash-box.</p>
+
+<p>The toad-eating Schoenstein burned with desire to copy
+these letters and send the transcript on to Emperor Francis
+Joseph. They would have made interesting reading to my
+old uncle who has given up cracking nuts since his teeth
+fell out. There is Kati Schratt, you say. Pshaw, Kati is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+as old, or nearly as old, as his Majesty and she isn't a
+Ninon de l'Enclos by any means.</p>
+
+<p>To cut a long story short, Schoenstein could see but
+one way for getting those compromising letters: steal the
+keys and borrow the parcel for a short while. That's what
+Leopold was waiting for. Not half an hour after the keys
+had been abstracted, he raised the alarm. He had been
+"robbed." The archducal safe had been rifled. And he
+managed to catch Schoenstein red-handed.</p>
+
+<p>"Send for the police," thundered my brother, "and
+meanwhile watch the thief well." Schoenstein was given no
+chance to explain and deemed himself lucky to escape arrest.
+My brother suspended him from service and made
+him go to a hotel while he telegraphed the story of the
+attempted theft to Vienna, asking the Count's immediate
+dismissal.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, Vienna disavowed the dunderhead&mdash;royalty
+has no use for persons that allow themselves to be compromised&mdash;and
+he has been in disgrace ever since. Nor
+can he get another courtly office, for Leopold threatened
+the moment he sees him with a Highness to warn everybody:
+"Look to your watch and purse, we have a thief
+with us."</p>
+
+<p>I jotted this down to remind me that Prince George's
+spy deserves no better than the Emperor's.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXI" id="XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+
+<h4>BANISHMENT</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I am ordered to repair to a country house with the hated spy as
+my Grand Mistress&mdash;My first impulse to go home, but afraid
+parents won't have me.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>August 10, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Order from the King that myself and children spend
+the rest of the summer at Villa Loschwitz, to remain until
+I get royal permission to return to Dresden,&mdash;the Tisch to
+act as chief of my household.</p>
+
+<p>Banished! I didn't know whether to laugh or cry.
+Smile, because I escaped the <i>ennui</i> of attending court at
+the summer residence of Pillnitz; weep, because my absence
+from court would be interpreted as a disciplinary measure.</p>
+
+<p>I know Pillnitz is about as gay as a Trappist feast
+of carrion and ant's milk, but this princess doesn't want to
+be disciplined.</p>
+
+<p>I shall tell them that I want to go home, but will they
+have me in Salzburg? Papa, of course, but if mother hears
+of my acquaintance with Heine, "who doesn't love Jesus,"&mdash;her
+own words,&mdash;she will undoubtedly side with Prince
+George against her daughter. It was Heine who wrote of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+one of her ancestors, King Louis of Bavaria: "As soon
+as the monkeys and kangaroos are converted to Christianity,
+they'll make King Louis their guardian saint, in proof
+of their perfect sanity." And you don't suppose for a moment
+that mamma forgets a thing like that. As to Nietzsche,
+he will give her no conscientious qualms, for I'm sure
+she never heard of the gentleman, but my going to the
+Gipsy Baron "where two princely mistresses are gyrating"&mdash;horrible!</p>
+
+<p>I hear her say: "I think Prince George is most considerate
+sending our daughter to Loschwitz. She deserved
+to be put in a nunnery and made to kneel on unboiled peas
+three times a day." And when it comes to an <i>&eacute;clat</i>, even
+papa may have to abandon me. Emperor Francis Joseph
+holds the purse-strings; and papa always lives beyond his
+means and Francis Joseph, King Albert and Prince George
+are fast friends. If papa quarrelled with the two latter
+gentlemen, they would immediately denounce him to the
+Emperor. The rest can easily be guessed.</p>
+
+<p>Sorry, but papa is no hero in his daughter's eyes.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXII" id="XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+
+<h4>"POOR RELATIONS" IN ROYAL HOUSES</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Myself and Frederick Augustus quarrel and pound table&mdash;The
+Countess Cosel's golden vessel&mdash;Off to Brighton&mdash;Threat of
+a beating&mdash;I provoke shadows of divorce&mdash;King threatens
+force&mdash;More defiance on my part&mdash;I humble the King and
+am allowed to invite my brother Leopold.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 33em;">Villa Loschwitz</span>, <i>September 1, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Father had to give in. He is the poor relation, and
+a poor relation in royal circles doesn't amount to more than
+one among well-to-do merchants and farmers. He has no
+rights that others need respect and if he shows backbone
+he is given to understand that the head of the family has
+other uses for the palace or hunting grounds lent him.</p>
+
+<p>"I would love to have you with me in Salzburg," he
+wrote, "but, dear child, it's for your best to learn to obey.
+Do it for your old father's sake."</p>
+
+<p>Still I wouldn't give in at once. "I won't go to Loschwitz,"
+I declared. And gave a dozen reasons besides the
+paramount one that I wouldn't go, because Prince George
+wanted me.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm no trunk to be shipped hither and thither at
+someone's behest," I said.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus took umbrage at the "someone,"
+which he pronounced <i>l&egrave;se majest&eacute;</i>, and to emphasise the
+fact hit the table with a bang, whereupon I pounded the
+table twice: bang-bang!</p>
+
+<p>It hurt my hand, and didn't do Frederick Augustus
+any good. Nor was the discussion advanced thereby. For
+the rest: an exchange of names and epithets that smacked
+of the kitchen rather than the <i>salon</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Too bad you exhaust all your energy with me," I said
+among other things, "while in the royal presence you act
+the docile lamb's tail."</p>
+
+<p>He began prating about his character as an army
+officer again, and I reminded him that I wasn't the Countess
+Cosel.</p>
+
+<p>"Who's that?" asked the big ignoramus.</p>
+
+<p>"Never heard of the lady that refused to accompany
+Augustus to the Camp of M&uuml;hlberg unless he brought her
+a certain intimate golden vessel costing five thousand
+<i>Thalers</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"A loving cup?" asked my husband.</p>
+
+<p>"If you like to call it so."</p>
+
+<p>"But why did you say you are no Cosel?"</p>
+
+<p>"I meant to imply that I am not a prisoner of state
+and don't want to be treated like one. Hence, since a visit
+to my parents would greatly embarrass them, I decided to
+go to Brighton for the season."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Brighton," he repeated, "and where will you get the
+spondulicks?"</p>
+
+<p>"I saved up quite a bit of money. Guess I can manage
+the expense alright."</p>
+
+<p>"Lip-music," cried Frederick Augustus in his polite
+way. "You have no idea what such a trip costs."</p>
+
+<p>I assured him that I had made every inquiry and was
+able to meet all expenses. "We will go incog.," I added,
+"the babies and nurse and Lucretia. The Tisch woman
+shall have a furlough even before she asks for it."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that so?" Frederick Augustus laughed brutally.
+"You seem to forget that you are subject to our house
+laws."</p>
+
+<p>"And you seem to forget that I have a will of my
+own," I almost shouted.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus jumped up. "Not another word
+on the subject," he commanded. "The incident is closed."</p>
+
+<p>It suddenly occurred to me that Prince George had
+been talking once more to Frederick Augustus about the
+pugilistic performances of my mother. Perhaps he was
+trying to pluck up courage to beat me, a diversion not
+altogether unknown in the House of Saxony, according
+to the Memoirs of the famous Baron Schweinichen, Court
+Marshal and <i>Chroniqueur</i>.</p>
+
+<p>His diaries, covering a number of years, have many
+such entries as this: "His Royal Highness hit the Prin<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>cess
+a good one on the 'snout' by way of silencing her
+tongue." Doubtless George would be delighted to have
+me "shut up" by some such process, but Frederick Augustus
+lacks the sand.</p>
+
+<p>When he was gone, I indicted a letter to the King,
+advising him in oily, malicious, yet eminently respectful
+language that, not wishing to figure as a prisoner of state,
+I had decided to spend the rest of the summer abroad with
+my children. At the same time I intimated that I was well
+aware of being in disgrace and being regarded with ill
+favor by the several members of the royal family.</p>
+
+<p>"If it pleases your Majesty," I added, "I will relieve
+a most unhappy situation by giving back his liberty to
+Frederick Augustus. I'll promise not to oppose divorce,
+or allow my family to interfere."</p>
+
+<p>This letter I sent to the King, sealing it with my
+personal arms, of which there is no duplicate at court.
+After that I sent three telegrams. One to papa, announcing
+that I was going to Brighton; another to the Palace Hotel
+in Brighton; a third to the Minister of Railways, commanding
+that my saloon carriage be coupled to the Continental
+express night after next. I knew, of course, that the King
+would be informed of these messages in a twinkling.</p>
+
+<p>I waited an hour for the Powers to move; as a rule
+it takes them a week or ten days. Exactly sixty-five minutes
+after sending my letter to the King, Frederick Augus<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>tus
+rode into the courtyard like a madman. He had been
+hurriedly summoned from the drill-grounds, I heard afterwards.
+He dismounted at the stairs leading to the King's
+apartments. Half an hour later, he slunk into my room, as
+serious as a corpse. There wasn't a trace of brutality in
+his voice as he said:</p>
+
+<p>"A fine row you kicked up."</p>
+
+<p>I didn't favor him by questions, but kept looking out
+of the window. He walked up and down for five or six
+minutes, boring his eyes into the corners of the room.
+Suddenly, at a safe distance, he delivered himself of the
+following:</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty interdicts your plans <i>in toto</i>. You will
+be conducted to Loschwitz tonight. Don't put yourself
+to the humiliation of trying to disobey. You are being
+watched."</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty's own words?"</p>
+
+<p>"He refused to see me," answered Frederick Augustus,
+dejectedly. He acted as if pronouncing his own death
+warrant. "Baumann told me." (This is the King's Secretary.)</p>
+
+<p>I almost pitied the poor fellow, but I had to hold my
+own.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Frederick Augustus," I said, "you can tell
+Baumann from me that I won't go to Loschwitz tonight;
+that for the present I intend to stay here and that, if they<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+force me, they'll need plenty of rope, for I will holler and
+kick and do all I can to attract attention."</p>
+
+<p>Maybe Frederick Augustus wanted to say something
+in reply, but open his mouth was all he could manage.
+Seeing him so bamboozled, I continued: "It is decided,
+then, that I stay, but I give you fair warning that I will
+skip to England sooner or later. I don't want you to get
+into trouble, Frederick Augustus, therefore inform Baumann
+without delay."</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus got blue in the face. He seemed
+ready to jump on me, crush me between his cuirassier fists.
+I held up my hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Did Baumann tell you that I offered to accept divorce
+if it pleases the King?"</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus changed color. White as a ghost,
+he fixed his eyes upon mine, momentarily, and murmured:
+"Have we got to that point?"</p>
+
+<p>He ran out of the room and a minute later was tearing
+up the stairs leading to the King's apartments. Lucretia
+says he returned within a quarter of an hour and
+tried my door. But I had locked myself in and refused
+to open. We didn't meet until dinner. Neither of us ate
+a bite, or said a word. Baumann was announced with the
+ice. He was all smiles, all devotion.</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty will be pleased to see your Imperial
+Highness in a quarter of an hour," he said sweetly.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus was a painted sepulchre when I
+coolly replied: "Pray inform His Majesty that I am not
+well and about to retire for the night."</p>
+
+<p>At this Baumann looked like a whipped dog. He
+probably thought it impossible for anyone to refuse to
+answer the summons of His Majesty. With the most downcast
+mien in the world, he seemed singularly anxious to
+render himself ridiculous. "Maybe the Crown Prince will
+do in my stead," I suggested maliciously.</p>
+
+<p>Baumann grabbed at the straw and withdrew. A little
+while later a lackey came, summoning Frederick Augustus
+to Prince George. When he came back, he was all undone.</p>
+
+<p>"Father treated me very well," he said. "He says the
+King regrets that your uncontrollable temper causes so
+many misunderstandings, and both His Majesty and father
+have no objection to your staying in Dresden if you like.
+Loschwitz was suggested because you and the children
+seem to need country air.</p>
+
+<p>"As to your proposed visit to England, the King begs
+you to consider that such a journey at this time is liable
+to provoke a scandal which would reflect not only on you,
+on us, but on your poor parents."</p>
+
+<p>The old story of the penurious relations, I thought
+bitterly, but on the whole I was well pleased. I had beaten
+and out-generaled them all.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"If Loschwitz isn't meant for punishment, I accept
+with pleasure," I said. "It's a very pretty place." Poor
+Frederick Augustus' face lit up. "But there must be an
+end to the talk about I being in disgrace. If the King is
+as friendly to me as he makes out, let him come and see
+me and the babies. As to summonses by Baumann or
+others, I won't accept them."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," said Frederick Augustus, and I saw that
+I had risen mile-high in his estimation, "when will it be
+your pleasure to leave for Loschwitz?"</p>
+
+<p>"Tonight, if I have permission to invite Leopold for a
+week or so."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you stark, staring mad?" shouted my husband,&mdash;"Impose
+conditions after the King moderated?"</p>
+
+<p>"Go and tell Baumann I'll have Leopold or all is off,"
+I said.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning: Ceremonial visit from the Queen.
+The tip of her nose was redder than ever and she seemed
+prepared to weep at the flicking of an eye-lash. She gave
+me a list of her troubles, mental, physical, political, matrimonial
+and otherwise, since the day she was born, but said:
+"Obedience to my father, the King, and obedience to my
+husband, the King, has enabled me to weather all storms.
+You, too, must learn obedience, Louise. It's women's only
+salvation and especially a princess's."</p>
+
+<p>I answered that I fully recognized my obligations to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+the King. "I only object to being buffeted around like a
+piece of furniture."</p>
+
+<p>"I know, I know," said the Queen, "and hope all is
+arranged satisfactorily. The King will be glad if you
+invite your parents to Loschwitz."</p>
+
+<p>"I asked permission to invite Leopold."</p>
+
+<p>"But, no doubt, your parents would take more interest
+in the children than your brother."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't dispute that, Your Majesty. But if my parents
+joined me at the present time, people might think they
+came to condole with me or else to scold me. I want
+Leopold."</p>
+
+<p>The Queen said she wouldn't dare mention Leopold to
+His Majesty.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then," I concluded, "I shall stay in Dresden,
+regarding Baumann's fine promises as mere talk."</p>
+
+<p>The Queen went away with the air of a martyr, but
+three days later Baumann came and said His Imperial
+Highness was welcome.</p>
+
+<p>A triumph all along the line. I left Dresden without
+seeing the King.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus is at the man&oelig;uvres.</p>
+
+<p>The Baroness is acting as my Grand Mistress.</p>
+
+<p>I expect Leopold in a fortnight.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXIII" id="XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+
+<h4>A SERVANT-TYRANT</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>My correspondence is not safe from the malicious woman appointed
+Grand Mistress&mdash;Lovers at a distance and by correspondence&mdash;Fell
+in love with a leg.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>September 8, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Baroness Tisch, now that she attained the height of
+her ambition, is beginning to show her claws. She is an
+infernal cat. Her skinniness makes her repulsive to me
+and her face gives everyone the impression that she just
+sucked an enormous lemon. She lisps and that makes me
+nervous. I feel like aping her when she isn't around.</p>
+
+<p>She's after me like the devil chasing a poor soul and
+as I never address her except to command or reprimand,
+she tries to find out any secret doings, or thinkings, I may
+be guilty of by way of letters I write or receive.</p>
+
+<p>According to the laws of most countries private correspondence
+is sacred, legally and morally. The late Field-Marshal,
+Count Blumenthal, wrote to his wife of the Crown
+Prince, afterwards Emperor Frederick, that he was a "d&mdash;&mdash;
+fool," but "as communications between husband and wife
+are privileged," no official cognizance was taken.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Otherwise in this petty kingdom and, as already told,
+in Austria, whose monarch, in family matters at least,
+holds to the "<i>L'Etat c'est moi</i>" maxim.</p>
+
+<p>The King's spy, the Tisch, constituted herself post-office
+of Villa Loschwitz&mdash;a duty appertaining to her rank&mdash;and
+I wager she works the "<i>Black Cabinet</i>" to perfection.
+Of course, I am now careful in all I write and advise my
+friends to be, but I sometimes get letters from Unknowns,
+people that sympathize with me or have fallen in love with
+me. All women in high station have lovers among the
+lowly. I recall the Cardinal Dubois' yarn about Salvatico,
+envoy of the Prince of Modena, my kinsman of yore. The
+Italian was sent to Paris to conduct home his master's
+lovely intended, <i>Mademoiselle</i> de Valois, daughter of the
+Regent. It happened that the emissary was introduced to
+<i>Mademoiselle's</i> room an hour before the time set, when she
+was lying on a lounge "with one leg, almost naked, hanging
+down." Salvatico fell in love with the leg and exhausted
+himself in so many "Ah, ah's" of admiration and other
+love-sick stunts that the Duke of Richelieu, having older
+rights, said to him: "Rogue, if you had your deserts I
+would cut off your two ears!"</p>
+
+<p>No man, except my husband, has seen my legs, which
+is a pity, perhaps, but the extreme <i>d&eacute;collet&eacute;</i> demanded at
+certain court functions, especially in Berlin, gained me<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+many epistolary lovers, whose homage I accept gracefully,
+but in silence, of course.</p>
+
+<p>Still, a malicious thing like the Tisch, if one gives her
+enough rope, might arrange, on paper at least, to get me
+with child by a Lothario a hundred miles off, even as the
+children of Madame de Montespan and Louis XIV were
+credited to the Marquis, her husband, residing a hundred
+leagues away, at Guienne. Let me find her red-handed and
+she will fare even worse than Schoenstein.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXIV" id="XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+
+<h4>MORE TYRANNY OF A TITLED SERVANT</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>My daily papers seized, and only milk-and-water clippings are
+submitted&mdash;"King's orders"&mdash;Grand Mistress's veracity
+doubted&mdash;My threats of suspension cow her.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>September 10, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>This morning there were no newspapers at the usual
+hour. Instead, the Tisch furnished a heap of clippings
+carefully pasted up&mdash;the veriest milk-and-water slush
+"ever." Instanter I sent for my tormentor.</p>
+
+<p>"What's this?" I demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Today's papers, Your Imperial Highness."</p>
+
+<p>"You made these clippings?"</p>
+
+<p>"At Your Imperial Highness's commands."</p>
+
+<p>"And you think me ninny enough to be satisfied with
+reading no more than what you consider proper for me
+to see?"</p>
+
+<p>The Tisch wavered not a bit. "His Majesty the King
+is served the same fashion."</p>
+
+<p>"No matter. I want my papers whole, and don't you<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+dare to mutilate them." By way of letting her down easier
+I added: "Don't give yourself the trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"No trouble, I assure your Imperial Highness. With
+your permission, then, I will continue to clip for Your
+Imperial Highness."</p>
+
+<p>I rose and, measuring her from head to toe with flaming
+eyes, I said: "You will do nothing of the kind, do you
+understand?"</p>
+
+<p>The impertinent cat insisted: "But I think it
+proper&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Have you heard what I said or not, Baroness?"</p>
+
+<p>She tried to save her face by asserting, "I am acting
+by command of His Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>"I will ask His Majesty whether you spoke the truth,"
+I said quick as a flash; "meanwhile you are suspended and
+will return to Dresden until recalled. Ring the bell and I
+will give orders to the Master of Horse to send you away."</p>
+
+<p>Of course Tisch couldn't afford such an inquiry to be
+made, which would have exposed her clumsy hand and,
+as remarked, royalty doesn't care to be found out. Defeat
+staring her in the face, Tisch wavered: "Of course, if
+your Imperial Highness chooses to take the responsibility,
+I will be most happy to submit the papers as they arrive."</p>
+
+<p>"In their wrappers," I commanded, as I dismissed her.</p>
+
+<p>By distributing a hundred marks in silver, I found out
+that the Tisch examines my body-servants daily and that,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+night after night, she sits up hours writing long-winded
+reports. She is the King's tool, but she let the cat out of
+the bag when cornered. That gives me the whip hand for
+the time being.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXV" id="XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+
+<h4>THE TWO BLACK SHEEP OF THE FAMILY UNITED</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Leopold upon my troubles and his own&mdash;Imperial Hapsburgs
+that, though Catholics, got divorces or married divorced
+women&mdash;Books that are full of guilty knowledge, according
+to royalty&mdash;A mud-hole lodging for one Imperial Highness&mdash;Leopold's
+girl&mdash;What I think of army officers' wives&mdash;Their
+anonymous letters&mdash;Leopold's money troubles&mdash;We
+will fool our enemies by feigning obedience.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>September 15, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Leopold is with me, the brother two years older than
+I. They just made him a Major&mdash;a twelve-month later than
+his patent calls for.</p>
+
+<p>Like myself, he is almost permanently in disgrace with
+the head of the family, even as I am with the King and
+Prince George. We had no sooner embraced and kissed,
+than I asked him for the latest gossip concerning the Crown
+Princess of Saxony.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a tough one," he said, shaking his finger with
+amused mockery. According to Vienna court gossip, "I
+threw Prince George out of doors," when he "raised
+his hand against me," Frederick Augustus and my<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>self
+haven't been on speaking terms for six months; and
+the Saxe family was actually considering the advisability
+of divorce.</p>
+
+<p>Of course I told Leopold how things really are.</p>
+
+<p>"Then there will be no divorce?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"If the King and Prince George leave me alone,&mdash;no."</p>
+
+<p>"Too bad," he said with a laugh, "that knocks me out
+of the pleasure of maintaining my <i>thesis</i> that the founder
+of the Christian religion didn't believe in indissoluble marriage,
+but, on the contrary, in divorce if such couldn't be
+avoided."</p>
+
+<p>"Who told you that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Professor Wahrmund is preparing a paper on the subject,"
+said Leopold, who, as remarked, is a very well-read
+chap and a student. He named five or six emperors and
+kings, Catholics, some of them members of the Austrian
+Imperial family, who obtained divorces, or married divorced
+women. I jotted down the list.</p>
+
+<p>Lothair II divorced his wife Theutberga and married
+his love, Waldrade.</p>
+
+<p>Emperor Frederick I divorced the Empress Anna on
+the plea that she was sterile. She married a Count, with
+whom she had a dozen children.</p>
+
+<p>Margaret, a daughter of Leopold VI of Austria, was
+divorced by King Ottokar of Bohemia.</p>
+
+<p>John Henry, Prince of Bohemia, divorced his wife<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+Margareta, who afterwards married an ancestor of the
+Kaiser, Ludwig of Brandenburg.</p>
+
+<p>King Ladislaus of Sicily divorced Queen Constance and
+forced his vassal, Andrea di Capua, to marry her against
+his will. Ten years later Ladislaus married Maria de
+Lusignan.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>But a little knowledge is a terrible thing, if it happens
+to be acquired by a prince. Princes are supposed to know
+nothing but the art and the <i>finesses</i> of destruction&mdash;war.
+Upbuilding is not in their line.</p>
+
+<p>"I hear you are exercising a bad influence on Louise,"
+roared our uncle, the Emperor, at Leopold when the latter
+took leave from him. "You furnished to her those infernal
+books, sowing the seed of guilty knowledge?"</p>
+
+<p>Leopold so far forgot himself as to address a question
+to the "All-Highest": "What infernal books?"</p>
+
+<p>"Books full of indecencies and obscenities, in short
+pornographic literature," shouted the head of the family,
+turned his horse and rode away in high dudgeon. Royal
+arguments are nothing if not one-sided!</p>
+
+<p>Then Leopold told of himself. His garrison: a filthy
+mud-hole in Poland. One-story houses and everybody peeping
+into everybody else's windows. The few notables of
+the town and neighborhood tickled to death because they
+have an Imperial Highness with them, and the fool of an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+Imperial Highness goes and "besots himself with a mere
+country lass." He showed me her photograph. I like her
+looks. A pretty face, blonde hair and soft eyes. He was
+her first lover. On his account she left her family. She
+dotes on him as a dog dotes on his master.</p>
+
+<p>Leopold is eccentric enough to jeopardize his career
+for this poor thing. He rented a small house for her and
+spends much of his time there when not on the drill-grounds.</p>
+
+<p>Hence intense indignation among the "respectable
+ladies." An Imperial Highness within reach and he "doesn't
+come to our dances, he doesn't visit and sends his regrets
+when invited!"</p>
+
+<p>Poor Marja suffers especially from the venom of the
+officers' wives,&mdash;cattle I detest. No royal or imperial prince
+is safe from them except in his mother's womb.</p>
+
+<p>"From morn till night and half the night they do nothing
+but gossip about me and my girl," said Leopold,&mdash;"If
+the cats were only satisfied with that! But every little
+while I get an anonymous letter from one of them, denouncing
+her; Marja is favored in a similar way; so is
+my general and our uncle, the Emperor."</p>
+
+<p>And needless to say Leopold can't get along on his
+salary and appanage. Father can't give him much. The
+Emperor won't, because the clergy intrigues against him
+as a free-thinker and non-church-goer.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>We thought long and deep whether it wouldn't be possible
+to improve our position and we decided on this:</p>
+
+<p>We will keep up each other's spirits by clandestine
+correspondence, carried on with the aid of a mutual friend.
+At the same time we will, apparently, fall in with the ideas
+of "our masters" and endure a few pin-pricks rather than
+waste our strength in useless opposition.</p>
+
+<p>Let no one chide us for hypocrites, because our gentleness
+will be a mask, our submission a snare, our obedience
+a lie. It's all on the outside. Inwardly Leopold and
+Louise will remain true to themselves.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXVI" id="XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+
+<h4>FREDERICK AUGUSTUS CONTINUES VERY RAW</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Manners <i>&agrave; la</i> barracks natural to royal princes&mdash;Names I am
+called&mdash;My ladies scandalized&mdash;Leopold turned over a new
+leaf, according to agreement, and is well treated&mdash;The King
+grateful to me for having "influenced Leopold to be good."</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>October 1, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I have tried it a fortnight during Frederick Augustus'
+sojourn here, and, like the French Countess who fell in
+love with the strong man of the circus, I am disappointed.
+Frederick Augustus considers my tractability <i>carte blanche</i>
+to carry into the boudoir of an Imperial Princess the license
+of the brothel. He treats me like a kept-woman&mdash;all with
+the utmost good-nature. I am called names such as the
+other Augustus bestowed on the mothers of his three hundred
+and fifty-two, and I daren't remind him that some day
+I'll be Queen of these realms.</p>
+
+<p>This prince, like the majority of them, hasn't the ghost
+of an idea of a sensitive woman's nature. He paws me over
+like a prize cow, and as the fourteenth Louis esteemed his
+mistress's chamber-women no more worthy of notice than
+her lap-dogs, so Frederick Augustus makes love <i>&agrave; la</i> bar<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>racks
+before the Schoenberg, Countess von Minckwitz, or
+whatever other lady is in attendance.</p>
+
+<p>Only when he does it before the Tisch I am inclined
+to be amused rather than incensed. Tisch, cadaverous
+beanpole, never felt a loving touch on her shoulder.
+The place where her bosom should be never experienced
+a friendly squeeze. No one ever cared whether she wore
+silk stockings or rubber boots&mdash;be amorous, Frederick
+Augustus, when the Tisch is 'round! Indulge
+your coarseness! Put twenty-mark pieces in my stockings
+for a kiss. Tell gay stories and don't forget playing with
+my corsage. It will make the old woman mad. It will
+remind her of what she missed&mdash;of what she will miss all
+her life!</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>October 10, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Letter from Leopold. He is going to church and&mdash;they
+leave his mistress in peace.</p>
+
+<p>He is paying banal compliments to the noble-women
+of his garrison and pinches the officers' wives when he finds
+one in a corner&mdash;and they seem to live in corners when His
+Imperial Highness is around&mdash;hence, no more anonymous
+letters!</p>
+
+<p>The spy planted in his household by the Emperor is
+allowed to see much of the "innocent" correspondence pass<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>ing
+between me and Leopold. He has reported to Francis
+Joseph that the Prince turned over a new leaf.</p>
+
+<p>Result: Leopold's debts have been paid and he got
+about two thousand marks over and above his wants.</p>
+
+<p>Further results: A gracious letter from the King's
+House Marshal, Baron Carlowitz, praising me for "the good
+influence I am exercising on Leopold."</p>
+
+<p>Truly the world wants to be deceived.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXVII" id="XXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+
+<h4>PRINCE MAX MAKES LOVE TO ME</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Wants me to consult him on all spiritual matters&mdash;Warns me
+against the Kaiser, the heretic bishop&mdash;Princes as ill-mannered
+as Russian-Jew up-starts.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Dresden</span>, <i>November 15, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Prince Max called on me the day of my arrival and
+promised me an armchair in Paradise for "reforming" Leopold.
+"I understand that your family life is ideal now,"
+he added. "What bliss!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Louise," he continued, with the face of a donkey
+withdrawing his nozzle from a syrup barrel, "whenever
+doubtful of the right way, of the Lord's way, come to me."</p>
+
+<p>It would have been un-politic to repulse the grotesque
+ape, and I said: "I will. I will even give you the preference
+over the Kaiser, who asked me the same thing&mdash;as
+<i>summus episcopus</i>, of course."</p>
+
+<p>Max looked about the room. We were alone, yet he
+lowered his voice to a faint whisper. "William is a heretic.
+Don't trust him in religious matters," he breathed stealthily.
+And this devilish Max began to stroke my hands and admire
+a bracelet I wore above the elbow.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Kaiser wouldn't have gone much further under
+the circumstances. Maybe he would have kissed my arm,
+though, from wrist to pit.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Tonight family tea in the Queen's <i>salon</i>. The King
+an icicle, but polite as a French marquis. He gave me the
+three "<i>How art thou's</i>" in the space of five minutes, asked
+after the babies and promised to come and look them over.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus, half insane with delight, pinched
+my arm and squeezed my leg under the table. I felt like
+boxing his ears.</p>
+
+<p>My father-in-law had to behave in the presence of the
+King and said a few commonplaces to me.</p>
+
+<p>Johann George and Isabella talked automobiles, not to
+let us forget they are millionaires.</p>
+
+<p>"How much did you pay for my blue car?" asked
+Isabella.</p>
+
+<p>"Not much," replied Johann George; "sixty thousand
+francs, if I recollect rightly."</p>
+
+<p>"My allowance for a whole year." I smiled my sweetest,
+and the King looked disapprovingly at the braggarts.</p>
+
+<p>For ill manners recommend me to a Russian-Jew upstart
+or to a Royal Highness.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXVIII" id="XXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+
+<h4>THE SHAH OF PERSIA FALLS IN LOVE WITH ME</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The "animal" and his show of diamonds and rubies&mdash;Overcome
+by love he treats me like a lady of the harem&mdash;On the defensive&mdash;The
+King of kings an ill-behaved brute&mdash;Eats like
+a pig and affronts Queen&mdash;-Wiped off greasy hands on my
+state robe&mdash;When ten thousand gouged-out eyes carpeted his
+throne&mdash;Offers of jewels&mdash;"Does he take me for a ballet
+girl?"&mdash;The Shah almost compromises me&mdash;King, alarmed,
+abruptly ends dinner&mdash;I receive presents from him.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Dresden</span>, <i>November 20, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Lover No. two. Very much in earnest, like the first,
+but I&mdash;extremely distant this time, though I accepted some
+emeralds and sapphires as big as dove's eggs. The Shah of
+Persia is the happy-unhappy man.</p>
+
+<p>The King and all the Princes went to the railway station
+to receive him. The Queen and Princesses, our entourage
+behind us, assembled in the throne room to do
+honor to the "animal." To designate him otherwise would
+be callow flattery.</p>
+
+<p>But his diamonds and rubies fairly dazzled us. Nothing
+like it in Europe, and our gala uniforms, compared with
+his, like stage tiaras to the Russian Crown jewels!</p>
+
+<p>Though he had eyes for me only, I didn't like him a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+bit. He is a little fellow, unsecure on his pins. And like
+the Balkan princeling I met in Vienna, looks as though
+there was a strain of Jewish blood in his veins.</p>
+
+<p>Like a true Oriental potentate, he wasted not a minute's
+time on the Queen and my sisters-in-law, but began
+making love to me as soon as he entered. The King had
+to take him by the arm to remind him that his first greetings
+were due to her Majesty. Poor Carola! Her face
+looked like parchment, much interlined, and the point of
+her nose was as conspicuous as usual.</p>
+
+<p>There's nothing elegant about this "King of kings,"
+and his French, like his manners, is atrocious. He addressed
+a few set phrases to the Queen, then attacked me&mdash;"attacked"
+is the right word. If I hadn't been on the
+defensive, I think he would have handled my charms as
+unceremoniously as Frederick Augustus when in his cups.
+As it was I escaped but by the length of an eye-lash.</p>
+
+<p>State dinner at five. I never saw such an ill-behaved
+brute, yet he intended to be most agreeable. We are very
+pious at this court, but on occasions like this even an old
+woman like the Queen is obliged to denude herself like a
+wet-nurse on duty.</p>
+
+<p>His Majesty had the Queen on one side; me on the
+left. The King of Saxony was opposite.</p>
+
+<p>After we sat down the Shah examined Queen Carola
+from the point of her chin to the edge of her desolate cor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>sage
+and had the effrontery to express disapproval in all
+but words. Then he turned to me. His gaze became admiring.
+He was evidently delighted with his discoveries
+and, true despot that he is, turned his back on the Queen,
+while paying extravagant court to my charms.</p>
+
+<p>The King, the whole vast assembly, the surrounding
+splendor were lost on this mutton-eater of a barbarian.
+He saw only me, <i>m-e</i>, ME, and I'm sure would have consigned
+all the rest to some unspeakable Oriental death for
+five minutes' <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i> with Louise.</p>
+
+<p>"You are neglecting Her Majesty," I whispered to
+him over and over again. This seemed to enrage him, but
+at last he turned to the Queen, expecting her to begin a
+conversation with him. Of course, Her Majesty thought
+he would take the initiative, which led to mutual staring,
+the Shah's eyes growing wickeder every second. Then he
+began to devote himself to the food and, be sure, there was
+small pleasure in watching him. He fed more like a dog
+than a human being and actually had the effrontery to wipe
+his sauce-spattered hands in the lap of my state robe.</p>
+
+<p>Then, before his mouth was empty, he began talking
+again.</p>
+
+<p>"Which of the princes is your husband?"</p>
+
+<p>I singled out Frederick Augustus. "He isn't a beauty
+by any means," he said, after examining him like a horse
+for sale.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The next second his eyes were wandering over my
+body; I felt as if I was being disrobed.</p>
+
+<p>"You will attend the opera?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll have the honor."</p>
+
+<p>"I will send you a little present after dinner," he said.
+"If you wear it tonight, I will regard that as a sign of
+hope." The beast affected a sentimentality to which he
+must be a stranger.</p>
+
+<p>I recalled that he was the monster who carpeted the
+steps of his throne with the gouged-out eyes of ten thousand
+enemies of his r&eacute;gime when he was crowned. On
+twenty-thousand human eyes he trod with naked feet as
+he acclaimed himself "King of kings" and the "true son of
+God." And Juggernaut was in love with me!</p>
+
+<p>I was speechless. Did he take me for a dancing girl?
+I narrowed my shoulders and gave him a look of disdain.
+House Marshal Baron Carlowitz, standing behind the King's
+chair, took in the situation and whispered to King Albert.</p>
+
+<p>The King immediately rose from table and the state
+dinner came to an abrupt end.</p>
+
+<p>An hour later, while I was dressing for the theatre,
+a big jewel box was handed in. "From the Shah."</p>
+
+<p>Despite my disgust with the fellow, I opened it in
+feverish haste. There was a bracelet set with rubies, sapphires
+and emeralds of fabulous size.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXIX" id="XXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+
+<h4>THE SHAH COMPROMISES ME IN PUBLIC</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Has only eyes for me at the grand man&oelig;uvres, and I can't drive
+him from my carriage&mdash;Ignores the King and the military
+spectacle&mdash;Calls me his adored one&mdash;Court in despair&mdash;Shah
+ruins priceless carpets to make himself a lamb stew.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>December 1, 1894</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am in disgrace again and that uncouth animal, the
+Shah, is responsible.</p>
+
+<p>The dinner episode was bad enough, but he carried
+on worse at the grand parade next day.</p>
+
+<p>Six or eight regiments, Horse, Foot and Artillery, had
+been moved to do him honor, but he flatly refused to accept
+a mount for the occasion. Like the ladies of the royal
+family, he drove to the parade field in a coach and four,
+and no sooner did he clap eyes on me at the rendezvous
+in another vehicle than he left his and shambled over to
+me. He stood at the carriage door, chanting love and devotion,
+and if I hadn't been all ice, I have no doubt he
+would have jumped in and ordered the coachman to drive
+to a hotel.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the King trotted around the man&oelig;uvre<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+field in honor of his "sublime guest." Evolutions, <i>Parade-marsch</i>,
+attacks, saluting the colors, Persian and Saxon,
+what not? Imagine the feelings of the old King when he
+rode up to the Shah's gala coach and found it empty.</p>
+
+<p>The marching past had begun, and still the "King of
+kings" turned his back on it all, while trying to persuade
+me to be Queen of his seraglio.</p>
+
+<p>Our courtiers, the princes, the Queen, the generals were
+in despair. They took counsel with each other, disputed,
+advised, got red in the face. The Shah's gentlemen alone
+kept cool. They probably argued: If our master prefers
+the company of a pretty woman to looking at ten
+thousand men, he shows his good taste.</p>
+
+<p>I tried to shake him off. He stood his ground and
+smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"The Grand March has begun, Your Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>"Bother the Grand March."</p>
+
+<p>The King began to bombard me with ungracious,
+glances, and of course everybody stared. Three times I
+asked the big booby to return to his carriage to oblige his
+host. "Not while I may look at you, adored one."</p>
+
+<p>His love-making became desperate. The Crown Princess
+of Saxony, the Imperial Highness of Austria, the
+"adored one" of this butcher, who was ruining twenty-five
+thousand marks' worth of carpets in his apartments at our
+palace by using them as a shambles to prepare his breakfast<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+of lamb stew. It was contemptible,&mdash;nay, ridiculous. Surely
+there was nothing to do but laugh. And I laughed and
+laughed again.</p>
+
+<p>Only when the last battalion had marched by and the
+music ceased, the "King of kings" returned to his carriage
+and drove back to Dresden with the most bored looking
+visage of the world.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXX" id="XXX"></a>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
+
+<h4>MY LIFE AT COURT BECOMES UNBEARABLE</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Laughter a crime&mdash;Disappointed Queen lays down the law for
+my behavior&mdash;Frederick Augustus sometimes fighting drunk&mdash;Draws
+sword on me&mdash;Prince George would have me
+beaten&mdash;To bed with his boots on.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>January 5, 1895</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Ever since the Shah left I have been the object of
+criticism, suspicions and down-right attacks by the pretty
+family I married into. These pages witness that I tried to
+conform to the absurd notions and comply with the narrow-minded
+idiosyncrasies of the Royal Wettiners. I give
+it up. It can't be done, and I won't make another effort at
+pleasing my relatives-in-law, who adjudge laughter a crime
+and the desire to make friends a bid of lewdness.</p>
+
+<p>Prince George invented the phrase, "Louise is over-desirous
+to please," and Queen Carola paid me a state visit
+to acquaint me with the new indictment.</p>
+
+<p>"Good gracious," I said to Her Majesty, "is that all?
+I thought of being accused of 'sassing' the Archangel Gabriel.
+As to desire to please, that's exactly what ails me.
+I love to please. I love to see people happy. I love to
+make friends."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"My dear child," said the Queen, "you haven't the
+slightest notion of royal dignity. You talk like a <i>cocotte</i>.
+It's a Princess's place to be honored, to be held in supreme
+esteem."</p>
+
+<p>Poor old woman! She was never pretty, never was
+made love to, never had admirers, legitimate or otherwise; she
+thus became impregnated with the fixed idea that to be
+fair and to be loved for one's fairness is frivolous, if not
+altogether reprehensible.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 40em;"><i>March 10, 1895.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus drinks. He says I drive him to drink
+by my attitude towards his beloved family. What
+the beloved family does to me doesn't count, of course.</p>
+
+<p>Drinking was one of the vices of his youth. Love
+for me cured him of the dreadful habit. As this love
+wanes, the itch for alcohol increases.</p>
+
+<p>I can't do anything with him when he is drunk, and
+at such times I am afraid of him. He both nauseates me
+and frightens me. Sometimes he comes home "fighting
+drunk." The fumes of wine, beer and <i>Schnapps</i>, mixed
+with tobacco, upset my stomach and I try to avoid his
+coarse embrace as any decent woman would.</p>
+
+<p>What does this royal drill-ground bully do? He unsheathes
+his sword and threatens to cut my liver out, unless
+I instantly doff my clothes and go to bed with him.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Prince George's evil counsel wasn't powerful enough
+to procure me beatings, but my husband's military education,
+his love of discipline, backed by alcohol, thrusts a
+sword into his hand, and, if I refuse to comply with his
+atrocious demands, I am liable to be treated like so many
+"mere" civilians that are sabred in the public streets for
+refusing to do some spurred and epauletted blackguard's
+bidding, or entertain his insults.</p>
+
+<p>If the Socialists, who are forever railing against these
+self-same army poltroons, only knew it! An Imperial Highness
+threatened like a small "cit" with a four-foot sword
+in the hand of a drunken Royal Highness and dragged
+to a couch with no more ceremony than a street-walker
+passing a Cossack barracks!</p>
+
+<p>The howl that would go up in the Diet, or the <i>Reichstag</i>,
+the fulminant denials by prince and king and government!
+And if I really did get hurt in one of these fracases,
+Frederick Augustus would be sure of a "severe
+reprimand" by father and uncle, and perhaps by the Kaiser,
+too, but would that heal my wounds, would it save me from
+death? Would it even prevent Prince George from saying
+that I myself was to blame?</p>
+
+<p>No, no, I like a whole skin and prefer an embrace
+to a sword-thrust any day, like my ancestress, the Queen
+of Naples, who consummated the marriage forced upon
+her on the spot and in sight of the army rather than have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+her head cut off. Too bad she was hanged in the end
+despite her complacency.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
+
+<p>Indeed, if Frederick Augustus shows the mailed fist,
+I don't stand on ceremony, but I do wish he would take
+his boots off.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span></p>
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Joanna I, Queen of Naples, a pupil of Petrarca and in
+many respects an enlightened ruler. She issued the first laws and
+regulations regarding prostitutes. Hanged by order of King
+Louis of Hungary, after her defeat in battle, July, 1381.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXI" id="XXXI"></a>CHAPTER XXXI</h2>
+
+<h4>PRISON FOR PRINCES THAT OPPOSE THE KING</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Duke of Saxony banished&mdash;Cut off from good literature even&mdash;Anecdote
+concerning the Grand Dauphin and his "kettledrums"&mdash;A
+royal prince's garrison life&mdash;His association with
+lewd women.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>September 1, 1895</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I have once more come to the conclusion that the
+agreement I made with Leopold, to dissimulate my real
+feelings, was the sanest decision I ever formed, for, while
+<i>lettres de cachet</i> are a dead measure as far as ordinary
+mortals go, kings still wield that awful and mysterious abuse
+of power in the family circle.</p>
+
+<p>There is a distant connection of our "sublime master,"
+the King, lingering, without process of law, in a state
+prison. Duke of Saxony is his title, and he is quite
+rich in his own right. Some six or eight years ago
+he raised his hand against the King after the latter struck
+him.</p>
+
+<p>It was suggested that he had better make away with
+himself, and a revolver and poison were conspicuously displayed
+in the room where he was held captive.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Duke said "nay." He thought he could "brass"
+it out. But the assembled family council taught him that,
+while the world at large was <i>fin-de-si&egrave;cle</i>, royalty still lived
+in the traditions of the eighteenth century. It empowered
+the King to banish his kinsman to a lonely country house,
+styled castle by courtesy, and he is confined there even
+today, with the proviso, though, that he may use the surrounding
+hunting-grounds. Otherwise he lives in complete
+seclusion, separated not only from all his friends, but from
+the very classes of society to which he belongs by birth
+and education. And he is still a young man.</p>
+
+<p>I believe they are trying to drive him mad, once as a
+punishment, and again to secure his fortune the quicker.
+To the latter end, he is denied all books that give him
+pleasure and are liable to improve his mind. Bibles, Christian
+Heralds, the Lives of the Martyrs, or the Popes, galore,
+but never a Carlyle, Shakespeare or Taine, which he
+demands regularly.</p>
+
+<p>The Duke is dying of <i>ennui</i>, they say, and to kill time
+engages in all sorts of manual labor. When he gets tired
+of that he blows the trombone.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course he would prefer a pair of kettledrums,"
+said my cousin Bernhardt of Weimar, to whom I am indebted
+for the above.</p>
+
+<p>"Kettledrums?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I mean those the Grand Dauphin, called 'Son of a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+king, father of a king, never a king,' was so fond of, and
+which he finally married in secret."</p>
+
+<p>I looked bewildered.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a very ignorant girl," said Bernhardt. "Never
+heard of the prodigious bosoms of <i>Mademoiselle</i> Chouin?"</p>
+
+<p>"They won't let the Duke marry?" I queried.</p>
+
+<p>"Not even temporarily," said Bernhardt. "And they
+are trying the same game on me. My garrison&mdash;a dung-heap.
+The people there, males and females, entirely unacquainted
+with soap and water. Nothing in the world to
+do but drink and gamble."</p>
+
+<p>"That reminds me. What are you doing in Dresden?"</p>
+
+<p>"With Your Imperial Highness's permission, I came
+to see my girl."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is the lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"No lady at all. Just an ordinary servant-wench, but
+prettier and more devilish than a hundred of them."</p>
+
+<p>"Bernhardt!"</p>
+
+<p>"What would you have me do, Louise? I haven't
+money enough to keep a mistress, and King and Queen
+certainly won't keep one for me. I wish I had lived a
+hundred and fifty years ago, when every lady of the court
+was expected to entertain the royal princes, the Palace
+footing the bill."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXII" id="XXXII"></a>CHAPTER XXXII</h2>
+
+<h4>PRINCE GEORGE SHOWN THE DOOR BY GRAND-DUCHESS MELITA</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>A royal lady who walks her garden attired in a single diaphanous
+garment&mdash;Won't stand for any meddling&mdash;Called impertinent&mdash;My
+virtuous indignation assumed&mdash;A flirtation at a
+distance&mdash;An audacious lover&mdash;The Grand Mistress hoodwinked&mdash;Matrimonial
+horns for Kaiser&mdash;The banished Duke
+dies&mdash;Princes scolded like school-boys.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>February 5, 1896</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>At last Prince George got his deserts, and got 'em good
+and heavy. There had been rumors for some time that
+Grand-duke Ernest Ludwig and his bride, Victoria Melita
+of Saxe-Coburg, the English branch, didn't get along together.
+Ernest Ludwig is a serious-minded, modest and
+intelligent man, but a good deal of a sissy. Victoria Melita
+is a spit-fire, very good-looking and anxious to let people
+know about it. She rides horseback and fences to show
+off her figure, and someone called her a Centaur.</p>
+
+<p>"Be in the palace gardens tomorrow at eleven," answered
+Melita, "and you will be convinced that I am not
+half-horse, even if my husband is a ninny."</p>
+
+<p>She kept the <i>rendezvous</i>, attired in a single garment of
+diaphanous texture.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When Prince George heard that she had a lover, he
+went to Darmstadt to "correct her," as he expressed himself
+with much self-satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>But Victoria Melita proved to him that English princesses
+are made of sterner stuff than the German variety.</p>
+
+<p>"I will have none of your meddling," said the bride
+of two years.</p>
+
+<p>"I came here to make peace between you people."</p>
+
+<p>"Play the dove to your daughter-in-law," quoth the
+Grand-duchess. "I hear you are fighting like Kilkenny
+cats."</p>
+
+<p>"You are impertinent, Madame," cried George furiously.</p>
+
+<p>"You will oblige me by showing this man the door,"
+demanded Victoria Melita, addressing her husband.</p>
+
+<p>"Not until I have explained the situation," answered
+Ernest Ludwig quietly. "Listen, then, cousin! While I
+am by principle opposed to divorce, I won't force my wife
+to live with me."</p>
+
+<p>"And now be so kind as to withdraw," said Victoria
+Melita, opening the door for Prince George. Poor as I
+am, I would have given five thousand marks to have seen
+the meddling pest exit in that fashion, and I love Victoria
+Melita for the spirit she displayed, even if I don't approve
+of her <i>liaisons</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span></p><hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>February 10, 1896</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>A mighty virtuous remark escaped me on the last
+page, and I almost feel like asking the Grand-duchess's
+pardon, for, whatever I am, I'm no hypocrite. Melita is
+said to have a lover; I have an admirer. Up to now I
+don't care a rap for him, but who knows?</p>
+
+<p>It's Count Bielsk of the Roumanian Embassy. I can't
+remember whether he was ever introduced to me. Most
+probably he was, but I forgot.</p>
+
+<p>An elegant fellow&mdash;always looks as if he stepped out
+of a tailor's shop in Piccadilly.</p>
+
+<p>Every single night I go to the theatre the Count occupies
+an orchestra chair that affords the best possible view
+of the royal box. It happened too often and too persistently
+to be accidental. Moreover, I observe that he pays
+no attention to the play. He has eyes for me only.</p>
+
+<p>Impertinence? Decidedly, but I can't be angry with
+the fellow. On the contrary, I am flattered, and the kind
+face and the fine eyes he's got!</p>
+
+<p>Poor stupid Tisch doesn't approve of the theatre, of
+course, and usually begs to be excused on the plea of religious
+duties. "What a sinner you must be," I sometimes
+say, "when you are obliged to forever bother God with
+prayers."</p>
+
+<p>The Schoenberg I send into the next box, for she is no
+spy and never watches me. But if I must take Tisch, I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+always command her to sit behind me. Etiquette forbids
+her the front of the box and from the rear she can see
+only the stage.</p>
+
+<p>What fun to carry on a flirtation right under the nose
+of that acrid-hearted, snivelling bigot, who would mortgage
+part of the eternal bliss she promises herself for a
+chance to catch me at it!</p>
+
+<p>Am I flirting, then?</p>
+
+<p>To spite the Tisch I would plant horns on the very
+Kaiser.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p style="margin-left: 44em;"><i>April 1, 1896.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The Duke of Saxony is dead&mdash;the man who at one
+time offered violence to His Majesty. Bernhardt was mistaken;
+he left a wife and three children. Of course, no
+recognized wife. Just the woman he married. Unless you
+are of the blood-royal, you won't see the difference, but
+that is no concern of mine.</p>
+
+<p>Novels and story books have a good deal to say on
+the subject of inheritance-fights among the lowly. Greed,
+hard-heartedness, close-fistedness, treachery, cheating all
+around! See what will happen to the Duke's widow and
+her little ones.</p>
+
+<p>According to the house laws, a regular pirate's code,
+his late Highness's fortune reverts to the family treasury.
+Prince Johann George will derive the revenues from the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+real estate the Duke owned privately. He is already rich,&mdash;sufficient
+reason for his wanting more. I shudder when
+I think what they will do to the woman the Duke married.</p>
+
+<p>The most notable thing about the funeral was the
+"calling down" Prince Bernhardt got.</p>
+
+<p>"You will go to my valet and ask him to lend you one
+of my helmets. Yours is not the regulation form, I see,"
+said the King to him in the voice of a drill-sergeant. And
+Bernhardt had to take to his heels like a school-boy caught
+stealing apples.</p>
+
+<p>I had to laugh when I observed the meeting between
+my erstwhile admirer, the Prince of Bulgaria, and His
+Majesty.</p>
+
+<p>Ferdinand's broad chest was ablaze with orders and
+decorations, but his valet had forgotten to pin onto him
+the Cross of the <i>Rautenkrone</i>, the Royal Saxe House decoration.
+There were plenty of others, but the King had eyes
+only for the one not dangling from a green ribbon. Consequently,
+Ferdinand, though a sovereign Prince, got only
+one "<i>How art thou?</i>" If we were living in the eighteenth,
+instead of the nineteenth, century, his valet's neglect would
+constitute a prime cause for war between the two countries.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXIII" id="XXXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXXIII</h2>
+
+<h4>MELITA'S LOVE AFFAIRS AND MINE</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The Grand Duchess tells me how she cudgeled George&mdash;Living
+dictaphone employed&mdash;Shows him who is mistress of the
+house&mdash;Snaps fingers in Prince George's face&mdash;Debate about
+titles&mdash;"A sexless thing of a husband"&mdash;Conference between
+lover and husband&mdash;Grand Duke doesn't object to his wife's
+lover, but lover objects to "his paramour being married."</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>April 15, 1896</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Melita conducted herself at the funeral and in our
+palace as unconcernedly as if she and George were fast
+friends. She smiled every time she saw him, and he cut
+her dead to his heart's content. During the three days'
+stay of the Hesses, I had many a good talk and many a
+good laugh with Melita, and now I got a true and unabridged
+record of what happened at Darmstadt during
+George's meddling visit there.</p>
+
+<p>The Grand-duchess, who can be as catty as they make
+'em, had her secretary sit behind a screen to take stenographic
+notes.</p>
+
+<p>Saxon kings and princes always roar and bellow when,
+in conversation or otherwise, things go against their "all-highest"
+grain. As soon as George felt that he was losing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+ground, he began to bark and yell, whereupon Melita interrupted
+him by saying, "I beg you to take notice that you
+are in <i>my</i> house."</p>
+
+<p>George grew so red in the face, Melita hoped for an
+apoplectic fit. But after a few seconds he managed to
+blurt out: "It's your husband's house."</p>
+
+<p>"While I am Grand-duchess of Hesse it's my house,
+too. Moreover, this is my room and I forbid you to play
+the ruffian here."</p>
+
+<p>Prince George looked at the Grand-duke, but Ernest
+Ludwig said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>"I am here as the King's representative. I represent
+the chief of the Royal House of Saxony."</p>
+
+<p>"A fig for your Royal House of Saxony," said Melita,
+snapping her fingers in George's face. "Queen Victoria is
+my chief of family, and, that aside, Ludwig and I are sovereigns
+in Hesse and have no intention whatever to allow
+anyone&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Anyone?" repeated George aghast. "You refer to me
+as anyone?"</p>
+
+<p>"In things matrimonial," said Melita, "only husband
+and wife count; all others are 'anyone.' You, too."</p>
+
+<p>"She calls me 'you,'" cried George, white with rage,
+looking helplessly at Ernest Ludwig. When the latter kept
+his tongue and temper, George addressed himself to Melita
+once more.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I want you to understand that my title is Royal
+Highness."</p>
+
+<p>"And I want you to understand that I am Her Royal
+Highness the Grand-duchess of Hesse, Royal Princess of
+Great Britain and Ireland, Duchess of Saxony," cried Melita,
+stamping her foot.</p>
+
+<p>With that she went to the door, opened it and said,
+"I request Your Royal Highness to leave my house this
+very second."</p>
+
+<p>And George went.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>June 1, 1896</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Poor virtuous me, to chide myself, and call myself
+names for flirting with Count Bielsk&mdash;at a distance of
+twenty feet or more! "I could kick my back," as the Duc
+de Richelieu&mdash;not the Cardinal, but the lover of the Regent's
+daughters and "every wife's husband"&mdash;used to say (only
+a bit more grossly) when I think what I miss in this dead-alive
+Dresden.</p>
+
+<p>Darmstadt isn't half as big a town, and the Hesse
+establishment doesn't compare with ours in magnitude, but
+what fun Melita is having!</p>
+
+<p>Of course, it isn't <i>all</i> fun, for her husband is a "sexless"
+thing, and, like the Grand-duchess Serge of Russia, she
+would be a virgin, though married for years, if it wasn't
+for the other.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The other" is none other but Kyril, the lover of our
+Dolores,&mdash;Kyril isn't exactly pining away when separated
+from Melita.</p>
+
+<p>Well, Melita wants him all to herself. She wants a
+divorce. The complacent husband, who is no husband at
+all, doesn't suit her. Exit Ernest Ludwig&mdash;officially. Enter
+Kyril&mdash;legitimately.</p>
+
+<p>She made me reams of confidences, indulged in whole
+<i>brochures</i> of dissertations on the question of sex. What
+an ignoramus I am! I didn't understand half she said and
+was ashamed to ask.</p>
+
+<p>Ernest Ludwig is the most accommodating of husbands.
+Knows all about Kyril and would gladly shut both
+eyes if they let him. Melita might, if pressed very hard,
+for adultery has no terrors for her, but Kyril affects the
+idealist. Sure sign that he really loves her. If he was
+mine, I would be afraid of this Kyril. No doubt he is
+jealous as a Turk.</p>
+
+<p>Last week the three of them had a conference. Lovely
+to see husband, wife and paramour "in peaceful meeting
+assembled" and talk over the situation as if it concerned
+the Royal stud or something of the sort.</p>
+
+<p>No recriminations, no threats, no heroics; only when
+Ernest Ludwig submitted that divorce be avoided to save
+his face as a sovereign, Kyril got a bit excited.</p>
+
+<p>"This is not a question of politics," he said, "or what<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+the dear public thinks. Your wife don't want you; as a
+matter of fact, she isn't your wife, and since we are in
+love with each other, we ought to marry."</p>
+
+<p>"Marry, marry, why always marry?" demanded the
+Grand-duke. "I acknowledge that I haven't the right to
+interfere in my wife's pleasure&mdash;I am not built that way.
+Well, I <i>don't</i> interfere. What more do you want? You
+don't deny that I am the chief person to be considered."</p>
+
+<p>"You?" mocked Kyril. "You with your sovereignty
+are not in it at all. If it wasn't for you, Melita and I
+could marry and say no more about it."</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't prevent your enjoyment of each other,"
+pleaded the ruler of the Hessians.</p>
+
+<p>Now the idealistic Kyril got on his high horse. "Grand-duke,"
+he said, "if you don't object to your wife having a
+lover, that's your business. For my part, I object to my
+paramour having a husband."</p>
+
+<p>And so on <i>ad infinitum</i>, and a goose like me abuses
+herself for a bit of goo-goo-eyeing.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXIV" id="XXXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXXIV</h2>
+
+<h4>MORE ABOUT THE SWEET ROYAL FAMILY LIFE</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Closed season" for petty meannesses&mdash;A prince who enjoys himself
+like a pig&mdash;Why princes learn trades&mdash;A family dinner to
+the accompaniment of threats and smashing of table&mdash;The
+Duke's widow and children robbed of their inheritance by
+royal family&mdash;King confiscates testament.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>September 13, 1896</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>They are treating me like a laying hen. Expect another
+golden egg in December. Hence, "closed season"
+for imperious commands, "all-highest" orders and petty
+meannesses.</p>
+
+<p>When I learned that Bernhardt was in Dresden, I
+phoned him to come out and see me&mdash;without asking either
+royal, princely, or the Tisch's permission.</p>
+
+<p>A junior prince, without fortune or high protector, is
+really to be pitied. His title, the vague possibility that
+some day he may be called to the throne, stand between
+him and enjoyment of life as a man. Nothing left, but to
+enjoy himself like a pig.</p>
+
+<p>Bernhardt admits it. "They planted me in the God-forsakenest
+hole in the kingdom. If I saw a pretty woman<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+in my garrison from one year's end to the other, I would
+die of joy. And the newspaper scribblers wonder why we
+are all Oscar Wildes.</p>
+
+<p>"Just to kill time, I am learning the carpenter's trade&mdash;this
+Royal Highness, you must know, lives in a carpenter's
+house, as innocent of sanitary arrangements as a
+Bushman's hut. Of course, I run away every little while
+to Dresden, incog. to pay my respects to Venus.</p>
+
+<p>"Louise," he cried with comic emphasis, "may the three
+hours you steal from my girl, by way of this visit, be deducted
+from your eternal beatitude."</p>
+
+<p>I lent the poor fellow five hundred marks and he rushed
+back to Dresden.</p>
+
+<p>Tonight I told Frederick Augustus of my interview
+with Bernhardt, not mentioning the five hundred, of course.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed. "He's no worse than the rest of us used
+to be," he said. "I did exactly like him, and father and
+uncle and brothers and cousins, ditto. Behold&mdash;your
+husband-locksmith! Max spent all his time reading
+the Lives of the Popes. That made him the dried-up
+mummy he is. But, believe me, I gave the girls many
+a treat. All the money I could beg, borrow or steal went
+for girls."</p>
+
+<p>Which explains Frederick Augustus's bedroom manners&mdash;sometime
+transplanted to the parlor.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span></p><hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>January 1, 1897</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I gave Saxony a third prince on December 9, and really
+I wasn't quite in condition to be scolded at today's family
+dinner. But since, with three boys growing up, the succession
+is more than guaranteed, the season for insults is
+again open.</p>
+
+<p>His Majesty, our most gracious, sublime, etc., sovereign,
+sulks. Consequently the family looks glum, down
+in the mouth, utterly unhappy.</p>
+
+<p>Max gets up to make a speech and one could fairly
+see the lies wriggle out of his mouth full of defective teeth:
+exemplary family life; traditional friendship of all members
+for each other; perfect unity; the King and all
+the princes brave as lions; the Queen and all the princesses
+paragons of virtue. And the fatherly love with which the
+King embraces us all; his more than royal generosity; his
+mildness, his Christian virtues!</p>
+
+<p>The Queen is a goose. Max's lying commonplaces
+make her forget her many years of misery spent at this
+court, and she grows as sentimental as a kitten. Fat Mathilda,
+Isabelle and Johann George applaud Max despite
+their better understanding, and now the King rises to make
+his usual New Year's address.</p>
+
+<p>The gist of his long-winded remarks is this: "I am
+the lord, your master, and I will see to it that you&mdash;wife,
+brother, nephews and nieces&mdash;will dance as I whistle.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"For obedience to the King is the highest law," he paraphrases
+Wilhelm,&mdash;"strictest, unconditional obedience" (and
+he gave me a poisoned look) "and let no one forget it, no
+one." With that he beat the table with his clenched fist, and
+the whole assemblage turns an accusing eye on me.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>April 6, 1897</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>They have driven the late Duke of Saxony's wife and
+children from house and home&mdash;put her on the high-road,
+piling her personal belongings, trunks, wardrobe and knick-knacks
+outside, too.</p>
+
+<p>She arrived in Dresden and sought refuge with her
+widowed mother. Her father, a Court-Councillor, dismissed
+because of the relations between the Duke and his daughter,
+died of grief and mortification, almost penniless. And
+the Ducal widow is as poor as the mother&mdash;and three children
+to bring up! Children of the royal blood of Saxony,
+children sanctioned by the Church of which they prate so
+much, for there is no doubt that the pair married in
+secret.</p>
+
+<p>The late Highness kept all his papers in a strong-box,
+and it's said the King's representative, who searched the
+safe by Royal orders, found neither acknowledgment of
+the marriage, nor a last will in favor of the widow and
+children. Hence, all the Duke's belongings revert to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+royal family, and the estate he lived on goes to his next
+of kin, Johann George.</p>
+
+<p>Johann George, who has more money than he knows
+what to do with, promptly sent the bailiff after his cousin's
+wife and children.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Noblesse oblige</i>,&mdash;the way you interpret the old saying,
+will advance the cause of monarchy immensely," I said to
+the official heir.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it any business of mine to support my relatives'
+mistresses?" I saw he was mad clean through.</p>
+
+<p>"You know very well that she was his wife."</p>
+
+<p>"There is apparently no official record of the marriage."</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe not in Dresden, as the nuptials were solemnized
+abroad. But what about the testament?"</p>
+
+<p>Johann George grew very red in the face. "If there
+is one, the King must have confiscated it. That often happens
+in royal houses."</p>
+
+<p>"And you mean to say that, with all your riches, you
+are heartless enough and contemptible enough&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Take a care, Your Imperial Highness. The Duke's
+strumpet was today indicted for <i>l&egrave;se majest&eacute;</i> in connection
+with the testament matter." This junior prince dared to
+speak thus to me, the Crown Princess.</p>
+
+<p>"Johann George," I cried, "forget not that sooner or
+later I will be at the head of the royal family of Saxony.
+I forbid you to introduce your mess-room jargon into my<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+parlor; at the same time I am sincerely sorry that a Prince
+of Saxony should stoop to buy cigarettes and gasoline with
+the pittance stolen from his cousin's widow and her three
+little children."</p>
+
+<p>I went to the door and told the lackey on duty to fetch
+his Royal Highness's carriage.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXV" id="XXXV"></a>CHAPTER XXXV</h2>
+
+<h4>FLIRTATION DEVELOPS INTO LOVE</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>At the theatre&mdash;My adorer must have felt my presence&mdash;Forgot
+his diplomacy&mdash;The mute salute&mdash;His good looks&mdash;His mouth
+a promise of a thousand sweet kisses&mdash;Our love won't be
+any painted business.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Dresden</span>, <i>April 6, Night, 1897</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The talk with Johann George had excited me so, I
+wanted a diversion. Frederick Augustus sent word that he
+wouldn't be home for dinner. Hence, I decided to go to
+the theatre after an absence of months. It was after six
+when I telephoned that I would occupy my box at the
+Royal Opera. If I should see Him there, in the absence
+of announcements in the newspapers!</p>
+
+<p>He was there. In his usual seat. I won't rest until
+I find out how he manages to get wind of my theatrical
+ventures at such short notice. The Opera, Faust, had been
+in progress for ten minutes when I arrived. I espied him
+at once, but kept well behind the curtains of the box for a
+second or two. Then, suddenly, I dropped into the gilded
+armchair and the very same moment our eyes met.</p>
+
+<p>I am sure he expected me; he must have known I was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+near when I entered the house. To his ears the hundred
+and one melodies of Gounod's masterpiece were naught
+compared with the music of my silken skirts.</p>
+
+<p>He was so overcome, he forgot his diplomacy. Twice
+he pressed his right hand to his heart, then bowed his head
+in a mute salute.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately the house was dark at the time and the
+audience, unacquainted with my visit, paid strict attention
+to the stage. No one but him saw my heart leap
+within me and the blood mount to my cheeks. Presently
+his diplomatic tact got the upper hand again, and he fixed
+his eyes on the score. That afforded me the chance to
+take a pictorial inventory of my lover-at-a-distance. I used
+my opera-glasses unmercifully.</p>
+
+<p>He's a fine looking man&mdash;if he were a woman he would
+be hailed a beauty. His forehead is a dream of loveliness;
+his mouth a promise of a thousand sweet kisses.</p>
+
+<p>If this man wants me, I mean if he wants me badly,
+our love won't be any painted business, I assure you.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>April 25, 1897</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Ball at the Roumanian Embassy. Royal command to
+attend.</p>
+
+<p>As if it needed a command to throw me into the arms
+of Bielsk.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span></p><hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXVI" id="XXXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXXVI</h2>
+
+<h4>COUNT BIELSK MAKES LOVE TO THE CROWN PRINCESS</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Fearless to indiscretion&mdash;He "thou's" me&mdash;Puts all his chances
+on one card&mdash;Proposes a rendezvous&mdash;Shall I go or shall I
+not go?&mdash;Peril if I go and peril if I don't.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Dresden</span>, <i>April 26, 1897, Night</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>We went to the ball as His Majesty's representatives,
+Frederick Augustus and I, and were obliged to say a few
+nothingnesses to a hundred paltry persons or more. When
+the Ambassador introduced Count Bielsk, I said in the most
+careless voice of the world, "I hear you love the theatre,
+Count."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care a rap for the theatre," he replied. "I
+go to opera and operetta simply to see you, Imperial Highness."</p>
+
+<p>Such audacity! And he spoke quite loud.</p>
+
+<p>Frightened, I turned to the next person presented, saying
+something imbecile, no doubt.</p>
+
+<p>Later I withdrew upon the dais to watch the dancing,
+and at a moment when I was quite alone, he came up to
+me, making it appear as if I had commanded his attendance.</p>
+
+<p>"I have much to say to Your Imperial Highness."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I didn't have my wits about me and didn't know how
+to act. He repeated twice or oftener: "Pray, Your Imperial
+Highness, I have something to say to you," until, at
+last, I threw etiquette to the winds and asked:</p>
+
+<p>"Why should you wish to talk to me in private, Count?"
+No royal woman indulging in lovers ever encouraged a
+rogue more carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Because my life and happiness depend on what I have
+to say to you."</p>
+
+<p>And, weaker still, I assented by the tone of my voice
+rather than words: "You make me curious, Count. Whatever
+you have to say, say it now."</p>
+
+<p>He raised his eyes to me, with a soul and reputation-destroying
+look. "Thanks!" Then wildly, clamorously:
+"Louise, I love you."</p>
+
+<p>Instinctively I thought of flight, but his eyes wouldn't
+let me rise. From that moment on he dropped my title.</p>
+
+<p>"Stay," he whispered, "I beseech you, stay. Don't
+you see that I love you to distraction? I have kept silent
+these many months. Now I must talk. I love thee,
+Louise."</p>
+
+<p>I tried in vain to collect my thoughts while his love talk
+fanned my blood. Finally I managed to say: "Can't you
+see that you are playing <i>va banque</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know, but it doesn't interest me. Let my career
+be wrecked, I care not; I've got only one thought in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+world&mdash;thee, only one wish&mdash;thee. And I must either love
+thee or die."</p>
+
+<p>I turned my eyes away and rose abruptly. As he bowed
+to kiss my hand, he whispered, still "<i>thou'ing</i>" me: "I expect
+you tomorrow at the end of the Grand Boulevard.
+Come when you please. I will wait all day."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>And here I am thinking, thinking, thinking.</p>
+
+<p>"The end of the Boulevard" is the beginning of Dresden's
+<i>Bois</i>. Does this madman really suppose that Her
+Imperial Highness, the Crown Princess of this kingdom,
+will lower herself and respond to his demand for a rendezvous?</p>
+
+<p>Yet, how he must love me to risk saying what he did
+say to me. He is no ill-balanced youth; he is a man of
+ripe judgment. His passion got the better of him.</p>
+
+<p>I adore passion.</p>
+
+<p>I must go no more to the theatre. Impossible for me
+to see him nightly.</p>
+
+<p>But it's a fine thing to be loved as I am. The most
+beautiful thing in the wide, wide world!</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 32em;">Dresden</span>, <i>April 27, 1897. In the Morning.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>He is waiting. Doubtless he expects me. What a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+persuasive thing love is, to be sure! Because he loves me,
+he argues that the Crown Princess, the wife and mother,
+will rush to meet him, fall into his arms.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, he will be most unhappy if I don't go, for
+I am sure he is not your ordinary "petticoat-chaser." He
+will suffer, he is suffering now while I sit here quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Am I quiet? If I weren't determined to stay at home,
+I would half-admit to myself that my soul is obsessed with
+longing for this man.</p>
+
+<p>A diplomat, who has seen much of court life, assumes
+that a woman in my position is at liberty to keep rendezvous!
+Let's reason it out.</p>
+
+<p>To begin with, Lucretia has to be won over. That's
+easy enough, but the coachman and lackey! They must be
+told that Her Imperial Highness is graciously pleased to
+<i>walk</i> in the <i>Bois</i>, the carriage waiting at the end of the
+Grand Boulevard.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 40em;"><i>After Luncheon.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I ought to have said to him, I won't come. It's cruel
+to let him wait on a street corner and not even send notice,
+and to tip him off is impossible.</p>
+
+<p>And come to think of it, if Lucretia and I were promenading
+in the <i>Bois</i> and met the Count by accident, where's
+the harm? And if I don't go&mdash;Good Lord, he might kill<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+himself. He is desperate enough for that. And he might
+leave letters compromising me.</p>
+
+<p>I will go to give him a piece of my mind. I will be
+very harsh with him, very adamant.</p>
+
+<p>And I will try to find out how he manages to select
+always the same theatre as I.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXVII" id="XXXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXXVII</h2>
+
+<h4>RAPID LOVE MAKING IN THE BOIS</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>A discreet maid&mdash;"Remove thy glove"&mdash;Kisses of passion, pure
+kisses, powerful kisses&mdash;I see my lover daily&mdash;Countess
+Baranello offers "doves' nest"&mdash;Driving to rendezvous in
+state&mdash;"Naughty Louise," who makes fun of George.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>June 1, 1897.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>A month of untold happiness. I went to the <i>Bois</i> and
+I am going there every afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>He was splendid; he was modest, quiet. He seemed
+to exude happiness.</p>
+
+<p>Lucretia is discretion itself. She kept behind us, but
+out of ear-shot.</p>
+
+<p>"I came to tell you that you acted like a madman last
+night, and that the offense must not be repeated," I said
+sternly to Bielsk.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>am</i> a madman&mdash;in love," he replied, looking at me
+with big, soulful eyes.</p>
+
+<p>I chattered a lot of nonsense, prohibitions, commands,
+entreaties.</p>
+
+<p>"Remove thy glove," he begged.</p>
+
+<p>"You mustn't 'thou' me."</p>
+
+<p>"Remove thy glove," he repeated.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Why I complied, I don't know, but I ripped off my
+glove, and he held my hand in both his hands and kissed
+it and kissed it.</p>
+
+<p>"What right have you got to treat me like a woman
+unmindful of her duties?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know that thou art lonesome, forlorn, Louise."</p>
+
+<p>He struck at my heart as he spoke these words, and
+my eyes filled with tears. He pressed his warm, pulsating
+lips on the palm of my hand, covering it from wrist to
+finger-tips with wild kisses.</p>
+
+<p>We were standing among the trees, and Lucretia, at a
+little distance, was plucking flowers. The remnant of common
+sense I mustered told me: "He is dishonoring you,
+repulse him," but his "I love thee, Louise," rang like
+music in my ears. However, I tore myself free at last.
+"Farewell, we must never meet again."</p>
+
+<p>And then I lay in his arms, on his broad chest, and
+he covered my face with kisses, not passionate or insulting
+kisses. His lips touched lightly my eyes, my cheeks, my
+own lips&mdash;recompense for the long fast he had endured
+during all the months he had loved me at a distance.</p>
+
+<p>Marvelous kisses kissed this man, pure kisses, lovely
+kisses, powerful kisses. And I thought the whole world was
+falling to pieces around me and I didn't care as long as
+only he and I were living. He himself freed me.</p>
+
+<p>"Tomorrow," he whispered.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I awoke confused, ashamed of my weakness, trembling.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll never see you again. Never," I said as if I
+meant it.</p>
+
+<p>"Tomorrow, love," he repeated. And I ran and joined
+Lucretia.</p>
+
+<p>When we were riding home I told Lucretia to draw the
+curtains, and fell upon her neck and told her all.</p>
+
+<p>The good soul was nearly frightened to death and we
+cried a good deal.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>January 5, 1898</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I neglected my diary, I neglect everything, for I'm in
+love. What care I for the King, Prince George and the
+rest who are trying to make life miserable for me? I
+laugh their pettinesses to scorn, for I have no other thought
+now but Romano Bielsk, no other interests. He is my all,
+my happiness.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, his "<i>Tomorrow, love</i>," prevailed and it has
+been "<i>Tomorrow, love</i>," ever since. On the day after our
+first meeting I actually thought I was warring against nature
+if I resisted his entreaties. It seemed to me that I
+had always known him, that we were predestined for each
+other. I still think so.</p>
+
+<p>Lucretia has a relative here, an aunt, member of the
+court set. Old Countess Baranello delights in intrigue and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+hates Prince George. When I told her of my affair, she
+placed her palace at our disposal, saying:</p>
+
+<p>"Bielsk shall have a key to the garden gate and to the
+pavilion inside the walls, which connects, through a subterranean
+passage, with my sun-parlor. You can meet your
+love there any time. I will see to it that none of the servants
+or workmen disturb you."</p>
+
+<p>A capital arrangement, worthy of an old lady who has
+seen many gallant days! There can be no possible objection
+to my visits at her palace, and the grounds to which
+Romano has the <i>entr&eacute;e</i> fronts on a street unfrequented by
+society or carriages.</p>
+
+<p>I descend from my carriage at the palace gate; a knot
+of people, a small crowd, perhaps, collects to salute me and
+gape at the horses and livery. I sweep up the stoop, lined
+by my own, and the Countess's, servants. The bronze doors
+open. The Countess advances with stately curtsy; a few
+words <i>sub rosa</i>, and I&mdash;fly into the arms of love, while
+faithful Lucretia mounts guard at the street side, and Her
+Ladyship's spy glasses cover the garden;&mdash;needless precautions,
+but&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>It's rare fun, and, after all, where's the harm?</p>
+
+<p>I made good as propagatrix of the royal race, and a
+union of soul such as exists between me and Romano never
+entered into my relations with Frederick Augustus.</p>
+
+<p>Romano is very intelligent. I can learn from him;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+Frederick Augustus taught me only coarseness, and if it
+came high, <i>double entendres</i>. Yet my lover is only a Councillor
+of Legation! Because his superiors, fearing his
+adroitness, keep him down.</p>
+
+<p>My children! Have I ever been allowed to be a real
+mother to them? The King, the nation, owns my little
+ones. I see them at stated intervals for half an hour or so,
+and romp with them as I do with my dogs.</p>
+
+<p>Still, I don't altogether approve of Louise, malicious
+girl! When I am at the top-gallant of my happiness I
+sometimes say to myself: "Oh, if only George could see
+me now!"</p>
+
+<p>Naughty Louise&mdash;it's unworthy of thee. What do I
+care for George, what do I care for the world?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXVIII" id="XXXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXXVIII</h2>
+
+<h4>"IN LOVE THERE ARE NO PRINCESSES, ONLY WOMEN"</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>A diplomatic trick&mdash;Jealous of Romano's past&mdash;The pact for life
+and the talisman&mdash;If there were a theatre fire the talisman
+would discover our love to the King&mdash;Some ill-natured
+reflections&mdash;Bernhardt's escapades cover up my tracks&mdash;The
+"black sheep" jumps his horse over a coffin&mdash;King gives him
+a beating&mdash;Bernhardt's mess-room lingo&mdash;Anecdotes of royal
+voluptuaries&mdash;Forces animals to devour each other&mdash;Naked
+ballet-girls as horses&mdash;Abnormals rule the world.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>May 20, 1898</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Romano learned about my theatre going by a diplomatic
+trick. He told one of the minor attaches of the Embassy
+that he had orders to watch me&mdash;"all-highest command."
+The official, consequently, negotiated with the box offices
+of all the theatres to phone him the moment Her Imperial
+Highness ordered seats.</p>
+
+<p>I am crazy to know how many women Romano loved
+in the twenty or more years since he grew to man's estate,
+and how many he seduced. It agitates and pains me to
+think of it, but all my questions are barren of results.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday I asked him whether he ever knew a Princess
+of the Blood before me&mdash;"knew" in the biblical sense.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"In love," he said, "there are no princesses, there are
+women only."</p>
+
+<p>He saw that I was hurt and added quickly: "Now
+don't be unreasonable, Louise&mdash;no prejudices. With the
+thought in my mind that you are an Imperial Highness, or
+that you consider yourself of better clay than I, I couldn't
+love you as I do."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>July 1, 1898</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>We made a life-pact. Romano cut a gold piece in two
+and bored a hole in each half. He drew thin gold chains
+through the holes, gave me one of the amulets, and
+kept the other. Our combined monograms were already
+engraved on the bits of gold <i>en miniature</i>. Each swore to
+wear the talisman on the naked body for life, but we exchange
+amulets daily, or as often as we meet.</p>
+
+<p>When I am enthroned in the royal box and look down
+upon my lover below, I think all the time of this, our secret
+understanding, and it sometimes occurs to me, that the
+opera house might get on fire and both of us perish.</p>
+
+<p>Next day our bodies would be found. In or near the
+royal box, that of a woman, burned so as to be unrecognizable
+at first. ("We are all of the same clay," says Romano.)</p>
+
+<p>And down in the orchestra floor they would find Romano's
+body, likewise unrecognizable.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And on my charred breast they would find the half of
+a twenty-mark piece. And on his charred chest they would
+find the half of a twenty-mark piece.</p>
+
+<p>And they would put the two together and discover
+that they match.</p>
+
+<p>Consternation, speculation!</p>
+
+<p>Someone suggests that the mysterious gold pieces be
+photographed for publication and the engraver who made
+the monogram, and the jeweler who sold the two chains
+come forward as witnesses.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the identity of my body is established. That
+of Romano's follows. <i>Scandalum magnatum!</i> But what
+are you going to do about it, <i>Messieurs</i>?</p>
+
+<p>If you had only known it a week ago! A prison <i>&agrave; la</i>
+Princess Ahlden, or the Danish Queen Caroline Matilda,
+for me, disgraceful dismissal for Romano, for times are
+happily past when comely gentlemen, who have the wit
+to amuse royal ladies, durst be murdered in cold blood
+like Koenigsmarck, or be-handed, be-headed and cut into
+ninety-nine pieces as Struensee was in Copenhagen market-square.</p>
+
+<p>What are you going to do about it, King, George,
+Frederick Augustus?</p>
+
+<p>I'll tell you. You will bury me with the pomp of
+kings; and your sycophants will print beautiful stories about
+me, asserting that I died trying to rescue others, or did<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+something of the sort; and your Court Chaplains will weep
+and pray and lie for me. And the tip of Queen Carola's
+nose will be redder than ever.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>September 1, 1898</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My young friend Bernhardt is doing me a great service
+and himself a lot of harm.</p>
+
+<p>A good-natured, tractable boy <i>au fond</i>, they made him
+a poltroon and worse by their persecutions, their meanness,
+their petty tyranny. He is proud, and they sent him to
+reside on a village manure heap; he is ambitious, and must
+drill raw recruits from morn till night; he is eager to learn
+and they try to embalm his intellect with tracts and kill
+his initiative by the endless, watery <i>ennui</i> of tu-penny
+environment.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, he gets desperate and kicks over the traces,
+and while attracting the dear family's disapproving attention,
+I am more free than ever to devote myself to my
+Romano.</p>
+
+<p>Bernhardt's "latest" is really inexcusable. "I wonder
+we don't turn tigers with the education we receive," said
+one of the brothers of Louis XVI when upbraided for
+thoughtlessness and lack of consideration for the feelings
+of others&mdash;but Bernhardt seems to qualify for a vulture, and
+no original one at that, for a like offense as he is charged<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+with was, several years ago, laid at the door of my cousin,
+Archduke Otho of Austria.</p>
+
+<p>Observe half a dozen young officers riding horseback
+in the neighborhood of their garrison town, Bernhardt at
+the head. At a bend in the road, a rural funeral <i>cort&egrave;ge</i>
+hoves into sight: coffin borne on the shoulders of half a
+dozen peasants; weeping relatives; friends promising themselves
+a good time at the widow's expense on returning
+home. A black cross lifted high; priest and choir-boys in
+their robes.</p>
+
+<p>"Halt," thunders Bernhardt, blocking the way.</p>
+
+<p>The priest tries to expostulate with the half-drunken
+fellow.</p>
+
+<p>"Shut up, black-coat. I am His Royal Highness, Prince
+Bernhardt."</p>
+
+<p>Then&mdash;the devil must be riding him&mdash;he orders the
+coffin put down on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"Out of the way, yokels."</p>
+
+<p>And he leaps his horse three or four times across the
+coffin.</p>
+
+<p>The outrage is duly reported in the newspapers and
+Bernhardt is summoned before the King. "Don't you dare
+to appear in uniform," Albert added in his own hand.</p>
+
+<p>"What has happened?" I asked the ne'er-do-well, when
+he begged for an audience after meeting the King.</p>
+
+<p>He pointed to a swollen cheek.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"He hit me three times in <i>the eats</i>." (I beg the Diary's
+pardon for the language; I report literally.) "Three
+times," repeated Bernhardt, "that's the reason he wanted me
+to appear in mufti. As I went out one of the lackeys said:
+'I never heard His Majesty rave so.'"</p>
+
+<p>"But why did you make a beast of yourself?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"To force the King to transfer me to another garrison,
+of course. I can't remain where I am, for the people
+are terribly incensed against me."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you tell His Majesty?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not on your life," answered Bernhardt. "If I did,
+I would have to stay there until my last tooth falls out. As
+things are, the Colonel will insist upon my speedy transference,
+and that's worth the three slams on the face I got
+in addition to the various <i>Lausbubs</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"He called you, an army officer, a '<i>Lausbub</i>.' Where is
+his vaunted respect for the uniform?"</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't he hit me in <i>the eats</i>?" lamented Bernhardt
+tragically in his terrible lingo. "I responded both to insult
+and injury by knocking my heels together and saying:
+'At Your Majesty's commands.'"</p>
+
+<p>Of course, I told Romano. "Royalty," he said, "has
+only, on the face of it, advanced beyond the pirate and
+robber-baron period. <i>Au fond</i> all princes and kings would
+be criminals if they happened not to be crowned heads."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 469px;">
+<img src="images/kingalbert.jpg" width="469" height="600" alt="THE LATE KING ALBERT OF SAXONY
+
+Louise&#39;s Uncle by Marriage" title="" />
+<span class="caption">THE LATE KING ALBERT OF SAXONY<br />
+
+Louise&#39;s Uncle by Marriage</span>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span></p>
+<p>He told me of a Balkan prince&mdash;young Alexander of
+Servia, the same mamma Natalie intended for my consort&mdash;whose
+chief amusement consists in having mice and
+rats chased by ferocious tom-cats in a big cage made for
+that purpose. Once, growing tired of that sport, he incarcerated
+ten tom-cats in the same cage without food many
+days in succession, visiting the prison hourly to see whether
+they wouldn't take to devouring each other.</p>
+
+<p>When, in the end, they did, tearing one another to
+pieces, His Majesty danced around the cage in high glee,
+pronouncing the battle of the poor beasts a bully spectacle.</p>
+
+<p>"You visited Castle Sibyllenort a week ago," continued
+Romano&mdash;"a most proper place, this royal residence, is it
+not? You ought to have seen it before your puritan King
+inherited it, ten years ago, upon the death of the last Duke
+of Brunswick. At that time it was a veritable museum
+of pornography, the apotheosis of Paphian voluptuousness.
+The palace, which has over four hundred rooms and halls&mdash;not
+one which a decent woman might enter without a
+blush&mdash;acquired its equipment as a <i>lupanar</i> and its reputation
+for debauchery under the famous, or notorious, 'Diamond
+Duke,' a brother of the Highness who left the estate
+to King Albert. Both Dukes held high carnival in its gilded
+halls, but he of the diamonds rather outdid William in outraging
+decency.</p>
+
+<p>"One of his chief amusements was to hire a drove of
+ballet girls for parlor horses. He had a carriage con<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>structed
+no bigger or heavier than a Japanese jinrickshaw,
+and to this hitched ten or twenty ballet girls in their birthday
+suits, walking on all fours, himself rider and driver.</p>
+
+<p>"Gracious&mdash;how he lashed his treble and quadruple
+teams of human flesh as they pulled him from room to
+room, and his was no make-belief ferocity, either. He was
+a niggardly rake, but in order to indulge his Sadist tendencies,
+agreed to pay one <i>Thaler</i> (Seventy-five cents) for
+every drop of blood shed by the girls.</p>
+
+<p>"To make the count easier, white linen sheets were
+spread over the carpets, and the sum total was paid over
+to the two-legged horses after each entertainment, the girls
+showing the sorest stripes or wounds getting the larger
+share."</p>
+
+<p>Romano, who lived at half a dozen courts and is primed
+with the scandalous gossip of them all, could certainly write
+an entertaining book on the fallacies and vices of the
+world's Great.</p>
+
+<p>It's most indelicate, to be sure, but I laughed long and
+hard over the sexual specialty of my uncle, Archduke Karl
+Ludwig, who is bad, anyhow, as everybody knows.</p>
+
+<p>One morning His Highness rose at an unusually early
+hour, even before the scrub-women made their exit. In
+the corridors, in the parlors, everywhere blonde and dark
+percherons, cleaning away for dear life and courting housemaid's
+knee!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Karl Ludwig has no more use for women than the
+late Chevalier de Lorraine, the President of the <i>Mignons</i>,
+but the exaggerated protuberances he met so unexpectedly
+on all sides, appealed to his sense of humor, or some other
+sense which I would hate to name. Anyhow, he ran into
+the garden and cut himself a switch. And ever since then
+his chief amusement is to switch scrubbing percherons. If
+he succeeds in dealing one a blow unforeseen by lying in
+wait for her, or coming upon her all of a sudden, he is
+particularly satisfied with his day's work and is liable to
+give a beggar a copper instead of the usual demi-copper.</p>
+
+<p>And of such abnormals the rulers of the world are
+recruited.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXIX" id="XXXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXXIX</h2>
+
+<h4>MY PUNISHMENT</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I lose my lover&mdash;Quarrels with me because I did my duty as a
+mother&mdash;Royalty extols me for the same reason&mdash;My pride
+of kingship aroused by Socialist scribblers&mdash;Change my opinion
+as to Duke's widow&mdash;Parents arrive&mdash;Father and his alleged
+astrolatry&mdash;His finances disarranged by alimony payments&mdash;My
+uncle, the Emperor, rebukes mother harshly for
+complaining of <i>rou&eacute;</i> father.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>Christmas, 1898</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>God punished me for my sins. My children, one after
+the other, were ill with scarlet fever, and the youngest is
+only now out of danger. Of course, I abandoned all my
+frivolities. I can say without boasting that the mother
+atoned for the short-comings of the wife and princess.</p>
+
+<p>Hence I thought justified to arrange for a right royal
+Christmas present: Romano.</p>
+
+<p>Lucretia went to see him. He received her coldly,
+hardly vouchsafed a word. From a secret drawer of his
+desk he took a letter, ready written, dated and gave it to
+Lucretia. "It explains," he said curtly, as he opened the
+door for her.</p>
+
+<p>He has abandoned me. Because I loved my children<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+better than him, because I am a mother first, Lais second,
+he throws away his Imperial <i>fille de joie</i> like a lemon sucked
+dry and prates of tendernesses and heavenly fancies that he
+alone feels, that are outside the pale of my understanding.</p>
+
+<p>He even refuses to thank me, this proud wooer of the
+royal bed. He "has given me the best that is in man to
+give to a woman," etc., etc.</p>
+
+<p>Be it so! God desired to punish me and, because I
+loved much, he meted out to me mild chastisement.</p>
+
+<p>He stole my lover, but I have my children.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>January 15, 1899</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The King, Prince George, my brothers-in-law, my
+cousins and aunts are trying to make a hero of me. Because
+I followed the inclinations of my heart and helped
+to save my children, there's no end of their praise and
+admiration. Did they take me for a raven? I am disgusted
+with so much unctuousness.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless I changed my mind about the Duke's
+widow. When I felt friendly towards her and quarrelled
+with Johann George for taking her money and with the
+King for embezzling the testament and offering accommodation
+at the poor-house for his kin's children, I thought it
+a family affair, but now that the Socialist papers meddle
+with the case, which concerns the royal house and the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+royal house alone, it's time for the Crown Princess to stand
+by her colors.</p>
+
+<p>Those Jews have actually the audacity to reprimand
+the King and the royal princes, to impute ignoble motives
+to us all! They talk of us as if we were <i>Messieurs</i> and
+<i>Mesdames</i> Jones or Browns, trying to enrich ourselves at
+the expense of a corpse!</p>
+
+<p>They call us "inheritance-chasers," "purloiners of pupillary
+funds," "starvers of innocent children."</p>
+
+<p>The Duke's kept-woman is "a lady of the highest character"
+and we are not; her children are of the blood royal&mdash;only
+better for the dash of plebeian.</p>
+
+<p>It makes me boil to read such things; to see the reverence
+due the throne set aside, the royal banner dragged
+into the mire, and of course it's the kept-woman to whom
+we are indebted for this pretty kettle of fish. It is she
+who set the press against us, and it's me, Louise, who protests
+with all her might that her demands and petitions be
+denied.</p>
+
+<p>Let her starve with her brats. If she was sent to the
+poor-house she might make anarchists out of loyal paupers.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>April 1, 1899</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My parents came to see the children and make merry
+because I am basking in the sun of royal grace. Mother<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+has a new maid of honor, as ugly as the Tisch, and when
+we are <i>entre nous</i> every second word is: "when Louise is
+Queen." They know to a penny what our inheritance from
+the King, the Queen and Prince George will amount to and
+are forever making plans and specifications how to spend
+the money for the glory of Saxony and of our own family.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
+
+<p>Mother's scare-crow of a maid of honor had at least
+sense enough to tell Lucretia of a few scandals that happened
+at home, which mother never intended for my ears.</p>
+
+<p>It seems that papa, some few months ago, suddenly
+became possessed of the ambition to become an astronomer.
+Nothing would do, but he must buy a heap of instruments
+and set them up in a distant tower of Salzburg Castle.
+And there he spent all his evenings&mdash;star-gazing, he gave
+out.</p>
+
+<p>He seldom reached the nuptial couch before one or two
+in the morning,&mdash;utterly exhausted by the night's work.</p>
+
+<p>Well, mamma thought he labored too hard, and one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+forenoon when he had gone hunting, climbed up many
+stairs to investigate. Imagine her surprise when she found,
+in the astrolatry, a young lady in the act of getting out
+of bed, a girl, by the way, whom I used to know.</p>
+
+<p>Mamma had the <i>mauvais genre</i> to report the case to
+Emperor Francis Joseph, while papa sought another climate,
+remaining away until mother begged him on her bended
+knees, so to speak, to come home. Nor did she get satisfaction
+from Vienna. That great moral teacher, the
+Emperor, told her not to make a scare-crow of herself, but
+on the contrary make herself pretty and agreeable for,
+and to, her lord and master. I understand now why mamma
+says: "All men stick together like gypsies."</p>
+
+<p>As a matter of fact father's limited resources are considerably
+affected by the various alimonies he has to pay to
+his own mistresses and those of my brothers. The third
+born of our boys, only a week ago, made too free with the
+<i>fianc&eacute;e</i> of the pastry-cook, who threatened to kill him. It
+cost father several thousand florins to appease the ruffian
+and Heinrich Ferdinand renewed acquaintance with mother's
+boxing proclivities.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span></p>
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> The fortune of the present King of Saxony (Louise's
+ex-husband) amounts to 25 million marks ($6,225,000)&mdash;no more
+than many an American parent paid for his daughter's seedy
+coronet. It will be remembered that Gladys Vanderbilt and
+Anna Gould brought to their husbands fifteen million dollars
+each, and the Castellanes and Szechenys are only nobles of the
+second class, their ancestors never having possessed ever so small
+a territory as sovereign lords. The bigger half of the Saxon
+King's fortune comes from the Brunswick inheritance already
+mentioned.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XL" id="XL"></a>CHAPTER XL</h2>
+
+<h4>A PLEBEIAN LOVER</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>In need of a friend&mdash;My physician offers his friendship&mdash;I discover
+that he loves me, but he will never confess&mdash;I give
+him encouragement&mdash;We manage to persuade the King to
+further our intrigue&mdash;Not a bit repentant of my peccadilloes&mdash;Very
+submissive&mdash;Introduced to my lover's wife.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>in May, 1899</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Privy Councillor von Barthels, my body physician, is
+a very agreeable man. I have no use for his services, <i>professional</i>
+services at present, yet insist upon receiving him
+daily. Still I love him not. Only esteem him as a friend,
+I need a friend. Physicians can keep secrets, and I have
+many of them. I look upon Barthels as my Father-confessor.</p>
+
+<p>The tears came into his eyes when I told him, and he
+said: "Imperial Highness, this is the most beautiful hour
+of my life."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke with enthusiasm; there was fire in his eyes
+and in his voice, yet a moment later he was again the most
+reserved of men and conversation lagged.</p>
+
+<p>It happened three days ago. He has paid me four
+visits since and I notice with astonishment, with curi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>osity
+and with alarm, that this man is in love with me.</p>
+
+<p>How long has he loved me?</p>
+
+<p>His love is like a warm mantle 'round my shoulders
+on a chilly night. It exudes warmth, strength, beatitude,
+yet there is none of the animal.</p>
+
+<p>He is a good talker on a thousand and one subjects,
+a thinker and psychologist. Psychology is his strong point.
+He argues brilliantly on the subject, yet I need only look
+at him to upset his <i>thesis</i>, to make him stammer and redden.</p>
+
+<p>He's no Count Bielsk and will never tell me of his
+own accord that he loves me. Is his admiration greater
+than his love? Perhaps so. It gives me a feeling of security.</p>
+
+<p>Lucretia knows, but in the presence of the Tisch, he
+plays the servant, deeming himself thrice honored by being
+allowed to breathe the same air as her Imperial Highness.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>June 15, 1899</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I frequently drive to the <i>Bois</i> nowadays with the
+children, the <i>Bois</i>, where I was so happy with Him.</p>
+
+<p>Romano was right, a thousand times right, that he
+abandoned me when our love was at its zenith.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 42em;"><i>At Midnight.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>It's done.</p>
+
+<p>Barthels came tonight. He was so feverish, so passion<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>ate,
+there was so much humble solicitation in his looks and
+manners, I was moved to pity.</p>
+
+<p>This man is too over-awed by my rank to ever permit
+himself to express his feelings by word of mouth. He
+talked of everything but love and was in the midst of a
+learned dissertation when I sunk my eyes in his and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you try to hide things from me? Don't I
+know what's in your heart?"</p>
+
+<p>Like a little criminal&mdash;as my oldest boy does occasionally&mdash;he
+turned red, then white, then red again. He buried
+his face in his hands. He trembled. He seemed to be
+crying. I arose, and lightly laid my hand upon his blonde
+head.</p>
+
+<p>He's got the finest, silkiest hair in the world, shimmering
+like beaten gold.</p>
+
+<p>And then he lay at my feet, covering them with kisses.
+And instantly all his force, his courage, his eloquence
+returned.</p>
+
+<p>He went away like a man a-dreaming.</p>
+
+<p>I long for him; I confess I long for him. Whether
+I love him or not I don't know. But that I know, I <i>will</i>
+love him.</p>
+
+<p>And if I cannot, what matters it? I don't have to
+love to be happy. To <i>be</i> loved is enough. I want to be
+his Queen, his life.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span></p><hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>July 1, 1899</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Privy Councillor von Barthels told the King that my
+delicate condition needs constant watching. I go to his
+clinic every second day, while he visits me once or twice
+daily at the palace.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Like Melita I am never a bit repentant of my peccadilloes.</p>
+
+<p>If I don't want to do a thing, neither Kaiser, King,
+George, Frederick Augustus, my parents, the Pope, nor
+the whole world, can make me. But if I resolve to follow
+my sweet inclinations, rueing and pining are out of question.</p>
+
+<p>Ferdinand is the most devoted of lovers. He has
+unlimited tendernesses&mdash;a new experience for me.</p>
+
+<p>The lover of my girlhood days overwhelmed me by
+audacity. The Shah used me like a show-girl. Romano
+was imperious, super-mannish. For him I was only the
+female of the species.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, in the midst of an embrace, Ferdinand
+suddenly seems to recollect that a Queen trembles in his
+arms; the master turns <i>&acirc;me damn&eacute;e</i>. I am Sultana, Louise-Catherine.</p>
+
+<p>Like Catherine the Great, I would throw millions to
+my favorites and millions more when I dismissed one.
+At any rate, I would give each a hundred thousand marks<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+"to furnish himself with linen and silks,"&mdash;a <i>mot</i> invented
+by the Semiramis of the North.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>July 5, 1899</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>No more clinic for me. Ferdinand begged so hard,
+that I allowed him to introduce his wife. She came in
+after we finished our "consultation," a little heap of misfortune,
+execrably dressed, frightened, almost dead with
+submissiveness.</p>
+
+<p>And I am robbing this poor creature; it's like stealing
+pennies from a child. And under her own roof.</p>
+
+<p>It must not be. I am going to the country.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLI" id="XLI"></a>CHAPTER XLI</h2>
+
+<h4>AN ATROCIOUS ROYAL SCANDAL</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>A royal couple that shall be nameless&mdash;The voluptuous Duchess&mdash;Her
+husband the worst of degenerates&mdash;"What monsters
+these royalties be"&mdash;Nameless outrages&mdash;A Duchess forced
+to have lovers&mdash;Ferdinand and I live like married folk&mdash;Duchess
+feared for her life&mdash;Her husband murdered her&mdash;I
+scold and humiliate my overbearing Grand Mistress&mdash;The
+medical report too horrible to contemplate.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 40em;">&mdash;&mdash;R</span>, <i>July 15, 1899</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am afraid to date this entry. Another terrible indictment
+of royalty. And, as usual, things criminal are at
+the bottom of the abuse of sovereign power.</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess had a baby and asked me to be godmother
+to the little girl. The King, eager to oblige his
+rich cousin, favored the journey. I insisted that Ferdinand
+accompany me. "Marie," I said, "hates Tisch, and she
+must, under no circumstances, be commanded to attend
+me." Lucretia would do. It would be cheaper.</p>
+
+<p>The King first wouldn't hear of Dr. von Barthels
+going. People might think I had some chronic disease.
+But he finally gave in for the sake of the child I expect.
+"We need a few princes more from you," said His Majesty<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+benignly. "When you got about a dozen boys, you can
+rest." Pleasant job, that of a Crown Princess.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 40em;">&mdash;&mdash;R</span>, <i>July 16, 1899</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess is a pretty woman, her face a lovely
+oval. She has small eyes, the color of amethysts. Her
+complexion is as white and harmonious as if she washed
+in sow's milk, like the late Ninon.</p>
+
+<p>Her mouth is sweet, but certain lines indicate that it
+can bite as well as smile. She has abundant hair, the color
+of Ferdinand's.</p>
+
+<p>This dainty, albeit voluptuous, little person, is mated
+to a bull-necked He, pompous, broad and full of the conceit
+of the <i>duodez</i> satrap.</p>
+
+<p>Marie was forced to marry him; their honeymoon
+scarcely lasted a fortnight and he treated her shamefully
+after that. Of course, babies she must bear like any other
+"royal cow."</p>
+
+<p>Gradually, very gradually, she got over her disappointment
+and shyness, developing into a cunning, world-wise
+woman. Then came the man she was bound to love, even
+as the violet is bound to be kissed by the sun. She had
+no scruples about accepting him, thinking herself entitled
+to compensation for the sorrows of her married life. And
+revenge is sweet.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Duke found them out in the first month of their
+young love, walked into her boudoir one fine afternoon
+and remarked casually that none of his hats would fit him,&mdash;"on
+account of the horns you kindly planted on my
+forehead."</p>
+
+<p>Marie was more dead than alive when he asked her
+for the key of her writing desk. She lied and lied; to no
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p>He kicked open the writing desk, and with his iron
+fists broke the shelves and pigeon holes, laying bare a
+secret drawer and stacks of love letters it shielded. These
+he confiscated. Then locked himself into his room to enjoy
+his disgrace. This monster is a <i>Masochist</i> and Sadist
+combined. He loves both to inflict suffering upon himself
+and upon others.</p>
+
+<p>What monsters royalties be!</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile Marie experienced all the tortures
+of purgatory; she thought of flight, of suicide. Before
+she could indulge in either her husband was back: Othello
+in the last act.</p>
+
+<p>Marie was frightened stiff, her brain a whirl, her
+limbs inert. Rape most foul this crowned satyr committed.
+"He fell upon me as a pack of hounds overwhelm a hunted,
+wounded she-stag," she said.</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards he commanded her to describe minutely
+every detail of her relations with the other. He was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+primed with the letter-accounts; he made her dot her
+amorous I's and cross her bawdry T's. And every attempt
+at omission he punished with kicks and cuffs; no drayman
+or brick-layer could give a more expert exhibition of
+woman-beating! And he violated her again.</p>
+
+<p>This was the beginning of a series of outrages of the
+same gross character. Marie suffered for years and years
+that His Royal Highness may gratify his unclean fancies:
+he the pander; she the Cyprian.</p>
+
+<p>"If I ceased having lovers, I think he would kill me,"
+says Marie.</p>
+
+<p>Alas, such is the stuff "God's Anointed" are made of!
+In the face of such, we pronounce a hypocritical <i>j'accuse</i>
+upon the Louis's and Pompadours, upon Marie Antoinette
+even.</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess, who knows, gave Ferdinand an apartment
+near my own. We are living here like man and
+wife. He sometimes calls me "<i>Frau Professor</i>."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>July 19, 1899</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Marie is dead. "Died suddenly," said the telegram.
+I understand now why she begged me, with tears in her
+eyes, to remain at least two weeks. She was afraid that,
+though ill and suffering after the confinement, he would
+treat her as he did when he first found her unfaithful.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Don't go," she cried. "It will be my death." And
+when I showed her the King's letter commanding me to
+return at once, she made her confidential tire-woman swear
+on the Bible that she wouldn't leave her for a minute,
+day or night, until she herself released her from the
+promise.</p>
+
+<p>Private advices from &mdash;&mdash;r say His Highness
+brutally kicked the faithful maid out of his wife's bedroom
+and outraged his sick wife while the servant kept
+thundering at the door, denouncing her master a murderer.</p>
+
+<p>Ferdinand says the great majority of crowned heads
+are sexual voluptuaries, deserving of the penitentiary or
+the straight-jacket.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>August 1, 1899</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I caught the Tisch stealing one of my letters. Happily
+there was nothing incriminating in it, though addressed
+to Ferdinand,&mdash;just the letter the Crown Princess would
+write to a Privy Councillor. But the petty theft indicates
+that she suspects. Prince George, I am told, receives a
+report from her every few days.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I had my revenge. The Queen called today to
+see the children, and when Her Majesty and myself withdrew
+into my closet, the Tisch, who had been spying,
+didn't retire as promptly as she might.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Can't you see that you are <i>de trop</i>," I said sharply
+to her. "Please close the door from outside." The
+Baroness gave a cry of dismay and the Queen was scandalized.</p>
+
+<p>"Louise," she said, "that is no way to treat servants.
+You should always try to be kind and considerate with
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"I am, thanks, Your Majesty," I replied. "All the officials
+and servants love me, but I have very good reasons for
+treating the Tisch as I do."</p>
+
+<p>Of course, George will hear of this, and the Tisch will
+be reprimanded by him as well. Spies that compromise
+themselves, compromise their masters.</p>
+
+<p>The same evening I said to the Tisch in the presence
+of the nurses:</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Baroness, I wish you would display a little
+more tact. Listen at my doors as much as you like, but
+whatever you do, don't spy on Her Majesty in my house."
+She exuded a flood of tears and I sent her to her room.
+"Don't come back until you can show a pleasant face. I
+want to see none other around me."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>August 2, 1899</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Ferdinand received a medical report from &mdash;&mdash;r.
+My first private advices regarding Marie's death were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+correct, but the additional details given are too horrible
+to contemplate.</p>
+
+<p>The poor Duchess was brutally murdered. She died
+cursing her crowned murderer.</p>
+
+<p>The manner in which she was put to death can only be
+likened to that of the lover in Heinrich von Kleist's poetically
+sublime, but morally atrocious, tragedy, <i>Penthesilcia</i>,
+except that, in poor Marie's case, the <i>woman</i> suffered from
+the awful frenzy of the male, in whom the "gentlest passion"
+degenerated in Saturnalia of revolting cruelty. The
+Duke killed Marie because <i>doing so gave him the most
+damnable pleasure,&mdash;her the most excruciating pain</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the King's will is the highest law and criminals
+on thrones laugh at the criminal code.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLII" id="XLII"></a>CHAPTER XLII</h2>
+
+<h4>I LOSE ANOTHER OF MY LOVERS</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Happily no scandal&mdash;Rewarded for bearing children&mdash;$1250&mdash;for
+becoming a mother&mdash;Royal poverty&mdash;Bernhardt, the black
+sheep, in hot water again&mdash;The King rebukes me for taking
+his part.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>August 10, 1899</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus sent for Ferdinand and gave him
+to understand that he had received divers anonymous letters,
+connecting my name with that of the Privy Councillor.
+"Of course I don't believe a word of it," said my husband,
+"but one in my position cannot afford to flout public opinion.
+It will be for the best, if you cease your services to Her
+Imperial Highness."</p>
+
+<p>Upon the same day Ferdinand received orders from
+the King to stop his visits.</p>
+
+<p>The Baroness's doings, of course,&mdash;pin-pricks when she
+would like to shoot with sharp cartridges. She evidently
+doesn't know the full extent of our intimacy. As to
+Ferdinand, he acted the coward, left my letters unanswered
+and didn't make the slightest attempt to continue relations
+that might possibly turn out to his disadvantage.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He is contemptible. My heart is unengaged, but my
+pride sadly humbled.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>February 15, 1900</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The King sent me an emerald, one-twentieth the size
+of that given me by the Shah of Persia. Frederick Augustus
+did himself proud and, on his part, I gained a pearl
+necklace in acknowledgment of my renewed services to
+the state. Little Marguerite was born January 24.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus also gave me five thousand marks
+spending money. Not much for a multi-millionaire's wife
+or daughter, I reckon, but a terrible lot for an Imperial
+Highness.</p>
+
+<p>When I read of the sums the Vanderbilts, Astors,
+Goulds and other dollar-kings spend in Paris and London,
+and even with us in Dresden, I sometimes wish I could
+exchange places with an American Duchess or Countess
+long enough to buy all the things beautiful and pretty I
+would like to own. An awful thing is royal poverty, but
+the reputation of affluence and unlimited resources, stalking
+ahead of us, whenever we enter a store or bargain
+with a jeweler, is worse.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Imperial Highness is pleased to joke," says my
+man-milliner, when I admit, unblushingly, that I haven't
+the wherewithal to buy the things I dote on.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Wait till I am Queen, modistes, store-keepers, jewelers!
+The new Majesty will show you that she cares for money
+only to get rid of it.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>February 20, 1900</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>This morning Lucretia came running to the nursery
+and whispered to me: "Imperial Highness, quick, to the
+boudoir. He begged so hard, I smuggled him in."</p>
+
+<p>She couldn't say more, for the Tisch was watching us.
+What new trouble was brewing? Could it be Romano,
+dare-devil, who had come back to me?</p>
+
+<p>If it was that poltroon, Ferdinand, I would have him
+thrown out by my lackeys.</p>
+
+<p>The mysterious visitor doffed wig and false moustache.
+"It's me," cried Bernhardt. "You are my only hope."</p>
+
+<p>"What have you been doing again?"</p>
+
+<p>"They threaten to banish my girl from the garrison
+and I won't stand for it. If they send her away or imprison
+her, I will kick up such a row, all Europe shall hear of it."</p>
+
+<p>"But why this masquerade?"</p>
+
+<p>"S-s-sh!" whispered the young prince. "I came without
+leave." Quickly, breathlessly, he continued: "I hear
+you are in His Majesty's good graces. Go and see him
+on my behalf. Persuade him to annul the order of banishment
+or render it ineffective."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Bernhardt," I said, "why don't you marry?"</p>
+
+<p>"If I could get a girl like you, Louise, I would&mdash;today,
+tomorrow, but the royal scare-crows that will have penniless
+me,&mdash;much obliged! You are a very exceptional woman,"
+he added earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>We held a council of war, discussing the situation from
+every view-point, and finally I agreed to see Baumann.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll have to vouch for your future good conduct," I
+said.</p>
+
+<p>"On condition that they leave my girl alone."</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely. And on your part you give me your word
+of honor not to scandalize the people of your new garrison;
+to gradually break with the girl and, in the end, get married."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a brick, Louise," cried Bernhardt, and before
+I could shake him off, he was kissing me all over my face.
+No cousinly or brotherly kisses! His lips were apart, there
+was passion in his embrace. I struggled, but his hand
+pressed against my back. What strength the rascal's got!</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>February 21, 1900</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The King is adamant. I no sooner mentioned Bernhardt's
+name than his face froze.</p>
+
+<p>"Does your husband know about your interference for
+that rake?"</p>
+
+<p>When I answered in the negative, he praised Frederick<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+Augustus for strict submission to the royal will and upbraided
+me for "upholding Bernhardt in his wickedness."</p>
+
+<p>"The boy is desperate," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"If he is desperate," cried the King, "let him do the
+one reasonable and honorable thing: mend his evil ways.
+It will come easy if he seeks true strength in prayer, in
+fasting and religious discipline."</p>
+
+<p>"I submit to your Majesty that it might be well to send
+Bernhardt travelling."</p>
+
+<p>"On a tour of inspection of houses of ill-fame?" interrupted
+Albert coldly. "This is a mere waste of words," he
+added, looking towards the door, "and I'm sorry that
+Your Imperial Highness has the bad taste to take the part
+of this disobedient, immoral and altogether reprehensible
+<i>Lausbub</i>."</p>
+
+<p>That meant my dismissal. I shudder when I think of
+the consequences of the King's obstinacy.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLIII" id="XLIII"></a>CHAPTER XLIII</h2>
+
+<h4>THE CROWN PRINCESS QUELLS A RIOT</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Asked to play the coward, and I refuse&mdash;A hostler who would
+die for a look from me&mdash;Hostler marriages in royal houses&mdash;Anecdotes
+and unknown facts concerning royal ladies and
+their offspring&mdash;Refuse police escort and rioters acclaim me&mdash;Whole
+royal family proud of my feat.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>July 3, 1900</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Behold Louise, a political personage!</p>
+
+<p>I was driving with my little ones in the <i>Bois</i> yesterday
+afternoon. We occupied an open court carriage, conspicuous
+for livery and magnificent horse-flesh, for I love display
+and the children enjoy it. We were driving along leisurely
+enough when there was hasty clatter of hoofs and wheels
+behind. Presently a royal <i>coup&eacute;</i> dashed up alongside.</p>
+
+<p>The Tisch stuck her head out:</p>
+
+<p>"Imperial Highness&mdash;the town's in revolt.&mdash;Socialist
+riot. They are marching upon the palace.&mdash;For the love
+of God, return at once. Your Imperial Highness must take
+a seat in this inconspicuous carriage. We will change to
+the first <i>Droschke</i> we meet, going through side-streets."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Baroness," I answered, "it's not in my nature<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+to shirk peril. If I were to be hanged and quartered and
+could avoid that unpleasantness by changing from my carriage
+to a cab&mdash;I would be hanged and quartered. Take
+the children and return to the palace any way you like.</p>
+
+<p>"As for me, I'll go back as Her Imperial Highness, the
+Crown Princess of Saxony, and my coachman will drive
+slowly."</p>
+
+<p>I kissed the children, and the <i>coup&eacute;</i> rolled away at a
+sharp clip.</p>
+
+<p>Calling the coachman by name, I commanded him:
+"You heard what my Grand Mistress said. Riot or no
+riot, I am solely responsible for my own safety. You will
+take orders from no one but me, neither from the mob nor
+the police."</p>
+
+<p>The coachman lifted his hat respectfully and bowed
+a submissive "At Your Imperial Highness's orders." The
+groom, a young, good-looking fellow, struck the broadsword
+at his side.</p>
+
+<p>"There is some good steel in this, Your Imperial Highness,"
+he said with sparkling eyes. I believe this poor
+fellow would have died for a single look from me.</p>
+
+<p>Among royal servants, the most devoted are those connected
+with the <i>Marstall</i>. No wonder so many of my sisters
+born on the steps of the throne, fell in love with their
+Master of Horse or equerries; some with mere hostlers, like
+Queen Christina of Spain, the mother of my aunt Isabelle,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+of amorous memory. Her lover, Munoz, of the Body
+Guards, was a famous equestrian and two years younger
+than Christina. He managed horses so well, she thought
+it would be great fun to boss this giant. But it ended by
+the brute lording it over her, the "Catholic Majesty." By
+the way, I wonder what became of Christina's and Munoz's
+several children. While they lived together from 1833 to
+1844 without the sanction of either law or church, they
+were "regularly married" in the end, the hostler, Munoz,
+metamorphosing into Duke Rianzares. Yet the <i>Almanach
+de Gotha</i> knows not their progeny when, as "love children,"
+they should live long and happily.</p>
+
+<p>Another "hostler-marriage" occurred in the family of
+the proud Kaiser, the contracting parties being Princess
+Albrecht of Prussia and a groom, whose name I forget.
+This Princess, Marianne of the Netherlands, brought the
+first "real" money into the Hohenzollern family, and her
+husband, Albrecht, was long regarded the Cr&oelig;sus among
+German princes.</p>
+
+<p>After the divorce, His Royal Highness forced the ex-wife
+to marry the hostler, and the bloom of forbidden love
+having worn off in the meantime, Marianne seldom passed
+a day without being soundly beaten by the plebeian. Maybe
+she liked it. Some women do.</p>
+
+<p>Today her offspring with Master Fisticuffs are sturdy
+farmers in Silesia, but two of the three sons she had with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+the royal Prince, as well as the sons the royal Prince had
+with his second wife, Rosalie von Rauch, are degenerates.
+Rosalie's sons are known as Counts Hohenau and the wife
+of the elder, Fritz, is giving my astute and pious cousin,
+the Kaiserin, considerable heart-ache.</p>
+
+<p>Curious, isn't it? The children of the "adulteress"
+are successful men and women, aids in the progress of the
+world; those of the blood royal, in double or single doses,
+a menace to public morality. This much for your royal
+inbred custom.</p>
+
+<p>But back to Dresden. The order to drive slowly was
+soon rescinded, for I was burning to see a riot at close
+range. "<i>Plein carri&egrave;re</i>," I commanded, and my fast <i>Carrossiers</i>
+went at a tremendous rate for two miles. The moment
+I saw, in the distance, knots of people standing round or
+moving in the direction of the palace, I cried: "<i>Schritt</i>,"
+and we proceeded as leisurely as if following a funeral.</p>
+
+<p>As we turned around a corner, a detachment of gendarmes,
+sent to watch for me, hove into sight. Their commanding
+officer signalled frantically to the coachman to stop,
+but George had his instructions and proceeded.</p>
+
+<p>The officer spurred his horse and rode up to me, questioning
+me with his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"My orders," I explained.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I must escort Your Imperial Highness."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Strict orders from my superior officer, Your Imperial
+Highness," and the gendarmes formed a <i>cordon</i> around my
+carriage.</p>
+
+<p>I was furious. "Send for your commander."</p>
+
+<p>The captain of the gendarmes could not be found at
+once and joined my cavalcade only when we were opposite
+a living wall of excited people, nearly all of them workmen.</p>
+
+<p>"What is Your Imperial Highness's pleasure?" asked
+the captain, bending down from his horse.</p>
+
+<p>"Send your men away instantly."</p>
+
+<p>"But the responsibility?"</p>
+
+<p>"Rests with me and with me only. Send them away.
+Every one of them."</p>
+
+<p>The mob was watching us. I read suspicion in the
+eyes of those nearest. The captain gave the sign and the
+troopers turned their horses' heads, saluting me with their
+drawn swords.</p>
+
+<p>"May I act as Your Imperial Highness's out-rider?"
+asked the captain in a low voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't trouble yourself. I command you."</p>
+
+<p>The groom had been watching us. I gave the signal
+and we proceeded at a pace. The rampart of human bodies
+swung open and lined the sides of the streets. Someone
+cried: "Three cheers for the Crown Princess," and everyone
+responded.</p>
+
+<p>These Socialists, whom I had been taught to hate and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
+despise, behaved in exemplary style. When I dismissed
+their tyrants, the gendarmes, they immediately took me
+under their protection. I am sure anyone daring to insult
+me, or raise a hand against me, would have fared badly at
+the hands of his fellows.</p>
+
+<p>I was all smiles, bowing right and left. Labor
+agitators raised their hats to me, mothers offered their
+children that I might pat their little hand, or lay mine
+on their head&mdash;a veritable triumph!</p>
+
+<p>When I drove into the palace yard, the Guards rushed
+out to do me honor. The Queen, the King and Prince
+George saluted me from the windows of their apartments.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus embraced me in front of everybody.
+In short I was made a hero of.</p>
+
+<p>I afterwards learned that as soon as the palace knew
+of the incipient riot, the King sent word to all members
+of the royal family, ordering them to stay in their apartments.
+They were even forbidden to show themselves at
+the windows overlooking the palace square.</p>
+
+<p>Learning that I had gone driving, mounted grooms
+were dispatched in all directions to intercept me. The
+Tisch, being responsible for the royal children, got the
+fastest team the court commands and started for the <i>Bois</i>.</p>
+
+<p>It gave me some satisfaction to observe that I arrived
+before her. Of course, I never doubted the children's
+safety.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The evening papers devoted columns to the little incident
+and Prince George had the great sorrow to hear the
+King say: "A dare-devil, that Louise, but she did the right
+thing. By pretending confidence in the loyalty of the
+people, she successfully gulled them. The riot's back was
+broken when she showed a bold front."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLIV" id="XLIV"></a>CHAPTER XLIV</h2>
+
+<h4>THE NEW LOVER, AND "I PLAY THE HUSSY FOR FAIR"</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Who is that most exquisite <i>Vort&auml;nzer</i>?&mdash;A lovely boy&mdash;"Blush,
+good white paper"&mdash;I long for Henry&mdash;My eyes reflect love&mdash;"I
+must see you tonight. Arrange with Lucretia"&mdash;Sorry
+I ever loved a man before Henry&mdash;Poetry even&mdash;I try to get
+him an office at court&mdash;Afraid women will steal him.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Pillnitz</span>, <i>September 5, 1900</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dance at the royal summer residence. Concentrated
+<i>ennui</i> as a rule, but a complete success this time.</p>
+
+<p>I have seen Him,&mdash;capital "H." He is the one man
+for me.</p>
+
+<p>I am happy; I am myself again. All sorrows are forgotten.
+I am ten years younger.</p>
+
+<p>Love at first sight. I the aggressor. I must be getting
+very clever since I managed to hide it from hundreds of
+searching eyes, even from my entourage.</p>
+
+<p>"Lucretia," I whispered breathlessly to my confidante,
+"find out the name of the <i>Vort&auml;nzer</i>, quick."</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Vort&auml;nzer</i>, at royal courts, is a sort of official
+master of the dance, who sets the pace for the company,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
+combining the duties of master of ceremonies and of dancing
+master.</p>
+
+<p>The more I looked at the <i>Vort&auml;nzer</i>, the more he
+enchanted me. Taller than any other man present, elegant,
+blonde, clean-shaven. Not an ounce of superfluous flesh,
+I judged. Might be the reincarnation of the <i>Duc</i> de Richelieu,
+who seduced my three cousins d'Orleans.</p>
+
+<p>His face is livid with white and carmine tints; his
+eyes glow with an irresistible charm. That figure of his!
+The elegance of the palm tree, both straight and flexible.
+And the infinity of grace as he waltzed that little Baroness
+around.</p>
+
+<p>"Baron Bergen, of the Guards," breathed Lucretia into
+my ear.</p>
+
+<p>"My Master of Ceremony will command Baron Bergen
+at the end of this dance."</p>
+
+<p>When he stood before me, bowing and smiling, the idea
+that he was Richelieu reincarnated became almost a certainty
+with me.</p>
+
+<p>Like Richelieu, his face has the refinement that we
+admire in women (I forgot to say that I became infatuated
+with him merely from seeing a back view of the man.
+When he turned around, I was lost).</p>
+
+<p>While he chanted the usual compliments, my eyes hung
+upon his cherry lips, reveled in his white, strong teeth.
+The man I want. I say it without shame, without care.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Blush, good, white paper! I am giving an account
+of my feelings, and if they be impure, there's something
+wrong with nature.</p>
+
+<p>Even as I write, I tremble with longing, with desire
+for Henry.</p>
+
+<p>Ten days since we first met. It might have been this
+morning, so lively and overwhelming is the recollection.
+I am impatient for his kisses, for his blonde loveliness,
+for his whole self,&mdash;just as if we hadn't loved and kissed
+scarce an hour ago.</p>
+
+<p>"My horse, Lucretia. We'll go for a canter. I must
+have air and plenty of it."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Pillnitz</span>, <i>September 10, 1900</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I must give some additional account of our first meeting
+at the court ball. Ah, I was the hussy for fair! He
+couldn't help seeing the impression he made upon me. My
+eyes must have reflected it in letters of flame. I wish he
+were as bold as the <i>Duc</i>, who slept on a pillow stuffed
+with the hair of his mistresses, past and present.</p>
+
+<p>I never made such advances to any man. I was gone
+clean off my head.</p>
+
+<p>When he reddened and when his left hand, resting on
+the hilt of his sword, trembled, I became intoxicated.</p>
+
+<p>And I danced with him, and I was angry with myself<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+for lacking the courage to say: "Feel my heart beat." My
+great-great-aunt and namesake, Marie Antoinette, did and
+won the love of her life,&mdash;Fersen.</p>
+
+<p>But we <i>fin de si&egrave;cle</i> women are cowards. All I said
+to him was: "I must see you tonight. Arrange with
+Lucretia."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Dresden</span>, <i>September 30, 1900</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Summer heat continues, but no country-seat for me!
+The town is a much safer place for lovers, and old Countess
+Baranello keeps open house for us all the year round. We
+meet daily. I persuaded Henry's colonel that the lieutenant
+would never be a courtier unless he saw more of court
+life and was relieved, to a certain extent, of duties on the
+drill ground.</p>
+
+<p>We see each other mornings or afternoons at the
+Countess's. The evenings we spend at the theatre together,
+I in the box, he in the <i>fauteuil</i> once sacred to Romano.
+Every Saturday afternoon we concoct the repertoire for
+the week following, and he goes at once to secure tickets
+for the various entertainments I intend to visit for his
+sake.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>October 1, 1900</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I wish I had never loved any man before Henry. I
+wish he had known me as an innocent girl. I wish I wasn't<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+royal. Then I could get a divorce and marry him, but
+now, if I got ten divorces, he would always be the insignificant
+Baron, I the Princess of the Blood.</p>
+
+<p>And I couldn't see my love humiliated!</p>
+
+<p>As a talisman he wears on his chest a golden locket
+with my miniature. In exchange he gave me a <i>Portebonheur</i>
+with his picture and a few sweet words.</p>
+
+<p>So help me, God, I am in love with this man,&mdash;love
+him to the verge of poetry. Indeed, I am writing silly
+verse in his honor, and later haven't the courage to show
+it to him. <i>Par example</i>:</p>
+
+<p>
+I want you most, dear, when the sunset bright<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Makes of the hills a glorious funeral pyre,</span><br />
+So die the love-light in your eyes, if die it must,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And leave the wondrous, throbbing silence of the night.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Henry isn't very intellectual, I am afraid, but he is
+the finest horseman in the world.</p>
+
+<p>If I were Queen, I would barter a regiment to have
+him appointed my Chief Master of Horse. Augustus of
+the three-hundred and fifty-two sold one for his first night
+with Cosel.</p>
+
+<p>I am racking my brains for a pretense to have him
+appointed to court duty,&mdash;anything to give him the <i>entr&eacute;e</i>
+to my apartments. But he is far too beautiful. The sancti<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>monious
+cats that envy me my happiness, that look upon
+love as a crime, would at once combine to destroy him.</p>
+
+<p>Well, we'll have to bear with the difficulties of the
+situation forced upon us by these moral busy-bodies. As
+for me, I'll be thrice careful, for if He was taken away
+from me, all the joy would go out of my life.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLV" id="XLV"></a>CHAPTER XLV</h2>
+
+<h4>LOVE AND THE HAPPINESS IT CONVEYS</h4>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>My Grand Mistress suspects because I am so amiable&mdash;Pangs of
+jealousy&mdash;Every good-looking man pursued by women&mdash;A
+good story of my cousin, the Duchess Berri&mdash;We all go
+cycling together&mdash;The Vitzthums&mdash;Love making on the
+street&mdash;A mud bath.</p></div>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 42em;"><i>December 15, 1900.</i></span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When one is in love and loved a-plenty, weeks and months roll by without notice by the happy ones.</p>
+
+<p>For my part I never thought there was so much happiness
+in the world as I am experiencing since the beginning
+of September. But I have my troubles, too. First,
+the Tisch. When a lady is well pleased by her lover, then
+her eyes are bright, her cheeks glow, her lips smile; she
+bears with her entourage; she is kind to her servants.
+The moment I treated the Tisch as a human being, she
+began to suspect, and I am sure she is eating her heart
+out fretting because God gave me both nuts and teeth to
+crack them.</p>
+
+<p>But I am qualifying as an expert deceiver, and my
+Grand Mistress won't catch me in a hurry.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>My other great trouble is: long separations from Henry,
+hours upon hours in daytime, half the nights.</p>
+
+<p>What is he doing when he is not with me? Of course
+he pretends to tell, but I am not goose enough to suppose
+that he would incriminate himself for the love of truth.
+He is hiding things from me, perhaps cheating me. I have
+to arm myself with all the faith loving woman commands
+to forestall occasional noisy out-breaks of jealousy.</p>
+
+<p>Was there ever a good-looking man, women didn't try
+to capture and seduce? Manly beauty is the red rag that
+enthralls and excites women and renders them dishonest,
+though their honor doesn't lodge at the point they designate
+as its <i>habitat</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, when in these jealous frenzies, I wish
+Henry had a face like a Chinese kite, or like Riom, husband
+and lover of my ancestress, the Duchess du Berri.</p>
+
+<p>She was "<i>satisfied</i>" with him, but since her lady-in-waiting,
+too, was, I might, after all, fare no better than
+Berri, if Henry was a toad, "his skin spotted like a serpent's,
+oily like a negro's, changeable like a chameleon, with a
+turned up nose and disproportionate mouth." Yet I hardly
+believe that, like my cousin, I would say anent a rival:
+"Whoever would not be satisfied with him, would be hard
+to please."</p>
+
+<p>Alas, with women in love the extreme of ugliness
+counts as triumphantly as the charms of Adonis. Ever<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+since I read certain passages of Faust, part II, Eduard
+von Hartmann's "Philosophy of the Unconscious," and Lermontoff's
+"Hero of our Times," I am convinced that to
+love a man very good-looking, or, on the contrary, a perfect
+horror, is no sinecure.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately Henry is almost penniless.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>January 2, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Henry's sister married one of the numerous Vitzthums,
+of the family that furnished the Saxon court with titled
+servants and <i>ma&icirc;tresses en titre</i> for the past several hundred
+years.</p>
+
+<p>I immediately sent word to her ladyship, that having
+taken up bicycling, I would be pleased to have her attend
+me on the wheel on the afternoon following. The invitation
+was issued from the office of my Court Marshal,
+which is controlled by the King's. Having thus secured
+beforehand His Majesty's approval, possible criticism was
+nipped in the bud. The bride asked permission to bring
+her husband.</p>
+
+<p>"Granted. Order of dress: <i>mufti</i>."</p>
+
+<p>This enabled us, myself and Henry, and the Count
+and Countess to ride all over town, unrecognized by either
+officials or the public at large.</p>
+
+<p>It was great fun, and I told the Vitzthums that I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+intended to wheel every morning at nine, immediately after
+breakfast. Count Vitzthum is Henry's colonel. Of course
+he granted both Henry and himself furlough for the time set.</p>
+
+<p>What happiness! Now I don't have to wait till afternoon
+and evening to see my lover.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>January 10, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am so happy, I am growing careless.</p>
+
+<p>The Vitzthums, profiting by the fact that they are but
+recently married, prefer to travel in pairs, and always take
+the lead. Accordingly Henry and myself, incog. as far
+as my future subjects go, are free to indulge in occasional
+caresses and sweet nonsense-talk.</p>
+
+<p>I was pouring honeyed words into Henry's ears the
+other morning when my wheel skidded on the wet pavement,
+and before he, or I, could save me, I was down on
+my back in the mud.</p>
+
+<p>The fact that I was again <i>enceinte</i>, and the other fact
+that I was covered with dirt, ought to have prompted me to
+return to the palace at once, but how un-Louise-like the
+straight and sane course would have been.</p>
+
+<p>I allowed myself to be wiped off by Henry; then
+mounted my wheel anew and raced after the Vitzthums.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, a reporter heard of the incident and,
+for the benefit of his pocket, made a column out of it.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A few hours after the story appeared in the evening paper,
+the palace was in an uproar. The King wasn't well enough
+to scold me, so he delegated that pleasant duty to Prince
+George. His Royal Highness promptly informed me that
+the "damned bicycling had to stop."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLVI" id="XLVI"></a>CHAPTER XLVI</h2>
+
+<h4>FEARS FOR MY LOVE</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Some reflections on queens of old who punished recreant lovers&mdash;Henry
+was in debt and I gave him money&mdash;Indignities by
+which some of that money was earned&mdash;Husband accompanies
+me to Loschwitz&mdash;Reflections on Frederick Augustus's
+character.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 38em;"><i>January 15, 1901.</i></span>
+</p>
+
+<p>My love played the melancholy Dane for the last few
+days. His tenderness seemed labored, his spirits under a
+cloud. Every smile I got had to be coaxed from him.</p>
+
+<p>"The end of my happiness," I thought; "some chit of
+a girl dethroned me." And I cursed my birthday. "A
+kingdom for ten years off my age."</p>
+
+<p>And my thoughts of thoughts travelled back to the
+times when royal ladies had their rivals immured, as practiced
+by a Brandenburg princess at the Kaiser's hunting
+box at Gr&uuml;newald, or made a head shorter, like Lady Jane
+Grey, who was far too pretty to please Elizabeth; or shot,
+as elected by Queen Christina, <i>tribade</i> and nymphomaniac
+both.</p>
+
+<p>And the things Queen Bess did to her unfaithfuls and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+the crimes Mary Stuart perpetrated to cheat Jeannie Bothwell
+out of her doughty Hepburn!</p>
+
+<p>"If I were Queen," I thought, and I must have spoken
+aloud, for Henry said: "You would make me a great lord,
+love, wouldn't you, give me the best paying office at court,
+but that's small comfort to my creditors today."</p>
+
+<p>"It's creditors, mere creditors bothering you?" I almost
+shouted with joy. This man was still mine. No one
+had succeeded in luring him away from me. I threw myself
+upon him and nearly smothered him.</p>
+
+<p>Filthy lucre, or the want of it, oppressing my boy.
+Money, miserable money, caused me to doubt his very
+loyalty.</p>
+
+<p>"How much?"</p>
+
+<p>He stuttered and denied and swore it was all a mistake
+and that I had misunderstood him. "As an army
+officer&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't talk like Frederick Augustus. It will give me
+the greatest pleasure in the world to arrange your affairs,
+dearest."</p>
+
+<p>I got him to name the sum after a while. What a
+pity I am not rich. As Catharine sent her Orloffs and
+Potemkins and Zoritchs to the State Treasury to help themselves
+as they saw fit, so I would gladly turn fortunes over
+to Henry, never asking for an accounting.</p>
+
+<p>But this Imperial Highness is wretchedly poor, like<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+most royal women not actually seated on the throne. I
+can't offer my paramour financial independence, not even
+luxury, but, thank heaven, I saved up enough to provide
+for his present needs, even if my treasury be drained to
+the last twenty-mark piece, and I will have to cut short
+my charities for the next quarter of a year. But he must
+not know these sordid details.</p>
+
+<p>Some day I will be Queen. I will reimburse the poor
+and I will be a true Catharine to Henry.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>January 16, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I brought my mite to our rendezvous. Mostly in small
+bills and twenty-mark pieces. If Henry knew that many
+of these were earned in the right royal fashion of having
+them slipped down one's stocking by a husband, too drunk
+to distinguish a royal palace from a dance-hall!</p>
+
+<p>He told me honestly enough how he got into debt.
+"How can one lay by for a rainy day when one hasn't got
+anything?"</p>
+
+<p>I appreciate the play of words, for I am in the same
+predicament.</p>
+
+<p>Only once has Henry touched a card, but he lost
+considerably in horse deals, as most young army officers
+do.</p>
+
+<p>His sister made a rich marriage, but he wouldn't dis<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>cover
+himself to her. If she asked money of her husband,
+there might be trouble, for Vitzthum is not a liberal man.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>April 1, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The children's health called for country air and I was
+quasi-forced to retire to Loschwitz, though I have a thousand
+and one reasons for remaining in Dresden. Frederick
+Augustus accompanies us. After the strenuous city life
+(in Dresden!), he needs a change and a long rest from
+drinking and carousing, he says boastingly.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, while he is here, I dare not invite the Vitzthums.
+But as soon as he is gone, they shall come for a
+couple of weeks, and their presence will make Henry's
+possible.</p>
+
+<p>It's dreadful the way I miss the sweet boy. I suffer
+like a dog, when the longing seizes me, suffer both in heart
+and body. When I contemplate his miniature, tears come
+into my eyes. I often cry for hours thinking of him.</p>
+
+<p>And to have to endure this great booby of a husband
+of mine day and night, especially nights. It's almost more
+than I can bear.</p>
+
+<p>The grossness of his egotism reminds me of the story
+told of King James, whom the English got rid of in 1689.</p>
+
+<p>The Dutch William, instead of waiting peacefully for
+the heritage of his father-in-law, went to claim it before<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+his death, and James, pressed on all sides by enemies, decided
+upon flight.</p>
+
+<p>One Sunday, in the month of December, his devotions
+over, he dismissed all his servants and advised his last partisans
+to turn towards the rising sun.</p>
+
+<p>After which, he lay for an hour with his wife, the
+better to take leave of her."</p>
+
+<p>The very thing Frederick Augustus would do if war
+or revolution made us fugitives.</p>
+
+<p>I never realized the diversity in our natures as much
+as I do now, when all my thoughts go out to another, when
+even connubial tendernesses seem like whip-strokes.</p>
+
+<p>The further our souls draw apart, the more disgusting
+this forced intimacy, the prostitution under the marriage
+vow, which I detest and abhor.</p>
+
+<p>But what will I do? Shut my door to him? He would
+kick it in, or climb through the window. It's easier to
+submit to the violation of my person than to breaking of
+locks and furniture.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLVII" id="XLVII"></a>CHAPTER XLVII</h2>
+
+<h4>LOVE'S INTERMEZZO</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Bernhardt takes advantage of my day-dreams&mdash;My husband's indolent
+<i>gaucherie</i>&mdash;Violent love-making&mdash;Ninon who loved
+families, not men&mdash;Does Bernhardt really love me?</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>April 10, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately Bernhardt came for a few days to relieve
+the monotony of my alcove life <i>par le droit du plus fort</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Tall stories of dissipation, indiscipline, scandal, had
+preceded the poor fellow. No doubt, his military superiors
+got orders to make his life as unhappy as they possibly can,
+and he retaliates.</p>
+
+<p>The Prince told me that, at last, he had succeeded arranging
+for an audience with the King. His Majesty had
+denied himself to Bernhardt for months past. He managed
+the coveted boon only by the intervention of various
+high generals and the threat to appeal to the Kaiser.</p>
+
+<p>The Royal House of Saxony, while compelled to recognize
+William as War-Lord, doesn't court his interference,
+or attempted interference, in matters military.</p>
+
+<p>Flushed with this initial success and expecting lots of
+good things in the future, Bernhardt was bent upon having<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+a good time. He drank with Frederick Augustus, made
+love to Lucretia and squeezed the chambermaids on his
+floor to his heart's content.</p>
+
+<p>To me he was the most gallant of cousins and, glad to
+contribute to the happiness of the poor fellow, I gave him
+plenty of rope, perhaps too much.</p>
+
+<p>On the second day of his stay we had a very merry
+dinner, having dispensed for the time with titled servants.</p>
+
+<p>After dinner the three of us retired to the veranda. I
+was in a rocker, showing perhaps more of my ankles than
+was absolutely necessary. Frederick Augustus was smoking
+dreamily. Like an animal he likes to sleep after he has
+gorged himself.</p>
+
+<p>Bernhardt, with my permission, had thrown himself
+on a wicker lounge and was absorbing cigarettes at a killing
+rate. I bantered him on his laziness. But he only sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"You wish that audience was past and forgotten," I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Pshaw, I'm thinking of something prettier than the
+King."</p>
+
+<p>Remembering Bernhardt's chief weakness, I indulged in
+the old joke, "<i>Cherchez la femme</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Bernhardt replied, with another succession of groans,
+"You are right, Louise; <i>parfaitement, cherchez la femme</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Egads," grunted Frederick Augustus, glad for an excuse
+to go to his room, or play a game of pinochle with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
+his aides, "egads, if you indulge in intellectualities, I had
+better go. A full stomach and French conversation&mdash;whew!"</p>
+
+<p>The Tisch was in Dresden; <i>Fr&auml;ulein</i> von Schoenberg
+with the children, Lucretia flirting somewhere at a
+neighboring country chalet. We were alone on the remote
+terrace and it was getting dark. Bernhardt sat up and
+looked at me with eyes of life-giving fire, but continued
+silent.</p>
+
+<p>"You want me to think that you command the rays
+of the sun stolen by Prometheus?"</p>
+
+<p>He answered not, but sought to burn the skin of my
+neck and bosom by those Prometheus rays.</p>
+
+<p>Now, in the morning I got a note from Henry, and I
+had been thinking of the dear boy every minute. I was
+longing for him; my heart, my senses were crying for him.</p>
+
+<p>I forgot Bernhardt; I forgot all around me. With my
+fancies focussed on my lover, I leaned back in my armchair,
+gazing at the rising moon. My word, at that moment
+I was lost to everything.</p>
+
+<p>I half-awoke from my dream when I heard Bernhardt
+rise. A moment later I felt his eyes prowling over my
+body. Then a shadow darkened my face and Bernhardt
+said with a strange quaver in his voice:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Cherchez la femme.</i> You are the woman, Louise, you
+and none else."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And wild, forbidden kisses burned on my face, on my
+neck, on my breasts. Both hands claimed a lover's liberties.</p>
+
+<p>I was taken completely unawares; in my mind of minds
+I was in the Countess's pavilion, receiving Henry's caresses.
+All sense of location had vanished. And, thinking of my
+lover, I clasped both arms about Bernhardt's neck and drew
+him to me. We kissed like mad. The love feast for Henry
+became Bernhardt's in the twinkling of an eye.</p>
+
+<p>Whether he felt like a thief, I don't know; for
+my part my senses responded to Henry, not to his
+substitute.</p>
+
+<p>How long this embrace lasted, I don't know. Somebody,
+or some noise, caused us to separate.</p>
+
+<p>I fled and locked myself in my room.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell His Royal Highness he must excuse me. I can't
+see him before he goes away. Say I have a headache, or
+the gout, I don't care which," I commanded Lucretia next
+morning.</p>
+
+<p>The previous night I had denied myself to Frederick
+Augustus, though he entreated and raved.</p>
+
+<p>While I appreciate the arch-Lais's <i>bon mot</i> that "one
+can't judge of a family by a single specimen," which made
+Ninon talk of her lovers <i>not</i> as Coligny, Villarceau, S&eacute;vign&eacute;,
+Cond&eacute;, d'Albret, etc., but as <i>les</i> Rochefoucaults, <i>les</i>
+d'Effiats, <i>les</i> Cond&eacute;s, <i>les</i> S&eacute;vign&eacute;s, etc., I was determined<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+not to betray Henry by the whole House of Saxony in a
+single twelve-hours.</p>
+
+<p>I wonder whether this Bernhardt loves me? Perhaps,
+on his part, it was the longing for the girl he adores, as,
+on mine, it was longing for Henry that drew us together
+with electric force. And, of course, environment had something
+to do with it: moon, opportunity, Frederick Augustus's
+indolent <i>gaucherie</i>. Yes, why deny it, the good dinner
+we had, the champagne.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLVIII" id="XLVIII"></a>CHAPTER XLVIII</h2>
+
+<h4>GRAND MISTRESS TELLS HUSBAND I KEEP A DIARY</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>He wants to see it, but seems unsuspecting&mdash;Grand Mistress
+denies that she meant mischief, but I upbraid her unmercifully&mdash;Threaten
+to dismiss her like a thieving lackey.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>May 1, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus leaves tomorrow. Forever, I
+thought, when he put this question to me:</p>
+
+<p>"You are keeping a Diary, Louise?"</p>
+
+<p>I was frightened dumb. I stared at him.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter," he laughed. "I'm not going to
+eat you." He didn't seem to be at all perturbed.</p>
+
+<p>"How do you know I keep a Diary?" I stuttered.</p>
+
+<p>Nonchalantly enough he made answer: "Your bag-of-bones
+Baroness told me. Full of forbidden things, I suppose,
+since you regard it a state secret. You often say that
+my education was sadly neglected. Maybe I can learn a
+thing or two from your scribblings. Let's look 'm over."</p>
+
+<p>By this time I had regained my composure. "Naturally,"
+I said, "a Diary records thoughts and things intended
+for the writer only, but if you choose to be ungentlemanly
+enough to wish to peruse those pages more sacred<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+than private letters, I suppose I will have to submit."</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus changed the subject, but I felt instinctively
+that he was disappointed. Someone had played
+on his curiosity, and to go unsatisfied is not at all in this
+prince's line.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, the someone was the Tisch, but how did
+she know? I will ask her as soon as Frederick Augustus
+is gone.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>May 2, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Have you ever seen my Diary?" I asked the Tisch
+this morning.</p>
+
+<p>"Never, Your Imperial Highness."</p>
+
+<p>"Then how do you know I keep a Diary?"</p>
+
+<p>"I surmised it because I saw Your Imperial Highness
+write repeatedly in one and the same book." The hussy
+affected a humble tone, but the note of triumph and hatred
+underlying the creature's meekness did not escape me.</p>
+
+<p>"And the mere surmise prompted you to blab to my
+husband, arouse his suspicions?"</p>
+
+<p>"For Heaven's sake," cried my Grand Mistress, "I had
+no idea that His Royal Highness didn't know about the
+Diary. Secrets between the Prince-Royal and Your Imperial
+Highness&mdash;how dare I pre-suppose such a state of
+things? His Royal Highness casually asked how the Crown<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
+Princess killed time in Loschwitz. I mentioned riding,
+driving, bicycling, writing letters, writing in the Diary&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>My fingers itched to slap her lying face, Grand-Duchess
+of Tuscany fashion, but I kept my temper.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen to me," I said. "While you have secret instructions
+to play the serpent in my household and to betray,
+for dirty money, your mistress of the Blood Imperial,
+your duties as a spy are confined to my going and coming,
+to my exterior conduct, to my visits outside the palace, to
+my friendships, perhaps.</p>
+
+<p>"They cannot possibly encompass my thoughts. And
+my Diary is the repository of my thoughts&mdash;thoughts that
+must not be defiled by your favor-seeking curiosity. Be
+warned. The next time you dare act the burglar&mdash;I say
+<i>burglar</i>&mdash;I will kick you out of doors like a thieving lackey."</p>
+
+<p>She got as white as a sheet and hissed back: "Your
+Imperial Highness can't dismiss me. Only His Majesty has
+power&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I interrupted her with an imperious gesture.</p>
+
+<p>"I said I will kick you out of doors like a thieving
+lackey," I repeated, "and I will do so this moment if you
+say another word. Whether or not His Majesty will punish
+me for the act, that's <i>my</i> business. You will be on the
+street and will stay on the street."</p>
+
+<p>I pointed to the door: "I dismiss you now. You will
+keep to your room for the rest of the day."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I saw the Tisch was near collapse.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Imperial Highness deigns to insult a defenseless
+woman," she breathed as she went out.</p>
+
+<p>Defenseless! So is the viper that attacks one's heel!
+First these "defenseless" creatures goad one to madness,
+then they appeal to our <i>noblesse oblige</i>. The enmity between
+the Tisch and I is more intense than ever.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLIX" id="XLIX"></a>CHAPTER XLIX</h2>
+
+<h4>ARISTOCRATIC VISITORS</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I hear disquieting news about my lover's character&mdash;The aristocracy
+a dirty lot&mdash;Love-making made easy by titled friends&mdash;Anecdotes
+of Richelieu and the Duke of Orleans&mdash;The German
+nobleman who married Miss Wheeler and had to resign
+his birthright&mdash;The disreputable business the Pappenheims
+and other nobles used to be in&mdash;I am afraid to question
+my lover as to charges.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>May 15, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The Vitzthums have been visiting for a week. Henry
+lodges in the village, but spends nearly all his time in the
+castle and grounds. We play tennis, polo, ball; we drive,
+ride, go bicycling, we dine and sup together.</p>
+
+<p>I ought to be the happiest woman in the world, but a
+shadow dims the ideal picture my mind's eye drew of the
+lover.</p>
+
+<p>I have it recorded somewhere&mdash;I wish I hadn't, so I
+might doubt my memory&mdash;that Henry told me he never
+borrowed from his sister. Countess Vitzthum's confidences
+to me show that he did repeatedly, that, in fact, he is forever
+trying to borrow.</p>
+
+<p>"He is a spendthrift; he cannot be trusted," said his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+sister, who loves him dearly. "He will wreck his career
+if he continues at the pace he is going. Some day we may
+hear of him as a waiter or cab-driver in New York."</p>
+
+<p>These disclosures frightened me. I might forgive him
+the lie, but what is he doing with the money?</p>
+
+<p>Spending it on lewd women like Bernhardt, I suppose.</p>
+
+<p>I said: "Oh," and Madame von Vitzthum seemed to
+catch its significance. It occurred to her at once that she
+had said too much and she tried to minimize her brother's
+delinquencies. But I know.</p>
+
+<p>Maybe some of my money went to pay hotel expenses
+for&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 40em;"><i>At Midnight.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My cousin Richelieu caused his mistresses to be painted
+in all sorts of monastic garments and licentious devices,
+saying: "I have my saints and martyrs; they are all that;
+but, as for virgins, there are none outside of Paradise."
+Substitute <i>paillards</i> for the holy ones and you have the
+situation in a nutshell.</p>
+
+<p>The Vitzthums are panderers. They always manage
+to leave me alone with Henry. When we are a-wheel, they
+ride a mile ahead; while playing tennis one or the other
+aims the ball, every little while, to enter the open window
+of a summer-house, where my lover and I can exchange
+a few rapid kisses. When we are driving, without coach<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>man
+or groom, of course, they always "feel like walking
+a bit," while Henry and I remain in the carriage.</p>
+
+<p>The same at the house, on the veranda. They are
+always <i>de trop</i>. Vitzthum even sacrifices himself to the
+extent of paying court to the Tisch and engaging her entire
+attention, if it must be. He reminds me of a certain
+colonel of the French army during the Regency.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Monseigneur</i>," said this gentleman to my cousin
+d'Orleans, "permit me to employ my regiment as a guard
+for my wife, and I swear to you that nobody shall go near
+her but Your Highness."</p>
+
+<p>Of course, it's very lovely of them, but rather emphasizes
+the poor opinion I have of the nobility.</p>
+
+<p>Your nobleman and noblewoman adopt all tones, all
+airs, all masks, all allures, frank and false, flattering and
+brutal, choleric or mild, virtuous or bawdy&mdash;anything as
+long as it makes for their profit. Some months ago I met
+at the Dresden court the Dowager Countess Julie Feodorowna
+of Pappenheim, who told everybody she could persuade
+to listen that her eldest son, Max Albrecht, had to
+resign the succession, because he married beneath him, an
+American heiress, Miss Wheeler of Philadelphia.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you despise money?" I queried with a malicious
+thought just entering my head.</p>
+
+<p>"Not exactly, Your Imperial Highness," she said, "but
+our house laws&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Those funny house laws," I smiled, "you don't say
+they forbid a Pappenheim to accept half a dozen millions
+from his wife, when, in days gone by, the Counts of Pappenheim's
+chief income was the tax on harlotry in Franconia
+and Swabia."</p>
+
+<p>The Countess nearly dropped. "Don't be alarmed," I
+said. "See the pompous looking man in the corner yonder?
+It's Count Henneberg. His forbears held the fiefship
+of the W&uuml;rzburg city brothel for many hundred years.
+That's where the family fortune came from."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>May 17, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am an ingrate. I bit the hand that fed me. Noble
+iniquity that yields such delicious crumbs of love as Henry
+and I stole in moments of ecstasy in park and parlor, in
+pavilion and veranda, on our drives and rides, be blessed a
+hundred times. Ah, the harvest of little tendernesses, the
+sweet words I caught on the wing&mdash;recompense for the
+weeks of abstinence I suffered!</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally only, very occasionally, I feel like questioning
+Henry as to the lie he was guilty of. I quizzed
+his sister time and again about his relations with women.
+She always gives me a knowing laugh; I wonder whether
+she means to be impertinent, or is simply a silly goose.</p>
+
+<p>I won't ask him. If he is innocent, as I sincerely hope,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+he will be offended. If he is not, he will be ashamed of
+himself and will avoid me in future. It's "innocent," you
+lose, and "guilty," you don't win.</p>
+
+<p>And I love him. I want him, whether he lies to me
+or not.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="L" id="L"></a>CHAPTER L</h2>
+
+<h4>TO LIVE UNDER KING'S AND PRINCE GEORGE'S EYE</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Abruptly ordered to the royal summer residence&mdash;The Vitzthums
+and Henry take flight&mdash;Enmeshed by Prince George's
+intrigues&mdash;Those waiting for a crown have no friends&mdash;What
+I will do when Queen&mdash;No wonder Kings of old married
+only relatives&mdash;Interesting facts about relative marriages
+furnished by scientist.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>May 18, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>All-highest order to proceed to Pillnitz, the royal summer
+residence, without delay&mdash;a command I cannot possibly
+evade. Conveyed in curt, almost insulting terms&mdash;the
+Tisch's work, no doubt.</p>
+
+<p>It came like lightning out of a blue sky, just when
+Henry and I had planned some real love-making <i>&agrave; la</i>
+Dresden.</p>
+
+<p>The Vitzthums lost no time taking their leave when
+the scent of royal disgrace was in the air, and, as if to
+emphasize the obscene office they had assumed, they spirited
+Henry away ere we had time even to say goodbye.</p>
+
+<p>What a life I am leading with the ogre of the King's
+wrath forever hanging over me; Prince George's intrigues,
+octopus-like, enmeshing me!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Ten years I have been Crown Princess of these realms.
+Three Princes and a Princess I gave to Saxony. A fifth
+child is trembling in my womb, yet every atom of happiness
+that falls to my lot is moulded into a strand of the rope
+fastening 'round my neck.</p>
+
+<p>I haven't a friend in the world. A most dangerous
+thing to be on good terms with the heirs to the crown.
+Makes the temporary incumbent of the bauble nervous,
+makes him jealous.</p>
+
+<p>When I am Queen, I will have friends in plenty. But
+then I won't need any. Immense wealth will be at my
+disposal. I will have offices to distribute, titles, crosses and
+stars.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of tolerating the serpents now coiling at my
+fireside ready to spring at a word from their master, I
+will appoint to court offices persons I love or esteem, at
+least.</p>
+
+<p>Henry shall be my Chief Equerry; the Tisch will be
+dismissed in disgrace&mdash;no pension.</p>
+
+<p>But I am day-dreaming again. I started out to say
+that I had no friends. Yet there's Bernhardt? Precisely&mdash;as
+long as I am his mistress.</p>
+
+<p>Marie is dead, Melita expects to be divorced before
+the end of the year. She will be a Russian Grand-Duchess,
+and the tedium of petty German court life will know her
+no longer.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Aside from Lucretia, there isn't a man or woman at
+the Saxon court whom I can trust, for our high functionaries
+are only lackeys having a bathroom to themselves.
+In no other way do they differ from the
+servants who are allowed one bathroom per twenty-four
+heads.</p>
+
+<p>But the high aristocracy! Its men and women flatter
+us to get us into leading strings, try to make us pawns on
+the political or social chess-board. As a whole, they are a
+despicable lot.</p>
+
+<p>No wonder kings of old married members of their
+own family exclusively, even their sisters, <i>in re</i> of which
+the learned Baron von Reitzenstein told me many interesting
+details.</p>
+
+<p>He copied especially from Egyptian records, but also
+from Armenian, Babylonian and Persian, to wit:</p>
+
+<p>Daranavausch married his niece, Phratunga.</p>
+
+<p>His son and successor married his niece Artayanta.</p>
+
+<p>Artaxerxes was also married to a niece of his.</p>
+
+<p>Darius II and Parysatis married their sisters.</p>
+
+<p>Kambyses married two of his sisters.</p>
+
+<p>Artachschasa II married his two daughters; Kobad
+his daughter Sambyke.</p>
+
+<p>Artaviraf, the founder of a great ancient religion, married
+no less than seven of his sisters&mdash;because "there were
+no other women worthy of the honor."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>According to that, the aristocracy of old must have
+been as rotten as that of our day.</p>
+
+<p>Lucretia is the only person I trust, and they would
+have robbed me of her services long ago if my marriage
+contract did not vest the power of dismissal in me.</p>
+
+<p>Unlike me, she can afford to defy the King's wrath.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LI" id="LI"></a>CHAPTER LI</h2>
+
+<h4>COLD RECEPTION&mdash;ENEMIES ALL AROUND</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Frederick Augustus gives his views on adultery&mdash;Doesn't care
+personally, but "the King knows"&mdash;"Thank God, the King is
+ill"&mdash;I am deprived of my children&mdash;Have I got the moral
+strength to defy my enemies?</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Pillnitz</span>, <i>May 20, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am undone. That malicious Tisch woman holds me
+in the hollow of her hand.</p>
+
+<p>I dropped into a sea of ice when I set foot in the castle.
+Long faces, suspicious looks, frigidity everywhere.
+The King treats me like a criminal. I wonder the guards
+don't refuse their <i>spiel</i> at my coming and going.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Pillnitz</span>, <i>May 21, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus arrived. He doesn't say for how
+long, and acts the icicle in the presence of others. At night
+he seeks his "rights," seeks them brutally.</p>
+
+<p>This afternoon he said to me:</p>
+
+<p>"That you made me a cuckold isn't exactly killing
+me; this sort of thing happened to better men than I, and&mdash;I
+was almost prepared for it. But to hear it announced
+from the King's lips&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Because His Majesty knows&mdash;Frederick Augustus
+raved and swore I had dishonored him.</p>
+
+<p>"If I wasn't a royal prince, I would be kicked out of the
+army," he whined.</p>
+
+<p>In short, adultery isn't so very reprehensible if the
+King doesn't know.</p>
+
+<p>Late tonight profound disquietude at court. The King
+is ill.</p>
+
+<p>Thank God, the audience I feared must be postponed.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Pillnitz</span>, <i>May 22, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>It wasn't. His Majesty appointed Prince George his
+representative, and I received a command to call on him
+at ten sharp.</p>
+
+<p>I wrote on the Court Marshal's brutal invitation: "I
+refuse to see His Royal Highness."</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later the Tisch entered my apartment
+with a look of triumph on her hateful face. She handed
+me a letter on a golden plate and waited.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Ladyship is dismissed," I snapped.</p>
+
+<p>She didn't move: "I expect your Imperial Highness's
+commands with respect to the royal children," she said.
+"May it please Your Imperial Highness to read Prince
+George's letter."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I tore open the envelope. His Majesty's representative
+"graciously permits me to see my children at nine in the
+morning and between five and six in the afternoon. At no
+other time, and never unless Baroness Tisch is in attendance."</p>
+
+<p>I threw the letter on the floor and trampled on it.
+"Get out," I commanded the Baroness. If she hadn't gone
+instantly, I believe I would have choked her.</p>
+
+<p>So I am deemed unworthy to mother the children I
+bore; and a spy is officially appointed to watch my intercourse
+with the little ones lest I corrupt them. No other
+inference was to be drawn from the measure.</p>
+
+<p>"I will show them." But no sooner was the threat
+launched, than a great fear clutched at my heart.</p>
+
+<p>Was I in a position to defy them? To guard the
+purity of the royal children "is the King's first duty towards
+his family." If he had proof positive that I was an
+impure woman, there was no use quarrelling with his decision.
+Besides, moral delinquencies engender more than
+physical weakness. I felt my boasted energy ebbing away
+fast.</p>
+
+<p>"I am without strength, unnerved, because Henry left
+me," I lied to myself. The abandoned woman is either a
+tigress or a kitten. I happen to be no tigress.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LII" id="LII"></a>CHAPTER LII</h2>
+
+<h4>PRINCE GEORGE REVEALS TO ME THE DEPTH OF HIS HATRED</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>A terrible interview&mdash;"The devil will come to claim you"&mdash;Uncertain
+how much the King and Prince George know&mdash;I
+break into the nursery and stay with my children all day&mdash;Prince
+George insults me in my own rooms and threatens
+prison if I disobey him.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Pillnitz</span>, <i>May 23, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I caught Prince George in the park after laying in
+wait for him three long hours.</p>
+
+<p>"Why does Your Royal Highness forbid me to see my
+children?" I demanded, every nerve aquiver.</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty's orders. He thinks you are not fit company
+for growing children. You are leading a godless
+life."</p>
+
+<p>"What does Your Royal Highness mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"What I said. A godless life, such as you entered
+upon, is an invitation to the devil. Sins are the devil's
+envoys. When you are black with sin, the devil himself
+will come to claim you."</p>
+
+<p>He dropped his theological lingo and continued: "My
+fine daughter-in-law wants to be everybody's lady-love. If<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+she had her sweet will, she would ruin every young chap
+in the residence and the surrounding country."</p>
+
+<p>He looked about him and, seeing we were unobserved,
+eased his bile in this pretty epigram as rank as a serpent's
+saliva: "An adulterous wife, that's what you are. Satan
+alone knows how many you seduced."</p>
+
+<p>It was more than I could stand and I burst into tears.
+In moments like this women always cry, but even if I
+hadn't felt like doing so, I would have cried because George
+hates it.</p>
+
+<p>"Prove to me, prove to the King that you are sorry for
+what you have done, return to the path of righteousness,
+to God, and we will see about the children," he whispered
+as he moved away.</p>
+
+<p>"What does he know?" "How much have they found
+out?" I kept saying to myself as I withdrew to my lonely
+apartments.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Pillnitz</span>, <i>May 24, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>No answer to the questions in my last entry. The
+silent persecution continues unabated. I am growing desperate.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Pillnitz</span>, <i>May 25, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>This morning at eight-thirty I went to the nursery.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Baroness tried to speak to me. I held up my
+hand. "Not a word from you, or something terrible will
+happen."</p>
+
+<p><i>Fr&auml;ulein</i> von Schoenberg, who is really a sweet girl,
+offered some respectful advice. I begged her to be silent.
+If the door had been locked I would have forced it with
+the dagger I carried in my bosom.</p>
+
+<p>Lucretia came and whispered. "I have decided to
+stay, and stay I will. Let them do their worst if they
+dare," I told her.</p>
+
+<p>I changed the children's <i>curriculum</i>. "You can drive
+every day; you can't have mother every day. Let's have
+some games."</p>
+
+<p>I remained in the nursery till all the children were
+asleep. They partook of the breakfast, lunch and dinner
+I ordered for myself. A great treat for them. We were
+very happy.</p>
+
+<p>But I waited in vain for interference. Nothing happened
+to clear the situation. Those questions were still
+unanswered when I returned to my apartments.</p>
+
+<p>I had just sat down to read the evening papers, when
+Prince George entered unannounced.</p>
+
+<p>"If ever again you dare disobey my commands"&mdash;he
+shouted without preliminaries.</p>
+
+<p>I cut him short: "Are the children yours or mine?"</p>
+
+<p>"They belong to Saxony, to the Royal House," he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+bawled, and poured forth a torrent of abuse without giving
+me a chance to put in a word. "You shall be disciplined
+to the last extremity. We will imprison you in some lonely
+tower, without state or attendants. You shall not see your
+children from one year's end to the other."</p>
+
+<p>"Prison for the Crown Princess? Would you dare,
+Prince George?"</p>
+
+<p>"At the Tower of Nossen rooms are in readiness for
+your Imperial Highness," sneered my father-in-law as he
+walked out.</p>
+
+<p>Nossen! A ruined country-house, flanked by a medi&aelig;val
+tower in the midst of swamps. The nearest habitation
+miles away. Neither railway nor post-office, neither telegraph
+nor telephone&mdash;just the place to bury one alive. And I
+only thirty-one.</p>
+
+<p>Augustus the Physical Strong imprisoned Countess
+Cosel at Nossen six months before he sent her to her
+prison-grave in Stolpen. After Cosel's departure, another
+royal mistress was lodged in Nossen, and as she would
+neither commit suicide, nor succumb to the fever, they
+starved her to death. And it all happened in the eighteenth
+century.</p>
+
+<p>The word Nossen sent cold shivers down my spine. I
+am sure I won't sleep a wink.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LIII" id="LIII"></a>CHAPTER LIII</h2>
+
+<h4>REVOLVER IN HAND, I DEMAND AN EXPLANATION</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>An insolent Grand Mistress, but of wonderful courage&mdash;Imprisonment,
+threats to kill have no effect on her&mdash;Disregards
+my titles&mdash;My lover's souvenir and endearing words&mdash;How
+she caused Henry to leave me&mdash;My paroxysms of rage&mdash;Henry's
+complete betrayal of me.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Pillnitz</span>, <i>May 26, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>This morning I awoke a mental and physical wreck,
+but determined to solve those vexatious questions: "What
+do the King and Prince George know?" "What have they
+found out?"</p>
+
+<p>I slipped on a dressing-gown, fetched my small revolver
+from its hiding-place in the boudoir and rang for the Tisch.</p>
+
+<p>I received her politely enough. I was quiet, cold,
+calculating. She gave a start as she observed my stony
+countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"Baroness," I said, motioning her to come nearer,
+"explain the attitude assumed by His Majesty, Prince
+George and the rest."</p>
+
+<p>She shrugged her shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to know. Do you hear, Grand Mistress? I
+command you to speak," I cried.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A sneer of contempt hovered about her lips. She is a
+viper, this woman, but has the courage of the rattle-snake
+in action.</p>
+
+<p>I turned the keys in the several doors and threw them
+under the bed. From under the pillow I drew my revolver.</p>
+
+<p>I showed her the weapon and calmly announced,
+accentuating each word: "You won't leave this room alive
+until the question I put to you is answered to my satisfaction.
+I want the whole truth. You needn't excuse your
+own part in the business. As Henri <i>Quatre</i> said to the
+lover of Diane de Poitiers, secreted under her bed, as he
+threw him half a cold bird: 'We all want to live, some
+honestly, some dishonestly.' You choose the dishonest road.
+Be it so.</p>
+
+<p>"But I want you to state what you accuse me of.
+Hurry," I added menacingly.</p>
+
+<p>The Tisch was unmoved. Either she thinks me a
+horrible dastard or is brave to madness. She looked at
+me fearlessly and smiled. She seemed to enjoy my rage.</p>
+
+<p>"Answer or I will shoot you like the dog you are."</p>
+
+<p>And then her cold and fearless voice rang out: "Put
+your revolver away. I am not afraid to tell you, and that
+thing might go off. Is it possible," she continued sarcastically,
+"you have to ask?"</p>
+
+<p>This woman dared to address me "you." "Tisch," I
+thundered, "my title reads Your Imperial Highness."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Another contemptuous smile curled her thin lips as
+she answered insolently: "At your commands. But if you
+want me to talk, put away the weapon. I won't open my
+head while threatened."</p>
+
+<p>I threw the revolver into a drawer of my chiffonier
+and the Tisch approached me. "Do you know this?" she
+hissed, whipping from her desert bosom the golden <i>Portebonheur</i>,
+Henry's present.</p>
+
+<p>I had missed it for two days. Fear seized my throat.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know this?" repeated the Tisch, pushing the
+button and disclosing Henry's miniature with the legend
+"To my sweetest Louise."</p>
+
+<p>"Where did you get it?" I asked, half-dead with shame
+and fear.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind. It's the last piece of evidence that
+fell into my hands. The real facts I have known for a
+long while."</p>
+
+<p>"And sold that knowledge?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did my duty."</p>
+
+<p>"Report, then."</p>
+
+<p>And she told the story of her infamy&mdash;or mine?</p>
+
+<p>My true relations with Henry were discovered by her
+at Loschwitz. He is a distant relative of hers and she
+an intimate friend of his mother. Hence she took care not
+to compromise the young man. The entire blame was put
+on me.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Her Imperial Highness is indulging in a dangerous
+flirtation with Baron Bergen," she advised the King. "They
+must be separated at once lest that exemplary young man
+fall victim to her seductive wiles. I beseech Your Majesty
+to order the Crown Princess to Pillnitz and put a stop to
+her most reprehensible conduct."</p>
+
+<p>Hence the royal command to proceed to Pillnitz without
+a moment's delay. "The King and Prince George deem
+your honor unsafe unless you are under their watchful
+eyes," she had the effrontery to tell me.</p>
+
+<p>She drew a key from her pocket and opened one of
+the bedroom doors.</p>
+
+<p>With her hand on the knob, she said, bowing formally:</p>
+
+<p>"By Your Imperial Highness's leave, I will keep the
+<i>Portebonheur</i> to use in case you are ever tempted again
+'to throw me out of doors like a thieving lackey!'"</p>
+
+<p>A low bow, a sarcastic smile,&mdash;my executioner was
+gone. And I broke some priceless bric-a-brac, stamped my
+foot on the pearl necklace Frederick Augustus had given
+me, tore three or four lace handkerchiefs and stuffed the
+rags in my mouth to prevent me from crying aloud.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Pillnitz</span>, <i>May 27, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Lucretia finished the Tisch's report. The good soul
+hadn't had the courage to tell me before, but now that the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
+Grand Mistress had spoken, considerations of delicacy no
+longer stood in the way.</p>
+
+<p>What a judge of character I am, to be sure: Henry,
+whom I raised from obscurity, whom I befriended, loved,
+advanced, rescued from the hands of usurers&mdash;a traitor,
+pshaw, worse,&mdash;I cannot write down the word, but it's in
+my mind.</p>
+
+<p>Henry, who hadn't the time to take leave from me,
+devoted an hour to the Tisch before he went away with
+the Vitzthums.</p>
+
+<p>He told her all and gave her his word of honor&mdash;the
+honor of a man who accepted money from the woman
+weak enough to love him&mdash;that, first, he would never see
+me again of his own accord and would reject both my
+entreaties and commands; secondly, that he would petition
+to be transferred to a distant garrison to be out of the
+path of temptation; thirdly, that he would burn my letters.</p>
+
+<p>The Tisch, on her part, promised to tell the King
+only half the truth&mdash;not for my sake, of course, but to
+shield her dear, seduced young relative.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LIV" id="LIV"></a>CHAPTER LIV</h2>
+
+<h4>FORCED TO DO PENANCE LIKE A TRAPPIST MONK</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"By the King's orders"&mdash;I submit for the sake of my children&mdash;Must
+fast as well as pray&mdash;In delicate health, I insist upon
+returning to Dresden&mdash;Bernhardt, to avoid being maltreated
+by King, threatens him with his sword&mdash;The King's awful
+wrath&mdash;Bernhardt prisoner in Nossen&mdash;I escape, temporarily,
+protracted <i>ennui</i>.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Pillnitz</span>, <i>May 28, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Though I am in delicate health, the King, having
+recovered from his illness, commanded me to do penance,&mdash;almost
+public penance.</p>
+
+<p>Fast and pray, pray and fast is the order of the day
+for the next two weeks.</p>
+
+<p>I arise every morning at five. At six a closed carriage
+takes me to a distant nunnery of the Ursulines, a good
+hour's travel. I am forced to attend mass, which also lasts
+an hour. Then a half-hour's sermon, dealing with fire and
+brimstone, hell and damnation.</p>
+
+<p>When that's over the Mother Superior kindly asks me
+to her cell and lectures me for an hour on the duties of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+a wife and mother, and on the terrors that follow in the
+wake of adultery.</p>
+
+<p>(I wonder where she gets her wisdom. She isn't
+married, she isn't supposed to have children, and she ought
+to know that the founder of her religion was most kind
+to the adulteress.)</p>
+
+<p>Then back to Pillnitz and breakfast, for it's the King's
+express command that I worship on an empty stomach;
+some Jesuit told George my sins would never be forgiven
+unless the torture of the fast was added to that of early
+rising, travel, prostration before the altar and listening to
+pious palaver.</p>
+
+<p>I stand it for my children's sake. They will be returned
+to me after I did penance full score. My only satisfaction:
+I compel the Tisch to attend me on my trips, and make her
+sit on the back seat of the carriage. I know this turns her
+stomach and watch her twitching face with devilish glee.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>June 15, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>With the authority of the pregnant woman I demanded
+that I be allowed to return to town.</p>
+
+<p>"If compelled to see Prince George and the rest of my
+enemies daily, my child will be mal-formed, or I will
+suffer an <i>avortement</i>," I told the King.</p>
+
+<p>They let me go and I am breathing more freely. I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+still wear the chain and ball, but they don't cut into my
+flesh as in Pillnitz.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday I learned that Bernhardt was in Dresden,
+and sent for him. He came in company of two army
+officers who remained in the anteroom.</p>
+
+<p>"I am a prisoner," he said resignedly, "those fellows
+outside will conduct me to Nossen."</p>
+
+<p>The audience granted him several months ago took
+place only after my departure from the summer residence,
+and developed into a fearful scene.</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty," said Bernhardt, "was in a rage when
+I entered. 'State what you have to say,' said the King,
+'and be brief.'</p>
+
+<p>"'If Your Majesty will graciously permit me to reside
+in Dresden, I will promise to lead a life in accordance
+with Your Majesty's intentions and will obey your slightest
+wish.'</p>
+
+<p>"'What?' cried the King, 'You dare name conditions
+for your good conduct?'"</p>
+
+<p>Bernhardt denied any intention to impose conditions,
+but begged to submit to His Majesty that he couldn't exist
+in those small garrisons. If in Dresden, it would come
+easier to him to turn over a new leaf.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure, all you young rakes want to live in the capital,"
+sneered the King, "because it's easy in a big town to hide
+one's delinquencies."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Your Majesty," cried Bernhardt, "if I ever did a
+reprehensible thing, it was forced upon me by intolerable
+conditions."</p>
+
+<p>The King grew white with rage.</p>
+
+<p>"No excuses," he thundered. "You are a rip and ugly
+customer and you will stay in the garrison I designated."</p>
+
+<p>Even before the King had finished, Bernhardt interrupted
+him with a fierce: "Don't you call me names,
+Majesty. I won't stand for that."</p>
+
+<p>"Won't stand for anything that I think proper to mete
+out to you, rascal? I will make you." The King had risen
+and was about to box Bernhardt's ears.</p>
+
+<p>Bernhardt jumped back two paces and shouted like
+mad: "Don't you dare touch me. I will defend my honor
+sword in hand, even if I have to shoot myself on the spot."</p>
+
+<p>For several seconds the King stood speechless, then
+he reached out his hand and touched an electric button.
+Marshal Count Vitzthum responded.</p>
+
+<p>"Take him," said the King hoarsely&mdash;"he is your
+prisoner."</p>
+
+<p>Bernhardt drew his sword and threw it at the King's
+feet. He was conducted to a room, and sentinels were
+posted outside his door and under his windows. Presently
+the telephone called together a council of war and it was
+decided that Bernhardt go to Nossen during the King's
+pleasure, or rather displeasure.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The army officers that act as my guards are not
+allowed to speak to me," said Bernhardt, "and the garrison
+in Nossen will likewise be muzzled." He laughed as he
+added: "I suppose I shall have to make friends with the
+spirits of the great Augustus's mistresses haunting the old
+burg. They were gay ones! If the King remembered that,
+he would send me to the Trappists rather than to Nossen."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>July 1, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I never dreamt that science would come to my rescue,
+but a clever woman has more than one trick up her sleeve.
+On a visit to a book store I happened to see a new publication
+on the Hygienics of Pregnancy and had it sent to the
+palace.</p>
+
+<p>Last night, when nearly dead with <i>ennui</i>, I turned over
+the leaves of the volume and came across an article advising
+women in my condition to seek plenty of merry company.
+My mind was made up at once.</p>
+
+<p>First thing in the morning I sent for the Court Physician,
+and with many a sigh and groan gave him to understand
+that I feared to have melancholy if I continued the
+monotonous life I was leading.</p>
+
+<p>I happened to strike one of the doctor's pet theories,
+and he recited whole pages from the book I had been reading.
+Then he asked me a hundred questions, and rest<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+assured that my answers were in accordance with my
+wishes.</p>
+
+<p>"I will have the honor to report to His Majesty at
+once," said the Councillor at the end of the examination,
+"that some diversion is imperative in Your Imperial Highness's
+case. Would Your Imperial Highness be pleased
+to visit the theatre or the Opera if the King approves?"</p>
+
+<p>The King did approve, and the Crown Princess of
+Saxony is once more permitted the privilege of <i>Frau</i>
+Schmidt and <i>Frau</i> M&uuml;ller; namely, to go to the theatre
+when she feels like it.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 418px;">
+<img src="images/george.jpg" width="418" height="600" alt="THE LATE KING GEORGE OF SAXONY
+
+Louise&#39;s Father-in-Law" title="" />
+<span class="caption">THE LATE KING GEORGE OF SAXONY<br />
+
+Louise&#39;s Father-in-Law</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LV" id="LV"></a>CHAPTER LV</h2>
+
+<h4>FRANCIS JOSEPH JOINS MY SAXON ENEMIES</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Cuts me dead before whole family&mdash;Everybody talks over my
+head at dinner&mdash;I refuse to attend more court festivities&mdash;Husband
+protests because I won't stand for insult from Emperor&mdash;I
+give rein to my contempt for his family&mdash;Hypocrites,
+despoilers, gamblers, religious maniacs, brutes&mdash;Benign
+lords to the people, tyrants at home&mdash;I cry for my
+children like a she-dog whose young were drowned.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>November 2, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Great family concourse to look my new baby over,
+dear Marie Alix, born at Wachwitz, September 27.</p>
+
+<p>Emperor Francis Joseph was first to arrive, the Majesty
+who is forever posing as the family's good genius, as
+upholder of peace and amity among his countless cousins
+and nieces, and the many uncles and aunts and other
+relatives of his grand-children.</p>
+
+<p>Behold how he lived up to this reputation!</p>
+
+<p>I had been commanded to attend the reception in the
+Queen's <i>salon</i>, and made my bow to him. He bowed all
+around, looking at each present, but managed to overlook
+me.</p>
+
+<p>Then he commenced a long and weary conversation<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+with the Queen, at whose elbow I sat, and when his stock
+of platitudes was exhausted, turned to fat Mathilde, congratulating
+her on the possession of the <i>Stern Kreuz</i>
+decoration, an Austrian order which I likewise wore at
+my corsage. It was none other than the late Empress
+Elizabeth who pinned it on me.</p>
+
+<p>Presently dinner was announced. The Emperor took
+in Her Majesty, the King, <i>nolens, volens</i>, had to conduct
+me, but gave me neither word nor look. Nor did the others.
+I couldn't have been more isolated on a desert island, than
+at this royal board.</p>
+
+<p>They talked and cracked their silly jokes, and paid
+compliments to each other and were careful not to let their
+tongues run away with their intriguing minds, but all went
+above my head. No one spoke to me but the lackeys: "If
+it please Your Imperial Highness&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus tore into my bedroom some little
+time after I had retired. Picture of the offended gentleman,
+if you please. I got no more than I deserve, but it
+"reflected on him, h-i-m, HIM." Though it was a "family
+dinner," he, the Crown Prince of Saxony, was "publicly" disgraced.
+The Emperor had treated the Crown Princess as
+air. He had not deigned to address a single word to her.
+The Crown Princess was a trollop in the Imperial eyes&mdash;it
+was enough to drive the Crown Prince to drink.</p>
+
+<p>"Drink yourself to death then," I shrieked.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>During the night I speculated what to do: ask a private
+audience of the Emperor, state my side of the case and
+beg his forgiveness and protection, beg, especially, for better
+treatment at his hands?</p>
+
+<p>And if he refused?</p>
+
+<p>Francis Joseph is a good deal of a Jesuit. When he
+hates, he never lets it come to a break; when he loves,
+he never attaches himself.</p>
+
+<p>If I stooped to humiliate myself, he might choose to
+debase me still more. It was entirely probable that he
+would betray my confidences to the King and Prince George.</p>
+
+<p>I will defy him and&mdash;all of them!</p>
+
+<p>"Her Imperial Highness regrets&mdash;&mdash;" my Court Marshal
+wrote in answer to all invitations or rather "commands"
+for the next three days. When I refused to participate
+in the "grand leave-taking," Frederick Augustus
+came post-haste to expostulate with me.</p>
+
+<p>"You must. It would be an affront without precedent."</p>
+
+<p>"Take leave of a man who didn't say good-day to me
+on his arrival, and who probably intends to slight me in
+similar fashion on going away&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>In lieu of argument the Prince Royal abused me like
+a pick-pocket; I had waited for it and now I let loose.</p>
+
+<p>"You are like the rest of your family," I shouted:
+"ignorant, thoughtless, brutal <i>en venerie</i>, sanctimonious in
+dotage. I know few people for whom I have so great a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
+detestation as for the Royal Saxons. Look at your father,
+there is no more jesuitical a Jesuit, the inward man as
+hideous as the outward. He would be an insolent lackey,
+if he didn't happen to be a prince.</p>
+
+<p>"And Johann George&mdash;a shameless inheritance-chaser,
+despoiler of pupillary funds, gambler at the <i>bourse</i>, who
+whines like a whipped dog when he loses.</p>
+
+<p>"The royal Bernhardt, companion of street-walkers!</p>
+
+<p>"Prince Max, who talks theology, but keeps his eye on
+Therese.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Queen, a victim of religious madness, your King
+and his system&mdash;organized selfishness. Chicanery for those
+dependent upon him, ruin for all more gifted than the
+average Wettiner.</p>
+
+<p>"While living here I have learned to look upon my
+father's discrowning as a stroke of good luck for, since
+kings can no longer indulge their brutalities against their
+subjects, they turned tyrants at home.</p>
+
+<p>"If your father did to the humblest of his subjects
+what he did to me, he would be chased from home and
+country. The people, the parliament, his own creatures
+would rise against him and blot his name from the royal
+roster.</p>
+
+<p>"In the palace, in boudoirs, in the nurseries, he plays
+the prince&mdash;extortioner&mdash;executioner. To the public he is
+the benign lord, whining for paltry huzzas."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus was so dumfounded, he could only
+grind his teeth.</p>
+
+<p>I continued: "You prate of respect due the Majesty.
+There's nothing to induce feelings of that sort. Round
+me there is naught but weakness, hypocrisy, pettiness. I
+see shame and thievery stalking side by side in these gilded
+halls&mdash;gilded for show, but pregnant with woe.</p>
+
+<p>"Fie on you, Prince Royal, who allows his wife to be
+dogged by spies. Thieves, paid by your father, steal my
+souvenirs; a burglar's kit hidden in their clothes, they
+besiege my writing table. Jailers stand between me and
+my children.</p>
+
+<p>"My children!</p>
+
+<p>"Like a she-dog,<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> whose young were drowned, I cry
+for my babies&mdash;I, the Crown Princess of Saxony, who saved
+your family from dying out, a degenerate, depraved, demoralized,
+decadent race."</p>
+
+<p>When I had said this and more I fell down and was
+seized by crying convulsions.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span></p><div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Queens seem to like this unseemly comparison:
+</p><p>
+"Am I a kennel-dog in the estimation of the Bastard of England?"
+cried Mary of Scots, when Queen Elizabeth refused her
+safe-conduct through England upon her departure from France
+(Summer 1561).</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LVI" id="LVI"></a>CHAPTER LVI</h2>
+
+<h4>I AM DETERMINED TO DO AS I PLEASE</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I reject mother's tearful reproaches&mdash;I beard Prince George in
+his lair despite whining chamberlains&mdash;I tell him what I
+think of him, and he becomes frightened&mdash;Threatens madhouse&mdash;"I
+dare you to steal my children"&mdash;I win my point&mdash;and
+the children&mdash;"Her Imperial Highness regrets"&mdash;Lots
+of forbidden literature&mdash;Precautions against intriguing Grand
+Mistress&mdash;The affair with Henry&mdash;was it a flower-covered
+pit to entrap me?&mdash;Castle Stolpen and some of its awful
+history.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>November 5, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Patience ceased to be a virtue. Tolerance would be
+a crime against myself. I am determined to do as I please
+in future. If it upsets the King's, Prince George's and
+the rest's delicate digestion, so much the better.</p>
+
+<p>The newspapers are hinting about my troubles with
+Prince George and the King. When I go driving or appear
+at the theatre, the public shows its sympathy in many ways.
+Sometimes I am acclaimed to the echo.</p>
+
+<p>Mamma wrote me a tearful letter. She spent six hours
+in prayers for "sinful Louise" and sends me the fruits
+of her meditations: six pages of close script, advising me
+how to regain the King's and Prince George's favor.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Never before have I failed in outward respect to my
+mother, but this time I wrote to her: "Pray attend to your
+own affairs. Don't meddle in mine which you are entirely
+unable to understand."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>November 6, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Bernhardt was sent to Sonnenstein. Whether he became
+insane at Nossen, or whether it is the family's intention
+to drive him mad among the madmen of Sonnenstein, I
+don't know, but it behooves me to be careful.</p>
+
+<p>Sonnenstein has accommodation for both sexes.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>November 15, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I sent a letter to the King, asking him to have Loschwitz
+Castle prepared for my reception. His Majesty didn't
+deign to answer, but Prince George commanded me in
+writing to stay at Dresden "under his watchful eye."</p>
+
+<p>I immediately proceeded to his apartments in my morning
+undress, without hat, gloves or wrap. As I rushed
+through the anteroom, Adjutant von Metsch begged me
+with up-lifted hands not to force His Royal Highness's
+door, Prince George being too ill to receive me, etc., etc.
+I paid no attention to his mournful whinings. At that
+moment I had courage enough to stock a regiment.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"So you won't allow me to go to Loschwitz," I addressed
+George as I suddenly bobbed up at the side of his desk.</p>
+
+<p>My father-in-law looked at me as if I were a spook,
+emerged from a locked closet.</p>
+
+<p>"Who let you in?" he managed to say after a while.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't come here to answer questions," I replied.
+"I came to announce that if you don't let me go to Loschwitz,
+there will be a scandal that will resound all over
+Christendom and make you impossible in your own capital."</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you want to leave Dresden?" he insisted.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I want to be alone. Because I am tired of
+hateful faces. Because I refuse to accept orders and insults
+from people that are beneath an Imperial Princess of
+Austria."</p>
+
+<p>Prince George turned pale.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I one of those beneath Your Imperial Highness?"
+he queried stupidly.</p>
+
+<p>"Decidedly so."</p>
+
+<p>A long pause. Then Prince George shouted: "To the
+devil with you. I don't care whether you stay in Loschwitz,
+or Dresden, or on the Vogelwiese."</p>
+
+<p>The Vogelwiese is an amusement park, respectable
+enough, but the word or name, as used by George, reeked
+with sinister and insulting meaning.</p>
+
+<p>Trembling with rage, I replied: "Right royal language
+you royal Saxons use. From time to time, I suppose, you<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
+refresh your fish-wife vocabulary in the annals of Augustus
+the Physical Strong, than whom a more gross word-slinger
+did not walk the history of the eighteenth century."</p>
+
+<p>I believe Prince George was frightened by my violence.
+Assuming a haughty tone he said formally: "Your
+Imperial Highness is at liberty to travel whenever you
+please, but you will be so good as to leave your children
+in Dresden."</p>
+
+<p>I stepped up to the white-livered coward and hissed
+in his face: "Steal my children if you dare, and I will go
+to France, or Switzerland and ask a republican President
+to interfere for humanity's sake."</p>
+
+<p>"And&mdash;land yourself in an insane asylum," sneered
+George.</p>
+
+<p>"An old trick of the Royal House of Saxony, I know,"
+I shouted back. "Bernhardt is saner than you, yet the King
+sent him to Sonnenstein. If such a crime had been perpetrated
+by one not a king, he would go to jail."</p>
+
+<p>Prince George pointed a trembling finger towards the
+door. "Out with you!" he bawled hoarsely. "Out!"</p>
+
+<p>I stood my ground. "May I take my children? Yes
+or no?"</p>
+
+<p>He rang the bell and repeated mechanically: "Out with
+you, out!"</p>
+
+<p>I had another fit of crying convulsions. Doctors, maids
+and lackeys were summoned in numbers. They bedded me<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>
+on the couch and six men-servants carried me to my apartments.</p>
+
+<p>Two days later I went to Loschwitz with my children.</p>
+
+<p>I had defied the King. Prince George was humbled.
+I carried my point, and the Dresden court will not see me
+again in a hurry.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>Christmas, 1901</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I refused to spend Christmas at Court. Frederick
+Augustus planned a stay of a couple of weeks. "Not a
+single night," I wrote back.</p>
+
+<p>They parleyed; they begged. "The Crown Prince
+desires to spend Christmas with the children. In the
+interests of public opinion, it's absolutely necessary that he
+does."</p>
+
+<p>"But not&mdash;that I submit to prostitution. I will give
+him a dinner, but he will drive back to Dresden immediately
+afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus brought numerous presents for me.
+"You may place them under the Christmas tree," I ordered
+the Tisch.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Your Imperial Highness, look," cried the Tisch,
+holding up something or other.</p>
+
+<p>I turned my back on her and looked out of the window.
+I never went near my end of the Christmas table. "You<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
+will send the things brought by His Royal Highness to
+the bazaar for crippled children," I told the House Marshal.
+"They shall be sold for the benefit of the poor."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>January 1, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Her Imperial Highness regrets."</p>
+
+<p>I refused the invitations to today's family dinner; the
+grand reception, <i>Te Deum</i> and parade. "Unprecedented
+affront!" What do I care!</p>
+
+<p>I have eighteen horses, half-a-dozen carriages, I drive,
+I ride, I hunt, I give the Tisch palpitation daily by the
+literature I affect: <i>Zola</i>, <i>Flaubert</i>, <i>M'lle Paul</i>, <i>Ma Femme</i>,
+<i>M'lle de Maupin</i>, <i>Casanova</i>, <i>M'me Bovary</i>. And the periodicals
+I subscribed for! <i>Simplicissimus</i>, Harden's <i>Zukunft</i>,
+all the <i>double entendre</i> weeklies and monthlies of Paris.
+May Prince George and Mathilde burst with rage and envy
+when they hear of my excursions in the realms of the literary
+Satans.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>January 15, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The Tisch is beginning to treat me like a person irresponsible
+for her doings. Sonnenstein is looming up anew.
+But I am going to fool her. As I will hold no more speech
+with her, there will be no occasion for turning my own
+words against me.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>If I have to give a command, or answer a question,
+I ask Lucretia or <i>Fr&auml;ulein</i> von Schoenberg to convey my
+orders.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>March 20, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>An uneventful winter is drawing to a close. By banishing
+myself to this quiet place I raised a barrier against
+quarrels, against harsh orders, against humiliations. And
+the barrier also shuts out: love, happiness.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, when the Tisch's hateful mouth spouts
+honeyed platitudes, I ask myself whether the affair with
+Henry wasn't, after all, a flower-covered pit dug for me
+by my enemies.</p>
+
+<p>It was the Tisch who had Henry appointed <i>Vort&auml;nzer</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Maybe, knowing my inflammable heart, she offered the
+tempting bait solely to the end of getting me into her
+power?</p>
+
+<p>Far from impossible.</p>
+
+<p>I curse the day when I entered Dresden, joined this
+court and family.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 37em;">Loschwitz</span>, <i>May 15, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Royal command to join the court at Pillnitz June 1.
+The King, who has been ailing for some time, is anxious<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+to be reunited with the children, and, as a necessary evil,
+I must go along.</p>
+
+<p>I replied that I would prefer Nossen, or even Stolpen,
+if it pleases His Majesty.</p>
+
+<p>Castle Stolpen is an old-time stronghold of the bishops
+of Meissen, and its very ruins are pregnant with reminiscences
+of a barbaric age. The apartments once occupied
+by the Countess Cosel, as a prison first, as a residence
+after the death of Augustus, might be made habitable even
+now. Exceedingly interesting are the old-time torture
+chambers and the subterranean living rooms of the
+"sworn torturer" and the dogs, man-shaped, that served
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Sanct. Donatus Tower, a wing of the great, black pile,
+was the ancient <i>habitat</i> of these worthies, and the torture
+chamber, still extant, is a hall almost as big as the Dresden
+throne-room. In an inscription hewn in the basalt, the
+sovereign bishop, Johannes VI, poses as builder and seems
+proud of the damnable fact. Other princes of the Church
+let us know in high-sounding Latin script that they created
+the "Monk hole" and the "stairless prison" respectively.</p>
+
+<p>The latter is a vast subterranean vault, never reached
+by sunshine or light of any kind. Its victims were made
+to descend some twenty feet below the surface of the earth
+on a ladder. When near the bottom, the ladder was pulled
+up and&mdash;stayed up. The prisoners were fed once every<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+twenty-four hours, when a leather water pouch and some
+pounds of black bread were sent down on a rope.</p>
+
+<p>Of course only the strongest got a morsel, or a drink
+of water. The others died of starvation and the survivors
+lived only until there were new arrivals, stronger than
+themselves. The dead bodies were never removed, and
+horrible stories of necrophily smudge the records of this
+awful prison and cover its princely keepers with infamy.</p>
+
+<p>The "Monk's hole" was called officially "Obey Your
+Judge." It is a sort of chimney, just large enough to take
+the body of a man.</p>
+
+<p>When a monk or other prisoner refused to confess,
+he was let down into the hole in the wall to starve, while
+tempting dishes, meat, wine and bread, were dangled over
+his head, almost within reach of his hands.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, after enduring this torture for several days,
+the delinquent was glad enough to "Obey His Judge."</p>
+
+<p>By offering to go to this abode of horror and to take
+the place of Cosel, I meant to show my utter contempt
+for the royal favor vouchsafed.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LVII" id="LVII"></a>CHAPTER LVII</h2>
+
+<h4>I CONFESS TO PAPA</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>King Albert dies and King George a very sick man&mdash;Papa's
+good advice&mdash;"You will be Queen soon"&mdash;A lovely old man,
+very much troubled.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 33em;">Castle Sibyllenort</span>, <i>June 19, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>King Albert is dead. George is King, and may God
+have mercy upon my soul.</p>
+
+<p>Of course the demise of His Majesty changed all my
+plans of defiance and otherwise. I am once more an official
+person, even an important one, for the new King can't last
+long. He is a very sick man, in fact. Perhaps that is the
+reason why he wants to hear himself addressed "Your
+Majesty" all the time. Petty souls like to be called "great."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>June 21, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I intended to return at once to Loschwitz, but the King,
+hearing of my intention and not wishing to provoke another
+scene, invited my father to come to Dresden "in the interests
+of his daughter."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The same evening I received a wire from papa, saying
+that he would be in Dresden within twenty-four
+hours.</p>
+
+<p>My own arrival in the capital was kept secret by the
+King's order, but next afternoon, when I drove to the
+station to welcome my father, I got my reception just the
+same. The people wildly cheered their Crown Princess
+and thousands of sympathizing eyes followed me from the
+palace to the depot.</p>
+
+<p>I was almost overcome by so much sympathy and when
+at last I saw father, I threw myself on his neck, crying
+aloud.</p>
+
+<p>The King was standing by, impatiently waiting to conduct
+his grand-ducal guest before the guard of honor had drawn
+up. "Later, later," whispered papa, patting me on the
+cheek.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>June 22, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I had an hour's talk with father. I bared my heart
+to him. I reported my own faults along with those of the
+others.</p>
+
+<p>Papa understands me. He sympathizes with me, but
+help me he cannot.</p>
+
+<p>"These are only passing shadows," he said. "Look
+boldly into the future. You will soon be Queen."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And he told me of his financial difficulties and of the
+misfortune of being a sovereign lord without either land
+or money.</p>
+
+<p>"The Emperor ordered me to scold you hard," he continued,
+"and mamma wants me to be very severe. As to
+King George, he said he would thank God if I succeeded
+in breaking your rebellious spirit. 'If you don't, I will,'
+added his Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>Then father kissed me more lovingly than ever and
+asked, half apologetically: "Is it true, Louise, that you
+had a lover?"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought I had one, but he was unworthy of me,"
+I replied without shame.</p>
+
+<p>My confession seemed to frighten him.</p>
+
+<p>"It's sad, sad," he said. "Royal blood is dangerous
+juice. It brought Mary of Scots to the scaffold; it caused
+your great-aunt Marie Antoinette to lose her head, only
+to save the old monarchies a few years later, when we
+inveigled the enemy of legitimate kingship into a marriage
+with another of your relatives. But for Marie, Louise, the
+descendants of the Corsican might still sit on a dozen
+thrones."</p>
+
+<p>Father forgot his daughter's disgrace when he mounted
+this historic hobby-horse and, needless to say, I did not
+recall the original text.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Only when, three days later, he took leave of me,
+holding my head long between his two trembling hands
+and kissing me again and again, I felt that the poor, old
+man's heart was oppressed with shame and torn by fears.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LVIII" id="LVIII"></a>CHAPTER LVIII</h2>
+
+<h4>MONSIEUR GIRON&mdash;RICHARD, THE ARTIST</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The King asks me to superintend lessons by M. Giron&mdash;A most
+fascinating man&mdash;His Grecian eyes&mdash;He is a painter as well
+as a teacher&mdash;In love&mdash;Careless whether I am caught in my
+lover's arms&mdash;"Richard" talks anarchy to me&mdash;Why I don't
+believe in woman suffrage&mdash;Characters and doings of women
+in power.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>July 1, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>King George is determined I shall stay in Dresden
+to end the newspaper talk about trouble in the bosom of
+the royal family.</p>
+
+<p>He engaged a new head-tutor for my little brood.
+Monsieur Giron, a Belgian of good family.</p>
+
+<p>"I would be pleased if you attended the children's
+lessons and reported to me on the method of the new man,"
+he said. "You are so intellectual, Louise, you will find
+out quickly if M. Giron is not what he is represented
+to be."</p>
+
+<p>I promised, for, after all, I owed so much to the King
+and my children.</p>
+
+<p>Alas, it was fate!</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span></p><hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Dresden</span>, <i>July 1, After Midnight</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>He is tall, well made, and his wild, Grecian eyes fascinate
+me. He is conscious of self, but modest. His voice
+is sweet and sonorous, his eyes are bright with intellect.
+Speaking eyes!</p>
+
+<p>I asked him to visit my apartments at the conclusion
+of school hours. He told me he was a painter as well as
+a teacher of languages.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you like to paint me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am dying for a chance to reproduce your loveliness
+as far as my poor art permits."</p>
+
+<p>He told me he had a studio in town, where he is known
+under his artist's <i>pseudonyme</i>, Richard.</p>
+
+<p>"How romantic! I'd like to see it," I said impulsively.</p>
+
+<p>"Several ladies and gentlemen of society sat for portraits
+at my studio here and at home."</p>
+
+<p>In short we arranged that he paint my picture and
+that I should go to his studio, where the light is excellent.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>July 15, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am happy once more. Those hours at Richard's
+studio are the sweetest of my life.</p>
+
+<p>Lucretia acts the protecting angel as usual. Richard
+calls her Justice because she is "blind." When she is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
+along, I drive boldly up to the door in one of the court
+carriages. Sometimes, when I can sneak out of the palace
+for a little while unobserved, I go alone in a cab.</p>
+
+<p>How long this sort of thing can go on without discovery,
+I know not. As to what will happen afterwards,
+I care not.</p>
+
+<p>If I was told that tomorrow I would be caught in my
+lover's arms and banished to a lone island for life, I would
+go to his studio just the same.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>August 1, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Richard is moulding my character. I, once so proud
+of rank and station, I, who upheld the Wettiners' robbery
+of a poor, defenseless woman, the Duke's wife, because
+Socialistic papers spoke in her favor,&mdash;Louise now allows
+anarchistic tendencies to be poured in her ears. She almost
+applauds them.</p>
+
+<p>This easy change from one extreme to the other at a
+lover's behest is one of the things that make woman's rule&mdash;or
+co-rule&mdash;as the male's political equal&mdash;impossible. It's
+a sort of <i>Phallus</i> worship that always was and always
+will be.</p>
+
+<p>"Though women have not unfrequently been the holders
+of temporary and precarious power, there are not many
+instances where they have held secure and absolute domin<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span>ion,"
+says Dr. William W. Ireland in his famous "Blot
+upon the Brain."</p>
+
+<p>Because they were swayed by the male of the species,
+of course!</p>
+
+<p>Though the characters of the world's female sovereigns
+differed as to blood, race, education, environment
+and personal traits, neither showed any inclination to resist
+the allurements of irregular <i>amours</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Think of Semiramis, of Mary of Scots, of Elizabeth,
+Catherine I, of the Tsaritzas Elizabeth and the second
+Catherine&mdash;under the temptations of Power, they recruited
+paramours for themselves in all ranks of society.</p>
+
+<p>Agrippina was more licentious than Caligula; Messalina's
+infamy surpassed Nero's, and the furthest reaching,
+the one irresistible Power swaying them all was MAN.</p>
+
+<p>Augustus of the three hundred and fifty-four emphasized
+this in the negative and, in his own uncouth way, by "postering"
+the Countess Cosel's chief charm on penny coins.</p>
+
+<p>"She cost Saxony twenty millions in gold&mdash;behold the
+penny's worth she gave in return."</p>
+
+<p>When the beauty who had brought the richest German
+kingdom to the verge of state bankruptcy died February 2,
+1765, four hundred of Augustus's infamous medals were
+found hidden in her favorite armchair. She paid three or
+four times their weight in gold for each.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LIX" id="LIX"></a>CHAPTER LIX</h2>
+
+<h4>THE PEOPLE THINK ME A WANTON</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Credit me with innumerable lovers, but don't disapprove&mdash;Glad
+the King feels scandalized&mdash;Picture of the "she-monster"&mdash;Everybody
+eager for love&mdash;I delight in Richard's jealousy&mdash;Husband's
+indelicate announcement at table&mdash;I rush from the
+royal opera to see my lover&mdash;A threatening dream&mdash;Richard
+not mercenary like my noble lovers.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>August 10, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>This is the kind of speech Richard holds with me and&mdash;I
+enjoy:</p>
+
+<p>"Every working-girl, every poor woman who suckles
+her own children and helps her husband in the fight for existence,
+stands mountain high above royal ladies like you.</p>
+
+<p>"None of you royal ladies are their moral equals.</p>
+
+<p>"In no distant time," he says, "they will chase you from
+your thrones, even as your relatives had to evacuate France
+by tumbril, post-chaise or train."</p>
+
+<p>Richard's ethical and intellectual valuation of royal
+princes coincides with my own. He has rare insight into
+our family life.</p>
+
+<p>However, these disclosures both amazed and alarmed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
+me when I first heard them pronounced. I never dreamt
+that opinions of that kind prevailed among the masses.</p>
+
+<p>"But why am I acclaimed whenever I show myself?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because you are pretty, because you impersonate the
+one thing all are desirous to embrace: affluence, kindness,
+youth and beauty. Because you are a treat to the senses
+and because sensuality is the paramount thing in life,
+whether we admit it or not."</p>
+
+<p>"Who's 'we'?"</p>
+
+<p>"Kings and anarchists, princesses of the Blood and laundresses,
+royal princes and cab drivers, empresses, street-walkers,
+society ladies, big-wigs and <i>sabretasches</i>. The
+draggled Menads and the helpful Lafayette, the Jacobins,
+Charlotte Corday and the man she killed&mdash;all were, and are,
+on similar pleasure bent."</p>
+
+<p>And he added quickly: "As to the Dresdeners, they
+are tickled because, every time they applaud you, the King
+is scandalized."</p>
+
+<p>"How do they know that I am not on good terms with
+the King?"</p>
+
+<p>"The very children in arms understand."</p>
+
+<p>All Dresden, says Richard, is talking about me. Everybody
+assumes to know the number and qualities of my lovers.
+"Louise," they argue, "knows how to enjoy herself, but,
+though it serves the King right, we wouldn't have her for a
+daughter-in-law, either."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>According to the masses, I visit the Vogelwiese at
+night, ride on the flying horses and solicit men and boys that
+please my fancy. Like a gigantic she-monster, I drag them
+to my lair&mdash;"some to vanish forever." (No doubt, I eat
+them.)</p>
+
+<p>"Unwashed soldiers and clerks reeking with cheap
+perfume, actors and students, draymen and generals, it's all
+the same to the Crown Princess.</p>
+
+<p>"Sometimes, when the spirit moves her, the Crown Princess
+issues from her gilded apartments in the palace and
+seizes the sentinel patrolling the corridors. Or she visits
+the guard-room <i>en d&eacute;shabille</i> and selects the youngest and
+best looking officer for her prey.</p>
+
+<p>"Generous, too. She thinks nothing of handing a pension
+of ten thousand marks per year to a chap that pleased
+her once."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that all they say about me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not one-half. Poor devils that can't afford ten marks
+per year for their fun, Cit's wives that know only their ill-kempt
+husbands, factory girls that sell their virtue for a
+supper or a glass of beer&mdash;though afterwards they claim
+it was champagne&mdash;all take delight in contemplating that
+you, or any other good looking royal woman, are Frankenstein's
+succuba or worse. Didn't they accuse your grand-aunt,
+Marie Antoinette, of incest with her son and gave
+him to the cobbler to thrash the immorality out of him?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And they give names?"</p>
+
+<p>"Strings of them"&mdash;among them several I never heard
+mentioned before.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>August 15, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Richard is jealous&mdash;jealous of the men I did love and
+the regiments that public opinion give me credit for. He
+must needs think I have loins of steel.</p>
+
+<p>He tells me he suffers agonies by what I confessed,
+and still more by what I hide. To see him thus unhappy
+gives me intense pleasure, for it shows that the boy loves
+me to distraction.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 44em;"><i>Midnight.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>M. Giron was very cold and distant during the afternoon's
+lessons.</p>
+
+<p>I had previously lunched with him at his studio and
+we were very gay then. I teased him unmercifully about
+"his royal <i>demi-mondaine</i>," as the masses painted me.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus was very gallant at dinner and told
+me, before a table full of people, that he would take pleasure
+in sleeping with me tonight. I have too bad a conscience
+to deny myself to him. But I ran over to the opera for half
+an hour and ordered M. Giron to my box.</p>
+
+<p>"I got over my vexation," he said,&mdash;"got over it because
+I reflected that you are the Princess Royal and that I would
+be a fool to take your love seriously. Henceforth I will<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>
+regard it a passing adventure and let it go at that, for if I
+thought it the great passion of my life, I would despair,
+indeed."</p>
+
+<p>"Find a closed cab," I whispered, my heart in my mouth;
+"I must see you alone. I will be at the northern side-exit
+in five minutes."</p>
+
+<p>Cabby was ordered to drive slowly along unfrequented
+side streets. We lowered the curtains.</p>
+
+<p>"So you don't love me?" I wailed. Burying my face on
+Richard's chest I cried as if my heart would break.</p>
+
+<p>"Not love you?" he breathed. "If I loved you not, I
+would die, Louise."</p>
+
+<p>"Then why those cruel words?"</p>
+
+<p>"Good heavens," he cried, "haven't I the right to be
+jealous? I said what I said to hear you say that you love
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"And you will always love me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Always, dearest," and he covered my face and neck
+with burning kisses.</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later I was again seated at the opera.</p>
+
+<p>I hear Frederick Augustus in the corridor.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>August 16, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>A horrible night. Lucky that Frederick Augustus was
+more than half drunk when he sought "His Imperial Pleas<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>ure-trove,"
+as he likes to call me, for I often talk in my
+sleep and&mdash;I dreamt of Richard. I dreamt of my enemies,
+too.</p>
+
+<p>They stole him from me. He was of the past like
+Henry, Romano and the rest.</p>
+
+<p>In a second dream he jilted me&mdash;cast me off like a
+garment, old or out of fashion.</p>
+
+<p>Lucretia, who sleeps in the next room, heard me cry
+out in terror, heard me denounce the King, Tisch&mdash;everybody.</p>
+
+<p>And Frederick Augustus snored.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>October 1, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Princes and noblemen have ever sought their own advantage
+of me. To them I was always the milch-cow, or
+Phryne, outright.</p>
+
+<p>Richard is poor. I offered him a considerable sum for
+one of his paintings.</p>
+
+<p>"Never again mention the matter," he said curtly.</p>
+
+<p>"But it would give me much pleasure to be of assistance
+to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Louise, we must separate if you don't stop that line of
+talk," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>And he means it.</p>
+
+<p>A day or two later I let fall, casually, that Frederick<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
+Augustus might buy the portrait of myself that was nearing
+completion under his skillful brush.</p>
+
+<p>"His Royal Highness won't have the chance," he cried
+fiercely. "I will tell him it isn't finished, or doesn't come
+up to my artistic standard, or something of the sort."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LX" id="LX"></a>CHAPTER LX</h2>
+
+<h4>THE DAY OF JUDGMENT LOOMS UP</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>My Grand Mistress shows her colors&mdash;Richard advises flight&mdash;I
+hesitate on account of my children&mdash;My Grand Mistress
+steals a letter from Richard to me&mdash;I opine that an adulteress's
+word is as good as a thief's&mdash;I humble my Grand
+Mistress, but it won't do me much good&mdash;Pleasant hours at
+his studio.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>October 15, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>That dreadful dream is becoming a heart-breaking
+reality.</p>
+
+<p>The Tisch entered my boudoir last night in her mantilla,
+emblem of her office as Grand Mistress.</p>
+
+<p>Some dirty business on hand, I surmised at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Imperial Highness," she said, genuflexing ceremoniously,
+"I submit that your artist takes too long about the
+portrait. Your Imperial Highness's visits to the studio must
+cease."</p>
+
+<p>"Since when do you give orders here, Baroness?"</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty empowered me," answered the Grand
+Dame.</p>
+
+<p>"In that case, do as you like, but don't bother me," I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
+cried bravely enough, but trembling in every limb. The
+Tisch, no doubt, is preparing to deal me another blow.</p>
+
+<p>When I told Richard that henceforth we would have to
+exercise extra care, he was beside himself with rage.</p>
+
+<p>"Why stand such tyranny?" he cried. "No self-respecting
+woman, other than royal, would submit for a single week
+to be bullied and intrigued against and threatened and browbeaten
+as you are, and they have ill-used you for eleven
+years. If you were a simple Cit's daughter, instead of the
+descendant of a decrepit, bloodless family, yclept royal, you
+would make an end now, leave them to their shabby kingship
+and be a free woman&mdash;free and happy."</p>
+
+<p>My lover forgets the children, but the picture of the
+free life he draws is most attractive.</p>
+
+<p>"And would you go with me to the end of the earth, as
+the story books put it?" I asked tremblingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Louise," he answered, "if you are brave enough and
+strong enough to throw away a crown, I will be your slave
+for life."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>October 20, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Your Imperial Highness was pleased to call me a thief
+once," said the Tisch early this morning as she entered my
+boudoir, triumph written all over her yellow countenance.
+"You repeated that calumny to the Prince Royal and doubt<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>less
+to many other persons. Today came the opportunity
+to live up to my reputation. I stole a letter addressed to you
+by your present lover, and as Your Imperial Highness is
+pleased to doubt my authority, immediately sent it to His
+Majesty. It makes highly interesting reading."</p>
+
+<p>The blow made my knees tremble, but pain and rage
+came to my assistance, effacing the momentary weakness.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't think for a moment to frighten me," I cried. "I
+say to your face that I have a lover&mdash;a gentleman, not an
+unspeakable, like your nephew. And now listen: I will
+tell the King and the press of Europe, if it must be, that
+it was you, my Grand Mistress, who 'pandered' me to Henry&mdash;for&mdash;revenue.
+I will have him whipped out of the
+army&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You don't suppose for a moment that the word of an
+adulteress would prove acceptable either to His Majesty or
+anyone else?" hissed the insolent creature.</p>
+
+<p>"My word will be accepted all around," I shouted back,
+"for I have the proofs, proofs that you smuggled this unspeakable
+into my household, proofs that you lied to the
+King in order not to disrupt your nephew's career.</p>
+
+<p>"And I will cry from the house-tops that you discovered
+my relations with Henry only <i>after</i> I had paid his
+debts, <i>after</i> I had financed his excursions to gambling-houses
+and to usurers' dens. Ah, I paid his tailors and glove-makers,
+his board and lodging, his laundry bills. I paid the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>
+alimony due his strumpets, and <i>after</i> all was done, <i>after</i> his
+lieutenantship had again a clean bill of health, financially
+speaking, then, and not a moment before, did you step in
+and make an end of the farce, wherein I played the part of
+'angel,' or pay-master."</p>
+
+<p>The Tisch got visibly smaller under my lash. The air
+of triumph she bore when entering the room gave way to
+an expression of despair. If she hadn't sent the letter to the
+King, I believe she would have given it up after I was half
+through with her.</p>
+
+<p>Once more I hold the whip hand, but what good will
+it do me since I am condemned to lose the man I love?</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 44em;"><i>At Midnight.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Richard approved of all I said and did. We were unspeakably
+happy this afternoon, despite the storm threatening
+us.</p>
+
+<p>I fear neither the King nor Frederick Augustus now,
+but the fear of Sonnenstein I can't shake off.</p>
+
+<p>If the King takes it upon himself to say that I'm mad,
+there will be plenty of medical authorities to bear him out,
+none to oppose him.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, they will separate me from my children and
+will do their utmost to drive me mad between now and the
+time when I should be proclaimed Queen.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LXI" id="LXI"></a>CHAPTER LXI</h2>
+
+<h4>A MAD HOUSE FOR LOUISE&mdash;PROBABLY</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>My confidential maid, Lucretia, is banished&mdash;The new King has
+got the incriminating letter, but Frederick Augustus says
+nothing&mdash;On the eve of judgment the King falls ill.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>October 21, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>This morning, at six, Lucretia rushed into my room.
+She was in her night-gown. Her hair was loose. No color
+in her face.</p>
+
+<p>And between sobs and curses she told me that she had
+orders to leave by ten sharp. "If you dare stay over the
+appointed time, you will be transported to the frontier on
+foot, between gendarmes."</p>
+
+<p>"Von Baumann shall come."</p>
+
+<p>I threw a loose wrapper over my night-gown and
+received him at once.</p>
+
+<p>"My marriage contract provides that no one but I have
+the right of dismissal with respect to Countess Baranello,"
+I said sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"As long as the lady keeps within the law," replied
+Baumann with just a trace of insolence in his voice.</p>
+
+<p>I looked at him in astonishment.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The Countess is guilty of a crime, of a succession of
+crimes," continued Baumann, "but His Majesty, not wishing
+to be harsh, decided to treat her merely as an obnoxious
+foreigner. She has forfeited her right to live in Saxony,
+and will do well to obey."</p>
+
+<p>I helped poor Lucretia pack. I gave her a handful of
+jewels, I paid her a year's salary in advance and ordered
+the treasury to procure first-class passage for her to Rome.</p>
+
+<p>I sent her to the station in my own carriage, and wired
+to our Rome representative to show her every courtesy.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 44em;"><i>Afternoon.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus hasn't said a word to me about the
+affair with Richard. We have our meals together and his
+attitude in no wise differs from that usually maintained.
+Yet I am convinced he knows.</p>
+
+<p>The last service rendered me by Lucretia, gave me
+great relief. She found out that neither the Tisch, nor
+Frederick Augustus, nor the King know who "Richard" is.
+Fortunately his letter was typewritten, signature and all.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 44em;"><i>Six o'clock.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The King announced his visit for eight o'clock.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span></p><hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 44em;"><i>Nine o'clock.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The King had a fall in his apartments shortly after
+he sent me notice of his coming. He was unconscious for
+two hours.</p>
+
+<p>Safe for the time being!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LXII" id="LXII"></a>CHAPTER LXII</h2>
+
+<h4>KING'S ILLNESS A BOON TO LOVERS</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Prayers mixed with joy&mdash;Espionage disorganized, and I can do as
+I please&mdash;Love-making in the school-room&mdash;Buying a ring
+for Richard&mdash;"Wishing it on"&mdash;"Our marriage"&mdash;King's life
+despaired of&mdash;My tormentors obsequious&mdash;Smile at my peccadilloes&mdash;Husband
+proud of me&mdash;My popularity a great asset&mdash;Frederick
+Augustus delighted when he hears that King
+can't last long&mdash;The joyous luncheon at Richard's studio&mdash;Making
+fun of majesties&mdash;I expect to be Queen presently.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>October 22, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>He is dangerously ill. It may be weeks and months before
+the King recovers&mdash;if he recovers at all.</p>
+
+<p>I feel like praying, crying, shouting with joy.</p>
+
+<p>When Richard folded his arms about me this afternoon,
+I said to myself: "God doesn't begrudge me a lover as
+kind and good as Richard."</p>
+
+<p>The King's illness has disorganized the espionage, my
+coming and going are no longer controlled. The body-groom
+brings in my letters as delivered at the gate.</p>
+
+<p>In the school room, while the children are writing or
+studying, Richard and I find time to exchange kind words
+and even an occasional caress. When I "command" the
+tutor to my apartments, we need fear no surprise.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The utmost quiet prevails in the palace. The courtyard
+is sanded foot high and strewn with straw to deaden the
+sound of wheels and horses' hoofs. No more mounting of
+the guard with fife and drum.</p>
+
+<p>I suggested that the children be sent to the <i>Grosser
+Garten</i> to play. The Tisch agreed with enthusiasm. This
+yields us&mdash;Richard and myself&mdash;two hours of love-making.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>October 25, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The King continues ill.</p>
+
+<p>I went into a cheap jeweler's this afternoon and bought
+an inexpensive ring with a ruby no larger than a pin head.
+When I gave it to Richard, he grew red with joy.</p>
+
+<p>Strange, he bought a similar ring for me. I shall never
+wear another ring in my life but Richard's. I pulled my
+rings off one after the other and threw them on the bed.</p>
+
+<p>I kissed the larger ring and "wished" it on Richard's
+finger. He did the same with the ring intended for me.
+And we said, as with a common breath, "Our wedding."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>November 1, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>A bulletin, by the King's physicians, holds out scant
+hopes for George's life.</p>
+
+<p>I am watching the palace yard. The Archbishop of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>
+Dresden, attended by two court chaplains and a host of other
+clerics, is just mounting the stairs to administer the last
+rites of the Church. The next minute may see me Queen
+of Saxony. I may even be Queen now. I wish I had the
+effrontery to promise the lackey or official, announcing my
+enthronization, a handful of gold, as George did, when
+King Albert was dying.</p>
+
+<p>Even so, I have risen immeasurably in everybody's
+esteem. The sweet family knows me again. Johann George,
+Mathilde, Isabelle and Max are kotowing to me. Bernhardt
+sent me a telegram of condolence&mdash;condolence! He is a
+humorist, that boy.</p>
+
+<p>Minister of the Royal House, Baron Seydwitz, called
+twice. The Royal Adjutant, General von Carlowitz, spoke
+of the possibility of giving Bernhardt a command in Dresden.
+Von Baumann says it was the President of the Police
+who insisted upon Lucretia's hasty departure. If he, Baumann,
+had his way, my maid of honor would have got off
+with a warning.</p>
+
+<p>And you should see the Tisch. She must have spent
+a month's salary on flowers for me, which I promptly sent
+to the nearest pauper hospital. She smiles, she nearly breaks
+her back genuflexing. Her every second word is "most
+submissive," "will the Imperial Highness deign to do this,"
+that, or the other thing.</p>
+
+<p>The terror got into her old bones and she trembles for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>
+her pension, for, of course, she knows that instant dismissal
+will be her portion.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus talks of having some more princes
+and&mdash;acts accordingly. Perish the thought that his Louise
+is an adulteress, that she ever had a lover, has one now!</p>
+
+<p>He is haunting my room, running from door to window,
+from window to door. Every little while he opens the
+<i>porti&egrave;res</i> to see if no one's coming to address him "Your
+Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>"Your popularity with the public is a great asset," he
+says over and over again. "Lucky devil I, to have a wife as
+smart as you."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>November 2, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus came running into my room and
+gave me a bear-hug.</p>
+
+<p>"The doctors say the King is lost. Impossible to keep
+him alive any longer."</p>
+
+<p>He rushed out.</p>
+
+<p>I am Queen.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 42em;"><i>After Lunch.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Just back from Richard's studio. We had lunch together.
+We laughed, we danced, we sang. We bombarded
+one another with pillows.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>We acted the jubilant heirs. I recalled Sybillenort at
+the time King Albert died. In Saxony, when man or woman
+shuffles off this mortal coil, there's always a good "feed"
+at the corpse's expense. At the late King's castle a "mourning
+breakfast" was served upon the royal family's arrival
+from Dresden&mdash;a most magnificent repast in the matter
+of plate and victuals offered, but each had to serve himself
+or herself, as servants were dispensed with.</p>
+
+<p>This by the new King's special orders&mdash;that he might
+hear himself addressed "Your Majesty" by his kith and kin,
+a formality usually neglected in the family circle except
+when two or more of the big-wigs are warring against each
+other.</p>
+
+<p>"Will Your Majesty have one or two lumps of sugar?"</p>
+
+<p>"May it please Your Majesty&mdash;some steak?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hope Your Majesty will allow me to peel an orange
+for Your Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>Thus at Sybillenort. And at Richard's:</p>
+
+<p>"Will Your Greatness (Majesty) deign to take Your
+Greatness's feather out of my eye?"</p>
+
+<p>Or: "May it never please Your Transparency (<i>Durchlaucht</i>,
+German for Highness) to let <i>His</i> Greatness see
+through you."</p>
+
+<p>I am several times a Countess besides a Princess,
+Duchess, etc., and Richard continued with his paraphrasing
+of titles:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Your Illuminatedness<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> makes lights quite unnecessary,"
+and he switched them off in a room already darkened by
+blinds and shades and curtains.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span></p>
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> "Illuminated" is the proper title for German counts of the
+higher class.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LXIII" id="LXIII"></a>CHAPTER LXIII</h2>
+
+<h4>WHAT I WILL DO WHEN I AM QUEEN</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>A foretaste: titled servants put me <i>en route</i> for lover&mdash;The bargain
+I will propose to Frederick Augustus&mdash;Frederick Augustus
+will be a complaisant King&mdash;To revive <i>Petit Trianon</i>&mdash;I
+am addressed as Queen.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 38em;">Dresden</span>, <i>November 3, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Though still styled Crown Princess, I am already revelling
+in the delights and perquisites of queenship: I do as I
+please, go where I please, I would think aloud, as I please, if
+anyone dared me.</p>
+
+<p>For all my enemies of a week ago turned flatterers and
+flunkeys, bowing, grovelling, fawning, contemptible in their
+self-abasement, but quite useful to my purposes.</p>
+
+<p>Like most royal palaces, ours at Dresden has a secret
+staircase and exit for emergencies. It is never used by
+ladies; only the princes have recourse to it, occasionally, to
+drop out of sight in <i>mufti</i>, for, of course, royal incognito is
+more or less legitimate.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"In the evening, after our card party was over, Catherine
+was seen to dismiss her court and retire to her private
+apartments with the new favorite," say the Secret Memoirs
+of the Court of St. Petersburg.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Less publicly, perhaps, but even more illegitimately, I
+walk the secret staircase <i>en route</i> for my lover whenever
+I please nowadays.</p>
+
+<p>I go veiled and&mdash;make the Grand Mistress open the
+door for me. She knows that I am on sweet pleasure bent
+and&mdash;smiles.</p>
+
+<p>"When will Your Imperial Highness deign to return?"</p>
+
+<p>I name the hour and she is there to receive me&mdash;smirking,
+blind, deaf and dumb.</p>
+
+<p>A foretaste of my queenship paradise! No one will
+boss me, no one will dare talk about me, everything I do will
+be good, even sublime.</p>
+
+<p>I made up my mind as to Frederick Augustus.</p>
+
+<p>"Frederick Augustus," I will say to him, "now that we
+are King and Queen, let's enjoy to the full the thing's emoluments;
+otherwise, what's the use? You will allow me to
+go my way and I will certainly shut both eyes as to your
+doings, even if you follow in the footsteps of your namesake
+of the three-hundred-and-fifty-two."</p>
+
+<p>Of course, I will say it differently, but my husband will
+understand. The main thing: the royal family and court
+must stop hurling at me the long, watery <i>haussez les mains</i>
+of narrow-minded, provincial inquisitiveness, which both oppresses
+and goads me.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus has too much respect for the kingly
+dignity to impugn his partner, the Queen.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Will I revive, then, the seraglios of the Russian Anns
+and Elizabeths, or start a new <i>Parc aux Cerfs</i> with strong
+men and Marathon winners for inmates? Thank you, a
+miniature <i>Petit Trianon</i> will be good enough for me.</p>
+
+<p>The Tisch entered a minute ago and respectfully remains
+at the door, though she sees I am engaged on my
+Diary. I watch her in the mirror. She would travel bare-foot
+to Kevlaar, of which Heinrich Heine sung, for a glimpse
+of what I wrote. Her variegated grimaces give her the
+appearance of a carved wooden devil, sprinkled with holy
+water.</p>
+
+<p>At last I deign to inquire: "What is it, Baroness?"</p>
+
+<p>"The Crown Prince wants to see Your Imperial Highness.
+May he come in?"</p>
+
+<p>"Since when does my husband send you to announce
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon, Your Imperial Highness, I meant Prince
+George."</p>
+
+<p>Designating my first-born Prince Royal, means recognizing
+me as Queen.</p>
+
+<p>And, but ten days ago, this same viper refused to address
+me by my <i>proper</i> title.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LXIV" id="LXIV"></a>CHAPTER LXIV</h2>
+
+<h4>THE KING IS ALIVE AND PUNISHMENT NEAR</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>My queenship postponed&mdash;King George publicly acclaimed&mdash;Cuts
+me dead in church&mdash;Frederick Augustus's disappointment&mdash;Terrible
+power of a king over his family, and no appeal&mdash;I
+am like the nude witch of old.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Dresden</span>, <i>November 10, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The King has taken nourishment. The King will not
+die&mdash;he will live and punish me. Still, I must not complain.
+I had a respite and Richard says, "when one rises from the
+dead, one is less inclined to be severe with the living." But
+he grew rather despondent immediately.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>La libert&eacute; est une garce, qui ne se laisse monter que sur
+des matelas des cadavres humains!</i>" he quoted <i>Comte</i> Mirabeau.
+Our corpse was alive, our liberty is dead for the time
+being.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Dresden</span>, <i>November 15, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The King went driving this morning and I am told that
+he came home well pleased, for there was lusty cheering
+along the line. Frederick Augustus hasn't mentioned my
+affair at all. Disappointment made him rather gloomy and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>
+he begins to treat me again in the right royal Saxon fashion:
+I am air for His Highness.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 44em;"><i>After Supper.</i></span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The family will wait upon His Majesty in a body tomorrow,
+to congratulate him on his recovery. After that,
+<i>Te Deum</i> in the cathedral, which the court and authorities
+must attend by command.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Imperial Highness's pew will be in readiness,
+but my sublime master has not deigned to graciously announce
+that he wishes to receive Your Imperial Highness,"&mdash;this
+from the toad Baumann, who but yesterday licked my
+boots.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Dresden</span>, <i>November 16, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Another straw indicating the direction of the wind&mdash;the
+ill-wind.</p>
+
+<p>King George commanded Bernhardt to be madman no
+longer and come and live in Dresden. Since his arrival he
+has paid assiduous court to all members of the royal family,
+but me. He called on the royal ministers, the courtiers, the
+high civil authorities, but my apartments have seen him not.
+I don't blame the boy for making the best of the situation,
+but was it really necessary to offer gratuitous insult to the
+only relative that stood by him when in trouble?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Doubtless, he took his cue from the King, who cut me
+dead while, with the rest, I thanked God for his recovery.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 40em;"><i>November 20, 1902.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>The Tisch is openly talking Sonnenstein. "The royal
+apartments are ready for her reception," she let fall yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>Old Andrew, my confidential servant, told me.</p>
+
+<p>She shows me the face of a bull-dog about to spring
+at a victim, a sea-green devil filled with vinegar and gall,
+but affects icy courtesy.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Augustus is down in the mouth. If he knows
+of any evil intention against me, he evidently made up his
+mind to hold his tongue and avoid scenes.</p>
+
+<p>Richard keeps on saying: "Don't worry. After all,
+what can they do to you?" He doesn't know, or doesn't
+want to understand that, while the law holds out protection
+for all, from pedlars and vagabonds to and including prime
+ministers, royalty itself is only technically above the law;
+in <i>praxis</i> we are beyond the benefits of all law, human and
+otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>To be sure, a Cit is sometimes unjustly treated, but with
+tenacity and a small amount of courage, he finds his remedy
+in the courts and in the press.</p>
+
+<p>To royal princes and princesses the King is both judge<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span>
+and executioner, as the cases of the Duke of Saxony and
+Bernhardt show. Maybe it pleases His Majesty to cloak his
+tyranny by convoking a commission, but what of it, since
+the commission is invariably made up of his creatures,
+trained, if not commanded, to do the all-highest will and
+nothing but the all-highest will?</p>
+
+<p>As in days gone by, the poor "witch"&mdash;if she be young
+and comely&mdash;must face her accusers naked, the sworn torturer
+at her elbow, so I have no standing in law or decency
+before the Powers over social life or death in our sphere
+of society.</p>
+
+<p>If there be blemishes in my character, the King sees
+them magnified by the sharp tongues of evil creatures, his
+spies. There is no privacy. I must submit to be stared at,
+to have my flesh lacerated by curious eyes, and, as in the case
+of the old-time "witches," the handsomest were condemned
+the quicker because "the devil was more liable to choose
+them for an abode than ugly ones," so my very beauty will
+hasten my destruction.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LXV" id="LXV"></a>CHAPTER LXV</h2>
+
+<h4>FISTICUFFS DON'T SAVE MY CROWN</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The attempted theft of my Diary&mdash;Grand Mistress discovered
+after breaking open my desk&mdash;Reading Diary like mad&mdash;Personal
+encounter between me and Grand Mistress&mdash;I am the
+stronger, and carry off the manuscript, but have to leave all
+my love letters, which go to the King&mdash;I discover that they
+had stolen the key to my Diary from my neck.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Dresden</span>, <i>November 27, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am undone.</p>
+
+<p>They tried to obtain a picture of Louise <i>in the nude</i>&mdash;Louise
+as she paints <i>Herself</i>&mdash;this Diary, in fact&mdash;and,
+though I foiled them, the King now has in his hands my
+entire correspondence&mdash;every letter from every man that
+ever approached or possessed me.</p>
+
+<p>And be sure he won't use them for curl papers as did
+the Duke of Richelieu with the remnants of his ladyloves'
+<i>billets doux</i> that escaped confiscation.</p>
+
+<p>"My collection is incomplete. I have to begin another,"
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>Alas, my collection was only <i>too</i> complete!</p>
+
+<p>This is how it came about:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As I was in the act of retiring last night, a clairvoyant's
+vision seized me. "Somebody meddling with your papers!"
+"They are breaking into your <i>secr&eacute;taire</i>," the voices said.</p>
+
+<p>I slipped on a pair of bath sandals and stealthily opened
+the door of my boudoir.</p>
+
+<p>My writing desk was open, all the drawers ajar and in
+disorder; the Baroness bending over this, my Diary. She
+was reading like mad, her eyes danced with lust of revenge.</p>
+
+<p>With one bound I was at her side and she was so frightened
+at first, I thought she would drop. Her chest seemed
+to draw inward; she swayed to and fro. But only for a
+second or two. Then, recovering her self-possession, her
+fighting harness was in place again.</p>
+
+<p>"Go to your room, Royal Highness," she said in a tone
+of command. "These papers are confiscated in the name
+of the King."</p>
+
+<p>I was beside myself with rage. "My Diary," I cried;
+"instantly return it to me."</p>
+
+<p>More I couldn't say, for I had neither breath nor voice.
+My right hand was on the book when she attempted to
+seize it.</p>
+
+<p>I struck her hand with Richard's ring&mdash;I wish it was
+bigger, I wish it had a good diamond point&mdash;but she wouldn't
+let go. Then, before one could count one, two, three, I had
+hold of her&mdash;Heaven, how I enjoyed it; the satisfaction I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span>
+had in giving rein to my passion, for all was up now, anyhow.</p>
+
+<p>With the left hand I caught her by the throat, while my
+good right boxed her ears after the homely manner mamma
+had taught me. Good, sound cuffs, I assure you, each liable
+to dislocate a tooth.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Canaille</i>," I cried, "<i>miserable canaille</i>." I pushed her
+into a corner and recovered the Diary, folding it up quickly.
+I was holding the book close to my bosom when I crossed
+the room to regain my bedchamber.</p>
+
+<p>The Tisch after me, trying to snatch it back. I caught
+her on the chest and sent her flying. Then, with the manuscript,
+I made good my escape, leaving for the contemptible
+bird of prey all my love letters, reams of them, the oldest
+fifteen or more years old, the latest bearing yesterday's
+date.</p>
+
+<p>Once in my room, I recollected and made a grab at my
+throat. The key to my Diary was gone. They stole it,
+chain and all, while I was asleep, no doubt.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 36em;">Dresden</span>, <i>November 28, 1902</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Awakening, I find myself seated at the little table near
+the window. Both my hands are ink-spotted. So is my
+night-dress.</p>
+
+<p>I see, I have written an account of the battle. I must<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span>
+have done so some time after I returned from the field. It's
+well, for at the moment, I don't remember a thing.</p>
+
+<p>The palace clock strikes seven.</p>
+
+<p>The day of my doom.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LXVI" id="LXVI"></a>CHAPTER LXVI</h2>
+
+<h4>ABANDONED</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>My titled servants withdraw from me&mdash;An old footman my sole
+support&mdash;Queen takes the children&mdash;Old Andrew plays spy
+for me.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 40em;"><i>Afternoon.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>No one has come to see me. My household, my adjutants,
+marshal, chamberlains, equerries, the ladies of my
+entourage are on duty, but since I ordered my meals brought
+to the room, they pretend to assume that I'm too ill to see
+anyone. There may be no truth in the saying that rats leave
+the ship destined to sink, but the titled vermin royalty surrounds
+itself with certainly knows when to avoid dangerous
+craft.</p>
+
+<p>I rang for Andrew. The good, old man wouldn't put
+me to the humiliation of asking questions.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Imperial Highness's children are with Her
+Majesty," he said; and, coming a step nearer, he added in
+an undertone: "Baroness Tisch has been with His Majesty
+since nine in the morning."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a kind and brave man." I held out my hand.</p>
+
+<p>"If Your Imperial Highness has no immediate orders<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span>
+for me," continued the good soul, "I beg to be allowed to
+visit my friend, Hans, the King's body-servant."</p>
+
+<p>I thanked Andrew for his good intentions. "Wait in
+the ante-chamber until I am dressed."</p>
+
+<p>I donned a forty-mark costume that I keep on hand
+for the purpose; it didn't take me more than six or seven
+minutes.</p>
+
+<p>"I will have to leave by the secret staircase, Andrew."</p>
+
+<p>He understood and cleared the way for me.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LXVII" id="LXVII"></a>CHAPTER LXVII</h2>
+
+<h4>FAMILY COUNCIL AT CASTLE</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Rendezvous at studio&mdash;State takes my children from me&mdash;Madhouse
+or flight&mdash;I brought fifty-two trunks to the palace&mdash;Depart
+with small satchel&mdash;If I attempt to see my children
+I'll be seized as "mad woman"&mdash;Varying emotions of the
+last ten minutes&mdash;Threatening shadows thrown on a curtain
+decide me&mdash;Ready for flight&mdash;Diary the last thing to go into
+the satchel.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 40em;"><i>At Night. Eleven O'clock.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>They went into family council at six tonight and are
+still deliberating, Andrew reports. The Tisch, he says, acts
+as secretary; His Majesty, of course, presides.</p>
+
+<p>Present are the Dowager Queen, Mathilde and Isabelle.
+Then Frederick Augustus, Johann George, Max and Bernhardt.
+Baron George von Metzsch, a high government and
+court functionary and my enemy, attends as legal adviser to
+the King.</p>
+
+<p>It's in the nature of things that the Baron will do his
+worst to destroy me, but Bernhardt! Bernhardt, who held
+me in his arms, now one of my judges! He will have to be
+especially severe with his <i>quondam</i> mistress lest the King
+suspect.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>While the sweet family bent over those love letters&mdash;I
+bet the Tisch withheld Henry's&mdash;I sat in Richard's studio,
+advising with him.</p>
+
+<p>"There are only two things to be considered: the madhouse
+or instant flight."</p>
+
+<p>"You dare advise me to leave my children?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are no nurseries in madhouses. Your children
+are lost to you, anyhow. If you remain, as an alleged insane
+person, you 'can't be trusted,' they'll argue, for you
+are helpless, legally, morally and physically.</p>
+
+<p>"If you run away to Switzerland, on the other hand,
+you are a free woman, under the protection of a republican
+government.</p>
+
+<p>"Switzerland, I needn't tell you, will not go to war to
+wrest your children from the royal family, but will afford
+you personally every advantage, legal and otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>"Decide quickly: are you going to make King George a
+present of yourself as well as of the five children you bore
+for the benefit of the Wettiners?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>My mind is made up. My few belongings are packed.
+I, who came to Dresden with fifty-two trunks, leave the palace
+with a satchel, easy to carry. I take nothing but my
+personal jewels, the little money I own and some changes
+of linen.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>If I could only see my children for a moment or two,
+but the Queen has them in her keeping, and I might be
+seized as a "mad woman" if I dared leave my apartments
+and cross to those occupied by Her Majesty.</p>
+
+<p>And Frederick Augustus! He will miss me in his way.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Ten more minutes. I hear the distant clatter of a carriage.
+Richard driving to our rendezvous, two streets north
+of the palace gate.</p>
+
+<p>Will my limbs carry me to him and liberty? I pace the
+room to test their strength.</p>
+
+<p>"Louise," says the voice within,&mdash;"your last chance.
+Your good-natured husband, your darling children, your old
+parents, pomp and state and circumstance, indeed, a crown,
+you are going to abandon for&mdash;what?"</p>
+
+<p>A man whose carnal side only you know, a poor
+man, an artist without fame, a professional without
+future.</p>
+
+<p>Sadly perturbed in mind, I walk to the window. Those
+of His Majesty's cabinet, where the family council is in
+progress, are directly opposite.</p>
+
+<p>Shadows of men and women, rising from a sitting position,
+are thrown on the curtains.</p>
+
+<p>One of the shades slowly ascends.</p>
+
+<p>I see the Tisch pointing a bony finger to the windows<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span>
+of my boudoir. Von Metzsch stands by her side. They grin.</p>
+
+<p>You triumph, wretch and Jezebel?</p>
+
+<p>But when your <i>sbirri</i>, in an hour from now, or tomorrow
+morning early, invade my rooms, instructed to carry
+me away&mdash;bound hand and foot to a sofa, or in a straight
+jacket, perhaps&mdash;they will find the Crown Princess gone&mdash;her
+and her Diary.</p>
+
+<p>Both will be safe on foreign soil ere you can make
+arrangements for organized pursuit, for Richard and I will
+travel by carriage to a distant suburb, there mount the fast
+express and keep to our state room, engaged under an
+assumed name, until without the sphere of Saxon or German
+influence.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>A discreet knock. Andrew, my liberator! In his hand
+a tallow dip to light this Imperial Highness down back stairs
+to the new life of her choice.</p>
+
+<p>"One moment, old man, this book goes into the valise.</p>
+
+<p>"Hand me the blotter, please. Tears won't do.</p>
+
+<p>"And a couple more handkerchiefs from the top of the
+chiffonier, please."</p>
+
+
+<h3>FINIS</h3>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Secret Memoirs: The Story of Louise,
+Crown Princess, by Henry W. Fischer
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SECRET MEMOIRS ***
+
+***** This file should be named 29167-h.htm or 29167-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/2/9/1/6/29167/
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Jane Hyland, Bill Tozier and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/29167-h/images/crown.jpg b/29167-h/images/crown.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1e57a29
--- /dev/null
+++ b/29167-h/images/crown.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/29167-h/images/fredaug.jpg b/29167-h/images/fredaug.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f0a5d39
--- /dev/null
+++ b/29167-h/images/fredaug.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/29167-h/images/george.jpg b/29167-h/images/george.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6e54854
--- /dev/null
+++ b/29167-h/images/george.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/29167-h/images/kingalbert.jpg b/29167-h/images/kingalbert.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..be6325d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/29167-h/images/kingalbert.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/29167-h/images/louisa.jpg b/29167-h/images/louisa.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9f8d071
--- /dev/null
+++ b/29167-h/images/louisa.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/29167.txt b/29167.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7e3a7b4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/29167.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9930 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Secret Memoirs: The Story of Louise, Crown
+Princess, by Henry W. Fischer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Secret Memoirs: The Story of Louise, Crown Princess
+
+Author: Henry W. Fischer
+
+Release Date: June 19, 2009 [EBook #29167]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SECRET MEMOIRS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Jane Hyland, Bill Tozier and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Secret Memoirs
+
+THE COURT OF ROYAL SAXONY
+
+1891-1902
+
+This edition, printed on Japanese vellum paper, is limited to two
+hundred and fifty copies.
+
+No. ________
+
+
+
+[Illustration: LOUISE, EX-CROWN-PRINCESS OF SAXONY
+
+Photo taken shortly before her flight from Dresden]
+
+Secret Memoirs
+
+THE COURT OF ROYAL SAXONY 1891-1902
+
+THE STORY OF LOUISE CROWN PRINCESS
+
+FROM THE PAGES OF HER DIARY, LOST AT THE TIME OF HER ELOPEMENT FROM
+DRESDEN WITH M. ANDRE ("RICHARD") GIRON
+
+BY HENRY W. FISCHER
+
+Author of "Private Lives of William II and His Consort," "Secret History
+of the Court of Berlin," etc., etc.
+
+Illustrated from Photographs
+
+BENSONHURST, NEW YORK FISCHER'S FOREIGN LETTERS, INC. PUBLISHERS
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1912
+BY HENRY W. FISCHER
+
+Copyright, 1912, applied for by Henry W. Fischer in Great Britain
+
+Copyright, 1912, by Henry W. Fischer, in Germany, France, Austria,
+Switzerland, and all foreign countries having international copyright
+arrangements with the United States
+
+[_All rights reserved, including those of translation_]
+
+
+
+
+EDITOR'S CARD
+
+
+This is to certify that the Ex-Crown Princess of Saxony, now called
+Countess Montiguoso, Madame Toselli by her married name, is in no way,
+either directly or indirectly, interested in this publication.
+
+There has been no communication of whatever nature, directly or through
+a third party, between this lady and the editor or publishers. In fact,
+the publication will be as much a surprise to her as to the general
+public.
+
+The Royal Court of Saxony, therefore, has no right to claim, on the
+ground of this publication, that Princess Louise violated her agreement
+with that court as set forth in the chapter on the _Kith and Kin of the
+ex-Crown Princess of Saxony_, under the heads of "_Louise's Alimony and
+Conditions_" and "_Allowance Raised and a Further Threat_."
+
+ HENRY W. FISCHER, _Editor_.
+ Fischer's Foreign Letters, Publishers
+
+
+
+
+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 amusement, 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 Sadist 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 companionship 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-encompassing 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"! Amusements 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 nobility. 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, Archduchess of Austria,
+Princess of Hungary and Tuscany, Crown Princess of Saxony, etc., etc.,
+smash these paper records of infallible royal rectitude, 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 title 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
+disfranchisement. She had no axes to grind while writing; for her all
+kings dropped out of the clouds; the lustre 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."
+
+Yet this large folio edition of _obscenites royale_, chock full, at the
+same time, of intensely human and interesting facts, notable and amusing
+things, as enthralling as a novel by Balzac,--Louise's life record in
+sum and substance, since her carryings-on _after_ she doffed her royal
+robes for the motley of the free woman are of no historical, and but
+scant human interest.
+
+The prodigality of the mass of indictments Louise launches against
+royalty as every-day occurrences, reminds one of the great Catharine
+Sforza, Duchess of Milan's clever _mot_. When the enemy captured her
+children she merely said, "I retain the oven for more."
+
+
+_Royal Scandals_
+
+Such scandalmongering! Only Her Imperial Highness doesn't see the
+obloquy,--sarcasm, cynicism and disparagement being royalty's every-day
+diet.
+
+Such gossiping! But what else was there to do at a court whose
+literature is tracts and whose theatre of action the drill grounds.
+
+But for all that, Louise's Diary is history, because its minute things
+loom big in connection with social and political results, even as its
+horrors and abnormalities help paint court life and the lives of kings
+and princes as they _are_, not as royalties' sycophants and apologizers
+would have us view them.
+
+There is a perfect downpour of books eulogizing monarchs and monarchy;
+royal governments spend millions of the people's money to uphold and
+aggrandize exalted kingship and seedy princeship alike; three-fourths of
+the press of Europe is swayed by king-worship, or subsidized to sing the
+praises of "God's Anointed," while in our own country the aping of
+monarchical institutions, the admiration for court life, the
+idealization of kings, their sayings, doings and pretended superiority,
+as carried on by the multi-rich, are undermining love for the Republic
+and the institutions our fathers fought and bled for.
+
+
+_Un-American Folly_
+
+It's the purpose of the present volume to show the guilty folly of such
+un-American, un-republican, wholly unjustifiable, reprehensible and
+altogether ridiculous King-worship, not by argument, or a more or less
+fanciful story, but by the unbiased testimony of an "insider."
+
+Let it be considered, above all, that a member of the proudest Imperial
+family in the wide, wide world demonstrates, by inference, the absurdity
+of King-worship!
+
+Of course, whether or not you'll obey the impassioned appeal of the
+corner sermonizer, who, espying a number of very decolletee ladies
+passing by in a carriage, cried out: "_Quand vous voyez ces tetons
+rebondies, qui se montrent avec tant d'impudence, bandez! bandez!
+bandez! vous--les yeux!_" is a matter for you to decide.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Seek not for descriptions of ceremonials and festivities in these pages;
+only imbeciles among kings are interested in such wearying spectacles,
+intended to dazzle the multitude. The Czar Paul, who became insane and
+had his head knocked off by his own officers, appeared upon the scene
+vacated by his brilliant mother, Catharine the Great, with a valise full
+of petty regulations, ready drawn up, by which, every day, every hour,
+every minute, he announced some foolish change, punishment or favor, but
+I often saw Kaiser Wilhelm and other kings look intensely bored and
+disgusted when obliged to attend dull and superfluous court or
+government functions.
+
+
+_Royalty's Loose Talk_
+
+But for genuine expressions of the royal self consult Louise. Those who
+think that royalty shapes its language in accordance with the plural of
+the personal pronoun, sometimes used in state papers, will be shocked at
+the "neglige talk" of one royal highness and the "rag-time" expressions
+of others. Louise, herself, assures us over and over again that she
+"_feels like a dog_," a statement no self-respecting publisher's reader
+would allow to pass, yet I was told by a friend of King Frederick of
+Denmark that he loved to compare his "all-highest person" to a "_mut_,"
+and I remember a letter from Victor Emanuel II to his great Minister,
+Count Cavour, solemnly protesting that he (the King) was "_no ass_."
+
+When the same Danish ruler, the seventh of his name, was asked why, in
+thunder, he married a common street walker (the Rasmussen, afterwards
+created Countess Danner), he cried out with every indication of gusto:
+"You don't know how deliciously common that girl is."
+
+Frederick's words explain the hostler marriages of several royal women
+mentioned by Louise, as well as her own and loving family's
+_broulleries_ of the fish-wife order, repeatedly described in the Diary.
+
+
+_Royalty Threatens a Royal Woman_
+
+It is safe to say that few $15 flats in all the United States witnessed
+more outrageous family jars than were fought out in the gilded halls of
+the Dresden palace between Louise and father-in-law and Louise and
+husband. Threats of violence are frequent; Prince George promises his
+daughter-in-law a sound beating at the hands of the Crown Prince and the
+Crown Princess confesses that she would rather go to bed with a drunken
+husband, booted and spurred, than risk a sword thrust.
+
+At the coronation of the present Czar, at Moscow, I mistook the Duke of
+Edinburgh, brother of the late King Edward, for a policeman attached to
+the British Ambassador, so exceedingly commonplace a person in
+appearance, speech and manner he seemed; Louise has a telling chapter on
+the mean looks of royalty, but fails to see the connection between that
+and royalty's coarseness.
+
+Perhaps it wasn't the "commonness" of Lady Emma Hamilton, child of the
+slums, impersonator of _risque_ stage pictures, and mistress of the
+greatest naval hero of all times, that appealed primarily to Louise's
+grand-aunt, Queen Caroline of Naples, but the abandon of the beautiful
+Englishwoman, her reckless exposure of person, her freedom of speech,
+certainly sealed the friendship between the adventuress and the despotic
+ruler who deserved the epithet of "bloody" no less than Mary of England.
+
+
+_Covetous Royalty_
+
+Royal covetousness is another subject dwelt on by Louise. We learn that
+in money matters the kings and princes of her acquaintance--and her
+acquaintance embraces all the monarchs of Europe--are "dirty," that
+royal girls are given in marriage to the highest bidder, and that poor
+princes have no more chance to marry a rich princess than a drayman an
+American multi-millionaire's daughter.
+
+Louise gives us a curious insight into the Pappenheim-Wheeler marriage
+embroglio, and refers to some noble families that made their money in
+infamous trades; that the Kaiser adopted the title of one of these
+unspeakables ("Count of Henneberg") she doesn't seem to know.
+
+We hear of imperial and royal highnesses, living at public expense and
+for whom honors and lucrative employment are exacted from the people,
+who at home figure as poor relations, obliged to submit to treatment
+that a self-respecting "boots" or "omnibus" would resent.
+
+Here we have a royal prince of twenty-four or twenty-five subjected to
+kicks and cuffs by his uncle, who happens to be king--no indignity
+either to the slugged or the slugger in that--but when a pretty princess
+gets a few "_Hochs_" more than an ugly, mouse-colored majesty, she is
+all but flayed for "playing to the gallery."
+
+"High-minded" royalty robs widows and despoils orphans; re-introduces
+into the family obsolete punishments forbidden by law; maintains in the
+household a despicable spy system! Its respect for womanhood is on a par
+with a Bushman's; of authors, "lickspittles" only count; literature,
+unless it kowtows to the "all-highest" person, is the "trade of Jew
+scribblers."
+
+
+_Right Royal Manners_
+
+As to manners, what do you think of kings and princes and grand-dukes
+who, at ceremonial dinners, pound the table to "show that they are
+boss"?
+
+Louise tells of an emperor at a foreign court ignoring one of his
+hostesses absolutely, even refusing to acknowledge her salute by a nod.
+We hear of expectant royal heirs who engage in wild fandangoes of
+merriment while their father, brother or cousin lies dying.
+
+"Personal matter," you say? "A typical case," I retort.
+
+"Ask the _Duc du_ Maine to wait till I am dead before he indulges in the
+full extent of his joy," said the dying Louis XIV, when the _De
+Profundis_ in the death chamber was suddenly interrupted by the sound of
+violent laughter from the adjoining gallery. And the fact that almost
+every new king sets aside the testament of his predecessor,--is this not
+evidence of the general callowness of feeling prevailing in royal
+circles?
+
+
+_The Irish Famine and Royalty_
+
+In famine times, the kings and princes of old drove the starving out of
+town to die of hunger in the fields, and as late as 1772 one hundred and
+fifty thousand Saxons died of hunger under the "glorious reign" of
+Louise's grandfather-by-marriage, Frederick Augustus III. And the "Life
+of Queen Victoria," approved by the Court of St. James, unblushingly
+informs us that in 1847 "Her Most Gracious Majesty" was chiefly
+concerned about investing to good profit the revenues of the Prince of
+Wales, her infant son (about four hundred thousand dollars per annum).
+
+Yet, while Victoria pinched the boy's tenants to extort an extra penny
+for him, and "succeeded in saving all but four thousand pounds sterling"
+of his imperial allowance, the population of Ireland was reduced two
+millions by the most dreadful famine the world remembers!
+
+Before the famine Ireland had a population of 8,196,597, against a
+population of 15,914,148 in England and Wales, while Scotland's
+population was 2,620,184.
+
+Six years after the famine Ireland's population was 6,574,278,
+Scotland's 2,888,742, England and Wales' 17,927,609. Today Ireland's
+population is less than Scotland's, the exact figures being: Scotland
+4,759,445, Ireland 4,381,951, England and Wales 36,075,269.
+
+
+_Royalty Utterly Heartless_
+
+However, as the waste of two million human lives, the loss of four
+millions in population, subsequently enabled the Prince of Wales to tie
+the price of a dukedom[3] in diamonds around a French dancer's neck and
+to support a hundred silly harlots in all parts of Europe, who cares?
+
+According to Louise and--others, royalty is the meanest, the most
+heartless, the most faithless and the most unjust of the species--that
+in addition she herself disgraced its womanhood, after the famous Louise
+of Prussia rehabilitated queenship, is regrettable, but to call it
+altogether unexpected would be rank euphemism.
+
+
+_Louise's Character_
+
+If Louise had lived at the time of Phryne, the philosophers would have
+characterized her as "an animal with long hair"; if he had known her,
+the great Mirabeau might have coined his pet phrase, "a human that
+dresses, undresses and--talks" (or writes) for Louise; as a matter of
+fact, she is one of those "_Jansenists_" of love who believe in the
+utter helplessness of natural woman to turn down a good looking man.
+
+Her great grand-uncle, Emperor Francis, recorded on a pane of glass
+overlooking the courtyard of the Vienna _Hofburg_ his opinion of women
+in the brief observation: "_Chaque femme varie_" (Women always change).
+
+This is true of Louise and also untrue of her. While occupying her high
+position at the Saxon court she was fixed in the determination to make a
+cuckold of her husband, though Frederick Augustus, while a pumpkin,
+wasn't fricasseed in snow by any means.
+
+The process gave her palpitations, but, like Ninon, she was "_so_ happy
+when she had palpitations."
+
+
+_Changed Lovers Frequently_
+
+As to lovers, she changed them as often as she had to, never hesitating
+to pepper her _steady_ romances by playing "everybody's wife," chance
+permitting, as she intimates naively towards the close of the Diary.
+
+Qualms of conscience she knows not, but of pride of ancestry, of
+insistence on royal prerogatives, she has plenty and to spare.
+
+"My great grand-aunt, Marie Antoinette, did this"; "my good cousins
+d'Orleans" (three of them) "allowed themselves to be seduced"; "_ma
+cousine de_ Saxe-Coburg laughs at conventionalities,"--there you have
+the foundation of the iniquitous philosophy of the royal Lais. And for
+the rest--when she is queen, all will be well.
+
+
+_Her Court--A Seraglio_
+
+Louise's fixed idea was that, as Queen of Saxony, she had but to say the
+word to establish a court _a la_ Catharine II; time and again she refers
+to the great Empress's male seraglio, and to the enormous sums she
+squandered on her favorites. If the Diarist had known that Her Majesty
+of Russia, when in the flesh, never suffered to be longer than
+twenty-four hours without a lover, Louise, no doubt, would have made the
+most elaborate plans to prevent, in her own case, a possible
+_interregnum_ of five minutes even.
+
+She thought she held the whip hand because a king cannot produce princes
+without his wife, while the wife can produce princes without the king;
+besides Frederick Augustus was no paragon, and he who plants horns, must
+not grudge to wear them.
+
+A wanton's calculations, it will be argued,--but Louise's records show
+that her husband, the king-to-be, fell in with her main idea,--that he
+forgave the unfaithful wife, the disgraced princess, because, as Queen,
+her popularity would be "a great asset."
+
+And Americans, our women of whom we are so proud, are asked to bow down
+to such sorry majesties!
+
+
+_Sired and "Cousined" by Lunatics_
+
+And is there no excuse for so much baseness in high places? Our royal
+Diarist offers none, but her family history is a telling apology.
+
+Be it remembered that Louise is not so much an Austrian as a
+Wittelsbacher of the royal house of Bavaria that gave to the world two
+mad kings, Louis II and Otho, the present incumbent of the throne,
+besides a number of eccentrics, among others Louise's aunts, the Empress
+Elizabeth and the Duchess d'Alencon, both dead; Crown Prince Rudolph of
+Austria, her cousin, was also undoubtedly insane, the result of breeding
+in and in, Austrian, Bourbon and Wittelsbach stock, all practically of
+the same parentage, in a mad mix-up, the insane Wittelsbachers
+predominating.
+
+To cap the climax, Louise has eighteen or nineteen insane cousins on her
+mother's side!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Once upon a time Louise's prosaic and stupid great-uncle, as a young
+husband, felt dreadfully scandalized when his Queen, Marie Antoinette,
+bombarded him with spit-balls.
+
+"What can I do with her?" he asked "Minister Sans-culotte" Dumouriez.
+
+"I would spike the cannon, Sire," replied the courtier.
+
+"_Enclouer le canon_," if performed in time, might have saved Louise,
+but I doubt it.
+
+ HENRY W. FISCHER.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: "Be civil, good people, I am the English hure," said Nell
+Gwyn, addressing a London mob that threatened to storm her carriage,
+assuming that its occupant was the hated Frenchwoman.]
+
+[Footnote 2: "Your biography give a faithful portrait of self," said
+Fontenelle, the famous French Academician, to an 18th Century Marquise,
+"but I miss the record of your gallantries."
+
+"_Ah, Monsieur, c'est que je ne me suis peinte qu'en buste!_" replied
+her ladyship.]
+
+[Footnote 3: The Prince of Wales' revenue is derived from the Duchy of
+Cornwall, amounting to about half a million dollars per year.]
+
+
+
+
+KITH AND KIN OF THE EX-CROWN PRINCESS OF SAXONY
+
+
+_Louise's Own Family_
+
+The royal woman whose life's history is recorded in this volume was born
+Louise Antoinette, Daughter of the late Grand Duke Ferdinand IV of
+Tuscany (died January 17, 1908) and the Dowager Grand Duchess Alice,
+_nee_ Princess Bourbon of Parma.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Louise has four brothers, among them the present head of the Tuscany
+family, Joseph Ferdinand, who dropped the obsolete title of Grand Duke
+and is officially known as Archduke of Austria-Hungary.
+
+He is a brigadier general, commanding the Fifth Austrian Infantry, and
+unmarried.
+
+Better known is Louise's older brother, the former Archduke Leopold, who
+dropped his title and dignities, and, as a Swiss citizen, adopted the
+name of Leopold Wulfling. This Leopold is generally regarded as a black
+sheep.
+
+Louise more often refers to him in the present volume than to any other
+member of her family.
+
+He is now a commoner by his own, more or less enforced, abdication, as
+Louise is a commoner by decree of her chief-of-family, the Austrian
+Emperor, Francis Joseph, dated Vienna, January 27, 1903.
+
+A month before above date the Saxon court had conferred on Louise the
+title of Countess Montiguoso, while, on her own part, she adopted the
+fanciful cognomen of Louise of Tuscany.
+
+Of Louise's two remaining brothers, one, Archduke Peter, serves in the
+Austrian army as Colonel of the Thirty-second Infantry, while Archduke
+Henry is Master of Horse in the Sixth Bavarian Dragoons.
+
+Only one of Louise's four sisters is married, the oldest, Anna, now
+Princess Johannes of Hohenlohe-Bartenstein.
+
+The unmarried sisters are Archduchesses Margareta (31 years old),
+Germana (28 years old), Agnes (22 years old).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Mother Comes of Mentally Tainted Stock_
+
+Louise's mother, _nee_ Princess Alice of Parma, is the only surviving
+sister of the late Duke Robert, who left twenty children, all living,
+and of whom eighteen or nineteen are either imbeciles or raving
+lunatics, the present head of the house, Duke Henry, belonging to the
+first category of mentally unsound.
+
+Louise's first cousin, Prince Elias of Parma, the seventh son, is
+accounted sound, but Elias's sister, Zita (the twelfth child), developed
+maniacal tendencies since her marriage to Archduke Karl Francis Joseph,
+heir-presumptive to the crown of Austria-Hungary.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Francis Joseph's Autocratic Rule_
+
+_Louise Formerly in Line of Austrian Succession_
+
+Louise was in the line of the Austrian succession until, upon her
+marriage to the Crown Prince of Saxony (1891), she officially renounced
+her birthrights.
+
+Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria-Hungary is Louise's grand-uncle as
+well as chief of the imperial family of Austria, the royal family of
+Hungary, the Grand-ducal family of Tuscany (now extinct as far as the
+title goes), and of the Estes, which is the Ducal Line of Modena,
+extinct in the male line. Finally he is recognized as chief by the ducal
+family of Parma, descendants of the Spanish Hapsburgs.
+
+Emperor Francis Joseph rules all the Hapsburgers, Austrian, Hungarian,
+and those of Tuscany, of Este, of Modena and Parma, autocratically, his
+word being law in the family. Even titles conferred by birth can be
+taken away by him, as exemplified in the case of Louise and her brother
+Leopold.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Royal Saxons_
+
+As a member of the Austrian imperial family, the Hapsburgers, founded in
+883, Louise ranked higher than her husband, the Crown Prince of the
+petty Kingdom of Saxony, whose claim to the royal title dates from
+1806,--a gift of the Emperor Napoleon.
+
+She married Frederick Augustus November 21, 1891, while the latter's
+uncle reigned as King Albert of Saxony (1873 to 1902).
+
+Louise's father-in-law, up to then known as Prince George, succeeded his
+brother June 19, 1902. He was then a widower and his family consisted
+of:
+
+Princess Mathilde, unmarried,
+
+The Crown Prince Frederick Augustus, husband of Louise,
+
+Princess Marie-Josepha, wife of Archduke Otho of Austria,
+
+Prince Johann George, at that time married to Isabelle of Wuerttemberg,
+and
+
+Prince Max. The latter subsequently shelved his title and entered the
+Church July 26, 1896. He is a professor of canonical law and slated for
+a German bishopric.
+
+At the time of Prince George's ascension, there was also living the late
+King Albert's widow, Queen Caroline, _nee_ Princess of Wasa, since
+dead.
+
+The Marchesa Rapallo, _nee_ Princess Elizabeth of Saxony, is a sister of
+the late King George.
+
+
+_Louise and Her Father-in-Law_
+
+During King George's short reign, Louise ran away from the Saxon court,
+end of November, 1902.
+
+On February 11, 1903, divorce was pronounced against her by a special
+court assembled by King George.
+
+Louise was adjudged the guilty party and deprived of the name and style
+of Crown Princess of Saxony. As previously (January 27) the Austrian
+Emperor had forbidden her to use the name and title of Austrian
+Archduchess and Imperial and royal Princess, Louise would have been
+nameless but for the rank and title of Countess Montiguoso, conferred
+upon her by King George.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Louise's Alimony Conditional_
+
+At the same time Louise accepted from the court of Saxony a considerable
+monthly allowance on condition that "she undertake nothing liable to
+compromise the reigning family, either by criticism or story, either by
+word, deed or in writing."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Frederick Augustus, King_
+
+Upon his father's death, Frederick Augustus succeeded King George
+October 15, 1904. He is now forty-seven years old, while Louise is
+forty-two.
+
+The King of Saxony has six children by Louise, three boys and three
+girls, five born in wedlock, the youngest born without wedlock. The
+children born in wedlock are:
+
+ The present Crown Prince, born 1893.
+ Frederick Christian, likewise born in 1893.
+ Ernest, born 1896.
+ Margaret, born 1900.
+ And Marie Alix, born 1901.
+
+The youngest Princess of Saxony, so called, Anna Monica, was born by
+Louise more than six months after she left her husband and nearly three
+months after her divorce.
+
+Louise desired to retain Anna Monica in her own custody, but though the
+child's fathership is in doubt, to say the least, Frederick Augustus
+insisted upon the little one's transference to his care.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Allowance Raised and a Further Threat_
+
+King Frederick Augustus raised Louise's allowance to $12,000 per year,
+"which alimony ceases if the said Countess Montiguoso shall commit,
+either personally, directly or indirectly, any act in writing or
+otherwise liable to injure the reputation of King Frederick Augustus or
+members of the royal family of Saxony, or if the said Countess
+Montiguoso contributes to any such libellous publication in any manner
+or form."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_The Divorce of Royal Couple Illegal_
+
+After divorce was pronounced against her, Louise declined to accept the
+decree of the court, pronouncing the proceedings illegal on the ground
+that both she and husband are Catholics and that the Roman Catholic
+Church, under no circumstances, recognizes divorce. Her protest gained
+importance from the fact that her marriage to Frederick Augustus was
+solemnized by the rites of the Roman Catholic Church. The Saxon court,
+on the other hand, justified its own decision by basing same on a
+certain civil ceremony entered into by Louise and Frederick Augustus
+previous to the church marriage.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Louise Marries a Second Time_
+
+When Louise realized in the course of years that Frederick Augustus
+would not take her back, she changed her mind as to the illegality of
+her divorce and married, September 25, 1907, Enrico Toselli, an Italian
+composer and pianist of small reputation.
+
+This marriage was performed civilly. They have one child, a boy, about
+whose custody the now legally separated parents have instituted several
+actions in law. The boy has now been allotted to the care of Toselli's
+mother.
+
+
+_King Did Not Marry Again_
+
+King Frederick Augustus, though by the laws of Saxony and Germany
+allowed to contract a second marriage, has not availed himself of the
+license, probably in deference to the wishes of the Vatican. At the same
+time he spurned all of Louise's attempts at reconciliation, the most
+dramatic of which was her _coup de tete_ of December, 1904, when she
+went to Dresden "to see her children," was arrested at the palace gate
+and conducted out of the kingdom by high police officials.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Other Royalties Mentioned in This Volume_
+
+Louise refers, in her Diary, to the Kaiser as "cousin." If there be any
+relationship between her and William, it is that imposed by the Saxon
+marriage, Saxon princes and princesses having frequently intermarried
+with the royal and princely Hohenzollerns, despite the differences of
+religion. There are four courts of Saxony despite that of Dresden:
+Weimar, Meiningen, Altenburg and Coburg and Gotha.
+
+The latter duchy's ruler, Karl Eduard, is of English descent, a son of
+the late Duke of Albany. Hence, Louise's cousinship with Victoria
+Melita, sometime Grand Duchess of Hesse, now Grand Duchess Kyril of
+Russia.
+
+Of course, Louise is closely related to all the Orleans and Bourbons.
+
+Marie Antoinette, Queen of France, who died on the scaffold at Paris,
+October 16, 1793, she calls her great-grand-aunt and namesake, claiming,
+at the same time, most of the Kings and princes of France of the
+seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as relatives.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+ MOTHERHOOD
+
+ PAGE
+
+ A sterile Royal Family once fruitful--Diary true record of
+ self--Long legs of Countess Solms--A child only because
+ he can't help it--Wet nurse to Socialist brat--Royal
+ permit for nursing--Royal negligee talk--A Saxon
+ failing 1
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+ THE SWEET FAMILY
+
+ Husband loving, but family nasty--Money considerations--Brutal
+ caresses in public--Pests in the family--Awful
+ serenity--Meddle with angels' or devils' affairs--Father-in-law's
+ gritty kiss 7
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+ WEEPING WILLOW--EMBLEM ROYAL
+
+ A pious fraud--Theresa Mayer--Character of the Queen--Mopishness
+ rampant 11
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+ MY UNPLEASANT YOUTH
+
+ Father hard to get along with--Royal imaginations--Kings
+ cursing other kings--Poverty and pretense--Piety that
+ makes children suffer--Up at five to pray on cold
+ stones--Chilblains and prayer 15
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+ A FIERCE DISCIPLINARIAN
+
+ Diamonds used to punish children--Face object of attacks--
+ Grunting and snorting at the royal table--Blood flowing
+ at dinner--My brother jumps out of a window 19
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+ LEOPOLD DEFENDS MY HONOR AT HIS PERIL
+
+ Punished for objecting to familiarities--Awful names I was
+ called--Locked in the room with wicked teacher--Defend
+ myself with burning lamp--My brother nearly kills
+ my would-be assailant 23
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+ PRINCES AND PRINCESSES DANCE TO THE TUNE OF THE WHIP
+
+ The result shows in the character of rulers--Why English
+ kings and princes are superior to the Continental kind--Leopold's
+ awful revenge--Mother acts the tigress--Her
+ mailed fist--"I forbid Your Imperial Highness to see
+ that dog" 27
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+ PLANNING TO GET A HUSBAND FOR ME
+
+ Dissecting possible wooers at Vienna--Royalty after money,
+ not character--"He is a Cohen, not a Coburg"--Prince
+ who looked like a Jew counter-jumper in his Sunday
+ best--Balkan princes tabooed by Francis Joseph--A
+ good time for the girls--Army men commanded to attend
+ us 35
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+ LOVE-MAKING
+
+ The fascinating Baron--The man's audacity--Putting the
+ question boldly--Real love-making--_Risque_ stories for
+ royalty 41
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+ MY POPULARITY RENDERS GEORGE DYSPEPTIC
+
+ The Cudgel-Majesty--Prince George's intrigues--No four-horse
+ coach for Princess--Popular demonstration in my
+ favor--"All-highest" displeasure 45
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+ SCOLDED FOR BEING POPULAR
+
+ Entourage spied upon by George's minions--My husband
+ proves a weakling--I disavow the personal compliment--No
+ more intelligent than a king should be 53
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+ ROYAL DISGRACE--LIGHTNING AND SHADOWS
+
+ Ordered around by the Queen--Give thanks to a bully--Jealous
+ of the "mob's" applause--"The old monkey after
+ '_Hochs_'"--Criticizing the "old man"--Royalty's plea for
+ popularity--Proposed punishments for people refusing
+ to love royalty 57
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+ UNSPEAKABLE LITTLENESSES OF PETTY COURTS
+
+ Another quarrel with my husband--Personal attendant to a
+ corpse--Killing by pin pricks--The mythical three "_How
+ art thou's?_"--Unwanted sympathy from my inferiors--Pride
+ of the decapitated Queen of France is in me--Lovers
+ not impossible--Court to blame for them--My
+ husband acts cowardly--Brutalizes my household--I
+ lock myself in 63
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+ IMPERIAL RUSSIAN ETHICS TRANSFERRED TO DRESDEN
+
+ My husband's reported escapade--Did he give diamonds to a
+ dancing girl?--His foolish excuses--"I am your pal"--A
+ restaurant scene in St. Petersburg--The birthday
+ suit 71
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+ ROYALTY NOT PRETTY, AND WHY
+
+ Fecundity royal women's greatest charm--How to have
+ beautiful children 77
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+ MORE JEALOUSIES OF THE GREAT
+
+ Men and women caress me with their eyes--Some disrespectful
+ sayings and doings of mine--First decided quarrel
+ with Frederick Augustus--I go to the theatre in spite
+ of him 81
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+ THE ROYAL PRINCE, WHO BEHAVES LIKE A DRUNKEN BRICKLAYER
+
+ I face the music, but my husband runs away--Prince George
+ can't look me in the eye--He roars and bellows--Advocates
+ wife-beating--I defy him--German classics--"Jew
+ literature" _Auto da fe_ ordered 85
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+ I DEFY THEM
+
+ Laughter and pleasant faces for me--Frederick Augustus refuses
+ to back me, but I don't care--We quarrel about
+ my reading--He professes to gross ignorance 91
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+
+ ATTEMPTED VIOLENCE DEFEATED BY FIRMNESS
+
+ Frederick Augustus seeks to carry out his father's brutal
+ threats--Orders and threats before servants--I positively
+ refuse to be ordered about--Frederick Augustus
+ plays Mrs. Lot--Enjoying myself at the theatre 95
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+
+ TITLED SERVANTS LOW AND CUNNING
+
+ George tries to rob me of my confidante--Enter the King's
+ spy, Baroness Tisch in her true character--Punishment
+ of one royal spy 99
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+
+ BANISHMENT
+
+ I am ordered to repair to a country house with the hated spy
+ as my Grand Mistress--My first impulse to go home,
+ but afraid parents won't have me 103
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+
+ "POOR RELATIONS" IN ROYAL HOUSES
+
+ Myself and Frederick Augustus quarrel and pound table--The
+ Countess Cosel's golden vessel--Off to Brighton--Threat
+ of a beating--I provoke shadows of divorce--King
+ threatens force--More defiance on my part--I
+ humble the King and am allowed to invite my brother
+ Leopold 105
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+
+ A SERVANT-TYRANT
+
+ My correspondence is not safe from the malicious woman
+ appointed Grand Mistress--Lovers at a distance and by
+ correspondence--Fell in love with a leg 115
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+
+ MORE TYRANNY OF A TITLED SERVANT
+
+ My daily papers seized, and only milk-and-water clippings
+ are submitted--"King's orders"--Grand Mistress's veracity
+ doubted--My threats of suspension cow her 119
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+
+ THE TWO BLACK SHEEP OF THE FAMILY UNITED
+
+ Leopold upon my troubles and his own--Imperial Hapsburgs
+ that, though Catholics, got divorces or married
+ divorced women--Books that are full of guilty knowledge,
+ according to royalty--A mud-hole lodging for one
+ Imperial Highness--Leopold's girl--What I think of
+ army officers' wives--Their anonymous letters--Leopold's
+ money troubles--We will fool our enemies by
+ feigning obedience 123
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+
+ FREDERICK AUGUSTUS CONTINUES VERY RAW
+
+ Manners _a la_ barracks natural to royal princes--Names I
+ am called--My ladies scandalized--Leopold turned over
+ a new leaf, according to agreement, and is well treated--The
+ King grateful to me for having "influenced Leopold
+ to be good" 129
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+
+ PRINCE MAX MAKES LOVE TO ME
+
+ Wants me to consult him on all spiritual matters--Warns me
+ against the Kaiser, the heretic bishop--Princes as ill-mannered
+ as Russian-Jew up-starts 133
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+ THE SHAH OF PERSIA FALLS IN LOVE WITH ME
+
+ The "animal" and his show of diamonds and rubies--Overcome
+ by love he treats me like a lady of the harem--On
+ the defensive--The King of kings an ill-behaved
+ brute--Eats like a pig and affronts Queen--Wiped off
+ greasy hands on my state robe--When ten thousand
+ gouged-out eyes carpeted his throne--Offers of jewels--"Does
+ he take me for a ballet girl?"--The Shah almost
+ compromises me--King, alarmed, abruptly ends
+ dinner--I receive presents from him 135
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+
+ THE SHAH COMPROMISES ME IN PUBLIC
+
+ Has only eyes for me at the grand manoeuvres, and I can't
+ drive him from my carriage--Ignores the King and the
+ military spectacle--Calls me his adored one--Court in
+ despair--Shah ruins priceless carpets to make himself
+ a lamb stew 139
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+
+ MY LIFE AT COURT BECOMES UNBEARABLE
+
+ Laughter a crime--Disappointed Queen lays down the law
+ for my behavior--Frederick Augustus sometimes fighting
+ drunk--Draws sword on me--Prince George would have
+ me beaten--To bed with his boots on 143
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+
+ PRISON FOR PRINCES THAT OPPOSE THE KING
+
+ Duke of Saxony banished--Cut off from good literature
+ even--Anecdote concerning the Grand Dauphin and his
+ "kettledrums"--A royal prince's garrison life--His association
+ with lewd women 147
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+
+ PRINCE GEORGE SHOWN THE DOOR BY GRAND-DUCHESS MELITA
+
+ A royal lady who walks her garden attired in a single diaphanous
+ garment--Won't stand for any meddling--Called
+ impertinent--My virtuous indignation assumed--A
+ flirtation at a distance--An audacious lover--The
+ Grand Mistress hoodwinked--Matrimonial horns for
+ Kaiser--The banished Duke dies--Princes scolded like
+ school-boys 151
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+ MELITA'S LOVE AFFAIRS AND MINE
+
+ The Grand Duchess tells me how she cudgeled George--Living
+ dictaphone employed--Shows him who is mistress
+ of the house--Snaps fingers in Prince George's
+ face--Debate about titles--"A sexless thing of a husband"--Conference
+ between lover and husband--Grand
+ Duke doesn't object to his wife's lover, but lover objects
+ to "his paramour being married" 157
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+ MORE ABOUT THE SWEET ROYAL FAMILY LIFE
+
+ "Closed season" for petty meannesses--A prince who enjoys
+ himself like a pig--Why princes learn trades--A family
+ dinner to the accompaniment of threats and smashing of
+ table--The Duke's widow and children robbed of their
+ inheritance by royal family--King confiscates testament 163
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+
+ FLIRTATION DEVELOPS INTO LOVE
+
+ At the theatre--My adorer must have felt my presence--Forgot
+ his diplomacy--The mute salute--His good looks--His
+ mouth a promise of a thousand sweet kisses--Our
+ love won't be any painted business 169
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+ COUNT BIELSK MAKES LOVE TO THE CROWN PRINCESS
+
+ Fearless to indiscretion--He "thou's" me--Puts all his
+ chances on one card--Proposes a rendezvous--Shall I
+ go or shall I not go?--Peril if I go and peril if I don't 171
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+ RAPID LOVE MAKING IN THE BOIS
+
+ A discreet maid--"Remove thy glove"--Kisses of passion,
+ pure kisses, powerful kisses--I see my lover daily--Countess
+ Barnello offers "doves' nest"--Driving to
+ rendezvous in state--"Naughty Louise," who makes fun
+ of George 177
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+ "IN LOVE THERE ARE NO PRINCESSES, ONLY WOMEN"
+
+ A diplomatic trick--Jealous of Romano's past--The pact for
+ life and the talisman--If there were a theatre fire the
+ talisman would discover our love to the King--Some
+ ill-natured reflections--Bernhardt's escapades cover up
+ my tracks--The "black sheep" jumps his horse over a
+ coffin--King gives him a beating--Bernhardt's mess-room
+ lingo--Anecdotes of royal voluptuaries--Forces
+ animals to devour each other--Naked ballet-girls as
+ horses--Abnormals rule the world 183
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+ MY PUNISHMENT
+
+ I lose my lover--Quarrels with me because I did my duty
+ as a mother--Royalty extols me for the same reason---My
+ pride of kingship aroused by Socialist scribblers--Change
+ my opinion as to Duke's widow--Parents arrive--Father
+ and his alleged astrolatry--His finances disarranged
+ by alimony payments--My uncle, the Emperor,
+ rebukes mother harshly for complaining of _roue_
+ father 193
+
+ CHAPTER XL
+
+ A PLEBEIAN LOVER
+
+ In need of a friend--My physician offers his friendship--I
+ discover that he loves me, but he will never confess--I
+ give him encouragement--We manage to persuade
+ the King to further our intrigue--Not a bit repentant of
+ my peccadilloes--Very submissive--Introduced to my
+ lover's wife 199
+
+ CHAPTER XLI
+
+ AN ATROCIOUS ROYAL SCANDAL
+
+ A royal couple that shall be nameless--The voluptuous
+ Duchess--Her husband the worst of degenerates--"What
+ monsters these royalties be"--Nameless outrages--A
+ Duchess forced to have lovers--Ferdinand and I
+ live like married folk--Duchess feared for her life--Her
+ husband murdered her--I scold and humiliate my overbearing
+ Grand Mistress--The medical report too horrible
+ to contemplate 205
+
+ CHAPTER XLII
+
+ I LOSE ANOTHER OF MY LOVERS
+
+ Happily no scandal--Rewarded for bearing children--$1250--for
+ becoming a mother--Royal poverty--Bernhardt,
+ the black sheep, in hot water again--The King rebukes
+ me for taking his part 213
+
+ CHAPTER XLIII
+
+ THE CROWN PRINCESS QUELLS A RIOT
+
+ Asked to play the coward, and I refuse--A hostler who
+ would die for a look from me--Hostler marriages in
+ royal houses--Anecdotes and unknown facts concerning
+ royal ladies and their offspring--Refuse police escort
+ and rioters acclaim me--Whole royal family proud
+ of my feat 219
+
+ CHAPTER XLIV
+
+ THE NEW LOVER, AND "I PLAY THE HUSSY FOR FAIR"
+
+ Who is that most exquisite _Vortaenzer?_--A lovely boy--"Blush,
+ good white paper"--I long for Henry--My eyes
+ reflect love--"I must see you tonight. Arrange with
+ Lucretia"--Sorry I ever loved a man before Henry--Poetry
+ even--I try to get him an office at court--Afraid
+ women will steal him 227
+
+ CHAPTER XLV
+
+ LOVE AND THE HAPPINESS IT CONVEYS
+
+ My Grand Mistress suspects because I am so amiable--Pangs
+ of jealousy--Every good-looking man pursued by women--A
+ good story of my cousin, the Duchess Berri--We
+ all go cycling together--The Vitzthums--Love making
+ on the street--A mud bath 233
+
+ CHAPTER XLVI
+
+ FEARS FOR MY LOVE
+
+ Some reflections on queens of old who punished recreant
+ lovers--Henry was in debt and I gave him money--Indignities
+ by which some of that money was earned--Husband
+ accompanies me to Loschwitz--Reflections on
+ Frederick Augustus's character 239
+
+ CHAPTER XLVII
+
+ LOVE'S INTERMEZZO
+
+ Bernhardt takes advantage of my day-dreams--My husband's
+ indolent _gaucherie_--Violent love-making--Ninon who
+ loved families, not men--Does Bernhardt really love me? 245
+
+ CHAPTER XLVIII
+
+ GRAND MISTRESS TELLS HUSBAND I KEEP A DIARY
+
+ He wants to see it, but seems unsuspecting--Grand Mistress
+ denies that she meant mischief, but I upbraid her
+ unmercifully--Threaten to dismiss her like a thieving
+ lackey 251
+
+ CHAPTER XLIX
+
+ ARISTOCRATIC VISITORS
+
+ I hear disquieting news about my lover's character--The
+ aristocracy a dirty lot--Love-making made easy by titled
+ friends--Anecdotes of Richelieu and the Duke of Orleans--The
+ German nobleman who married Miss Wheeler and
+ had to resign his birthright--The disreputable business
+ the Pappenheims and other nobles used to be in--I am
+ afraid to question my lover as to charges 255
+
+ CHAPTER L
+
+ TO LIVE UNDER KING'S AND PRINCE GEORGE'S EYE
+
+ Abruptly ordered to the royal summer residence--The Vitzthums
+ and Henry take flight--Enmeshed by Prince
+ George's intrigues--Those waiting for a crown have no
+ friends--What I will do when Queen--No wonder Kings
+ of old married only relatives--Interesting facts about
+ relative marriages furnished by scientist 261
+
+ CHAPTER LI
+
+ COLD RECEPTION--ENEMIES ALL AROUND
+
+ Frederick Augustus gives his views on adultery--Doesn't
+ care personally, but "the King knows"--"Thank God,
+ the King is ill"--I am deprived of my children--Have
+ I got the moral strength to defy my enemies? 265
+
+ CHAPTER LII
+
+ PRINCE GEORGE REVEALS TO ME THE DEPTH OF HIS HATRED
+
+ A terrible interview--"The devil will come to claim you"--Uncertain
+ how much the King and Prince George know--I
+ break into the nursery and stay with my children all
+ day--Prince George insults me in my own rooms and
+ threatens prison if I disobey him 269
+
+ CHAPTER LIII
+
+ REVOLVER IN HAND, I DEMAND AN EXPLANATION
+
+ An insolent Grand Mistress, but of wonderful courage--Imprisonment,
+ threats to kill have no effect on her--Disregards
+ my titles--My lover's souvenir and endearing
+ words--How she caused Henry to leave me--My paroxysms
+ of rage--Henry's complete betrayal of me 273
+
+ CHAPTER LIV
+
+ FORCED TO DO PENANCE LIKE A TRAPPIST-MONK
+
+ "By the King's orders"--I submit for the sake of my children--Must
+ fast as well as pray--In delicate health, I insist
+ upon returning to Dresden--Bernhardt, to avoid
+ being maltreated by King, threatens him with his sword--The
+ King's awful wrath--Bernhardt prisoner in Nossen--I
+ escape, temporarily, protracted _ennui_ 279
+
+ CHAPTER LV
+
+ FRANCIS JOSEPH JOINS MY SAXON ENEMIES
+
+ Cuts me dead before whole family--Everybody talks over
+ my head at dinner--I refuse to attend more court festivities--Husband
+ protests because I won't stand for insult
+ from Emperor--I give rein to my contempt for his
+ family--Hypocrites, despoilers, gamblers, religious maniacs,
+ brutes--Benign lords to the people, tyrants at home--I
+ cry for my children like a she-dog whose young
+ were drowned 285
+
+ CHAPTER LVI
+
+ I AM DETERMINED TO DO AS I PLEASE
+
+ I reject mother's tearful reproaches--I beard Prince George
+ in his lair despite whining chamberlains--I tell him what
+ I think of him, and he becomes frightened--Threatens
+ madhouse--"I dare you to steal my children"--I win my
+ point--and the children--"Her Imperial Highness regrets"--Lots
+ of forbidden literature--Precautions against
+ intriguing Grand Mistress--The affair with Henry--was
+ it a flower-covered pit to entrap me?--Castle Stolpen
+ and some of its awful history 291
+
+ CHAPTER LVII
+
+ I CONFESS TO PAPA
+
+ King Albert dies and King George a very sick man--Papa's
+ good advice--"You will be Queen soon"--A lovely old
+ man, very much troubled 301
+
+ CHAPTER LVIII
+
+ MONSIEUR GIRON--RICHARD, THE ARTIST
+
+ The King asks me to superintend lessons by M. Giron--A
+ most fascinating man--His Grecian eyes--He is a painter
+ as well as a teacher--In love--Careless whether I am
+ caught in my lover's arms--"Richard" talks anarchy to
+ me--Why I don't believe in woman suffrage--Characters
+ and doings of women in power 305
+
+ CHAPTER LIX
+
+ THE PEOPLE THINK ME A WANTON
+
+ Credit me with innumerable lovers, but don't disapprove--Glad
+ the King feels scandalized--Picture of the "she-monster"--Everybody
+ eager for love--I delight in Richard's
+ jealousy--Husband's indelicate announcement at
+ table--I rush from the royal opera to see my lover--A
+ threatening dream--Richard not mercenary like my noble
+ lovers 309
+
+ CHAPTER LX
+
+ THE DAY OF JUDGMENT LOOMS UP
+
+ My Grand Mistress shows her colors--Richard advises flight--I
+ hesitate on account of my children--My Grand Mistress
+ steals a letter from Richard to me--I opine that an
+ adulteress's word is as good as a thief's--I humble my
+ Grand Mistress, but it won't do me much good--Pleasant
+ hours at his studio 317
+
+ CHAPTER LXI
+
+ A MAD HOUSE FOR LOUISE--PROBABLY
+
+ My confidential maid, Lucretia, is banished--The new King
+ has got the incriminating letter, but Frederick Augustus
+ says nothing--On the eve of judgment the King falls ill 321
+
+ CHAPTER LXII
+
+ KING'S ILLNESS A BOON TO LOVERS
+
+ Prayers mixed with joy--Espionage disorganized, and I can
+ do as I please--Love-making in the school-room--Buying
+ a ring for Richard--"Wishing it on"--"Our marriage"--King's
+ life despaired of--My tormentors obsequious--Smile
+ at my peccadilloes--Husband proud of
+ me--My popularity a great asset--Frederick Augustus
+ delighted when he hears that King can't last long--The
+ joyous luncheon at Richard's studio--Making fun of
+ majesties--I expect to be Queen presently 325
+
+ CHAPTER LXIII
+
+ WHAT I WILL DO WHEN I AM QUEEN
+
+ A foretaste: titled servants put me _en route_ for lover--The
+ bargain I will propose to Frederick Augustus--Frederick
+ Augustus will be a complaisant King--To revive
+ _Petit Trianon_--I am addressed as Queen 331
+
+ CHAPTER LXIV
+
+ THE KING IS ALIVE AND PUNISHMENT NEAR
+
+ My queenship postponed--King George publicly acclaimed--Cuts
+ me dead in church--Frederick Augustus's disappointment--Terrible
+ power of a king over his family,
+ and no appeal--I am like the nude witch of old 335
+
+ CHAPTER LXV
+
+ FISTICUFFS DON'T SAVE MY CROWN
+
+ The attempted theft of my Diary--Grand Mistress discovered
+ after breaking open my desk--Reading Diary like
+ mad--Personal encounter between me and Grand Mistress--I
+ am the stronger, and carry off the manuscript,
+ but have to leave all my love letters, which go to the
+ King--I discover that they had stolen the key to my
+ Diary from my neck 339
+
+ CHAPTER LXVI
+
+ ABANDONED
+
+ My titled servants withdraw from me--An old footman my
+ sole support--Queen takes the children--Old Andrew
+ plays spy for me 343
+
+ CHAPTER LXVII
+
+ FAMILY COUNCIL AT CASTLE
+
+ Rendezvous at studio--State takes my children from me--Madhouse
+ or flight--I brought fifty-two trunks to the
+ palace--Depart with small satchel--If I attempt to see
+ my children I'll be seized as "mad woman"--Varying
+ emotions of the last ten minutes--Threatening shadows
+ thrown on a curtain decide me--Ready for flight--Diary
+ the last thing to go into the satchel 345
+
+
+[Illustration: FROM LOUISE'S DIARY]
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF LOUISE, CROWN PRINCESS OF SAXONY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MOTHERHOOD
+
+ A sterile Royal Family once fruitful--Diary true record of
+ self--Long legs of Countess Solms--A child only because he can't
+ help it--Wet nurse to Socialist brat--Royal permit for
+ nursing--Royal negligee talk--A Saxon failing.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _February 17, 1893_.
+
+I did my duty towards the Saxons. I gave them a Prince. The Royal House
+ought to be grateful to me:--I am helping to perpetuate it. Who would,
+if I didn't? My sister-in-law, Princess Mathilde, is an old maid. The
+other, Maria Josepha, as sterile as Sarah was before she reached the
+nineties. This applies also to Isabelle, the wife of brother-in-law,
+John-George. And Prince Max, tired of ballet girls, is about to take the
+soutane.
+
+There is just one more royal Saxon princess, Elizabeth, and she
+succeeded in having children neither with her husband _de jure_, the
+late Duke of Genoa, nor with her husband-lover, Marquis Rapallo.
+
+Louise, then, is the sole living hope of the royal Saxons that, only 160
+years ago, boasted of a sovereign having three hundred and fifty-two
+children to his credit, among them not a few subsequently accounted
+geniuses. Augustus, the Physical Strong (1670 to 1733), was the happy
+father, the _Mareshal de_ Saxe one of his numerous gifted offspring.
+
+Alas, since then the House of Wettin has declined not in numbers only.
+
+Poor baby is burdened with ten names in honor of so many ancestors. Why,
+in addition, they want to call him "Maria" I cannot for the life of me
+understand, for there never was a Saxon princess or queen that amounted
+to a row of pins.
+
+I wonder whether they will say the same of me after the crown of the
+Wettiners descended upon my brow. Those so inclined should consult these
+papers ere they begin throwing stones, for my Diary is intended to
+contain my innermost thoughts, my ambitions, my promises for the future,
+_Myself_, and let no one judge me by what I say other than what is
+recorded here.
+
+These pages are my Father Confessor. I confess to myself,--what a woman
+in my position says to members of her family or official and
+semi-official persons--her servants, so to speak--doesn't signify, to
+borrow a phrase from my good cousin, the Kaiser Wilhelm.
+
+Father-in-law George tells me to trust no one but him, my husband, and
+Frederick Augustus's sisters, cousins and aunts, and to rely on prayer
+only, yet, stubborn as nature made me, I prefer respectable white paper
+to my sweet relatives.
+
+Up to now my most ambitious literary attempts were intimate letters to
+my brother Leopold, the "Black Sheep." As I now start in writing letters
+to myself, it occurs to me that my worse self may be corresponding with
+my better self, or vice versa. If I was only a poet like Countess Solms,
+but, dear, no. All real bluestockings are ugly and emaciated. Solms is
+both, and her legs are as long and as thin as those of Diana, my English
+hunter.
+
+I think this Diary business will be quite amusing,--at any rate, it will
+be more so than the conversation of my ladies. Ah, those ladies of the
+court of Saxony! If they would only talk of anything else but orphans,
+sisters of charity and ballet girls. The latter always have one foot in
+Hades, while you can see the wings grow on the backs of the others.
+
+When the von Schoenberg struts in, peacock fashion, and announces "his
+royal Highness did himself the honor to soil his bib," I sometimes stare
+at her, not comprehending at the moment, and the fact that she is
+talking of my baby only gradually comes to mind. Isn't it ridiculous
+that a little squalling bit of humanity, whom the accident of birth
+planted in a palace, is royalty first and all the time, and a child only
+because he can't help it?
+
+As for me, I am a woman and mother first, and my child is an animated
+lump of flesh and blood--_my_ flesh and blood--first and all the time.
+Of course, when baby came I wanted to nurse it. You should have seen
+Frederick Augustus's face. If I had proposed to become a wet-nurse to
+some "socialist brat" he couldn't have been more astonished. Yet my
+great ancestress, the Empress Maria Theresa, nursed her babies "before a
+parquet of proletarians," at the theatre and at reviews, and thought
+nothing of giving the breast to a poor foundling left in the park of
+Schoenbrunn.
+
+Frederick Augustus recovered his speech after a while--though he never
+says anything that would seem to require reflection, he always acts the
+deep thinker. "Louise," he mumbled reproachfully,--"what will his
+Majesty say?"
+
+"I thought you were the father of the child," I remarked innocently.
+
+"No levity where the King is concerned," he corrected poor me. "You know
+very well that for an act of this kind a royal permit must be previously
+obtained."
+
+Followed a long pause to give his mental apparatus time to think some
+more. Then: "And, besides, it will hurt your figure."
+
+"Augusta Victoria" (the German Empress) "nursed half a dozen children,
+and her _decollete_ is still much admired," I insisted.
+
+Frederick Augustus paid no attention to this argument. "Anyhow, I don't
+want the doctors to examine your breast daily," he said with an air of
+mixed sentimentality and brusqueness.
+
+These were not his own words, though. My husband, not content with
+calling a spade a spade, invariably uses the nastiest terms in the
+dictionary of debauchery. When he tells me of his love adventures before
+marriage it's always "I bagged that girl," or "I made something tender
+out of her," just as a hunter talks of game or a leg of venison.
+
+He doesn't want to be rude; he is so without knowing it. His indelicacy
+would be astounding in a man born on the steps of the throne, if the
+Princes of this royal house were not all inclined that way.
+
+Two weeks after my accouchement George and Isabelle called. Though
+brother and sister-in-law, we are not at all on terms of intimacy.
+Frederick Augustus made some remarks of a personal nature that sent all
+the blood to my head; Isabelle seemed to enjoy my discomfort, but George
+had the decency to go to the window and comment on the dirty boots of a
+guard lieutenant just entering the courtyard. Frederick Augustus
+thought he had made a hit with Isabelle and applauded his own effort
+with a loud guffaw, while pounding his thighs, which seems to give him
+particular satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE SWEET FAMILY
+
+ Husband loving, but family nasty--Money considerations--Brutal
+ caresses in public--Pests in the family--Awful serenity--Meddle with
+ angels' or devils' affairs--Father-in-law's gritty kiss.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _February 24, 1893_.
+
+I have been married some fifteen months and I love my husband. He is
+kind, not too inquisitive and passionate. I have better claims to
+domestic happiness than most of my royal sisters on or near the thrones
+of Europe. Of course when I married into the Saxon royal family I
+expected to be treated with ill-concealed enmity. Wasn't I young and
+handsome? Reason enough for the old maids and childless wives, my new
+sweet relatives, to detest me.
+
+Wasn't I poor? I brought little with me and my presence entailed a
+perpetual expense. Now in royal families money is everything, or nearly
+so, and the newcomer that eats but doesn't increase the family fortune
+is regarded as an interloper.
+
+If I hadn't "_made good_," that is if, in due time, I hadn't become a
+mother, my position among the purse-proud, rapacious and narrow-minded
+Wettiners would have become wellnigh intolerable. But I proved myself a
+_Holstein_. I rose superior to Queen Carola, who never had a child, and
+to Maria, Mathilda, Isabelle and Elizabeth, who either couldn't or
+didn't. But, to my mind, acting the _cow_ for the benefit of the race
+did not invite stable manners.
+
+I wasn't used to them. They hadn't figured in the dreams of my girlhood.
+I thought love less robust. I didn't expect to be squeezed before my
+ladies. Even the best beloved husband shouldn't take liberties with his
+wife's waist in the parlor.
+
+And Frederick Augustus's negligee talk is no less offensive than his
+manner of laying loving hands on my person. As a rule, he treats me like
+a third-row dancing girl that goes to petition the manager for a place
+nearer the footlights. There is no limit to his familiarities or to the
+license of his conversation. "_Fine wench_" is a term of affection he
+likes to bestow on his future queen; indeed, one of the less gross. He
+has the weakness to like epithets that, I am told, gentlemen sometimes
+use in their clubs, but never towards a mistress they half-way respect.
+
+My father-in-law, Prince George, is a pest of another kind. While
+Frederick Augustus is jovial and rude, George is rude and serene of a
+serenity that would make a Grand Inquisitor look gay.
+
+One of my famous ancestresses, the Princess-Palatine, sister-in-law of
+Louis the Fourteenth, once boxed the Dauphin's ears for a trick he
+played on her, by putting his upright thumb in the centre of an armchair
+which her royal highness meant to sit on.
+
+Whenever I behold George's funereal visage, I long to repeat the
+Dauphin's undignified offense. I would like to see this royal parcel of
+melancholy jump and dance; change that ever-frowning and mournful aspect
+of his. Indeed, I would like to treat him to one of the anecdotes that
+made the Duchess de Berri explode with laughter.
+
+Frederick Augustus lives in deadly fear of him, and never gets his hair
+cut without first considering whether his father will approve or not.
+George isn't happy unless he renders other people unhappy. I actually
+believe he would rather meddle with the angels' or devils' affairs than
+say his prayers, though he is a bigot of the most advanced stripe.
+
+Sometimes when the itch for meddling has hold of him, he cites all the
+married princes of the royal house and lectures them on the wickedness
+of having no children, winding up by commanding each one to explain, in
+detail, his failure to have offspring.
+
+Of course, these gentlemen put the blame on their wives, whereupon the
+ladies are forthwith summoned to be threatened and cajoled.
+
+Prince George had the great goodness to approve of my baby and to
+congratulate me, also to set me up as an example for Isabelle. When I
+return to Dresden I shall be made Colonel of Horse.
+
+Twice has George kissed me,--upon my arrival in Saxony and five days
+after the birth of my child. It felt like a piece of gritty ice rubbing
+against my forehead.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+WEEPING WILLOW--EMBLEM ROYAL
+
+ A pious fraud--Theresa Mayer--Character of the Queen--Mopishness
+ rampant.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _March 1, 1893_.
+
+Prince Max came unexpectedly. He is studying for the priesthood and
+looks more sour than his father even. I was in bed, nursing a sick
+headache, but presuming upon his future clerical dignity, he walked in
+without ceremony and sat down on a chair near my bed. Then he raised his
+hands in prayer and announced that he had come to assist in my
+devotions.
+
+"Forget that I am your brother-in-law and cousin," he said; "tell me
+what's in your heart, Louise, and I will pray to the good God for thee."
+
+"Don't trouble yourself," I replied, "I have a court chaplain charged
+with these affairs. Rather tell me about the latest comic opera."
+
+"Comic opera!" he stammered. "You don't intend to go to such worldly
+amusements now that you are a mother?"
+
+"Of course I do. The very day I return to Dresden I will take a look at
+your girl."
+
+"My--what?" gasped Max.
+
+"Your Theresa--Theresa Mayer. I understand she made a great hit in the
+_Geisha_, and everybody approves of your taste, Max."
+
+Max turned red, then green, and I thought to myself what a fool I was.
+He's a favorite with the King and Queen, and my father-in-law believes
+every word he says.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _March 10, 1893_.
+
+Queen Carola is a good soul though she doesn't dare call her soul her
+own. I never heard her say "_peep_" in the presence of his Majesty. She
+looks forlorn and frightened when King Albert is around.
+
+I like her better since I am a mother, for she loves baby. Yes, though
+she is a Queen, I saw her actually smile at the child once or twice.
+
+Poor woman, the point of her nose is always red, and, like Father-in-law
+George, she believes weeping willow the only fit emblem for royalty. The
+look of the whipped dog is always in her weak eyes.
+
+I am too young and--they _do_ say--too frivolous to stand so much
+mopishness. These mustard-pots, sedate, grave, wan and long-faced, make
+me mad. I don't know what to say,--all I can do is try to hide my
+"un-princess-like" cheerfulness when they are around.
+
+I wish I had an ounce or so of diplomacy in my composition. It might
+enable me to sympathize with the fancied troubles of the Queen and
+Prince George, but I am incorrigible.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+MY UNPLEASANT YOUTH
+
+ Father hard to get along with--Royal imaginations--Kings cursing
+ other kings--Poverty and pretense--Piety that makes children
+ suffer--Up at five to pray on cold stones--Chilblains and prayer.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _March 11, 1893_.
+
+It occurs to me that, if this is intended as a record of my
+life--somewhat after the fashion of the _Margravine_ of Bayreuth's
+Memoirs--I ought to tell about my girlhood.
+
+Let me admit at once that my marriage to the Crown Prince of Saxony was,
+politically speaking, a stroke of good luck. My father, the Grand-duke
+of Tuscany, had been deprived of land and crown ten years before I was
+born, and, though he likes to pose as a sovereign, he is, as a matter of
+fact, a mere private gentleman of limited resources, whom the head of
+the family, the Austrian Emperor, may coax or browbeat at his sweet
+pleasure. If papa had been able to save his thronelet, I have no doubt
+he would be a most agreeable man, open-handed and eager to enjoy life,
+but instead of making the best of a situation over which he has no
+control, he is forever fretting about his lost dignities and about "his
+dear people" that don't care a snap for his love and affection. This
+makes him a trying person to get along with,--mention a king or prince
+in the full enjoyment of power, and father gets melancholy and calls
+Victor Emanuel, the second of his name, a brigand.
+
+He seldom or never visits his _confreres_ in the capitals of Europe, but
+when I was a girl our gloomy palace at Salzburg saw much of the ghosts
+of decaying royalty. The Dukes of Modena and Parma, the King of Hanover,
+the _Kurfurst_ of Hesse, the King of Naples and other monarchs and
+toy-monarchs that were handed their walking papers by sovereigns
+mightier than themselves, visited us off and on, filling the air with
+lamentations and cursing their fate.
+
+And, like papa, all these _ex'es_ are ready to fly out of their very
+skins the moment they notice the smallest breach of etiquette concerning
+their august selves. If they had the power, the Imperial Highnesses
+would execute any man that called them "Royal Highness," while the Royal
+Highnesses would be pleased to send to the gallows persons addressing
+them as "Highness" only.
+
+And papa has other troubles, and the greatest of them, lack of money.
+Poverty in private life must be hard enough, but a poor king, obliged to
+keep up the pretense of a court, is to be pitied indeed.
+
+Add to what I have said, father's share of domestic unhappiness. Mother
+is a Bourbon of Parma, serious-minded and hard like my father-in-law,
+and almost as much of a religious fanatic.
+
+Oh, how we children suffered by the piety of our mother. There were
+eight of us, myself the oldest of five girls, and seven years older than
+my sister Anna. Yet this baby, as soon as she could walk, was obliged to
+rise, like myself, at five o'clock summer and winter to go to the chapel
+and pray. The chapel was lighted only by a few wax candles and, of
+course, was unheated like the corridors of the palace. And like them it
+was paved with stones. Many a chilblain I carried away from kneeling on
+those granite flags.
+
+And the stupidity of the thing! Instead of saying our prayers we
+murmured and protested, and as soon as we were old enough we slipped
+portions of novels in our prayer-books, which we read while mass was
+said. That trick was not unfraught with danger though, for mother's
+spies were always after us, and the bad light made reading difficult.
+
+I am sure that if mother had found us out, she would have whipped us
+within an inch of our lives.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+A FIERCE DISCIPLINARIAN
+
+ Diamonds used to punish children--Face object of attacks--Grunting
+ and snorting at the royal table--Blood flowing at dinner--My brother
+ jumps out of a window.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _April 1, 1893_.
+
+Nothing of consequence happened since my last entry, and I continue the
+story of my girlhood.
+
+Her Imperial Highness, my pious mother, had a terrible way of punishing
+her children. The face of the culprit was invariably the object of her
+attacks. She hit us with the flat of her bony hand, rendered more
+terrible by innumerable rings. The sharp diamonds cut into the flesh and
+usually made the blood flow freely.
+
+The court chaplain at Salzburg was a peasant's boy without manners or
+breeding of any kind. While the least violation of etiquette or
+politeness on the children's part was punished by a box on the ear, or
+by withholding the next meal, mother overlooked the swinishness of the
+chaplain simply because he wore a black coat.
+
+One of the chaplain's most offensive habits was to grunt and snort when
+eating. On one occasion my brother Leopold gave a somewhat exaggerated
+imitation of these disgusting practices at table, whereupon mother,
+blind with fury, for she thought a priest could do no wrong, struck
+Leopold in the face, causing the blood to gush from his lacerated cheek.
+
+Father immediately rose from table and savagely turning upon mother
+said, "Understand, Madame, that as a sovereign and head of the family I
+will have no one punished in my presence. If I think punishment
+necessary, I will inflict it myself in a dignified way."
+
+Mother immediately began to cry. She always had a flood of tears ready
+when father offered the slightest reprimand. Afterwards she upbraided
+father and us, the children. If it were not for her incessant prayers,
+she said, and for the Christian life she was leading, God would have
+destroyed the Tuscans long ago, and she wasn't sure that either of us
+would attain Paradise except for her intercession with the Almighty.
+
+This and similar scenes and incidents disgusted me with religion early
+in life. Myself and all my brothers and sisters hated the very sight of
+the court chaplain who licked our mother's boots, while heaping
+punishments and indignities upon us.
+
+At one time my brother Leopold didn't know his catechism. "I will teach
+your Imperial Highness to skip your lessons," said the court chaplain.
+"Kneel before me and read the passage over ten times as a punishment."
+
+Leopold promptly answered: "I won't."
+
+"Yes, you will, Imperial Highness, for such are my orders," cried the
+court chaplain.
+
+Leopold said doggedly, "I kneel before the altar and before the Emperor,
+if he demands it, not before such as you."
+
+"Suppose I call on your Imperial Highness's mother and ask her to forbid
+you to mount a horse for a month or so?" queried our tormentor.
+
+Horseback riding was Leopold's chief pleasure, and the chaplain had no
+sooner launched his threat, when Leopold opened the window and
+apparently jumped out. As the school-room was situated in the third
+story, the teacher thought his pupil dead on the pavement below, but
+Leopold was merely hanging on to the stone coping and shutters. That
+gave him the whip hand over the teacher. "I will let go if you don't
+promise not to inform mother," demanded the twelve-year-old boy.
+
+"I promise, only come in," moaned the teacher.
+
+"Promise furthermore there shall be no punishment whatever for what I
+did and said."
+
+"None whatever, your Imperial Highness."
+
+"Swear it on the cross."
+
+The chaplain did as ordered and Leopold crawled back to safety.
+
+Leopold is a good deal like me, and has been in hot water more or less
+all his life.
+
+When I was a girl of fifteen, he defended my honor at the risk of the
+fearful punishments my mother had in store for those children that
+wouldn't buckle down to the chaplain, but that is so sad a chapter of my
+girlhood days I cannot bring myself to put it down today.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+LEOPOLD DEFENDS MY HONOR AT HIS PERIL
+
+ Punished for objecting to familiarities--Awful names I was
+ called--Locked in the room with wicked teacher--Defend myself with
+ burning lamp--My brother nearly kills my would-be assailant.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _April 2, 1893_.
+
+I want to finish with evil recollections. Maybe I will be able to forget
+them, when I have done with this narrative. My mother, as pointed out,
+had more confidence in our rascally court chaplain than in her own
+children, and was far more concerned about the chaplain's dignity than
+ours. She never hesitated to doubt her children's veracity, but regarded
+all the chaplain said as gospel truth.
+
+About two weeks before Easter, 1885, the time when I was just budding
+into young womanhood, the chaplain began to pay me a great deal of
+attention. The lessons he gave me to learn were insignificant compared
+with those of my brothers and sisters, and it mattered not whether I
+came to school prepared or otherwise. The strict disciplinarian had all
+of a sudden turned lenient. He began to pat my hair, to give me friendly
+taps on the shoulder, and never took his eyes off me. I was too young
+and innocent to see the true significance of his strange behavior, but
+I woke up suddenly and ran crying to my mother, telling her what had
+happened.
+
+"I won't take another lesson from that man, unless my lady-in-waiting is
+present," I sobbed.
+
+"You are a malicious, lying, low-minded creature," hissed my mother, at
+the same time striking me in the face with her big diamonds. "It's
+mortal sin to throw suspicion on so holy a man, and I will not have him
+watched."
+
+I ran out of mother's room crying, intending to go to papa, but met the
+boys in the corridor, who told me that father had just departed for the
+chase. Then I took Leopold aside and told him everything. He was
+half-mad with rage and was hardly able to articulate when he rushed to
+mother's room demanding protection for me.
+
+"I will protect the holy man instead," answered my fanatic mother.
+"Louise shall be locked in the room with the chaplain while she has her
+lesson." And my mother actually carried out that wicked design inspired
+by fanaticism.
+
+Locked in a room with me, the chaplain was sweetness itself, but for a
+while at least remained at a distance. When he attempted to approach me,
+I seized the burning kerosene lamp, as Leopold had advised.
+
+"One step more," I cried excitedly, "and I will throw the lamp in your
+face."
+
+The coward stood still in his tracks, and began whispering to me in a
+hoarse voice things I hardly understood, but that nevertheless wounded
+me to the quick. I kept my hand at the burning lamp during the whole
+hour and was ready to faint when the fiend at last left me.
+
+As the door opened, I saw Leopold standing outside, an enormous dog whip
+in hand. Without a word he applied the whip to the chaplain's broad
+face, lashing him right and left. The scoundrel offered no resistance,
+but fled like the dog he was, Leopold after him through the long
+corridors, upstairs and downstairs, through the picture gallery and the
+state apartments, lashing him as he ran, the two of them filling the
+palace with cries of rage and pain. Only the fact that Leopold stumbled
+over a footstool, enabled the chaplain to reach his room alive, where he
+barricaded himself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+PRINCES AND PRINCESSES DANCE TO THE TUNE OF THE WHIP
+
+ The result shows in the character of rulers--Why English kings and
+ princes are superior to the Continental kind--Leopold's awful
+ revenge--Mother acts the tigress--Her mailed fist--"I forbid Your
+ Imperial Highness to see that dog."
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _April 21, 1893_.
+
+If my Diary ever fell into plebeian hands, I suppose such stories as the
+above would be branded as rank exaggerations.
+
+A Queen endangering life and health of her children by a form of
+punishment otherwise known only in the prize ring.
+
+An Imperial Highness using her diamonds to graft scars on the cheeks of
+a little girl!
+
+Royal children beaten worse than dogs, deprived of sleep, subjected to
+cold and damp and, withal, given over, bound hand and foot, so to speak,
+to the tender mercies of low-minded, unworthy, and even dangerous
+persons without manners or education.
+
+And, to cap the climax, a Royal maid in the first blush of budding
+womanhood grossly repulsed and physically attacked when she appeals to
+her mother for protection; that child locked in a room with her would-be
+ravisher and obliged to defend her honor by a threat of murder.
+
+Only the uninitiated--men and women living outside the pale of royal
+courts--will deem such things impossible. Let me tell these happy
+ignoramuses that all through the nineteenth century the princes and
+princesses of Europe were brought up to the tune of the whip and of
+physical and mental humiliation. It was the fashion.
+
+The only eminent monarch of the immediate past--Frederick the Great--was
+all but flayed alive by his father when a boy and young man,--emulate
+the second King of Prussia's brutalities and your offspring will be
+destined for greatness, argued princes.
+
+The first Emperor William of Germany had a gentle mother, my famous
+namesake; he was always a gentleman. The Russian Czars, Paul, Nicholas
+I, and Alexander III, were brought up with the knout, their preceptors
+used the boys at their sweet pleasure. The first turned out a madman;
+the second a brute; the third his people's executioner.
+
+Czar Paul would run a mile to cane a soldier who had a speck of dust on
+his boots. My grand-uncle, Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria, sometimes
+travels tens of miles to box the ears of a member of his family.
+
+Francis Joseph had a cruel bringing up.
+
+At the Royal Library in Berlin I saw the manuscript of _Les Memoires de
+ma vie: la princesse de Prusse, Frederice Sophie Wilhelmine, qui epousa
+le Margrave de Bayreuth_,--the original, unedited save by the
+corrections of the authoress. A good many passages of this "most
+terrible indictment of royalty" reminded me of home. There is even a
+parallel, or a near-parallel, of my own case just recorded. The Princess
+Wilhelmina's all-powerful governess was Madame Leti, who pummelled the
+child "as if she had been her mother." This Leti was undoubtedly a
+Sadist; to inflict torture, to practice refined cruelties was a joy to
+her. Not content with whipping the little girl, she added, shortly
+before her dismissal, some poisonous matter to Wilhelmina's wash water
+"that gnawed the skin and made my face all coppery and inflamed my
+eyes." This species of wickedness, at last, resulted in the discharge of
+Leti, "but she decided to leave me a few souvenirs in the shape of
+fisticuffs and kicks. She had told my mother that I was suffering from
+nose bleed and punched my nose whenever she was unobserved. During the
+last week of her stay at the palace I sometimes bled like an ox, and my
+arms and legs were blue, green and yellow from her kicks and cuffs. I am
+sure if she could have broken my legs with impunity, she would not have
+hesitated a moment to do so."
+
+History and the court gossip of the day afford plenty of precedents for
+what happened to me and my brothers and sisters in Salzburg. Indeed,
+Prince Albert, Consort of the late Queen Victoria, was the only royal
+father of the first half of the century that used the rod in moderation.
+To my mind that is one of the reasons why English kings and princes are
+so far superior to the Continental kind.
+
+But to return to Salzburg.
+
+Leopold had it all his own way for a quarter of an hour, as none of the
+servants would interfere in favor of the hated chaplain and mother was
+engaged in her oratory in a far away part of the castle. So my brother
+kicked in the door and went for the cowering brute again, raining
+stripes on every part of his bloated body, alternately using the whip
+and the whip-end. Undoubtedly Leopold would have killed him then and
+there if his boy's strength had not given out. He left him more dead
+than alive, bleeding and moaning.
+
+I will never forget the spectacle when Leopold came down the stairs
+after leaving the chaplain's room. I and my brothers and sisters were
+huddled together behind our ladies in the blue ante-chamber. A dozen or
+more lackeys stood in the corridor, whispering.
+
+Leopold's face was deathly pale as he descended the stairs, and blood
+was dripping from his whip, reddening the white linen runners
+protecting the carpet. He wore his army uniform, that should have saved
+him from violence at any rate. At that moment I prayed my sincerest that
+father would come home. I would have thrown myself on my knees and told
+everything, servants or no servants. But mother came instead.
+
+She was fully informed and she sprang upon poor Leopold like a tigress,
+knocking him from one end of the corridor to the other with her
+diamond-mailed fist. It was terrible, and all of us children cried aloud
+with terror. But the more we cried and the more we begged for mercy, the
+harder were the blows mother rained upon poor Leopold's face and head.
+His blood spattered over the white enameled banisters and doors until
+finally he was dragged out of my mother's clutches by an old footman who
+placed his broad back between the Imperial Highness and her victim.
+
+Now, it was the rule in our house that the whipped child had to ask our
+mother's forgiveness for putting her to the trouble of wielding the
+terrible back of her hand.
+
+Six weeks Leopold stayed at Salzburg after the scene described, and
+daily my mother urged him to beg her forgiveness. The boy stood
+stockstill on these occasions, never twitching a muscle of his face and
+never saying a word in reply. During all these six weeks he waited on
+mother morning, noon and night, according to ceremony, but never a word
+escaped him, never did he look in her direction unless actually forced
+to do so. He played the deaf and dumb to perfection.
+
+Father must have thought that Leopold got enough punishment, for he
+never mentioned the matter to him and forbade the servants to even
+allude to the court chaplain. Mother, on her part, placed the chaplain
+in charge of two skilled surgeons and sent every little while to inquire
+how he was doing.
+
+On the third day she said to my father at table, that she was going to
+pay a visit to the court chaplain.
+
+"I forbid your Imperial Highness to see that dog," said my father in an
+icy voice that brooked no reply. "I will have his carcass thrown out of
+here as soon as his condition permits."
+
+That was the only time I heard father speak like a sovereign and man.
+
+That Leopold nearly killed the scoundrel, as he promised to do, is
+evident from the fact that the court chaplain lay in the castle three
+weeks before he could be transported to a monastery. Some monks--for
+none of the servants would lend a helping hand--carried him away by
+night and none of the children ever saw or heard of our tormentor again.
+
+The only sorry reminder of the episode is the estrangement of Leopold
+and our mother. Though mother tried her hardest to win back the boy's
+confidence and affection, he remained an iceberg towards her,
+ceremonious but cold, polite but wholly indifferent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+PLANNING TO GET A HUSBAND FOR ME
+
+ Dissecting possible wooers at Vienna--Royalty after money, not
+ character--"He is a Cohen, not a Coburg"--Prince who looked like a
+ Jew counter-jumper in his Sunday best--Balkan princes tabooed by
+ Francis Joseph--A good time for the girls--Army men commanded to
+ attend us.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _April 25, 1893_.
+
+A change of scene. I was eighteen and my parents were anxious to get a
+husband for me. Royalty marries off its princes at an early age to keep
+them out of mischief; its princesses as soon as a profitable suitor
+turns up or can be secured by politics, diplomacy, the exercise of
+parental wits or the powerful influence of the head of the House.
+
+Sister Anna, now Princess John of Hohenlohe, myself and mother were
+invited to Vienna. It was my introduction to royal pomp and
+circumstance. The _Hofburg_, our town lodging, seemed to me the first
+and also the last cry in sumptuousness--all that was beautiful and
+expensive in days gone by is there, and all that is new and desirable is
+there, too; Schoenbrunn, the Imperial summer residence, is a dream of
+loveliness wedded to grandeur. Between the Emperor and my mother and
+between her and the numerous archduchesses and archdukes every second
+word uttered referred to me as the possible wife of someone or another.
+And that someone was well dissected as to fortune, success in life and
+political exigencies.
+
+Whether he was good-looking or a monkey in face and figure mattered not.
+Health, good character, uprightness didn't count.
+
+Has he expectations for gaining a throne? Will he be wise enough to
+retain that throne? What kind of an establishment will he be able to set
+up? How long may his parents live, hanging on to the family
+fortune?--These were the only considerations deemed worthy of
+discussion.
+
+Three or four of the archduchesses seemed to be acting as marriage
+brokers for Ferdinand, just elected hereditary prince of Bulgaria, whose
+mother, Princess Clementine, a daughter of the dethroned King Louis
+Philippe of France, was reputed to be rolling in gold.
+
+Leopold irreverently called Ferdinand's partisans "_Fillons_" after
+famous "_La Fillon_," who supplied the harem of our jolly ancestor, the
+Regent of France, Duke of Orleans, and he insisted that Ferdinand was a
+_Cohen_, not a Coburg. As a matter of fact, Ferdinand's great fortune is
+derived from a Kohary, which is Hungarian for Cohen. The original Kohary
+was a cattle-dealer, who supplied the armies of the Allies during the
+Napoleonic wars. In this way he accumulated so much wealth that an
+impoverished Coburg prince fell in love with his daughter and made her
+his wife, after she exchanged the name of Rebecca for Antonie and the
+Mosaic faith for that of Rome.
+
+Young and proud and flippant as I was, Leopold's talk filled me with
+hearty contempt for the "Coburger" long before we were introduced. And
+as to his ambassador, who was forever dancing attendance upon me, I
+hated him. Yet the Imperial "_Fillons_" kept up their clatter, and one
+fine morning Prince Ferdinand was announced.
+
+He wasn't half bad looking, but struck me as too much of a mother's-boy.
+Princess Clementine seemed to decide everything for him. Anyhow, I
+wouldn't have him and he marched off again.
+
+I next reviewed, as another Balkan matrimonial possibility, Prince
+Danilo of Montenegro, a small, thin person, looking like a Jew
+counter-jumper in holiday dress--Vienna "store-clothes."
+
+Danilo spoke the worst _table d'hote_ French I ever heard in my life,
+and I told mother I would rather marry a rich banker than this crowned
+idiot. For once she agreed with me and said his father was only a
+"mutton-thief," anyhow.
+
+Finally there was talk of King Alexander of Servia, six years younger
+than I. Queen Natalie, who a few days ago celebrated one of her several
+reunions with ex-King Milan, spoke feelingly of her "Sasha" to mother,
+lauding him as the best of sons and the most promising of sovereigns,
+but the oft-divorced Majesty was less communicative when mother asked
+how many millions she would pass over to Alexander on his marriage day.
+That settled "Sasha's" ambitions as far as my hand was concerned. Marry
+a Balkan King and the _nee_ Keshko holding the purse-strings! Not for my
+father's daughter! I didn't want to marry into a Russian Colonel's
+family, anyhow. I believe Queen Natalie's father was a colonel, or was
+he only a lieutenant-colonel?
+
+These marriage negotiations aside, Anna and myself had a mighty good
+time in Vienna (I forgot to say that Emperor Francis Joseph agreed with
+me that Danilo and Alexander were quite impossible and that henceforth
+Balkan marriages should be taboo).
+
+"I have ordered a dozen young officers to report for tonight's dancing,"
+said my Imperial uncle one evening. "Select from among them your tennis
+partners, girls." Baron Cambroy of the Guards was my choice, and a
+mighty handsome fellow he is. He seemed pleased when I commanded him to
+tennis duty every afternoon during our stay. He is tall and spare in
+appearance and I might have fallen in love with him sooner, but for his
+dark skin. I am an Italian and, by way of contrast, prefer blondes to
+any other sort of man.
+
+Anna, myself and our ladies bicycled to the tennis court every
+afternoon, and on our way back to the castle were escorted by the Baron
+and the other officers.
+
+Trust a girl with a dress reaching an inch below her knees to find out
+scandals! On the second day after our meeting with the Baron, Anna told
+me that he was the lover of Draga Maschin, lady-in-waiting to Queen
+Natalie of Servia.[4]
+
+Draga was in attendance upon Queen Natalie when she called on us, a
+beautiful girl, somewhat too full-bosomed for an unmarried one, like my
+great-aunt, Catharine, who became the wife of that upstart, Jerome
+Napoleon. At home we have her picture, and mother, who was rather skinny
+as a girl, never failed to point out that it was painted before Queen
+Catharine's marriage, despite her voluptuous bust.
+
+If my Baron was really Draga's beloved, that would more than half
+explain mother's puzzle.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 4: The same who afterwards became the Queen of King Alexander
+of Servia and eventually the cause of his death and of the extinction of
+the Obrenovitsch dynasty. Alexander and Draga were both slaughtered in
+their beds May 29, 1903, ten years after the above was written.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+LOVE-MAKING
+
+ The fascinating Baron--The man's audacity--Putting the question
+ boldly--Real love-making--_Risque_ stories for royalty.
+
+
+ CASTLE WACHWITZ, _May 1, 1893_.
+
+I am in love but, like a prudent virgin, I admitted the fact to myself
+only shortly before we departed for Salzburg. After I put several
+hundred miles between me and my fascinating Baron, all's well again.
+
+My first love, and it was the man's audacity that won the day!
+
+Imagine an Imperial Highness, decidedly attractive, eighteen, and no
+tigress by any means, wheeling at the side of a mere lieutenant who has
+nothing but his pay to bless himself with and nothing but good looks to
+recommend him. And, as before stated, he wasn't even my style.
+
+Anna pedalled ahead some twenty-five paces; our ladies wheezed and
+snorted that many behind. This devil of a lieutenant took a chance.
+
+"Imperial Highness," he commenced, "I wager you don't know what love
+is."
+
+It was the one theme I was aching for, scenting, as I did, the odor of
+forbidden things. Never before had I the opportunity.
+
+"R-e-a-l love," he insisted.
+
+"Do you blame me?" I asked, vixen-like. "Would be a poor specimen of
+Guard officer who didn't know more about real love than a mere girl of
+eighteen and a princess at that."
+
+"Will your Imperial Highness allow me to explain?" This, oh so
+insinuatingly, from the gay seducer.
+
+"Why not?" I asked, with the air of a _roue_ and hating myself for
+blushing like a poppy--I felt it.
+
+"Charmed to enlighten you--with your Imperial Highness's permission,"
+whispered the Baron, his knee crowding mine as he drew nearer on his
+wheel.
+
+"Explain away."
+
+"Not until I have your Imperial Highness's express command and your
+promise not to get angry if I should offend."
+
+Anna, always an _enfant terrible_ and invariably in the way, was waiting
+for us in the shadow of a tree and now rode by the Baron's side. She had
+evidently heard part of our conversation.
+
+"Permission and pardon granted beforehand," she cried. "Go ahead."
+
+The Baron looked at me, and not to be outdone by the parcel of
+impudence in short petticoats, I said carelessly: "Oh, tell. I command."
+
+The Baron began to stroke his moustache and then related a story of
+Napoleon and our ancestress Marie Louise, the Austrian Archduchess, not
+found in school books.
+
+On the day before her entry into Paris, he said, and when they were
+destined to meet for the first time, Napoleon waylaid his bride-to-be at
+Courcelles and without ceremony entered her carriage. They rushed past
+villages, through towns _en fete_ and at last, at nine o'clock in the
+evening, reached the palace of Compiegne. There the Emperor cut short
+the addresses of welcome, presentations and compliments, and taking
+Marie Louise by the hand conducted her to his private apartments. Next
+morning they had breakfast in bed. The marriage ceremony took place a
+few days later.
+
+"That's love," said the Baron, shooting significant glances at me.
+
+"Henry _Quatre_ did the same to Marie de Medici--an Italian like you,
+Imperial Highness."
+
+Anna didn't know what to make of it, and as for me, my tongue stuck to
+the roof of my mouth.
+
+The impudent fellow seems to have misinterpreted our silence, for,
+brazen like the _Duc de_ Richelieu, who boasted of sleeping in the beds
+of queens, he continued:
+
+"Catharine the Great, too, knew what love was. One fine afternoon when
+she wasn't a day older than you, Imperial Highness, she looked out of
+the window of her room at Castle Peterhof. In the garden below a
+sentinel, very handsome, very Herculean, very brave, was pacing up and
+down. Catharine, then Imperial Grand-duchess and only just married, made
+a sign to the soldier. The giant, abandoning his rifle, jumped below the
+window and Catharine jumped onto his shoulders from the second story.
+
+"That's real love," concluded the Baron.
+
+Anna got frightened and fled down the avenue, but I had the weakness to
+remain at the Baron's side until we reached the palace.
+
+Alas, Frederick Augustus wasn't as good a talker as the Baron.
+
+[Illustration: FREDERICK AUGUSTUS, REIGNING KING OF SAXONY
+
+Louise's Ex-Husband]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+MY POPULARITY RENDERS GEORGE DYSPEPTIC
+
+ The Cudgel-Majesty--Prince George's intrigues--No four-horse coach
+ for Princess--Popular demonstration in my favor--"All-highest"
+ displeasure.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _September 1, 1893_.
+
+I haven't lived up to my promise to keep a daily record, or even a
+weekly one. Those tales of my girlhood days disgusted me with diary
+keeping as far as my early experiences at home went and I reflected that
+many of the subsequent happenings in my life might be safer in the
+shrine of memory, than spread over the pages of a blank-book, even
+though no one sees it and I carry its golden key on a chain around my
+neck.
+
+We are back in the capital now and things are moving. Great doings had
+been planned for our reception, for the re-entry of the little prince,
+my baby, and his mother who is expected to give another child to Saxony
+at the end of the year. Two babies in one year! I am going to beat the
+German Empress, and if Wilhelm doesn't send me a medal I will cut him
+dead the next time I see him!
+
+Well, about that reception. Flags, triumphal arches, speeches by the
+burgo-master, white-robed virgins at the station and all that sort of
+thing!
+
+But Father-in-law George said "no." Anything that gives joy to others
+goes against his royal grain, gives him politico-economic dyspepsia. He
+doesn't want me to be popular,--neither me, nor Frederick Augustus, nor
+the baby.
+
+George will be the next king, and if the Dresdeners or the Saxons want
+to "_Hoch the King_," they must "_Hoch_" George. They MUST. "It's their
+damned duty," says George the Pious, who never blasphemes on his own
+account, but allows himself some license concerning his subjects. His
+attitude recalls the story told of Frederick William the First of
+Prussia, whose appearance on the streets of Berlin used to cause
+passers-by to run to save their back. Upon one occasion His Majesty
+caught one of these fugitives, and whacking him over the head with his
+Spanish reed, cried angrily: "What do you want to run away from me for?"
+
+"Because I'm afraid of your Royal Majesty," stuttered the poor devil.
+
+"Afraid?" thundered Frederick William, giving the fellow another whack
+with his cane. "Afraid?"--the beating continuing--"when I, your King,
+commanded you to love me. Love me, you miserable coward, love God's
+Anointed." And the loving Majesty broke his cane on the unloving
+subject's back.
+
+Two days before our arrival Prince George sent his adjutant, Baron de
+Metsch-Reichenbeck, to the Mayor of Dresden, stopping all reception
+arrangements contemplated.
+
+To have children was a mere picnic to Her Imperial Highness, lied
+George's messenger,--if the physicians hadn't used chloroform I would
+have perished with the torture. Ovations intended as a sort of reward or
+recognition of my services to the country, then, would be entirely out
+of place, and must not be thought of.
+
+The municipality thereupon officially abandoned preparations. I was a
+little vexed when I first heard about George's meanness, yet again felt
+tickled that he went out of his way to intrigue against me, the despised
+little princess of a House that ceased to reign. And I had an idea that
+the Dresdeners would give us a good welcome anyhow.
+
+I had contemplated ordering my special train to leave in the early
+morning or at noon, but the Ministry of Railways informed me that it was
+impossible to accommodate me at the hours mentioned.
+
+"We will take the ordinary express, then, and will be in Dresden at four
+in the afternoon," I suggested.
+
+"According to the new schedule, the express doesn't stop in Dresden,"
+protested Frederick Augustus.
+
+"We will command it to stop," I cried.
+
+Frederick Augustus looked at me as if I had asked him to borrow twenty
+marks from the Kaiser. "For God's sake!" he cried, "don't you know what
+happened to John the other day?"
+
+I confessed my ignorance.
+
+"Well," said Frederick Augustus, "John ordered the Continental express
+to pick him up at his garrison, and he had no sooner arrived in Dresden
+than he was commanded by the King to appear before him. His Majesty
+walked all over John, accusing him of 'interfering with international
+traffic' and forbidding him to issue another order of that character."
+
+"Pshaw!" I said, "John is merely a childless princeling. I am the mother
+of Saxony's future king. The regeneration, the perpetuation of your race
+depends on me."
+
+It was a mere waste of breath, for at that moment came a telegram,
+announcing that our special was billed to leave at 3:30, getting us to
+Dresden at half-past five--King's orders.
+
+"Did you command the _Daumont_ coach-and-four to meet us at the
+station?" I asked.
+
+"My dear child, you are dreaming," replied Frederick Augustus. "The
+State carriages are the property of the Crown and we don't own a
+four-horse team in Dresden. They will send the ordinary royal carriage,
+I suppose."
+
+I was mad enough to wish my husband's family to Hades, the whole lot of
+them, but the people of Dresden took revenge in hand and dealt most
+liberally. Of course, having fixed our arrival at a late and unusual
+hour, George expected there would be no one to welcome us, but the great
+concourse of people that actually assembled at the station and in the
+adjacent streets, lining them up to the palace gates, was tremendous
+instead.
+
+One more disappointment. George had sent an inconspicuous, narrow
+_coupe_ to the station,--the Dresdeners shouldn't see more than the
+point of my nose. I saw through his scheme the moment I clapped eyes on
+that mouse-trap of a vehicle standing at the curb.
+
+And then I remembered the brilliant stagecraft of August the Physical
+Strong--he of the three hundred and fifty-two--and how he always managed
+to focus everybody's eyes on himself. And I stood stockstill on the
+broad, red-carpeted terrace when I walked out of the waiting room and
+held up my baby in the face of the multitude. You could hear the
+"_Hochs_" and Hurrahs all over town, they said. Hats flew in the air,
+handkerchiefs waved, flags were thrust out of the windows of the houses.
+
+"What are you doing, Imperial Highness?" whispered _Fraeulein von_
+Schoenberg, my lady-in-waiting.
+
+"Never mind, I will carry the baby to the carriage," I answered curtly.
+
+"But the King and Prince George will be angry,--everything will be
+reported to them."
+
+"I sincerely hope it will," I said.
+
+And before I entered that petty _souriciere_ of a royal coach, I danced
+the baby above my head time and again, giving everybody a chance to see
+him. And as I stood there in the midst of this tumult of applause, this
+waving sea of good-will, this thunder of jubilation, I felt proud and
+happy as I never did before. And when the thought struck me how mad
+George would feel about it all, I had to laugh outright.
+
+I was still grinning to myself when I heard Frederick Augustus's
+troubled voice: "Get in, what are you standing around here for?"--These
+manifestations of popularity spelt "all-highest" displeasure to him,
+poor noodle. He anticipated the scene at the palace, George fuming and
+charging "play to the gallery," the Queen in tears, the King threatening
+to banish us from Dresden.
+
+"Be it so," I said to myself, "we might as well be hanged for a sheep as
+a lamb." And I refused to enter the carriage until I had waved and
+smiled profound thanks to everybody in the square and in the windows and
+on the balconies of the surrounding houses.
+
+I saw the Master of Horse address the coachman and immediately divined
+his purpose. So I pulled at the rope and commanded the coachman to drive
+slowly. I said it in my most imperious manner, and the Master of Horse
+dared not give the counter order with which Prince George had charged
+him. Poor man, his failure to subordinate my will to his, or George's,
+cost him his job.
+
+And so we made our royal entry into Dresden amid popular rejoicings. I
+glued my face to the carriage window and smiled and smiled and showed
+the baby to everyone who asked for the boon.
+
+Baby took it all in a most dignified fashion. He neither squalled nor
+kicked, but seemed to enjoy the homage paid him.
+
+When we reached the palace there was another big crowd of well-wishers,
+who shouted themselves hoarse for Louise and the baby, and, malicious
+thing that I am, I noticed with pleasure that it all happened under
+George's windows.
+
+"This will give father-in-law jaundice," said baby's nurse in Italian.
+She is a girl from Tuscany and very devoted to me.
+
+"If he dies, I will be Queen the sooner," thought I,--but happily I
+didn't think aloud.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+SCOLDED FOR BEING POPULAR
+
+ Entourage spied upon by George's minions--My husband proves a
+ weakling--I disavow the personal compliment--No more intelligent
+ than a king should be.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _September 5, 1893_.
+
+I wrote the foregoing at one sitting, without interruption. It's not so
+easy a matter to put down the consequences of our triumph, or rather
+mine and baby's.
+
+When I entered my apartments, I met a whole host of long faces. The
+Commander of the Palace, in great gala, offered a most stiff and icy
+welcome. The adjutants, the chamberlains, the _maitre d'Hotel_, all
+looked ill at ease. They evidently felt the coming storm in their bones
+and didn't care to have it said of them, by George's spies, that they
+lent countenance, even in a most remote way, to my carryings-on. Even
+the Schoenberg--my own woman--shot reproachful glances at me when the
+Commander of the Palace happened to look her way.
+
+Frederick Augustus looked and acted as if he was to be deprived of all
+his military honors.
+
+"Your courage must have fallen into your _cuirassier_ boots, look for it
+there," I said to him in an undertone when he seemed ready to go to
+pieces at the entrance of the King's grand marshal, Count Vitzthum.
+
+With that I advanced towards His Excellency and, holding out my hand to
+be kissed, took care to say to him with my most winning smile,
+
+"I trust His Majesty will be pleased with me, for of course our grand
+reception was but a reflex of the love the people have for their King. I
+never for a moment took it as a personal compliment."
+
+My smart little speech disconcerted the official completely. Maybe he
+had orders to say something disagreeable, but my remark disarmed him,
+forestalled any quarrel that might have been in the King's or Prince
+George's mind.
+
+Frederick Augustus, who is no more intelligent than a future king should
+be, was so amazed, he had to think hard and long before he could even
+say "Good evening" to the Count. As for the latter, he hawed and coughed
+and stammered and cleared his throat until finally he succeeded in
+delivering himself of the following sublime effort:
+
+"I will have the honor to report to His Majesty that during the time of
+your Imperial Highness's entry, your Imperial Highness thought of
+naught but the all-highest approval of His Majesty."
+
+Whereupon I shook his hand again and dismissed him. "It will please me
+immensely, Count," I said, "immensely."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+ROYAL DISGRACE--LIGHTNING AND SHADOWS
+
+ Ordered around by the Queen--Give thanks to a bully--Jealous of the
+ "mob's" applause--"The old monkey after '_Hochs_'"--Criticizing the
+ "old man"--Royalty's plea for popularity--Proposed punishments for
+ people refusing to love royalty.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _September 8, 1893_.
+
+Thrice twenty-four hours of royal disgrace and I am--alive. This
+morning: "All-highest order," signed by Her Majesty's Dame of the
+Palace, Countess von Minckwitz: "The Queen is graciously pleased to
+invite your Imperial Highness to audience."
+
+Of course her pleasure is a command. I dressed in state and ordered all
+the ladies and gentlemen of my court to attend me to the royal chambers.
+
+Queen Carola was very nice, giving the impression that she would be more
+lovely still if she dared.
+
+"Prince George has just commanded your husband," she said,--"the King
+ordered this condescension on my brother-in-law's part. You will have to
+thank him for it."
+
+Isn't it amusing to be an Imperial Highness and a Crown Princess to be
+ordered around like a "boots" and to be "commanded" like an orphan
+child to say thanks to one's betters!
+
+I promised and the Queen, assuming that I intended to act the good
+little girl, took courage to say--for she is the biggest of
+cowards--"You are too popular, Louise. Such a reception as you had! All
+the papers, even the Jew-sheets, are full of it."
+
+And before I could make any excuses for my popularity she added in
+sorrowful, half-accusing tones: "I lived here ever so many years and the
+mob never applauded _me_."
+
+"It's so fickle," I quoted. I had to say something, you know.
+
+"And contemptible," added the Queen heartily. "But how is baby?"
+
+I begged permission to send for him. Her Majesty was pleased to play
+with the little one for a minute or two and that secured me a gracious
+exit. The Queen attended me to the door, opening it with her own royal
+hand, thereby rehabilitating me with my entourage waiting outside.
+
+Meanwhile Frederick Augustus had a "critical quarter of an hour" with
+father-in-law, who assumed to speak on behalf of the King.
+
+"The King," he said, "despised 'playing to the gallery' worse than the
+devil hated holy water." (This court is overrun with Jesuits, and we
+must needs adopt their vernacular.)
+
+The King, he repeated, thought it very bad taste for anyone to take the
+centre of the stage in these "popularity-comedies," and he told a lot
+more lies of the same character. Then he bethought himself of his own
+grieved authority.
+
+"Tell your wife," he said, "that I, her father-in-law, and next to the
+throne, do everything in my power to escape such turbulent scenes, and
+that I would rather ride about town in an ordinary _Droschke_ (cab) of
+the second class, preserving my incognito, than in a state carriage and
+be the object of popular acclamation."
+
+When Frederick Augustus repeated the above with the most solemn face in
+the world, I thought I would die with laughter and actually had to send
+for my tire-woman to let my corset out a few notches.
+
+"The old monkey," I cried--"as if he wasn't after '_Hochs_' morning,
+noon and night; as if he thought of anything else when he mounts a
+carriage or his horse."
+
+"You forget yourself, Louise," warned Frederick Augustus in the voice of
+an undertaker, and I really think he meant it. But I wasn't in the mood
+to be silenced.
+
+"And as if I didn't know that, like Kaiser Wilhelm, he keeps a record of
+towns and villages that were never honored by one of his visits,
+intending to make his ceremonial entry there at the first plausible
+opportunity."
+
+"It isn't true," insisted Frederick Augustus.
+
+Then I got angry. "It may be thought polite in the bosom of your family
+to call one another a liar," I retorted, "but don't you get into the
+habit of introducing those tap-room manners in the _menage_ of an
+Imperial Highness of Austria. I forbid it."
+
+And then I gave rein to some of the bitterness that had accumulated in
+my heart against the old man. Didn't I know that George was mad enough
+to quarrel with his dinner when, on his drives about town, he observed a
+single person refusing to salute him? And wasn't it a fact that the
+Socialists had combined never more to raise their hats to him just
+because he insisted on it? And wasn't that one of the reasons why the
+government was more hard on them than happened to be politic?
+
+"You mustn't say these things," pleaded Frederick Augustus.
+
+I pretended to melt. "May I not quote your father's own words?"
+
+"What my father says is always correct," replied the dutiful son.
+
+"Well, then, this is what he told House Minister von Seydowitz a couple
+of weeks ago: 'When I see one of these intending destroyers of the state
+and social order staring at me, hat on head and cigar in face, I doubly
+regret the good old times when kings and princes were at liberty to yank
+a scoundrel of that ilk to jail and immure him for life, giving him
+twenty-five stripes daily to teach him the desirableness of rendering
+unto Caesar that which is Caesar's.'"
+
+Frederick Augustus was holding his hands to his ears when I finished. He
+ran out and slammed the door behind him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+UNSPEAKABLE LITTLENESSES OF PETTY COURTS
+
+ Another quarrel with my husband--Personal attendant to a
+ corpse--Killing by pin pricks--The mythical three "_How art
+ thou's?_"--Unwanted sympathy from my inferiors--Pride of the
+ decapitated Queen of France is in me--Lovers not impossible--Court
+ to blame for them--My husband acts cowardly--Brutalizes my
+ household--I lock myself in.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _December 1, 1893_.
+
+I saved myself the trouble to record events for two or three months. I
+expect my child by the end of the year and, believing in prenatal
+influence, it would be a shame, I think, to poison the unborn baby's
+mind by dwelling on the unspeakable littlenesses that make up and burden
+life at this petty court.
+
+But I may die in the attempt of presenting Saxony with another candidate
+for appanages and honors, and this threat, hanging over every expectant
+mother, makes me take up my pen again. If I perish, let there be a
+record of my sufferings and also of my defiance.
+
+It turned out that the Queen's and George's apparent acquiescence to my
+sinful popularity marked the deceitful calm before the storm. Frederick
+Augustus has not succeeded in gaining the King's and his father's
+forgiveness even now. As a military officer he is shunted from pillar to
+post, and the generals and high officials of the court treat him like a
+recruit in disgrace. Of course he blames me, shouting that I wrecked his
+career.
+
+As if a future king need care a rap whether, as prince, he got a
+regiment a few months earlier or later.
+
+"When you are King," I sometimes say to him, "you may nominate yourself
+Field-Marshal-General and Great-Admiral above and below the sea--what do
+you care?"
+
+"It isn't the same," he moans. "I would like to have my patents signed
+by uncle or father."
+
+"Antedate your papers," I advised, "who dare dispute the king? Didn't
+the Kaiser nominate himself Adjutant-General to his grand-dad long after
+William I lay mouldering in Charlottenburg?"
+
+But Frederick Augustus takes colonel-ships and his petty kingship of the
+future too seriously to see even the humor of appointing oneself
+personal attendant to a corpse.
+
+As for me, if I weren't _enceinte_, they would send me to some
+lost-in-the-woods country house to die of _ennui_. But respect for
+public opinion forbidding drastic measures, George relies on a Russian
+expedient to humble my proud self and force me to submit to his
+meddling.
+
+In the Czar's country, when a village resolves on the death of some
+obnoxious individual, they take him, or her, and bind the body naked to
+a tree. Then several papers of pins are distributed among the
+inhabitants, and each man, woman and child is asked to put a pin in the
+lady or gentleman, whom they must approach blindfolded. They stick the
+pin wherever they touch the body and if the thing leaks out are able to
+swear by all the saints that they don't know where it struck. The pin
+pricking is continued until the obnoxious one expires amid awful
+tortures and, while all contributed to the murder, none can be hanged
+for it.
+
+In like manner George and his minions are trying to reduce me to the
+position of social and political corpse.
+
+Court festivities and public acts, attended by the court, seem to be
+specially arranged to pillorize me and husband. We are invited, of
+course. We are next in importance to Prince George. Our entourage is
+more numerous and more richly costumed than that of the other princes.
+Four horse coaches for us; Ministers of State waiting on us. I have
+train-bearers, pages, what-not.
+
+But the King and Prince George cut me and Frederick Augustus in sight of
+the whole court, of the public in fact!
+
+I don't mean to say that the "All-highest Lords," as they call
+themselves, treat us as air, or offer insult plain to the ear and
+eye--they couldn't afford to--nevertheless the stigma of royal disfavor
+is stamped on us. This is the mode of proceedings: Ceremony obliges the
+King to address each member of the royal family with the words: "How do
+you do?", in the German fashion, "_How art thou?_"
+
+To princes and princesses that are in disgrace, this momentous question
+is put only once. Those in good standing are asked three times.
+
+Ever since that September day when all Dresden did me honor, the King
+and Prince George have said "_How art thou's?_" to me and mine but once,
+whenever and wherever we met, and be sure there were always listeners to
+report the double omission.
+
+At first it amused me; then enraged me; I don't care a fig now. But
+Frederick Augustus! Poor imbecile, he is eating his heart out about
+those two missing "_How art thou's?_" and though he looks splendid in
+gala uniform he acts in the royal, but ungracious, presence like a green
+recruit expecting to be kicked and cuffed by his noncommissioned officer
+on getting back to the barracks.
+
+As to my entourage, it surrenders to royal disfavor even as Frederick
+Augustus: depressed faces, pitying glances. I could box their ears for
+their sympathy.
+
+Am I not the great-granddaughter of that mighty Maria Theresa that ruled
+Austria and Hungary with an iron hand, lined with velvet. "_Moriamur pro
+rege nostro_" (We will die for our King), cried the Hungarians, when she
+appealed to their chivalry, her new-born babe at her breast. "_Rege_,"
+not "_Regina_." They called her King. They forgot the woman in the
+monarch, yet I am treated like an insipid female always, never as the
+Crown Princess!
+
+Let them beware. My full name is Louise Marie Antoinette. I was named
+after the Marie Antoinette of history--another ancestor of mine--and the
+pride of the decapitated Queen of France is in me! My namesake was
+satisfied when she read the Saint-Antoine placard of June 25, 1791:
+"Whosoever insults Marie Antoinette shall be caned, whosoever applauds
+her shall be hanged." Some day I will dismiss the cattle that now grudge
+me the people's applause and punish those that insult me.
+
+Come to think of it, Marie Antoinette had not only pride and defiance,
+she had lovers too. Well, some day this Marie Antoinette may have
+lovers, and if it's wrong, let the recording angel debit my sins to the
+Saxon court.
+
+Thank God, I am blessed with that truly royal attribute, ability to
+dissimulate. "_Qui nescit dissimulare nescit regnare_" was all the Latin
+Charles VIII knew, yet he made a pretty successful king for one who died
+at the age of twenty-seven.
+
+I always act as if the King, and father-in-law George, had asked me not
+once, or three times, but a dozen times "_How art thou?_" I don't know
+anything about being in disgrace, I don't anticipate being snubbed and
+when I am snubbed I don't see it.
+
+The "all-highest Lord" looks daggers at me--I curtsy and smile!
+
+Father-in-law Prince George exhibits the visage of a poisoned pole-cat
+at my table--I congratulate him on his good digestion!
+
+Majesty pays no more attention to my presence than if I was a pillar, or
+a lackey; I greet him with my most devoted genuflections, rise from the
+carpet smiling all over the face and begin a frivolous conversation with
+the nearest man at hand, who in his fright acts as if he had taken an
+overdose of physic.
+
+If Frederick Augustus only had an inch of backbone, a pinch of ginger in
+his constitution! But he always stands around with a red face and the
+mien of a penitent. No dog, accustomed to daily beatings, follows his
+master's movements with more anxious looks than the Crown Prince of this
+realm bestows upon the goings and sayings of the King and Prince George.
+
+Then, as recompense for his royal feast of toads, he plays the tyrant at
+home. Jellyfish in the state apartments, a brute in our own and--on the
+drill grounds, I am told! He is always finding fault with the servants,
+and cares not whether he calls his Court Marshal, or a groom,
+"_Lausbub_." Poor Chamberlain von Tumpling earned that scurvy epithet
+the other day and he prides himself on being a nobleman and an army
+officer! Only this morning the prince roared and bellowed at one of my
+ladies, I thought she would have a stroke from righteous anger and
+vexation.
+
+When he attempted to address me in the same fashion, I simply turned my
+back on him, went into my boudoir and locked the door. I will keep him
+"guessing" for two days, sending for the court physician every little
+while.
+
+When he has to eat his meals alone and sleep alone for twice twenty-four
+hours, it will occur even to him that Louise is not made of the stuff
+that stands for being bullied.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+IMPERIAL RUSSIAN ETHICS TRANSFERRED TO DRESDEN
+
+ My husband's reported escapade--Did he give diamonds to a dancing
+ girl?--His foolish excuses--"I am your pal"--A restaurant scene in
+ St. Petersburg--The birthday suit.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _December 3, 1893_.
+
+After all, Frederick Augustus has more spirit than I gave him credit
+for. Isabelle just told me that he has a new love, and a very appetizing
+piece of femininity she is, _Fraeulein_ Dolores of the Municipal Theatre.
+
+"She's as well made as you, Louise, and rather more graceful," she said,
+"only her expression is somewhat inert. She lacks animation. Of course,
+she hasn't your attractive bust."
+
+That devilish Isabelle _sowed_ her poisonous information rather than
+pronounced it. "She has been seen with a new diamond-studded _bandeau_,"
+she added.
+
+At that moment the Schoenberg came to say that baby wants me. Isabelle
+went along to the nursery, but I managed to take the Schoenberg aside.
+
+"I must know, before dinner, who gave the Dolores woman the new jewelry
+she is displaying; likewise whether His Royal Highness is sweet on that
+hussy. No half-truths, if you please. I want to know the worst if there
+be any."
+
+The Schoenberg has a cousin who is a Councillor in the office of the
+police president, and the police president keeps a detailed record of
+the love affairs of all the actresses and singers employed in
+Dresden,--a relic of the time when stage folks, in European capitals,
+classed as "the King's servants."
+
+The Councillor came himself to report and, after listening to what he
+said, I raised the boycott on Frederick Augustus without further ado,
+inviting him to my bed and board once more.
+
+"So you went slumming with Kyril," I said after we had retired for the
+night.
+
+"Who told you?" stammered the big fellow, reddening to the roots of his
+hair.
+
+"Never mind. I know all! About the Dolores woman, her brand new
+diamonds, the pirouettes she did on the table and the many lace
+petticoats she wore."
+
+"My word, I didn't count them," vowed his Royal Highness.
+
+"Neither would I advise you to do so," I warned sternly, though as a
+matter of fact I was near exploding with laughter. "Now make a clean
+breast of it."
+
+"I swear I was only the elephant. The King himself would excuse me
+under the circumstances," whimpered my husband.
+
+"You big booby," I interposed, "can't you see that I'm not angry? I blab
+about you to the King? What do you take me for? I am your pal, now and
+always, in affairs liable to prove inartistic to the King's, or Prince
+George's, stomach. To begin with, what has an elephant to do with
+supping with a dancing girl?"
+
+Frederick Augustus explained that the name of the pachyderm applies to a
+third party, who attends a couple out for a lark until he proves a
+crowd. Our cousin, Grand-duke Kyril of Russia, visiting Dresden
+incognito, had prevailed on Frederick Augustus's good nature to serve
+him and the Dolores.
+
+"The Dolores is prettier than I?" I inquired.
+
+"Not at all. She has a black mole under her left bosom."
+
+"You saw that?"
+
+"How could I help it? Russian Grand-dukes never allow a girl to wear
+corsets at supper. Kyril says it interferes with digestion."
+
+How considerate of His Russian Imperial Highness!
+
+Well, they had a good time and I guess the Dolores earned her diamonds.
+A fair exchange is no robbery. "But in St. Petersburg," said Frederick
+Augustus, "they do these things better." And he gave an elaborate
+description of a famous restaurant there, where the princes of the
+imperial family hold high carnival occasionally.
+
+"The upper tier of dining rooms is reserved at night for any Grand-duke
+who promises his visit," quoted my husband, "and the broad marble stairs
+leading to them must not be used by others. Well, one fine evening
+Grand-duke Vladimir and a crowd of nobles and officers supped at the
+'_Ermitaj_' and when they were all good and drunk, one of Vladimir's
+guests, Prince Galitzin, bet the host the price of the supper and a
+champagne bath for all, that he could induce the famous _danseuse_
+Mshinskaya to descend the stairs stark naked and walk among the tables
+below without anyone offering her insult.
+
+"The bet was accepted and the girl sent for. She was found in a near-by
+theatre and rushed to the '_Ermitaj_'. Of course, seeing that His
+Imperial Highness wished it, she consented to pull off the trick
+and--her clothes, but she made a condition."
+
+"She demanded tights," I suggested.
+
+"Pshaw, she is a sport, says Kyril." This in a tone of disgust from
+Frederick Augustus. He continued: "She merely begged his Imperial
+Highness to have it announced that she, Mshinskaya, was acting under the
+Grand-duke's orders. Done. 'By His Imperial Highness's leave,' shouted
+the _Maitre d'Hotel_ from the top of the stairs, as _Mademoiselle_
+descended in her birthday suit. And the Mshinskaya made the tour of the
+restaurant as unconcernedly and as little subject to protests, or
+remarks, as if she had been muffled up to her ears.
+
+"That's what I call freedom--discipline," concluded Frederick Augustus.
+"Think of doing anything like that in a Dresden restaurant."
+
+"I would gladly give a year's allowance to the poor if you could manage
+it here while Prince George was masticating a Hamburg steak at a table
+opposite the grand staircase," said I.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+ROYALTY NOT PRETTY, AND WHY
+
+ Fecundity royal women's greatest charm--How to have beautiful
+ children.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _February 25, 1894_.
+
+Behold the mother of two boys in a twelve-month! Frederick came just in
+the nick of time, Sylvester Eve (December 31, 1893), to gain me a little
+brief renown, for royalty likes its women to be rabbits and, in the
+reigning houses at least, we are esteemed in proportion to our
+fecundity.
+
+"January 15--December 31," not half bad! Even Prince George had to admit
+that. And the Kaiser remarked: "Louise, if she keeps it up, bids fair to
+break de Villeneuve's record. Let me see, Sophie's first child was born
+January 9--a girl" (with a sneer); "her next, the Hereditary Count, on
+December 28th of the same year."
+
+The "de Villeneuve" is Sophie, Countess of Schlitz. Wilhelm made her
+celebrated by his gallantries and Lenbach by the great portrait he
+painted of her wondrous loveliness. If I ever have a daughter, I will
+have a copy of the Lenbach canvas placed in baby's room. Come to think
+of it, I will have one made right away to hang in my own boudoir.
+
+As stated, I believe in prenatal influence, and am more than convinced
+that the portraits of Saxon and Prussian princesses frowning from the
+walls of our palaces are calculated neither to promote beauty nor
+gentleness.
+
+If I had my way, I would send the whole lot to the store-room and fill
+the space they occupy with the present store-room treasures, old time
+portraits of August the Physical Strong's favorites, Aurora von
+Koenigsmark, Countess Cosel, Princess Lubomirska, Fatime, the Circassian,
+the Orselska and--who can remember their names?
+
+As a rule, queens and princesses are conspicuous for lack of beauty,
+while kings and princes cut most ordinary figures in _mufti_. Only their
+uniforms, the ribands and decorations, the _mise-en-scene_ render them
+tolerable imitations of the average military man.
+
+Why?
+
+Because their mothers and fathers, their sisters, cousins and aunts see
+nothing but painted and photographed and sculptured frights and
+grotesques. So much ugliness of the past must needs cause ugliness of
+the present and future.
+
+In a century the thrones of Europe have known but two beauties, both
+plebeians, the Empress Josephine and the Empress Eugenie. My aunt, the
+Empress Elizabeth, is only good-looking, the German Empress was just an
+ordinary German _Frau_ even in her salad-days.
+
+Well, my little girls, if I have any, shall profit by the lessons of the
+past. As expectant mothers in ancient Greece were wont to walk in the
+temple of _Athene Parthenos_, filled with the greatest sculptures the
+world has ever seen (ruins of them I admired in the British Museum), so
+I intend to have a gallery of my own for beauty's sake, even if every
+female figure be a harlot's likeness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+MORE JEALOUSIES OF THE GREAT
+
+ Men and women caress me with their eyes--Some disrespectful sayings
+ and doings of mine--First decided quarrel with Frederick Augustus--I
+ go to the theatre in spite of him.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 1, 1894_.
+
+I am afraid I wrote down some wicked things--wicked from the standpoint
+of the Saxon court--and though Queen Carola and father-in-law George
+know naught of my scribblings, punishment was meted out to me in full
+measure.
+
+Of course, it's my "damned popularity," as the King calls it, that got
+me into trouble again. My carriage happened to follow one occupied by
+the Queen at a distance of some hundred or more paces along the avenues
+of the _Grosser Garten_. I had no idea that Her Majesty was out at the
+time, and certainly was dressed to please the eye. I can't help it. It's
+a habit with me.
+
+Well, the optics of a good many of my future subjects grew long and
+cozening, like gipsies', when they beheld their queen-to-be; there was
+many a "flatteringly protracted, but never a wiltingly disapproving
+gaze," and those who liked me--and they all seemed to--shouted "Our
+Louise," and Hurrah. They shouted so loud that poor Queen Carola got
+plenty of auricular evidence of how her successor-to-be was loved by the
+people, by _her_, Carola's, people. And the poor old girl got so
+"peeved," she ordered her coachman to turn back and proceed to the
+palace by the shortest route, through the least frequented streets.
+
+Frederick Augustus knew all about it before I reached home and was in a
+terribly dejected state.
+
+"This has to stop," he said with a fine effort at imitating authority.
+"On Sunday, when we drove home from High Mass, you got an ovation while
+the King's carriage passed almost unnoticed. And now this affront to the
+Queen."
+
+"Bother the old girl," I replied, stamping my foot.
+
+Frederick Augustus got as white as a sheet. "That's the language of
+a--a--" He knew enough not to finish.
+
+"It's the title by which Queen Victoria is known to many of her
+subjects."
+
+"Who told you that?"
+
+"I often run across it in the English newspapers."
+
+"Jew-sheets!" roared Frederick Augustus.
+
+"Since you don't understand a word of English, you couldn't distinguish
+the London Times from the Hebrew At Work." After this sally, I added
+maliciously: "I'm going to the Opera Comique tonight. Come along?"
+
+"You are _not_ going to the Opera Comique," shouted Frederick Augustus.
+
+"You don't want me to go, papa don't want me to go, uncle and aunt and
+cousins don't? So many reasons more why I _shall_ go. I announced my
+coming and I will go, if I have to tear the ropes, by which you might
+bind me hand and foot, with my teeth."
+
+I rang the bell and ordered dinner served half an hour earlier than
+usual. Then I went to my dressing room to inspect the new gown that I
+intended to wear at the theatre.
+
+Girardi night! Girardi, the famous Vienna comedian! I never saw him. His
+humor will act as a tonic. Just what I need. I will die if I breathe
+none other but the air of this palace, that reeks with cheap
+pretensions, Jesuitical puritanism, envy and hatred, where every second
+person is a spy of either the King or George.
+
+I must escape the polluted atmosphere for a few hours, at least, and
+laugh, laugh, LAUGH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ 11:30 P.M.
+
+I have seen Girardi. I have laughed. I saw the Dolores. And I don't
+blame Kyril a bit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE ROYAL PRINCE, WHO BEHAVES LIKE A DRUNKEN BRICKLAYER
+
+ I face the music, but my husband runs away--Prince George can't look
+ me in the eye--He roars and bellows--Advocates wife-beating--I defy
+ him--German classics--"Jew literature" _Auto da fe_ ordered.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 2, 1894_.
+
+Chamberlain Baron Haugk, of the service of Prince George, called at nine
+A.M. and insisted upon seeing me. I sent out my Grand-Mistress, Baroness
+von Tisch, to tell him that "Her Imperial Highness would graciously
+permit him to wait upon her at half past ten."
+
+"But my all-highest master commands."
+
+I was listening in my boudoir and I went out to him only half-dressed, a
+powder-mantle over my shoulders.
+
+"Her Imperial Highness will not have her commands questioned by
+servants," I said in my most haughty style. The _Kammerherr_ knocked his
+heels together, bowed to the ground and retired. That's my way of
+dealing with royal flunkeys, no matter what their title of courtesy.
+
+He was back at the stroke of the clock to announce his "sublime master"
+for one in the afternoon.
+
+"I will be ready to receive his Royal Highness. My household shall be
+instructed," I answered coldly, though I dread that old man.
+
+"You are not wanted," I told Frederick Augustus. "Better make yourself
+scarce." He didn't need to be told twice. "Undress-uniform," he shouted
+to his valet. "And send somebody for a cab."
+
+"Why a cab?" I inquired.
+
+He looked at me in a pitying way. "Women are such geese," he made
+answer. "Don't you see, if I left the palace in one of our own
+carriages, the King, or father, might notice and call me back."
+
+"Oh, very well. And don't 'celebrate' too much while you are out."
+
+I had the lackeys line the staircase and corridors. My military
+household stood in the first ante-chamber, my courtiers in the second,
+my ladies in the third when Prince George walked into my parlor. At
+first he acted in no unfriendly manner. He kissed me on the forehead and
+asked after the babies, and if he hadn't riveted his eyes all the time
+into some corner of the room--his stratagem when in an ugly mood--I
+might have persuaded myself that he wasn't on mischief bent.
+
+But he soon began pouring out his bile. With a face like a wooden martyr
+he announced that he was not pleased with me.
+
+"You are too much of a light-weight, too vivacious, too attractive to
+the mob," he said in his bitterest tones. "You are forever seeking the
+public eye like--an actress."
+
+"I beg your Royal Highness to take notice that Imperial Princesses of
+Austria"--I put some emphasis on the Imperial--"while popular, never
+descend to jugglery," I answered politely, but firmly.
+
+"No offence to your Imperial Highness," said George, "but you must
+understand once and for all that Saxon princes and princesses are bound
+by our house laws to the strictest observance of precedence. The love of
+the people naturally goes out to the King and Queen. Junior members of
+the Royal House must not seek to divert to themselves the popularity
+that is the King's own."
+
+"I have always been taught to respond to popular greetings offered me.
+My aunt, the Empress Elizabeth, in particular instructed me to that
+effect," I submitted with great deference.
+
+"Her Majesty didn't instruct you to make a show of yourself every hour
+of the day," hissed George, his eyes devouring the stove.
+
+"I drive out twice, in the morning to go shopping, in the afternoon to
+air my babies."
+
+George, unable to dispute me, abandoned pretensions of politeness or
+manners. He fairly roared at me: "You are travelling the streets all the
+time. It has to stop."
+
+Whereupon I said in as sharp a voice as I could manage: "And Your Royal
+Highness has to stop bellowing at me. I'm not used to it. In Salzburg
+and Vienna gentlemen don't use that tone of voice and that sort of
+language to gentlewomen."
+
+"Salzburg," cried George, "in Salzburg you got your ears boxed, but it
+didn't do much good to all appearances."
+
+"Your Royal Highness," I answered, "my mother has her faults, but it's
+no one's business outside of her immediate family. And no one at this
+court has a mother's authority over me."
+
+I saw that George was beside himself with rage. "If your husband," he
+snarled, "was as free with his hand as your mother, there would be an
+end to your frivolities."
+
+"Your Royal Highness forgets what you admitted yourself, namely, that
+the indignities offered me while I was a child were bereft of beneficial
+results. And please take notice," I added, raising my voice, "I won't
+stand violence from anyone, neither from my husband--as you kindly
+suggest--nor from you, or the King."
+
+George was too surprised to even attempt a reply. He evidently didn't
+know what to say or do. To avoid my eyes that were seeking his, he
+turned his back on me and stepped up to a little table laden with books.
+He studied the titles for a while, then, turning suddenly, held a small
+volume towards me. His arm was out-stretched as if he feared to
+contaminate his uniform.
+
+"What have we got here?" he cried.
+
+It was my turn to be astonished. "Why, according to the binding, it must
+be Heine's _Atta Troll_."
+
+"_Atta Troll_," cried George, and opening the book at random he read
+half to himself:
+
+ "This bear-leader six Madonnas
+ Wears upon his pointed hat,
+ To protect his head from bullets
+ Or from lice, perchance, it may be."
+
+He fired the volume on the floor and grabbed another. "What's this?"
+
+"As the title will indicate to your Royal Highness, Nietzsche's
+Zarathustra." For the life of me I couldn't see any harm in this portion
+of my library.
+
+George continued to rummage among the books. He acted like a madman.
+"What's this, what's this?" he kept on saying, turning them over and
+over. I thought it beneath my dignity to answer. I just stared at the
+fanatic.
+
+After he finished his hurried examination, he took one book after the
+other and tossed it violently at my feet.
+
+"Heine, the Jew-scribbler," he cried, aiming a kick at Atta Troll.
+
+"Don't you dare," I said, "that book was given me by Her Majesty, the
+Empress of Austria."
+
+"I can't believe it," shouted George, "that Jew-scribbler, the reviler
+of kinship."
+
+"He never lampooned the kings of Saxony," I calmly remarked, picking up
+the volume. "Here is Her Majesty's dedication to me."
+
+"Everybody knows the eccentricities of Her Majesty of Austria," shouted
+George. "Anyhow, who gave you permission to read such rotten stuff as
+this at our court?"
+
+"Prince George," I answered, taking two steps towards him, "Duke of
+Saxony, the Archduchess of Austria takes pleasure to inform you that in
+her house she asks no one's permission what to read or do."
+
+At this he turned drill-ground bully. "You are in the King's house,"
+rang out his voice in cutting tones, "and at this moment I represent the
+King. And in the King's name I forbid you to read these obscenities, and
+in the King's name I hereby command that these books be destroyed at
+once."
+
+Well, since he talked in the King's name I had no leg to stand on. I
+merely bowed acquiescence and he strutted out, turning his back on me as
+he went without salutation of any sort. I ran into my room, locked the
+door and had a good cry.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+I DEFY THEM
+
+ Laughter and pleasant faces for me--Frederick Augustus refuses to
+ back me, but I don't care--We quarrel about my reading--He professes
+ to gross ignorance.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _May 1, 1894_.
+
+What's the use keeping a diary that is nothing but a record of quarrels
+and humiliations? After I finished the entry about my scene with Prince
+George, I felt considerably relieved. I had held my own, anyhow. But
+fighting is one thing and writing another. I am always ready for a
+fight, but "war-reporting" comes less easy.
+
+The unpleasantness with George brought in its wake, as a natural
+consequence so to speak, a whole lot of other squabbles and
+altercations, family jars and general rumpuses, which I cared not to
+embalm in these pages at the time. However, as they are part and parcel
+of my narrative, incomplete as it may be, I will insert them by and by
+according to their sequence.
+
+After George was gone I made up my mind that, his commands and threats
+notwithstanding, I must continue to live as I always did: joyful, free
+within certain limits and careless of puritan standards. If the rest of
+the royal ladies, and the women of the service, want to mope and look
+sour, that's their affair. Let them wear out their lives between
+confessional, knitting socks for orphan children, _Kaffe-klatsches,_
+spying and tale-bearing and prayer-meetings,--it isn't my style. I'm
+young, I'm pretty, I'm full of red blood, life means something to me. I
+want to live it my own way.
+
+I want to laugh; I have opinions of my own; I want to read books that
+open and improve the mind. I want to promote my education by attending
+lectures, by going to the theatre--in short, I don't want to become a
+dunce and a bell-jingling fool like the others.
+
+If that spells royal disgrace--be it so. Louise won't purchase two "_How
+art thou's?_" at the price their Majesties and Royal Highnesses ask.
+
+Of course, it would come easier with Frederick Augustus's help and
+support, but since he chooses to be bully-ragged and sat upon and,
+moreover, finds pleasure in licking the hand that strikes at his and his
+wife's dignity, I will go it alone.
+
+I defy them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 16, 1894_.
+
+I had another tiff with Frederick Augustus, but the cause is too
+insignificant to deserve record. I will rather tell about our grand
+quarrel following Prince George's visit. We dined alone that day, as he
+was eager to hear the news. The preliminaries didn't excite him much,
+but when I mentioned the book episode, he bristled up.
+
+"You won't allow the King, or Prince George, to dictate what I shall
+read or not read?" I demanded. "My house is my castle and I won't brook
+interference in my _menage_."
+
+"Do you really suppose," replied Frederick Augustus, "that I'll court
+royal displeasure for the sake of those Jew-scribblers? I never read a
+book since I left school and can't make out what interest books can have
+to you or anyone else. Where did you get them, anyhow?"
+
+I told him that Leopold supplied my book wants. "My brother is a very
+intelligent man," I said, "and the books he gives me are all classics in
+their way."
+
+"Go to with your book-talk!" he mocked in his most contemptuous voice.
+"I asked the director of the royal library and was told that each of the
+books, to which father objects, was written by a Jew. Let Jews read
+them. It isn't decent for a royal princess to do so."
+
+"My brother isn't a Jew."
+
+"But in utter disgrace in Vienna. No one at court speaks to him. He is
+head over heels in debt and the next we know he will be borrowing from
+us. As to those books, don't bring any more into the house. Royal
+princes and princesses have better things to do than waste time on
+Jew-scribblers."
+
+With that he violently pushed back his chair and left me, a very much
+enraged woman. He didn't give me the chance to have the last word.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+ATTEMPTED VIOLENCE DEFEATED BY FIRMNESS
+
+ Frederick Augustus seeks to carry out his father's brutal
+ threats--Orders and threats before servants--I positively refuse to
+ be ordered about--Frederick Augustus plays Mrs. Lot--Enjoying myself
+ at the theatre.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 17, 1894_.
+
+The chance came later and with it the conviction that His Royal
+Highness, Prince George, didn't quite believe me when I told him that I
+wouldn't stand for violence, for tonight Frederick Augustus attempted
+something of the sort.
+
+I had ordered my carriage for seven o'clock to drive to the theatre, and
+had just finished dressing when he stormed into my boudoir and demanded
+to know if I had taken leave of my senses.
+
+"Not that I am aware of."
+
+"But I hear you intend to go to the theatre--a princess in disgrace
+going to the theatre!"
+
+"Aren't you coming along, Frederick Augustus?" I asked naively.
+
+"I have no desire to lose my regiment."
+
+"And I have no desire to sit at home and talk nothingnesses with the
+fools His Majesty appoints for my service."
+
+"Take a care," cried Frederick Augustus.
+
+"Don't be a noodle and a coward," I answered hotly.
+
+"Louise, remember that I am an army officer."
+
+"What has that to do with my going to the theatre?"
+
+"It's the height of audacity to defy the King."
+
+"It would be the depth of cowardice to stay at home."
+
+"Take back that word, or----"
+
+"I wish Your Royal Highness a very pleasant evening," I said, indulging
+in a low genuflexion.
+
+Frederick Augustus got blue with rage. I saw him clench his fists as I
+swept out of the room, making as much noise with my train as I could
+manage.
+
+"An out-rider," I commanded the Master of Horse who stood in the
+ante-chamber awaiting me.
+
+"At your Imperial Highness' commands," bowed the Baron with the most
+astonished face in the world. We use out-riders, that is grooms in
+livery, to ride ahead of the royal carriage, only on state occasions in
+Dresden. But, of course, my orders would be obeyed even if I had
+demanded twelve grooms to attend me.
+
+I was just going out, preceded by my Chamberlain and followed by my
+ladies, Baroness Tisch and _Fraeulein_ von Schoenberg; there were two
+lackeys at the door and in the corridor stood the groom-in-waiting,
+holding several lap-robes for me to decide which to take, when the
+Prince caught up with me.
+
+"I forbid you to go to the theatre," he bawled in the presence of my
+titled entourage and three servants.
+
+I realized at once that this was the supreme moment of my life at the
+court of Saxony. Either bend or break. If I allowed myself to be roared
+at and ordered about like a servant-wench--goodbye the Imperial
+Highness! Enter the Jenny-Sneak German housewife, greedy for her
+master's smile and willing to accept an occasional kick. The Prince had
+begun this family brawl in public. I would finish.
+
+"I won't take orders," I held forth. "No commands, understand, princely,
+royal or otherwise. And be advised, now and for all time, that I will
+answer any attempt to brutalize me by immediate departure, or by seeking
+refuge with the Austrian Ambassador."
+
+If Frederick Augustus had suddenly become Mrs. Lot he wouldn't have been
+more conspicuous for utter petrification and silence. He stared at me
+with wide-open, bleary eyes and if I had taken him by the neck and feet
+and dropped him out of the window, as his ancestor Augustus of the
+three-hundred and fifty-two took the "spook" sent into his bedroom by
+Joseph the First, he wouldn't have offered the ghost of resistance, I
+dare say.
+
+"Your arm, Mr. Chamberlain, since His Royal Highness doesn't wish to
+accompany us." And I swept out of the ante-chamber and through the
+corridor, triumphant.
+
+"Gipsy Baron" was the bill of the play. I knew only a few of its waltzes
+and I drank in the comedy and the pretty music like one desperately
+athirst. Kyril's girl, the Dolores, was very chic and looked ravishingly
+pretty, and brother-in-law Max isn't the dunce I took him for.
+
+His Theresa is a droll dog, fair to look upon, dark and fat. It will
+take a lot of holy water to save her from purgatory.
+
+Girardi made me screech with laughter. He is as funny as my
+father-in-law is mournful--a higher compliment to his art I cannot pay.
+Of course, actor-like, he appreciated an Imperial Highness' applause and
+looked up to my box every little while. I wish, though, he hadn't
+acknowledged my plaudits by bowing to me. It attracted general attention
+and soon the whole house was staring and smiling. The people seemed to
+be glad that their Crown Princess was enjoying herself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+TITLED SERVANTS LOW AND CUNNING
+
+ George tries to rob me of my confidante--Enter the King's spy,
+ Baroness Tisch in her true character--Punishment of one royal spy.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _August 1, 1894_.
+
+Prince George is planning a devilish revenge. He threatens to separate
+me from my Secretary and confidante, little Baranello, whom I brought
+with me from Salzburg. She is an Italian, and, unlike most of them, as
+faithful as a dog. A connection of the Ruffo family, princes and dukes
+that gave the world more than one pope, the small fry Saxon nobility
+hate her, and George knows that he can't corrupt Lucretia by his paltry
+presents and ridiculous condescension.
+
+They would send her back to Salzburg, if they dared,--anyhow, Baroness
+von Tisch is to be both Chief Mistress and confidential secretary. If
+she died of the first confidence I make her, she wouldn't live five
+minutes.
+
+The King's House Marshal, Baron von Carlowitz, came to announce the
+change to me, but I knew, of course, that it was George's doings.
+
+"Tell Prince George," I said icily, "that I appreciate the fact of being
+deprived of the services of an honest woman in favor of a spy."
+
+I will "show" this Tisch woman, as my American friends say. Some three
+years ago Emperor Francis Joseph appointed a spy as attendant to my
+brother Leopold. Schoenstein, Baron or Count, was his name, I think.
+Schoenstein would rather bear evil tales of his young master to his old
+master than eat, and nothing would please him better than to meddle with
+Leopold's correspondence.
+
+He stole as many letters as he could lay his hands on. Fished them even
+from slop-pails, or pieced together such as Leopold tore up and dropped
+in the cuspidors. When brother observed this, he used to tear up bills
+and the most innocent writings of his own and other people into little
+bits and planted them in Schoenstein's hunting-grounds. Appropriate work
+for a _lick-spittle_ to pull them out. But Leopold got tired of playing
+with this vermin, and it tickled him to make an example of the scamp.
+Hence, he allowed it to be observed by Schoenstein when he, Leopold,
+locked a parcel of letters from his girl in the cash-box.
+
+The toad-eating Schoenstein burned with desire to copy these letters and
+send the transcript on to Emperor Francis Joseph. They would have made
+interesting reading to my old uncle who has given up cracking nuts since
+his teeth fell out. There is Kati Schratt, you say. Pshaw, Kati is as
+old, or nearly as old, as his Majesty and she isn't a Ninon de l'Enclos
+by any means.
+
+To cut a long story short, Schoenstein could see but one way for getting
+those compromising letters: steal the keys and borrow the parcel for a
+short while. That's what Leopold was waiting for. Not half an hour after
+the keys had been abstracted, he raised the alarm. He had been "robbed."
+The archducal safe had been rifled. And he managed to catch Schoenstein
+red-handed.
+
+"Send for the police," thundered my brother, "and meanwhile watch the
+thief well." Schoenstein was given no chance to explain and deemed
+himself lucky to escape arrest. My brother suspended him from service
+and made him go to a hotel while he telegraphed the story of the
+attempted theft to Vienna, asking the Count's immediate dismissal.
+
+Of course, Vienna disavowed the dunderhead--royalty has no use for
+persons that allow themselves to be compromised--and he has been in
+disgrace ever since. Nor can he get another courtly office, for Leopold
+threatened the moment he sees him with a Highness to warn everybody:
+"Look to your watch and purse, we have a thief with us."
+
+I jotted this down to remind me that Prince George's spy deserves no
+better than the Emperor's.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+BANISHMENT
+
+ I am ordered to repair to a country house with the hated spy as my
+ Grand Mistress--My first impulse to go home, but afraid parents
+ won't have me.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _August 10, 1894_.
+
+Order from the King that myself and children spend the rest of the
+summer at Villa Loschwitz, to remain until I get royal permission to
+return to Dresden,--the Tisch to act as chief of my household.
+
+Banished! I didn't know whether to laugh or cry. Smile, because I
+escaped the _ennui_ of attending court at the summer residence of
+Pillnitz; weep, because my absence from court would be interpreted as a
+disciplinary measure.
+
+I know Pillnitz is about as gay as a Trappist feast of carrion and ant's
+milk, but this princess doesn't want to be disciplined.
+
+I shall tell them that I want to go home, but will they have me in
+Salzburg? Papa, of course, but if mother hears of my acquaintance with
+Heine, "who doesn't love Jesus,"--her own words,--she will undoubtedly
+side with Prince George against her daughter. It was Heine who wrote of
+one of her ancestors, King Louis of Bavaria: "As soon as the monkeys and
+kangaroos are converted to Christianity, they'll make King Louis their
+guardian saint, in proof of their perfect sanity." And you don't suppose
+for a moment that mamma forgets a thing like that. As to Nietzsche, he
+will give her no conscientious qualms, for I'm sure she never heard of
+the gentleman, but my going to the Gipsy Baron "where two princely
+mistresses are gyrating"--horrible!
+
+I hear her say: "I think Prince George is most considerate sending our
+daughter to Loschwitz. She deserved to be put in a nunnery and made to
+kneel on unboiled peas three times a day." And when it comes to an
+_eclat_, even papa may have to abandon me. Emperor Francis Joseph holds
+the purse-strings; and papa always lives beyond his means and Francis
+Joseph, King Albert and Prince George are fast friends. If papa
+quarrelled with the two latter gentlemen, they would immediately
+denounce him to the Emperor. The rest can easily be guessed.
+
+Sorry, but papa is no hero in his daughter's eyes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+"POOR RELATIONS" IN ROYAL HOUSES
+
+ Myself and Frederick Augustus quarrel and pound table--The Countess
+ Cosel's golden vessel--Off to Brighton--Threat of a beating--I
+ provoke shadows of divorce--King threatens force--More defiance on
+ my part--I humble the King and am allowed to invite my brother
+ Leopold.
+
+
+ VILLA LOSCHWITZ, _September 1, 1894_.
+
+Father had to give in. He is the poor relation, and a poor relation in
+royal circles doesn't amount to more than one among well-to-do merchants
+and farmers. He has no rights that others need respect and if he shows
+backbone he is given to understand that the head of the family has other
+uses for the palace or hunting grounds lent him.
+
+"I would love to have you with me in Salzburg," he wrote, "but, dear
+child, it's for your best to learn to obey. Do it for your old father's
+sake."
+
+Still I wouldn't give in at once. "I won't go to Loschwitz," I declared.
+And gave a dozen reasons besides the paramount one that I wouldn't go,
+because Prince George wanted me.
+
+"I'm no trunk to be shipped hither and thither at someone's behest," I
+said.
+
+Frederick Augustus took umbrage at the "someone," which he pronounced
+_lese majeste_, and to emphasise the fact hit the table with a bang,
+whereupon I pounded the table twice: bang-bang!
+
+It hurt my hand, and didn't do Frederick Augustus any good. Nor was the
+discussion advanced thereby. For the rest: an exchange of names and
+epithets that smacked of the kitchen rather than the _salon_.
+
+"Too bad you exhaust all your energy with me," I said among other
+things, "while in the royal presence you act the docile lamb's tail."
+
+He began prating about his character as an army officer again, and I
+reminded him that I wasn't the Countess Cosel.
+
+"Who's that?" asked the big ignoramus.
+
+"Never heard of the lady that refused to accompany Augustus to the Camp
+of Muehlberg unless he brought her a certain intimate golden vessel
+costing five thousand _Thalers_?"
+
+"A loving cup?" asked my husband.
+
+"If you like to call it so."
+
+"But why did you say you are no Cosel?"
+
+"I meant to imply that I am not a prisoner of state and don't want to be
+treated like one. Hence, since a visit to my parents would greatly
+embarrass them, I decided to go to Brighton for the season."
+
+"Brighton," he repeated, "and where will you get the spondulicks?"
+
+"I saved up quite a bit of money. Guess I can manage the expense
+alright."
+
+"Lip-music," cried Frederick Augustus in his polite way. "You have no
+idea what such a trip costs."
+
+I assured him that I had made every inquiry and was able to meet all
+expenses. "We will go incog.," I added, "the babies and nurse and
+Lucretia. The Tisch woman shall have a furlough even before she asks for
+it."
+
+"Is that so?" Frederick Augustus laughed brutally. "You seem to forget
+that you are subject to our house laws."
+
+"And you seem to forget that I have a will of my own," I almost shouted.
+
+Frederick Augustus jumped up. "Not another word on the subject," he
+commanded. "The incident is closed."
+
+It suddenly occurred to me that Prince George had been talking once more
+to Frederick Augustus about the pugilistic performances of my mother.
+Perhaps he was trying to pluck up courage to beat me, a diversion not
+altogether unknown in the House of Saxony, according to the Memoirs of
+the famous Baron Schweinichen, Court Marshal and _Chroniqueur_.
+
+His diaries, covering a number of years, have many such entries as this:
+"His Royal Highness hit the Princess a good one on the 'snout' by way
+of silencing her tongue." Doubtless George would be delighted to have me
+"shut up" by some such process, but Frederick Augustus lacks the sand.
+
+When he was gone, I indicted a letter to the King, advising him in oily,
+malicious, yet eminently respectful language that, not wishing to figure
+as a prisoner of state, I had decided to spend the rest of the summer
+abroad with my children. At the same time I intimated that I was well
+aware of being in disgrace and being regarded with ill favor by the
+several members of the royal family.
+
+"If it pleases your Majesty," I added, "I will relieve a most unhappy
+situation by giving back his liberty to Frederick Augustus. I'll promise
+not to oppose divorce, or allow my family to interfere."
+
+This letter I sent to the King, sealing it with my personal arms, of
+which there is no duplicate at court. After that I sent three telegrams.
+One to papa, announcing that I was going to Brighton; another to the
+Palace Hotel in Brighton; a third to the Minister of Railways,
+commanding that my saloon carriage be coupled to the Continental express
+night after next. I knew, of course, that the King would be informed of
+these messages in a twinkling.
+
+I waited an hour for the Powers to move; as a rule it takes them a week
+or ten days. Exactly sixty-five minutes after sending my letter to the
+King, Frederick Augustus rode into the courtyard like a madman. He had
+been hurriedly summoned from the drill-grounds, I heard afterwards. He
+dismounted at the stairs leading to the King's apartments. Half an hour
+later, he slunk into my room, as serious as a corpse. There wasn't a
+trace of brutality in his voice as he said:
+
+"A fine row you kicked up."
+
+I didn't favor him by questions, but kept looking out of the window. He
+walked up and down for five or six minutes, boring his eyes into the
+corners of the room. Suddenly, at a safe distance, he delivered himself
+of the following:
+
+"His Majesty interdicts your plans _in toto_. You will be conducted to
+Loschwitz tonight. Don't put yourself to the humiliation of trying to
+disobey. You are being watched."
+
+"His Majesty's own words?"
+
+"He refused to see me," answered Frederick Augustus, dejectedly. He
+acted as if pronouncing his own death warrant. "Baumann told me." (This
+is the King's Secretary.)
+
+I almost pitied the poor fellow, but I had to hold my own.
+
+"My dear Frederick Augustus," I said, "you can tell Baumann from me that
+I won't go to Loschwitz tonight; that for the present I intend to stay
+here and that, if they force me, they'll need plenty of rope, for I
+will holler and kick and do all I can to attract attention."
+
+Maybe Frederick Augustus wanted to say something in reply, but open his
+mouth was all he could manage. Seeing him so bamboozled, I continued:
+"It is decided, then, that I stay, but I give you fair warning that I
+will skip to England sooner or later. I don't want you to get into
+trouble, Frederick Augustus, therefore inform Baumann without delay."
+
+Frederick Augustus got blue in the face. He seemed ready to jump on me,
+crush me between his cuirassier fists. I held up my hand.
+
+"Did Baumann tell you that I offered to accept divorce if it pleases the
+King?"
+
+Frederick Augustus changed color. White as a ghost, he fixed his eyes
+upon mine, momentarily, and murmured: "Have we got to that point?"
+
+He ran out of the room and a minute later was tearing up the stairs
+leading to the King's apartments. Lucretia says he returned within a
+quarter of an hour and tried my door. But I had locked myself in and
+refused to open. We didn't meet until dinner. Neither of us ate a bite,
+or said a word. Baumann was announced with the ice. He was all smiles,
+all devotion.
+
+"His Majesty will be pleased to see your Imperial Highness in a quarter
+of an hour," he said sweetly.
+
+Frederick Augustus was a painted sepulchre when I coolly replied: "Pray
+inform His Majesty that I am not well and about to retire for the
+night."
+
+At this Baumann looked like a whipped dog. He probably thought it
+impossible for anyone to refuse to answer the summons of His Majesty.
+With the most downcast mien in the world, he seemed singularly anxious
+to render himself ridiculous. "Maybe the Crown Prince will do in my
+stead," I suggested maliciously.
+
+Baumann grabbed at the straw and withdrew. A little while later a lackey
+came, summoning Frederick Augustus to Prince George. When he came back,
+he was all undone.
+
+"Father treated me very well," he said. "He says the King regrets that
+your uncontrollable temper causes so many misunderstandings, and both
+His Majesty and father have no objection to your staying in Dresden if
+you like. Loschwitz was suggested because you and the children seem to
+need country air.
+
+"As to your proposed visit to England, the King begs you to consider
+that such a journey at this time is liable to provoke a scandal which
+would reflect not only on you, on us, but on your poor parents."
+
+The old story of the penurious relations, I thought bitterly, but on the
+whole I was well pleased. I had beaten and out-generaled them all.
+
+"If Loschwitz isn't meant for punishment, I accept with pleasure," I
+said. "It's a very pretty place." Poor Frederick Augustus' face lit up.
+"But there must be an end to the talk about I being in disgrace. If the
+King is as friendly to me as he makes out, let him come and see me and
+the babies. As to summonses by Baumann or others, I won't accept them."
+
+"Very well," said Frederick Augustus, and I saw that I had risen
+mile-high in his estimation, "when will it be your pleasure to leave for
+Loschwitz?"
+
+"Tonight, if I have permission to invite Leopold for a week or so."
+
+"Are you stark, staring mad?" shouted my husband,--"Impose conditions
+after the King moderated?"
+
+"Go and tell Baumann I'll have Leopold or all is off," I said.
+
+Next morning: Ceremonial visit from the Queen. The tip of her nose was
+redder than ever and she seemed prepared to weep at the flicking of an
+eye-lash. She gave me a list of her troubles, mental, physical,
+political, matrimonial and otherwise, since the day she was born, but
+said: "Obedience to my father, the King, and obedience to my husband,
+the King, has enabled me to weather all storms. You, too, must learn
+obedience, Louise. It's women's only salvation and especially a
+princess's."
+
+I answered that I fully recognized my obligations to the King. "I only
+object to being buffeted around like a piece of furniture."
+
+"I know, I know," said the Queen, "and hope all is arranged
+satisfactorily. The King will be glad if you invite your parents to
+Loschwitz."
+
+"I asked permission to invite Leopold."
+
+"But, no doubt, your parents would take more interest in the children
+than your brother."
+
+"I don't dispute that, Your Majesty. But if my parents joined me at the
+present time, people might think they came to condole with me or else to
+scold me. I want Leopold."
+
+The Queen said she wouldn't dare mention Leopold to His Majesty.
+
+"Well, then," I concluded, "I shall stay in Dresden, regarding Baumann's
+fine promises as mere talk."
+
+The Queen went away with the air of a martyr, but three days later
+Baumann came and said His Imperial Highness was welcome.
+
+A triumph all along the line. I left Dresden without seeing the King.
+
+Frederick Augustus is at the manoeuvres.
+
+The Baroness is acting as my Grand Mistress.
+
+I expect Leopold in a fortnight.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+A SERVANT-TYRANT
+
+ My correspondence is not safe from the malicious woman appointed
+ Grand Mistress--Lovers at a distance and by correspondence--Fell in
+ love with a leg.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _September 8, 1894_.
+
+Baroness Tisch, now that she attained the height of her ambition, is
+beginning to show her claws. She is an infernal cat. Her skinniness
+makes her repulsive to me and her face gives everyone the impression
+that she just sucked an enormous lemon. She lisps and that makes me
+nervous. I feel like aping her when she isn't around.
+
+She's after me like the devil chasing a poor soul and as I never address
+her except to command or reprimand, she tries to find out any secret
+doings, or thinkings, I may be guilty of by way of letters I write or
+receive.
+
+According to the laws of most countries private correspondence is
+sacred, legally and morally. The late Field-Marshal, Count Blumenthal,
+wrote to his wife of the Crown Prince, afterwards Emperor Frederick,
+that he was a "d----fool," but "as communications between husband and
+wife are privileged," no official cognizance was taken.
+
+Otherwise in this petty kingdom and, as already told, in Austria, whose
+monarch, in family matters at least, holds to the "_L'Etat c'est moi_"
+maxim.
+
+The King's spy, the Tisch, constituted herself post-office of Villa
+Loschwitz--a duty appertaining to her rank--and I wager she works the
+"_Black Cabinet_" to perfection. Of course, I am now careful in all I
+write and advise my friends to be, but I sometimes get letters from
+Unknowns, people that sympathize with me or have fallen in love with me.
+All women in high station have lovers among the lowly. I recall the
+Cardinal Dubois' yarn about Salvatico, envoy of the Prince of Modena, my
+kinsman of yore. The Italian was sent to Paris to conduct home his
+master's lovely intended, _Mademoiselle_ de Valois, daughter of the
+Regent. It happened that the emissary was introduced to _Mademoiselle's_
+room an hour before the time set, when she was lying on a lounge "with
+one leg, almost naked, hanging down." Salvatico fell in love with the
+leg and exhausted himself in so many "Ah, ah's" of admiration and other
+love-sick stunts that the Duke of Richelieu, having older rights, said
+to him: "Rogue, if you had your deserts I would cut off your two ears!"
+
+No man, except my husband, has seen my legs, which is a pity, perhaps,
+but the extreme _decollete_ demanded at certain court functions,
+especially in Berlin, gained me many epistolary lovers, whose homage I
+accept gracefully, but in silence, of course.
+
+Still, a malicious thing like the Tisch, if one gives her enough rope,
+might arrange, on paper at least, to get me with child by a Lothario a
+hundred miles off, even as the children of Madame de Montespan and Louis
+XIV were credited to the Marquis, her husband, residing a hundred
+leagues away, at Guienne. Let me find her red-handed and she will fare
+even worse than Schoenstein.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+MORE TYRANNY OF A TITLED SERVANT
+
+ My daily papers seized, and only milk-and-water clippings are
+ submitted--"King's orders"--Grand Mistress's veracity doubted--My
+ threats of suspension cow her.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _September 10, 1894_.
+
+This morning there were no newspapers at the usual hour. Instead, the
+Tisch furnished a heap of clippings carefully pasted up--the veriest
+milk-and-water slush "ever." Instanter I sent for my tormentor.
+
+"What's this?" I demanded.
+
+"Today's papers, Your Imperial Highness."
+
+"You made these clippings?"
+
+"At Your Imperial Highness's commands."
+
+"And you think me ninny enough to be satisfied with reading no more than
+what you consider proper for me to see?"
+
+The Tisch wavered not a bit. "His Majesty the King is served the same
+fashion."
+
+"No matter. I want my papers whole, and don't you dare to mutilate
+them." By way of letting her down easier I added: "Don't give yourself
+the trouble."
+
+"No trouble, I assure your Imperial Highness. With your permission,
+then, I will continue to clip for Your Imperial Highness."
+
+I rose and, measuring her from head to toe with flaming eyes, I said:
+"You will do nothing of the kind, do you understand?"
+
+The impertinent cat insisted: "But I think it proper----"
+
+"Have you heard what I said or not, Baroness?"
+
+She tried to save her face by asserting, "I am acting by command of His
+Majesty."
+
+"I will ask His Majesty whether you spoke the truth," I said quick as a
+flash; "meanwhile you are suspended and will return to Dresden until
+recalled. Ring the bell and I will give orders to the Master of Horse to
+send you away."
+
+Of course Tisch couldn't afford such an inquiry to be made, which would
+have exposed her clumsy hand and, as remarked, royalty doesn't care to
+be found out. Defeat staring her in the face, Tisch wavered: "Of course,
+if your Imperial Highness chooses to take the responsibility, I will be
+most happy to submit the papers as they arrive."
+
+"In their wrappers," I commanded, as I dismissed her.
+
+By distributing a hundred marks in silver, I found out that the Tisch
+examines my body-servants daily and that, night after night, she sits
+up hours writing long-winded reports. She is the King's tool, but she
+let the cat out of the bag when cornered. That gives me the whip hand
+for the time being.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+THE TWO BLACK SHEEP OF THE FAMILY UNITED
+
+ Leopold upon my troubles and his own--Imperial Hapsburgs that,
+ though Catholics, got divorces or married divorced women--Books that
+ are full of guilty knowledge, according to royalty--A mud-hole
+ lodging for one Imperial Highness--Leopold's girl--What I think of
+ army officers' wives--Their anonymous letters--Leopold's money
+ troubles--We will fool our enemies by feigning obedience.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _September 15, 1894_.
+
+Leopold is with me, the brother two years older than I. They just made
+him a Major--a twelve-month later than his patent calls for.
+
+Like myself, he is almost permanently in disgrace with the head of the
+family, even as I am with the King and Prince George. We had no sooner
+embraced and kissed, than I asked him for the latest gossip concerning
+the Crown Princess of Saxony.
+
+"You are a tough one," he said, shaking his finger with amused mockery.
+According to Vienna court gossip, "I threw Prince George out of doors,"
+when he "raised his hand against me," Frederick Augustus and myself
+haven't been on speaking terms for six months; and the Saxe family was
+actually considering the advisability of divorce.
+
+Of course I told Leopold how things really are.
+
+"Then there will be no divorce?" he asked.
+
+"If the King and Prince George leave me alone,--no."
+
+"Too bad," he said with a laugh, "that knocks me out of the pleasure of
+maintaining my _thesis_ that the founder of the Christian religion
+didn't believe in indissoluble marriage, but, on the contrary, in
+divorce if such couldn't be avoided."
+
+"Who told you that?"
+
+"Professor Wahrmund is preparing a paper on the subject," said Leopold,
+who, as remarked, is a very well-read chap and a student. He named five
+or six emperors and kings, Catholics, some of them members of the
+Austrian Imperial family, who obtained divorces, or married divorced
+women. I jotted down the list.
+
+Lothair II divorced his wife Theutberga and married his love, Waldrade.
+
+Emperor Frederick I divorced the Empress Anna on the plea that she was
+sterile. She married a Count, with whom she had a dozen children.
+
+Margaret, a daughter of Leopold VI of Austria, was divorced by King
+Ottokar of Bohemia.
+
+John Henry, Prince of Bohemia, divorced his wife Margareta, who
+afterwards married an ancestor of the Kaiser, Ludwig of Brandenburg.
+
+King Ladislaus of Sicily divorced Queen Constance and forced his vassal,
+Andrea di Capua, to marry her against his will. Ten years later
+Ladislaus married Maria de Lusignan.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But a little knowledge is a terrible thing, if it happens to be acquired
+by a prince. Princes are supposed to know nothing but the art and the
+_finesses_ of destruction--war. Upbuilding is not in their line.
+
+"I hear you are exercising a bad influence on Louise," roared our uncle,
+the Emperor, at Leopold when the latter took leave from him. "You
+furnished to her those infernal books, sowing the seed of guilty
+knowledge?"
+
+Leopold so far forgot himself as to address a question to the
+"All-Highest": "What infernal books?"
+
+"Books full of indecencies and obscenities, in short pornographic
+literature," shouted the head of the family, turned his horse and rode
+away in high dudgeon. Royal arguments are nothing if not one-sided!
+
+Then Leopold told of himself. His garrison: a filthy mud-hole in Poland.
+One-story houses and everybody peeping into everybody else's windows.
+The few notables of the town and neighborhood tickled to death because
+they have an Imperial Highness with them, and the fool of an Imperial
+Highness goes and "besots himself with a mere country lass." He showed
+me her photograph. I like her looks. A pretty face, blonde hair and soft
+eyes. He was her first lover. On his account she left her family. She
+dotes on him as a dog dotes on his master.
+
+Leopold is eccentric enough to jeopardize his career for this poor
+thing. He rented a small house for her and spends much of his time there
+when not on the drill-grounds.
+
+Hence intense indignation among the "respectable ladies." An Imperial
+Highness within reach and he "doesn't come to our dances, he doesn't
+visit and sends his regrets when invited!"
+
+Poor Marja suffers especially from the venom of the officers'
+wives,--cattle I detest. No royal or imperial prince is safe from them
+except in his mother's womb.
+
+"From morn till night and half the night they do nothing but gossip
+about me and my girl," said Leopold,--"If the cats were only satisfied
+with that! But every little while I get an anonymous letter from one of
+them, denouncing her; Marja is favored in a similar way; so is my
+general and our uncle, the Emperor."
+
+And needless to say Leopold can't get along on his salary and appanage.
+Father can't give him much. The Emperor won't, because the clergy
+intrigues against him as a free-thinker and non-church-goer.
+
+We thought long and deep whether it wouldn't be possible to improve our
+position and we decided on this:
+
+We will keep up each other's spirits by clandestine correspondence,
+carried on with the aid of a mutual friend. At the same time we will,
+apparently, fall in with the ideas of "our masters" and endure a few
+pin-pricks rather than waste our strength in useless opposition.
+
+Let no one chide us for hypocrites, because our gentleness will be a
+mask, our submission a snare, our obedience a lie. It's all on the
+outside. Inwardly Leopold and Louise will remain true to themselves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+FREDERICK AUGUSTUS CONTINUES VERY RAW
+
+ Manners _a la_ barracks natural to royal princes--Names I am
+ called--My ladies scandalized--Leopold turned over a new leaf,
+ according to agreement, and is well treated--The King grateful to me
+ for having "influenced Leopold to be good."
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _October 1, 1894_.
+
+I have tried it a fortnight during Frederick Augustus' sojourn here,
+and, like the French Countess who fell in love with the strong man of
+the circus, I am disappointed. Frederick Augustus considers my
+tractability _carte blanche_ to carry into the boudoir of an Imperial
+Princess the license of the brothel. He treats me like a kept-woman--all
+with the utmost good-nature. I am called names such as the other
+Augustus bestowed on the mothers of his three hundred and fifty-two, and
+I daren't remind him that some day I'll be Queen of these realms.
+
+This prince, like the majority of them, hasn't the ghost of an idea of a
+sensitive woman's nature. He paws me over like a prize cow, and as the
+fourteenth Louis esteemed his mistress's chamber-women no more worthy of
+notice than her lap-dogs, so Frederick Augustus makes love _a la_
+barracks before the Schoenberg, Countess von Minckwitz, or whatever
+other lady is in attendance.
+
+Only when he does it before the Tisch I am inclined to be amused rather
+than incensed. Tisch, cadaverous beanpole, never felt a loving touch on
+her shoulder. The place where her bosom should be never experienced a
+friendly squeeze. No one ever cared whether she wore silk stockings or
+rubber boots--be amorous, Frederick Augustus, when the Tisch is 'round!
+Indulge your coarseness! Put twenty-mark pieces in my stockings for a
+kiss. Tell gay stories and don't forget playing with my corsage. It will
+make the old woman mad. It will remind her of what she missed--of what
+she will miss all her life!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _October 10, 1894_.
+
+Letter from Leopold. He is going to church and--they leave his mistress
+in peace.
+
+He is paying banal compliments to the noble-women of his garrison and
+pinches the officers' wives when he finds one in a corner--and they seem
+to live in corners when His Imperial Highness is around--hence, no more
+anonymous letters!
+
+The spy planted in his household by the Emperor is allowed to see much
+of the "innocent" correspondence passing between me and Leopold. He has
+reported to Francis Joseph that the Prince turned over a new leaf.
+
+Result: Leopold's debts have been paid and he got about two thousand
+marks over and above his wants.
+
+Further results: A gracious letter from the King's House Marshal, Baron
+Carlowitz, praising me for "the good influence I am exercising on
+Leopold."
+
+Truly the world wants to be deceived.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+PRINCE MAX MAKES LOVE TO ME
+
+ Wants me to consult him on all spiritual matters--Warns me against
+ the Kaiser, the heretic bishop--Princes as ill-mannered as
+ Russian-Jew up-starts.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 15, 1894_.
+
+Prince Max called on me the day of my arrival and promised me an
+armchair in Paradise for "reforming" Leopold. "I understand that your
+family life is ideal now," he added. "What bliss!"
+
+"Oh, Louise," he continued, with the face of a donkey withdrawing his
+nozzle from a syrup barrel, "whenever doubtful of the right way, of the
+Lord's way, come to me."
+
+It would have been un-politic to repulse the grotesque ape, and I said:
+"I will. I will even give you the preference over the Kaiser, who asked
+me the same thing--as _summus episcopus_, of course."
+
+Max looked about the room. We were alone, yet he lowered his voice to a
+faint whisper. "William is a heretic. Don't trust him in religious
+matters," he breathed stealthily. And this devilish Max began to stroke
+my hands and admire a bracelet I wore above the elbow.
+
+The Kaiser wouldn't have gone much further under the circumstances.
+Maybe he would have kissed my arm, though, from wrist to pit.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Tonight family tea in the Queen's _salon_. The King an icicle, but
+polite as a French marquis. He gave me the three "_How art thou's_" in
+the space of five minutes, asked after the babies and promised to come
+and look them over.
+
+Frederick Augustus, half insane with delight, pinched my arm and
+squeezed my leg under the table. I felt like boxing his ears.
+
+My father-in-law had to behave in the presence of the King and said a
+few commonplaces to me.
+
+Johann George and Isabella talked automobiles, not to let us forget they
+are millionaires.
+
+"How much did you pay for my blue car?" asked Isabella.
+
+"Not much," replied Johann George; "sixty thousand francs, if I
+recollect rightly."
+
+"My allowance for a whole year." I smiled my sweetest, and the King
+looked disapprovingly at the braggarts.
+
+For ill manners recommend me to a Russian-Jew upstart or to a Royal
+Highness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+THE SHAH OF PERSIA FALLS IN LOVE WITH ME
+
+ The "animal" and his show of diamonds and rubies--Overcome by love
+ he treats me like a lady of the harem--On the defensive--The King of
+ kings an ill-behaved brute--Eats like a pig and affronts
+ Queen---Wiped off greasy hands on my state robe--When ten thousand
+ gouged-out eyes carpeted his throne--Offers of jewels--"Does he take
+ me for a ballet girl?"--The Shah almost compromises me--King,
+ alarmed, abruptly ends dinner--I receive presents from him.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 20, 1894_.
+
+Lover No. two. Very much in earnest, like the first, but I--extremely
+distant this time, though I accepted some emeralds and sapphires as big
+as dove's eggs. The Shah of Persia is the happy-unhappy man.
+
+The King and all the Princes went to the railway station to receive him.
+The Queen and Princesses, our entourage behind us, assembled in the
+throne room to do honor to the "animal." To designate him otherwise
+would be callow flattery.
+
+But his diamonds and rubies fairly dazzled us. Nothing like it in
+Europe, and our gala uniforms, compared with his, like stage tiaras to
+the Russian Crown jewels!
+
+Though he had eyes for me only, I didn't like him a bit. He is a little
+fellow, unsecure on his pins. And like the Balkan princeling I met in
+Vienna, looks as though there was a strain of Jewish blood in his veins.
+
+Like a true Oriental potentate, he wasted not a minute's time on the
+Queen and my sisters-in-law, but began making love to me as soon as he
+entered. The King had to take him by the arm to remind him that his
+first greetings were due to her Majesty. Poor Carola! Her face looked
+like parchment, much interlined, and the point of her nose was as
+conspicuous as usual.
+
+There's nothing elegant about this "King of kings," and his French, like
+his manners, is atrocious. He addressed a few set phrases to the Queen,
+then attacked me--"attacked" is the right word. If I hadn't been on the
+defensive, I think he would have handled my charms as unceremoniously as
+Frederick Augustus when in his cups. As it was I escaped but by the
+length of an eye-lash.
+
+State dinner at five. I never saw such an ill-behaved brute, yet he
+intended to be most agreeable. We are very pious at this court, but on
+occasions like this even an old woman like the Queen is obliged to
+denude herself like a wet-nurse on duty.
+
+His Majesty had the Queen on one side; me on the left. The King of
+Saxony was opposite.
+
+After we sat down the Shah examined Queen Carola from the point of her
+chin to the edge of her desolate corsage and had the effrontery to
+express disapproval in all but words. Then he turned to me. His gaze
+became admiring. He was evidently delighted with his discoveries and,
+true despot that he is, turned his back on the Queen, while paying
+extravagant court to my charms.
+
+The King, the whole vast assembly, the surrounding splendor were lost on
+this mutton-eater of a barbarian. He saw only me, _m-e_, ME, and I'm
+sure would have consigned all the rest to some unspeakable Oriental
+death for five minutes' _tete-a-tete_ with Louise.
+
+"You are neglecting Her Majesty," I whispered to him over and over
+again. This seemed to enrage him, but at last he turned to the Queen,
+expecting her to begin a conversation with him. Of course, Her Majesty
+thought he would take the initiative, which led to mutual staring, the
+Shah's eyes growing wickeder every second. Then he began to devote
+himself to the food and, be sure, there was small pleasure in watching
+him. He fed more like a dog than a human being and actually had the
+effrontery to wipe his sauce-spattered hands in the lap of my state
+robe.
+
+Then, before his mouth was empty, he began talking again.
+
+"Which of the princes is your husband?"
+
+I singled out Frederick Augustus. "He isn't a beauty by any means," he
+said, after examining him like a horse for sale.
+
+The next second his eyes were wandering over my body; I felt as if I was
+being disrobed.
+
+"You will attend the opera?"
+
+"I'll have the honor."
+
+"I will send you a little present after dinner," he said. "If you wear
+it tonight, I will regard that as a sign of hope." The beast affected a
+sentimentality to which he must be a stranger.
+
+I recalled that he was the monster who carpeted the steps of his throne
+with the gouged-out eyes of ten thousand enemies of his regime when he
+was crowned. On twenty-thousand human eyes he trod with naked feet as he
+acclaimed himself "King of kings" and the "true son of God." And
+Juggernaut was in love with me!
+
+I was speechless. Did he take me for a dancing girl? I narrowed my
+shoulders and gave him a look of disdain. House Marshal Baron Carlowitz,
+standing behind the King's chair, took in the situation and whispered to
+King Albert.
+
+The King immediately rose from table and the state dinner came to an
+abrupt end.
+
+An hour later, while I was dressing for the theatre, a big jewel box was
+handed in. "From the Shah."
+
+Despite my disgust with the fellow, I opened it in feverish haste. There
+was a bracelet set with rubies, sapphires and emeralds of fabulous
+size.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+THE SHAH COMPROMISES ME IN PUBLIC
+
+ Has only eyes for me at the grand manoeuvres, and I can't drive
+ him from my carriage--Ignores the King and the military
+ spectacle--Calls me his adored one--Court in despair--Shah ruins
+ priceless carpets to make himself a lamb stew.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _December 1, 1894_.
+
+I am in disgrace again and that uncouth animal, the Shah, is
+responsible.
+
+The dinner episode was bad enough, but he carried on worse at the grand
+parade next day.
+
+Six or eight regiments, Horse, Foot and Artillery, had been moved to do
+him honor, but he flatly refused to accept a mount for the occasion.
+Like the ladies of the royal family, he drove to the parade field in a
+coach and four, and no sooner did he clap eyes on me at the rendezvous
+in another vehicle than he left his and shambled over to me. He stood at
+the carriage door, chanting love and devotion, and if I hadn't been all
+ice, I have no doubt he would have jumped in and ordered the coachman to
+drive to a hotel.
+
+Meanwhile the King trotted around the manoeuvre field in honor of his
+"sublime guest." Evolutions, _Parade-marsch_, attacks, saluting the
+colors, Persian and Saxon, what not? Imagine the feelings of the old
+King when he rode up to the Shah's gala coach and found it empty.
+
+The marching past had begun, and still the "King of kings" turned his
+back on it all, while trying to persuade me to be Queen of his seraglio.
+
+Our courtiers, the princes, the Queen, the generals were in despair.
+They took counsel with each other, disputed, advised, got red in the
+face. The Shah's gentlemen alone kept cool. They probably argued: If our
+master prefers the company of a pretty woman to looking at ten thousand
+men, he shows his good taste.
+
+I tried to shake him off. He stood his ground and smiled.
+
+"The Grand March has begun, Your Majesty."
+
+"Bother the Grand March."
+
+The King began to bombard me with ungracious, glances, and of course
+everybody stared. Three times I asked the big booby to return to his
+carriage to oblige his host. "Not while I may look at you, adored one."
+
+His love-making became desperate. The Crown Princess of Saxony, the
+Imperial Highness of Austria, the "adored one" of this butcher, who was
+ruining twenty-five thousand marks' worth of carpets in his apartments
+at our palace by using them as a shambles to prepare his breakfast of
+lamb stew. It was contemptible,--nay, ridiculous. Surely there was
+nothing to do but laugh. And I laughed and laughed again.
+
+Only when the last battalion had marched by and the music ceased, the
+"King of kings" returned to his carriage and drove back to Dresden with
+the most bored looking visage of the world.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+MY LIFE AT COURT BECOMES UNBEARABLE
+
+ Laughter a crime--Disappointed Queen lays down the law for my
+ behavior--Frederick Augustus sometimes fighting drunk--Draws sword
+ on me--Prince George would have me beaten--To bed with his boots on.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 5, 1895_.
+
+Ever since the Shah left I have been the object of criticism, suspicions
+and down-right attacks by the pretty family I married into. These pages
+witness that I tried to conform to the absurd notions and comply with
+the narrow-minded idiosyncrasies of the Royal Wettiners. I give it up.
+It can't be done, and I won't make another effort at pleasing my
+relatives-in-law, who adjudge laughter a crime and the desire to make
+friends a bid of lewdness.
+
+Prince George invented the phrase, "Louise is over-desirous to please,"
+and Queen Carola paid me a state visit to acquaint me with the new
+indictment.
+
+"Good gracious," I said to Her Majesty, "is that all? I thought of being
+accused of 'sassing' the Archangel Gabriel. As to desire to please,
+that's exactly what ails me. I love to please. I love to see people
+happy. I love to make friends."
+
+"My dear child," said the Queen, "you haven't the slightest notion of
+royal dignity. You talk like a _cocotte_. It's a Princess's place to be
+honored, to be held in supreme esteem."
+
+Poor old woman! She was never pretty, never was made love to, never had
+admirers, legitimate or otherwise; she thus became impregnated with the
+fixed idea that to be fair and to be loved for one's fairness is
+frivolous, if not altogether reprehensible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _March 10, 1895._
+
+Frederick Augustus drinks. He says I drive him to drink by my attitude
+towards his beloved family. What the beloved family does to me doesn't
+count, of course.
+
+Drinking was one of the vices of his youth. Love for me cured him of the
+dreadful habit. As this love wanes, the itch for alcohol increases.
+
+I can't do anything with him when he is drunk, and at such times I am
+afraid of him. He both nauseates me and frightens me. Sometimes he comes
+home "fighting drunk." The fumes of wine, beer and _Schnapps_, mixed
+with tobacco, upset my stomach and I try to avoid his coarse embrace as
+any decent woman would.
+
+What does this royal drill-ground bully do? He unsheathes his sword and
+threatens to cut my liver out, unless I instantly doff my clothes and go
+to bed with him.
+
+Prince George's evil counsel wasn't powerful enough to procure me
+beatings, but my husband's military education, his love of discipline,
+backed by alcohol, thrusts a sword into his hand, and, if I refuse to
+comply with his atrocious demands, I am liable to be treated like so
+many "mere" civilians that are sabred in the public streets for refusing
+to do some spurred and epauletted blackguard's bidding, or entertain his
+insults.
+
+If the Socialists, who are forever railing against these self-same army
+poltroons, only knew it! An Imperial Highness threatened like a small
+"cit" with a four-foot sword in the hand of a drunken Royal Highness and
+dragged to a couch with no more ceremony than a street-walker passing a
+Cossack barracks!
+
+The howl that would go up in the Diet, or the _Reichstag_, the fulminant
+denials by prince and king and government! And if I really did get hurt
+in one of these fracases, Frederick Augustus would be sure of a "severe
+reprimand" by father and uncle, and perhaps by the Kaiser, too, but
+would that heal my wounds, would it save me from death? Would it even
+prevent Prince George from saying that I myself was to blame?
+
+No, no, I like a whole skin and prefer an embrace to a sword-thrust any
+day, like my ancestress, the Queen of Naples, who consummated the
+marriage forced upon her on the spot and in sight of the army rather
+than have her head cut off. Too bad she was hanged in the end despite
+her complacency.[5]
+
+Indeed, if Frederick Augustus shows the mailed fist, I don't stand on
+ceremony, but I do wish he would take his boots off.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 5: Joanna I, Queen of Naples, a pupil of Petrarca and in many
+respects an enlightened ruler. She issued the first laws and regulations
+regarding prostitutes. Hanged by order of King Louis of Hungary, after
+her defeat in battle, July, 1381.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+PRISON FOR PRINCES THAT OPPOSE THE KING
+
+ Duke of Saxony banished--Cut off from good literature even--Anecdote
+ concerning the Grand Dauphin and his "kettledrums"--A royal prince's
+ garrison life--His association with lewd women.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _September 1, 1895_.
+
+I have once more come to the conclusion that the agreement I made with
+Leopold, to dissimulate my real feelings, was the sanest decision I ever
+formed, for, while _lettres de cachet_ are a dead measure as far as
+ordinary mortals go, kings still wield that awful and mysterious abuse
+of power in the family circle.
+
+There is a distant connection of our "sublime master," the King,
+lingering, without process of law, in a state prison. Duke of Saxony is
+his title, and he is quite rich in his own right. Some six or eight
+years ago he raised his hand against the King after the latter struck
+him.
+
+It was suggested that he had better make away with himself, and a
+revolver and poison were conspicuously displayed in the room where he
+was held captive.
+
+The Duke said "nay." He thought he could "brass" it out. But the
+assembled family council taught him that, while the world at large was
+_fin-de-siecle_, royalty still lived in the traditions of the eighteenth
+century. It empowered the King to banish his kinsman to a lonely country
+house, styled castle by courtesy, and he is confined there even today,
+with the proviso, though, that he may use the surrounding
+hunting-grounds. Otherwise he lives in complete seclusion, separated not
+only from all his friends, but from the very classes of society to which
+he belongs by birth and education. And he is still a young man.
+
+I believe they are trying to drive him mad, once as a punishment, and
+again to secure his fortune the quicker. To the latter end, he is denied
+all books that give him pleasure and are liable to improve his mind.
+Bibles, Christian Heralds, the Lives of the Martyrs, or the Popes,
+galore, but never a Carlyle, Shakespeare or Taine, which he demands
+regularly.
+
+The Duke is dying of _ennui_, they say, and to kill time engages in all
+sorts of manual labor. When he gets tired of that he blows the trombone.
+
+"Of course he would prefer a pair of kettledrums," said my cousin
+Bernhardt of Weimar, to whom I am indebted for the above.
+
+"Kettledrums?" I asked.
+
+"I mean those the Grand Dauphin, called 'Son of a king, father of a
+king, never a king,' was so fond of, and which he finally married in
+secret."
+
+I looked bewildered.
+
+"You are a very ignorant girl," said Bernhardt. "Never heard of the
+prodigious bosoms of _Mademoiselle_ Chouin?"
+
+"They won't let the Duke marry?" I queried.
+
+"Not even temporarily," said Bernhardt. "And they are trying the same
+game on me. My garrison--a dung-heap. The people there, males and
+females, entirely unacquainted with soap and water. Nothing in the world
+to do but drink and gamble."
+
+"That reminds me. What are you doing in Dresden?"
+
+"With Your Imperial Highness's permission, I came to see my girl."
+
+"Who is the lady?"
+
+"No lady at all. Just an ordinary servant-wench, but prettier and more
+devilish than a hundred of them."
+
+"Bernhardt!"
+
+"What would you have me do, Louise? I haven't money enough to keep a
+mistress, and King and Queen certainly won't keep one for me. I wish I
+had lived a hundred and fifty years ago, when every lady of the court
+was expected to entertain the royal princes, the Palace footing the
+bill."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+PRINCE GEORGE SHOWN THE DOOR BY GRAND-DUCHESS MELITA
+
+ A royal lady who walks her garden attired in a single diaphanous
+ garment--Won't stand for any meddling--Called impertinent--My
+ virtuous indignation assumed--A flirtation at a distance--An
+ audacious lover--The Grand Mistress hoodwinked--Matrimonial horns
+ for Kaiser--The banished Duke dies--Princes scolded like
+ school-boys.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _February 5, 1896_.
+
+At last Prince George got his deserts, and got 'em good and heavy. There
+had been rumors for some time that Grand-duke Ernest Ludwig and his
+bride, Victoria Melita of Saxe-Coburg, the English branch, didn't get
+along together. Ernest Ludwig is a serious-minded, modest and
+intelligent man, but a good deal of a sissy. Victoria Melita is a
+spit-fire, very good-looking and anxious to let people know about it.
+She rides horseback and fences to show off her figure, and someone
+called her a Centaur.
+
+"Be in the palace gardens tomorrow at eleven," answered Melita, "and you
+will be convinced that I am not half-horse, even if my husband is a
+ninny."
+
+She kept the _rendezvous_, attired in a single garment of diaphanous
+texture.
+
+When Prince George heard that she had a lover, he went to Darmstadt to
+"correct her," as he expressed himself with much self-satisfaction.
+
+But Victoria Melita proved to him that English princesses are made of
+sterner stuff than the German variety.
+
+"I will have none of your meddling," said the bride of two years.
+
+"I came here to make peace between you people."
+
+"Play the dove to your daughter-in-law," quoth the Grand-duchess. "I
+hear you are fighting like Kilkenny cats."
+
+"You are impertinent, Madame," cried George furiously.
+
+"You will oblige me by showing this man the door," demanded Victoria
+Melita, addressing her husband.
+
+"Not until I have explained the situation," answered Ernest Ludwig
+quietly. "Listen, then, cousin! While I am by principle opposed to
+divorce, I won't force my wife to live with me."
+
+"And now be so kind as to withdraw," said Victoria Melita, opening the
+door for Prince George. Poor as I am, I would have given five thousand
+marks to have seen the meddling pest exit in that fashion, and I love
+Victoria Melita for the spirit she displayed, even if I don't approve of
+her _liaisons_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _February 10, 1896_.
+
+A mighty virtuous remark escaped me on the last page, and I almost feel
+like asking the Grand-duchess's pardon, for, whatever I am, I'm no
+hypocrite. Melita is said to have a lover; I have an admirer. Up to now
+I don't care a rap for him, but who knows?
+
+It's Count Bielsk of the Roumanian Embassy. I can't remember whether he
+was ever introduced to me. Most probably he was, but I forgot.
+
+An elegant fellow--always looks as if he stepped out of a tailor's shop
+in Piccadilly.
+
+Every single night I go to the theatre the Count occupies an orchestra
+chair that affords the best possible view of the royal box. It happened
+too often and too persistently to be accidental. Moreover, I observe
+that he pays no attention to the play. He has eyes for me only.
+
+Impertinence? Decidedly, but I can't be angry with the fellow. On the
+contrary, I am flattered, and the kind face and the fine eyes he's got!
+
+Poor stupid Tisch doesn't approve of the theatre, of course, and usually
+begs to be excused on the plea of religious duties. "What a sinner you
+must be," I sometimes say, "when you are obliged to forever bother God
+with prayers."
+
+The Schoenberg I send into the next box, for she is no spy and never
+watches me. But if I must take Tisch, I always command her to sit
+behind me. Etiquette forbids her the front of the box and from the rear
+she can see only the stage.
+
+What fun to carry on a flirtation right under the nose of that
+acrid-hearted, snivelling bigot, who would mortgage part of the eternal
+bliss she promises herself for a chance to catch me at it!
+
+Am I flirting, then?
+
+To spite the Tisch I would plant horns on the very Kaiser.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _April 1, 1896._
+
+The Duke of Saxony is dead--the man who at one time offered violence to
+His Majesty. Bernhardt was mistaken; he left a wife and three children.
+Of course, no recognized wife. Just the woman he married. Unless you are
+of the blood-royal, you won't see the difference, but that is no concern
+of mine.
+
+Novels and story books have a good deal to say on the subject of
+inheritance-fights among the lowly. Greed, hard-heartedness,
+close-fistedness, treachery, cheating all around! See what will happen
+to the Duke's widow and her little ones.
+
+According to the house laws, a regular pirate's code, his late
+Highness's fortune reverts to the family treasury. Prince Johann George
+will derive the revenues from the real estate the Duke owned privately.
+He is already rich,--sufficient reason for his wanting more. I shudder
+when I think what they will do to the woman the Duke married.
+
+The most notable thing about the funeral was the "calling down" Prince
+Bernhardt got.
+
+"You will go to my valet and ask him to lend you one of my helmets.
+Yours is not the regulation form, I see," said the King to him in the
+voice of a drill-sergeant. And Bernhardt had to take to his heels like a
+school-boy caught stealing apples.
+
+I had to laugh when I observed the meeting between my erstwhile admirer,
+the Prince of Bulgaria, and His Majesty.
+
+Ferdinand's broad chest was ablaze with orders and decorations, but his
+valet had forgotten to pin onto him the Cross of the _Rautenkrone_, the
+Royal Saxe House decoration. There were plenty of others, but the King
+had eyes only for the one not dangling from a green ribbon.
+Consequently, Ferdinand, though a sovereign Prince, got only one "_How
+art thou?_" If we were living in the eighteenth, instead of the
+nineteenth, century, his valet's neglect would constitute a prime cause
+for war between the two countries.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+MELITA'S LOVE AFFAIRS AND MINE
+
+ The Grand Duchess tells me how she cudgeled George--Living
+ dictaphone employed--Shows him who is mistress of the house--Snaps
+ fingers in Prince George's face--Debate about titles--"A sexless
+ thing of a husband"--Conference between lover and husband--Grand
+ Duke doesn't object to his wife's lover, but lover objects to "his
+ paramour being married."
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 15, 1896_.
+
+Melita conducted herself at the funeral and in our palace as
+unconcernedly as if she and George were fast friends. She smiled every
+time she saw him, and he cut her dead to his heart's content. During the
+three days' stay of the Hesses, I had many a good talk and many a good
+laugh with Melita, and now I got a true and unabridged record of what
+happened at Darmstadt during George's meddling visit there.
+
+The Grand-duchess, who can be as catty as they make 'em, had her
+secretary sit behind a screen to take stenographic notes.
+
+Saxon kings and princes always roar and bellow when, in conversation or
+otherwise, things go against their "all-highest" grain. As soon as
+George felt that he was losing ground, he began to bark and yell,
+whereupon Melita interrupted him by saying, "I beg you to take notice
+that you are in _my_ house."
+
+George grew so red in the face, Melita hoped for an apoplectic fit. But
+after a few seconds he managed to blurt out: "It's your husband's
+house."
+
+"While I am Grand-duchess of Hesse it's my house, too. Moreover, this is
+my room and I forbid you to play the ruffian here."
+
+Prince George looked at the Grand-duke, but Ernest Ludwig said nothing.
+
+"I am here as the King's representative. I represent the chief of the
+Royal House of Saxony."
+
+"A fig for your Royal House of Saxony," said Melita, snapping her
+fingers in George's face. "Queen Victoria is my chief of family, and,
+that aside, Ludwig and I are sovereigns in Hesse and have no intention
+whatever to allow anyone----"
+
+"Anyone?" repeated George aghast. "You refer to me as anyone?"
+
+"In things matrimonial," said Melita, "only husband and wife count; all
+others are 'anyone.' You, too."
+
+"She calls me 'you,'" cried George, white with rage, looking helplessly
+at Ernest Ludwig. When the latter kept his tongue and temper, George
+addressed himself to Melita once more.
+
+"I want you to understand that my title is Royal Highness."
+
+"And I want you to understand that I am Her Royal Highness the
+Grand-duchess of Hesse, Royal Princess of Great Britain and Ireland,
+Duchess of Saxony," cried Melita, stamping her foot.
+
+With that she went to the door, opened it and said, "I request Your
+Royal Highness to leave my house this very second."
+
+And George went.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 1, 1896_.
+
+Poor virtuous me, to chide myself, and call myself names for flirting
+with Count Bielsk--at a distance of twenty feet or more! "I could kick
+my back," as the Duc de Richelieu--not the Cardinal, but the lover of
+the Regent's daughters and "every wife's husband"--used to say (only a
+bit more grossly) when I think what I miss in this dead-alive Dresden.
+
+Darmstadt isn't half as big a town, and the Hesse establishment doesn't
+compare with ours in magnitude, but what fun Melita is having!
+
+Of course, it isn't _all_ fun, for her husband is a "sexless" thing,
+and, like the Grand-duchess Serge of Russia, she would be a virgin,
+though married for years, if it wasn't for the other.
+
+"The other" is none other but Kyril, the lover of our Dolores,--Kyril
+isn't exactly pining away when separated from Melita.
+
+Well, Melita wants him all to herself. She wants a divorce. The
+complacent husband, who is no husband at all, doesn't suit her. Exit
+Ernest Ludwig--officially. Enter Kyril--legitimately.
+
+She made me reams of confidences, indulged in whole _brochures_ of
+dissertations on the question of sex. What an ignoramus I am! I didn't
+understand half she said and was ashamed to ask.
+
+Ernest Ludwig is the most accommodating of husbands. Knows all about
+Kyril and would gladly shut both eyes if they let him. Melita might, if
+pressed very hard, for adultery has no terrors for her, but Kyril
+affects the idealist. Sure sign that he really loves her. If he was
+mine, I would be afraid of this Kyril. No doubt he is jealous as a Turk.
+
+Last week the three of them had a conference. Lovely to see husband,
+wife and paramour "in peaceful meeting assembled" and talk over the
+situation as if it concerned the Royal stud or something of the sort.
+
+No recriminations, no threats, no heroics; only when Ernest Ludwig
+submitted that divorce be avoided to save his face as a sovereign, Kyril
+got a bit excited.
+
+"This is not a question of politics," he said, "or what the dear public
+thinks. Your wife don't want you; as a matter of fact, she isn't your
+wife, and since we are in love with each other, we ought to marry."
+
+"Marry, marry, why always marry?" demanded the Grand-duke. "I
+acknowledge that I haven't the right to interfere in my wife's
+pleasure--I am not built that way. Well, I _don't_ interfere. What more
+do you want? You don't deny that I am the chief person to be
+considered."
+
+"You?" mocked Kyril. "You with your sovereignty are not in it at all. If
+it wasn't for you, Melita and I could marry and say no more about it."
+
+"But I don't prevent your enjoyment of each other," pleaded the ruler of
+the Hessians.
+
+Now the idealistic Kyril got on his high horse. "Grand-duke," he said,
+"if you don't object to your wife having a lover, that's your business.
+For my part, I object to my paramour having a husband."
+
+And so on _ad infinitum_, and a goose like me abuses herself for a bit
+of goo-goo-eyeing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+MORE ABOUT THE SWEET ROYAL FAMILY LIFE
+
+ "Closed season" for petty meannesses--A prince who enjoys himself
+ like a pig--Why princes learn trades--A family dinner to the
+ accompaniment of threats and smashing of table--The Duke's widow and
+ children robbed of their inheritance by royal family--King
+ confiscates testament.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _September 13, 1896_.
+
+They are treating me like a laying hen. Expect another golden egg in
+December. Hence, "closed season" for imperious commands, "all-highest"
+orders and petty meannesses.
+
+When I learned that Bernhardt was in Dresden, I phoned him to come out
+and see me--without asking either royal, princely, or the Tisch's
+permission.
+
+A junior prince, without fortune or high protector, is really to be
+pitied. His title, the vague possibility that some day he may be called
+to the throne, stand between him and enjoyment of life as a man. Nothing
+left, but to enjoy himself like a pig.
+
+Bernhardt admits it. "They planted me in the God-forsakenest hole in the
+kingdom. If I saw a pretty woman in my garrison from one year's end to
+the other, I would die of joy. And the newspaper scribblers wonder why
+we are all Oscar Wildes.
+
+"Just to kill time, I am learning the carpenter's trade--this Royal
+Highness, you must know, lives in a carpenter's house, as innocent of
+sanitary arrangements as a Bushman's hut. Of course, I run away every
+little while to Dresden, incog. to pay my respects to Venus.
+
+"Louise," he cried with comic emphasis, "may the three hours you steal
+from my girl, by way of this visit, be deducted from your eternal
+beatitude."
+
+I lent the poor fellow five hundred marks and he rushed back to Dresden.
+
+Tonight I told Frederick Augustus of my interview with Bernhardt, not
+mentioning the five hundred, of course.
+
+He laughed. "He's no worse than the rest of us used to be," he said. "I
+did exactly like him, and father and uncle and brothers and cousins,
+ditto. Behold--your husband-locksmith! Max spent all his time reading
+the Lives of the Popes. That made him the dried-up mummy he is. But,
+believe me, I gave the girls many a treat. All the money I could beg,
+borrow or steal went for girls."
+
+Which explains Frederick Augustus's bedroom manners--sometime
+transplanted to the parlor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 1, 1897_.
+
+I gave Saxony a third prince on December 9, and really I wasn't quite in
+condition to be scolded at today's family dinner. But since, with three
+boys growing up, the succession is more than guaranteed, the season for
+insults is again open.
+
+His Majesty, our most gracious, sublime, etc., sovereign, sulks.
+Consequently the family looks glum, down in the mouth, utterly unhappy.
+
+Max gets up to make a speech and one could fairly see the lies wriggle
+out of his mouth full of defective teeth: exemplary family life;
+traditional friendship of all members for each other; perfect unity; the
+King and all the princes brave as lions; the Queen and all the
+princesses paragons of virtue. And the fatherly love with which the King
+embraces us all; his more than royal generosity; his mildness, his
+Christian virtues!
+
+The Queen is a goose. Max's lying commonplaces make her forget her many
+years of misery spent at this court, and she grows as sentimental as a
+kitten. Fat Mathilda, Isabelle and Johann George applaud Max despite
+their better understanding, and now the King rises to make his usual New
+Year's address.
+
+The gist of his long-winded remarks is this: "I am the lord, your
+master, and I will see to it that you--wife, brother, nephews and
+nieces--will dance as I whistle.
+
+"For obedience to the King is the highest law," he paraphrases
+Wilhelm,--"strictest, unconditional obedience" (and he gave me a
+poisoned look) "and let no one forget it, no one." With that he beat the
+table with his clenched fist, and the whole assemblage turns an accusing
+eye on me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 6, 1897_.
+
+They have driven the late Duke of Saxony's wife and children from house
+and home--put her on the high-road, piling her personal belongings,
+trunks, wardrobe and knick-knacks outside, too.
+
+She arrived in Dresden and sought refuge with her widowed mother. Her
+father, a Court-Councillor, dismissed because of the relations between
+the Duke and his daughter, died of grief and mortification, almost
+penniless. And the Ducal widow is as poor as the mother--and three
+children to bring up! Children of the royal blood of Saxony, children
+sanctioned by the Church of which they prate so much, for there is no
+doubt that the pair married in secret.
+
+The late Highness kept all his papers in a strong-box, and it's said the
+King's representative, who searched the safe by Royal orders, found
+neither acknowledgment of the marriage, nor a last will in favor of the
+widow and children. Hence, all the Duke's belongings revert to the
+royal family, and the estate he lived on goes to his next of kin, Johann
+George.
+
+Johann George, who has more money than he knows what to do with,
+promptly sent the bailiff after his cousin's wife and children.
+
+"_Noblesse oblige_,--the way you interpret the old saying, will advance
+the cause of monarchy immensely," I said to the official heir.
+
+"Is it any business of mine to support my relatives' mistresses?" I saw
+he was mad clean through.
+
+"You know very well that she was his wife."
+
+"There is apparently no official record of the marriage."
+
+"Maybe not in Dresden, as the nuptials were solemnized abroad. But what
+about the testament?"
+
+Johann George grew very red in the face. "If there is one, the King must
+have confiscated it. That often happens in royal houses."
+
+"And you mean to say that, with all your riches, you are heartless
+enough and contemptible enough----"
+
+"Take a care, Your Imperial Highness. The Duke's strumpet was today
+indicted for _lese majeste_ in connection with the testament matter."
+This junior prince dared to speak thus to me, the Crown Princess.
+
+"Johann George," I cried, "forget not that sooner or later I will be at
+the head of the royal family of Saxony. I forbid you to introduce your
+mess-room jargon into my parlor; at the same time I am sincerely sorry
+that a Prince of Saxony should stoop to buy cigarettes and gasoline with
+the pittance stolen from his cousin's widow and her three little
+children."
+
+I went to the door and told the lackey on duty to fetch his Royal
+Highness's carriage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+FLIRTATION DEVELOPS INTO LOVE
+
+ At the theatre--My adorer must have felt my presence--Forgot his
+ diplomacy--The mute salute--His good looks--His mouth a promise of a
+ thousand sweet kisses--Our love won't be any painted business.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 6, Night, 1897_.
+
+The talk with Johann George had excited me so, I wanted a diversion.
+Frederick Augustus sent word that he wouldn't be home for dinner. Hence,
+I decided to go to the theatre after an absence of months. It was after
+six when I telephoned that I would occupy my box at the Royal Opera. If
+I should see Him there, in the absence of announcements in the
+newspapers!
+
+He was there. In his usual seat. I won't rest until I find out how he
+manages to get wind of my theatrical ventures at such short notice. The
+Opera, Faust, had been in progress for ten minutes when I arrived. I
+espied him at once, but kept well behind the curtains of the box for a
+second or two. Then, suddenly, I dropped into the gilded armchair and
+the very same moment our eyes met.
+
+I am sure he expected me; he must have known I was near when I entered
+the house. To his ears the hundred and one melodies of Gounod's
+masterpiece were naught compared with the music of my silken skirts.
+
+He was so overcome, he forgot his diplomacy. Twice he pressed his right
+hand to his heart, then bowed his head in a mute salute.
+
+Fortunately the house was dark at the time and the audience,
+unacquainted with my visit, paid strict attention to the stage. No one
+but him saw my heart leap within me and the blood mount to my cheeks.
+Presently his diplomatic tact got the upper hand again, and he fixed his
+eyes on the score. That afforded me the chance to take a pictorial
+inventory of my lover-at-a-distance. I used my opera-glasses
+unmercifully.
+
+He's a fine looking man--if he were a woman he would be hailed a beauty.
+His forehead is a dream of loveliness; his mouth a promise of a thousand
+sweet kisses.
+
+If this man wants me, I mean if he wants me badly, our love won't be any
+painted business, I assure you.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 25, 1897_.
+
+Ball at the Roumanian Embassy. Royal command to attend.
+
+As if it needed a command to throw me into the arms of Bielsk.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+COUNT BIELSK MAKES LOVE TO THE CROWN PRINCESS
+
+ Fearless to indiscretion--He "thou's" me--Puts all his chances on
+ one card--Proposes a rendezvous--Shall I go or shall I not
+ go?--Peril if I go and peril if I don't.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 26, 1897, Night_.
+
+We went to the ball as His Majesty's representatives, Frederick Augustus
+and I, and were obliged to say a few nothingnesses to a hundred paltry
+persons or more. When the Ambassador introduced Count Bielsk, I said in
+the most careless voice of the world, "I hear you love the theatre,
+Count."
+
+"I don't care a rap for the theatre," he replied. "I go to opera and
+operetta simply to see you, Imperial Highness."
+
+Such audacity! And he spoke quite loud.
+
+Frightened, I turned to the next person presented, saying something
+imbecile, no doubt.
+
+Later I withdrew upon the dais to watch the dancing, and at a moment
+when I was quite alone, he came up to me, making it appear as if I had
+commanded his attendance.
+
+"I have much to say to Your Imperial Highness."
+
+I didn't have my wits about me and didn't know how to act. He repeated
+twice or oftener: "Pray, Your Imperial Highness, I have something to say
+to you," until, at last, I threw etiquette to the winds and asked:
+
+"Why should you wish to talk to me in private, Count?" No royal woman
+indulging in lovers ever encouraged a rogue more carelessly.
+
+"Because my life and happiness depend on what I have to say to you."
+
+And, weaker still, I assented by the tone of my voice rather than words:
+"You make me curious, Count. Whatever you have to say, say it now."
+
+He raised his eyes to me, with a soul and reputation-destroying look.
+"Thanks!" Then wildly, clamorously: "Louise, I love you."
+
+Instinctively I thought of flight, but his eyes wouldn't let me rise.
+From that moment on he dropped my title.
+
+"Stay," he whispered, "I beseech you, stay. Don't you see that I love
+you to distraction? I have kept silent these many months. Now I must
+talk. I love thee, Louise."
+
+I tried in vain to collect my thoughts while his love talk fanned my
+blood. Finally I managed to say: "Can't you see that you are playing _va
+banque_?"
+
+"I know, but it doesn't interest me. Let my career be wrecked, I care
+not; I've got only one thought in the world--thee, only one wish--thee.
+And I must either love thee or die."
+
+I turned my eyes away and rose abruptly. As he bowed to kiss my hand, he
+whispered, still "_thou'ing_" me: "I expect you tomorrow at the end of
+the Grand Boulevard. Come when you please. I will wait all day."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And here I am thinking, thinking, thinking.
+
+"The end of the Boulevard" is the beginning of Dresden's _Bois_. Does
+this madman really suppose that Her Imperial Highness, the Crown
+Princess of this kingdom, will lower herself and respond to his demand
+for a rendezvous?
+
+Yet, how he must love me to risk saying what he did say to me. He is no
+ill-balanced youth; he is a man of ripe judgment. His passion got the
+better of him.
+
+I adore passion.
+
+I must go no more to the theatre. Impossible for me to see him nightly.
+
+But it's a fine thing to be loved as I am. The most beautiful thing in
+the wide, wide world!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 27, 1897. In the Morning._
+
+He is waiting. Doubtless he expects me. What a persuasive thing love
+is, to be sure! Because he loves me, he argues that the Crown Princess,
+the wife and mother, will rush to meet him, fall into his arms.
+
+Of course, he will be most unhappy if I don't go, for I am sure he is
+not your ordinary "petticoat-chaser." He will suffer, he is suffering
+now while I sit here quietly.
+
+Am I quiet? If I weren't determined to stay at home, I would half-admit
+to myself that my soul is obsessed with longing for this man.
+
+A diplomat, who has seen much of court life, assumes that a woman in my
+position is at liberty to keep rendezvous! Let's reason it out.
+
+To begin with, Lucretia has to be won over. That's easy enough, but the
+coachman and lackey! They must be told that Her Imperial Highness is
+graciously pleased to _walk_ in the _Bois_, the carriage waiting at the
+end of the Grand Boulevard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _After Luncheon._
+
+I ought to have said to him, I won't come. It's cruel to let him wait on
+a street corner and not even send notice, and to tip him off is
+impossible.
+
+And come to think of it, if Lucretia and I were promenading in the
+_Bois_ and met the Count by accident, where's the harm? And if I don't
+go--Good Lord, he might kill himself. He is desperate enough for that.
+And he might leave letters compromising me.
+
+I will go to give him a piece of my mind. I will be very harsh with him,
+very adamant.
+
+And I will try to find out how he manages to select always the same
+theatre as I.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+RAPID LOVE MAKING IN THE BOIS
+
+ A discreet maid--"Remove thy glove"--Kisses of passion, pure kisses,
+ powerful kisses--I see my lover daily--Countess Baranello offers
+ "doves' nest"--Driving to rendezvous in state--"Naughty Louise," who
+ makes fun of George.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 1, 1897._
+
+A month of untold happiness. I went to the _Bois_ and I am going there
+every afternoon.
+
+He was splendid; he was modest, quiet. He seemed to exude happiness.
+
+Lucretia is discretion itself. She kept behind us, but out of ear-shot.
+
+"I came to tell you that you acted like a madman last night, and that
+the offense must not be repeated," I said sternly to Bielsk.
+
+"I _am_ a madman--in love," he replied, looking at me with big, soulful
+eyes.
+
+I chattered a lot of nonsense, prohibitions, commands, entreaties.
+
+"Remove thy glove," he begged.
+
+"You mustn't 'thou' me."
+
+"Remove thy glove," he repeated.
+
+Why I complied, I don't know, but I ripped off my glove, and he held my
+hand in both his hands and kissed it and kissed it.
+
+"What right have you got to treat me like a woman unmindful of her
+duties?"
+
+"I know that thou art lonesome, forlorn, Louise."
+
+He struck at my heart as he spoke these words, and my eyes filled with
+tears. He pressed his warm, pulsating lips on the palm of my hand,
+covering it from wrist to finger-tips with wild kisses.
+
+We were standing among the trees, and Lucretia, at a little distance,
+was plucking flowers. The remnant of common sense I mustered told me:
+"He is dishonoring you, repulse him," but his "I love thee, Louise,"
+rang like music in my ears. However, I tore myself free at last.
+"Farewell, we must never meet again."
+
+And then I lay in his arms, on his broad chest, and he covered my face
+with kisses, not passionate or insulting kisses. His lips touched
+lightly my eyes, my cheeks, my own lips--recompense for the long fast he
+had endured during all the months he had loved me at a distance.
+
+Marvelous kisses kissed this man, pure kisses, lovely kisses, powerful
+kisses. And I thought the whole world was falling to pieces around me
+and I didn't care as long as only he and I were living. He himself freed
+me.
+
+"Tomorrow," he whispered.
+
+I awoke confused, ashamed of my weakness, trembling.
+
+"I'll never see you again. Never," I said as if I meant it.
+
+"Tomorrow, love," he repeated. And I ran and joined Lucretia.
+
+When we were riding home I told Lucretia to draw the curtains, and fell
+upon her neck and told her all.
+
+The good soul was nearly frightened to death and we cried a good deal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 5, 1898_.
+
+I neglected my diary, I neglect everything, for I'm in love. What care I
+for the King, Prince George and the rest who are trying to make life
+miserable for me? I laugh their pettinesses to scorn, for I have no
+other thought now but Romano Bielsk, no other interests. He is my all,
+my happiness.
+
+Of course, his "_Tomorrow, love_," prevailed and it has been "_Tomorrow,
+love_," ever since. On the day after our first meeting I actually
+thought I was warring against nature if I resisted his entreaties. It
+seemed to me that I had always known him, that we were predestined for
+each other. I still think so.
+
+Lucretia has a relative here, an aunt, member of the court set. Old
+Countess Baranello delights in intrigue and hates Prince George. When I
+told her of my affair, she placed her palace at our disposal, saying:
+
+"Bielsk shall have a key to the garden gate and to the pavilion inside
+the walls, which connects, through a subterranean passage, with my
+sun-parlor. You can meet your love there any time. I will see to it that
+none of the servants or workmen disturb you."
+
+A capital arrangement, worthy of an old lady who has seen many gallant
+days! There can be no possible objection to my visits at her palace, and
+the grounds to which Romano has the _entree_ fronts on a street
+unfrequented by society or carriages.
+
+I descend from my carriage at the palace gate; a knot of people, a small
+crowd, perhaps, collects to salute me and gape at the horses and livery.
+I sweep up the stoop, lined by my own, and the Countess's, servants. The
+bronze doors open. The Countess advances with stately curtsy; a few
+words _sub rosa_, and I--fly into the arms of love, while faithful
+Lucretia mounts guard at the street side, and Her Ladyship's spy glasses
+cover the garden;--needless precautions, but----
+
+It's rare fun, and, after all, where's the harm?
+
+I made good as propagatrix of the royal race, and a union of soul such
+as exists between me and Romano never entered into my relations with
+Frederick Augustus.
+
+Romano is very intelligent. I can learn from him; Frederick Augustus
+taught me only coarseness, and if it came high, _double entendres_. Yet
+my lover is only a Councillor of Legation! Because his superiors,
+fearing his adroitness, keep him down.
+
+My children! Have I ever been allowed to be a real mother to them? The
+King, the nation, owns my little ones. I see them at stated intervals
+for half an hour or so, and romp with them as I do with my dogs.
+
+Still, I don't altogether approve of Louise, malicious girl! When I am
+at the top-gallant of my happiness I sometimes say to myself: "Oh, if
+only George could see me now!"
+
+Naughty Louise--it's unworthy of thee. What do I care for George, what
+do I care for the world?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+"IN LOVE THERE ARE NO PRINCESSES, ONLY WOMEN"
+
+ A diplomatic trick--Jealous of Romano's past--The pact for life and
+ the talisman--If there were a theatre fire the talisman would
+ discover our love to the King--Some ill-natured
+ reflections--Bernhardt's escapades cover up my tracks--The "black
+ sheep" jumps his horse over a coffin--King gives him a
+ beating--Bernhardt's mess-room lingo--Anecdotes of royal
+ voluptuaries--Forces animals to devour each other--Naked
+ ballet-girls as horses--Abnormals rule the world.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _May 20, 1898_.
+
+Romano learned about my theatre going by a diplomatic trick. He told one
+of the minor attaches of the Embassy that he had orders to watch
+me--"all-highest command." The official, consequently, negotiated with
+the box offices of all the theatres to phone him the moment Her Imperial
+Highness ordered seats.
+
+I am crazy to know how many women Romano loved in the twenty or more
+years since he grew to man's estate, and how many he seduced. It
+agitates and pains me to think of it, but all my questions are barren of
+results.
+
+Yesterday I asked him whether he ever knew a Princess of the Blood
+before me--"knew" in the biblical sense.
+
+"In love," he said, "there are no princesses, there are women only."
+
+He saw that I was hurt and added quickly: "Now don't be unreasonable,
+Louise--no prejudices. With the thought in my mind that you are an
+Imperial Highness, or that you consider yourself of better clay than I,
+I couldn't love you as I do."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 1, 1898_.
+
+We made a life-pact. Romano cut a gold piece in two and bored a hole in
+each half. He drew thin gold chains through the holes, gave me one of
+the amulets, and kept the other. Our combined monograms were already
+engraved on the bits of gold _en miniature_. Each swore to wear the
+talisman on the naked body for life, but we exchange amulets daily, or
+as often as we meet.
+
+When I am enthroned in the royal box and look down upon my lover below,
+I think all the time of this, our secret understanding, and it sometimes
+occurs to me, that the opera house might get on fire and both of us
+perish.
+
+Next day our bodies would be found. In or near the royal box, that of a
+woman, burned so as to be unrecognizable at first. ("We are all of the
+same clay," says Romano.)
+
+And down in the orchestra floor they would find Romano's body, likewise
+unrecognizable.
+
+And on my charred breast they would find the half of a twenty-mark
+piece. And on his charred chest they would find the half of a
+twenty-mark piece.
+
+And they would put the two together and discover that they match.
+
+Consternation, speculation!
+
+Someone suggests that the mysterious gold pieces be photographed for
+publication and the engraver who made the monogram, and the jeweler who
+sold the two chains come forward as witnesses.
+
+Meanwhile the identity of my body is established. That of Romano's
+follows. _Scandalum magnatum!_ But what are you going to do about it,
+_Messieurs_?
+
+If you had only known it a week ago! A prison _a la_ Princess Ahlden, or
+the Danish Queen Caroline Matilda, for me, disgraceful dismissal for
+Romano, for times are happily past when comely gentlemen, who have the
+wit to amuse royal ladies, durst be murdered in cold blood like
+Koenigsmarck, or be-handed, be-headed and cut into ninety-nine pieces as
+Struensee was in Copenhagen market-square.
+
+What are you going to do about it, King, George, Frederick Augustus?
+
+I'll tell you. You will bury me with the pomp of kings; and your
+sycophants will print beautiful stories about me, asserting that I died
+trying to rescue others, or did something of the sort; and your Court
+Chaplains will weep and pray and lie for me. And the tip of Queen
+Carola's nose will be redder than ever.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _September 1, 1898_.
+
+My young friend Bernhardt is doing me a great service and himself a lot
+of harm.
+
+A good-natured, tractable boy _au fond_, they made him a poltroon and
+worse by their persecutions, their meanness, their petty tyranny. He is
+proud, and they sent him to reside on a village manure heap; he is
+ambitious, and must drill raw recruits from morn till night; he is eager
+to learn and they try to embalm his intellect with tracts and kill his
+initiative by the endless, watery _ennui_ of tu-penny environment.
+
+Of course, he gets desperate and kicks over the traces, and while
+attracting the dear family's disapproving attention, I am more free than
+ever to devote myself to my Romano.
+
+Bernhardt's "latest" is really inexcusable. "I wonder we don't turn
+tigers with the education we receive," said one of the brothers of Louis
+XVI when upbraided for thoughtlessness and lack of consideration for the
+feelings of others--but Bernhardt seems to qualify for a vulture, and no
+original one at that, for a like offense as he is charged with was,
+several years ago, laid at the door of my cousin, Archduke Otho of
+Austria.
+
+Observe half a dozen young officers riding horseback in the neighborhood
+of their garrison town, Bernhardt at the head. At a bend in the road, a
+rural funeral _cortege_ hoves into sight: coffin borne on the shoulders
+of half a dozen peasants; weeping relatives; friends promising
+themselves a good time at the widow's expense on returning home. A black
+cross lifted high; priest and choir-boys in their robes.
+
+"Halt," thunders Bernhardt, blocking the way.
+
+The priest tries to expostulate with the half-drunken fellow.
+
+"Shut up, black-coat. I am His Royal Highness, Prince Bernhardt."
+
+Then--the devil must be riding him--he orders the coffin put down on the
+ground.
+
+"Out of the way, yokels."
+
+And he leaps his horse three or four times across the coffin.
+
+The outrage is duly reported in the newspapers and Bernhardt is summoned
+before the King. "Don't you dare to appear in uniform," Albert added in
+his own hand.
+
+"What has happened?" I asked the ne'er-do-well, when he begged for an
+audience after meeting the King.
+
+He pointed to a swollen cheek.
+
+"He hit me three times in _the eats_." (I beg the Diary's pardon for the
+language; I report literally.) "Three times," repeated Bernhardt,
+"that's the reason he wanted me to appear in mufti. As I went out one of
+the lackeys said: 'I never heard His Majesty rave so.'"
+
+"But why did you make a beast of yourself?" I asked.
+
+"To force the King to transfer me to another garrison, of course. I
+can't remain where I am, for the people are terribly incensed against
+me."
+
+"Did you tell His Majesty?"
+
+"Not on your life," answered Bernhardt. "If I did, I would have to stay
+there until my last tooth falls out. As things are, the Colonel will
+insist upon my speedy transference, and that's worth the three slams on
+the face I got in addition to the various _Lausbubs_."
+
+"He called you, an army officer, a '_Lausbub_.' Where is his vaunted
+respect for the uniform?"
+
+"Didn't he hit me in _the eats_?" lamented Bernhardt tragically in his
+terrible lingo. "I responded both to insult and injury by knocking my
+heels together and saying: 'At Your Majesty's commands.'"
+
+Of course, I told Romano. "Royalty," he said, "has only, on the face of
+it, advanced beyond the pirate and robber-baron period. _Au fond_ all
+princes and kings would be criminals if they happened not to be crowned
+heads."
+
+[Illustration: THE LATE KING ALBERT OF SAXONY
+
+Louise's Uncle by Marriage]
+
+He told me of a Balkan prince--young Alexander of Servia, the same mamma
+Natalie intended for my consort--whose chief amusement consists in
+having mice and rats chased by ferocious tom-cats in a big cage made for
+that purpose. Once, growing tired of that sport, he incarcerated ten
+tom-cats in the same cage without food many days in succession, visiting
+the prison hourly to see whether they wouldn't take to devouring each
+other.
+
+When, in the end, they did, tearing one another to pieces, His Majesty
+danced around the cage in high glee, pronouncing the battle of the poor
+beasts a bully spectacle.
+
+"You visited Castle Sibyllenort a week ago," continued Romano--"a most
+proper place, this royal residence, is it not? You ought to have seen it
+before your puritan King inherited it, ten years ago, upon the death of
+the last Duke of Brunswick. At that time it was a veritable museum of
+pornography, the apotheosis of Paphian voluptuousness. The palace, which
+has over four hundred rooms and halls--not one which a decent woman
+might enter without a blush--acquired its equipment as a _lupanar_ and
+its reputation for debauchery under the famous, or notorious, 'Diamond
+Duke,' a brother of the Highness who left the estate to King Albert.
+Both Dukes held high carnival in its gilded halls, but he of the
+diamonds rather outdid William in outraging decency.
+
+"One of his chief amusements was to hire a drove of ballet girls for
+parlor horses. He had a carriage constructed no bigger or heavier than
+a Japanese jinrickshaw, and to this hitched ten or twenty ballet girls
+in their birthday suits, walking on all fours, himself rider and driver.
+
+"Gracious--how he lashed his treble and quadruple teams of human flesh
+as they pulled him from room to room, and his was no make-belief
+ferocity, either. He was a niggardly rake, but in order to indulge his
+Sadist tendencies, agreed to pay one _Thaler_ (Seventy-five cents) for
+every drop of blood shed by the girls.
+
+"To make the count easier, white linen sheets were spread over the
+carpets, and the sum total was paid over to the two-legged horses after
+each entertainment, the girls showing the sorest stripes or wounds
+getting the larger share."
+
+Romano, who lived at half a dozen courts and is primed with the
+scandalous gossip of them all, could certainly write an entertaining
+book on the fallacies and vices of the world's Great.
+
+It's most indelicate, to be sure, but I laughed long and hard over the
+sexual specialty of my uncle, Archduke Karl Ludwig, who is bad, anyhow,
+as everybody knows.
+
+One morning His Highness rose at an unusually early hour, even before
+the scrub-women made their exit. In the corridors, in the parlors,
+everywhere blonde and dark percherons, cleaning away for dear life and
+courting housemaid's knee!
+
+Karl Ludwig has no more use for women than the late Chevalier de
+Lorraine, the President of the _Mignons_, but the exaggerated
+protuberances he met so unexpectedly on all sides, appealed to his sense
+of humor, or some other sense which I would hate to name. Anyhow, he ran
+into the garden and cut himself a switch. And ever since then his chief
+amusement is to switch scrubbing percherons. If he succeeds in dealing
+one a blow unforeseen by lying in wait for her, or coming upon her all
+of a sudden, he is particularly satisfied with his day's work and is
+liable to give a beggar a copper instead of the usual demi-copper.
+
+And of such abnormals the rulers of the world are recruited.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+MY PUNISHMENT
+
+ I lose my lover--Quarrels with me because I did my duty as a
+ mother--Royalty extols me for the same reason--My pride of kingship
+ aroused by Socialist scribblers--Change my opinion as to Duke's
+ widow--Parents arrive--Father and his alleged astrolatry--His
+ finances disarranged by alimony payments--My uncle, the Emperor,
+ rebukes mother harshly for complaining of _roue_ father.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _Christmas, 1898_.
+
+God punished me for my sins. My children, one after the other, were ill
+with scarlet fever, and the youngest is only now out of danger. Of
+course, I abandoned all my frivolities. I can say without boasting that
+the mother atoned for the short-comings of the wife and princess.
+
+Hence I thought justified to arrange for a right royal Christmas
+present: Romano.
+
+Lucretia went to see him. He received her coldly, hardly vouchsafed a
+word. From a secret drawer of his desk he took a letter, ready written,
+dated and gave it to Lucretia. "It explains," he said curtly, as he
+opened the door for her.
+
+He has abandoned me. Because I loved my children better than him,
+because I am a mother first, Lais second, he throws away his Imperial
+_fille de joie_ like a lemon sucked dry and prates of tendernesses and
+heavenly fancies that he alone feels, that are outside the pale of my
+understanding.
+
+He even refuses to thank me, this proud wooer of the royal bed. He "has
+given me the best that is in man to give to a woman," etc., etc.
+
+Be it so! God desired to punish me and, because I loved much, he meted
+out to me mild chastisement.
+
+He stole my lover, but I have my children.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 15, 1899_.
+
+The King, Prince George, my brothers-in-law, my cousins and aunts are
+trying to make a hero of me. Because I followed the inclinations of my
+heart and helped to save my children, there's no end of their praise and
+admiration. Did they take me for a raven? I am disgusted with so much
+unctuousness.
+
+Nevertheless I changed my mind about the Duke's widow. When I felt
+friendly towards her and quarrelled with Johann George for taking her
+money and with the King for embezzling the testament and offering
+accommodation at the poor-house for his kin's children, I thought it a
+family affair, but now that the Socialist papers meddle with the case,
+which concerns the royal house and the royal house alone, it's time for
+the Crown Princess to stand by her colors.
+
+Those Jews have actually the audacity to reprimand the King and the
+royal princes, to impute ignoble motives to us all! They talk of us as
+if we were _Messieurs_ and _Mesdames_ Jones or Browns, trying to enrich
+ourselves at the expense of a corpse!
+
+They call us "inheritance-chasers," "purloiners of pupillary funds,"
+"starvers of innocent children."
+
+The Duke's kept-woman is "a lady of the highest character" and we are
+not; her children are of the blood royal--only better for the dash of
+plebeian.
+
+It makes me boil to read such things; to see the reverence due the
+throne set aside, the royal banner dragged into the mire, and of course
+it's the kept-woman to whom we are indebted for this pretty kettle of
+fish. It is she who set the press against us, and it's me, Louise, who
+protests with all her might that her demands and petitions be denied.
+
+Let her starve with her brats. If she was sent to the poor-house she
+might make anarchists out of loyal paupers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _April 1, 1899_.
+
+My parents came to see the children and make merry because I am basking
+in the sun of royal grace. Mother has a new maid of honor, as ugly as
+the Tisch, and when we are _entre nous_ every second word is: "when
+Louise is Queen." They know to a penny what our inheritance from the
+King, the Queen and Prince George will amount to and are forever making
+plans and specifications how to spend the money for the glory of Saxony
+and of our own family.[6]
+
+Mother's scare-crow of a maid of honor had at least sense enough to tell
+Lucretia of a few scandals that happened at home, which mother never
+intended for my ears.
+
+It seems that papa, some few months ago, suddenly became possessed of
+the ambition to become an astronomer. Nothing would do, but he must buy
+a heap of instruments and set them up in a distant tower of Salzburg
+Castle. And there he spent all his evenings--star-gazing, he gave out.
+
+He seldom reached the nuptial couch before one or two in the
+morning,--utterly exhausted by the night's work.
+
+Well, mamma thought he labored too hard, and one forenoon when he had
+gone hunting, climbed up many stairs to investigate. Imagine her
+surprise when she found, in the astrolatry, a young lady in the act of
+getting out of bed, a girl, by the way, whom I used to know.
+
+Mamma had the _mauvais genre_ to report the case to Emperor Francis
+Joseph, while papa sought another climate, remaining away until mother
+begged him on her bended knees, so to speak, to come home. Nor did she
+get satisfaction from Vienna. That great moral teacher, the Emperor,
+told her not to make a scare-crow of herself, but on the contrary make
+herself pretty and agreeable for, and to, her lord and master. I
+understand now why mamma says: "All men stick together like gypsies."
+
+As a matter of fact father's limited resources are considerably affected
+by the various alimonies he has to pay to his own mistresses and those
+of my brothers. The third born of our boys, only a week ago, made too
+free with the _fiancee_ of the pastry-cook, who threatened to kill him.
+It cost father several thousand florins to appease the ruffian and
+Heinrich Ferdinand renewed acquaintance with mother's boxing
+proclivities.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 6: The fortune of the present King of Saxony (Louise's
+ex-husband) amounts to 25 million marks ($6,225,000)--no more than many
+an American parent paid for his daughter's seedy coronet. It will be
+remembered that Gladys Vanderbilt and Anna Gould brought to their
+husbands fifteen million dollars each, and the Castellanes and Szechenys
+are only nobles of the second class, their ancestors never having
+possessed ever so small a territory as sovereign lords. The bigger half
+of the Saxon King's fortune comes from the Brunswick inheritance already
+mentioned.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL
+
+A PLEBEIAN LOVER
+
+ In need of a friend--My physician offers his friendship--I discover
+ that he loves me, but he will never confess--I give him
+ encouragement--We manage to persuade the King to further our
+ intrigue--Not a bit repentant of my peccadilloes--Very
+ submissive--Introduced to my lover's wife.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _in May, 1899_.
+
+Privy Councillor von Barthels, my body physician, is a very agreeable
+man. I have no use for his services, _professional_ services at present,
+yet insist upon receiving him daily. Still I love him not. Only esteem
+him as a friend, I need a friend. Physicians can keep secrets, and I
+have many of them. I look upon Barthels as my Father-confessor.
+
+The tears came into his eyes when I told him, and he said: "Imperial
+Highness, this is the most beautiful hour of my life."
+
+He spoke with enthusiasm; there was fire in his eyes and in his voice,
+yet a moment later he was again the most reserved of men and
+conversation lagged.
+
+It happened three days ago. He has paid me four visits since and I
+notice with astonishment, with curiosity and with alarm, that this man
+is in love with me.
+
+How long has he loved me?
+
+His love is like a warm mantle 'round my shoulders on a chilly night. It
+exudes warmth, strength, beatitude, yet there is none of the animal.
+
+He is a good talker on a thousand and one subjects, a thinker and
+psychologist. Psychology is his strong point. He argues brilliantly on
+the subject, yet I need only look at him to upset his _thesis_, to make
+him stammer and redden.
+
+He's no Count Bielsk and will never tell me of his own accord that he
+loves me. Is his admiration greater than his love? Perhaps so. It gives
+me a feeling of security.
+
+Lucretia knows, but in the presence of the Tisch, he plays the servant,
+deeming himself thrice honored by being allowed to breathe the same air
+as her Imperial Highness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 15, 1899_.
+
+I frequently drive to the _Bois_ nowadays with the children, the _Bois_,
+where I was so happy with Him.
+
+Romano was right, a thousand times right, that he abandoned me when our
+love was at its zenith.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _At Midnight._
+
+It's done.
+
+Barthels came tonight. He was so feverish, so passionate, there was so
+much humble solicitation in his looks and manners, I was moved to pity.
+
+This man is too over-awed by my rank to ever permit himself to express
+his feelings by word of mouth. He talked of everything but love and was
+in the midst of a learned dissertation when I sunk my eyes in his and
+said:
+
+"Why do you try to hide things from me? Don't I know what's in your
+heart?"
+
+Like a little criminal--as my oldest boy does occasionally--he turned
+red, then white, then red again. He buried his face in his hands. He
+trembled. He seemed to be crying. I arose, and lightly laid my hand upon
+his blonde head.
+
+He's got the finest, silkiest hair in the world, shimmering like beaten
+gold.
+
+And then he lay at my feet, covering them with kisses. And instantly all
+his force, his courage, his eloquence returned.
+
+He went away like a man a-dreaming.
+
+I long for him; I confess I long for him. Whether I love him or not I
+don't know. But that I know, I _will_ love him.
+
+And if I cannot, what matters it? I don't have to love to be happy. To
+_be_ loved is enough. I want to be his Queen, his life.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 1, 1899_.
+
+Privy Councillor von Barthels told the King that my delicate condition
+needs constant watching. I go to his clinic every second day, while he
+visits me once or twice daily at the palace.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Like Melita I am never a bit repentant of my peccadilloes.
+
+If I don't want to do a thing, neither Kaiser, King, George, Frederick
+Augustus, my parents, the Pope, nor the whole world, can make me. But if
+I resolve to follow my sweet inclinations, rueing and pining are out of
+question.
+
+Ferdinand is the most devoted of lovers. He has unlimited
+tendernesses--a new experience for me.
+
+The lover of my girlhood days overwhelmed me by audacity. The Shah used
+me like a show-girl. Romano was imperious, super-mannish. For him I was
+only the female of the species.
+
+Sometimes, in the midst of an embrace, Ferdinand suddenly seems to
+recollect that a Queen trembles in his arms; the master turns _ame
+damnee_. I am Sultana, Louise-Catherine.
+
+Like Catherine the Great, I would throw millions to my favorites and
+millions more when I dismissed one. At any rate, I would give each a
+hundred thousand marks "to furnish himself with linen and silks,"--a
+_mot_ invented by the Semiramis of the North.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 5, 1899_.
+
+No more clinic for me. Ferdinand begged so hard, that I allowed him to
+introduce his wife. She came in after we finished our "consultation," a
+little heap of misfortune, execrably dressed, frightened, almost dead
+with submissiveness.
+
+And I am robbing this poor creature; it's like stealing pennies from a
+child. And under her own roof.
+
+It must not be. I am going to the country.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI
+
+AN ATROCIOUS ROYAL SCANDAL
+
+ A royal couple that shall be nameless--The voluptuous Duchess--Her
+ husband the worst of degenerates--"What monsters these royalties
+ be"--Nameless outrages--A Duchess forced to have lovers--Ferdinand
+ and I live like married folk--Duchess feared for her life--Her
+ husband murdered her--I scold and humiliate my overbearing Grand
+ Mistress--The medical report too horrible to contemplate.
+
+
+ ----R, _July 15, 1899_.
+
+I am afraid to date this entry. Another terrible indictment of royalty.
+And, as usual, things criminal are at the bottom of the abuse of
+sovereign power.
+
+The Duchess had a baby and asked me to be godmother to the little girl.
+The King, eager to oblige his rich cousin, favored the journey. I
+insisted that Ferdinand accompany me. "Marie," I said, "hates Tisch, and
+she must, under no circumstances, be commanded to attend me." Lucretia
+would do. It would be cheaper.
+
+The King first wouldn't hear of Dr. von Barthels going. People might
+think I had some chronic disease. But he finally gave in for the sake of
+the child I expect. "We need a few princes more from you," said His
+Majesty benignly. "When you got about a dozen boys, you can rest."
+Pleasant job, that of a Crown Princess.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ----R, _July 16, 1899_.
+
+The Duchess is a pretty woman, her face a lovely oval. She has small
+eyes, the color of amethysts. Her complexion is as white and harmonious
+as if she washed in sow's milk, like the late Ninon.
+
+Her mouth is sweet, but certain lines indicate that it can bite as well
+as smile. She has abundant hair, the color of Ferdinand's.
+
+This dainty, albeit voluptuous, little person, is mated to a bull-necked
+He, pompous, broad and full of the conceit of the _duodez_ satrap.
+
+Marie was forced to marry him; their honeymoon scarcely lasted a
+fortnight and he treated her shamefully after that. Of course, babies
+she must bear like any other "royal cow."
+
+Gradually, very gradually, she got over her disappointment and shyness,
+developing into a cunning, world-wise woman. Then came the man she was
+bound to love, even as the violet is bound to be kissed by the sun. She
+had no scruples about accepting him, thinking herself entitled to
+compensation for the sorrows of her married life. And revenge is sweet.
+
+The Duke found them out in the first month of their young love, walked
+into her boudoir one fine afternoon and remarked casually that none of
+his hats would fit him,--"on account of the horns you kindly planted on
+my forehead."
+
+Marie was more dead than alive when he asked her for the key of her
+writing desk. She lied and lied; to no purpose.
+
+He kicked open the writing desk, and with his iron fists broke the
+shelves and pigeon holes, laying bare a secret drawer and stacks of love
+letters it shielded. These he confiscated. Then locked himself into his
+room to enjoy his disgrace. This monster is a _Masochist_ and Sadist
+combined. He loves both to inflict suffering upon himself and upon
+others.
+
+What monsters royalties be!
+
+In the meanwhile Marie experienced all the tortures of purgatory; she
+thought of flight, of suicide. Before she could indulge in either her
+husband was back: Othello in the last act.
+
+Marie was frightened stiff, her brain a whirl, her limbs inert. Rape
+most foul this crowned satyr committed. "He fell upon me as a pack of
+hounds overwhelm a hunted, wounded she-stag," she said.
+
+Afterwards he commanded her to describe minutely every detail of her
+relations with the other. He was primed with the letter-accounts; he
+made her dot her amorous I's and cross her bawdry T's. And every attempt
+at omission he punished with kicks and cuffs; no drayman or brick-layer
+could give a more expert exhibition of woman-beating! And he violated
+her again.
+
+This was the beginning of a series of outrages of the same gross
+character. Marie suffered for years and years that His Royal Highness
+may gratify his unclean fancies: he the pander; she the Cyprian.
+
+"If I ceased having lovers, I think he would kill me," says Marie.
+
+Alas, such is the stuff "God's Anointed" are made of! In the face of
+such, we pronounce a hypocritical _j'accuse_ upon the Louis's and
+Pompadours, upon Marie Antoinette even.
+
+The Duchess, who knows, gave Ferdinand an apartment near my own. We are
+living here like man and wife. He sometimes calls me "_Frau Professor_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _July 19, 1899_.
+
+Marie is dead. "Died suddenly," said the telegram. I understand now why
+she begged me, with tears in her eyes, to remain at least two weeks. She
+was afraid that, though ill and suffering after the confinement, he
+would treat her as he did when he first found her unfaithful.
+
+"Don't go," she cried. "It will be my death." And when I showed her the
+King's letter commanding me to return at once, she made her confidential
+tire-woman swear on the Bible that she wouldn't leave her for a minute,
+day or night, until she herself released her from the promise.
+
+Private advices from ----r say His Highness brutally kicked the faithful
+maid out of his wife's bedroom and outraged his sick wife while the
+servant kept thundering at the door, denouncing her master a murderer.
+
+Ferdinand says the great majority of crowned heads are sexual
+voluptuaries, deserving of the penitentiary or the straight-jacket.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _August 1, 1899_.
+
+I caught the Tisch stealing one of my letters. Happily there was nothing
+incriminating in it, though addressed to Ferdinand,--just the letter the
+Crown Princess would write to a Privy Councillor. But the petty theft
+indicates that she suspects. Prince George, I am told, receives a report
+from her every few days.
+
+Well, I had my revenge. The Queen called today to see the children, and
+when Her Majesty and myself withdrew into my closet, the Tisch, who had
+been spying, didn't retire as promptly as she might.
+
+"Can't you see that you are _de trop_," I said sharply to her. "Please
+close the door from outside." The Baroness gave a cry of dismay and the
+Queen was scandalized.
+
+"Louise," she said, "that is no way to treat servants. You should always
+try to be kind and considerate with them."
+
+"I am, thanks, Your Majesty," I replied. "All the officials and servants
+love me, but I have very good reasons for treating the Tisch as I do."
+
+Of course, George will hear of this, and the Tisch will be reprimanded
+by him as well. Spies that compromise themselves, compromise their
+masters.
+
+The same evening I said to the Tisch in the presence of the nurses:
+
+"My dear Baroness, I wish you would display a little more tact. Listen
+at my doors as much as you like, but whatever you do, don't spy on Her
+Majesty in my house." She exuded a flood of tears and I sent her to her
+room. "Don't come back until you can show a pleasant face. I want to see
+none other around me."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _August 2, 1899_.
+
+Ferdinand received a medical report from ----r. My first private advices
+regarding Marie's death were correct, but the additional details given
+are too horrible to contemplate.
+
+The poor Duchess was brutally murdered. She died cursing her crowned
+murderer.
+
+The manner in which she was put to death can only be likened to that of
+the lover in Heinrich von Kleist's poetically sublime, but morally
+atrocious, tragedy, _Penthesilcia_, except that, in poor Marie's case,
+the _woman_ suffered from the awful frenzy of the male, in whom the
+"gentlest passion" degenerated in Saturnalia of revolting cruelty. The
+Duke killed Marie because _doing so gave him the most damnable
+pleasure,--her the most excruciating pain_.
+
+Yet the King's will is the highest law and criminals on thrones laugh at
+the criminal code.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII
+
+I LOSE ANOTHER OF MY LOVERS
+
+ Happily no scandal--Rewarded for bearing children--$1250--for
+ becoming a mother--Royal poverty--Bernhardt, the black sheep, in hot
+ water again--The King rebukes me for taking his part.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _August 10, 1899_.
+
+Frederick Augustus sent for Ferdinand and gave him to understand that he
+had received divers anonymous letters, connecting my name with that of
+the Privy Councillor. "Of course I don't believe a word of it," said my
+husband, "but one in my position cannot afford to flout public opinion.
+It will be for the best, if you cease your services to Her Imperial
+Highness."
+
+Upon the same day Ferdinand received orders from the King to stop his
+visits.
+
+The Baroness's doings, of course,--pin-pricks when she would like to
+shoot with sharp cartridges. She evidently doesn't know the full extent
+of our intimacy. As to Ferdinand, he acted the coward, left my letters
+unanswered and didn't make the slightest attempt to continue relations
+that might possibly turn out to his disadvantage.
+
+He is contemptible. My heart is unengaged, but my pride sadly humbled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _February 15, 1900_.
+
+The King sent me an emerald, one-twentieth the size of that given me by
+the Shah of Persia. Frederick Augustus did himself proud and, on his
+part, I gained a pearl necklace in acknowledgment of my renewed services
+to the state. Little Marguerite was born January 24.
+
+Frederick Augustus also gave me five thousand marks spending money. Not
+much for a multi-millionaire's wife or daughter, I reckon, but a
+terrible lot for an Imperial Highness.
+
+When I read of the sums the Vanderbilts, Astors, Goulds and other
+dollar-kings spend in Paris and London, and even with us in Dresden, I
+sometimes wish I could exchange places with an American Duchess or
+Countess long enough to buy all the things beautiful and pretty I would
+like to own. An awful thing is royal poverty, but the reputation of
+affluence and unlimited resources, stalking ahead of us, whenever we
+enter a store or bargain with a jeweler, is worse.
+
+"Your Imperial Highness is pleased to joke," says my man-milliner, when
+I admit, unblushingly, that I haven't the wherewithal to buy the things
+I dote on.
+
+Wait till I am Queen, modistes, store-keepers, jewelers! The new Majesty
+will show you that she cares for money only to get rid of it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _February 20, 1900_.
+
+This morning Lucretia came running to the nursery and whispered to me:
+"Imperial Highness, quick, to the boudoir. He begged so hard, I smuggled
+him in."
+
+She couldn't say more, for the Tisch was watching us. What new trouble
+was brewing? Could it be Romano, dare-devil, who had come back to me?
+
+If it was that poltroon, Ferdinand, I would have him thrown out by my
+lackeys.
+
+The mysterious visitor doffed wig and false moustache. "It's me," cried
+Bernhardt. "You are my only hope."
+
+"What have you been doing again?"
+
+"They threaten to banish my girl from the garrison and I won't stand for
+it. If they send her away or imprison her, I will kick up such a row,
+all Europe shall hear of it."
+
+"But why this masquerade?"
+
+"S-s-sh!" whispered the young prince. "I came without leave." Quickly,
+breathlessly, he continued: "I hear you are in His Majesty's good
+graces. Go and see him on my behalf. Persuade him to annul the order of
+banishment or render it ineffective."
+
+"Bernhardt," I said, "why don't you marry?"
+
+"If I could get a girl like you, Louise, I would--today, tomorrow, but
+the royal scare-crows that will have penniless me,--much obliged! You
+are a very exceptional woman," he added earnestly.
+
+We held a council of war, discussing the situation from every
+view-point, and finally I agreed to see Baumann.
+
+"I'll have to vouch for your future good conduct," I said.
+
+"On condition that they leave my girl alone."
+
+"Precisely. And on your part you give me your word of honor not to
+scandalize the people of your new garrison; to gradually break with the
+girl and, in the end, get married."
+
+"You are a brick, Louise," cried Bernhardt, and before I could shake him
+off, he was kissing me all over my face. No cousinly or brotherly
+kisses! His lips were apart, there was passion in his embrace. I
+struggled, but his hand pressed against my back. What strength the
+rascal's got!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _February 21, 1900_.
+
+The King is adamant. I no sooner mentioned Bernhardt's name than his
+face froze.
+
+"Does your husband know about your interference for that rake?"
+
+When I answered in the negative, he praised Frederick Augustus for
+strict submission to the royal will and upbraided me for "upholding
+Bernhardt in his wickedness."
+
+"The boy is desperate," I said.
+
+"If he is desperate," cried the King, "let him do the one reasonable and
+honorable thing: mend his evil ways. It will come easy if he seeks true
+strength in prayer, in fasting and religious discipline."
+
+"I submit to your Majesty that it might be well to send Bernhardt
+travelling."
+
+"On a tour of inspection of houses of ill-fame?" interrupted Albert
+coldly. "This is a mere waste of words," he added, looking towards the
+door, "and I'm sorry that Your Imperial Highness has the bad taste to
+take the part of this disobedient, immoral and altogether reprehensible
+_Lausbub_."
+
+That meant my dismissal. I shudder when I think of the consequences of
+the King's obstinacy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII
+
+THE CROWN PRINCESS QUELLS A RIOT
+
+ Asked to play the coward, and I refuse--A hostler who would die for
+ a look from me--Hostler marriages in royal houses--Anecdotes and
+ unknown facts concerning royal ladies and their offspring--Refuse
+ police escort and rioters acclaim me--Whole royal family proud of my
+ feat.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 3, 1900_.
+
+Behold Louise, a political personage!
+
+I was driving with my little ones in the _Bois_ yesterday afternoon. We
+occupied an open court carriage, conspicuous for livery and magnificent
+horse-flesh, for I love display and the children enjoy it. We were
+driving along leisurely enough when there was hasty clatter of hoofs and
+wheels behind. Presently a royal _coupe_ dashed up alongside.
+
+The Tisch stuck her head out:
+
+"Imperial Highness--the town's in revolt.--Socialist riot. They are
+marching upon the palace.--For the love of God, return at once. Your
+Imperial Highness must take a seat in this inconspicuous carriage. We
+will change to the first _Droschke_ we meet, going through
+side-streets."
+
+"My dear Baroness," I answered, "it's not in my nature to shirk peril.
+If I were to be hanged and quartered and could avoid that unpleasantness
+by changing from my carriage to a cab--I would be hanged and quartered.
+Take the children and return to the palace any way you like.
+
+"As for me, I'll go back as Her Imperial Highness, the Crown Princess of
+Saxony, and my coachman will drive slowly."
+
+I kissed the children, and the _coupe_ rolled away at a sharp clip.
+
+Calling the coachman by name, I commanded him: "You heard what my Grand
+Mistress said. Riot or no riot, I am solely responsible for my own
+safety. You will take orders from no one but me, neither from the mob
+nor the police."
+
+The coachman lifted his hat respectfully and bowed a submissive "At Your
+Imperial Highness's orders." The groom, a young, good-looking fellow,
+struck the broadsword at his side.
+
+"There is some good steel in this, Your Imperial Highness," he said with
+sparkling eyes. I believe this poor fellow would have died for a single
+look from me.
+
+Among royal servants, the most devoted are those connected with the
+_Marstall_. No wonder so many of my sisters born on the steps of the
+throne, fell in love with their Master of Horse or equerries; some with
+mere hostlers, like Queen Christina of Spain, the mother of my aunt
+Isabelle, of amorous memory. Her lover, Munoz, of the Body Guards, was
+a famous equestrian and two years younger than Christina. He managed
+horses so well, she thought it would be great fun to boss this giant.
+But it ended by the brute lording it over her, the "Catholic Majesty."
+By the way, I wonder what became of Christina's and Munoz's several
+children. While they lived together from 1833 to 1844 without the
+sanction of either law or church, they were "regularly married" in the
+end, the hostler, Munoz, metamorphosing into Duke Rianzares. Yet the
+_Almanach de Gotha_ knows not their progeny when, as "love children,"
+they should live long and happily.
+
+Another "hostler-marriage" occurred in the family of the proud Kaiser,
+the contracting parties being Princess Albrecht of Prussia and a groom,
+whose name I forget. This Princess, Marianne of the Netherlands, brought
+the first "real" money into the Hohenzollern family, and her husband,
+Albrecht, was long regarded the Croesus among German princes.
+
+After the divorce, His Royal Highness forced the ex-wife to marry the
+hostler, and the bloom of forbidden love having worn off in the
+meantime, Marianne seldom passed a day without being soundly beaten by
+the plebeian. Maybe she liked it. Some women do.
+
+Today her offspring with Master Fisticuffs are sturdy farmers in
+Silesia, but two of the three sons she had with the royal Prince, as
+well as the sons the royal Prince had with his second wife, Rosalie von
+Rauch, are degenerates. Rosalie's sons are known as Counts Hohenau and
+the wife of the elder, Fritz, is giving my astute and pious cousin, the
+Kaiserin, considerable heart-ache.
+
+Curious, isn't it? The children of the "adulteress" are successful men
+and women, aids in the progress of the world; those of the blood royal,
+in double or single doses, a menace to public morality. This much for
+your royal inbred custom.
+
+But back to Dresden. The order to drive slowly was soon rescinded, for I
+was burning to see a riot at close range. "_Plein carriere_," I
+commanded, and my fast _Carrossiers_ went at a tremendous rate for two
+miles. The moment I saw, in the distance, knots of people standing round
+or moving in the direction of the palace, I cried: "_Schritt_," and we
+proceeded as leisurely as if following a funeral.
+
+As we turned around a corner, a detachment of gendarmes, sent to watch
+for me, hove into sight. Their commanding officer signalled frantically
+to the coachman to stop, but George had his instructions and proceeded.
+
+The officer spurred his horse and rode up to me, questioning me with his
+eyes.
+
+"My orders," I explained.
+
+"Then I must escort Your Imperial Highness."
+
+"Don't."
+
+"Strict orders from my superior officer, Your Imperial Highness," and
+the gendarmes formed a _cordon_ around my carriage.
+
+I was furious. "Send for your commander."
+
+The captain of the gendarmes could not be found at once and joined my
+cavalcade only when we were opposite a living wall of excited people,
+nearly all of them workmen.
+
+"What is Your Imperial Highness's pleasure?" asked the captain, bending
+down from his horse.
+
+"Send your men away instantly."
+
+"But the responsibility?"
+
+"Rests with me and with me only. Send them away. Every one of them."
+
+The mob was watching us. I read suspicion in the eyes of those nearest.
+The captain gave the sign and the troopers turned their horses' heads,
+saluting me with their drawn swords.
+
+"May I act as Your Imperial Highness's out-rider?" asked the captain in
+a low voice.
+
+"Don't trouble yourself. I command you."
+
+The groom had been watching us. I gave the signal and we proceeded at a
+pace. The rampart of human bodies swung open and lined the sides of the
+streets. Someone cried: "Three cheers for the Crown Princess," and
+everyone responded.
+
+These Socialists, whom I had been taught to hate and despise, behaved
+in exemplary style. When I dismissed their tyrants, the gendarmes, they
+immediately took me under their protection. I am sure anyone daring to
+insult me, or raise a hand against me, would have fared badly at the
+hands of his fellows.
+
+I was all smiles, bowing right and left. Labor agitators raised their
+hats to me, mothers offered their children that I might pat their little
+hand, or lay mine on their head--a veritable triumph!
+
+When I drove into the palace yard, the Guards rushed out to do me honor.
+The Queen, the King and Prince George saluted me from the windows of
+their apartments.
+
+Frederick Augustus embraced me in front of everybody. In short I was
+made a hero of.
+
+I afterwards learned that as soon as the palace knew of the incipient
+riot, the King sent word to all members of the royal family, ordering
+them to stay in their apartments. They were even forbidden to show
+themselves at the windows overlooking the palace square.
+
+Learning that I had gone driving, mounted grooms were dispatched in all
+directions to intercept me. The Tisch, being responsible for the royal
+children, got the fastest team the court commands and started for the
+_Bois_.
+
+It gave me some satisfaction to observe that I arrived before her. Of
+course, I never doubted the children's safety.
+
+The evening papers devoted columns to the little incident and Prince
+George had the great sorrow to hear the King say: "A dare-devil, that
+Louise, but she did the right thing. By pretending confidence in the
+loyalty of the people, she successfully gulled them. The riot's back was
+broken when she showed a bold front."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV
+
+THE NEW LOVER, AND "I PLAY THE HUSSY FOR FAIR"
+
+ Who is that most exquisite _Vortaenzer_?--A lovely boy--"Blush, good
+ white paper"--I long for Henry--My eyes reflect love--"I must see
+ you tonight. Arrange with Lucretia"--Sorry I ever loved a man before
+ Henry--Poetry even--I try to get him an office at court--Afraid
+ women will steal him.
+
+
+ PILLNITZ, _September 5, 1900_.
+
+Dance at the royal summer residence. Concentrated _ennui_ as a rule, but
+a complete success this time.
+
+I have seen Him,--capital "H." He is the one man for me.
+
+I am happy; I am myself again. All sorrows are forgotten. I am ten years
+younger.
+
+Love at first sight. I the aggressor. I must be getting very clever
+since I managed to hide it from hundreds of searching eyes, even from my
+entourage.
+
+"Lucretia," I whispered breathlessly to my confidante, "find out the
+name of the _Vortaenzer_, quick."
+
+The _Vortaenzer_, at royal courts, is a sort of official master of the
+dance, who sets the pace for the company, combining the duties of
+master of ceremonies and of dancing master.
+
+The more I looked at the _Vortaenzer_, the more he enchanted me. Taller
+than any other man present, elegant, blonde, clean-shaven. Not an ounce
+of superfluous flesh, I judged. Might be the reincarnation of the _Duc_
+de Richelieu, who seduced my three cousins d'Orleans.
+
+His face is livid with white and carmine tints; his eyes glow with an
+irresistible charm. That figure of his! The elegance of the palm tree,
+both straight and flexible. And the infinity of grace as he waltzed that
+little Baroness around.
+
+"Baron Bergen, of the Guards," breathed Lucretia into my ear.
+
+"My Master of Ceremony will command Baron Bergen at the end of this
+dance."
+
+When he stood before me, bowing and smiling, the idea that he was
+Richelieu reincarnated became almost a certainty with me.
+
+Like Richelieu, his face has the refinement that we admire in women (I
+forgot to say that I became infatuated with him merely from seeing a
+back view of the man. When he turned around, I was lost).
+
+While he chanted the usual compliments, my eyes hung upon his cherry
+lips, reveled in his white, strong teeth. The man I want. I say it
+without shame, without care.
+
+Blush, good, white paper! I am giving an account of my feelings, and if
+they be impure, there's something wrong with nature.
+
+Even as I write, I tremble with longing, with desire for Henry.
+
+Ten days since we first met. It might have been this morning, so lively
+and overwhelming is the recollection. I am impatient for his kisses, for
+his blonde loveliness, for his whole self,--just as if we hadn't loved
+and kissed scarce an hour ago.
+
+"My horse, Lucretia. We'll go for a canter. I must have air and plenty
+of it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PILLNITZ, _September 10, 1900_.
+
+I must give some additional account of our first meeting at the court
+ball. Ah, I was the hussy for fair! He couldn't help seeing the
+impression he made upon me. My eyes must have reflected it in letters of
+flame. I wish he were as bold as the _Duc_, who slept on a pillow
+stuffed with the hair of his mistresses, past and present.
+
+I never made such advances to any man. I was gone clean off my head.
+
+When he reddened and when his left hand, resting on the hilt of his
+sword, trembled, I became intoxicated.
+
+And I danced with him, and I was angry with myself for lacking the
+courage to say: "Feel my heart beat." My great-great-aunt and namesake,
+Marie Antoinette, did and won the love of her life,--Fersen.
+
+But we _fin de siecle_ women are cowards. All I said to him was: "I must
+see you tonight. Arrange with Lucretia."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _September 30, 1900_.
+
+Summer heat continues, but no country-seat for me! The town is a much
+safer place for lovers, and old Countess Baranello keeps open house for
+us all the year round. We meet daily. I persuaded Henry's colonel that
+the lieutenant would never be a courtier unless he saw more of court
+life and was relieved, to a certain extent, of duties on the drill
+ground.
+
+We see each other mornings or afternoons at the Countess's. The evenings
+we spend at the theatre together, I in the box, he in the _fauteuil_
+once sacred to Romano. Every Saturday afternoon we concoct the
+repertoire for the week following, and he goes at once to secure tickets
+for the various entertainments I intend to visit for his sake.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 1, 1900_.
+
+I wish I had never loved any man before Henry. I wish he had known me as
+an innocent girl. I wish I wasn't royal. Then I could get a divorce and
+marry him, but now, if I got ten divorces, he would always be the
+insignificant Baron, I the Princess of the Blood.
+
+And I couldn't see my love humiliated!
+
+As a talisman he wears on his chest a golden locket with my miniature.
+In exchange he gave me a _Portebonheur_ with his picture and a few sweet
+words.
+
+So help me, God, I am in love with this man,--love him to the verge of
+poetry. Indeed, I am writing silly verse in his honor, and later haven't
+the courage to show it to him. _Par example_:
+
+ I want you most, dear, when the sunset bright
+ Makes of the hills a glorious funeral pyre,
+ So die the love-light in your eyes, if die it must,
+ And leave the wondrous, throbbing silence of the night.
+
+Henry isn't very intellectual, I am afraid, but he is the finest
+horseman in the world.
+
+If I were Queen, I would barter a regiment to have him appointed my
+Chief Master of Horse. Augustus of the three-hundred and fifty-two sold
+one for his first night with Cosel.
+
+I am racking my brains for a pretense to have him appointed to court
+duty,--anything to give him the _entree_ to my apartments. But he is far
+too beautiful. The sanctimonious cats that envy me my happiness, that
+look upon love as a crime, would at once combine to destroy him.
+
+Well, we'll have to bear with the difficulties of the situation forced
+upon us by these moral busy-bodies. As for me, I'll be thrice careful,
+for if He was taken away from me, all the joy would go out of my life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV
+
+LOVE AND THE HAPPINESS IT CONVEYS
+
+ My Grand Mistress suspects because I am so amiable--Pangs of
+ jealousy--Every good-looking man pursued by women--A good story of
+ my cousin, the Duchess Berri--We all go cycling together--The
+ Vitzthums--Love making on the street--A mud bath.
+
+
+ _December 15, 1900._
+
+When one is in love and loved a-plenty, weeks and months roll by without
+notice by the happy ones.
+
+For my part I never thought there was so much happiness in the world as
+I am experiencing since the beginning of September. But I have my
+troubles, too. First, the Tisch. When a lady is well pleased by her
+lover, then her eyes are bright, her cheeks glow, her lips smile; she
+bears with her entourage; she is kind to her servants. The moment I
+treated the Tisch as a human being, she began to suspect, and I am sure
+she is eating her heart out fretting because God gave me both nuts and
+teeth to crack them.
+
+But I am qualifying as an expert deceiver, and my Grand Mistress won't
+catch me in a hurry.
+
+My other great trouble is: long separations from Henry, hours upon hours
+in daytime, half the nights.
+
+What is he doing when he is not with me? Of course he pretends to tell,
+but I am not goose enough to suppose that he would incriminate himself
+for the love of truth. He is hiding things from me, perhaps cheating me.
+I have to arm myself with all the faith loving woman commands to
+forestall occasional noisy out-breaks of jealousy.
+
+Was there ever a good-looking man, women didn't try to capture and
+seduce? Manly beauty is the red rag that enthralls and excites women and
+renders them dishonest, though their honor doesn't lodge at the point
+they designate as its _habitat_.
+
+Sometimes, when in these jealous frenzies, I wish Henry had a face like
+a Chinese kite, or like Riom, husband and lover of my ancestress, the
+Duchess du Berri.
+
+She was "_satisfied_" with him, but since her lady-in-waiting, too, was,
+I might, after all, fare no better than Berri, if Henry was a toad, "his
+skin spotted like a serpent's, oily like a negro's, changeable like a
+chameleon, with a turned up nose and disproportionate mouth." Yet I
+hardly believe that, like my cousin, I would say anent a rival: "Whoever
+would not be satisfied with him, would be hard to please."
+
+Alas, with women in love the extreme of ugliness counts as triumphantly
+as the charms of Adonis. Ever since I read certain passages of Faust,
+part II, Eduard von Hartmann's "Philosophy of the Unconscious," and
+Lermontoff's "Hero of our Times," I am convinced that to love a man very
+good-looking, or, on the contrary, a perfect horror, is no sinecure.
+
+Fortunately Henry is almost penniless.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 2, 1901_.
+
+Henry's sister married one of the numerous Vitzthums, of the family that
+furnished the Saxon court with titled servants and _maitresses en titre_
+for the past several hundred years.
+
+I immediately sent word to her ladyship, that having taken up bicycling,
+I would be pleased to have her attend me on the wheel on the afternoon
+following. The invitation was issued from the office of my Court
+Marshal, which is controlled by the King's. Having thus secured
+beforehand His Majesty's approval, possible criticism was nipped in the
+bud. The bride asked permission to bring her husband.
+
+"Granted. Order of dress: _mufti_."
+
+This enabled us, myself and Henry, and the Count and Countess to ride
+all over town, unrecognized by either officials or the public at large.
+
+It was great fun, and I told the Vitzthums that I intended to wheel
+every morning at nine, immediately after breakfast. Count Vitzthum is
+Henry's colonel. Of course he granted both Henry and himself furlough
+for the time set.
+
+What happiness! Now I don't have to wait till afternoon and evening to
+see my lover.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 10, 1901_.
+
+I am so happy, I am growing careless.
+
+The Vitzthums, profiting by the fact that they are but recently married,
+prefer to travel in pairs, and always take the lead. Accordingly Henry
+and myself, incog. as far as my future subjects go, are free to indulge
+in occasional caresses and sweet nonsense-talk.
+
+I was pouring honeyed words into Henry's ears the other morning when my
+wheel skidded on the wet pavement, and before he, or I, could save me, I
+was down on my back in the mud.
+
+The fact that I was again _enceinte_, and the other fact that I was
+covered with dirt, ought to have prompted me to return to the palace at
+once, but how un-Louise-like the straight and sane course would have
+been.
+
+I allowed myself to be wiped off by Henry; then mounted my wheel anew
+and raced after the Vitzthums.
+
+Unfortunately, a reporter heard of the incident and, for the benefit of
+his pocket, made a column out of it.
+
+A few hours after the story appeared in the evening paper, the palace
+was in an uproar. The King wasn't well enough to scold me, so he
+delegated that pleasant duty to Prince George. His Royal Highness
+promptly informed me that the "damned bicycling had to stop."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVI
+
+FEARS FOR MY LOVE
+
+ Some reflections on queens of old who punished recreant
+ lovers--Henry was in debt and I gave him money--Indignities by which
+ some of that money was earned--Husband accompanies me to
+ Loschwitz--Reflections on Frederick Augustus's character.
+
+
+ _January 15, 1901._
+
+My love played the melancholy Dane for the last few days. His tenderness
+seemed labored, his spirits under a cloud. Every smile I got had to be
+coaxed from him.
+
+"The end of my happiness," I thought; "some chit of a girl dethroned
+me." And I cursed my birthday. "A kingdom for ten years off my age."
+
+And my thoughts of thoughts travelled back to the times when royal
+ladies had their rivals immured, as practiced by a Brandenburg princess
+at the Kaiser's hunting box at Gruenewald, or made a head shorter, like
+Lady Jane Grey, who was far too pretty to please Elizabeth; or shot, as
+elected by Queen Christina, _tribade_ and nymphomaniac both.
+
+And the things Queen Bess did to her unfaithfuls and the crimes Mary
+Stuart perpetrated to cheat Jeannie Bothwell out of her doughty Hepburn!
+
+"If I were Queen," I thought, and I must have spoken aloud, for Henry
+said: "You would make me a great lord, love, wouldn't you, give me the
+best paying office at court, but that's small comfort to my creditors
+today."
+
+"It's creditors, mere creditors bothering you?" I almost shouted with
+joy. This man was still mine. No one had succeeded in luring him away
+from me. I threw myself upon him and nearly smothered him.
+
+Filthy lucre, or the want of it, oppressing my boy. Money, miserable
+money, caused me to doubt his very loyalty.
+
+"How much?"
+
+He stuttered and denied and swore it was all a mistake and that I had
+misunderstood him. "As an army officer----"
+
+"Don't talk like Frederick Augustus. It will give me the greatest
+pleasure in the world to arrange your affairs, dearest."
+
+I got him to name the sum after a while. What a pity I am not rich. As
+Catharine sent her Orloffs and Potemkins and Zoritchs to the State
+Treasury to help themselves as they saw fit, so I would gladly turn
+fortunes over to Henry, never asking for an accounting.
+
+But this Imperial Highness is wretchedly poor, like most royal women
+not actually seated on the throne. I can't offer my paramour financial
+independence, not even luxury, but, thank heaven, I saved up enough to
+provide for his present needs, even if my treasury be drained to the
+last twenty-mark piece, and I will have to cut short my charities for
+the next quarter of a year. But he must not know these sordid details.
+
+Some day I will be Queen. I will reimburse the poor and I will be a true
+Catharine to Henry.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _January 16, 1901_.
+
+I brought my mite to our rendezvous. Mostly in small bills and
+twenty-mark pieces. If Henry knew that many of these were earned in the
+right royal fashion of having them slipped down one's stocking by a
+husband, too drunk to distinguish a royal palace from a dance-hall!
+
+He told me honestly enough how he got into debt. "How can one lay by for
+a rainy day when one hasn't got anything?"
+
+I appreciate the play of words, for I am in the same predicament.
+
+Only once has Henry touched a card, but he lost considerably in horse
+deals, as most young army officers do.
+
+His sister made a rich marriage, but he wouldn't discover himself to
+her. If she asked money of her husband, there might be trouble, for
+Vitzthum is not a liberal man.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _April 1, 1901_.
+
+The children's health called for country air and I was quasi-forced to
+retire to Loschwitz, though I have a thousand and one reasons for
+remaining in Dresden. Frederick Augustus accompanies us. After the
+strenuous city life (in Dresden!), he needs a change and a long rest
+from drinking and carousing, he says boastingly.
+
+Of course, while he is here, I dare not invite the Vitzthums. But as
+soon as he is gone, they shall come for a couple of weeks, and their
+presence will make Henry's possible.
+
+It's dreadful the way I miss the sweet boy. I suffer like a dog, when
+the longing seizes me, suffer both in heart and body. When I contemplate
+his miniature, tears come into my eyes. I often cry for hours thinking
+of him.
+
+And to have to endure this great booby of a husband of mine day and
+night, especially nights. It's almost more than I can bear.
+
+The grossness of his egotism reminds me of the story told of King James,
+whom the English got rid of in 1689.
+
+The Dutch William, instead of waiting peacefully for the heritage of his
+father-in-law, went to claim it before his death, and James, pressed on
+all sides by enemies, decided upon flight.
+
+One Sunday, in the month of December, his devotions over, he dismissed
+all his servants and advised his last partisans to turn towards the
+rising sun.
+
+After which, he lay for an hour with his wife, the better to take leave
+of her."
+
+The very thing Frederick Augustus would do if war or revolution made us
+fugitives.
+
+I never realized the diversity in our natures as much as I do now, when
+all my thoughts go out to another, when even connubial tendernesses seem
+like whip-strokes.
+
+The further our souls draw apart, the more disgusting this forced
+intimacy, the prostitution under the marriage vow, which I detest and
+abhor.
+
+But what will I do? Shut my door to him? He would kick it in, or climb
+through the window. It's easier to submit to the violation of my person
+than to breaking of locks and furniture.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVII
+
+LOVE'S INTERMEZZO
+
+ Bernhardt takes advantage of my day-dreams--My husband's indolent
+ _gaucherie_--Violent love-making--Ninon who loved families, not
+ men--Does Bernhardt really love me?
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _April 10, 1901_.
+
+Fortunately Bernhardt came for a few days to relieve the monotony of my
+alcove life _par le droit du plus fort_.
+
+Tall stories of dissipation, indiscipline, scandal, had preceded the
+poor fellow. No doubt, his military superiors got orders to make his
+life as unhappy as they possibly can, and he retaliates.
+
+The Prince told me that, at last, he had succeeded arranging for an
+audience with the King. His Majesty had denied himself to Bernhardt for
+months past. He managed the coveted boon only by the intervention of
+various high generals and the threat to appeal to the Kaiser.
+
+The Royal House of Saxony, while compelled to recognize William as
+War-Lord, doesn't court his interference, or attempted interference, in
+matters military.
+
+Flushed with this initial success and expecting lots of good things in
+the future, Bernhardt was bent upon having a good time. He drank with
+Frederick Augustus, made love to Lucretia and squeezed the chambermaids
+on his floor to his heart's content.
+
+To me he was the most gallant of cousins and, glad to contribute to the
+happiness of the poor fellow, I gave him plenty of rope, perhaps too
+much.
+
+On the second day of his stay we had a very merry dinner, having
+dispensed for the time with titled servants.
+
+After dinner the three of us retired to the veranda. I was in a rocker,
+showing perhaps more of my ankles than was absolutely necessary.
+Frederick Augustus was smoking dreamily. Like an animal he likes to
+sleep after he has gorged himself.
+
+Bernhardt, with my permission, had thrown himself on a wicker lounge and
+was absorbing cigarettes at a killing rate. I bantered him on his
+laziness. But he only sighed.
+
+"You wish that audience was past and forgotten," I asked.
+
+"Pshaw, I'm thinking of something prettier than the King."
+
+Remembering Bernhardt's chief weakness, I indulged in the old joke,
+"_Cherchez la femme_."
+
+Bernhardt replied, with another succession of groans, "You are right,
+Louise; _parfaitement, cherchez la femme_."
+
+"Egads," grunted Frederick Augustus, glad for an excuse to go to his
+room, or play a game of pinochle with his aides, "egads, if you indulge
+in intellectualities, I had better go. A full stomach and French
+conversation--whew!"
+
+The Tisch was in Dresden; _Fraeulein_ von Schoenberg with the children,
+Lucretia flirting somewhere at a neighboring country chalet. We were
+alone on the remote terrace and it was getting dark. Bernhardt sat up
+and looked at me with eyes of life-giving fire, but continued silent.
+
+"You want me to think that you command the rays of the sun stolen by
+Prometheus?"
+
+He answered not, but sought to burn the skin of my neck and bosom by
+those Prometheus rays.
+
+Now, in the morning I got a note from Henry, and I had been thinking of
+the dear boy every minute. I was longing for him; my heart, my senses
+were crying for him.
+
+I forgot Bernhardt; I forgot all around me. With my fancies focussed on
+my lover, I leaned back in my armchair, gazing at the rising moon. My
+word, at that moment I was lost to everything.
+
+I half-awoke from my dream when I heard Bernhardt rise. A moment later I
+felt his eyes prowling over my body. Then a shadow darkened my face and
+Bernhardt said with a strange quaver in his voice:
+
+"_Cherchez la femme._ You are the woman, Louise, you and none else."
+
+And wild, forbidden kisses burned on my face, on my neck, on my breasts.
+Both hands claimed a lover's liberties.
+
+I was taken completely unawares; in my mind of minds I was in the
+Countess's pavilion, receiving Henry's caresses. All sense of location
+had vanished. And, thinking of my lover, I clasped both arms about
+Bernhardt's neck and drew him to me. We kissed like mad. The love feast
+for Henry became Bernhardt's in the twinkling of an eye.
+
+Whether he felt like a thief, I don't know; for my part my senses
+responded to Henry, not to his substitute.
+
+How long this embrace lasted, I don't know. Somebody, or some noise,
+caused us to separate.
+
+I fled and locked myself in my room.
+
+"Tell His Royal Highness he must excuse me. I can't see him before he
+goes away. Say I have a headache, or the gout, I don't care which," I
+commanded Lucretia next morning.
+
+The previous night I had denied myself to Frederick Augustus, though he
+entreated and raved.
+
+While I appreciate the arch-Lais's _bon mot_ that "one can't judge of a
+family by a single specimen," which made Ninon talk of her lovers _not_
+as Coligny, Villarceau, Sevigne, Conde, d'Albret, etc., but as _les_
+Rochefoucaults, _les_ d'Effiats, _les_ Condes, _les_ Sevignes, etc., I
+was determined not to betray Henry by the whole House of Saxony in a
+single twelve-hours.
+
+I wonder whether this Bernhardt loves me? Perhaps, on his part, it was
+the longing for the girl he adores, as, on mine, it was longing for
+Henry that drew us together with electric force. And, of course,
+environment had something to do with it: moon, opportunity, Frederick
+Augustus's indolent _gaucherie_. Yes, why deny it, the good dinner we
+had, the champagne.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVIII
+
+GRAND MISTRESS TELLS HUSBAND I KEEP A DIARY
+
+ He wants to see it, but seems unsuspecting--Grand Mistress denies
+ that she meant mischief, but I upbraid her unmercifully--Threaten to
+ dismiss her like a thieving lackey.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _May 1, 1901_.
+
+Frederick Augustus leaves tomorrow. Forever, I thought, when he put this
+question to me:
+
+"You are keeping a Diary, Louise?"
+
+I was frightened dumb. I stared at him.
+
+"What's the matter," he laughed. "I'm not going to eat you." He didn't
+seem to be at all perturbed.
+
+"How do you know I keep a Diary?" I stuttered.
+
+Nonchalantly enough he made answer: "Your bag-of-bones Baroness told me.
+Full of forbidden things, I suppose, since you regard it a state secret.
+You often say that my education was sadly neglected. Maybe I can learn a
+thing or two from your scribblings. Let's look 'm over."
+
+By this time I had regained my composure. "Naturally," I said, "a Diary
+records thoughts and things intended for the writer only, but if you
+choose to be ungentlemanly enough to wish to peruse those pages more
+sacred than private letters, I suppose I will have to submit."
+
+Frederick Augustus changed the subject, but I felt instinctively that he
+was disappointed. Someone had played on his curiosity, and to go
+unsatisfied is not at all in this prince's line.
+
+Of course, the someone was the Tisch, but how did she know? I will ask
+her as soon as Frederick Augustus is gone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _May 2, 1901_.
+
+"Have you ever seen my Diary?" I asked the Tisch this morning.
+
+"Never, Your Imperial Highness."
+
+"Then how do you know I keep a Diary?"
+
+"I surmised it because I saw Your Imperial Highness write repeatedly in
+one and the same book." The hussy affected a humble tone, but the note
+of triumph and hatred underlying the creature's meekness did not escape
+me.
+
+"And the mere surmise prompted you to blab to my husband, arouse his
+suspicions?"
+
+"For Heaven's sake," cried my Grand Mistress, "I had no idea that His
+Royal Highness didn't know about the Diary. Secrets between the
+Prince-Royal and Your Imperial Highness--how dare I pre-suppose such a
+state of things? His Royal Highness casually asked how the Crown
+Princess killed time in Loschwitz. I mentioned riding, driving,
+bicycling, writing letters, writing in the Diary----"
+
+My fingers itched to slap her lying face, Grand-Duchess of Tuscany
+fashion, but I kept my temper.
+
+"Listen to me," I said. "While you have secret instructions to play the
+serpent in my household and to betray, for dirty money, your mistress of
+the Blood Imperial, your duties as a spy are confined to my going and
+coming, to my exterior conduct, to my visits outside the palace, to my
+friendships, perhaps.
+
+"They cannot possibly encompass my thoughts. And my Diary is the
+repository of my thoughts--thoughts that must not be defiled by your
+favor-seeking curiosity. Be warned. The next time you dare act the
+burglar--I say _burglar_--I will kick you out of doors like a thieving
+lackey."
+
+She got as white as a sheet and hissed back: "Your Imperial Highness
+can't dismiss me. Only His Majesty has power----"
+
+I interrupted her with an imperious gesture.
+
+"I said I will kick you out of doors like a thieving lackey," I
+repeated, "and I will do so this moment if you say another word. Whether
+or not His Majesty will punish me for the act, that's _my_ business. You
+will be on the street and will stay on the street."
+
+I pointed to the door: "I dismiss you now. You will keep to your room
+for the rest of the day."
+
+I saw the Tisch was near collapse.
+
+"Your Imperial Highness deigns to insult a defenseless woman," she
+breathed as she went out.
+
+Defenseless! So is the viper that attacks one's heel! First these
+"defenseless" creatures goad one to madness, then they appeal to our
+_noblesse oblige_. The enmity between the Tisch and I is more intense
+than ever.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIX
+
+ARISTOCRATIC VISITORS
+
+ I hear disquieting news about my lover's character--The aristocracy
+ a dirty lot--Love-making made easy by titled friends--Anecdotes of
+ Richelieu and the Duke of Orleans--The German nobleman who married
+ Miss Wheeler and had to resign his birthright--The disreputable
+ business the Pappenheims and other nobles used to be in--I am afraid
+ to question my lover as to charges.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _May 15, 1901_.
+
+The Vitzthums have been visiting for a week. Henry lodges in the
+village, but spends nearly all his time in the castle and grounds. We
+play tennis, polo, ball; we drive, ride, go bicycling, we dine and sup
+together.
+
+I ought to be the happiest woman in the world, but a shadow dims the
+ideal picture my mind's eye drew of the lover.
+
+I have it recorded somewhere--I wish I hadn't, so I might doubt my
+memory--that Henry told me he never borrowed from his sister. Countess
+Vitzthum's confidences to me show that he did repeatedly, that, in fact,
+he is forever trying to borrow.
+
+"He is a spendthrift; he cannot be trusted," said his sister, who loves
+him dearly. "He will wreck his career if he continues at the pace he is
+going. Some day we may hear of him as a waiter or cab-driver in New
+York."
+
+These disclosures frightened me. I might forgive him the lie, but what
+is he doing with the money?
+
+Spending it on lewd women like Bernhardt, I suppose.
+
+I said: "Oh," and Madame von Vitzthum seemed to catch its significance.
+It occurred to her at once that she had said too much and she tried to
+minimize her brother's delinquencies. But I know.
+
+Maybe some of my money went to pay hotel expenses for----
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _At Midnight._
+
+My cousin Richelieu caused his mistresses to be painted in all sorts of
+monastic garments and licentious devices, saying: "I have my saints and
+martyrs; they are all that; but, as for virgins, there are none outside
+of Paradise." Substitute _paillards_ for the holy ones and you have the
+situation in a nutshell.
+
+The Vitzthums are panderers. They always manage to leave me alone with
+Henry. When we are a-wheel, they ride a mile ahead; while playing tennis
+one or the other aims the ball, every little while, to enter the open
+window of a summer-house, where my lover and I can exchange a few rapid
+kisses. When we are driving, without coachman or groom, of course, they
+always "feel like walking a bit," while Henry and I remain in the
+carriage.
+
+The same at the house, on the veranda. They are always _de trop_.
+Vitzthum even sacrifices himself to the extent of paying court to the
+Tisch and engaging her entire attention, if it must be. He reminds me of
+a certain colonel of the French army during the Regency.
+
+"_Monseigneur_," said this gentleman to my cousin d'Orleans, "permit me
+to employ my regiment as a guard for my wife, and I swear to you that
+nobody shall go near her but Your Highness."
+
+Of course, it's very lovely of them, but rather emphasizes the poor
+opinion I have of the nobility.
+
+Your nobleman and noblewoman adopt all tones, all airs, all masks, all
+allures, frank and false, flattering and brutal, choleric or mild,
+virtuous or bawdy--anything as long as it makes for their profit. Some
+months ago I met at the Dresden court the Dowager Countess Julie
+Feodorowna of Pappenheim, who told everybody she could persuade to
+listen that her eldest son, Max Albrecht, had to resign the succession,
+because he married beneath him, an American heiress, Miss Wheeler of
+Philadelphia.
+
+"Then you despise money?" I queried with a malicious thought just
+entering my head.
+
+"Not exactly, Your Imperial Highness," she said, "but our house
+laws----"
+
+"Those funny house laws," I smiled, "you don't say they forbid a
+Pappenheim to accept half a dozen millions from his wife, when, in days
+gone by, the Counts of Pappenheim's chief income was the tax on harlotry
+in Franconia and Swabia."
+
+The Countess nearly dropped. "Don't be alarmed," I said. "See the
+pompous looking man in the corner yonder? It's Count Henneberg. His
+forbears held the fiefship of the Wuerzburg city brothel for many hundred
+years. That's where the family fortune came from."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _May 17, 1901_.
+
+I am an ingrate. I bit the hand that fed me. Noble iniquity that yields
+such delicious crumbs of love as Henry and I stole in moments of ecstasy
+in park and parlor, in pavilion and veranda, on our drives and rides, be
+blessed a hundred times. Ah, the harvest of little tendernesses, the
+sweet words I caught on the wing--recompense for the weeks of abstinence
+I suffered!
+
+Occasionally only, very occasionally, I feel like questioning Henry as
+to the lie he was guilty of. I quizzed his sister time and again about
+his relations with women. She always gives me a knowing laugh; I wonder
+whether she means to be impertinent, or is simply a silly goose.
+
+I won't ask him. If he is innocent, as I sincerely hope, he will be
+offended. If he is not, he will be ashamed of himself and will avoid me
+in future. It's "innocent," you lose, and "guilty," you don't win.
+
+And I love him. I want him, whether he lies to me or not.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER L
+
+TO LIVE UNDER KING'S AND PRINCE GEORGE'S EYE
+
+ Abruptly ordered to the royal summer residence--The Vitzthums and
+ Henry take flight--Enmeshed by Prince George's intrigues--Those
+ waiting for a crown have no friends--What I will do when Queen--No
+ wonder Kings of old married only relatives--Interesting facts about
+ relative marriages furnished by scientist.
+
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _May 18, 1901_.
+
+All-highest order to proceed to Pillnitz, the royal summer residence,
+without delay--a command I cannot possibly evade. Conveyed in curt,
+almost insulting terms--the Tisch's work, no doubt.
+
+It came like lightning out of a blue sky, just when Henry and I had
+planned some real love-making _a la_ Dresden.
+
+The Vitzthums lost no time taking their leave when the scent of royal
+disgrace was in the air, and, as if to emphasize the obscene office they
+had assumed, they spirited Henry away ere we had time even to say
+goodbye.
+
+What a life I am leading with the ogre of the King's wrath forever
+hanging over me; Prince George's intrigues, octopus-like, enmeshing me!
+
+Ten years I have been Crown Princess of these realms. Three Princes and
+a Princess I gave to Saxony. A fifth child is trembling in my womb, yet
+every atom of happiness that falls to my lot is moulded into a strand of
+the rope fastening 'round my neck.
+
+I haven't a friend in the world. A most dangerous thing to be on good
+terms with the heirs to the crown. Makes the temporary incumbent of the
+bauble nervous, makes him jealous.
+
+When I am Queen, I will have friends in plenty. But then I won't need
+any. Immense wealth will be at my disposal. I will have offices to
+distribute, titles, crosses and stars.
+
+Instead of tolerating the serpents now coiling at my fireside ready to
+spring at a word from their master, I will appoint to court offices
+persons I love or esteem, at least.
+
+Henry shall be my Chief Equerry; the Tisch will be dismissed in
+disgrace--no pension.
+
+But I am day-dreaming again. I started out to say that I had no friends.
+Yet there's Bernhardt? Precisely--as long as I am his mistress.
+
+Marie is dead, Melita expects to be divorced before the end of the year.
+She will be a Russian Grand-Duchess, and the tedium of petty German
+court life will know her no longer.
+
+Aside from Lucretia, there isn't a man or woman at the Saxon court whom
+I can trust, for our high functionaries are only lackeys having a
+bathroom to themselves. In no other way do they differ from the servants
+who are allowed one bathroom per twenty-four heads.
+
+But the high aristocracy! Its men and women flatter us to get us into
+leading strings, try to make us pawns on the political or social
+chess-board. As a whole, they are a despicable lot.
+
+No wonder kings of old married members of their own family exclusively,
+even their sisters, _in re_ of which the learned Baron von Reitzenstein
+told me many interesting details.
+
+He copied especially from Egyptian records, but also from Armenian,
+Babylonian and Persian, to wit:
+
+Daranavausch married his niece, Phratunga.
+
+His son and successor married his niece Artayanta.
+
+Artaxerxes was also married to a niece of his.
+
+Darius II and Parysatis married their sisters.
+
+Kambyses married two of his sisters.
+
+Artachschasa II married his two daughters; Kobad his daughter Sambyke.
+
+Artaviraf, the founder of a great ancient religion, married no less than
+seven of his sisters--because "there were no other women worthy of the
+honor."
+
+According to that, the aristocracy of old must have been as rotten as
+that of our day.
+
+Lucretia is the only person I trust, and they would have robbed me of
+her services long ago if my marriage contract did not vest the power of
+dismissal in me.
+
+Unlike me, she can afford to defy the King's wrath.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LI
+
+COLD RECEPTION--ENEMIES ALL AROUND
+
+ Frederick Augustus gives his views on adultery--Doesn't care
+ personally, but "the King knows"--"Thank God, the King is ill"--I am
+ deprived of my children--Have I got the moral strength to defy my
+ enemies?
+
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 20, 1901_.
+
+I am undone. That malicious Tisch woman holds me in the hollow of her
+hand.
+
+I dropped into a sea of ice when I set foot in the castle. Long faces,
+suspicious looks, frigidity everywhere. The King treats me like a
+criminal. I wonder the guards don't refuse their _spiel_ at my coming
+and going.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 21, 1901_.
+
+Frederick Augustus arrived. He doesn't say for how long, and acts the
+icicle in the presence of others. At night he seeks his "rights," seeks
+them brutally.
+
+This afternoon he said to me:
+
+"That you made me a cuckold isn't exactly killing me; this sort of thing
+happened to better men than I, and--I was almost prepared for it. But to
+hear it announced from the King's lips----"
+
+Because His Majesty knows--Frederick Augustus raved and swore I had
+dishonored him.
+
+"If I wasn't a royal prince, I would be kicked out of the army," he
+whined.
+
+In short, adultery isn't so very reprehensible if the King doesn't know.
+
+Late tonight profound disquietude at court. The King is ill.
+
+Thank God, the audience I feared must be postponed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 22, 1901_.
+
+It wasn't. His Majesty appointed Prince George his representative, and I
+received a command to call on him at ten sharp.
+
+I wrote on the Court Marshal's brutal invitation: "I refuse to see His
+Royal Highness."
+
+Ten minutes later the Tisch entered my apartment with a look of triumph
+on her hateful face. She handed me a letter on a golden plate and
+waited.
+
+"Your Ladyship is dismissed," I snapped.
+
+She didn't move: "I expect your Imperial Highness's commands with
+respect to the royal children," she said. "May it please Your Imperial
+Highness to read Prince George's letter."
+
+I tore open the envelope. His Majesty's representative "graciously
+permits me to see my children at nine in the morning and between five
+and six in the afternoon. At no other time, and never unless Baroness
+Tisch is in attendance."
+
+I threw the letter on the floor and trampled on it. "Get out," I
+commanded the Baroness. If she hadn't gone instantly, I believe I would
+have choked her.
+
+So I am deemed unworthy to mother the children I bore; and a spy is
+officially appointed to watch my intercourse with the little ones lest I
+corrupt them. No other inference was to be drawn from the measure.
+
+"I will show them." But no sooner was the threat launched, than a great
+fear clutched at my heart.
+
+Was I in a position to defy them? To guard the purity of the royal
+children "is the King's first duty towards his family." If he had proof
+positive that I was an impure woman, there was no use quarrelling with
+his decision. Besides, moral delinquencies engender more than physical
+weakness. I felt my boasted energy ebbing away fast.
+
+"I am without strength, unnerved, because Henry left me," I lied to
+myself. The abandoned woman is either a tigress or a kitten. I happen to
+be no tigress.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LII
+
+PRINCE GEORGE REVEALS TO ME THE DEPTH OF HIS HATRED
+
+ A terrible interview--"The devil will come to claim you"--Uncertain
+ how much the King and Prince George know--I break into the nursery
+ and stay with my children all day--Prince George insults me in my
+ own rooms and threatens prison if I disobey him.
+
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 23, 1901_.
+
+I caught Prince George in the park after laying in wait for him three
+long hours.
+
+"Why does Your Royal Highness forbid me to see my children?" I demanded,
+every nerve aquiver.
+
+"His Majesty's orders. He thinks you are not fit company for growing
+children. You are leading a godless life."
+
+"What does Your Royal Highness mean?"
+
+"What I said. A godless life, such as you entered upon, is an invitation
+to the devil. Sins are the devil's envoys. When you are black with sin,
+the devil himself will come to claim you."
+
+He dropped his theological lingo and continued: "My fine daughter-in-law
+wants to be everybody's lady-love. If she had her sweet will, she would
+ruin every young chap in the residence and the surrounding country."
+
+He looked about him and, seeing we were unobserved, eased his bile in
+this pretty epigram as rank as a serpent's saliva: "An adulterous wife,
+that's what you are. Satan alone knows how many you seduced."
+
+It was more than I could stand and I burst into tears. In moments like
+this women always cry, but even if I hadn't felt like doing so, I would
+have cried because George hates it.
+
+"Prove to me, prove to the King that you are sorry for what you have
+done, return to the path of righteousness, to God, and we will see about
+the children," he whispered as he moved away.
+
+"What does he know?" "How much have they found out?" I kept saying to
+myself as I withdrew to my lonely apartments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 24, 1901_.
+
+No answer to the questions in my last entry. The silent persecution
+continues unabated. I am growing desperate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 25, 1901_.
+
+This morning at eight-thirty I went to the nursery.
+
+The Baroness tried to speak to me. I held up my hand. "Not a word from
+you, or something terrible will happen."
+
+_Fraeulein_ von Schoenberg, who is really a sweet girl, offered some
+respectful advice. I begged her to be silent. If the door had been
+locked I would have forced it with the dagger I carried in my bosom.
+
+Lucretia came and whispered. "I have decided to stay, and stay I will.
+Let them do their worst if they dare," I told her.
+
+I changed the children's _curriculum_. "You can drive every day; you
+can't have mother every day. Let's have some games."
+
+I remained in the nursery till all the children were asleep. They
+partook of the breakfast, lunch and dinner I ordered for myself. A great
+treat for them. We were very happy.
+
+But I waited in vain for interference. Nothing happened to clear the
+situation. Those questions were still unanswered when I returned to my
+apartments.
+
+I had just sat down to read the evening papers, when Prince George
+entered unannounced.
+
+"If ever again you dare disobey my commands"--he shouted without
+preliminaries.
+
+I cut him short: "Are the children yours or mine?"
+
+"They belong to Saxony, to the Royal House," he bawled, and poured
+forth a torrent of abuse without giving me a chance to put in a word.
+"You shall be disciplined to the last extremity. We will imprison you in
+some lonely tower, without state or attendants. You shall not see your
+children from one year's end to the other."
+
+"Prison for the Crown Princess? Would you dare, Prince George?"
+
+"At the Tower of Nossen rooms are in readiness for your Imperial
+Highness," sneered my father-in-law as he walked out.
+
+Nossen! A ruined country-house, flanked by a mediaeval tower in the midst
+of swamps. The nearest habitation miles away. Neither railway nor
+post-office, neither telegraph nor telephone--just the place to bury one
+alive. And I only thirty-one.
+
+Augustus the Physical Strong imprisoned Countess Cosel at Nossen six
+months before he sent her to her prison-grave in Stolpen. After Cosel's
+departure, another royal mistress was lodged in Nossen, and as she would
+neither commit suicide, nor succumb to the fever, they starved her to
+death. And it all happened in the eighteenth century.
+
+The word Nossen sent cold shivers down my spine. I am sure I won't sleep
+a wink.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIII
+
+REVOLVER IN HAND, I DEMAND AN EXPLANATION
+
+ An insolent Grand Mistress, but of wonderful courage--Imprisonment,
+ threats to kill have no effect on her--Disregards my titles--My
+ lover's souvenir and endearing words--How she caused Henry to leave
+ me--My paroxysms of rage--Henry's complete betrayal of me.
+
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 26, 1901_.
+
+This morning I awoke a mental and physical wreck, but determined to
+solve those vexatious questions: "What do the King and Prince George
+know?" "What have they found out?"
+
+I slipped on a dressing-gown, fetched my small revolver from its
+hiding-place in the boudoir and rang for the Tisch.
+
+I received her politely enough. I was quiet, cold, calculating. She gave
+a start as she observed my stony countenance.
+
+"Baroness," I said, motioning her to come nearer, "explain the attitude
+assumed by His Majesty, Prince George and the rest."
+
+She shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"I want to know. Do you hear, Grand Mistress? I command you to speak," I
+cried.
+
+A sneer of contempt hovered about her lips. She is a viper, this woman,
+but has the courage of the rattle-snake in action.
+
+I turned the keys in the several doors and threw them under the bed.
+From under the pillow I drew my revolver.
+
+I showed her the weapon and calmly announced, accentuating each word:
+"You won't leave this room alive until the question I put to you is
+answered to my satisfaction. I want the whole truth. You needn't excuse
+your own part in the business. As Henri _Quatre_ said to the lover of
+Diane de Poitiers, secreted under her bed, as he threw him half a cold
+bird: 'We all want to live, some honestly, some dishonestly.' You choose
+the dishonest road. Be it so.
+
+"But I want you to state what you accuse me of. Hurry," I added
+menacingly.
+
+The Tisch was unmoved. Either she thinks me a horrible dastard or is
+brave to madness. She looked at me fearlessly and smiled. She seemed to
+enjoy my rage.
+
+"Answer or I will shoot you like the dog you are."
+
+And then her cold and fearless voice rang out: "Put your revolver away.
+I am not afraid to tell you, and that thing might go off. Is it
+possible," she continued sarcastically, "you have to ask?"
+
+This woman dared to address me "you." "Tisch," I thundered, "my title
+reads Your Imperial Highness."
+
+Another contemptuous smile curled her thin lips as she answered
+insolently: "At your commands. But if you want me to talk, put away the
+weapon. I won't open my head while threatened."
+
+I threw the revolver into a drawer of my chiffonier and the Tisch
+approached me. "Do you know this?" she hissed, whipping from her desert
+bosom the golden _Portebonheur_, Henry's present.
+
+I had missed it for two days. Fear seized my throat.
+
+"Do you know this?" repeated the Tisch, pushing the button and
+disclosing Henry's miniature with the legend "To my sweetest Louise."
+
+"Where did you get it?" I asked, half-dead with shame and fear.
+
+"Never mind. It's the last piece of evidence that fell into my hands.
+The real facts I have known for a long while."
+
+"And sold that knowledge?"
+
+"I did my duty."
+
+"Report, then."
+
+And she told the story of her infamy--or mine?
+
+My true relations with Henry were discovered by her at Loschwitz. He is
+a distant relative of hers and she an intimate friend of his mother.
+Hence she took care not to compromise the young man. The entire blame
+was put on me.
+
+"Her Imperial Highness is indulging in a dangerous flirtation with Baron
+Bergen," she advised the King. "They must be separated at once lest that
+exemplary young man fall victim to her seductive wiles. I beseech Your
+Majesty to order the Crown Princess to Pillnitz and put a stop to her
+most reprehensible conduct."
+
+Hence the royal command to proceed to Pillnitz without a moment's delay.
+"The King and Prince George deem your honor unsafe unless you are under
+their watchful eyes," she had the effrontery to tell me.
+
+She drew a key from her pocket and opened one of the bedroom doors.
+
+With her hand on the knob, she said, bowing formally:
+
+"By Your Imperial Highness's leave, I will keep the _Portebonheur_ to
+use in case you are ever tempted again 'to throw me out of doors like a
+thieving lackey!'"
+
+A low bow, a sarcastic smile,--my executioner was gone. And I broke some
+priceless bric-a-brac, stamped my foot on the pearl necklace Frederick
+Augustus had given me, tore three or four lace handkerchiefs and stuffed
+the rags in my mouth to prevent me from crying aloud.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 27, 1901_.
+
+Lucretia finished the Tisch's report. The good soul hadn't had the
+courage to tell me before, but now that the Grand Mistress had spoken,
+considerations of delicacy no longer stood in the way.
+
+What a judge of character I am, to be sure: Henry, whom I raised from
+obscurity, whom I befriended, loved, advanced, rescued from the hands of
+usurers--a traitor, pshaw, worse,--I cannot write down the word, but
+it's in my mind.
+
+Henry, who hadn't the time to take leave from me, devoted an hour to the
+Tisch before he went away with the Vitzthums.
+
+He told her all and gave her his word of honor--the honor of a man who
+accepted money from the woman weak enough to love him--that, first, he
+would never see me again of his own accord and would reject both my
+entreaties and commands; secondly, that he would petition to be
+transferred to a distant garrison to be out of the path of temptation;
+thirdly, that he would burn my letters.
+
+The Tisch, on her part, promised to tell the King only half the
+truth--not for my sake, of course, but to shield her dear, seduced young
+relative.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIV
+
+FORCED TO DO PENANCE LIKE A TRAPPIST MONK
+
+ "By the King's orders"--I submit for the sake of my children--Must
+ fast as well as pray--In delicate health, I insist upon returning to
+ Dresden--Bernhardt, to avoid being maltreated by King, threatens him
+ with his sword--The King's awful wrath--Bernhardt prisoner in
+ Nossen--I escape, temporarily, protracted _ennui_.
+
+
+ PILLNITZ, _May 28, 1901_.
+
+Though I am in delicate health, the King, having recovered from his
+illness, commanded me to do penance,--almost public penance.
+
+Fast and pray, pray and fast is the order of the day for the next two
+weeks.
+
+I arise every morning at five. At six a closed carriage takes me to a
+distant nunnery of the Ursulines, a good hour's travel. I am forced to
+attend mass, which also lasts an hour. Then a half-hour's sermon,
+dealing with fire and brimstone, hell and damnation.
+
+When that's over the Mother Superior kindly asks me to her cell and
+lectures me for an hour on the duties of a wife and mother, and on the
+terrors that follow in the wake of adultery.
+
+(I wonder where she gets her wisdom. She isn't married, she isn't
+supposed to have children, and she ought to know that the founder of her
+religion was most kind to the adulteress.)
+
+Then back to Pillnitz and breakfast, for it's the King's express command
+that I worship on an empty stomach; some Jesuit told George my sins
+would never be forgiven unless the torture of the fast was added to that
+of early rising, travel, prostration before the altar and listening to
+pious palaver.
+
+I stand it for my children's sake. They will be returned to me after I
+did penance full score. My only satisfaction: I compel the Tisch to
+attend me on my trips, and make her sit on the back seat of the
+carriage. I know this turns her stomach and watch her twitching face
+with devilish glee.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 15, 1901_.
+
+With the authority of the pregnant woman I demanded that I be allowed to
+return to town.
+
+"If compelled to see Prince George and the rest of my enemies daily, my
+child will be mal-formed, or I will suffer an _avortement_," I told the
+King.
+
+They let me go and I am breathing more freely. I still wear the chain
+and ball, but they don't cut into my flesh as in Pillnitz.
+
+Yesterday I learned that Bernhardt was in Dresden, and sent for him. He
+came in company of two army officers who remained in the anteroom.
+
+"I am a prisoner," he said resignedly, "those fellows outside will
+conduct me to Nossen."
+
+The audience granted him several months ago took place only after my
+departure from the summer residence, and developed into a fearful scene.
+
+"His Majesty," said Bernhardt, "was in a rage when I entered. 'State
+what you have to say,' said the King, 'and be brief.'
+
+"'If Your Majesty will graciously permit me to reside in Dresden, I will
+promise to lead a life in accordance with Your Majesty's intentions and
+will obey your slightest wish.'
+
+"'What?' cried the King, 'You dare name conditions for your good
+conduct?'"
+
+Bernhardt denied any intention to impose conditions, but begged to
+submit to His Majesty that he couldn't exist in those small garrisons.
+If in Dresden, it would come easier to him to turn over a new leaf.
+
+"Sure, all you young rakes want to live in the capital," sneered the
+King, "because it's easy in a big town to hide one's delinquencies."
+
+"Your Majesty," cried Bernhardt, "if I ever did a reprehensible thing,
+it was forced upon me by intolerable conditions."
+
+The King grew white with rage.
+
+"No excuses," he thundered. "You are a rip and ugly customer and you
+will stay in the garrison I designated."
+
+Even before the King had finished, Bernhardt interrupted him with a
+fierce: "Don't you call me names, Majesty. I won't stand for that."
+
+"Won't stand for anything that I think proper to mete out to you,
+rascal? I will make you." The King had risen and was about to box
+Bernhardt's ears.
+
+Bernhardt jumped back two paces and shouted like mad: "Don't you dare
+touch me. I will defend my honor sword in hand, even if I have to shoot
+myself on the spot."
+
+For several seconds the King stood speechless, then he reached out his
+hand and touched an electric button. Marshal Count Vitzthum responded.
+
+"Take him," said the King hoarsely--"he is your prisoner."
+
+Bernhardt drew his sword and threw it at the King's feet. He was
+conducted to a room, and sentinels were posted outside his door and
+under his windows. Presently the telephone called together a council of
+war and it was decided that Bernhardt go to Nossen during the King's
+pleasure, or rather displeasure.
+
+"The army officers that act as my guards are not allowed to speak to
+me," said Bernhardt, "and the garrison in Nossen will likewise be
+muzzled." He laughed as he added: "I suppose I shall have to make
+friends with the spirits of the great Augustus's mistresses haunting the
+old burg. They were gay ones! If the King remembered that, he would send
+me to the Trappists rather than to Nossen."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 1, 1901_.
+
+I never dreamt that science would come to my rescue, but a clever woman
+has more than one trick up her sleeve. On a visit to a book store I
+happened to see a new publication on the Hygienics of Pregnancy and had
+it sent to the palace.
+
+Last night, when nearly dead with _ennui_, I turned over the leaves of
+the volume and came across an article advising women in my condition to
+seek plenty of merry company. My mind was made up at once.
+
+First thing in the morning I sent for the Court Physician, and with many
+a sigh and groan gave him to understand that I feared to have melancholy
+if I continued the monotonous life I was leading.
+
+I happened to strike one of the doctor's pet theories, and he recited
+whole pages from the book I had been reading. Then he asked me a hundred
+questions, and rest assured that my answers were in accordance with my
+wishes.
+
+"I will have the honor to report to His Majesty at once," said the
+Councillor at the end of the examination, "that some diversion is
+imperative in Your Imperial Highness's case. Would Your Imperial
+Highness be pleased to visit the theatre or the Opera if the King
+approves?"
+
+The King did approve, and the Crown Princess of Saxony is once more
+permitted the privilege of _Frau_ Schmidt and _Frau_ Mueller; namely, to
+go to the theatre when she feels like it.
+
+[Illustration: THE LATE KING GEORGE OF SAXONY
+
+Louise's Father-in-Law]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LV
+
+FRANCIS JOSEPH JOINS MY SAXON ENEMIES
+
+ Cuts me dead before whole family--Everybody talks over my head at
+ dinner--I refuse to attend more court festivities--Husband protests
+ because I won't stand for insult from Emperor--I give rein to my
+ contempt for his family--Hypocrites, despoilers, gamblers, religious
+ maniacs, brutes--Benign lords to the people, tyrants at home--I cry
+ for my children like a she-dog whose young were drowned.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 2, 1901_.
+
+Great family concourse to look my new baby over, dear Marie Alix, born
+at Wachwitz, September 27.
+
+Emperor Francis Joseph was first to arrive, the Majesty who is forever
+posing as the family's good genius, as upholder of peace and amity among
+his countless cousins and nieces, and the many uncles and aunts and
+other relatives of his grand-children.
+
+Behold how he lived up to this reputation!
+
+I had been commanded to attend the reception in the Queen's _salon_, and
+made my bow to him. He bowed all around, looking at each present, but
+managed to overlook me.
+
+Then he commenced a long and weary conversation with the Queen, at
+whose elbow I sat, and when his stock of platitudes was exhausted,
+turned to fat Mathilde, congratulating her on the possession of the
+_Stern Kreuz_ decoration, an Austrian order which I likewise wore at my
+corsage. It was none other than the late Empress Elizabeth who pinned it
+on me.
+
+Presently dinner was announced. The Emperor took in Her Majesty, the
+King, _nolens, volens_, had to conduct me, but gave me neither word nor
+look. Nor did the others. I couldn't have been more isolated on a desert
+island, than at this royal board.
+
+They talked and cracked their silly jokes, and paid compliments to each
+other and were careful not to let their tongues run away with their
+intriguing minds, but all went above my head. No one spoke to me but the
+lackeys: "If it please Your Imperial Highness----"
+
+Frederick Augustus tore into my bedroom some little time after I had
+retired. Picture of the offended gentleman, if you please. I got no more
+than I deserve, but it "reflected on him, h-i-m, HIM." Though it was a
+"family dinner," he, the Crown Prince of Saxony, was "publicly"
+disgraced. The Emperor had treated the Crown Princess as air. He had not
+deigned to address a single word to her. The Crown Princess was a
+trollop in the Imperial eyes--it was enough to drive the Crown Prince to
+drink.
+
+"Drink yourself to death then," I shrieked.
+
+During the night I speculated what to do: ask a private audience of the
+Emperor, state my side of the case and beg his forgiveness and
+protection, beg, especially, for better treatment at his hands?
+
+And if he refused?
+
+Francis Joseph is a good deal of a Jesuit. When he hates, he never lets
+it come to a break; when he loves, he never attaches himself.
+
+If I stooped to humiliate myself, he might choose to debase me still
+more. It was entirely probable that he would betray my confidences to
+the King and Prince George.
+
+I will defy him and--all of them!
+
+"Her Imperial Highness regrets----" my Court Marshal wrote in answer to
+all invitations or rather "commands" for the next three days. When I
+refused to participate in the "grand leave-taking," Frederick Augustus
+came post-haste to expostulate with me.
+
+"You must. It would be an affront without precedent."
+
+"Take leave of a man who didn't say good-day to me on his arrival, and
+who probably intends to slight me in similar fashion on going away----"
+
+In lieu of argument the Prince Royal abused me like a pick-pocket; I had
+waited for it and now I let loose.
+
+"You are like the rest of your family," I shouted: "ignorant,
+thoughtless, brutal _en venerie_, sanctimonious in dotage. I know few
+people for whom I have so great a detestation as for the Royal Saxons.
+Look at your father, there is no more jesuitical a Jesuit, the inward
+man as hideous as the outward. He would be an insolent lackey, if he
+didn't happen to be a prince.
+
+"And Johann George--a shameless inheritance-chaser, despoiler of
+pupillary funds, gambler at the _bourse_, who whines like a whipped dog
+when he loses.
+
+"The royal Bernhardt, companion of street-walkers!
+
+"Prince Max, who talks theology, but keeps his eye on Therese.
+
+"Your Queen, a victim of religious madness, your King and his
+system--organized selfishness. Chicanery for those dependent upon him,
+ruin for all more gifted than the average Wettiner.
+
+"While living here I have learned to look upon my father's discrowning
+as a stroke of good luck for, since kings can no longer indulge their
+brutalities against their subjects, they turned tyrants at home.
+
+"If your father did to the humblest of his subjects what he did to me,
+he would be chased from home and country. The people, the parliament,
+his own creatures would rise against him and blot his name from the
+royal roster.
+
+"In the palace, in boudoirs, in the nurseries, he plays the
+prince--extortioner--executioner. To the public he is the benign lord,
+whining for paltry huzzas."
+
+Frederick Augustus was so dumfounded, he could only grind his teeth.
+
+I continued: "You prate of respect due the Majesty. There's nothing to
+induce feelings of that sort. Round me there is naught but weakness,
+hypocrisy, pettiness. I see shame and thievery stalking side by side in
+these gilded halls--gilded for show, but pregnant with woe.
+
+"Fie on you, Prince Royal, who allows his wife to be dogged by spies.
+Thieves, paid by your father, steal my souvenirs; a burglar's kit hidden
+in their clothes, they besiege my writing table. Jailers stand between
+me and my children.
+
+"My children!
+
+"Like a she-dog,[7] whose young were drowned, I cry for my babies--I,
+the Crown Princess of Saxony, who saved your family from dying out, a
+degenerate, depraved, demoralized, decadent race."
+
+When I had said this and more I fell down and was seized by crying
+convulsions.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 7: Queens seem to like this unseemly comparison:
+
+"Am I a kennel-dog in the estimation of the Bastard of England?" cried
+Mary of Scots, when Queen Elizabeth refused her safe-conduct through
+England upon her departure from France (Summer 1561).]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVI
+
+I AM DETERMINED TO DO AS I PLEASE
+
+ I reject mother's tearful reproaches--I beard Prince George in his
+ lair despite whining chamberlains--I tell him what I think of him,
+ and he becomes frightened--Threatens madhouse--"I dare you to steal
+ my children"--I win my point--and the children--"Her Imperial
+ Highness regrets"--Lots of forbidden literature--Precautions against
+ intriguing Grand Mistress--The affair with Henry--was it a
+ flower-covered pit to entrap me?--Castle Stolpen and some of its
+ awful history.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 5, 1901_.
+
+Patience ceased to be a virtue. Tolerance would be a crime against
+myself. I am determined to do as I please in future. If it upsets the
+King's, Prince George's and the rest's delicate digestion, so much the
+better.
+
+The newspapers are hinting about my troubles with Prince George and the
+King. When I go driving or appear at the theatre, the public shows its
+sympathy in many ways. Sometimes I am acclaimed to the echo.
+
+Mamma wrote me a tearful letter. She spent six hours in prayers for
+"sinful Louise" and sends me the fruits of her meditations: six pages of
+close script, advising me how to regain the King's and Prince George's
+favor.
+
+Never before have I failed in outward respect to my mother, but this
+time I wrote to her: "Pray attend to your own affairs. Don't meddle in
+mine which you are entirely unable to understand."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 6, 1901_.
+
+Bernhardt was sent to Sonnenstein. Whether he became insane at Nossen,
+or whether it is the family's intention to drive him mad among the
+madmen of Sonnenstein, I don't know, but it behooves me to be careful.
+
+Sonnenstein has accommodation for both sexes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _November 15, 1901_.
+
+I sent a letter to the King, asking him to have Loschwitz Castle
+prepared for my reception. His Majesty didn't deign to answer, but
+Prince George commanded me in writing to stay at Dresden "under his
+watchful eye."
+
+I immediately proceeded to his apartments in my morning undress, without
+hat, gloves or wrap. As I rushed through the anteroom, Adjutant von
+Metsch begged me with up-lifted hands not to force His Royal Highness's
+door, Prince George being too ill to receive me, etc., etc. I paid no
+attention to his mournful whinings. At that moment I had courage enough
+to stock a regiment.
+
+"So you won't allow me to go to Loschwitz," I addressed George as I
+suddenly bobbed up at the side of his desk.
+
+My father-in-law looked at me as if I were a spook, emerged from a
+locked closet.
+
+"Who let you in?" he managed to say after a while.
+
+"I didn't come here to answer questions," I replied. "I came to announce
+that if you don't let me go to Loschwitz, there will be a scandal that
+will resound all over Christendom and make you impossible in your own
+capital."
+
+"Why do you want to leave Dresden?" he insisted.
+
+"Because I want to be alone. Because I am tired of hateful faces.
+Because I refuse to accept orders and insults from people that are
+beneath an Imperial Princess of Austria."
+
+Prince George turned pale.
+
+"Am I one of those beneath Your Imperial Highness?" he queried stupidly.
+
+"Decidedly so."
+
+A long pause. Then Prince George shouted: "To the devil with you. I
+don't care whether you stay in Loschwitz, or Dresden, or on the
+Vogelwiese."
+
+The Vogelwiese is an amusement park, respectable enough, but the word or
+name, as used by George, reeked with sinister and insulting meaning.
+
+Trembling with rage, I replied: "Right royal language you royal Saxons
+use. From time to time, I suppose, you refresh your fish-wife
+vocabulary in the annals of Augustus the Physical Strong, than whom a
+more gross word-slinger did not walk the history of the eighteenth
+century."
+
+I believe Prince George was frightened by my violence. Assuming a
+haughty tone he said formally: "Your Imperial Highness is at liberty to
+travel whenever you please, but you will be so good as to leave your
+children in Dresden."
+
+I stepped up to the white-livered coward and hissed in his face: "Steal
+my children if you dare, and I will go to France, or Switzerland and ask
+a republican President to interfere for humanity's sake."
+
+"And--land yourself in an insane asylum," sneered George.
+
+"An old trick of the Royal House of Saxony, I know," I shouted back.
+"Bernhardt is saner than you, yet the King sent him to Sonnenstein. If
+such a crime had been perpetrated by one not a king, he would go to
+jail."
+
+Prince George pointed a trembling finger towards the door. "Out with
+you!" he bawled hoarsely. "Out!"
+
+I stood my ground. "May I take my children? Yes or no?"
+
+He rang the bell and repeated mechanically: "Out with you, out!"
+
+I had another fit of crying convulsions. Doctors, maids and lackeys were
+summoned in numbers. They bedded me on the couch and six men-servants
+carried me to my apartments.
+
+Two days later I went to Loschwitz with my children.
+
+I had defied the King. Prince George was humbled. I carried my point,
+and the Dresden court will not see me again in a hurry.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _Christmas, 1901_.
+
+I refused to spend Christmas at Court. Frederick Augustus planned a stay
+of a couple of weeks. "Not a single night," I wrote back.
+
+They parleyed; they begged. "The Crown Prince desires to spend Christmas
+with the children. In the interests of public opinion, it's absolutely
+necessary that he does."
+
+"But not--that I submit to prostitution. I will give him a dinner, but
+he will drive back to Dresden immediately afterwards."
+
+Frederick Augustus brought numerous presents for me. "You may place them
+under the Christmas tree," I ordered the Tisch.
+
+"Oh, Your Imperial Highness, look," cried the Tisch, holding up
+something or other.
+
+I turned my back on her and looked out of the window. I never went near
+my end of the Christmas table. "You will send the things brought by His
+Royal Highness to the bazaar for crippled children," I told the House
+Marshal. "They shall be sold for the benefit of the poor."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _January 1, 1902_.
+
+"Her Imperial Highness regrets."
+
+I refused the invitations to today's family dinner; the grand reception,
+_Te Deum_ and parade. "Unprecedented affront!" What do I care!
+
+I have eighteen horses, half-a-dozen carriages, I drive, I ride, I hunt,
+I give the Tisch palpitation daily by the literature I affect: _Zola_,
+_Flaubert_, _M'lle Paul_, _Ma Femme_, _M'lle de Maupin_, _Casanova_,
+_M'me Bovary_. And the periodicals I subscribed for! _Simplicissimus_,
+Harden's _Zukunft_, all the _double entendre_ weeklies and monthlies of
+Paris. May Prince George and Mathilde burst with rage and envy when they
+hear of my excursions in the realms of the literary Satans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _January 15, 1902_.
+
+The Tisch is beginning to treat me like a person irresponsible for her
+doings. Sonnenstein is looming up anew. But I am going to fool her. As I
+will hold no more speech with her, there will be no occasion for turning
+my own words against me.
+
+If I have to give a command, or answer a question, I ask Lucretia or
+_Fraeulein_ von Schoenberg to convey my orders.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _March 20, 1902_.
+
+An uneventful winter is drawing to a close. By banishing myself to this
+quiet place I raised a barrier against quarrels, against harsh orders,
+against humiliations. And the barrier also shuts out: love, happiness.
+
+Sometimes, when the Tisch's hateful mouth spouts honeyed platitudes, I
+ask myself whether the affair with Henry wasn't, after all, a
+flower-covered pit dug for me by my enemies.
+
+It was the Tisch who had Henry appointed _Vortaenzer_.
+
+Maybe, knowing my inflammable heart, she offered the tempting bait
+solely to the end of getting me into her power?
+
+Far from impossible.
+
+I curse the day when I entered Dresden, joined this court and family.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LOSCHWITZ, _May 15, 1902_.
+
+Royal command to join the court at Pillnitz June 1. The King, who has
+been ailing for some time, is anxious to be reunited with the children,
+and, as a necessary evil, I must go along.
+
+I replied that I would prefer Nossen, or even Stolpen, if it pleases His
+Majesty.
+
+Castle Stolpen is an old-time stronghold of the bishops of Meissen, and
+its very ruins are pregnant with reminiscences of a barbaric age. The
+apartments once occupied by the Countess Cosel, as a prison first, as a
+residence after the death of Augustus, might be made habitable even now.
+Exceedingly interesting are the old-time torture chambers and the
+subterranean living rooms of the "sworn torturer" and the dogs,
+man-shaped, that served him.
+
+Sanct. Donatus Tower, a wing of the great, black pile, was the ancient
+_habitat_ of these worthies, and the torture chamber, still extant, is a
+hall almost as big as the Dresden throne-room. In an inscription hewn in
+the basalt, the sovereign bishop, Johannes VI, poses as builder and
+seems proud of the damnable fact. Other princes of the Church let us
+know in high-sounding Latin script that they created the "Monk hole" and
+the "stairless prison" respectively.
+
+The latter is a vast subterranean vault, never reached by sunshine or
+light of any kind. Its victims were made to descend some twenty feet
+below the surface of the earth on a ladder. When near the bottom, the
+ladder was pulled up and--stayed up. The prisoners were fed once every
+twenty-four hours, when a leather water pouch and some pounds of black
+bread were sent down on a rope.
+
+Of course only the strongest got a morsel, or a drink of water. The
+others died of starvation and the survivors lived only until there were
+new arrivals, stronger than themselves. The dead bodies were never
+removed, and horrible stories of necrophily smudge the records of this
+awful prison and cover its princely keepers with infamy.
+
+The "Monk's hole" was called officially "Obey Your Judge." It is a sort
+of chimney, just large enough to take the body of a man.
+
+When a monk or other prisoner refused to confess, he was let down into
+the hole in the wall to starve, while tempting dishes, meat, wine and
+bread, were dangled over his head, almost within reach of his hands.
+
+Of course, after enduring this torture for several days, the delinquent
+was glad enough to "Obey His Judge."
+
+By offering to go to this abode of horror and to take the place of
+Cosel, I meant to show my utter contempt for the royal favor
+vouchsafed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVII
+
+I CONFESS TO PAPA
+
+ King Albert dies and King George a very sick man--Papa's good
+ advice--"You will be Queen soon"--A lovely old man, very much
+ troubled.
+
+
+ CASTLE SIBYLLENORT, _June 19, 1902_.
+
+King Albert is dead. George is King, and may God have mercy upon my
+soul.
+
+Of course the demise of His Majesty changed all my plans of defiance and
+otherwise. I am once more an official person, even an important one, for
+the new King can't last long. He is a very sick man, in fact. Perhaps
+that is the reason why he wants to hear himself addressed "Your Majesty"
+all the time. Petty souls like to be called "great."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 21, 1902_.
+
+I intended to return at once to Loschwitz, but the King, hearing of my
+intention and not wishing to provoke another scene, invited my father to
+come to Dresden "in the interests of his daughter."
+
+The same evening I received a wire from papa, saying that he would be in
+Dresden within twenty-four hours.
+
+My own arrival in the capital was kept secret by the King's order, but
+next afternoon, when I drove to the station to welcome my father, I got
+my reception just the same. The people wildly cheered their Crown
+Princess and thousands of sympathizing eyes followed me from the palace
+to the depot.
+
+I was almost overcome by so much sympathy and when at last I saw father,
+I threw myself on his neck, crying aloud.
+
+The King was standing by, impatiently waiting to conduct his grand-ducal
+guest before the guard of honor had drawn up. "Later, later," whispered
+papa, patting me on the cheek.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _June 22, 1902_.
+
+I had an hour's talk with father. I bared my heart to him. I reported my
+own faults along with those of the others.
+
+Papa understands me. He sympathizes with me, but help me he cannot.
+
+"These are only passing shadows," he said. "Look boldly into the future.
+You will soon be Queen."
+
+And he told me of his financial difficulties and of the misfortune of
+being a sovereign lord without either land or money.
+
+"The Emperor ordered me to scold you hard," he continued, "and mamma
+wants me to be very severe. As to King George, he said he would thank
+God if I succeeded in breaking your rebellious spirit. 'If you don't, I
+will,' added his Majesty."
+
+Then father kissed me more lovingly than ever and asked, half
+apologetically: "Is it true, Louise, that you had a lover?"
+
+"I thought I had one, but he was unworthy of me," I replied without
+shame.
+
+My confession seemed to frighten him.
+
+"It's sad, sad," he said. "Royal blood is dangerous juice. It brought
+Mary of Scots to the scaffold; it caused your great-aunt Marie
+Antoinette to lose her head, only to save the old monarchies a few years
+later, when we inveigled the enemy of legitimate kingship into a
+marriage with another of your relatives. But for Marie, Louise, the
+descendants of the Corsican might still sit on a dozen thrones."
+
+Father forgot his daughter's disgrace when he mounted this historic
+hobby-horse and, needless to say, I did not recall the original text.
+
+Only when, three days later, he took leave of me, holding my head long
+between his two trembling hands and kissing me again and again, I felt
+that the poor, old man's heart was oppressed with shame and torn by
+fears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVIII
+
+MONSIEUR GIRON--RICHARD, THE ARTIST
+
+ The King asks me to superintend lessons by M. Giron--A most
+ fascinating man--His Grecian eyes--He is a painter as well as a
+ teacher--In love--Careless whether I am caught in my lover's
+ arms--"Richard" talks anarchy to me--Why I don't believe in woman
+ suffrage--Characters and doings of women in power.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 1, 1902_.
+
+King George is determined I shall stay in Dresden to end the newspaper
+talk about trouble in the bosom of the royal family.
+
+He engaged a new head-tutor for my little brood. Monsieur Giron, a
+Belgian of good family.
+
+"I would be pleased if you attended the children's lessons and reported
+to me on the method of the new man," he said. "You are so intellectual,
+Louise, you will find out quickly if M. Giron is not what he is
+represented to be."
+
+I promised, for, after all, I owed so much to the King and my children.
+
+Alas, it was fate!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 1, After Midnight_.
+
+He is tall, well made, and his wild, Grecian eyes fascinate me. He is
+conscious of self, but modest. His voice is sweet and sonorous, his eyes
+are bright with intellect. Speaking eyes!
+
+I asked him to visit my apartments at the conclusion of school hours. He
+told me he was a painter as well as a teacher of languages.
+
+"Would you like to paint me?"
+
+"I am dying for a chance to reproduce your loveliness as far as my poor
+art permits."
+
+He told me he had a studio in town, where he is known under his artist's
+_pseudonyme_, Richard.
+
+"How romantic! I'd like to see it," I said impulsively.
+
+"Several ladies and gentlemen of society sat for portraits at my studio
+here and at home."
+
+In short we arranged that he paint my picture and that I should go to
+his studio, where the light is excellent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _July 15, 1902_.
+
+I am happy once more. Those hours at Richard's studio are the sweetest
+of my life.
+
+Lucretia acts the protecting angel as usual. Richard calls her Justice
+because she is "blind." When she is along, I drive boldly up to the
+door in one of the court carriages. Sometimes, when I can sneak out of
+the palace for a little while unobserved, I go alone in a cab.
+
+How long this sort of thing can go on without discovery, I know not. As
+to what will happen afterwards, I care not.
+
+If I was told that tomorrow I would be caught in my lover's arms and
+banished to a lone island for life, I would go to his studio just the
+same.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _August 1, 1902_.
+
+Richard is moulding my character. I, once so proud of rank and station,
+I, who upheld the Wettiners' robbery of a poor, defenseless woman, the
+Duke's wife, because Socialistic papers spoke in her favor,--Louise now
+allows anarchistic tendencies to be poured in her ears. She almost
+applauds them.
+
+This easy change from one extreme to the other at a lover's behest is
+one of the things that make woman's rule--or co-rule--as the male's
+political equal--impossible. It's a sort of _Phallus_ worship that
+always was and always will be.
+
+"Though women have not unfrequently been the holders of temporary and
+precarious power, there are not many instances where they have held
+secure and absolute dominion," says Dr. William W. Ireland in his
+famous "Blot upon the Brain."
+
+Because they were swayed by the male of the species, of course!
+
+Though the characters of the world's female sovereigns differed as to
+blood, race, education, environment and personal traits, neither showed
+any inclination to resist the allurements of irregular _amours_.
+
+Think of Semiramis, of Mary of Scots, of Elizabeth, Catherine I, of the
+Tsaritzas Elizabeth and the second Catherine--under the temptations of
+Power, they recruited paramours for themselves in all ranks of society.
+
+Agrippina was more licentious than Caligula; Messalina's infamy
+surpassed Nero's, and the furthest reaching, the one irresistible Power
+swaying them all was MAN.
+
+Augustus of the three hundred and fifty-four emphasized this in the
+negative and, in his own uncouth way, by "postering" the Countess
+Cosel's chief charm on penny coins.
+
+"She cost Saxony twenty millions in gold--behold the penny's worth she
+gave in return."
+
+When the beauty who had brought the richest German kingdom to the verge
+of state bankruptcy died February 2, 1765, four hundred of Augustus's
+infamous medals were found hidden in her favorite armchair. She paid
+three or four times their weight in gold for each.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIX
+
+THE PEOPLE THINK ME A WANTON
+
+ Credit me with innumerable lovers, but don't disapprove--Glad the
+ King feels scandalized--Picture of the "she-monster"--Everybody
+ eager for love--I delight in Richard's jealousy--Husband's
+ indelicate announcement at table--I rush from the royal opera to see
+ my lover--A threatening dream--Richard not mercenary like my noble
+ lovers.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _August 10, 1902_.
+
+This is the kind of speech Richard holds with me and--I enjoy:
+
+"Every working-girl, every poor woman who suckles her own children and
+helps her husband in the fight for existence, stands mountain high above
+royal ladies like you.
+
+"None of you royal ladies are their moral equals.
+
+"In no distant time," he says, "they will chase you from your thrones,
+even as your relatives had to evacuate France by tumbril, post-chaise or
+train."
+
+Richard's ethical and intellectual valuation of royal princes coincides
+with my own. He has rare insight into our family life.
+
+However, these disclosures both amazed and alarmed me when I first
+heard them pronounced. I never dreamt that opinions of that kind
+prevailed among the masses.
+
+"But why am I acclaimed whenever I show myself?"
+
+"Because you are pretty, because you impersonate the one thing all are
+desirous to embrace: affluence, kindness, youth and beauty. Because you
+are a treat to the senses and because sensuality is the paramount thing
+in life, whether we admit it or not."
+
+"Who's 'we'?"
+
+"Kings and anarchists, princesses of the Blood and laundresses, royal
+princes and cab drivers, empresses, street-walkers, society ladies,
+big-wigs and _sabretasches_. The draggled Menads and the helpful
+Lafayette, the Jacobins, Charlotte Corday and the man she killed--all
+were, and are, on similar pleasure bent."
+
+And he added quickly: "As to the Dresdeners, they are tickled because,
+every time they applaud you, the King is scandalized."
+
+"How do they know that I am not on good terms with the King?"
+
+"The very children in arms understand."
+
+All Dresden, says Richard, is talking about me. Everybody assumes to
+know the number and qualities of my lovers. "Louise," they argue, "knows
+how to enjoy herself, but, though it serves the King right, we wouldn't
+have her for a daughter-in-law, either."
+
+According to the masses, I visit the Vogelwiese at night, ride on the
+flying horses and solicit men and boys that please my fancy. Like a
+gigantic she-monster, I drag them to my lair--"some to vanish forever."
+(No doubt, I eat them.)
+
+"Unwashed soldiers and clerks reeking with cheap perfume, actors and
+students, draymen and generals, it's all the same to the Crown Princess.
+
+"Sometimes, when the spirit moves her, the Crown Princess issues from
+her gilded apartments in the palace and seizes the sentinel patrolling
+the corridors. Or she visits the guard-room _en deshabille_ and selects
+the youngest and best looking officer for her prey.
+
+"Generous, too. She thinks nothing of handing a pension of ten thousand
+marks per year to a chap that pleased her once."
+
+"Is that all they say about me?"
+
+"Not one-half. Poor devils that can't afford ten marks per year for
+their fun, Cit's wives that know only their ill-kempt husbands, factory
+girls that sell their virtue for a supper or a glass of beer--though
+afterwards they claim it was champagne--all take delight in
+contemplating that you, or any other good looking royal woman, are
+Frankenstein's succuba or worse. Didn't they accuse your grand-aunt,
+Marie Antoinette, of incest with her son and gave him to the cobbler to
+thrash the immorality out of him?"
+
+"And they give names?"
+
+"Strings of them"--among them several I never heard mentioned before.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _August 15, 1902_.
+
+Richard is jealous--jealous of the men I did love and the regiments that
+public opinion give me credit for. He must needs think I have loins of
+steel.
+
+He tells me he suffers agonies by what I confessed, and still more by
+what I hide. To see him thus unhappy gives me intense pleasure, for it
+shows that the boy loves me to distraction.
+
+ _Midnight._
+
+M. Giron was very cold and distant during the afternoon's lessons.
+
+I had previously lunched with him at his studio and we were very gay
+then. I teased him unmercifully about "his royal _demi-mondaine_," as
+the masses painted me.
+
+Frederick Augustus was very gallant at dinner and told me, before a
+table full of people, that he would take pleasure in sleeping with me
+tonight. I have too bad a conscience to deny myself to him. But I ran
+over to the opera for half an hour and ordered M. Giron to my box.
+
+"I got over my vexation," he said,--"got over it because I reflected
+that you are the Princess Royal and that I would be a fool to take your
+love seriously. Henceforth I will regard it a passing adventure and let
+it go at that, for if I thought it the great passion of my life, I would
+despair, indeed."
+
+"Find a closed cab," I whispered, my heart in my mouth; "I must see you
+alone. I will be at the northern side-exit in five minutes."
+
+Cabby was ordered to drive slowly along unfrequented side streets. We
+lowered the curtains.
+
+"So you don't love me?" I wailed. Burying my face on Richard's chest I
+cried as if my heart would break.
+
+"Not love you?" he breathed. "If I loved you not, I would die, Louise."
+
+"Then why those cruel words?"
+
+"Good heavens," he cried, "haven't I the right to be jealous? I said
+what I said to hear you say that you love me."
+
+"And you will always love me?"
+
+"Always, dearest," and he covered my face and neck with burning kisses.
+
+Ten minutes later I was again seated at the opera.
+
+I hear Frederick Augustus in the corridor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _August 16, 1902_.
+
+A horrible night. Lucky that Frederick Augustus was more than half drunk
+when he sought "His Imperial Pleasure-trove," as he likes to call me,
+for I often talk in my sleep and--I dreamt of Richard. I dreamt of my
+enemies, too.
+
+They stole him from me. He was of the past like Henry, Romano and the
+rest.
+
+In a second dream he jilted me--cast me off like a garment, old or out
+of fashion.
+
+Lucretia, who sleeps in the next room, heard me cry out in terror, heard
+me denounce the King, Tisch--everybody.
+
+And Frederick Augustus snored.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 1, 1902_.
+
+Princes and noblemen have ever sought their own advantage of me. To them
+I was always the milch-cow, or Phryne, outright.
+
+Richard is poor. I offered him a considerable sum for one of his
+paintings.
+
+"Never again mention the matter," he said curtly.
+
+"But it would give me much pleasure to be of assistance to you."
+
+"Louise, we must separate if you don't stop that line of talk," he
+replied.
+
+And he means it.
+
+A day or two later I let fall, casually, that Frederick Augustus might
+buy the portrait of myself that was nearing completion under his
+skillful brush.
+
+"His Royal Highness won't have the chance," he cried fiercely. "I will
+tell him it isn't finished, or doesn't come up to my artistic standard,
+or something of the sort."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LX
+
+THE DAY OF JUDGMENT LOOMS UP
+
+ My Grand Mistress shows her colors--Richard advises flight--I
+ hesitate on account of my children--My Grand Mistress steals a
+ letter from Richard to me--I opine that an adulteress's word is as
+ good as a thief's--I humble my Grand Mistress, but it won't do me
+ much good--Pleasant hours at his studio.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 15, 1902_.
+
+That dreadful dream is becoming a heart-breaking reality.
+
+The Tisch entered my boudoir last night in her mantilla, emblem of her
+office as Grand Mistress.
+
+Some dirty business on hand, I surmised at once.
+
+"Imperial Highness," she said, genuflexing ceremoniously, "I submit that
+your artist takes too long about the portrait. Your Imperial Highness's
+visits to the studio must cease."
+
+"Since when do you give orders here, Baroness?"
+
+"His Majesty empowered me," answered the Grand Dame.
+
+"In that case, do as you like, but don't bother me," I cried bravely
+enough, but trembling in every limb. The Tisch, no doubt, is preparing
+to deal me another blow.
+
+When I told Richard that henceforth we would have to exercise extra
+care, he was beside himself with rage.
+
+"Why stand such tyranny?" he cried. "No self-respecting woman, other
+than royal, would submit for a single week to be bullied and intrigued
+against and threatened and browbeaten as you are, and they have ill-used
+you for eleven years. If you were a simple Cit's daughter, instead of
+the descendant of a decrepit, bloodless family, yclept royal, you would
+make an end now, leave them to their shabby kingship and be a free
+woman--free and happy."
+
+My lover forgets the children, but the picture of the free life he draws
+is most attractive.
+
+"And would you go with me to the end of the earth, as the story books
+put it?" I asked tremblingly.
+
+"Louise," he answered, "if you are brave enough and strong enough to
+throw away a crown, I will be your slave for life."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 20, 1902_.
+
+"Your Imperial Highness was pleased to call me a thief once," said the
+Tisch early this morning as she entered my boudoir, triumph written all
+over her yellow countenance. "You repeated that calumny to the Prince
+Royal and doubtless to many other persons. Today came the opportunity
+to live up to my reputation. I stole a letter addressed to you by your
+present lover, and as Your Imperial Highness is pleased to doubt my
+authority, immediately sent it to His Majesty. It makes highly
+interesting reading."
+
+The blow made my knees tremble, but pain and rage came to my assistance,
+effacing the momentary weakness.
+
+"Don't think for a moment to frighten me," I cried. "I say to your face
+that I have a lover--a gentleman, not an unspeakable, like your nephew.
+And now listen: I will tell the King and the press of Europe, if it must
+be, that it was you, my Grand Mistress, who 'pandered' me to
+Henry--for--revenue. I will have him whipped out of the army----"
+
+"You don't suppose for a moment that the word of an adulteress would
+prove acceptable either to His Majesty or anyone else?" hissed the
+insolent creature.
+
+"My word will be accepted all around," I shouted back, "for I have the
+proofs, proofs that you smuggled this unspeakable into my household,
+proofs that you lied to the King in order not to disrupt your nephew's
+career.
+
+"And I will cry from the house-tops that you discovered my relations
+with Henry only _after_ I had paid his debts, _after_ I had financed his
+excursions to gambling-houses and to usurers' dens. Ah, I paid his
+tailors and glove-makers, his board and lodging, his laundry bills. I
+paid the alimony due his strumpets, and _after_ all was done, _after_
+his lieutenantship had again a clean bill of health, financially
+speaking, then, and not a moment before, did you step in and make an end
+of the farce, wherein I played the part of 'angel,' or pay-master."
+
+The Tisch got visibly smaller under my lash. The air of triumph she bore
+when entering the room gave way to an expression of despair. If she
+hadn't sent the letter to the King, I believe she would have given it up
+after I was half through with her.
+
+Once more I hold the whip hand, but what good will it do me since I am
+condemned to lose the man I love?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Midnight._
+
+Richard approved of all I said and did. We were unspeakably happy this
+afternoon, despite the storm threatening us.
+
+I fear neither the King nor Frederick Augustus now, but the fear of
+Sonnenstein I can't shake off.
+
+If the King takes it upon himself to say that I'm mad, there will be
+plenty of medical authorities to bear him out, none to oppose him.
+
+Of course, they will separate me from my children and will do their
+utmost to drive me mad between now and the time when I should be
+proclaimed Queen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXI
+
+A MAD HOUSE FOR LOUISE--PROBABLY
+
+ My confidential maid, Lucretia, is banished--The new King has got
+ the incriminating letter, but Frederick Augustus says nothing--On
+ the eve of judgment the King falls ill.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 21, 1902_.
+
+This morning, at six, Lucretia rushed into my room. She was in her
+night-gown. Her hair was loose. No color in her face.
+
+And between sobs and curses she told me that she had orders to leave by
+ten sharp. "If you dare stay over the appointed time, you will be
+transported to the frontier on foot, between gendarmes."
+
+"Von Baumann shall come."
+
+I threw a loose wrapper over my night-gown and received him at once.
+
+"My marriage contract provides that no one but I have the right of
+dismissal with respect to Countess Baranello," I said sharply.
+
+"As long as the lady keeps within the law," replied Baumann with just a
+trace of insolence in his voice.
+
+I looked at him in astonishment.
+
+"The Countess is guilty of a crime, of a succession of crimes,"
+continued Baumann, "but His Majesty, not wishing to be harsh, decided to
+treat her merely as an obnoxious foreigner. She has forfeited her right
+to live in Saxony, and will do well to obey."
+
+I helped poor Lucretia pack. I gave her a handful of jewels, I paid her
+a year's salary in advance and ordered the treasury to procure
+first-class passage for her to Rome.
+
+I sent her to the station in my own carriage, and wired to our Rome
+representative to show her every courtesy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Afternoon._
+
+Frederick Augustus hasn't said a word to me about the affair with
+Richard. We have our meals together and his attitude in no wise differs
+from that usually maintained. Yet I am convinced he knows.
+
+The last service rendered me by Lucretia, gave me great relief. She
+found out that neither the Tisch, nor Frederick Augustus, nor the King
+know who "Richard" is. Fortunately his letter was typewritten, signature
+and all.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Six o'clock._
+
+The King announced his visit for eight o'clock.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Nine o'clock._
+
+The King had a fall in his apartments shortly after he sent me notice of
+his coming. He was unconscious for two hours.
+
+Safe for the time being!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXII
+
+KING'S ILLNESS A BOON TO LOVERS
+
+ Prayers mixed with joy--Espionage disorganized, and I can do as I
+ please--Love-making in the school-room--Buying a ring for
+ Richard--"Wishing it on"--"Our marriage"--King's life despaired
+ of--My tormentors obsequious--Smile at my peccadilloes--Husband
+ proud of me--My popularity a great asset--Frederick Augustus
+ delighted when he hears that King can't last long--The joyous
+ luncheon at Richard's studio--Making fun of majesties--I expect to
+ be Queen presently.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 22, 1902_.
+
+He is dangerously ill. It may be weeks and months before the King
+recovers--if he recovers at all.
+
+I feel like praying, crying, shouting with joy.
+
+When Richard folded his arms about me this afternoon, I said to myself:
+"God doesn't begrudge me a lover as kind and good as Richard."
+
+The King's illness has disorganized the espionage, my coming and going
+are no longer controlled. The body-groom brings in my letters as
+delivered at the gate.
+
+In the school room, while the children are writing or studying, Richard
+and I find time to exchange kind words and even an occasional caress.
+When I "command" the tutor to my apartments, we need fear no surprise.
+
+The utmost quiet prevails in the palace. The courtyard is sanded foot
+high and strewn with straw to deaden the sound of wheels and horses'
+hoofs. No more mounting of the guard with fife and drum.
+
+I suggested that the children be sent to the _Grosser Garten_ to play.
+The Tisch agreed with enthusiasm. This yields us--Richard and
+myself--two hours of love-making.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _October 25, 1902_.
+
+The King continues ill.
+
+I went into a cheap jeweler's this afternoon and bought an inexpensive
+ring with a ruby no larger than a pin head. When I gave it to Richard,
+he grew red with joy.
+
+Strange, he bought a similar ring for me. I shall never wear another
+ring in my life but Richard's. I pulled my rings off one after the other
+and threw them on the bed.
+
+I kissed the larger ring and "wished" it on Richard's finger. He did the
+same with the ring intended for me. And we said, as with a common
+breath, "Our wedding."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 1, 1902_.
+
+A bulletin, by the King's physicians, holds out scant hopes for George's
+life.
+
+I am watching the palace yard. The Archbishop of Dresden, attended by
+two court chaplains and a host of other clerics, is just mounting the
+stairs to administer the last rites of the Church. The next minute may
+see me Queen of Saxony. I may even be Queen now. I wish I had the
+effrontery to promise the lackey or official, announcing my
+enthronization, a handful of gold, as George did, when King Albert was
+dying.
+
+Even so, I have risen immeasurably in everybody's esteem. The sweet
+family knows me again. Johann George, Mathilde, Isabelle and Max are
+kotowing to me. Bernhardt sent me a telegram of condolence--condolence!
+He is a humorist, that boy.
+
+Minister of the Royal House, Baron Seydwitz, called twice. The Royal
+Adjutant, General von Carlowitz, spoke of the possibility of giving
+Bernhardt a command in Dresden. Von Baumann says it was the President of
+the Police who insisted upon Lucretia's hasty departure. If he, Baumann,
+had his way, my maid of honor would have got off with a warning.
+
+And you should see the Tisch. She must have spent a month's salary on
+flowers for me, which I promptly sent to the nearest pauper hospital.
+She smiles, she nearly breaks her back genuflexing. Her every second
+word is "most submissive," "will the Imperial Highness deign to do
+this," that, or the other thing.
+
+The terror got into her old bones and she trembles for her pension,
+for, of course, she knows that instant dismissal will be her portion.
+
+Frederick Augustus talks of having some more princes and--acts
+accordingly. Perish the thought that his Louise is an adulteress, that
+she ever had a lover, has one now!
+
+He is haunting my room, running from door to window, from window to
+door. Every little while he opens the _portieres_ to see if no one's
+coming to address him "Your Majesty."
+
+"Your popularity with the public is a great asset," he says over and
+over again. "Lucky devil I, to have a wife as smart as you."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 2, 1902_.
+
+Frederick Augustus came running into my room and gave me a bear-hug.
+
+"The doctors say the King is lost. Impossible to keep him alive any
+longer."
+
+He rushed out.
+
+I am Queen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _After Lunch._
+
+Just back from Richard's studio. We had lunch together. We laughed, we
+danced, we sang. We bombarded one another with pillows.
+
+We acted the jubilant heirs. I recalled Sybillenort at the time King
+Albert died. In Saxony, when man or woman shuffles off this mortal coil,
+there's always a good "feed" at the corpse's expense. At the late King's
+castle a "mourning breakfast" was served upon the royal family's arrival
+from Dresden--a most magnificent repast in the matter of plate and
+victuals offered, but each had to serve himself or herself, as servants
+were dispensed with.
+
+This by the new King's special orders--that he might hear himself
+addressed "Your Majesty" by his kith and kin, a formality usually
+neglected in the family circle except when two or more of the big-wigs
+are warring against each other.
+
+"Will Your Majesty have one or two lumps of sugar?"
+
+"May it please Your Majesty--some steak?"
+
+"I hope Your Majesty will allow me to peel an orange for Your Majesty."
+
+Thus at Sybillenort. And at Richard's:
+
+"Will Your Greatness (Majesty) deign to take Your Greatness's feather
+out of my eye?"
+
+Or: "May it never please Your Transparency (_Durchlaucht_, German for
+Highness) to let _His_ Greatness see through you."
+
+I am several times a Countess besides a Princess, Duchess, etc., and
+Richard continued with his paraphrasing of titles:
+
+"Your Illuminatedness[8] makes lights quite unnecessary," and he
+switched them off in a room already darkened by blinds and shades and
+curtains.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 8: "Illuminated" is the proper title for German counts of the
+higher class.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXIII
+
+WHAT I WILL DO WHEN I AM QUEEN
+
+ A foretaste: titled servants put me _en route_ for lover--The
+ bargain I will propose to Frederick Augustus--Frederick Augustus
+ will be a complaisant King--To revive _Petit Trianon_--I am
+ addressed as Queen.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 3, 1902_.
+
+Though still styled Crown Princess, I am already revelling in the
+delights and perquisites of queenship: I do as I please, go where I
+please, I would think aloud, as I please, if anyone dared me.
+
+For all my enemies of a week ago turned flatterers and flunkeys, bowing,
+grovelling, fawning, contemptible in their self-abasement, but quite
+useful to my purposes.
+
+Like most royal palaces, ours at Dresden has a secret staircase and exit
+for emergencies. It is never used by ladies; only the princes have
+recourse to it, occasionally, to drop out of sight in _mufti_, for, of
+course, royal incognito is more or less legitimate.
+
+ "In the evening, after our card party was over, Catherine was seen
+ to dismiss her court and retire to her private apartments with the
+ new favorite," say the Secret Memoirs of the Court of St.
+ Petersburg.
+
+Less publicly, perhaps, but even more illegitimately, I walk the secret
+staircase _en route_ for my lover whenever I please nowadays.
+
+I go veiled and--make the Grand Mistress open the door for me. She knows
+that I am on sweet pleasure bent and--smiles.
+
+"When will Your Imperial Highness deign to return?"
+
+I name the hour and she is there to receive me--smirking, blind, deaf
+and dumb.
+
+A foretaste of my queenship paradise! No one will boss me, no one will
+dare talk about me, everything I do will be good, even sublime.
+
+I made up my mind as to Frederick Augustus.
+
+"Frederick Augustus," I will say to him, "now that we are King and
+Queen, let's enjoy to the full the thing's emoluments; otherwise, what's
+the use? You will allow me to go my way and I will certainly shut both
+eyes as to your doings, even if you follow in the footsteps of your
+namesake of the three-hundred-and-fifty-two."
+
+Of course, I will say it differently, but my husband will understand.
+The main thing: the royal family and court must stop hurling at me the
+long, watery _haussez les mains_ of narrow-minded, provincial
+inquisitiveness, which both oppresses and goads me.
+
+Frederick Augustus has too much respect for the kingly dignity to impugn
+his partner, the Queen.
+
+Will I revive, then, the seraglios of the Russian Anns and Elizabeths,
+or start a new _Parc aux Cerfs_ with strong men and Marathon winners for
+inmates? Thank you, a miniature _Petit Trianon_ will be good enough for
+me.
+
+The Tisch entered a minute ago and respectfully remains at the door,
+though she sees I am engaged on my Diary. I watch her in the mirror. She
+would travel bare-foot to Kevlaar, of which Heinrich Heine sung, for a
+glimpse of what I wrote. Her variegated grimaces give her the appearance
+of a carved wooden devil, sprinkled with holy water.
+
+At last I deign to inquire: "What is it, Baroness?"
+
+"The Crown Prince wants to see Your Imperial Highness. May he come in?"
+
+"Since when does my husband send you to announce him?"
+
+"Pardon, Your Imperial Highness, I meant Prince George."
+
+Designating my first-born Prince Royal, means recognizing me as Queen.
+
+And, but ten days ago, this same viper refused to address me by my
+_proper_ title.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXIV
+
+THE KING IS ALIVE AND PUNISHMENT NEAR
+
+ My queenship postponed--King George publicly acclaimed--Cuts me dead
+ in church--Frederick Augustus's disappointment--Terrible power of a
+ king over his family, and no appeal--I am like the nude witch of
+ old.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 10, 1902_.
+
+The King has taken nourishment. The King will not die--he will live and
+punish me. Still, I must not complain. I had a respite and Richard says,
+"when one rises from the dead, one is less inclined to be severe with
+the living." But he grew rather despondent immediately.
+
+"_La liberte est une garce, qui ne se laisse monter que sur des matelas
+des cadavres humains!_" he quoted _Comte_ Mirabeau. Our corpse was
+alive, our liberty is dead for the time being.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 15, 1902_.
+
+The King went driving this morning and I am told that he came home well
+pleased, for there was lusty cheering along the line. Frederick Augustus
+hasn't mentioned my affair at all. Disappointment made him rather gloomy
+and he begins to treat me again in the right royal Saxon fashion: I am
+air for His Highness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _After Supper._
+
+The family will wait upon His Majesty in a body tomorrow, to
+congratulate him on his recovery. After that, _Te Deum_ in the
+cathedral, which the court and authorities must attend by command.
+
+"Your Imperial Highness's pew will be in readiness, but my sublime
+master has not deigned to graciously announce that he wishes to receive
+Your Imperial Highness,"--this from the toad Baumann, who but yesterday
+licked my boots.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 16, 1902_.
+
+Another straw indicating the direction of the wind--the ill-wind.
+
+King George commanded Bernhardt to be madman no longer and come and live
+in Dresden. Since his arrival he has paid assiduous court to all members
+of the royal family, but me. He called on the royal ministers, the
+courtiers, the high civil authorities, but my apartments have seen him
+not. I don't blame the boy for making the best of the situation, but was
+it really necessary to offer gratuitous insult to the only relative that
+stood by him when in trouble?
+
+Doubtless, he took his cue from the King, who cut me dead while, with
+the rest, I thanked God for his recovery.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _November 20, 1902._
+
+The Tisch is openly talking Sonnenstein. "The royal apartments are ready
+for her reception," she let fall yesterday.
+
+Old Andrew, my confidential servant, told me.
+
+She shows me the face of a bull-dog about to spring at a victim, a
+sea-green devil filled with vinegar and gall, but affects icy courtesy.
+
+Frederick Augustus is down in the mouth. If he knows of any evil
+intention against me, he evidently made up his mind to hold his tongue
+and avoid scenes.
+
+Richard keeps on saying: "Don't worry. After all, what can they do to
+you?" He doesn't know, or doesn't want to understand that, while the law
+holds out protection for all, from pedlars and vagabonds to and
+including prime ministers, royalty itself is only technically above the
+law; in _praxis_ we are beyond the benefits of all law, human and
+otherwise.
+
+To be sure, a Cit is sometimes unjustly treated, but with tenacity and a
+small amount of courage, he finds his remedy in the courts and in the
+press.
+
+To royal princes and princesses the King is both judge and executioner,
+as the cases of the Duke of Saxony and Bernhardt show. Maybe it pleases
+His Majesty to cloak his tyranny by convoking a commission, but what of
+it, since the commission is invariably made up of his creatures,
+trained, if not commanded, to do the all-highest will and nothing but
+the all-highest will?
+
+As in days gone by, the poor "witch"--if she be young and comely--must
+face her accusers naked, the sworn torturer at her elbow, so I have no
+standing in law or decency before the Powers over social life or death
+in our sphere of society.
+
+If there be blemishes in my character, the King sees them magnified by
+the sharp tongues of evil creatures, his spies. There is no privacy. I
+must submit to be stared at, to have my flesh lacerated by curious eyes,
+and, as in the case of the old-time "witches," the handsomest were
+condemned the quicker because "the devil was more liable to choose them
+for an abode than ugly ones," so my very beauty will hasten my
+destruction.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXV
+
+FISTICUFFS DON'T SAVE MY CROWN
+
+ The attempted theft of my Diary--Grand Mistress discovered after
+ breaking open my desk--Reading Diary like mad--Personal encounter
+ between me and Grand Mistress--I am the stronger, and carry off the
+ manuscript, but have to leave all my love letters, which go to the
+ King--I discover that they had stolen the key to my Diary from my
+ neck.
+
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 27, 1902_.
+
+I am undone.
+
+They tried to obtain a picture of Louise _in the nude_--Louise as she
+paints _Herself_--this Diary, in fact--and, though I foiled them, the
+King now has in his hands my entire correspondence--every letter from
+every man that ever approached or possessed me.
+
+And be sure he won't use them for curl papers as did the Duke of
+Richelieu with the remnants of his ladyloves' _billets doux_ that
+escaped confiscation.
+
+"My collection is incomplete. I have to begin another," he said.
+
+Alas, my collection was only _too_ complete!
+
+This is how it came about:
+
+As I was in the act of retiring last night, a clairvoyant's vision
+seized me. "Somebody meddling with your papers!" "They are breaking into
+your _secretaire_," the voices said.
+
+I slipped on a pair of bath sandals and stealthily opened the door of my
+boudoir.
+
+My writing desk was open, all the drawers ajar and in disorder; the
+Baroness bending over this, my Diary. She was reading like mad, her eyes
+danced with lust of revenge.
+
+With one bound I was at her side and she was so frightened at first, I
+thought she would drop. Her chest seemed to draw inward; she swayed to
+and fro. But only for a second or two. Then, recovering her
+self-possession, her fighting harness was in place again.
+
+"Go to your room, Royal Highness," she said in a tone of command. "These
+papers are confiscated in the name of the King."
+
+I was beside myself with rage. "My Diary," I cried; "instantly return it
+to me."
+
+More I couldn't say, for I had neither breath nor voice. My right hand
+was on the book when she attempted to seize it.
+
+I struck her hand with Richard's ring--I wish it was bigger, I wish it
+had a good diamond point--but she wouldn't let go. Then, before one
+could count one, two, three, I had hold of her--Heaven, how I enjoyed
+it; the satisfaction I had in giving rein to my passion, for all was up
+now, anyhow.
+
+With the left hand I caught her by the throat, while my good right boxed
+her ears after the homely manner mamma had taught me. Good, sound cuffs,
+I assure you, each liable to dislocate a tooth.
+
+"_Canaille_," I cried, "_miserable canaille_." I pushed her into a
+corner and recovered the Diary, folding it up quickly. I was holding the
+book close to my bosom when I crossed the room to regain my bedchamber.
+
+The Tisch after me, trying to snatch it back. I caught her on the chest
+and sent her flying. Then, with the manuscript, I made good my escape,
+leaving for the contemptible bird of prey all my love letters, reams of
+them, the oldest fifteen or more years old, the latest bearing
+yesterday's date.
+
+Once in my room, I recollected and made a grab at my throat. The key to
+my Diary was gone. They stole it, chain and all, while I was asleep, no
+doubt.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DRESDEN, _November 28, 1902_.
+
+Awakening, I find myself seated at the little table near the window.
+Both my hands are ink-spotted. So is my night-dress.
+
+I see, I have written an account of the battle. I must have done so
+some time after I returned from the field. It's well, for at the moment,
+I don't remember a thing.
+
+The palace clock strikes seven.
+
+The day of my doom.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVI
+
+ABANDONED
+
+ My titled servants withdraw from me--An old footman my sole
+ support--Queen takes the children--Old Andrew plays spy for me.
+
+
+ _Afternoon._
+
+No one has come to see me. My household, my adjutants, marshal,
+chamberlains, equerries, the ladies of my entourage are on duty, but
+since I ordered my meals brought to the room, they pretend to assume
+that I'm too ill to see anyone. There may be no truth in the saying that
+rats leave the ship destined to sink, but the titled vermin royalty
+surrounds itself with certainly knows when to avoid dangerous craft.
+
+I rang for Andrew. The good, old man wouldn't put me to the humiliation
+of asking questions.
+
+"Your Imperial Highness's children are with Her Majesty," he said; and,
+coming a step nearer, he added in an undertone: "Baroness Tisch has been
+with His Majesty since nine in the morning."
+
+"You are a kind and brave man." I held out my hand.
+
+"If Your Imperial Highness has no immediate orders for me," continued
+the good soul, "I beg to be allowed to visit my friend, Hans, the King's
+body-servant."
+
+I thanked Andrew for his good intentions. "Wait in the ante-chamber
+until I am dressed."
+
+I donned a forty-mark costume that I keep on hand for the purpose; it
+didn't take me more than six or seven minutes.
+
+"I will have to leave by the secret staircase, Andrew."
+
+He understood and cleared the way for me.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVII
+
+FAMILY COUNCIL AT CASTLE
+
+ Rendezvous at studio--State takes my children from me--Madhouse or
+ flight--I brought fifty-two trunks to the palace--Depart with small
+ satchel--If I attempt to see my children I'll be seized as "mad
+ woman"--Varying emotions of the last ten minutes--Threatening
+ shadows thrown on a curtain decide me--Ready for flight--Diary the
+ last thing to go into the satchel.
+
+
+ _At Night. Eleven O'clock._
+
+They went into family council at six tonight and are still deliberating,
+Andrew reports. The Tisch, he says, acts as secretary; His Majesty, of
+course, presides.
+
+Present are the Dowager Queen, Mathilde and Isabelle. Then Frederick
+Augustus, Johann George, Max and Bernhardt. Baron George von Metzsch, a
+high government and court functionary and my enemy, attends as legal
+adviser to the King.
+
+It's in the nature of things that the Baron will do his worst to destroy
+me, but Bernhardt! Bernhardt, who held me in his arms, now one of my
+judges! He will have to be especially severe with his _quondam_ mistress
+lest the King suspect.
+
+While the sweet family bent over those love letters--I bet the Tisch
+withheld Henry's--I sat in Richard's studio, advising with him.
+
+"There are only two things to be considered: the madhouse or instant
+flight."
+
+"You dare advise me to leave my children?"
+
+"There are no nurseries in madhouses. Your children are lost to you,
+anyhow. If you remain, as an alleged insane person, you 'can't be
+trusted,' they'll argue, for you are helpless, legally, morally and
+physically.
+
+"If you run away to Switzerland, on the other hand, you are a free
+woman, under the protection of a republican government.
+
+"Switzerland, I needn't tell you, will not go to war to wrest your
+children from the royal family, but will afford you personally every
+advantage, legal and otherwise.
+
+"Decide quickly: are you going to make King George a present of yourself
+as well as of the five children you bore for the benefit of the
+Wettiners?"
+
+"Never."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My mind is made up. My few belongings are packed. I, who came to Dresden
+with fifty-two trunks, leave the palace with a satchel, easy to carry. I
+take nothing but my personal jewels, the little money I own and some
+changes of linen.
+
+If I could only see my children for a moment or two, but the Queen has
+them in her keeping, and I might be seized as a "mad woman" if I dared
+leave my apartments and cross to those occupied by Her Majesty.
+
+And Frederick Augustus! He will miss me in his way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ten more minutes. I hear the distant clatter of a carriage. Richard
+driving to our rendezvous, two streets north of the palace gate.
+
+Will my limbs carry me to him and liberty? I pace the room to test their
+strength.
+
+"Louise," says the voice within,--"your last chance. Your good-natured
+husband, your darling children, your old parents, pomp and state and
+circumstance, indeed, a crown, you are going to abandon for--what?"
+
+A man whose carnal side only you know, a poor man, an artist without
+fame, a professional without future.
+
+Sadly perturbed in mind, I walk to the window. Those of His Majesty's
+cabinet, where the family council is in progress, are directly opposite.
+
+Shadows of men and women, rising from a sitting position, are thrown on
+the curtains.
+
+One of the shades slowly ascends.
+
+I see the Tisch pointing a bony finger to the windows of my boudoir.
+Von Metzsch stands by her side. They grin.
+
+You triumph, wretch and Jezebel?
+
+But when your _sbirri_, in an hour from now, or tomorrow morning early,
+invade my rooms, instructed to carry me away--bound hand and foot to a
+sofa, or in a straight jacket, perhaps--they will find the Crown
+Princess gone--her and her Diary.
+
+Both will be safe on foreign soil ere you can make arrangements for
+organized pursuit, for Richard and I will travel by carriage to a
+distant suburb, there mount the fast express and keep to our state room,
+engaged under an assumed name, until without the sphere of Saxon or
+German influence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A discreet knock. Andrew, my liberator! In his hand a tallow dip to
+light this Imperial Highness down back stairs to the new life of her
+choice.
+
+"One moment, old man, this book goes into the valise.
+
+"Hand me the blotter, please. Tears won't do.
+
+"And a couple more handkerchiefs from the top of the chiffonier,
+please."
+
+
+FINIS
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Secret Memoirs: The Story of Louise,
+Crown Princess, by Henry W. Fischer
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SECRET MEMOIRS ***
+
+***** This file should be named 29167.txt or 29167.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/2/9/1/6/29167/
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Jane Hyland, Bill Tozier and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/29167.zip b/29167.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..53ef69c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/29167.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9fa6844
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #29167 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/29167)