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STORY OF A GRAND DUKE.

•» (Froth Hepworth Dixon's Free Russia.) When Alexander the First — elder brother of Constantine and Nicholas died, unexpectedly, at Taganrog, on the distant Sea of Azof, leaving no son to reign in his stead, the crown descended, by law and usage, to the brother next in birth. Constantine was then at Warsaw with his Polish wife ; Nicholas was at St Petersburg with his guards. Constantine was called the heir ; and up to that hour no one seems to have doubted that he would wear the crown in case the Emperor's life should fail. There was, however, a party in the senate and the barrack against him — the old Russian party, who could not pardon him his Polish wife. When couriers brought the news from Taganrog to St. Petersburg, Nicolas, having formed no plans as yet, called up the guards, announced his brother's advent to the throne, and set them an example of loyalty by taking the oath of allegiance to his Imperial Majesty, Constantine the First. The guards being sworn, the generals and staff-officers signed the act of accession, and took the oaths. Cantering off to their several barracks, these officers put the various regiments at St. Petersburg under fealty to Constantine the First ; and Nicolas sent news that night to Warsaw tbat the new Emperor had begun to reign. But while the messengers were tearing through the winter snows, some members of the Senate came to Nicolas with yet more startling news. Alexander, they said, had left with them a sealed paper, contents unknown, which they were not to open until they heard that be was dead. On opening this packet they found in it two papers ; one a letter from the Grand Duke Constantine, written in 1822, renouncing his rights in the crown : the second a manifesto by the dead Emperor, written in 1823, accepting that renunciation and adopting his brother Nicolas as his lawful heir. A similar packet, they alleged, had been secretly left with Philaret of Moscow, and would be found in the sacristy of his cathedral church. Nicolas scanned these documents closely ; saw good reason to put them by, and urged tbe whole body of the Senate to swear fidelity to Constantine the First. In every office of the State the Imperial functionaries took this oath ; all Russia, in fact all Europe, saw that Constantine had opened his reign in peace. Then followed a surprise. Some letters passed between the two Grand Dukes, in which (it was said) the brothers were each endeavouring to force the other to ascend the throne ; Nicolas urging that Constantine was the elder born and rightful heir • Constantine urging that Nicolas had better health and a more active spirit. Ten days rolled by, The empire was without a chief. A plot, of which Pestel, Bostovtsef, and Mouravief, were leading spirits, was on the point of explosion. But on Christmas Eve, the Grand Duke Nicolas made up his mind to take the crown. He spent the night in drawing up a manifesto, setting forth the facts which led him to occupy his brother's seat ; and on Christmas Day he read this paper in the Senate, by which body he waß at once proclaimed Autocrat and Tsar. A hundred generals rode to the various barracks to read the new pro clamation, and to get those troops who bad sworn but a week ago to uphold his Majesty Constantine the First, to cast that oath to the winds, and to swear a second time to upheld his Majesty Nicolas the First. But if most of the regimentß were quick to unswear themselves by word of command, a part of the Guards, chiefly the marines and grenadiers, refused ; and, marching from their quarters into St. Isaac's square, took up a menacing position towards the new Emperor ; while a cry rose wildly from the crowd of" Long live Constantine the First!" A shot was heard. Count Miloradsvitcb, GovernorGeneral of St. Petersburg, fell dead ; a brave general who had passed through fifty battles, killed as he was trying to harangue bis troops. A line of fire now opened on the square. Colonel Sturler fell, at the head of his regiment'of guards. When night came . down, the ground was covered with dead, and dying men ; but Nicolas was

master of the square. A charge of grapeshot swept the Btreets clear of rioters, just as night was coming down. When the trials to which the events of that day give rise, came on, it suited both the Government and the conspirators to keep the Grand Duke out of sight. Count Nesselrode told the Courts that this revolt was revolutionary, not dynastic ; and Nicolas denounced the leaders to his people as men who wished to bring " a foreign contagion upon their sacred soil." The Grand Duke and his Polish wife remained in Warsaw, living at the summer garden of Belvedere, in the midst of woods and lakes, of pictures and works of art. Once, indeed, he left his charming villa for a season, to appear, quite unexpectedly (tbe court declared), in the Kremlin, and assist in placing the Imperial Crown on his brother's head. That act of grace accomplished he returned to Warsaw ; where he reigned as viceroy ; keeping a modest court, and leading an almost private life. But the country was excited, the army was not content. One war was forced by Nicolas on Persia, a second on Turkey ; both of them glorious for the Russian arms ; yet men were said to be troubled at the sight of a younger brother on the throne ; a sentiment or reverence for the elder son being one of the strongest feelings in a Slavonic breast ; and all these troubles were kept alive by the social and political writhings of the Polei. Two prosperous wars had made tbe Emperor so proud and haughty that when news came in from Paris, telling him of the fall of Charles the Tenth, be summoned his Minister of War, and ordered his troops to march. He said he would move on Paris, and his kozacks began to talk of picqueting tbeir horses on the Seine. But the French have agencies of mischief in every town in Poland ; and in less than five mouths after Charles the Tenth left Paris, Warsaw was in arms. Every act of this Polish rising seems, so far as concerns the Grand Duke Conßtantince, to admit of being told in different ways. A band of young men stole into the Belvedere in the gloom of a November night, and ravaged through the rooms. They killed General Gendre ; they killed the Vice-President of Police, Lubowicki ; and they suffered the Grand Duke to escape by the garden gate. These are the facts ; but whether he escaped by chance is what remains in doubt. The Russian version was that these young fellows came to kill the Prince, as well as Gondre and Lubowicki ; that a servant hearing the tumult near tbe palace, ran to his master's room and led him through the domestic passages iuto the open air. The Polish version was, that these young men desired to find the Prince, not to murder him, but to use him as either hostage or Emperor in their revolt against his brother's rale. Arriving in Warsaw from his country house, the Grand Duke, finding that city in the power of a revolted soldiery, moved some posts on the road towards the Russian frontier. Agents came to assure him that no harm was meant to him ; that be was free to march with his guards and stores; that no one would follow him or molest him on the road. Some Polish companies were with him ; and four days after his departure from Belvedere he received in his camp, near Warsaw, a deputation sent to him by his own request, from the insurgent chiefs. Then came the act which roused the anger of his brother's Court ; and led, as some folk think, to the mystery and sympathy which cling around his name. He asked the deputation to state their terms. " A living Poland !" they replied ; " the charter of Alexander the First ; a Polish army aud police : the restoration of our ancient frontier." In return he told these deputies that be had not sent to. Lithuania for troops, and he consented that the Polish companies in his camp should return to Warsaw and join the ins_r- ; gent band ! For such a surrender to the rebels, auy other general in the i service would certainly have been tried i and Bhot. The Emperor, when he . heard of the nows, went almost mad with rage ; and everyone wishing to i stand well at Court began to whißper that the Grand Duke Constantine had i forfeited his honour and his life.

■ Constantine died suddenly at Minsk. The disease was cholera. The corpse was carried to St. Petersburg; and the Prince, who had lost a crown for love, was laid with honour among the ashes of his race in the gloomy fortress of St. Peter and St. Paul. But no Gazetteer could make the common people believe that their Prince was gone from them for ever. Like his father Paul, and like his grandfather Peter, he was only hiding in some secret place; and putting their heads together by the winter fires, they told each other he would come again. In the year of emancipation (1861) a man appeared in the province of Penza, who announced himself not only as the Grand Duke, but as a prophet, a leader, and a messenger from the Tsar. He told the people they were being doceived by their priests and lords, that the Emperor was on their side, that the Emancipai tion Act gave them the land without i purchase and rent-charge, and that they must support the Emperor in his design to do them good. A crowd of : peasants, gathering to his voice, and ; carrying a red banner, marched ; through the villages, crying death to i the priests and nobles. General ■ Dreniakine an aide-de-camp of the - Emperor, a prompt and confidential I officer, was Bent from St. Petersburg ) against the Grand Duke, whom in his ) proclamation he called Egortsoff ; and after a smart affair, in which eight j men were killed and twenty-six badly ; hurt, the peasants fled before the ; troops. The Grand Duke was suf- , fered to escape ; and nothing more has , been heard of him, except an official ) hint that he is dead. i What wonder that a credulous ; people fancies the hero of such advens tures may be still alive ? i In every country which has virtue i enough to keep the memory of a better i day, the popular mind is apt to clothe , its hopes in this legendary form. In England, the Commons expected Ar- , thur to awake; in Portugal they i expected Sebastian to return ; in Ger- . many they believed that Barbaroasa sat on his lonely peak. Masses of : men believe that Peter the Third is • living, and yet will resume his throne. Before landing in the Holy Isles, I gave much thought to this mystery of the Grand Duke, and nursed a very faint hope of being able to resolve the spectre into some mortal shape. ■■-■----■■■-■-■■HH

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TS18700824.2.10

Bibliographic details

Star (Christchurch), Issue 703, 24 August 1870, Page 4

Word Count
1,872

STORY OF A GRAND DUKE. Star (Christchurch), Issue 703, 24 August 1870, Page 4

STORY OF A GRAND DUKE. Star (Christchurch), Issue 703, 24 August 1870, Page 4