Page 74 of Catherine the Great

2 “Your long letter and stories”: Ibid., 57

  3 “You were in a mood to quarrel”: Ibid., 67

  4 “Precious darling”: Ibid.

  5 “I wrote you a letter”: Ibid., 75

  6 “Do me this one favor”: Ibid., 77

  7 “Such rage ought to be expected”: Ibid., 80

  8 “My Lord and Dear Husband!”: Ibid., 77

  9 “Should you not find pleasure”: Ibid., 81

  10 “May God forgive you”: Ibid., 82

  11 “Your Most Gracious Majesty”: Ibid., 83

  12 “I read your letter”: Ibid., 84

  13 “To present this comedy to society”: Ibid., 85

  14 “Matushka, here is the result”: Ibid.

  15 “Your foolish acts remain the same”: Ibid., 68

  16 “Listening to you talk sometimes”: Ibid., 74

  17 “God knows I don’t intend”: Ibid., 87

  18 “Your Most Gracious Majesty”: Ibid.

  19 “You know, Madam, I am your slave”: Soloveytchik, 195

  62. NEW RELATIONSHIPS

  1 “My husband has written me”: Smith, Love and Conquest, 76

  2 “You ask for Zavadovsky’s removal”: Ibid., 85

  3 “Varinka, I love you”: Soloveytchik, 167

  4 “Listen, my dearest, Varinka is very sick”: Smith, Love and Conquest, 96

  5 “What’s the use of all this?”: Soloveytchik, 170

  6 “Would it not be charming”: Anthony, 315

  63. FAVORITES

  1 “with the greatest dignity”: Coughlan, 294

  2 “Last night I was in love with him”: Haslip, 257

  3 “Pyrrhus, king of Epirus”: Kaus, 326,

  4 “Big books at the bottom”: Cronin, 256

  5 “changed his original common name”: Haslip, 261

  6 “kind, gay, honest”: Madariaga, Russia in the Age, 354

  7 “compared to the others, he was an angel”: Haslip, 288

  8 “they helped, but I could not endure”: Alexander, 217

  9 “I am plunged into the most profound grief”: Ibid., 216

  10 “From Catherine to my dearest friend”: Haslip, 290

  11 “I am once more inwardly calm”: Ibid., 292

  12 “You cur, you monkey”: Ibid., 299

  13 “Either he or I must go!”: Ibid.

  14 “They slept until nine o’clock”: Alexander, 218

  15 “We are as clever”: Coughlan, 295

  16 “Sasha is beyond price”: Haslip, 305

  17 “stifling”: Ibid., 306

  18 “It is your duty to remain”: Ibid., 330

  19 “cold and preoccupied”: Alexander, 219

  20 “a girl most ordinary”: Ibid., 220

  21 “God grant them happiness”: Gooch, 51

  22 “I have never been”: Alexander, 222

  23 “constantly tortures my soul”: Ibid.

  64. CATHERINE, PAUL, AND NATALIA

  1 “We have never had a jollier time”: Gooch, 26

  2 “I return to town on Tuesday”: Ibid.

  3 “Everything is done to excess”: Alexander, 227

  4 “The grand duke”: Smith, Love and Conquest, 58

  5 “Her friends are, with reason”: Alexander, 228

  6 “Never in my life”: Ibid.

  7 “For three days”: Haslip, 239

  8 “perfectly formed boy”: Alexander, 229

  9 I have wasted no time”: Troyat, 232

  10 “since it has been proven”: Ibid., 231

  65. PAUL, MARIA, AND THE SUCCESSION

  1 “I hope that in time”: Ibid., 231

  2 “Nothing can exceed”: Gooch, 29

  3 “The grand duke is exceedingly amiable”: Ibid.

  4 “my daughter.… Be assured”: Alexander, 232

  5 “We shall have her here”: Anthony, 277

  6 “My son has returned”: Alexander, 233.

  7 “I swear to love and adore you”: Troyat, 234

  8 “This dear husband is an angel”: Gooch, 30

  9 “Wherever she goes”: Ibid.

  10 “had been given a map of Europe”: Haslip, 285

  11 “whether his Polish majesty”: Ibid., 286

  12 “prefers stewed fruit”: Ibid.

  13 “an ardent and impetuous man”: Waliszewski, 403

  14 “The grand duke is greatly undervalued”: Gooch, 30

  15 “When they admitted me”: Ibid., 32

  16 “He combined plenty of intelligence”: Ibid., 33

  17 “You tax me with my hypochondria”: Anthony, 287

  18 “Permit me to write you often”: Ibid.

  19 “One cannot see everything”: Troyat, 323

  20 “I told you that your request”: Gooch, 27

  21 “I shall be separated”: Gooch, 34

  22 “There is no one”: Anthony, 288

  23 “I see into what hands”: Gooch, 35

  24 “I hope not in the time of M. Alexander”: Ibid., 36

  66. POTEMKIN: BUILDER AND DIPLOMAT

  1 “Is that a soldier’s business?”: Soloveytchik, 177

  2 “such a mixture of wit”: Ibid., 221

  3 “She had the strongest desire to help us”: Ibid., 201

  4 “You have chosen an unlucky moment”: Ibid., 212

  5 “The interest I take in everything”: Ibid., 216

  6 “Flatter her as much as you can”: Ibid., 225

  7 “You can demand of us”: Ibid.

  8 The dialogue between Potemkin and Harris regarding an Anglo-Russian alliance is drawn from Soloveytchik, 227–45

  9 “La mariée est trop belle”: Ibid., 234

  10 “The acquisition of the Crimea”: Soloveytchik, 180

  67. CRIMEAN JOURNEY AND “POTEMKIN VILLAGES”

  1 “Everything was done to deter me”: Haslip, 308

  2 “Your children belong to you”: Troyat, 271

  3 “Your latest proposal”: Rounding, 424

  4 “heavy baggage”: Madariaga, Russia in the Age, 569

  5 “It was a time”: Haslip, 307

  6 “One day when I was sitting”: Rounding, 429

  7 “Here, the greenery in the meadows”: Smith, Love and Conquest, 176

  8 “Avoid the prince”: Haslip, 310

  9 “the greatest genius of her age”: Ibid., 303

  10 “the pleasantest company”: Ibid., 304

  11 “It is odd”: Smith, Love and Conquest, 175

  12 “Gentlemen, the king of Poland”: Montefiore, 365

  13 “It was thirty years”: Ibid., 366

  14 “They spoke little”: Haslip, 314

  15 “our guest’s desire that I remain here”: Smith, Love and Conquest, 178

  16 “The king bores me”: Haslip, 315

  17 “The new favorite is good-looking”: Ibid., 317

  18 “I performed a great deed”: Cronin, 130

  19 “What a peculiar land”: Montefiore, 371

  20 “the most beautiful port I have ever seen”: Ibid., 374

  21 “I love you and your service”: Smith, Love and Conquest, 180

  22 “How I appreciate the feelings”: Ibid., 182

  23 “Between you and me, my friend”: Ibid.

  68. THE SECOND TURKISH WAR AND THE DEATH OF POTEMKIN

  1 “You are impatient”: Madariaga, Russia in the Age, 398

  2 “Children, I forbid you”: Soloveytchik, 301

  3 “I will try to get it cheaply”: Ibid., 308

  4 “You cannot capture a fortress”: Ibid.

  5 “My dear friend, you alone mean more to me”: Ibid.

  6 “May the Prince Gregory Alexandrovich”: Ibid., 309

  7 “Hurry up, my dear friend”: Ibid.

  8 “If Izmail resists”: Montefiore, 450

  9 “this insane note … Sir John Falstaff”: Alexander, 270

  10 “breastplate”: Haslip, 346

  11 “We have pulled one paw out”: Madariaga, Russia in the Age, 414

  12 “I here behold a Commander in Chief”
: Ibid., 314

  13 “Has your ship struck”: Morison, 230

  14 “Paul Jones has just arrived: Ibid., 364

  15 “I was entirely captivated”: Ibid.

  16 “It is to you alone”: Montefiore, 400

  17 “Our victory is complete”: Ibid.

  18 “I hope to be subjected”: Morison, 382

  19 “nobody wished to serve:: Ibid., 384

  20 “She then indulged”: Ibid., 387

  21 “The charge against me is an unworthy”: Ibid., 388

  22 “The accusation against me is false”: Ibid. 513 “Paul Jones is no more guilty than I”: Montefiore, 421

  23 “I must pull out the tooth”: Soloveytchik, 326

  24 “When one looks at the Prince-Marshal Potemkin”: Ibid., 327

  25 “The child sends his greetings”: Ibid., 335

  26 “I could not remove him from my path”: Montefiore, 478

  27 “Please send me a Chinese dressing gown”: Ibid., 338

  28 “the first pianist and one of the best composers”: Montefiore, 482

  29 “Take that which”: Smith, Love and Conquest, 389

  30 “I’m not going to recover”: Soloveytchik, 340

  31 “Tell me frankly”: Ibid.

  32 “Good hands”: Ibid., 341

  33 “Matushka, oh how sick I am!”: Smith, Love and Conquest, 390

  34 “I have no more strength”: Ibid., 390

  35 “This will be enough”: Soloveytchik, 342

  36 “the prince is no longer on this earth”: Ibid., 343

  37 “Now I have no one left”: Ibid.

  69. ART, ARCHITECTURE, AND THE BRONZE HORSEMAN

  1 “The Walpole paintings are no longer to be had”: Descargues, 42

  2 “The Comte de Baudoin leaves it”: Ibid., 44

  3 “The world is a strange place”: Ibid.

  4 “We are prodigiously delighted”: Ibid.

  5 “I am a glutton”: Waliszewski, 344

  6 “You should know our mania”: Madariaga, Russia in the Age, 532

  7 “Now I love to distraction”: Waliszewski, 390

  8 The Captain’s Daughter appears in Yarmolinski, ed., 599–727

  9 “My posterity is Your Majesty”: Waliszewski, 341 529 “What a charming picture”: Descargues, 26

  10 “My paintings are beautiful”: Ibid., 29

  11 “They have not made, as I have”: Rounding, 221

  12 “There is an old song”: Ibid., 222

  13 “I hear only praise”: Ibid.

  14 “in general, everyone is very happy”: Ibid.

  15 “You will choose honest and reasonable people”: Waliszewski, 350

  16 The lines from Pushkin’s “The Bronze Horseman” are cited in Yarmolinski, ed., 106–107

  70. “THEY ARE CAPABLE OF HANGING THEIR KING FROM A LAMPPOST!”

  1 “to God and the country never to be separated”: Schama, 359

  2 “Go tell those who have sent you”: Schama, 363

  3 “null, illegal, and unconstitutional”: Winik, 124

  4 “I fear that the greatest obstacle”: Gooch, 103

  5 “French, Russians, Danes”: Madariaga, Catherine, 189

  6 “I cannot believe in the superior talents”: Gooch, 99

  7 “They are capable of hanging their king”: Madariaga, Russia in the Age, 421

  8 “Above all, I hope”: Gooch, 99

  9 “I am sad to see you go”: Haslip, 341

  10 “I am afraid so, Madame”: Ibid.

  11 “the Hydra with twelve hundred heads”: Waliszewski, 351

  12 “only people who set in motion a machine”: Gooch, 100

  13 “Tell a thousand people to draft a letter”: Cronin, 269

  14 “the cause of the king of France”: This summary of Catherine’s memorandum is based on Lariviere, 101 ff.

  15 “an exemplary and unforgettable act”: Schama, 612

  16 “a scum of criminals vomited”: Loomis, 75

  17 “I don’t give a damn about the prisoners”: Schama, 633

  18 “to protect the republic”: Thompson, 258–9

  19 “the foulest and most atrocious act”: Schama, 687

  20 “The revolution has no need”: Loomis, 335

  21 “Madame, we must go now”: Ibid., 333

  22 “The mechanism falls like thunder”: Schama, 621

  23 “immediately after the decapitation”: www.guillotine.dk/Pages/30sek/html.

  71. DISSENT IN RUSSIA, FINAL PARTITION OF POLAND

  1 “Likely to corrupt morals”: Madariaga, Russia in the Age, 546

  2 “beastly purpose”: Radishchev, 96

  3 “breaks the head”: Ibid., 97

  4 “Do you know, dear fellow citizens”: Ibid., 153

  5 “has learning enough”: Ibid., 239

  6 “hence the suspicion falls on M. Radishchev”: Ibid., 241

  7 “the purpose of this book is clear”: Ibid., 239

  8 “a rabble-rouser, worse than Pugachev”: Ibid., 11

  9 “I’ve read the book you sent me”: Montefiore, 440

  10 “Now I am my own master”: Radishchev, 19

  11 “will oppose us with only”: Madariaga, Russia in the Age, 430

  12 “exterminate that nest of Jacobins”: Haslip, 353

  13 “I am breaking my head”: Madariaga, Russia in the Age, 428

  14 “Apparently you ignore”: Ibid., “435

  15 “soldiers of Her Imperial Majesty”: Haslip, 356

  16 “Does the Diet authorize”: Madariaga, Russia in the Age, 439

  17 “Silence means consent”: Ibid. 557 “a Russian province”: Ibid., 440

  18 “the whole of Praga”: Ibid., 446

  72. TWILIGHT

  1 “You probably don’t need this contrivance”: Cronin, 289

  2 “are you not ashamed of yourself?”: Waliszewski, 376

  3 “let me march against the French!”: Kaus, 376

  4 “Madame, you must be gay”: Ibid., 367

  5 “Twenty years ago”: Waliszewski, 391

  6 “I have said it to you before”: Ibid., 412

  7 “It is astonishing”: Troyat, 236

  8 “If you only knew what wonders”: Kaus, 306

  9 “I am making a delicious child”: Troyat, 236

  10 “He loves me instinctively”: Oldenbourg, 331

  11 “It is sewn together”: Waliszewski, 413

  12 “There is in my country”: Troyat, 323

  13 “I didn’t know what would become of me”: Cronin, 295

  14 “the grand duchess will never be troubled”: Madariaga, Russia in the Age, 576

  15 “With the church’s blessing?”: Cronin, 296

  16 “King Gustavus is not well”: Ibid., 297

  17 “What I have written”: Madariaga, Russia in the Age, 576

  18 “The fact is that the king pretended”: Memoirs (Anthony), 321

  73. THE DEATH OF CATHERINE THE GREAT

  1 “The grand duke got out of his sleigh”: Cronin, 299

  2 “Gentlemen, the Empress Catherine is dead”: Ibid., 300

  3 “The subject was the unlimited power”: Madariaga, Russia in the Age, 580

  4 “Before I became what I am today”: Haslip, 361

  5 “HERE LIES CATHERINE”: Anthony, 325

  6 “my name is Catherine II”: Alexander, 265

  7 “Day before yesterday”: Haslip, 361

  ALSO BY ROBERT K. MASSIE

  Nicholas and Alexandra

  Peter the Great

  Dreadnought

  The Romanovs

  Castles of Steel

  Journey (co-author)

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  ROBERT K. MASSIE was born in Lexington, Kentucky, and studied American history at Yale and European history at Oxford, which he attended as a Rhodes Scholar. He was president of the Authors Guild from 1987 to 1991. His previous books include Nicholas and Alexandra, Peter the Great: His Life and World (for which he won a Pulitzer Prize for biography), The Romanovs
: The Final Chapter, Dreadnought: Britain, Germany, and the Coming of the Great War, and Castles of Steel: Britain, Germany, and the Winning of the Great War at Sea.

 


 

  Robert K. Massie, Catherine the Great

 


 

 
Thank you for reading books on BookFrom.Net

Share this book with friends