So, we now know something of the hitherto-unknown nations of Syldavia and Borduria as they existed in the 18th century. I shall return to their histories and cultures again, but I really need to start populating them with a cast of colourful characters. I have already mentioned the celebrated Wilhelm Tischdecke, Ercole di Grissini, Frans Schtroumpf and others, so here is a deeper look at a character who will go on to play a role in the destinies of the two nations.
What follows is the introduction to the extremely rare early 20th century work The Life and times of Aphra Lügenmärchen from the pen of a certain Constanza, Herzogin von Obernthal und Drötten, apparently a member of the Imperial Austrian aristocracy.
The book is subtitled "
Being
a true account of the life, exploits and adventures of Aphra
Lügenmärchen, sometime
lady's maid, companion, traveller, soldier, highwaywoman, author and
woman of ingenuity and resourcefulness."
Note: this image is by Catherine Read (1723-1778) and is entitled
Portrait of Lady Isabella Stanhope, later Countess of Sefton (1748-1819), half-length, in Hussar's costume, with a blue pelisse over a braided red dolman
When
I first began reading these journals, I had no knowledge of the
existence of the authoress nor of the small country in which she made
her home. I found her papers in a chest in my grandfather's house
near
Klagenfurt
some 10 or 11 years ago. It was not until two years later that I was
able to begin reading them and putting the various manuscripts
together into a coherent narrative. Unfortunately, the archive is not
complete and there are several gaps in the story. Researches that I
have undertaken in numerous public and private libraries have allowed
me to fill in some of the gaps and I am indebted to the assistance of
M. Henri Bouillion-Juste of Lyons who allowed me to read some of his
private family papers that refer to events in 18th century Syldavia.
Aphra
Lügenmärchen
opens
her journal
by
stating
that
she was born in in 1729 in the unremarkable
market town
of Sankt Nikolai bei Nirgends in Thuringia, the
illegitimate daughter of the late Erbherr von Reneklode,
a penniless and dissolute minor Thuringian nobleman and
sometime soldier, who
she claims taught her how to “read at
an early age, ride
a horse by the age of eight,
shoot a pistol and handle
a sabre before my 11th birthday",
that "knowledge is more valuable than
money" and that
"honour and prestige won't fill an empty stomach or keep the bailiffs
from your door”,
before
he expired from a combination of strong drink and a fever caught in a
Leipzig
debtors' prison when she was 14.
From her mother, Amelie
Trumbauer, a seamstress,
she says that she was taught “how
to cook, sew, present myself in
a winsome but modest manner, beguile
a man, steal his purse and leave him penniless
before he wakes”.
Almost everything
else she claims
to know, she says
she learnt from her experiences as a single
woman living by her wits
in a world of “dissemblers, liars,
poltroons, blusterers, fools,
libertines and all manner of ne'er-do-wells, rake-hells
and opportunists of every imaginable
kind”.
Leaving
her mother's home when she is 15, Aphra starts out in life as kitchen
maid in the home of the elderly Freiherr Albrecht von Brühwurst
and his young and beautiful, but libidinous wife Anne-Sophie von
Reichlich, who soon plucks the young Aphra from the kitchens to be
her personal maid and companion. When the venerable von Brühwurst
passes away, allegedly from a surfeit of effort in his wife's
bedchamber, Aphra and her mistress, together with a fine wardrobe of
clothes, the Freiherr's bank balance and a number of small but
valuable items, soon find themselves living in Erfurt, the capital of
the region. Within the year, Anne-Sophie manages to gain the
attentions of a number of suitors and, at Christmas 1747 marries the
rich, bookish and elderly Markgraf von Reißverschluss,
a nobleman from the Syldavian province of Zympathia.
Aphra writes
in her journal that “Milady
has captured herself a husband of considerable wealth and influence
but of an elderly and quite
unworldly mien. She
informs me, in her teasing
and humorous manner
that our new master is of an intellectual and spiritual bent.
I infer from her meaning in this matter that the Markgraf is
unlikely to make the same recourse to milady's chamber as caused the
demise of her previous husband. So geht es, I think. Milady and I
managed to organise our affairs together quite happily in Erfurt
before her marriage and
I see no reason why matters should change in the future.
Let the noble lord
tend to his books and I shall tend to Milady,
as befits her status and happiness.”
Thus, at the age of 19, Aphra finds herself living in the palatial
surroundings of the Schloss Reißverschluss,
situated in the vineyards that sustain the
economy of the nearby town
of Shmok, famous for a red
wine called szprädj.
Writing
many
years
later, Aphra looks
back, recording that;
“In
the Spring of 1748,
Milady,
her new husband and I arrive at the Castle of Reissverschluss in the
county of Zympathia. The lands around about are hilly and of a
productive nature, being largely given over to the production of
grapes, dairy farms and smallholdings. The Castle is a former
fortress, now made
over to a more peaceful existence but retaining its attractive
pepperpot towers and tall, well-built walls. Inside, replacing the
donjon of
more warlike times there is a pleasant great house in the ornamented
Austrian
style, popularly
called Rococo.
Inside the house are many fine rooms, each well-appointed and replete
with all manner of paintings, books and diverse statuary. My own
room, adjacent to that of Milady the Markgräfin, has silk-lined
walls adorned
with
painted
birds
and pagodas in the Chinese fashion. There is a connecting door
between rooms, so that I may visit my mistress at any time of the day
or night to minister to her needs, pleasures
and whims, which
are diverse and frequently demanding.
Milady's chamber is, in truth, a full
suite
of rooms, all magnificently decorated with many gilded putti,
paintings of classical subjects in the Italianate
style and fine Murano glass mirrors. Milord
the Markgraf has a separate suite in the other wing of the castle,
where he is attended by his gentleman, Herr Dreyer.
My
duties provide me with a modicum of free time and, when
I am not otherwise engaged,
I spend
my time becoming
acquainted with the numerous
staff
of the castle. The House is ordered by Herr Frotz, the Majordomo or
Chamberlain, and under him are Frau Ning,
the cook, Frau Pliss,
the housekeeper and Iskander Effendi, the Markgraf's dragoman and
library keeper.
I
cultivate this latter gentleman, who despite being a Turk is a
honourable and kindly soul who allows me access to our master's
books. There
are also numerous kitchen and chambermaids, porters and footmen. The
Castle servants all wear uniforms in the traditional Syldavian style,
but, as milady's companion I am allowed to costume myself in the
German style, which she finds more pleasing. My eyes are drawn to
several of the footmen, who are all strapping young men of a martial
appearance in their tight green
hussar breeches and frogged dolman tunics. I discover that it is one
of Milord's fancies to have his male servants trained to drill and
march in the military manner of the armies of the Austrian Kaiser, in
whose armies the Markgraf served as a young man, distinguishing
himself, it is said, under the command of the great Prinz Eugen
himself in
the wars against the barbaric Turks and
the perfidious and rapacious Frenchmen.
I soon
decide
that milady's convenient
marriage
has brought me to a place where I might profit greatly. I
set out to learn as much as possible about the customs, language and
traditions of this land of Syldavia, and the ways of its diverse
peoples.”
This entry is
is followed by several long and rather dull passages of Aphra's
recollections of life
in the Schloss Reißverschluss,
before she
recounts that she has formed a friendly
attachment with a certain Willi Langengriff, the Markgraf's dashing
Carinthian
riding
master. She draws a veil over the details of this affaire,
but does hint that her interests were
other than simply those of the
stable and
paddock, although she does record that she
had
always
enjoyed horse-riding. She writes that
“at
the Markgräfin's
pleasure,
I
am
issued with a finely-tailored dove grey riding costume in the hussar
style, complete with fur-trimmed pelisse and tight breeches”.
She
continues
that “From
time to time, it
pleases
Milady
greatly to see
me dress
in my hussar costume and put my fine Lipizzaner mare through her
paces. She will
watch
me
ride
for
at least an hour and insists
that I visit
her in my riding habit once my horse is exercised
and
stabled again.”
One can draw one's own conclusions regarding this passage. Aphra
closes
the passage
with the sentence, “What
with the
one
thing and the
other,
my equestrian exercises
always leave
me with a feeling
of
langour
and contentment.”
However,
this bucolic life of contentment and pleasure ends
in 1752 while
Aphra and her mistress are
residing in
Venice with the Markgraf. While sailing on the Lagoon, the Markgraf
suffers
a heart attack and plunges
over the side of the boat. His body is
swiftly recovered but it is
too late for the elderly nobleman. On their return to Syldavia, Aphra
and her mistress discover that the Markgraf had, surprisingly
perhaps, produced an heir who swiftly takes
possession of the estates and installs
his wife and brood of several children in the castle. Regretfully,
Aphra and her mistress are
forced to
part company, with the dowager Markgräfin
setting
out for Vienna and Aphra, complete with hussar uniform, choosing to
seek her fortunes in Klow, the capital of Syldavia. She writes
that “While
it was with a pang of regret and a heaviness in my heart that milady
and I parted, we did so on felicitous terms. My
mistress and dear friend Anne-Sophie had provided me with a charming
and liberal education in the ways of the aristocracy and a number of
years of unburdensome service and much happiness, not to mention a
comfortable sum of
gold and jewels deposited
in the Royal Bank of Klow. We embraced warmly and took to our
separate paths. I knew not whether we should ever join those paths
together
again
in the future.”
So
these, dear reader, were the humble beginnings of the life and
exploits of an interesting, if unfairly neglected, adventuress,
occasional soldier, spy, courtesan (of polyamorous and heterodox
tastes), occasional courtier and authoress of the 18th century.
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