"I have said that I had never observed the least tendency to sentimentality in Anastasia, but she was very attached to people whom she loved, and although she often showed them her affection in a somewhat abrupt fashion, she could also be very endearing at these times. She whom she loved the most in the world besides her parents, brother and sisters was the Grand Duchess Olga, to whom she referred as dear sweet Aunt Olga in her letter. These sentiments were shared by the other grand duchesses who also had a particular predilection for the youngest sister of their father whom they almost saw as a big sister.
Each of her visits to the palace was a feast day; as soon as they saw her, they ran to meet her, surround her and almost smother her with their caresses; but I believe that, of all the four, it was Anastasia who loved her the best, and this love was further reinforced by the feeling she had of being a little more preferred than the others. Is not the loving nature of this young girl of 14 also revealed by all the exquisite tenderness that she showed in the letter that she wrote?
For Anastasia, my wife was a special person, in that being of strong character, she had redressed the wrongs and restored peace in this small world of hers, and to whom ever since infancy, had come to seek protection every time she had considered herself wronged by her elders. She was so happy about this boundless love that she had inspired that she wanted my wife, who was so dear to her, to participate in her life and share her joys and sorrows; then, overcoming her laziness, she quickly took up her pen . . .
The imperial family led a very secluded life, and the Grand Duchesses saw little of their parents; and only the children of the Grand Duke Alexander came frequently to the palace, particularly Princess Irina Alexandrovna who was their only intimate friend. They also had a very real affection for Grand Duke Dimitri Pavlovitch and his sister, the Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna who had lived for some years in the grand palace of Tsarskoye-Selo, as well as for their two cousins from Pavlovsk, Princesses Tatiana and Vera Constantinovna; nevertheless, in the last few years, the visits to Tsarskoye-Selo became fewer and fewer.
This isolation had the effect of bringing the Grand Duchesses very close to their immediate entourage and to their professors; at least to those who had known them as infants and with those whom they had maintained an exquisite intimate rapport. Miss Schneider was the language teacher of the Empress, to whom she had given her first lessons in Russian while she was but the fiancée of the Tsarevich; and had also played a pre-eminent role in the life of the children. She was a Russian from the Baltic provinces who was fiercely devoted, and as she had a good heart, everyone in the palace loved her.
Among the maids of honor of the Empress, I will cite Princess Obolensky (who served until 1914), Baroness Buxhoeveden, and Countess Hendrikov, all of whom were deeply loved by the children.
Of all the Grand Duchesses, Anastasia was the closest to her professors, namely, her Russian teacher, the elderly P. V. Petrov, whom she dearly loved and on whose knees she loved to climb while she was but a baby; Mr. Conrad, the music teacher (our senior member); and Mr. Gibbes.
My other colleagues were Fr. Vassiliev, Mr. Kleinenberg, Mr.Ivanov and Mr. Tsitovitch who taught religion, German, history and the natural sciences; all these four later entered into our little world of Tsarskoye-Selo.3 During the Revolution, when the Imperial Family was exiled to Siberia and transferred to Tobolsk, Anastasia was already a young girl of 16. She had become quite robust, and was so much in despair that she would have given everything in the world to lose weight and return to her former slender self. For all that, however, she had not lost her mirth and spirit. At Tobolsk, she was, as she had always been at Tsarskoye-Selo, the life of the house. Her sallies made us forget all worries at the time; she had kept her charming joy of life and freshness, and in doing so, she had become the ray of sunlight in our Siberian exile. That is the story of one whom we have known as an infant, little child and young girl, who then had to perish at 17, a victim of the most frightful crime that history has ever known."