Just finished reading 'The German Woman', from which lots of interesting issues emerge (must remember that it is a novel!). One suggestion which emerges is that Alexandra seemed to think that her situation with Alexei was uniquely bad, in that the other mothers of haemophiliacs all had at least one healthy son.
Do I say this? It's been such a while since I wrote it - or even proofed it - that I don't remember quite what I impute to my fictional Alexandra. I tried to keep most of what I wrote within the bounds of what the evidence suggests, but because it's a novel and is designed to evoke the reader's sympathy for her I did try to explore how a mother might feel when she learned that after years of striving without success somehow to produce the son she was required to have she learned that the one, longed-for boy was afflicted with a disease that seemed to appear randomly in her family, at intervals, to mothers whose other children - other
sons - were healthy. Even her sister Irene, the mother of two haemophilic children (a unique situation when Alexei was born, because Ena was still unmarried then, and despite what some biographers assert Beatrice does NOT appear to have had two sons with haemophilia; nor was she close to her children and particularly affected by their suffering) also had one healthy son, so I speculate that Alexandra may well have felt in trying to make sense of her situation as a mother that fate had treated her with particular caprice. As it had.
I don't think I suggest that she felt her overall situation in life was in any way worse than anyone else's. My take on Alexandra, and the thesis motivating "The German Woman", is that her obsessive love for Nicholas gave her life meaning, and everything she did or believed arose from her feelings for him. He infected her religious views, her political opinions, and her feelings as a mother. Throughout her correspondence she repeats her opinion that her married life has been a very happy one; that marriages like this are not common at all; that her family life was "an ideal one". At no point did she suggest, and thus neither do I, that her overall situation was worse than that of her cousin Ena. If anything, if she knew of Alfonso's failings as a spouse (and since European royalty corresponded freely, passing on gossip and all, I think she might well have done) I think Alexandra might have drawn comfort from the contrast between her husband and Queen Ena's.