”I think of myself, sold as a child of fifteen and taking an oath I did not understand and could never undo.”
When I was four years old, I was watching my mom iron clothes. Being a curious if somewhat naïve kid, I thought it would be a grand idea to touch the hot iron. My mom warned me that it was a bad idea and not to touch it, but being the defiant little toddler that I was, I touched it anyway.
Reader, it hurt.
I burned my hand and my mom got the opportunity to tell me that she told me it wasn’t a good idea. As usual, Mom is always right.
The tragic life of Elisabeth of Austria is like watching something very similar happen. At the tender age of fifteen, Elisabeth accompanies her mother and older sister Helene to the royal court. The reason? Their mother is trying to arrange a marriage between Helene and, Franz Joseph, the emperor of the Austrian empire. At the age of 18, Helene is the perfect age for marriage material. Elisabeth, being 15, is still a long ways off from marriage prospects.
And then the unthinkable happens. Franz Joseph falls in love, all right… but with Elisabeth. And he falls hard.
Elisabeth’s mother is thrilled, her father is overjoyed, she’s smitten… and Franz Joseph’s mother is worried. She warns her son that while she does like Elisabeth, she’s not Empress material. She’s too impetuous, not refined and graceful enough, and the marriage was going to be a disaster.
Reader, he didn’t listen.
He and Elisabeth get married in a lavish ceremony, and then everything immediately begins to fall apart. Just like his mother predicted.
This book follows the whirlwind courtship between Elisabeth and Franz Joseph and ends with their wedding. It’s one of the shortest installments in The Royal Diaries series, and it shows. The book moved at breakneck pace that you could hardly keep up with the thing. The epilogue was more in-depth than the actual diary entries. However, the entries do show you how towards the end Elisabeth starts to regret her decision.
Truth be told, Franz and Elisabeth were a good match aesthetically, but not a good match personality wise. Elisabeth was a country girl at heart, happiest with her beloved horses, siblings, and father. She liked riding, writing poetry, wandering the countryside and playing with the village folk in town. In many historian’s opinion, she was simply not prepared or meant for the strict rigidity of the royal court. It was too uppity, too formal.
To make a modern comparison, it would be like if the Franz Joseph were living in the present day but instead of marrying a Kate Middleton, he married a Meghan Markle. Hence the reason she and Prince Harry left the royal court.
Elisabeth’s story is ultimately a tragic one, as she did not live the happily ever after life that she so desperately wanted. She exerted great influence over her life and is still considered one of the most influential figures in Austrian history. However, that one fateful decision that was made changed the course of her life forever, and not in a good way.
This was one of the more disappointing entries in The Royal Diaries series, just because I felt that the author glossed over a lot of Elisabeth’s early life. Maybe this was because he was focusing on such a minute point in her life that he didn’t feel the need to dig any deeper. I as a reader wanted to read more about her and get more insight into her fictional thoughts, and I think other readers would agree. This paper thin book offers a quick slice into the life of a remarkable young woman who would ultimately live an extremely tragic life.
”I was forced onto center stage, compelled to play the starring role in a play I had not read, until I discovered wherein resided my destiny.”