Ok, despite my cynical ways I must confess I´m in a romantic mood today... must be fall approaching! I want to share here my fave historical romantic figure: Count Axel von Fersen. After I saw Sofia Coppola´s movie about Marie Antoinette, I did some research and to my astonishment, this Swedish count really, really, really loved this controversial lady to death (literally).
He was a preppy young diplomat, the darling of all European courts, rather foppish, only concerned about his elegant garments and getting acquainted with the cream of society... until he met the queen of France and fell hopelessly in love. Then he matured into a sad, heroic man bitten by the bug of unrequitted love. He did anything in his power to protect her reputation, to no avail. In her final years, in the face of her disgrace, he compromised his fortune and even risked his life many times to safe her, and later on merely to console her in her final days. After her execution, he vowed his life had lost any sense, and in fact he never married (even though his bed was not exactly empty, mind you.... he was human after all).
This frienship, or whatever it was, is a fascinating read:
A fascinating, if tragic story Dame Ragnelle. It's always interesting to read these less well known (atleast to me) historical accounts. One can only hope things were different for him in his next lifetime!
I have still not seen Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette and I really must. I recall it is a visual feast as well as a powerful film.
Oh you must see the movie! I enjoyed it very much. The costumes and settings alone justify a viewing, but it happens to be a good movie besides. The queen makes a nice transition from spoiled brat to dignified spouse and mother in the face of tragedy, and is presented as a victim of extrenal circumstances. I don´t know if this portrayal is accurate or not, but it makes for an interesting character piece. Nic´s cousin Jason is very good as the king, BTW.
As for the unfortunate Count Fersen, what attracts me to his figure is how he surmounted his shallow courtly ways and, when the cruelties of revolution struck, raised to the occasion in the most noble of manners, with inherent goodness and brave resolve. Such a heroic person sounds more like a character in a matinee movie or a sentimental novel, but he was the real thing, girls....