<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller">THE SIEGE OF PARIS (1870-1871)</span><br/> <span class="smaller">WITH THE GERMANS OUTSIDE</span></h2>
<p class="summary">The Germans invest Paris—Trochu’s sortie fails—The English ambulance
welcomed—A Prince’s visit to the wounded—In the snow—Madame
Simon—A brave Lieutenant—Piano and jam—The big
guns begin—St. Denis—Old Jacob writes to the Crown Prince—A
dramatic telegram—Spy fever—Journalists mobbed.</p>
<p>After the French Emperor was defeated and taken
prisoner at Sedan a revolution broke out in Paris, and
the terms of peace which had been agreed upon were
refused by the Parisians. So the Germans marched on
Paris, arriving on the 18th of September. By the end of
October 240,000 men began to encircle the ring of fifteen
outer forts which guarded Paris.</p>
<p>Trochu was the Governor of Paris. On the 30th of
September he made a vigorous sortie across the Marne,
to the south-east, where he hoped to join the French army
of the Loire, and also at the same time to relieve Paris
of some hungry mouths.</p>
<p>But the grip of the Germans was too strong. They had
been allowed time to strengthen their positions, and the
sortie failed, though the great guns of the forts had
boomed and crashed until they were glowing hot.</p>
<p>An English ambulance under Mr. Young and Captain<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</SPAN></span>
Furley was received by the German doctor with great
enthusiasm, for medical comforts were growing scarce in
the field hospital.</p>
<p>The stores were carried into the doctor’s own room,
and as the box of sundries was unpacked it was splendid
to see the delight of the good man.</p>
<p>“Porter,” he cried—“ganz gut! Ale—ganz gut!
Chloroform—ach Gott! Twelve hundred cigars—du
lieber Gott!” and his hands and eyes went up in delight
and gratitude.</p>
<p>The woollen clothing alone must have saved many
lives. After supper that evening the German doctor got
up and made a little speech.</p>
<p>“Gentlemen, some people go about and make large
promises which are never fulfilled. What an example of
the contrary we have now before us! Mr. Young and
Captain Furley heard of our state; they let no red tape
stand in their way, and now this afternoon there comes
jogging up our avenue a waggon bringing what is health—nay,
what is life—to our poor sick and wounded. Here
is the Englander all over, gentlemen—the bulldog that
has no wind to spare in superfluous barking.”</p>
<p>The officers present raised their glasses and shouted
“Hochs!” for the English ambulance. It is pleasant
to hear of such comradeship between men of different
nations.</p>
<p>The next day we are told that, after desperate fighting,
the Head-quarters Staff of the German 12th Army Corps
sat down to a very sombre dinner-table and spoke to
one another in hushed voices, for many chairs were
empty this dinner-time that had been occupied at breakfast.
Not a man in the room but had lost dear friends,
and many had lost kinsmen, and some had brothers
lying out on the snow. On the forenoon of the fourth
day there were found eight poor wretches who had sur<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</SPAN></span>vived
the inclemency of two nights’ hard frost. Frostbitten,
they lived two days after they were found.</p>
<p>The Germans, after two days’ hard fighting, drove the
French back into Paris, with the loss of 6,000 men; but
they themselves were very disheartened.</p>
<p>Their loss in officers was very large. The 108th Regiment
lost thirty-six officers out of forty-five. In the
knapsacks of the French soldiers were found provisions
for six days, showing that they had hoped to co-operate
with the Southern Army of the Loire.</p>
<p>One day the Prince of Saxe-Weimar went to visit the
wounded Würtembergers, a big man and a kindly heart.
He went round with a box of cigars under his arm, asking
each patient, “Can you smoke?” It was pitiful to see
how they all tried to smoke, though some were too weak
to enjoy their weed. Now the Prince comes upon a
stalwart under officer.</p>
<p>“Are you married?”</p>
<p>“No, Highness; but my mother—she has three sons
down, all wounded, and it might be bad for her.”</p>
<p>The Prince took out a gold piece.</p>
<p>“Here, my man, send that to the mother, and let her
know it comes from your Queen.”</p>
<p>It seems that the Germans had quite mistaken the
amount of provisions existing in Paris. According to
their calculations by the middle of December Paris ought
to be feeling very hungry, on salt rations at the very best.
They had not yet prepared for a bombardment with
siege guns, hoping that Lady Famine would drive the
Parisians to surrender. But they made no sign.</p>
<p>Down at Argenteuil, on the north-west of Paris, there
was the crackling of the chasse-pot from over the river,
and yet most of the population had come back to their
shops. They gossiped in the streets with French gaiety
and unconcern, while the bullets sang overhead pretty<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</SPAN></span>
freely. The steeple of their beautiful church made a
good observatory, though its sides were riddled with holes
made by shells. The French peasants drove their carts
into the market-place below the church and sold eggs and
butter full merrily; yet somehow, if a German stood at
a window to gaze out, the French sharpshooters would
aim at him. At Lagny there were generally 1,000
prisoners a day passing through to Germany. Some were
so ravenous with hunger that they stooped to pick up
turnip-tops and bones from the gutter, until the British
Society organized a relief with stores of preserved meat
and bread. And there was no hospital for the wounded!
the poor creatures were dumped down in sheds, vans, the
station-rooms, the church, the <i>mairie</i>. In one day there
arrived 1,800 wounded. They were bestowed—frozen,
hungry, hopeless—in the cold comfort of the church.
Madame Simon, the lady superintendent of the Saxon
ambulance, did noble things day and night—a most
devoted woman. There were feats of quiet bravery done
every day. There was a colporteur of the English Bible
Society who used to drive his waggon on a road between
Gonesse and Aulnay, a road exposed to shell-fire more
than most.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said, “it is a good time for the men to read
good words when they are standing with the shadow of
death hanging over them.”</p>
<p>There is a story of a boy Lieutenant, von Schramm,
who found himself suddenly in a crowd of Frenchmen.
He leapt from his horse and hid in a house, in the hope
of escaping by the back-door; but his pursuers caught him,
and were taking him towards St. Denis, which lies to the
north of Paris. In going through the park of Le Bourget
the officer who carried von Schramm’s sword was shot and
fell. The boy made a dash for his own sword, grasped the
hilt and cut down the man on his other side, rushed for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</SPAN></span>
the small lake, dived to avoid pursuing bullets, and swam
safely across to rejoin his regiment. The strange thing
was that he had been on the sick-list before his winter
ducking, but now he was blessed with a boy’s appetite.</p>
<p>It spoke well for the German besiegers that they got
on so cordially with the villagers round Paris. These were
mostly of the humbler sort; or servants left behind to
take care of their master’s house. There were lovely
country houses inhabited by a few German officers, and,
were it not for the rents made by shot and shell, the owners
would not have grumbled much at their condition when
they returned to them, though, of course, there were cases
where the boisterous fun of German Lieutenants played
havoc with ormolu and gilding. I remember hearing<SPAN name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</SPAN>
of a grand piano which gave forth reluctant sounds
when the notes were pressed down. It was discovered
that the strings had been plentifully smeared with jams
and sweetmeats! But these jests were the exception.</p>
<p>The bombardment by the big guns had begun late in
December with much excited wonder on the part of the
Germans. Surely in a few days the Parisians will have
had enough of exploding shells! Now here was almost
the middle of January, and no effect visible. But the
forts round Paris had no living population: no houses
to be burnt, no women and children to mutilate. They
had to be battered to bits, if possible; and Paris was
behaving very heroically now. By the middle of January
she was living very poorly indeed, but she endured yet
another fifteen days longer.</p>
<p>As for the German soldiers, they began now to feel
bored to death, as so often happens in a long siege. The
first excitement evaporates; each day’s unlovely duties
recur with abominable sameness—and the Germans could
find no beer to drink. A German is used to drink plenty<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</SPAN></span>
of beer, and can carry it without ill effects; but when
Fritz took to drinking rum, schnapps, or arrack, he began
to reel about the village streets and look rather disreputable.</p>
<p>It was a strange sight to mount some hill and get a view
of Paris surrounded by its fifteen forts, and in a yet wider
circle by the German lines. The foam of white smoke
surged up all round; the thundering roar of cannon, the
dull echo of distant guns made dismal music to the ear.
The air of Paris is so clear compared to our English cities
that all was quite visible; and now that wood was scarce
and fires few, it was easy to mark the outlines of the larger
buildings, though above them hung a brown pall of smoke,
caused by exploding shells or houses that had caught fire.</p>
<p>Day after day there were rumours of this or that fort
having been silenced. Now it was St. Denis, on the north
side; now Valérien, on the west; now Vincennes, on the
east; but the respite was only given to cool the guns or
renew the emplacements, and all was as it had been.
Besides this there was the daily fear of a new sortie, as
Issy or Ivry broke out into fierce clamour on the south-west
and south-east. Then troops would be hurriedly
transferred along frozen or sometimes muddy roads,
while splinters of shell were whizzing about rather too
familiarly.</p>
<p>It was calculated that on a fierce day of firing the
Germans shot away 10 tons of powder, and nearly
200 tons of heavy matter—iron and steel—were hurled
upon the forts and city in twenty-four hours.</p>
<p>There is a story of the Crown Prince of Prussia which
illustrates his kindness of heart. In the 3rd Würtemberg
Dragoons was a certain Jacob, who had an aged and
anxious father. This father had not heard from his son
Jacob for so long a time that the old man, in his rustic
simplicity, sat down and laboriously wrote a letter to the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</SPAN></span>
Crown Prince, asking, “Can Your Highness find out anything
about my son?” The old man knew his son had
fought at Wörth and at Sedan, but nothing later than
Sedan. The Crown Prince did not throw this letter into
the waste-paper basket, but sent it to the officer commanding
the 3rd Würtembergers, requesting that the old
man’s mind should be set at ease. Jacob was sent for
by his commanding officer and asked why he had not
written home.</p>
<p>“Do you know that His Royal Highness the Crown
Prince wants to know why you have not written home
for many weeks?”</p>
<p>The man saluted. His purple face was a study.</p>
<p>“Go and write instantly, and bring the envelope to
me, sirrah.”</p>
<p>How that story got about among the men! How often
has the same experience come to house-masters, when
some loving mother appeals for help: “Please make
Harry write home.” Both Harry and Fritz need a
touch of the spur at times, but how promptly the letter
is written when they feel that touch!</p>
<p>The town of St. Denis suffered terribly. The front of
the theatre was in ruins. The cathedral, being banked
up high with sand-bags, had not suffered so much. The
tombs of the kings had all been thus protected, so had
the statues, and not even a nose had been knocked off.
But the bombardment had shattered many houses and
churches, and the shells had ploughed up the streets, or
rather hoed them into holes. It was only in the cold and
dark cellars that safety could be found. Even there
people were not always safe, and when they were pressed
to take refuge in Paris they peeped forth shuddering, and
swore they would rather die in their own cellars than
sally forth through a tempest of shell-fire.</p>
<p>“At nine o’clock on the evening of the 28th of January,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</SPAN></span>
1871, while the Head-quarters Staff of the Maes Army
were assembled in the drawing-rooms of the Crown
Prince’s château after dinner, an orderly brought in a
telegram to the Crown Prince. His Royal Highness,
having read it, handed it to General von Schlottheim,
the Chief of the Staff. That officer perused it in his
turn, and then rising, walked to the door communicating
between the billiard-room and the saloon, and there read
the telegram aloud. It was from the Emperor, and it
announced that, two hours before, Count Bismarck and
M. Jules Favre had set their hands to a convention, in
terms of which an armistice to last for twenty-one days
had already come into effect.”</p>
<p>This startling news meant that Paris was ready to surrender.
How many hearts were lighter in both camps
next day! War is not all glory and heroic achievement.
Those who know what war is pray to God that statesmen
and nations may think twice before they rush into so
terrible a calamity. In this war of 180 days the Germans
had won fifteen great victories, captured twenty-six
fortresses, and made 363,000 prisoners.</p>
<p>“Paris is utterly cowed, fairly beaten”—so they said
who came from Paris to the German lines, and a few non-combatants,
journalists, and philanthropists, ventured
to enter the city before the German troops passed in on
the 1st of March. They found the streets crowded with
men in uniform. The food shops had nothing to sell.
There were a few sickly preserves, nothing solid worth
eating—some horses’ fat for a delicacy to help down the
stuff they called bread. A fowl was priced at forty-five
francs; stickleback were fourteen francs a pound; butter,
forty francs a pound. Outside the bakers’ shops stood a
shivering line of ladies and women, waiting their turn for
loaves that tasted like putty, and pulled to pieces like
chopped straw.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But there were in side streets many of the roughest,
the most cowardly and cruel ruffians of the worst parts
of Paris. They were on the prowl, waiting for their
prey; so no wonder that Mr. Archibald Forbes, journalist,
and several others in divers parts of the city had unpleasant
experiences.</p>
<p>Forbes tells us he was walking down the Champs
Elysées when he met the Crown Prince of Saxony with
his staff riding by. Forbes raised his hat; the Prince returned
the salute and passed on. But the dirty <i>gamins</i>
of Paris had been looking on. They hustled the
Englishman, called him <i>mouchard</i> (spy), <i>sacré Prussien</i>,
<i>cochon</i>, tripped him up, hit him on the back of the head
with a stick; then, when he was down, they jumped on
his stomach with their sabots or wooden shoes. He
struggled, as a Scotsman can, got up, hit out right and
left; but numbers prevailed, and he was dragged by the
legs on his back, with many bumps and bruises, to the
police-station. There he showed his papers, and the
Prefect released him in a humour that said, “I am mighty
glad you Parisians have had a good thrashing.”</p>
<p>Another journalist—so he told me in London a few weeks
later—also had ventured to stray away from the German
sentries in order to see what Paris thought of a siege.
He soon found himself the centre of an angry throng.</p>
<p>Some cried: “He is a <i>sacré Prussien</i>! See his yellow
hair!”</p>
<p>“No; I am an English artist,” shouted my friend, still
smiling.</p>
<p>“He is a confounded spy! Take him to the Seine!
duck him in the river!”</p>
<p>They dragged him towards the river-bank. Out of his
eye corners my friend saw several boys pick up stones to
help him to sink. He thought his last hour was come.
They were close to the river: the water looked very cold.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</SPAN></span>
Then there came to his ears the “tuck” of a drum. A
company of French soldiers was marching by; a Colonel
on horseback rode beside them.</p>
<p>The artist recognized him, for they had once chummed
together near Metz. He called to him by name, and the
Colonel cried “Halt!”</p>
<p>He spurred his horse through the evil-smelling crowd,
and seeing who it was whom the rascals were going to
plunge into the Seine, held up his hand and cried:</p>
<p>“Let that English gentleman go. He is no Prussian,
but an artist who has drawn my portrait—mine, I tell
you—for the London journals. He is my friend—an
English friend, like Mr. Wallace.”</p>
<p>This testimony was enough for them. The excitable
crowd flew to the opposite extreme. Those who had
made ready to stone him like a water-rat now dropped
those stones, and rushing up with remorse and even
affection in their changed looks, threw fusty arms round
his neck, kissed him on both cheeks, sobbed and cried
for forgiveness for their little mistake.</p>
<p>Indeed it is not safe to enter too soon into a conquered
city.</p>
<p class="source">From “My Experiences of the War,” by Archibald Forbes. With
the kind permission of Messrs. Hurst and Blackett.</p>
<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></SPAN> My informant was an English artist.</p>
</div>
</div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />