<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller">THE SIEGE OF PARIS—<i>Continued</i></span><br/> <span class="smaller">WITH THE BESIEGED (1870-1871)</span></h2>
<p class="summary">Moods in Paris—The Empress escapes—Taking down Imperial flags—Playing
dominoes under fire—Cowards branded—Balloon post—Return
of the wounded—French numbed by cold—The lady and
the dogs—The nurse who was mighty particular—Castor and
Pollux pronounced tough—Stories of suffering.</p>
<p>One who was in Paris on the 3rd of September, 1870,
might have heard strange things said in the cafés as
evening came on. The French had suffered a great disaster;
they had surrendered to the Germans at Sedan!
MacMahon was wounded and taken prisoner; the Emperor
had given himself up, and was going to Germany as a
first-class prisoner; 80,000 men captured, and 200 guns.
Was not that news enough to sell every paper in the
street?</p>
<p>Shouts were heard of “Déchéance! Vive la République!”</p>
<p>Where was the poor Empress all this time? “Never
mind her; it was she who had stirred up the Emperor
Napoleon III. to make this horrible war.” So the papers
print cruel caricatures of her. On Sunday, the 4th, very
early in the morning, a huge crowd thronged the Place de
la Concorde; men were pulling down Imperial eagles<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</SPAN></span>
while the mob cheered. The regular soldiers met the
National Guard and made friends.</p>
<p>Men said to one another: “What will become of the
Empress?” “Will she fall a victim to the new patriots?”
And whilst some wondered, a few friends were even then
helping her to escape to England.</p>
<p>Everywhere on walls of houses were bills fixed announcing
the Republic, and inviting all men to rally to the
rescue of “La patrie en danger.”</p>
<p>But the railway-stations were very full of men, women,
and children, who were trying to get a little country air.
Could it be possible that they feared Paris might before
long be besieged?</p>
<p>Drums and bugles incessant, uniforms always, rifles
and side-arms very often. Men stood before the black-draped
statue of Strasbourg, and waved arms wildly,
shouting and screaming, “Revenge!” “Liberty!” and
the like.</p>
<p>By the 10th of the month the Prussian forces, 300,000
strong, were about twenty-five miles from the capital.
People began to look grave, and the more thoughtful
went to the stores, and made secret purchases of coffee,
rice, sugar, and other portable provisions. Still, the
Parisians have not lost their gaiety yet; comic songs and
punchinello evoke hilarious laughter.</p>
<p>Then came the news, “Versailles has honourably capitulated.”</p>
<p>What! so near as that! People are becoming nervous,
so that the new authorities proclaim by billposters that
the fifteen strong forts beyond the line of ramparts
are fully armed and manned by the sailors from the
fleet.</p>
<p>A captive balloon goes up from Montmartre to watch
the enemy. Then it occurs that obstacles outside the
city must be cleared away, so that the chassepot may<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</SPAN></span>
have space to reach the Prussians; and many houses and
bridges go down.</p>
<p>“Well, if there is a siege, have we not got a goodly
store of food—enough for two months? Are there not
plenty of cattle and sheep, fodder and grain collected
within the walls? Who cares for the Prussians?”</p>
<p>Yet when they see notices posted on the walls instructing
the newly enrolled how to load their muskets,
some have a twinge of doubt and anxiety. A few days
more, and Paris begins to feel she is being encircled by
the enemy. Great movement of troops towards Vincennes.
Official notices now state that all men liable to
military service must report themselves within twenty-four
hours, under penalty of being treated as deserters—and
shot.</p>
<p>Yet still many are placidly playing dominoes, or
calmly fishing from the bridges in the Seine, quite content
if they catch a gudgeon two inches long.</p>
<p>Yet, if some are betraying levity and selfishness, others
are filled with a desire to do something for their country.
The doctors offer their services in a body, and hospitals
for the wounded are being established at various points.</p>
<p>Ladies wearing a <i>brassard</i> on the arm (the Red Cross
badge) were almost too numerous; and some of these had
more zeal than strength, and failed lamentably when
brought face to face with horrible sights.</p>
<p>On the 19th of September some French forces, who
occupied the heights of Chatillon, were attacked in force
by the Germans, and driven away, and they ran through
Paris crying, “We are betrayed!” but the people gloomily
replied, “Cowards!”</p>
<p>The next day many of these fugitives were marched
along the boulevards, their hands tied behind their backs,
and the word <i>Lâche</i> (coward) printed in large letters between
their shoulders. Yet still crowds of men in uniform<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</SPAN></span>
and ladies fashionably dressed crowded the cafés, laughing
and full of mirth.</p>
<p>As the bombardment grew, it became the fashion to
gather at the Trocadero, and watch the Prussian shells
exploding in mid-air.</p>
<p>The village folk who had lived within the lines of investment
were brought inside the ramparts, and formed a class
of <i>bouches inutiles</i>, though some of the men were employed
to cut down trees and build barricades.</p>
<p>The Palace of St. Cloud was burnt down about this
time—some said by the French themselves, either by
accident or design.</p>
<p>A post by balloon and by carrier-pigeons had been introduced—<i>par
ballon monté</i>—by which letters were sent
away, but could not be received.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG id="img_11" src="images/i_263.jpg" width-obs="404" height-obs="600" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="header">The Balloon Post used during the Siege of Paris</p>
<p>Letters could be sent away by this method, but not received.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>In the middle of October Colonel Lloyd Lindsay arrived
from England, bringing with him £20,000 as a gift from
England to the sick and wounded. He came into Paris
in the uniform of his rank. This did not prevent his being
captured as a spy, and suffering some indignities at the
hands of the great unwashed of Belleville. Some with
questionable taste said, “The English send us money—all
right!—but why do they not help us with men and
guns?”</p>
<p>Trochu, the Governor of Paris, was thought to be rather
infirm of purpose; his sympathies were given more to
Napoleon than to the Republic, and he evidently distrusted
the fighting men within Paris. Indeed, there
were many officers quite unfit for work, who used to lounge
about the cafés, their hands buried in a warm muff and
their noses red with the little glasses they had emptied.
Many battalions of Federals elected their own officers,
and some men were seen to be soliciting votes, bottle in
hand. The National Guard, which was somewhat like
our militia, was distinct from the French army, and con<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</SPAN></span>tained
many bad characters; they were apt to desert in
time of danger.</p>
<p>On the 21st of October there was a sortie against the
Prussians on the west of Paris. They started at noon,
as Mont Valérien fired three guns in quick succession.
They took with them some new guns, called mitrailleuses,
from which great things were expected. In the evening
there came back a long procession of sixty-four carriages,
all filled with wounded. Crowds of anxious mothers
came clustering round, inquiring for friends. The people
in the street formed two lines for the carriages to pass
between; the men respectfully uncovered their heads.</p>
<p>November came, with snow and bitter frost. Strange
skins of animals began to be worn; fuel was scarce, gas
was forbidden, and epidemics arose. The very poor received
free meals from the <i>mairies</i>, while the more respectable
poor stayed at home, making no sign, but starving in
dumb agony.</p>
<p>On the 30th of November another sortie was attempted.
Some villages were taken by the French, Champigny and
Brie, the mitrailleuses being found very useful in sweeping
the streets; but towards evening the French were repulsed,
and the commander of the 4th Zouaves was left by his
own men on the ground wounded, a shell having dropped
near them. Fortunately, the English ambulance was
close by, and rendered such help as was possible. Then
they drove the helpless officer in a private brougham
back to Paris. What was their indignation when they
found great crowds of people of both sexes indulging in
noisy games, as if it was a holiday! The poor Chef de
Bataillon only lived a few hours after being taken to the
hospital.</p>
<p>Next day ambulances were sent out to search for the
wounded, but they came upon many stragglers bent on
loot. The wounded were in sore plight after spending a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</SPAN></span>
night on the frozen ground. Some had been able to make
a little fire out of bits of broken wheels, and to roast horse-flesh
cut from horses which the shells had killed. The
French troops had remained in bivouac all that night,
their strength impaired by fatigue and cold; the German
troops, on the contrary, were withdrawn from the field of
battle, their places being taken by others who had not
seen the carnage of the previous day, who were well fed
and sheltered, and thus far better fitted to renew the
fight. No wonder that the poor benumbed French failed
to make a stout resistance. Hundreds of wounded returned
to Paris all the following day, and it became evident that
no effort to break the circle of besiegers could succeed.
Paris awoke at last to the humiliating truth. The day
was cold and foggy; the transport of wounded was the
only sound heard in the streets; in the evening the
streets were dimly lit by oil-lamps, shops all closed at sundown,
and the boom of heavy guns seemed to ring the
knell of doom. All hope was now fixed on the provinces,
but a pigeon-post came in, telling them of a defeat near
Orleans.</p>
<p>“The Army of the Loire has been cut in two! Tant
mieux! (So much the better!) Now we have two Armies
of the Loire.” So the dandy of the pavement dismissed
the disaster with an epigram.</p>
<p>The scarcity of meat was felt in various ways; even the
rich found it difficult to smuggle a joint into their houses,
for it was liable to arrest on its way: some patriots would
take it from a cart or the shoulder of the butcher’s boy,
saying, “Ciel! this aristocrat is going to have more than
his share.” One day a fashionable lady was returning
home carrying a parasol and a neat parcel under her
shawl. After her came six hungry dogs, who could not
be persuaded to go home, though she hissed and scolded
and poked them with her gay parasol. On meeting a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</SPAN></span>
friend, she first asked him to drive them away, and then
confided to him that she had two pounds of mutton in her
parcel. And so the poor dogs got none!</p>
<p>Amongst the hungry folk we must not forget that there
were nearly 4,000 English in Paris, about 800 of whom
were destitute, and would have starved had it not been for
the kindness of Dr. Herbert and Mr. Wallace. The
wounded were well looked after, for there were 243 ambulances,
of which the largest, the International, had its
headquarters at the Grand Hotel. In one of the Paris
journals it was stated that a lady went to the Mayor’s
house of her district to ask to be given a wounded soldier,
that she might nurse him back to life. They offered her
a Zouave, small and swarthy.</p>
<p>“No, no,” she exclaimed; “I wish for a blonde patient,
being a brunette myself.”</p>
<p>It was hardly worth while going to pay a visit to the
Zoological Gardens, for most of the animals had been
eaten.</p>
<p>Castor and Pollux were amongst the last to render up
their bodies for this service. Castor and Pollux were two
very popular elephants, on whose backs half the boys and
girls in Paris had taken afternoon excursions. Poor
fellows! they were pronounced later on by the critical to
be tough and oily—to such lengths can human ingratitude
go when mutton is abundant.</p>
<p>They were twins and inseparables in life. Their trunks
were sold for 45 francs a pound, the residue for about
10 francs a pound. Besides the loss of the animals, all
the glass of the conservatories in the Jardin des Plantes
was shattered by the concussion of the big guns, and
many valuable tropical plants were dying.</p>
<p>The citizens, usually so gay and hopeful, presented a
woebegone appearance whenever they saw their soldiers
return from unsuccessful sorties. They began to look<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</SPAN></span>
about for traitors. “Nous sommes trahis!” was their
cry. There was one private of the 119th Battalion who
refused to advance with the others. His Captain remonstrated
with him; the private shot his Captain rather
than face the Germans. A General who was near ordered
the private to be shot at once. A file was drawn up, and
fired on him; he fell, and was left for dead. Presently an
ambulance stretcher came by, and picked him up, as a
wounded man; he was still alive, and had to be dealt with
further by other of his comrades. Let us hope that this
man’s relations never learnt how Jacques came to be so
riddled by bullets.</p>
<p>The houses on the left bank of the Seine were so
damaged that the citizens had to be transferred to the right
bank. In a few days the terrible battery of Meudon opened
fire upon the city. The shells now fell near to the centre
of Paris; day and night without rest or stay the pitiless
hail fell, and this went on for twelve days and nights.
Meanwhile the cold increased and the fuel failed; diseases
spread, and discontent with the Government arose.
Women waiting in the streets for their rations would fall
from exhaustion; others were mangled by shells. The
daily ration for which the poor creatures struggled consisted
now of 10 ounces of bread, 1 ounce of horse-flesh,
and a quarter litre of bad wine.</p>
<p>One more effort the starving Parisians made to break
through on the 19th of January. Early that morning
people were reading the latest proclamation on the walls:
“Citizens, the enemy kills our wives and children, bombards
us night and day, covers with shells our hospitals.
Those who can shed their life’s blood on the field of battle
will march against the enemy—suffer and die, if necessary,
but conquer!”</p>
<p>Three <i>corps d’armée</i>, more than 100,000 men, were
taking up their positions under cover of Mont Valérien;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</SPAN></span>
but a dense fog prevailed, and several hours were lost in
wandering aimlessly about, so that the French became
worn out with fatigue, whereas the Germans had passed
a quiet night, with good food to sustain their strength.
Yet for many hours the French obstinately held their
ground; then stragglers began to fall away, and officers
tried in vain to rally their companies. Night fell on a
beaten army hurrying back through the city gates.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the bombardment went on with increasing
violence, until early on the night of the 26th there was
a sudden lull; just before midnight a volley of fire came
from all points of the circle round Paris, then a weird
silence. Then it was known that the terms of surrender
had been signed—not too soon, for all were at starvation
point, and only six days’ rations remained. Paris had
been very patient under great sufferings through the cold
winter. It is pleasant to remember that supplies of food
sent from England were then waiting admission outside
the northern gates.</p>
<p>An English doctor residing in Paris during the siege
writes thus:</p>
<p>“One lady to whom I carried a fowl was prostrate in
bed, her physical powers reduced by starvation to an
extremely low ebb. When I told her that she was simply
dying from want of food, her reply was that she really
had no appetite; she could not eat anything. Yet when I
gave her some savoury morsel to be taken at once, and
then the fowl to be cooked later on, her face brightened;
she half raised herself in bed, and pressed the little articles
I had brought to her as a child presses a doll. I was told
also that the nurses in an ambulance which I had aided
with the British supplies danced round the tables, and
invoked blessings on our heads. As regards myself, what
I most craved for was fried fat, bacon, and fruit, and,
above all, apples.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Besides the wild animals of the French Zoological
Gardens, most of the domestic pets had been eaten. A
story is told of one French lady who carefully guarded her
little dog Fido, feeding him from her own plate with great
self-sacrifice. One day the family had the rare treat of a
hot joint, and in the middle of dinner the lady took up a
small bone to carry to Fido in the next room. She
returned in trouble, saying:</p>
<p>“Fido is not in the house; he would so have enjoyed
this bone. I hope he has not got out. They will kill him—the
brutes!—and eat him.”</p>
<p>The members of that starving family exchanged uneasy
glances; they were even now engaged upon a salmi,
or hash, formed from a portion of the lady’s pet!</p>
<p class="source">“From Memoirs of Dr. Gordon.” By kind permission of Messrs.
Swan Sonnenschein and Co.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</SPAN></span></p>
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