<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller">METZ (1870)</span></h2>
<p class="summary">Metz surrounded—Taken for a spy—Work with an ambulance—Fierce
Prussians rob an old woman—Attempt to leave Metz—Refusing
an honour—The <i>cantinière’s</i> horse—The grey pet of the regiment—Deserters
abound—A village fired for punishment—Sad scenes
at the end.</p>
<p>One Englishman, the Special Correspondent of the
<i>Manchester Guardian</i>, contrived to enter Metz shortly
before it was besieged. But he had not been there long
before a disagreeable experience befell him. He was
riding quietly outside the city towards the French camps
which were pitched all round it, when suddenly a soldier
stepped across the road, and cried, “Halt!”</p>
<p>Two men seized his reins, asking, “Have you any
papers?”</p>
<p>“Yes; here is my passport,” he replied confidently.</p>
<p>The passport puzzled them; it was taken to a
superior officer, who knew that it was English, but looked
suspiciously at the German visé which it bears.</p>
<p>The Englishman was taken to a General across the road,
who shook his head and remanded him to another
officer of the staff, a mile back towards Metz. It begins
to look serious; this man may be shot as a spy.</p>
<p>Two gendarmes were called up to guard him; soldiers
came up to stare with savage scowls—he was a spy un<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</SPAN></span>doubtedly;
but cigarettes were offered by the spy, and
things began to look less cloudy. Then up came General
Bourbaki, and fresh questions were put and answered;
then a mounted messenger was sent to Metz to find out if
the prisoner’s statements were correct. On his return
with a satisfactory account, the prisoner was told to mount
and ride with escort to the head-quarters of the Commander-in-Chief,
Marshal Bazaine. As he rode soldiers
jeered and prophesied a speedy death in a ditch, which
made him feel ill at ease.</p>
<p>A ride of a mile brought him to a pretty château,
where he was received with courtesy and kindness. At
a long common deal table in a wooden pavilion in the
garden sat the Marshal and some twenty officers of the
staff. Dispatches were being written, signed, and sent
off by mounted messengers. In the corner was an electric
telegraph, ticking off reports from distant points.</p>
<p>When the conference broke up, Marshal Bazaine
motioned the suspect to a seat, and questioned him, made
him show on a map where he had been riding, found he
understood no German and was a fool at maps (perhaps a
little stupidity was put on), then he left him to his secretary.</p>
<p>The latter said, with a sly glance: “We have so many
spies that we are bound to be careful, but the arrest in
this case is a stupid thing (<i>une bêtise</i>). I will give you a
<i>laissez-passer</i> for the day, monsieur.”</p>
<p>So he went off, relieved at not being shot for a spy, but
somewhat mortified.</p>
<p>There was hard fighting going on in the country round
Metz. Our countryman managed to get attached to an
ambulance, and went on to a battle-field at night.</p>
<p>“We lit our lanterns,” he says, “and went cautiously
into the valley. There were Prussian sharpshooters in
the wood beyond, and I confess I was very nervous at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</SPAN></span>
first: the still night, the errand we were on, all awed one.
But so soon as we reached the outskirts of the battle-field
all personal feelings gave way to others. Here at
every turn we found our aid was wanted. Thousands of
dead and wounded were around us, and we, a few strangers
sent by the International Society of London, were all that
were present to help them. Plugging and bandaging
such wounds as were hopeful of cure, giving a life-saving
drink here and there, moving a broken limb into a more
easy position, and speaking a word of encouragement
where the heart was failing—this was all we could do.
But all that night each worked his utmost, and when our
water failed two of us walked back four miles to Gravelotte
and brought a bucketful. We can dress, but not
remove, the wounded now. Often have I been tempted to
put a poor fellow out of his pain; it seems kinder, wiser,
and more Christian to blow out the flickering lamp than
let it smoulder away in hours of anguish. Daylight begins
to dawn, and we seek carriages—that is, jolting unhung
carts—to convey some of the wounded. Now, as we raise
them up and torture their poor wounds by moving them,
for the first time we hear a cry. The groans of the dying,
the shrieks of the wounded, are absent from the battle-field,
but far more dreadful and awe-inspiring is the awful
stillness of that battle-field at night. There is a low,
quivering moan floats over it—nothing more; it is a
sound almost too deep for utterance, and it thrills through
one with a strange horror. Hardly a word is uttered,
save only a half-wailed-out cry of ‘Ohé! ma pauvre
mère!’ Nothing is more touching, nothing fills one’s
eyes with tears more, than this plaintive refrain chanted
out as a death-chant by so many sons who never more on
this side the grave will see again that longed-for mother—‘Ohé!
ma mère, ma pauvre mère!’</p>
<p>“We select sixty or seventy of those whose wounds will<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</SPAN></span>
bear removal, and turn our faces towards Metz. Slowly
and sadly we creep out of the death-valley. The quaint
hooded forms of the sentinels who challenge us cut out
strangely against the green and gold of the morning sky.
Not a walking-stick, not a pipe is left us: they were cut
up into tourniquet-keys. I am ashamed to say I regretted
my pipe; but it came back to me after many weeks, being
brought to me by the man whose life it had saved. Very
grateful he was. As we toil upwards, musing on life and
death, bang! right in our very faces spits out a cannon.
Good heavens! they surely are not going to begin this
devil’s work again! Yes; there goes a battery to the
crest of the hill. We must take care of ourselves and
those we have so far rescued from slaughter. On we
tramp, but there is no food, not a crust of bread, not a
drop of water for our wounded. It is nine miles more
back to Metz, and tired as we are, we must walk it. Very
tired and hungry and cross we enter Metz, and there see
the French ambulances waiting with waggon-loads of appliances
and well-groomed horses. They had stopped to
breakfast, and many hundreds have died because they
did so. Well, we have earned ours, at any rate.”</p>
<p>It was now the 28th of August. Metz was blockaded. No
letters could be sent, for the German hosts were holding
the heights all round. Ruthless rough-riders were riding
into every French village. In one of these, the story
goes, a poor old woman was washing her little store of
linen. She was very old, and her grey hair sprouted in
silver tufts from her yellow skin. All the rest had fled
in panic; she alone was left busy at her tub, when up
rode some score of huge Dragoons. They pulled up in
front of her, speaking their barbarous tongue. One
Dragoon dismounts and draws his sword. Poor old
woman! she falls upon her knees and lifts up wrinkled
hands and cries feebly for mercy. It is in vain! Neither<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</SPAN></span>
age nor ugliness protects her. Raising his sword with one
hand, he stretches out the other towards her—the Prussian
monster!—and grasps her soap. He quietly cuts it in
two, pockets the one half and replaces the other on the
well wall, growling out, “Madame, pardon!”</p>
<p>The reaction was too great. When they rode away
laughing, the old woman forgot to be thankful that they
had not hurt her, and swore at them for hairy thieves.</p>
<p>On the 15th of September there were around Metz
138,000 men fit to take the field, 6,000 cavalry and
artillery. The Prussians had not anything like that
number. They were dying fast of dysentery and fever,
and yet Bazaine did nothing. Yet, though Metz was not
strongly held, it was very difficult to get through the
lines, and many a man, tempted by the bribe of 1,000
francs, lost his life in the attempt.</p>
<p>The English journalist tried to be his own courier and
carry his own letters. He presented himself at the
Prussian outposts in daylight, showed his passport, and
demanded permission to “pass freely without let or
hindrance.” In vain. The German soldiers treated him
to beer and cigars, and suggested he should return to
Metz. Next time he dressed himself up as a peasant,
with blouse, and sabots on his feet, and when it was
growing dusk tried to slip through the posts. “Halte
là!” rang out, and a sound of a rifle’s click brought him
up sharp. He was a prisoner, taken to the guard-house,
and questioned severely. He pretended to be very weak-headed,
almost an idiot.</p>
<p>“How many soldiers be there in Metz, master? I
dunno. Maybe 300. There’s a power of men walking
about the streets, sir.”</p>
<p>They smiled a superior smile, and offered the poor idiot
some dark rye-bread, cheese, and beer, and some clean
straw to lie down upon. Officers came to stare at him,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</SPAN></span>
asked him what village he was bound for. One of them
knew the village he named, and recognized his description
of it, for luckily he had got up this local knowledge
from a native in Metz. However, he was not permitted
to go to it, for before dawn next morning they led him,
shuffling in his wooden sabots, to a distant outpost, turned
his face towards Metz, with the curt remark: “Go
straight on to Metz, friend, or you will feel a bullet go
through your back.”</p>
<p>Grumbling to himself, he drew near the French outposts,
who fired at him. He lay down for some time,
then, finding he was in a potato-field, he set to work and
grubbed up a few potatoes to sell for a sou a piece. So
at last he found his way back to Metz, and got well
laughed at for his pains.</p>
<p>He then tried his hand at making small balloons to
carry his letters away; but the Germans used to fire at
them, wing them, and read the contents.</p>
<p>Many spies were shot in Metz, and some who were not
spies, but only suspected. It was the only excitement
in the city to go out to the fosse and see a spy shot.</p>
<p>There was one man whom all raised their hats to salute
when he passed. He was a short, thick-set man, wore a
light canvas jacket and leather gaiters. Under one arm
hung a large game-bag, and over the other sloped a
chassepot rifle. His name was Hitter, and he had made
a great name by going out in front of the <i>avant-poste</i>
and shooting the Prussian sentinels. One night he encountered
some waggons, shot down the escort from his
hiding-place, and brought four waggons full of corn into
Metz, riding on the box by the driver, pistol in hand.
This man organized a body of sharp-shooters for night
work, and many a poor sentinel met his death at their
hands.</p>
<p>One favourite dodge was to take out with them a tin<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</SPAN></span>
can fastened to a long string. When they got near the
Prussian outposts they made this go tingle tangle along
the ground. Then cautious heads would peep out; more
tangle tingle from the tin can, until the sentinels jump
up and blaze away at the weird thing that startles them
in the dark. Their fire has been drawn, and Hitter’s
men have the outpost at their mercy. They either shoot
them or bring them into Metz as prisoners.</p>
<p>At length Marshal Bazaine heard of Hitter’s prowess,
and sent for him, wanting to decorate him; but Hitter
was sensitive, and thought he ought to have been decorated
weeks ago. He came reluctantly.</p>
<p>“My man, I have heard of your doings—your clever
work at night—and in the name of France I give you
this decoration to wear.”</p>
<p>“I don’t want it, Marshal. Pray excuse me, if you
please.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense, my fine fellow. I insist on your acceptance
of the honour.”</p>
<p>“Oh! very well,” said Hitter, “if you insist, I suppose
I must; but, by your leave, I shall wear it on my
back—and very low down, too.”</p>
<p>The Marshal glared at Hitter, turned red, and ordered
him out.</p>
<p>As the siege went on the poor horses got thinner and
thinner. Their coats stood out in the wet weather rough
and bristly; often they staggered and fell dead in the
streets. They were soon set upon, and in a short time
flesh, bones, and hide had vanished, and only a little pool
of blood remained behind to tell where some hungry
citizens had snatched a good dinner.</p>
<p>One day a <i>cantinière</i> had left her cart full of drinkables
just outside the gate while she went to the fort to ask
what was wanted. She tarried, and her poor horse felt
faint, knelt down, and tried to die. No sooner was the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</SPAN></span>
poor beast on his knees than half a score of soldiers rushed
out to save his life by cutting his throat—at least, it
made him eat better. They quickly slipped off his skin
and cut him up in all haste. So many knives were “e’en
at him,” they soon carried off his “meat.” Then, in a
merry mood, seeing the gay <i>cantinière</i> was too busy
flirting to attend to her cart, they carefully set to work
and built him up again. They put the bones together
neatly, dragged the hide over the carcass, and arranged
the harness to look as if the animal had lain down between
the shafts. Then they retired to watch the comedy that
sprang out of a tragedy. Madame comes bustling out of
the fort. Eh! what’s that? Poor Adolfe is down on
the ground! The fat woman waddles faster to him, calls
him by name, taunts him with want of pluck, scolds, gets
out her whip; then is dumb for some seconds, touches
him, cries, weeps, wrings her hands in despair. Sounds
of laughter come to her ears; then she rises majestically
to the occasion, pours out a volley of oaths—oaths of
many syllables, oaths that tax a genius in arithmetic:
<i>diable! cent diables, mille diables, cent mille diables!</i> and
so on, until she loses her breath, puts her fat hand to her
heart, and again falls into a pathetic mood, passing later
on into hysteria, and being led away between two gendarmes.
Poor madame! She had loved Adolfe, and
would have eaten him in her own home circle rather than
that those <i>sacrés</i> soldiers should filch him away.</p>
<p>Well, they ate horses, when they could get them; but
donkeys were even more delicious, though very rare, for
they seldom died, and refused to get fat. Food was
growing so scarce in October that when you went out to
dinner you were expected to take your own bread with
you. Potatoes were sold at fifteen pence a pound; a
scraggy fowl might be bought for thirty shillings. The
Prussians had spread nets across the river, above and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</SPAN></span>
below, to prevent the French from catching too many
fish. As for sugar, it rose to seven shillings a pound.
Salt was almost beyond price. The poor horses looked
most woebegone. Many of them were Arabs, their bones
nearly through their skin, and they looked at their friends
with such a pitiful, appealing eye that it was most touching.
You might have gone into a trooper’s tent and wondered
to see the big tear rolling slowly down the bronzed cheek
of a brave soldier.</p>
<p>“What is it, m’sieur? I have just lost my best friend—my
best friend. He was with me in Algeria. Never
tumbled, never went lame. And he understood me better
than any Christian. He would have done anything for
me—in reason! Now he has had to go to the slaughter-house.
Oh, it is cruel, m’sieur! I shall never be the
same man again, for he loved me and understood me—and
I loved him.”</p>
<p>At last there was only one horse left in that camp, and
this was how he survived: He had laid himself down to
die; his eyes were fogging over, he felt so weak; but one
of the sick soldiers happened to pass that way, and being
full of pity from his own recent sufferings, he bethought
him of a disused mattress which he had seen in the
hospital close by. He returned and took out a handful
of straws, with which he fed the poor beast, a straw at
a time. The flaccid lips mumbled them awhile. At last
he managed to moisten the straw and eat a little. Another
handful was fetched, and the horse pricked his ears, and
tried to lift his head. That was the turning-point; life
became almost worth living again. The story rapidly
spread, and it became the charitable custom to spare a
bit of bread from dinner for the white horse of the Ile
Cambière. In time that spoilt child would neigh and
trot to meet any trooper who approached, confidently
looking for his perquisite of crust.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>There were 20,000 horses in Metz at the beginning of
the siege; at the time of the surrender a little over 2,000.</p>
<p>We are told by an Englishman who was with the
German Army outside Metz that in October a good many
Frenchmen deserted from Metz. On the 11th a poor
wretch was brought into the German lines. He said
that his desertion was a matter of arrangement with his
comrades. The man was an Alsatian, and spoke German
well. His regiment was supposed to be living under
canvas, but the stench in the tents was so strong, by
reason of skin diseases, that nearly all slept in the open
air. The skin disease was caused by the want of vegetables
and salt, and by living wholly on horse-flesh. The
deserter reported that the troops had refused to make
any more sorties, and they were all suffering from scurvy.</p>
<p>There was one village, Nouilly, which contained secret
stores, to which the French used to resort, and which the
Germans could not find; so the order was given to burn
it. Most of its inhabitants had gone to live in Metz.</p>
<p>“I was sitting at supper with Lieutenant von Hosius
and Fischer when an orderly entered with a note. It
was read aloud:</p>
<p>“‘Lieutenant von Hosius will parade at nine o’clock
with fifteen volunteers of his company, and will proceed
to burn the village of Nouilly.’</p>
<p>“Von Hosius was fond of herrings, so he stayed at table
to finish them, while Fischer went out for volunteers.
In a few minutes von Hosius was putting on his long
boots, taking his little dagger, which every officer wore
to ward off the vultures of the battle-field in case of being
wounded; then, taking his revolver, he sallied out to meet
his little band. The service was full of danger, for the
French lay very near, and had strong temptations for
entering it by night. If he did encounter a French force
inside the village, where would his fifteen volunteers be?</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“A little group of us watched by the watch-fire as they
marched down at the German quick step. For a while
we could hear the crashing through the vines, then the
hoarse challenge of the German rear sentry; then all
became quiet. For a few minutes the officer in command
of the outpost and myself were the only persons who
enjoyed the genial warmth of the fire; then through the
gloom came stalking the Major, who squatted down
silently by our side. Presently another form appeared—the
Colonel himself—and in half an hour nearly all the
officers of the battalion were round that bright wood fire.
They all tried to look unconcerned, but everybody was
very fidgety.</p>
<p>“Von Hosius was a long time. An hour had gone, and
Nouilly was but ten minutes or so distant, and the
Colonel’s nervousness was undisguised as he hacked at
the burning log with his naked sword. Suddenly the
vigilant Lieutenant gave a smothered shout, and we all
sprang to our feet. Flame-coloured smoke at last, and
plenty of it. But, bah! it was too far away—a false
alarm.</p>
<p>“The Colonel sat down moodily, and the Major muttered
something like a swear. One thing was good: there was
no sound of musketry firing.</p>
<p>“Another half-hour of suspense, and then a loud “Ha!”
from both Lieutenant and sentry. This time it was
Nouilly, and no mistake. Not from one isolated house,
but in six places at once, belched out the long streaks of
flame against the black darkness, and the separate fires
made haste to connect themselves. In ten minutes the
whole place was in one grand blaze, the church steeple
standing up in the midst of the sea of flame until a firework
of sparks burst from its top and it reeled to its
fall.</p>
<p>“Presently they came back, von Hosius panting with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</SPAN></span>
the exertion (he was of a portly figure). The duty had
been done without firing a single shot, and they brought
with them a respectable old horse which they had found
in a village stable.”</p>
<p>One evening, when the German officers were discussing
the causes of the French defeats, a First Lieutenant told
this story to illustrate it:</p>
<p>The Chief Rabbi of the Dantzic Jews had taken a new
house, and his flock determined to stock his wine-butt
for him. On a stated evening his friends went down one
after another into the Rabbi’s cellar, and emptied each
his bottle into the big vat. When the Rabbi came next
day to draw off his dinner wine he found the cask was
full of pure water. Each Jew had said to himself that
one bottle of water could never be noticed in so great a
quantity of wine, and so the poor Rabbi had not got a
drop of wine in his butt.</p>
<p>Now, it was just the same with the French army. One
soldier said to himself that it would not matter a copper
if he sneaked away; but the bother was that one and all
took the same line of reasoning, and the result was that
nobody was left to look the enemy in the face.</p>
<p>In order to bring about the fall of Metz a little sooner,
the Prussians drove out all the peasants from the neighbouring
villages, and forced them down to Metz. The
Mayor of Metz ordered them back; then the Prussians
fired over their heads, and tried to frighten them down
again. Meanwhile, the women and children were worn
out and hungry, and sat down to cry and wish for death.
These are some of the glories of war. Sometimes, when
they returned to their village home after a week’s absence,
they found a remarkable change. They had left a pretty
villa, trim gardens, and tiny pond and summer-house.
This is what an Englishman saw one day:</p>
<p>“I came on a little group, the extreme pathos of which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</SPAN></span>
made my heart swell. It was a family, and they sat in
front of what had once been their home. That home was
now roofless. The stones of the walls were all that was
left. The garden was a wreck, and the whole scene was
concentrated desolation. The husband leaned against
the wall, his arms folded, his head on his chest. The
wife sat on the wet ground, weeping over the babe at her
breast. Two elder children stared around them with
wonder and unconcern—too young to realize their misfortune.
No home, no food, a waggon and a field with
four graves in it—a sight enough to melt the hardest
heart.”</p>
<p>But there were so many similar scenes, and some much
more terrible to witness.</p>
<p>On the 29th of October, in torrents of rain, the French
soldiers went out of Metz, casting down their rifles and
swords in heaps at the gate, many glad enough to become
prisoners of war and have a full stomach. The Germans
came in very cautiously, examining fort and bastion and
bridge, to prevent any mine explosions, and in a few
hours “Metz la Pucelle” had become a German city.
Marshal Bazaine, who had done so little to help them,
was the object of every citizen’s curses. The women
pelted him with mud and called him “Coward!” as he
set off for the Prussian headquarters.</p>
<p class="source">From “The Siege of Metz,” by Mr. G. T. Robinson, by kind permission
of Messrs. Bradbury and Evans.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</SPAN></span></p>
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