^ * O « ^ ^^ ^ ^-^ . - - -^- • • « ^^ h' ^ 4 o V t • o k.^ ^n <;^ * Qii^ w -p * < ♦ 4 0^ ' THE PROLETARIAN REVOLT. A HISTORY OF The Paris Commune OF 1871. BY y G. B. BENHAM. " War is immoral, yet we fight.'"'— Raoul Rigault. SAN. FRANCISCO: INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING CO. 1898 26242 Entered according to Act of Con^-ess, in the year 1898, by G. B. Beniiam, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washing-ton. TWO COPIES R£C: iVED, TSE LIBRARY lor CONGRESS WASHINGTON s INTRODUCTION. Most of the historians of the Commune have said very little concerning the situation of affairs which gave birth to this extraordinary uprising. It is true that some of them have recognized its essentially proletarian character, but few have connected the Commune with the long series of events which led up to it. These authors have seen in the Paris revolution merely an outbreak of the turbulent members of society, discontented without reason and engaged in hopeless rebellion against the position in life to which ignorance and incapacity had consigned them. Many writers upon this subject, unable to divest themselves of their prejudices, and striving rather to give a popular than a just description of this revolt, have declared the aspirations of the French pro- letariat to have been compounded of folly and iniquity, leading, on this occasion, to an attempt to destroy the foundations of society and inaugurate* a reign of lawlessness and disorder. Contentedly believing all things old to be good and all usages established to be necessary, these writers have taken but little notice of the developments in in- dustrial and political economy, or of the increasing intelligence of the workers and their consequent realization of their changed condition. It would be necessary to trace the history of the evolution of capitalist production, and to review the political and literary progress of modern civilization, to recount in detail all the nil INTRODUCTION. causes which led to this great uprising. It will be sufficient here to indicate the principal historical events which have logical connection with the Commune. The presence of that spirit of inquiry and of secular progress, which, during the preceding four centuries had developed civilization, made possible the American and French revolutions. In them was signalized the advance of political democracy and the decline of absolutism, monarchical and religious. That surrounding economic conditions continually fostered discontent, accelerated the in- tellectual advance and raised the Democratic aspira- tions of the proletariat, is evidenced in the doc- trines promulgated advocating a more equitable distribution of natural resources and industrial products, by a political rearrangement of society. The uncertainties caused by the swift changes in their industrial condition, together with the dissipation of the religious credulity of the past, produced among the workers in all civ- ilized nations such independent thought and far- reaching desires as to dismay the foremost in the ranks of those striving for a mere political democ- racy. The conquest of science and invention reacted upon the moral and intellectual growth of the time. Not content with the surrender of divine prerogatives of domination by kings and ecclesias- tics, this new movement demanded the abrogation of the political supremacy which has its basis in the private ownership and control of the social powers of production. During the revolutions of 1848, which shook nearly every throne in Europe, almost the first indi- cations of distinct working-class political activity are to be recognized. In every quarter of Europe INTRODUCTION. the Red Spectre of Communism stalked before the astonished eyes of the middle-class, who had in- tended to secure by these revolts which they had initiated, merely constitutional g-overnment, free- dom of the press, of speech and the supremacy of commercial interests. Frightened by this unex- pected apparition, the bourgeoisie quickly made terms with the defenders of monarchical and aris- tocratic privileges, sacrificing many of their re- forms in the interests of " public order." While the authorities were engaged in sup- pressing these uprisings, working-class representa- tives from various countries met at London and issued the Manifesto of the Communist Party. The ideas enunciated by this programme spread among the workers in every civilized land, and the influ- ence of the manifesto was soon to be traced in all the working-class agitation of the time.* Vigorous as were the efforts of governments and their com- mercial and clerical allies to prevent speakers and writers from spreading the new doctrines, it was only in the suppression of speech that the authori- ties were measurably successful. But the progress of ideas keeps pace with social development. Publications poured from secret presses and were widely circulated among the ** lower orders of society." In 1864, the International Workingmen's Association was founded. The purpose of the or- ganization, as stated by its founders, was to " weld into one body the whole militant proletariat of Europe and America." This Association flourished. * Previous tf> 1SS8, the text had been reprinted many times in Switzer- land, England, America and France. Two editions in Russian were printed in Geneva, one by Bakounine [1864], and one by Vera Zasulitch [1882]. It has been published in Danish and Spanish several times and once in Armenian. Its circulation has been enormous. vi INTRODUCTION. It was the most prominent and formidable workingmen's society of its day, and was the first recognition of the complete identity of the workers' interests in all civilized countries. ''^ In France it grew rapidly, and the most intelligent and ad- vanced of the proletariat became its members. The most superficial acquaintance with the progress of industrial development, and the conse- quent revolution in the conditions of existence of vast masses in society, should convince anyone that an organized attempt to establish a social democratic autonomy was sure, sooner or later, somewhere, to be made; the peculiar situation of *Permanent statutes adopted at its first meeting, London, 1864, and con- firmed at its Geneva congress in 1866 : " In consideration that the emancipation of the laboring classes must be accomplished by the laboring classes, that the battle for the emancipation of the laboring classes does not signify a battle for class privileges and monopolies, but for equal rights and duties, and the abolition of class rule; " That the economic dependence of the laboring man upon the monop- olist of the implements of work, the sources of life, forms the basis of every kind of servitude, of social misery, of spiritual degradation, and political dependence; "That, therefore, the economic emancipation of the laboring classes is the great end to which every political movement must be subordinated as a simple auxiliary; " That all exertions which, up to this time, have been directed towards the attainment of this end, have failed on account of the want of solidarity between the varions branches of labor in everj'' land, and by reason of the absence of a brotherly bond of unity between the laboring classes of different coim tries; " That the emancipation of labor is neither a local nor a national, but a social, problem, which embraces all countries in which modern societj' exists, and whose solution depends upon the practical and theoretical co- operation of the most advanced lands; " That the present awakening of the laboring classes in the industrial lands of Europe gives occasion for new hope, but at the same time contains a solemn warning not to fall back into old errors, and demands an immediate union of the movements not yet united; ■' , in consideration of all these circimistanees, the first Inter- national Labor Congress declares that the International Workingmen's Asso- ciation, and all societies and individuals belonging to it, recognize truth, right, and morality as the basis of their conduct towards one another and their fellow-men, without respect to color, creed, or nationality. This con- gress regards it as the duty of man to demand the rights of a man and citizen, not only for himself, but for every one who does his duty. No rights with- out duties; no duties without rights*" INTRODUCTION. Vll Paris and of France in 1 871, seemed to the workers to supply the necessary conditions for such an attempt. The traditions which the French people had inherited from the great revolution of 1789, no doubt influenced many of the partisans of the Commune. The belief, too, that there was a scheme on foot in the Assembly to restore the Orleanists, prompted many of the advanced Republicans to join in the movement. But the tens of thousands of National Guards, made up exclusively of work- ingmen, under the control of an elected body com- posed almost entirely of workingmen, stamp the uprising with an indubitably proletarian character. Its significance can hardly be overestimated. It was a skirmish of the forces which will meet in greater actions on broader fields. Its history is that of the greatest revolt of "free " workers the world has ever seen. In consideration of the almost world-wide unrest among the wage- working class, and the tre- mendous growth of social democratic opinion, it is believed that a just survey of the incidents of such a movement and an attempt to portray its significance will be acceptable to all inclined to in- vesigate the social problems of the age. This volume is therefore submitted to the public with the consciousness that the facts ascer- tainable have been fairly presented, and it is hoped in a manner which will, to some extent, correct the many popular misconceptions regarding the acts, the interests and the personnel of the Commune. G. B. Bknham. San Francisco, January, 189S> SCEAUX*^ TAe Fi'^ufvs c/c/u^U lA.& Jr/r^f^ulisseM^*zts inl^ trAicA. Paris is e^u^uled.. I. France and The Second Empire. The France that the Revolution of 1789-96 produced was one in which " neither the upper nor lower crust could long endure." Feudalism had held a longer sway there than in England, and the constitution which was a heritage from the days of Danton could not form a lasting basis of govern- mental action. The progress to the revolution of 1830 developed the working class as a conscious social factor, and here first appeared, in somewhat vague form, the proletarian movement for what is now known as vSocialism. This Revolution of 1830 was a middle-class affair, but so determined were the proletarians and so desperately did they defend the barricades that they distinguished them- selves from the bourgeoisie whose initiative they had followed. This was repeated on a larger scale in 1848, and the workingmen, to further differentiate themselves, took up the red flag as their banner, an act which gained for them the name of Red Republi- cans.* One of the results of the displacement of Royalty in 1 848 was the elevation of I,ouis Napoleon Bonaparte to the presidency of the newly consti- tuted French Republic. He was elected by an im- mense popular majority. The circumstances of 'coup d'etat," by which he became Emperor^ are too well known to be related here. *Before the middle of June, 1848, the assembly issued a decree dissolving tlie national workshops. Forty thousand men took to the barricades to the 2 THK PARIS COMMUNK. The International Workingmen's Association became a prominent factor in politics during the Second Empire. The various political par- ties, from Orleanists to Communists, for several years preceding 1870, viewed with much the same complacency the too evident decadence of the Empire. All classes in society were rest- less. The Orleanists hoped for a restoration to power. The w^orkingmen had received little and had nothing to hope for in a continuation of the Napoleonic regime. Various events of more or less importance had made the Emperor unpopular; his warlike ventures had not raised the military prestige of France; his cousin, Pierre Bonaparte, was simply fined ^5000 for the murder of citizen Victor Noir. Gigantic schemes of fraudulent speculation, countenanced and fostered by those in high places, absorbed the earnings and savings of the people and involved thousands in ruin. Judicial tribunals were debauched and the public officials rioted in corruption and extravagance. f It became necessary to divert the public mind from the rottenness of the government. In order to do this, and with the hope of re-establishing confidence in the Empire, a war with Germany was resolved upon. A pretext was found in the claim of a Prussian prince to the succession of the cry of " bread or death." Eight thousand were killed in the fight, double that number were taken prisoners, three thousand of whom were afterwards shot in cold blood. ******** The Patnae, an organ of the government, spoke in these terms: — "We are surrounded by cannibals. If they remain in their lair they must be ex- tinguished; if they come out they must be c^U to pieces.'" M. Montelembert, the great Ultramontanest, declared in the assembly, that, " It is necessary to undertake against socialism a Roman expedition at home There only remains for us war — war carried on energetically and by every means." M. Thiers declared the constitution giving manhood suffrage "a vile bit of rag. " During 1850, the constitution was revised, manhood suffrage destroyed, and over four millions of workmen disfranchised. — Sketchley. tThiers, renewing his tortuous cunning and servile skillfulness, soug^ht to profit by all the Imperial mistakes. — Loekwood FRANCE AND THE SECOND EMPIRE. 3 throne of Spain. The national spirit was aroused, and the dissatisfied people became eager for hostilities. France sent into the field soldiers in abundance, but inefficiently disciplined, and officered by men whose tactics are a mystery, and whose operations were almost wholly unsuccessful, The French armies won but one important battle ; the Germans added victory to victory on French soil until Sedan fell. Another series of victories brought them to the gates of Paris. The French troops had scarcely delayed their march. Napoleon III aspired to imitate the first Em- peror, but the Second Empire will only be con- templated in pity for its victim, the French nation.* As the International Workingmen's Associa- tion was a prominent element in the Commune, it may be well hereto record its position regarding the war between Germany and France. In the J^eveil of] uly 12th, 1870, was published a manifesto ''to the Workmen of all Nations," from which we extract the following few passages: — "Once more," says this document, "on the pretext of European equilibrium, of national honour, the peace of the world is menaced by political ambitions. French, German, Spanish workmen ! let our voices unite in one cry of reprobation against war ! . . . .War for a question of preponderance or a dynasty, can, in the eyes of workmen, be nothing but a criminal absurdity. In answer to the war-like proclamations of those who exempt themselves from the blood-tax, and find in public " *The rascality of ministers, the unskillfulnesa and treason of generals, the shame of Sedan and Metz, the tortures of tJie siego of Paris, and the disgraceful capitulation which followed the infamies of Bori.caax and Ver- sailles made up the closing scenes of the Second Empire.— Lockwood^ 4 THE PARIS COMMUNE. misfortunes a source of fresh speculations, we protest, we who want peace, labor, and liberty ! . Brothers of Germany! Our division would only result in the complete triumph of despotism on both sides of the Rhine. . . . Workmen of all countries ! Whatever may for the present be- come of our common efforts, we, the members of the International Workingmen's Association, who know of no frontiers, we send you, as a pledge of indissoluble solidarity, the good wishes and salu- tations of the workmen of France." This manifesto of the Paris section was fol- lowed by numerous similar French addresses, of which we can here only quote the declaration of Neuilly-sur-Seine, published in the Marseillaise of July 22nd:—" The war, is it just ? No ! The war, is it national? No! It is merely Dynastic. In the name of humanity, of democracy, and the true interests of France, we adhere completely and energetically to the protestation of the Inter- national against the war." The German workmen of many cities replied in like sentiments. A mass meeting of workmen, held at Bruns- wick on July i6th, expressed its full concurrence with the Paris manifesto, spurned the idea of national antagonism to France, and wound up its resolutions with these words: — "We are enemies of all wars, but above all of dynastic wars. . With deep sorrow and grief we are forced to undergo a defensive war as an unavoidable evil; but we call, at the same time upon the whole German working-class to render the recurrence of such an immense social misfortune impossible by vindicating for the peoples themselves the power FRANCE AND THE SECOND EMPIRE. 5 to decide on peace and war, and making them masters of their own destinies.'* At Chemnitz, a meeting of delegates, repre- senting 50,000 Saxon workmen, adopted unani- mously a resolution to this effect: — '' In the name of the German Democracy, and especially of the workmen forming the Democratic Socialist Party, we declare the present war to be exclusively dynastic We are happy to grasp the fraternal hand stretched out to us by the workmen of France. . . . Mindful of the watchword of the International Workingmen's Associations: Proletarians of all countries imife, we shall never forget that the workmen of all countries are our friends and the despots of all countries our e?ie7nies.'" The Berlin branch of the International also replied to the Paris manifesto: — "We," they say, "join with heart and hand your protestation. ... Solemnl}^ we promise that neither the sound of the trumpet, nor the roar of the cannon, neither victory nor defeat, shall divert us from our common work for the union of the children of toil of all countries." 6 THK PARIS COMMUNB. II. Paris — September 20 to March 1, Paris, in 1870, was a city of almost 2,000,000 in- habitants, and, as to-day, the gayest and most fashionable capital in the world.* The city is built on both sides of the river Seine, whose islands formed the nucleus of the metropolis. It is elliptical in shape, environed by numerous villages and by thickly-settled country. The city is sur- rounded by a fortified wall, 21 miles in internal circumference, encircling an area of 30 square miles. Detached forts, 16 in number, guarded the approach to the line of fortifications. Fort Valerien, the largest and most advantageously situ- ated, being on the west of the ellipse formed by Forts Issy, Vanves, Montr ouge, Bic^tre and Ivry, these five lying to the south of the city. The fall of Sedan on September ist was not made known to the Parisians until September 3. The authorities were justly condemned for hold- ing back the news, and their pusillanimity aroused the citizens, who, on September dth, ousted the corpse of Imperialism, and there was at the Hotel de Ville immediately instituted that incarnation of plans and inaction, the self-constituted Government *The ancient Lutetia Parisornm; historically noticed by Csesar in "Com, mentaries" fifty years B C ; originally the chief settlement of the Parisii. a Gallic tribe conquered by the Romans. Population in 1869, 1,875,000 Paris has 20 arrondissements, each having a Mayor and two councillors. The Prefect of the Seine, appointed by the government, is the chief city oHicial; sometimes referred to as Central Mayor or Mayor of Paiii^ SEPTKMBKR 20 TO MARCH I. 7 of the National Defence. The members of the deposed house of deputies, elected under Napoleon III, seized the reins of power, and at once took on themselves all functions of government. General Trochu, commandant of Paris, refused to have anything to do with the new government un- less he was .made its head. Fearing his influence with the military, he was made Governor of Paris and Commander-in-Chief of the armies. M. Thi rs refused to be placed in any position in this govern- ment, which was dependent on the caprice of an ex- cited populace. He had sometime before distin- guished himself by referring to the people as " vile multitude.''^ Jules Favre, an orator of advanced years, was made Minister of Foreign Affairs. Leon Gambetta became Minister of the Interior. Etienne Arago was appointed Central Mayor, and made a speech in which it was apparent that he considered the Commune established.** "The first step taken by the new government was to send Thiers on a roving tour to all the Courts of Europe there to beg mediation by offering the barter of the Republic for a king."t An order was issued for the release of all political prisoners, which set at liberty Henri ♦Thiers, holding' himself in reserve to participate in the intrigues, which he saw a vast field for.— Loelcwood. **Many who use the word commune glibly have a very imperfect under- standing of its significance, and little imagine that it is as harmless and inno- cent a word as township, and means pretty much the same thing. The commune, with an emphasis on the article, means simply Paris, or, in a secondary sense, the administrative officers collectively governing Paris. France is divided into departments and communes, the same as our states are divided Into counties and townships , and Paris by itself forms one of these communes. The insurrection in Paris, of March 18, 1871, was one in favor of extreme local self-government The idea was to make each com- mune at least as independent as one of the states of the United States, and to unite dl the communes into a confederation with limited powers. The movement in favor of the autonomy of Paris is an old one, and has been supported by many able and respectable Frenchmen. One in favor of the movement la however, properly called a communalist, and not a communist, and the movement itself is communalism— not communism..— Rtchard T. Ely. tAddr»BB of Int. W. A. 8 . THK- PARIS COMMUNE. Rochefort, Gustave Flourens, Cluseret, Deles^ cluze, Grotisset, Vermorel and Eudes; also Megy and the others concerned in the bomb plot* Raoul Rigault, a young law student of revolu- tionary tendencies, established himself as head of the police department, where he continued for some time, the government not daring to depose him, for fear of antagonizing the radicals. More puerile conduct, in all respects is difficult to imagine than that of this singularly established government. Public meetings were addressed by Socialists and members of the International in all districts of the city. A demand was made on the government for an election. A Committee Central was chosen from the arrondissements; the method of choice was as follows: in each of the 20 arrondissements a meeting was held; a Com- mittee of Vigilance was elected by acclamation, and from this body four were selected from each arrondissement, making a Committee Central composed of 80 members, which at once made its headquarters at the headquarters of the Inter- national. Paris had undergone a dozen seiges, was now well provisioned, and, with the constant ad- dition of detachments driven in by the Germans, in condition to support a long and vigorous defence. The Parisians were vexed and mortified by the misfortunes of the French arms. In the belief that the Germans could not sustain the attacks from without and the arduous labors of so *Megy had been sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment for killing an officer who had unlawfully attempted to arrest him for participating in what was known as the " Complot of Bombs," a plot to overthrow by force, the Napoleonic Government In this affair there was also convicted and sentenced to shorter terms of imprisonment; Ferre, law student, Cournet, journalist and Moilen, physician Protot, lawyer, also accused, was by influence released, and defended the others when they were on trial fpr taking part in th« plot. SEPTKMBKR 20 TO MARCH I . ' ' 9 great an offensive undertaking, upon the subsis- ance that could be brought to or acquired in a hos- tile country, the inhabitants of the capital believed tlieir situation secure. There were about 500,000 men under arms in the city. On September 20th, the siege began. It is now conceded that the fall of the city was acknowledged to be but a matter of time by General Trochu.* L,eon Gambetta was sent out of the city in a bal- loon, to rouse the country to the support of Paris, and his efforts were not unsuccessful. Trochu had "plans" which were not operative. The troops sent against the Germans from the outside were not supported by the city's defenders. The popu- lace was incensed at the tardy tactics and timorous endeavors of the Government of the National Defence. The radicals wanted a Com- mune; the bourgeoisie were content with any form of control which would make a resistance adequate to the armament and ability of the city. The de- fence was understood to be a farce, and so ex- pressed in the correspondence of those high in ofl&cial position in the government. Bismarck afterward said of Trochu: " If he was a German general, I should have him shot." *Four months after the siege began, Trochu, in the presence of his col- leagues, addressed the assembled Mayors of Paris. He said "The first ques- tion put to me by my colleagues on the very evening of September 4th was this: Paris, can it, with any chance of success stand a siege by the Prussian army? I did not hesitate to answer in the negative. Some of my colleagues here present will warrant the truth of my words and the persist- ance of my opinion. * * * i told them the attempt of Paris to hold out would be a folly. * an heroic folly." In a letter to Gambetta, M. Favre avows that what they were "defend- ing" against w not the Prussian soldiers, but the workingmen of Paris. During ihe whole continuance of the siege the Bonapartist * * whom Trochu had wisely intrusted with the command of the Paris army, exchanged, in their intimate correspondence, jokes at the well-understood mockery of defence (see, for instance, the correspondence of Alphonse Simon Guind, supreme commander of the artillery of the Army of Defence of Paris and Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor, to Suzanne, general of division uf artillery, a correspondence published by the Journal Offi,ciel of the Commune.) lO THS PARIS COMMUNK. Mixed factions of workers and bourgeoisie nearly obtained control of the city October 31st. Flourens, Delescluze, and Blanqui were the leaders of the movement. Some members of the government were taken prisoners; but many of the bourgeois battal ions of the Guard supported the government, and, not desiring an internal war in the beseiged city, the insurrectionists re- leased their prisoners, and retired, under the ex- press agreement that no action was to be taken against any of the participants in the uprising. By a plebiscite November 3d the government was retained in power; feeling secure, it imme- diately issued warrants for the apprehension of the leaders in the affair of October 31st, although it had been pledged to take no action against any concerned. This brought the condem- nation of all fair-minded people upon the adminis- tration. Arago, the Mayor, at once resigned, and Jules Ferry, a lawyer, was appointed to suc- ceed him. On January 6th, red placards were posted in the city condemning the government and demand- ing the election of a Commune. These were signed by the representatives of the arrondisse- ments, among the signatures were between thirty and forty names of those afterward active in the work of the Commune. January 19th, in response to the demands for the government to "do some- thing," a sortie of 85,000 troops was made, which seemed likely to be successful in the morning, but was mismanaged and failed in the afternoon. A council of the governmental and city officials was held on January 20th, and declared further resis- tance useless; Trochu was disi)laccd and General Vinoy put in command, but the essential character of the "defence" remained the same. SKPTEMBKR 20 TO MARCH I. II On January 226., there wa an uprising, sup- ported by a large force of the Guards. The seat of government, the Hotel de Ville, was defended by the Mobiles. The latter opened fire, it is said on the order of Gustave Chaudey, one of the Mayor's deputies; the Guards returned the fire; in all 30 were killed and many wounded; the authorities took some prisoners and insurgents were repulsed. An order was written on January 27th, by Brunei, colonel of regiment in the Guards and Piazza, commandant of batta lion, for an assembling of the National Guard, the overthrow of the com- manders of the forts and their occupation by the Guards, who were to hold them at all hazards asrainst the Germans. To deliver the forts seemed to the Parisians the delivering of the city, to which they were unalterably opposed. But few Guards were at the rendezvous; the Prefect of Police ob- tained possession of the order, and Piazza and Brunei were imprisoned to await a military court trial. The German flag was hoisted on the forts on January 29th . An armistice was agreed upon and an election to be held February 8th. What was termed an "armistice" was in reality the surrender of Paris, The object was specifically stated to be "to permit the Government of the National Defence of France to convoke an assembly, freely elected, which will pronounce on the question whether war shall be continued, or what terms of peace shall be made."* The terms were mortifyingly humiliating to the Parisians. The city was virtually starved into the acceptance of them. Dogs, cats and rats were used as food and had high market prices. Jules Favre, in his negotiation with Bismarck, stipulated ♦Harper's Magazine, March, 1871. 12 THE PARIS COMMUNE. for the retention of their arms by the National Guards, who were to be *' charged with the preser- vation of the peace of Paris."* That the National Guards were allowed to re- tain their arms was not to preserve order in Paris, but because the government did not dare attempt the disarmament. There was a sullen dis- approval of the terms of the armistice throughout the entire country, and in Paris in particular. The Guard, it was safe to believe, would resist, ostensibly from patriotic motives, the disarmament. As a matter of fact, the Socialists, Communists, Internationals, and ultra-Republican leaders had the National Guard's ear, and this, with the other circumstances surrounding their proba- ble condition after disbandment, made the Guards an uncertain factor in the government's calcula- tions. The National Guard was almost entirely made up of workingmen; they saw Orleanists, Im- perialists and Clericals, all of whom they recog- nized as enemies, conniving at the terms of surren- der. Arrears of rent had accumulated against the Guardsmen while they served the state at about 30 cents a day. Building and other industries were almost entirely suspended. This condition pre- cluded the possibility of a return to labor by mem- bers of the Guard should it be disbanded. They were incensed at the suggestion of disarmament. Gambetta protested against the armistice; sent out a proclamation on his own responsibility, clam- oring for a continuation of war, and almost over- turned the arrangements. But the government an- nulled his proclamation, although there was a delay of twenty -four hours in revictualling the city. The *"Thcii was committed tbe crowning error of leaving armed a National Guard, a lartre portion of M'bicb was the refuse of France and the scum of dififerent European countries."— Fetridge, SKPTEMBKR 20 TO MARCH I. 1 3 conduct of his colleagues so exasperated Gambetta that he resigned as Minister of the Interior.* It is stated that more than 125,000 persons left Paris between January 29th and the day of election. An officer of the National Guard, soon after the armistice began, passed the French lines and fired his pistol at a Prussian sentinel. The officer was arrested and imprisoned by the Germans. Two Germans were arrested in Paris by the Guard, and sentenced to death by the Central Committee. The Prussian military authorities demanded the release of the condemned men. The Guard finally gave up the two men on agreement that their officer should be released. To this the French authorities agreed, but the Germans held that the officer should be tried by court martial and shot if found guilty. Thiers was bitterly de- nounced by the exasperated Guards, who claimed they had been tricked by the government. The free elections of this Assembly were held upon a notice of only eight days, which barely reached some of the provinces on the eve of election. Thiers made an electioneering tour and was chosen as deputy in twenty-six districts. Paris elected many radicals. — Delescluze, Pyat, Rochefort, Milliere, Gambon, Malon, Tridon, Tolain and Vesinier.f Varlin and Cluseret were defeated candidates. The rural districts sent Orleanists and Clericals, and some Republicans came from the cities. In session at Bordeaux, M.Grevywas, February 1 6th, almost unanimously elected President of the newly formed Assembly; Adolphe Thiers, on February 17th, was chosen, '■'■' A resistance was orsranized by Gambetta, at the head of a stock-jobbing' tlique, whose interests, both commercial and political, forbade them to let the war die out, lest they should find themselves face to face with a people determined to be fieeced no longer. — William Morris and E. Belfort Bax. tVesinier had been Secretary to Eugene Sue. 14 Tun PARIS COMMUNE. by the Assembly, as President of tlie French Republic. There was an evident desire on the part of this Assembly to take upon itself general govern- mental functions in addition to the special duty for which it had been elected.* General Vinoy had disarmed 250,000 men on February 9th, thus billeting upon Paris and vicinity a huge number of men without pay and, under the existing disturbances, without hope of employ- ment; 12,000 men retained their arms to " protect the peace of Paris." The latter part of February saw the Paris military formulating plans, and an arrangement was made to protect their interests. There were 20 Councils of Legion, one in each arrondis- sement, each Council composed of four representa- tives from each batta lion. Every Council of I^egion sent four representatives to form a Central Directorate, which was to be the governing military power. All representatives to be elected by the Guards. A few batta lions refused to join. The Directorate took the name of ' ' The Central Com- mittee of the National Guard." This Committee superseded in power, and largely in personnel, the committee elected from the arrondissements in the previous autumn. M. Favre was the most fervent of the public men in his protestations against surrendering on the terms of the Prussians, declaring, as Minister of Foreign Affairs, that the Government of National Defence would never "surrender an inch of terri- tory or a stone of a fortress." Bismarck and Thiers, *Ex-Emperor Napoleon addressed the Assembly calling their attention to the specific purpose for which they had been elected and their consequent usurpation of power in continuing as a general representative bodj" for the Bepubljc— ZTarpcr's Magazine, April, 1S71. SEPTEMBER 20 TO MARCH I. I 5 on February 26th, signed the peace treaty at Ver- sailles. Paris was turned over to the Germans, and two of France's richest provinces — Alsace and Lorraine — went to the victors. A war indemnity of $100,000,000 was agreed upon, and there were many other exacting stipulations in the treaty. On February 27th, Brunei, Piazza and Vermorel, imprisoned for political offenses, were released by the National Guards, who captured the prison; the Guards were becoming very active in opposi- tion to the Assembly, which was a source of irri- tation to the Parisians because of its decision for peace. Immediately preceding the entry of the Ger- mans into the city, some cannon were stored by General Vinoy near the quarters to be occupied by the conquerors. Being afraid of seeing them fall into the hands of the invaders, and possibly turned against the citizens, the National Guard and the populace transferred the guns to posi- tions of importance in the city, principally Mont- martre, Belleville, Buttes Chaumont and La Villette. Edouard Moreau, an active member of the Committee Central, was foremost in directing these operations. The guns were furnished by subscriptions of the National Guard,* and in the articles of peace were recognized as the property of the Guard, but Th rs, when expediency furnished a pretext, demanded the cannon as "the property of the nation. ' ' A committee was appointed from the National Guard to take charge of the defence of Montmartre. ♦Address Int. W. A. 1 6 THE PARIS COMMUN:^. III. March, Montmartre and The Commune. The terms of peace agreed to by Thiers were ratified by a vote of 546 for to 107 against in the Assembly at Bordeaux on March ist It was also decided to strip Paris of her position of capital and curb her.republican tendencies. The pay of the guards was withheld. Many of the Paris dep- uties, feeling insulted by these acts of the Assem^ . bly, returned to the metropolis. At II o'clock on March ist the German troops commenced their entry into Paris; in a few hours 30,000 of them occupied the quarters agreed upon. They were received with opprobrious epithets by some of the populace; but few people were on the streets; the theaters suspended their perform- ances; mourning was hung on many houses; business places were closed in the parts of city oc- cupied by the invaders . The German troops retired from Paris on the 3d, joining about 50,000 Germans who occupied the forts on the north of the city. The higher officers of the Guards formed a committee which amalgamated with the elected Gommittee Central of the Guard. The military forces in Paris now decided upon a closer alli- ance. The Federals and the National Guard formed "The Republican Federation." The forces in Paris will hereafter be designated generally as Federates, MARCH, MONTMARTRE AND THE COMMUNE. 1 7 which includes Mobiles, ( reserves ) Franc-tireurs (irregulars) and many regulars, (soldiers of the line) who now allied themselves with the National Guard. The Central Committee at this time received as members, four delegates especially deputed from the International Workingmen's Association. Several members of the latter had been before this time elected from the Guards to the Committee; all officers higher than chiefs of batta lion were also recognized as members of the Central Committee. The Assembly appointed officers for the Parisian military; the latter declared their inten- tion of obeying no officers not elected by themselves. On March 7th the reserves in all dis- tricts outside the city were disbanded. On March nth the government suspended five papers edited respectively by Rochefort, Jules Valles, Felix Pyat, Vermesch and Humbert, Paschal Grousset, and one other edited anonymously. These papers had vigorously and truthfully attacked the gov- ernment for its unfriendly attitude toward Paris. The trial by military court of those who were prom- inent in the affairs of October 31st and January 226. now came on. The accused were acquitted, with two exceptions — Blanqui and Flourens — who were sentenced to death. Flourens was at liberty in a quarter of the city which protected him; Blanqui was ill, but was put under arrest at once. Both of the condemned men issued proclamations call- ing on the citizens to unite to establish a govern- ment of the people. Flourens and Blanqui were condemned to death on March nth, the same day that the Assembly's decision to remove the nation's capital from Paris to Versailles became definitely known. 1 8 THE PARIS COMMUNE. These two events so manifestly inimical to the Paris populace, created an intense excitement. Mutterings of discontent were heard on every hand. Thiers and the Assembly government arrived in Paris on March 15th and at once set about finding means to disarm the people and to transfer the governmental center to Versailles * Attempts by peaceful means to obtain pos- session of the cannon at Montmartre, through the Mayor of i8th Arrondissement, were futile; the Guards and the people refused to give them up. General Vinoy is said to have entered the Montmartre district, on a tour of inspection, where he was villified by the women, pelted with stones and other missiles; but the crowning insult to the military leader was the offer to him of a workingman's cap. On March i6th a meeting was held by the Federates; officers were elected. Garibaldi was elected general in chief. Lullier, a forcible speaker and a great swaggerer, was appointed colonel of artillery. Budes, Duval, Henry and others, afterward prominent in the defence, were chosen chiefs of battalion. On the following day Thiers issued a proc- lamation to the citizens of Paris, demanding the return of the cannon to the arsenals and the deliverance to justice of " criminals " who "affect to institute a government," and threatening force if the disarmament was not immediate. In the evening, an unsuccessful attempt was made to obtain possessionof 56 cannon at Place des Vosges; these guns were removed that night by the Fed- erates to Belleville and the Buttes Chaumont. The ♦Versailles is situated 11 miles suiith-west of Paris, and in 1870 had about 45,000 inhabitants. MARCH, MONTMARTRB AND THE) COMMUNK. I9 Federates now had in their possession 471 pieces of artillery, 171 of which were at Montmartre. About 3 o'clock on the morning of March 1 8th an attempt was made by the Assembly's troops to take the cannon from Montmartre. This effort, made by a detachment under General I/ecomte, would have been successful if transport- ation of the artillery after capture had been properly arranged for. The populace and most of the Federates were asleep. A faint defence was made. Several Federates were shot, a few captured; these were placed in No. 6 Rue des Rosiers, which house had, the day before, been the quarters of the Montmartre Defence Committee. Hours of waiting for horses to haul away the cannon followed the capture. Rockets were fired from Federate strongholds, and the rappel was sounded in many quarters. The morning of the i8th dawned. Proclama- tions had been posted in the neighborhood by lyccomte on behalf of the government in the name of "law and order." These the women tore down. The rallying populace and Federates won over the soldiery. The women fed and brought wine to the Assembly troops on guard; the Federates appealed to the friendship of their comrades, and a general fraternization took place between the troops brought to capture the cannon and those who had placed them on Montmartre. The crowds forced back the guards, who yielded ground with scarcely a show of reluctance. Le- comte was incensed and addressed those showing their friendliness to the people, saying, "You shall have your deserts for this." ■ lyccomte three or four times ordered his men to fire on the crowd, but they refused, and 20 THE PARIS COMMUNE. finally j oined the people in capturing the general and some of his officers. Some of his soldiers, whom he had ordered under arrest for not firing into the crowd, wished to shoot him forthwith. The prisoners were taken to Chateau Rouge, a short distance from the scene of the arrest, and lyccomte was made to sign an order for the evacuation of Montmartre. Some of L/ecomte's men, recognized as gen- d'armes under Napoleon III, were killed by the people and Federates. About 2 p. m. Ivecomte and lo other officers were removed from Chateau Rouge to 6 Rue des Rosiers, where there was a clamorous assembly of the people and Guards, the latter incensed by the wrongs of their comrades, and all maddened by the strong efforts made by the commanding officer in the morning to have his troops fire on the people. lyccomte's soldiers, who had felt his severity, struggled, assisted by the people, to take him from the guards. A new prisoner was now introduced, amid an awful din. This was General Clement Thomas, said to have been captured while in the act of taking plans of the barracks on the boulevard Rochechaument.* He was almost immediately taken from those in charge, hurried to the yard adjoining and shot to death. "He stood up boldly to receive his death, and shaking his fist at his executioners, denounced them as cowards." (^^ Laches y^ A volley was not fired, the soldiers *He was passing in an inoffensive manner through the Pviie Marie- An- toinette, when one of the insurgents having recognized him by his large white beard, went straight to him, saying, "You are General Clement Thomas? I don't think I can be mistaken. That beard of j^ours betraj's you." " Well, supposing I am General Thomas. Have I not alwaj's done m.vduty?" "You are a traitor and a miserable.'" said the insurgent, grasping the old man by the collar. He was immediately assisted by others, who helped to drag the Generalin the direction of Rue des Rosiers. — Fetridge. MARCH, MONTMARTRK AND THK COMMUNE. 21 shooting singly; Thomas did not fall until the fif- teenth shot, although struck many times before. General Clement Thomas had not been much heard of since he had assisted the enemies of the people in the butcheries of June. This, and the incidents next related were not likely to make either the populace or the Federates friendly to him. General Tamisier resigned as chief of the Guard when the Government of the National Defence broke its agreement with the leaders of the uprising of October and January by bringing them to trial. Clement Thomas was appointed his successor by the Government of the National Defence. He is accused of pitting the working- mens' battallions of the Guard against those recruited from the middle-class, and causing to be disbanded, by false assertions of cowardice, some of the bravest battalions, who wished to fight the Germans but who were not favorable to the singular plans of General Trochu, whom General Thomas served obseqiously. Clement Thomas had also resigned as commandant-in-chief of the National Guard on February 15th, 1871. After the killing of General Thomas, Lecomte was the marched out and shot to death against the wall in the same place formerly occu- pied by General Thomas, whose body now lay at I^ecomte's feet; he pleaded on behalf of his family for the mercy he had never shown. What had he cared for the families of those upon whom he had repeatedly ordered his troops to fire that morning? The first shot fired struck I^ecomte behind the ear, killing him instantly. - Generals Lecomte and Clement Thomas were killed by the infuriated soldiers and the 22 THK PARIS COMMUNE. inhabitants of the quarter* The shooting of Thomas was principally done by the members of the National Guard, who had served under him; Lecomte was killed by his own men, largely from the 88th regiment, who j eered at him as he was led out, and cried out to him, "Its your turn now; you gave the order to fire on the people." There is an undecided question as to whether Lecomte had a trial, but the belief is that he had some form of a trial. Evidence is lacking which would support the belief that General Thomas had any trial- 1 The other arrested officers were released. Shortly before Lecomte's arrest, some horses arrived at Montmartre; they were harnessed to several guns, and accompanied by a party of soldiers of the line, started from the heights toward the city; were intercepted by Federates; the women of the district threw themselves on the guns; the regulars fraternized with the Federates; the traces on the harnesses were cut, and the cannon were dragged away by the people. Endeavors by the Government to regain cannon in other quarters of the city had been in slight degree successful, but had generally failed more through the inadequacy of discipline and force in the attacking parties, than through the defensive efforts of the Federates. The 88th regiment of the line was the soldiery which first occupied Montmartre, and afterward fraternized with the populace. This regiment *0n the 26th March, 1871, the National Assembly decreed that pensions should he awarded to the widows of the two generals and that a monument to them should be erected at the expense of the State. This monument has been constructed at Pere Lachaise, of granite from Flanders. The remains of tlie two generals were deposited there on the 26th of December, 1875. — tThe tribunal that condemned the generals was said to have been pre- sided over by an artisan of the International Society named Assi.—Cassell. MARCH, MONTMARTRE AND THK COMMUNE. 23 was disbanded after the fall of the Commune, never to again exist in the army of France. General d'Aurelles des Paladines, who suc- ceeded Clement Thomas as Commander of the National Guard, issued a proclamation in the after- noon of the 1 8th March, calling on the Guards to ** rally round their chiefs" as " the only means of escaping ruin and the domination of the foreigner." Of the io6th Battalion ( which had defended the Hotel de Ville on October 31st, against the in- surrectionists) but 300 of the 1200 men responded; other battalions supposed to be loyal responded in about the same ratio. Every development showed strength for the uprising. The affair of March i8th was the signal for a general movement for defence against the govern- ment. Barricades were erected, guns mounted, and bystanders were called upon to work at build- ing, or to assist in the defence of street fortifications. The Central Committee took charge of the greater part of the city, and had at least 100,000 troops at its command. The government had only a few thousand, many of which were likely, at any time, to fraternize with the Federates and the people. A few slight conflicts took place on the 19th, the insurrectionists being always victorious. A call was issued by the Committee Central for an election of ofiicials to govern the city, in which was said: "Let Paris and France together establish the basis of a Republic, acclaimed with all its consequences, the only government that will forever close the era of invasions and civil wars," This was signed by Assi, Billioray, Ferrat, Babick, Kdouard Moreau, C. Dupont, Varlin, Boursier, Martier, Gushier, Lavalette, Fr. Jourde, 24 'TH^ PARIS COMMUNE. Rousseau, Ch. LuUier, Blanchet, J. Grollard, Barroud, H. Geresme, Fabre and Pougerot. Command of the National Guard was, by the Mayors, given to General Xanglois. He was rejected by the Central Committee and L,ullier was elected commander by the Federates. The officials of the Assembly government clandestinely left the city; Thiers leaving by the back door of the Hotel de Ville. General Vinoy took with him some troops and baggage, and by lo a. m., March 19th, most of the Assembly's soldiers had left Paris. Almost every governmental post was deserted. A battalion of the National Guard which passed the Foreign Office, about 4 a.m. of the 19th, uttering menacing cries, is said to have accelerated the movements of the fleeing government. When the officials fled the city, correspondence was found which fully revealed the perfidious character of the Government of the National Defence. The Assembly cut the telegraph wires to prevent all communication with the outside provinces. The prefects of the provinces were informed by the Assembly that if any edicts emanating from Paris be published, the prefect of the district where the publication took place would be immediately arrested. The fortifications surrounding the city were evacuated by order of Thiers and the troops marched to Versailles to guard the persons of the officials. The forts remained unoccupied many hours, each member of the Central Committee assuring himself that some of the Committees' officials would attend to to their occupation by the Federates. The events of the struggle awaited neither the dilatory MARCH, MONTMARTRK AND THE COMMUNE. 25 V tactics nor the education by experience of those placed in positions of responsibility in Paris. C Fort Valerian, the strategic key of the defence of Paris was manned by a strong force from Ver- sailles as soon as the government's blunder in withdrawing the troops was appreciated. But before this was accomplished. General Vinoy is said to have pleaded unsuccessfully for hours with Thiers, who persistantly refused to sanction the re-occupation, afraid of exposing his own person to danger if the troops were removed from Ver- sailles. Thiers was in great perturbation, fearing the march of the Federates on his capital, whif^h, it was conceded, was sure to fall into their hands if the attack was made. Indecision was prominent in the action of both parties. Neither knew exactly its position or its strength. The five forts on the south — Issy, Vanves, Montrouge, Irvy, Bicetre — were occupied by the Federates. They took charge of the Hotel de Ville after a slight conflict. Jules Ferry, Central Mayor, was ousted; soon after, being threatened on the streets by a mob who shouted ''Death to Ferry," he took refuge in the house of a friend, escaped out of a back window by means of a ladder, and accompanied by many others of the friends of the Assembly, slipped away to Ver- sailles. The Committee Central speedily took possession of all public buildings and raised over them the red flag.* Marshals McMahon and Canrobert also sought the seat of the Versailles government, the fate of lyccomte and Clement Thomas indicating sur- roundings not favorable for military leaders. * The establishment of that Republic which takes pillage as its leading principle and blazons its banners with the hues of murder.— CasseM 26 TH^ PARIS CPMMUN:^. Most of the city" officials had taken them- selves to Versailles, and the organization of the city now devolved upon the Committee Central. A communication was received by the new city government from the commander of the German troops occupying: the fort& on the north of the city, in which it was stated that the Prussians would not interfere with the internal dissensions if no enmity was shown toward foreigners. This made the Committee Central much more at ease and Paschal Grousset framed an answer acceptable to the Committee, which was forwarded to the German commander. Thiers ordered 50,000 francs to be paid by the Bank of France for the arrears due the loyal National Guards.* March 20th, the Guards' command was, by the Mayors, and by sanction of Thiers, placed in the hands of Vice-Admiral Saisset. The new com- mander wished to take active measures at once, and troops were necessary to support him; a few Guards friendly to the Assembly, principally small traders, were still in the city; these he endeavored to mobilize. Saisset, with the disposition exhib- ited by all officials and parties connected with Parisian public affairs, promulgated various proc- lamations. Jie could find no authoritative basis ;^^atisfaCtory , to the people, and his numerous p^pclamations gained fpr him little consideration. Bonne, a tailor. Captain in the Guards friendly to ; the Assembly , also issued a proclamation calling on :ali to support the Assembly "in the interests of so- ciety." A Captain Vitroley issued a proclama- *General d'Aurelles des Paladines attached much weight to the insincerity ..of M. Picard as a factor iu creating dissatisfaction in the Guard, The pay- ments due the Guards were always needlessly delayed ; some were never paid. MARCH, MONTMARTRK AND THE) COMMUNE. 27 tion in Saisset's behalf, imploring support for him in the interest of "order." Saisset could get no troops together in Paris; Thiers would send none from Versailles, as he feared an attack by the Federates. The Versailles government in the Journal Officiel denounced the killing of I^ecomte and Clement Thomas as assassination and charged the Committee Central with the crime. Tho: Rappel , a revolutionary paper, announced the fact of the killing of the generals with expressions of pro- found sorrow; stated that the National Guards en- deavored to prevent the shooting, but that the angry crowd and the soldiers of the line cried out for death. For the most part, the supporters of the revolt declared that by their acts toward the people the generals had forfeited their lives; that they had "made themselves amenable to the laws of war, which does not allow the assassination of women or espoinage." The Committee Central declared its intention of investigating the cir- cumstances of the killing, but no reports of such investigation appear in the records- Appeals for desertions from the Parisian to the Versailles support were responded to only by the students of the L,atin Quarter, who had been formerly of ultra-revolutionary tendencies, but who could not reasonably be expected, either from education or position in life, to join a move- ment so markedly proletarian as was the revolt now in progress. The National Guards who were especially appealed to, w^ere firm in their adher- ance, to the Committee Central. - The Mayors, to whom Thiers had delegated full powers, appointed a committee of three— M. Tirard, M. Dubail and M. Helegion to organize a 28 THE PARIS COMMUNE. resistance to the Committee Central, now fully recognized as the dominant factor in affairs. Edouard Moreati, Jourde and Varlin acted for the Committee Central. In a conference the latter desired to control the Guards, but was willing to give the Mayors full municipal powers. This the latter refused. At this point, it is stated that the Central Committee delegates declared that "if it came to a conflict " and the Federates were defeated, they would "make of the country a second Poland." There was a vague rumor afloat, .probably unfounded, that Saisset intended attempting to establish himself as a dictator. He yielded up his authority, disbanded his troops, and went to Versailles on Saturday the 25th, to be reproached for his action by the irascible and unstable poli- ticians of the Assembly, who would neither advise nor assist him.^ On the 2oth the Assembly declared the De- partment of the Seine and Oise to be in a state of seige. The Committee Central immediately ordered an election for Communal Councilors, on the basis of one representative for each 20,000 inhabitants, the election to take place March 22d. The. Journal Offi-ciel, the government organ, had been taken over and published by the Committee Central. The government at Versailles also published a Journal OJficiel^ which together with the Mayors of the arrondisements, protested against the hold- ing of the election called by the Committee Central. On March 20th, 29 Paris papers issued a protest against the election. *"Saisset disbanded his few battalions * * * and left on foot and in disguise for Versailles, where he reported to M. Thiers that it would take 300,000 men to suppress the Communal movement in Paris."— CasseK. MARCH, MONTMARTRK AND THK COMMUNE. 29 Raoul Rigault took charge of the Police department by order of the Committee Central. lyouis Blanc, Milliere and others of the ex- treme Republican members of the Assembly, posted a manifesto in Paris on the 20th, in which they promised to bring before the Assembly the matters of the election of all officers of the Guard by its members, and a municipal council to be elected by all citizens in Paris. In the Assembly's sitting on the 21st, M. Thiers spoke several times, using the most conciliatory language toward the radicals; he promised a municipal council for Paris, and de- clared that under no circumstances would he send an armed force against that city. Already the efforts made to increase the forces surrounding Paris w^ere showing results, and every event showed the insincerity of these statements made by the head of the Versailles government. The Committee Central delegated Tony Moilin as Mayor of the 6th arrondissement, in place of M. Herisson. Moilin, after gaining possession of the Mairie and being displaced, was again installed by three battalions of Guards under Lullier. What was called an ''order" manifestation took place on the 21st. Considerable numbers of men paraded the streets crying "Down with the Committee Central." Some altercations occurred which, for a time, threatened a loss of life. A few arrests were made, by order of the Committee Central. The Federates seized several arsenals and equipped citizens with arms and munitions. M. Bonjean, President of the Court of Cas- sation, an aged jurist and an ardent supporter of the Assembly, was arrested, but upon no definite charge. 3b THE PARIS COMMUNE. On the next (fafy aa "order" procession con- sisting principally ot civilians, but containing' many men in the Nationgil Guard uniform, all ap- parently unarmed, was intfeupted in its march as it attempted an entrance to the l*lace Vendome from the Rue de la Paix.* As the front ranks came up; the Guards in the Place Vendome turned the butts of their guns toward the crowd, who filled the air with cries for the Assembly and of " Down with the Committee Central." It seemed for a time that the affair might not be serious, but as those in the front ranks of the parade were crowded Upon the Guards, recriminating and altercations occurred. The partisans of "order" attempted to disarm the Federates. A shot was fired. General Phil Sheridan, U.S. A., (who had accompanied the German army during the Franco-German war, and who .had arrived in Paris March 2d) was an eye-witness of this affair, said the "order" repre-' seritatives did the first firing;t the Federates were also fired upon from the windows of surrounding' houses. When tlii^ Federates opened fire, th? crowd scattered, running wildly in all directiofis to escape the fusilade. The firing lasted butl^fe^ mbniehts. [Eleven of tlje " order " partisans w^re killed, and probably three times as many were wounded. Pistols, stvordsticks and niissiles were found on the bodies of the participants iti the parade who were killed or wouhded, and weapons' were plentifully scattered upon the ground from which-they had been driven. ' * The demonstration advanced with Admiral Saisset at its head *' until * stopped * " by * Guards, with baj^dnets, who. filled '* the entrance td theiPlace Vendome'.— CasSeM. , , _ , . , . , .. ' ,\. /, ,. ; , V They were . without arms and most respectable iii; appearance— few blouses',' * if any , -weite to ^e seen/'— ^e«ri(i^e. • .....;. . , .. -jilj t The Assembly declared that General Sheridan was "against them" b^^causi^ he made this statement. ' ~ . • '^ >^-- MARCH, MONTMARTRK AND THE COMMUNK. 3I Otto Hottinguer, regent of the Bank of France and a member of the great banking firm of Hottinguer & Co., and M. Nathan, another banker, were killed. One young American, an ex -soldier in the civil war in the United States, who had joined the French army against the Germans, was also among the killed. ' 'Two Federates were killed, Wahlin and Fran- cois;: eight were wounded^ — Maljournal, Cochet, Ancelot, Legat, Reyer, Train and I^aborde. - Th.Qi Journal Officiel says — *' The first of the dead taken i to the ambulance of the Credit Mobilier was A^iscount de Molinet, who had been in thei front of the crowd, and who was i woundpd r i ti; the b ac k o f th e h e ad , He fell at the Icorner of the Rue de la Paix and Neuve- des-Petits-Ghamps, on the Place Vendome side, with his face to the ground. The fact is clear that he was; struck by his companions, for had he fallen in flying the body would have lain in the direction of the New Opera. On the corpse was found a poniard attached to the waist-belt, by a chain." The "peace" demonstration shows evidence of being an attempt to reach and seize the Committee Central headquarters in the Placer " The Federates were paid six sous per day; one sou in cash, and fivejn, the checques of the Central Committee ; the latter were not readily negotiable, which was a source of much dissatisfaction to the soldiery."— CasseZi. The •' Syndical Chambers of Stonemasons and Stonesawyers " on the 22d posted a manifesto printed on red paper, in the neighborhood of the Hotel de Ville. In part it said: "The difficult epoch which we are passing, through must have brought us to serious reflection on the subject of our social position as workmeh "We must ask ourselves whether we, the pro- ducers, ought to allow those who do not produce anything to live at ease; whether the system which has been pursued till now is destined to exist for all time, even when it is entirely opposed to us, * * Our employers only think at this moment how to profit by our anisery, in order to extort more ffom us, if possible: If we are true to ourselves, we will check their base rapacity. Let us prove our attachment to the sacred cause of Democracy." 32 THE PARIS COMMUNE. Vendome, and the vigorous attempt to break the line where the fighting took place was certainly not a pacific movement. The supporters of each party claimed that the opposition killed its own men and the reports of the affair are a mass of contradictory statements. The number of Guards killed and wounded, the friendly attitude of the Guards until the first shot was fired, together with the other circumstances surrounding this afi'air, bear out the belief that the intention was to overthrow the Committee's forces and establish Saisset in the Place Vendome. Bergeret, who was in charge of the Federates, said: "At i o'clock a crowd of ten thousand advanced and overpowered the first line, wrenched the rifles from the troops * * The crowd * * commenced using their revolvers and four of our men fell * * The Guards fired first in the air. * Some, enraged at seeing their comrades fall, fired at the crowd. We dd not want war, nor Favre made a speech on March 22d in the Assembly on the affair of the killing of Generals Clement Thomas and Lecomte. He said that the crime had soiled the Republic with blood. He described the assassination of the generals as committed by wretches worthy no kind of pity, for they had shown none either for civilization or for France.— Washburn. Besides the persons killed on the Place Vendome, thirty -three men (ac- cording to a correspondent of the M&nchester Gruardian) were put to death, in the latter days of March, on the most frivolous pretexts. Three of these were shot by National Guards at Belleville, because the latter did not admire the way they were dressed. One of the most shocking events of the time was the execution of an old man, seventy-eight years of age, named Bignon, who, some half century before, had denounced and caused the execution of four sergeants at La Rochelle, accused of political offences, Bignon was recognized in the Rue de Rivoli by a grandson of one of the sergeants, named Pommier.. The young man was sitting before a cafe, chatting with a friend, when he suddenly and abruptly rose, went up to a man who was passing by, aud said he arrested him as the person who had denounced the four ser- geants. After a few words had been exchanged, Bignon disengaged himself from the grasp of his assailant, and ran away, but was recaptured by the crowd, who wished to shoot him on the spot.' Young Pommier, however, interposed, saying that the man belonged to the justice of the land, and that the magistrates of the Republic must pass sentence on him. > He was then conducted to the Mairie of the fourth arrondisseraent, and was afterwards put to death. MARCH, MONTMARTRB AND THE COMMUNE. 33 do we wish to kill each other, but what can we do?" On the 22d the pupils of the Polytechnic School were given a vacation, and the youths placed themselves at the disposal of the city authorities, acting as aides-de-camp to the Pro- visonal Staff at the Place de la Bourse. A loyal regiment of the Guards with arms, three cannon and baggage forced its way through the city gates on the 2 2d, and marched to Versailles, where it was received with great enthusiasm and its officers promoted. Delegations to Versailles from various organ- izations seeking conciliation were numerous, but they received none but equivocal answers from the Assembly. The Mayors declared they could not sanction the election unless it was first authorized by the Versailles government; on the 24th a dozen or more of them visited the Assembly at Versailles to affect an agreement for Sunday, March 26, as the day of election. A fierce dis- pute arose in the Assembly as to whether the Mayors should be heard. There finally occurred such disorder that the visitors withdrew without even having had a respectful hearing. On returning home a maj ority of the Mayors and the Committee Central agreed on an election for the 26th. This was opposed by the Versaillese, assisted by the bourgeois press of Paris, all of whom hoped to gain by delay On the 24th more proclamations were posted, one stating the Assembly's willingness to allow the election of a municipal council; the National Guards to elect all its own officers; modifications regarding rent laws, and arrangements to ease small rent-payers. Louis Blanc and other radicals 34 THE PARIS COMMUNE. in the Assembly were in favor of a vote of approval on the action of the Mayors, (afterward almost uhanimousiy defeated ) but the general feeling among: the Assembly's members was one of cbn- sternatioh at the agreement of the Mayors with the Committee Central on this important matter. There was an irreconcil-ible though natural diSereiice of opinion upon many subjects between £he mhabitants of the French rural districts and the denizens of the large cities. Th6 former were conservative and religious; the latter radical and atheistic; the first from the standpoint of th^ shlall land holder and the petty trader of the small townsr held for individual property; the last— t full of propertiless artisans and laborers — weiJe strongly Communistic; the rurals were peaceful and subservient; the wage-earners aggressive :an%he' Breton Mobiles entered for the defence of; ^^dchu October 31st, 1870. The plaii of these^ ^ikhdergronnd passages had been -biit jjartialiy disclbsed to the Committee Central and there was much fear, on the part of the Federate authorities, of a surprise of the Hotel de Viile: Ivarge bodies of arriied men occupied the grdunds about the citj^'s capitol, and every precaution" wa^s taken to prevent an entry. This fear was not dissipated until the Commune was, as its member^ believed, solidly established by the. election of the"26th;''^ -r-..^;--'.:. i ■ . :' .-- ■ .-'■■'■'^.it>,^ ' ; Oh March ±5th ^Gejierals Chanzy and L division under which tjiey fall. - ' Mem'bbks OF till! Committee Central— Arthur Arnbuld, fAiitoine Arnaud, Assi, Blanchet, Brunei, Babick, BiUioray, Bergef-et, Gluvis Dupont, Eudes, Fortune, Geresme, Jourde, '^efi'ancaiSi.Langevin, Malon, Ostyn, Pindy, Ranvier, Varlin, :y;aiiiant, ,..,,..... 21 ■^•^ Members of the International Association— Aniou- -r^u^t, Assi, Avrial, Beslay, Babick, Clemence, V. Clement, Chalalri, Demay,. Duval, Dereure, Frankel, Emile Gerardin, Jourde, Lefrancais, Langevin, Malon, Ostyn, Oudet, Pindy, - ■ ; Theisz, Varlin, Vaillant, Verdure ............. 24 'i^'DetoCt Assi, Babick, Jourde,^ Ostyn, Pindy, "Varlin, •Vaillant; ^ef|"^pc4|.is and Laugevin,found in both above lists. \ 45 36 J . JFotJBNALiSTS— Arthur Arnould, Chardon, J. B. Clement,, idtflii*net", -Deleseluze, Ferre, Flourens, Gambou, Pasch^il jGtfousset, Miot, Felix Pyat, Pro totVRigault, Tridoh, VerdAire,' . Jples Valles, Vermorel ..„..,.. '. 17 phSDeduct Verdure and Arnould found in preceding lists . ' ' 2 ■'-■-■ ' ■ ■ '' ...'■■'• -■.::'■ ■, ■ ■ : .. ■•■15 . Speakers, AT CijTjjB AND Public Meetings— Amouroux, , "Jules Allix. Chappy, E. Clement, Demay, Descamps, Charles Oierardih; Ledrdyt, Leo: Meillet, Martelet; Osltyn, Oudet, . Pa,riselv Puget, Regere^Rastoul, Urbain ...... i^ - . . .17 '^ Deduct Amouroux, Demay, Ostyn and Oudet found in pre- ' ceding *l;ists. )i .p~ ."I'T--. ;.,•■; .^•. ",-:-■. >--.' .■*;';■ V ^■;. ■;.■ -r- . / ' ■ 4 :;:}] ^fTiTr-'t y"? v:^:' '::[':.' '-\ ' ' r :■'''■' ■ '* ■ is tylf^'Oa^-':^ *::;':.:t:': :' '• ,■ - ■ Total': "-64 '??!> iguch an array of speakers and writers proba- bly no city has ever seen in its legislative fepre- s^fltati^v^s:- " Subsequent events proved tmahy of the members to be of rare ability, but war iwa§ not their forte. The Commune's false Hop^s were MARCH, MONTMARfTRE AND I^HH COMMUNK. ^39 soon exposed^ as well as its inability -in what proved to be its principal business— the war against the Assembly. ; The election of March 26tli, established in Paris the largest legitimate representative govern- ment in France. The Assembly elected to repre- sent the sentiment as to the continuance of the war, and in the event of non-continuance, to establish a peace agreement, had discontinued hostilities, surrendered territory and arranged for the peace indemnity. For its further existence there was no logical reason, except in the usurp- ation of the powers of a National legislative body. ,. The advent, of the Commune was celebrated with festivities on the 28th. Cannon salutes, mili- tary parades, bands playing and thousands singing the Marseillaise. Speeches -were made in the square in front of the Hotel de Ville. Very largie bodies of military surrounded the place of the celebration, and cannon were trained to sweep the boulevards. The tri-color alternated with the red flag in the square, evidently a concession to the Moderate Party.* *One author says : "The Commune was inaugurated at the Hot^el de Ville on the 28th with considerable ceremony. Th« gate below the clock- tower was hung with red, blue and green drapery, whilst the statue of Henry IV above was concealed with a crimson curtain,. A platform ornamented with a bust of a female figure representing the Republic had been erected in front of the building, and on it were placed arm-chairs for the accommodation of the Committee Cannon were drawn up on the square, which was also occupied by about 20,000 National Guards in close ranks. Other battalion^;? waited in the adjacent streets and on the quay At four o'clock Citizen Assi rose and announced that the power of the Central Com- mittee had transpired and was now transferred to the Commune. He then read aloud the names of the Councilors elected. Cries of "Long Live the Republic" were raised, the trumpets sounded, drums be^t, and caps were waved in the air. About four o'clock salvos were firigd from the Hotel de Ville, and answered by the guns at Montmartre. This cannonade created considerable alarm among the inhabitants'; 'who imagined that the troops of Versailles had arrived at Paris, or that the Prussians had returned to restore order. All the National Guards present, to the number of 60,000, then marched past the dais on which the Committee was seated. In the evening the Arc de Triomphe, barracks, and principal public buildings were illuminated.'' 40 THK PARIS COMMUNE. "t^i^ Journal OJidel oi the Commune on March 30th published the following as the appointees to committees. Executive— V&illaut, Duval-, Eudes, Tridon, Lefrancais, Felix Pyat, Bergeret. Finance—JourAe, Varlin, V. Clement, Beslay, Regere. Military— Dnva.!, Flourens, Pindy, Eudes, Bergeret, Cliardon, Ranvier. Justice -Protot, Ranc,* Leo Meillet, Vermort 1, Ledrolt, Babick. Police— Rigault, Ferre, Assl, Cournet, Oudet, Chalain, Gerardin. Subsistence— Ostyn, Clement, Dereure, Champy, Parisel, Emile Clement, H. Fortune. Industry and Exchange— Fra,nkel, Malon, Thelsz, Dupont, Avrial, Liolseau-Pinson, Eug. Gerardin, Puget. Exterior Relations— Paschsi,! Grousset, Delescluze, Ranc, Ulysse Parent, Arthur Arnould, Ant. Arnould, Ch. Gerardin. Public Service— OstjUy Billioray, J. B. Clement, Mardelet, Mortier, Rastoul. Education— Jnles Valles, Doctor Goupil, Lefevre, Urbain, Albert Leroy, Verdure, Demay, Doctor Robinet. A classification by occupation of members of the Commune : ** Among the members of the Commune there were 12 journalists, 4 common schoolmasters, 4 barristers, 2 apothecaries, 5 painters, 2 architects, 2 engineers, 6 clerks belonging to commercial houses or to Government .fficies, 1 sculptor, 2 tradesmen, 1 journeyman jeweler, 1 journeyman carver, 1 journeyman printer, 2 journeyman bookbinders, 2 journeymen dyers, 2 journeyman shoenj skers, 1 journeyman hatter, 5 journeymen in the en- gineering service, 1 tinker, 1 basketmaker, 1 joiner, 1 cashier, 1 hairdresser, and 3 proprietors. The three last-mentioned were the citizens Theodore Regere de Montmore, who owned some small lands in the south of France; Pottier, the proprietor of a large bathing establishment near the Bank; and the Commandant Brunei. The well-known members of the Commune were M. Felix Pyat, the editor of the Vengeur; M. Ranc, a functionary of the Gambetta Government at Tours and Bordeaux; Gustave Flourens, one of the heroes of the movement of October 31st, and son of a savant of the Institute; M. Protot, an advocate; M. Leo Meilet, a Mayor, who had been very influential in obtaining the release of General Chanzy, and who received the thanks of the Assembly for his efforts in that cause; M. Paschal Grousset, the young Corsican whose challenge to Prince Pierre Bonaparte, in January. 1870, led to the death of his representative, M. Victor Noir; M. Arthur Arnould, formerly a writer in the Marseillaise; M. Jules Valles, of the Diable a Quatre;^. Delescluze, a prominent Red Repub- lican; and M. Ulysse Parent, a young man of fortune, who had for some time been on intimate terms with the revolutionary party. The great majority of the Communal administrators were persons of humble birth; but these belonged to the educated circles, and were men with positions to lose."— ''The Place Vendome and La Roquette," by Abbe Lamazou. * Ranc resigned April 7, declaring his "disapproval upon several impor- tant points as to the direction which has been given the Commune move- ment. * * Not wishing to create dissension, I decide upon retiring. I return to the ranks, and once more become a simple soldier of Paris, of the Commune and of the Republic." MARCH, MONTMARTRE AND THE COMMUNE. 4I No permanent president was elected in the Communal sittings. That official was selected from among the members at each meeting. The intention was not to have one person permanently hold a position of such authority and responsibility. At the election of the Commune the Committee Central was supposed to have finished its duties, and its continuance in special functions made the Commune's duties more complicated and less likely to proper observance. A Sub-Committee Central in the Commune was formed for the purpose of directing the Federates. This Committee consisted of Assi, Cluseret, Bergeret, Henry, Babick, Avoinejr., Avrial, Maljournal, Duval and Geresme. About 2,000 cannon including those in the forts, were at the disposal of the Commune; the Federates actually under arms were probably 125,000, but more than this were available. Their numbers has been variously stated from 125,000 to 300,000 men. The Assembly's forces were com- paratively weak in numbers, not trusted by their leaders. The districts of the country were invaded by the agents of Thiers, inviting assistance. The days next following the election of the Commune were busy ones for the Versaillese, who were aware of the strong feeling among the Parisians in favor of an attempt to capture the Assembly's capital. The number of persons who left Paris during the ten days ending the 30th of March was estimated at upwards of 160,000. 42 THK PARIS COMMUNE. IV. War— The Events of April, On April ist Thiers declared war and firing was begun by the Versailles forces. The troops at the command of the Assembly now comprised about 100,000 men, 50.000 of whom had been gathered together from various sources since March 20th. By vote in the Assembly each depart- ment was called upon to furnish a regiment, to be re- cruited as rapidly as possible from old and trusty soldiers, and forwarded at once to Versailles. These recruits were to receive a franc and a half a day. "Brittany furnished a small contingent of troops immediately on the call of Thiers for pro- vincial support of the Assembly. These troops fought under a white flag, each wore on his breast the heart of Jesus in white cloth and their cry was " lyong live the King"." The prisoners re- turned from Germany furnished large additions. Bismarck's influence did not cease in French affairs when the peace treaty was signed. He consigned the prisoners to Thiers in quantities just sufi&ciently large to keep thfe Versaillese in dependence upon him. The Commune's member^ were directed to take up the work of the local government of the districts which had elected them, in addition to their duties in the central body. The Military Committee of the Commune issued a proclamation in which it said: "The WAR — THE EVENTS OF APRIL. 43 Royalist conspirators have attacked, our moderate attitude notwithstanding. Our duty is to defend the city against this wanton aggression." Rigault ordered the arrest of the policemen who were not carrying out the Commune's orders. The gates were closed to the further exodus of the bourgeoisie, who were hastening out of the city. The "Assistance Publique" which had head- quarters opposite the Hotel de Ville, and man- aged estates and collected c moneys for the hospitals of Paris, on April ist, smuggled out of the city no less than 75,000,000 francs. The money and securities were hidden in sacks and and removed through the gates in potato carts. A few days later the Jesuits made an attempt to get off with 400,000 francs in strong boxes, but they were not successful, for the money was seized at the Lyons railway station . Henri Rochefort, through his journal, the Mot d' Ordre, demanded the demolition of the statue of Marshal Ney, the first Napoleon's famoiis officer. "The Government of the National Defence had thrown Napoleon's statue into the Seine, why should his servant's statue continue to commemo- rate the First Empire?" The capture of Versailles was now being con- sidered by the Commune. There seems to have been fully as much debate upon the propriety of the attempt as upon the probability of its success. This project was the cause of rancorous discus- sions in the Commune's sittings for many days. The meetings had now been made secret, though the general proceedings were made known to the public through proclamations and through the Joicrnal Officiel. There seems to be little doubt but that the Assembly's agents were, to a large extent, aware of the Commune's proceedings at 44 THE PARIS COMMUNE. all times. Cluseret and Eudes had been appointed Delegates of War. The opening of extensive hostilities outside the city occurred April 2d. The Federates had erected some fortifications at Neuilly with the in- tention of stopping the expected advance on Paris. General Vinoy, from Fort Valerian, sent a depu- tation to demand the Federates' withdrawal. There was an altercation and Dr. Pasquier, one of the deputation from the fort, said to have been unarmed and carrying a flag of truce, was shot and killed at the bridge of Courbevoie. He was a favorite with the gen d 'amies, who swore to avenge him. His death greatly complicated matters, and undoubtedly, added much to the unexampled atrocities of the Versaillese toward their prisoners. It was a most unfortunate affair, the details of which have never been clearly shown. The Federates claimed they believed the doctor to be a spy, and that he acted as if about to draw a re- volver when shot. After the killing of Dr. Pasquier a general action took place. The regulars brought up to support the Versaillese gen d'armes were tempted by a body of Federates, who turned the butts of the guns towards the advancing soldiers of the line; when the latter arrived in position, they fired a volley into the unresisting ranks of the Federates, who were thus rudely awakened from their dream of a friendly agreement with the opposing forces. The Federates, successful in withstanding the attack on their barricades, fol- lowed the retreating foe, and encountered the Pontifical Zouaves, headed by Colonel Charrette, and some other Versaillese reinforcements. The Zouaves advanced to the charge with cries of *'IyOng live the King," a singular war cry for soldiers of a "Republic.'' Their advance was so WAR — THK EVKNTS OF APRII.. 45 valorous and so well sustained by the regulars, that the Federates gave way and were finally de- feated, after two hours' sharp fighing. They were driven from Courbevoie and the bridge at Neuilly, and finally into the city, all the while being sub- jected to the fire of cannon from field guns and from Fort Valerien, and were also mowed down by the mitrailleuses of the Assembly's troops. The shells from Valerien fell among the combatants as they fought during the Federates' retreat, kill- ing and wounding both pursuers and pursued. The Federates had no artillery in this action and com- plained bitterly of being obliged to battle under such circumstances. The Versaillese captured five prisoners— one a lad of 15, all of whom they murdered in cold blood. The Times correspondent reported that Gen- eral Vinoy had personally ordered the killing of all National Guards captured. The greatest excitement now pervaded the exasperated Federates and the people of Paris. The huge body of soldiers was anxious to fight. Military affairs were in a very unsystematic condi- tion. There was no chief commander, that office having been abolished, it being believed that its continuance carried too great a centralization of power. Preparations for an advance on Versailles now occupied the energies of the Military Com- mission. Their haste was great, as they were driven by the heat of an excited populace, and surrounded by thousands of Federates, enraged by the repulse at Neuilly, and eager for an oppor- tunity for retaliation. The Commune's plans, such as they were, had been so quickly acted on that on the morning of the 3d, shortly after mid- night, there issued from the city three divisions 46 THK PARIS COMMUNK. of the Federate forces, commanded by Duval, Bergeret and Eudes. The combined force is variously stated, but probably 65,000 men were in the ranks. Bach division took a separate road with the intention of concentrating en route for Versailles. Rossel, who was chief of a legion, ordered his men to retreat before fighting began, alleging the ill condition of his troops and the lack of proper arrangements regarding supplies. Furious fighting took place on all the routes. General Duval, of the left division, by the lament- able lack of discipline, and the disaster on the right, was left unsupported. After a valorous efibrt he was obliged to surrender with about 1,500 men and General Vinoy asked the officers to step forward. General Duval and two other officers responded and saluted; they were at once stood up against a house and shot to death by order of Vinoy, contrary to the agreement of surrender. Their bodies were then thrown into a ditch. ^ Eudes was commanding the center column, the largest of the three, said to have contained 35,000 men. He met so vigorous an opposition as to completely disorganize his troops, who were routed, leaving many dead on the field; the Ver- saillese took some prisoners. Several of the cannon brought with the Federates were hurried into place to reply to the artillery fire of the enemy, when it was discovered that the projectiles at hand were of the wrong calibre. Bergeret and his officers were fancifully dec- orated with ribbons and gold laces. Bergeret. who is said to have been too un wieldly to ride on * Several authors endeavor to conceal this murder by sa3ing that Duval was killed in the battle, exhibited great bravery, etc. Fetridge says: "General Duval was killed the first day at Chattilon. * * General Henry was sent U) Versailles. Thp yersailles papers speak highly of the former's bravery." WAR — THE EVENTS OF APRIL. 47 horseback, accompanied his troops in a victoria drawn by two horses. His division marched from the Porte Maillot directly past and in range of Fort Valerien. The fort had been reinforced during the night by a strong body of Versaillese, and the Federals apparently believed, as they foolishly declared, that the fort would not fire on them.* This division was allowed to partially pass before a heavy fire of cannon, and mitrailleuses was opened upon them. The center of the column was demoralized and the rear retreated. Flourens' division, which passed to the north of the fort, had not been fired on, advanced, and was engaged by the enemy at Reuil. Flourens, with 3,000 or 4,000 men, was pressing back the Versaillese, when a whole army corps which had been concealed, was encountered and the Federates were defeated and scattered. Flourens and his aide-de-camp, Cypriani, were surrounded in a house in which they had taken refuge. Flourens, with a pistol, wounded one of the party who invaded the apartment where he was concealed. Captain Demarest rushed in and instantly killed Flourens by a stroke of a sabre which cleft his head open. Demarest, for this act, received the Cross of the Legion of Honor from the hands of Thiers.^ Cypriani was taken prisoner and sent to Versailles^ *It has been unhesitatingly stated by friends of the Commune that the leaders had deceived the body of the Federates by telling them that Fort Valerien was in the hands of the Commune. " On the afternoon of April 3d, a body of several hundred women gath- ered at the Place de la Concorde, and set out for Versailles in imitation of those who marched upon the same place in the time of Loms XVI. Ihey paraded up the Champs Elysees, wearing the bonnet rouge and singing the Marseillaise. Whenever they met an omnibus they stopped it, caused the pa^Vengers to dismount, and took possession themselves. They were in charge of an old woman, 60 years of age, who mounted an omnibus, dis- played the red flag and gave the word of command."— TTas/i&Mm. 48 THE PARIS COMMUNE. Misleading messages were circulated in the city, most of them declaring great successes by the Federates.* Flourens was one of the foremost revolutionary leaders and vigorous agitators of his day. Huge festoons of gold lace, gaudy l-ibbons, hats of most singular designs fancifully ornamented, were mucli favored by some of the leaders, Flourens among them, whose military capabilities were not of an order to well stand the attention which their equipage attracted Flourens was as officer in the revolt in Crete against the Turks in the Levant. " Gustave Flourens was an accomplished scholar and a man of much intelligence, but he early imbibed those revolutionary ideas which in the end cost him his life." " Flourens had begun life with every prospect of being a distin- guished scientist. His father, Pierre Flourens, had been perpetual secretary of the Academy of Sciences and a professor in the College de France, in which his son succeeded him when he was barely twenty-one. His first lecture, on the "History of Man," created a great impression; but in 1864 he resigned his professorship, and thenceforward devoted all his energies to the cause of the oppressed. In Crete he fought against the Turks. He was always conspiring when at home in Paris ; even when the Prussians were at its gates he could not refrain. He was the darling of the Belleville popula- tion, whom in times of distress and trial he fed, clothed and com- forted. Sometimes in prison, sometimes in exile. "He was a mad- man, but a hero, and towards the poor and the afflicted as gentle as a sister of charity," said one who knew him."t The demonstration against Versailles was continued in a desultory manner on April 4th, some reinforcement being forwarded to the Federates, and also to the Versailles troops. The result was a disastrous defeat for the Commune's forces, At 3 o'clock a courier passed by the Arc de Triomphe on his way to the Hotel de Villa, announcing to the crowd that Flourens had entered Ver- sailles at thf head of 40,000 men — that thej^ had captured one hundred deputies, and M. Thiers was a prisoner ! Some one suggested that "there were not over 20,000 men who went out this way " " Where did he get the men ? " " Oh, he has them ! " and "General Bergeret fought like a tiger. He had two horses killed under him. " " Before him you mean," shouted one of the crowd, " as he went out in a victoria." t Latimer. WAR — THE EVENTS OF APRII^. , 49 in some parts of the field a rout. Ranvier, how- ever, had supplied Fort Issy with several cannon which contributed greatly to the city's defence thereafter. An important factor in the vanquish- ing of the Federates was the lack of attention paid to the distribution of ammunition and sup- plies. Artillery ambulances and ammunition wagons were " everywhere except where they were wanted." On the 4th the Federates cap- tured 250 of the Versaillese troops, losing about 100 of their own men, including two commandants of battalion. General Gallifet, of the Versaillese, dis- tinguished himself on the 5th by bloodthirsty threatenings and by ordering the killing of Parisians. The character of this exceptionally sanguinary Versaillese commander will be ex- hibited in the account of his actions to be found in a subsequent chapter.* The death of Flourens was the signal for out- bursts of furious invectives by the Parisians against the Versaillese. His killing was de- nounced as assassination, and there was immedi- ately organized a corps of independent soldiery styling themselves "Avengers of Flourens," with the avowed purpose of revenging his death in every possible manner. In Versailles the news of his demise was received with unconcealed joy, and so important was he considered to the uprising by some of the Assembly's supporters, that they declared the revolution practically defeated with his death. The honors which greeted the slayer of Flourens show that his death was regarded as of great assistance to the Versaillese cause. *This Gallifet, "the kept man of his wife, so notorious for her shameless exhibitions at the orgies of the Second Empire," went, during* the war, by the name of the French "Ensign Tisto]^"— Address 0/ Int. W.A. 5q THE PARIS COMMUNE. The Military Commission displaced Bergeret and Budes from their commands. Cluseret was appointed in Bergeret's place. lyullier, in the excitement escaped from prison and gathered a band of personal followers about him, whose independent action served only to embarrass the Commune, who still hoped to use lyullier's sup- posed military ability. I^ullier addressed a letter to Henri Rochefort, in which he said that he had been "the victim of machinations," that he was now surrounded by 200 resolute men; that he carried three loaded revolvers, and was resolved to break the head of anyone who might come to arrest him. He was again sent to prison after the Federates finally withdrew from the advance on Versailles. Assi was committed to prison for questioning the powers of the Commune to take aggressive action against Versailles. The Assembly at this time evidenced the most determined efforts to stamp out all Communist support in Versailles. Those who avowed any sympathy or friendship for the National Guard or for the Commune were said to have been killed by men hired for that purpose. Garibaldi sent the Committee Central a letter containing a choice assortment of advice, but declining the proffered post of Commander of the Army of Paris. The Communal uprising at Marseilles was the strongest outside Paris. *A manifesto was issued. On April 4th the Assembly's troops captured the Marseilles railway station, defeating the *In part it said: "We want the establishment of the Republic by Republican institutions. We want unity of political gnidance, with a constituent Assembly, and a Republican Government the offspring of that Assembly, both having their seat in Paris, We want decentralization of the authorities, with autonomy of the Commune, while confiding to the Municipal Council elected by each large city its administrative and municipal belongings. The institution of Prefectures is fatal to liberty. We want the establish' APR II, — THK EVKNTS OF WAR. 5 1 National Gtiard,three of whom they took prisoners and immediately shot. Later in the day severe fighting took place, resulting in the killing and wounding of over 200 persons. By evening the Versaillese were in full possession of the city. The Commune was declared in Lyons, Nar- bonne, Toulouse and St. Ktienne, and was only subdued in each instance by loss of life.* Blisee Reclus was captured while making a reconnaissance at Chatillon. The funeral of those killed in the battles of the days next previous took place on April 6th . The ceremonies were not of a religious character, but were appropriate and impressive. Five members of the Commune were chief mourners. Delescluze pronounced a funeral oration at the grave. More than 200,000 people attended the ceremonies at Pere la Chaise cemetery. The unparalleled action of the Versaillese in the murdering of prisoners, which had been a marked feature of the victories of April 2d, 3rd and 4th, exasperated the Communal authorities, who attempted to stop further killings of this kind by immediately seizing M. Darboy, Archbishop of Paris; M. Deguerry, Cure of the Madeleine, and ment of the Republic by the federation of the National Guard over the whole breadth of our country. But, above all things, we want what Mar- seilles wants. If the Go^■ernment having its seat at Versailles had con- sented to dissolve the National Assembly, whose mission had expired, and transferred the seat of government to Paris, we should not ask such guarantees." *Let us look back for a moment to the twentj'^-two years ending 1870, and think of the treason of the Provisional Government of 1848, of the treason and brutal tyranny of the Constitutional Assembly, and of the National Assembly which followed, the slaughter of tens of thousands of the working classes, and the murder, or imprisonment and exile of all the leaders of the people; the treason, the perfidy, and the bloody massacres of Louis Napoleon, andhis career of shameless tj^ranny, ending in the humiliation of France; the usurpation and treason of the so-called government of National Defence, and of the Assembly elected to ratify the conditions of peace; remembering all these, need we be surprised at tlae revolt of the people of Paris, of Lyons, and of Marseilles against usurpation, and their determination to raise the banner of the republic. —Sketchley. 52 THB PARIS COMMUNE. others of the notable ecclesiastics of Paris.* These were held as hostages, and many radical journals advised their death in reprisal for the prisoners killed.f The law of reprisals has always been sanc- tioned during war; its effects have been for the most part, bad, entailing upon innocent persons a violent death; and, arousing all the vengeful feel- ings of the combatants, has prolonged the rancor of war and extended the area of death. It is questionable whether the threats of reprisals had any good effect on the Versaillese. The soldiers of the Assembly were constantly gaining ground, and it has never been shown that the Versaillese government dared to discourage their methods, so long as the end desired was being accomplished; in fact, every ofl&cial document praised, and not one ever carried a word of rebuke or caution to the troops. There was, moreover, a hatred engendered in the soldiers returned from Germany by the open contempt with which they were held by the Parisians, who had not forgotten Metz and Sedan, nor forgiven their capitulation. The troops with which Bismarck furnished the Assembly, were con- tinually referred to as "capitulards." Whatever may have been the sentiments of the German authorities toward the Commune in its early days, it was evident that at this time there *Lagorde, grand vicar of Mgr. Darboy, was paroled "on his honor," and sent to Versailles as a messenger to negotiate the exchange Darboy and others for Blanqui. He not Only failed in his errand, but never returned, though before going he declared he would return "even to face death itself." tThe Journal Offlciel on the 7th contained the following, part of an Address to the citizens of Paris " We have hostages in our hands. Let the Commune issue a decree and let its men act. For every head of a patriot which falls under the hands of the Versailles authorities, let that of a Bonapartist, Orleanist or Legitimitist roll in the dust as a reply." WAR — THE EVENTS OF APRII,. Krt was a complete understanding between the Assem- bly's agents and the Prussian military chiefs.^ Cluseret now ordered all men, married or single, between and including the ages of 19 and 45 to join in the defence; those of 17 and 18 years of age could volunteer to the service. This was unwelcome to a large number of the inhabitants, either neutrals or Versailles sympathizers. The Journal Officiel ( on the presence of the Due d'Aumale in France) said: "Society owes but one duty to princes — death; it is only bound to observe one formality — identity." On Good Friday, the 7th, the defences at Neuilly, which had been strengthened, were attacked and after furious fighting, the Federates were driven from the stronghold. This gave to the Versaillese a strong and nearer position to the city. Colonel Bourgoin died while at the head of the troop defending a barricade. Bourgoin was formerly aide-de-camp to Flourens when the latter was in the insurrection in Crete against the Turks. There are slight indications that the Prussians were friendly to the up- tisins: in its early days. Some time after the suppression of the Commune, the Constitutionnel alluded to a letter addressed by the Prussian authorities to the Communal War Department. This letter offered considerable quantities of flour, chasse- pots, and bayonet-sabres, at cei'tain stipulated prices, A sample of the pro- posed flour was enclosed. Some authorities insist that Thiers wished the Germans to re-occupy Paris immediately after the Commune's election, but that Bismarck had no wish for a possible re-opening of hostilities, which might result from the re- volt of the people throughout France at such action. It was understood that the war loan to France was not to be paid until the pacification of Paris. The Address of International asks : " Now, is it true or not — 1. That the business was so managed that a consideration of several hnndred millions was secured for the private benefit of Thiers, Jules Favre, Ernest Picard, Pouyer-Quertier, and Jules Simon ? and — 2. That no money was to be paid down until after the " pacification " of Paris ? " *The entire concord which existed between the Thiers Government and the German military authorities is shown by a proclamation issued by Prince Albert of Saxony, commander-in-chief of the Prussian 32d army corps on April 6th. By this order the powers of the French civil authorities were declared entirely transferred to the German military commanders. The 54 THE PARIS COMMUNE. The loss to the Federates was about 225 killed and 43 wounded in this defeat. The artillery fire on both sides was rapid and destructive. Twenty-one ofiicers of the Versaillese were killed or wounded, Generals Besson and Pexhot among the number. The fighting at Neuilly was desperate and great courage was shown by both defenders and assailants. Hand-to-hand combats were common. The treatment of pris- oners by the Versaillese probably excelled in ferocity anything recorded of civilized warfare.* Huge numbers of spectators viewed the engage- ment from either side. The vicinity of the Arc de Triomphe, from which the battle could be seen, was thronged, notwithstanding the imminent danger from shells, now specially directed on this part of the city. The constant falling of shells in the streets of Paris occasioned much displeasure as well as loss of life. The Parisians, knowing their danger to be greatly decreased by falling on their faces on the approach of a shell, were often put through this exercise by false alarms from the gamins. The latter would often cry "a shell" for the express purpose of seeing military tribunals were made competent to tfy offences against the German troops or against "public order" and the G^rm^n officers were instructeLt' to order the delivery of arms and ammunition •ail.d 'to search for and remove them; and to prohibit such publications and meetings as may seem to them of a nature to produce or protract disorder. ,, That this proclaj]r}3,tion was aimed at the ;,Coinmune and its sym- pathizers is plainly to be seen land that it was solicited by tlie Assembly's ' executive is equally evident. . Jv more disgusting and lugubrious spectacle than these boasters of the Government of National Defense, whose mouths had been filled with "great swelling words" of defiance a few months before, now crouching fawningly at the feet of their conquerors, is scarcely to be imagined. But in the face of the danger which threatened their class supremacy, the bourgeoisie of both nations forgot patriotism and national animosities and united in the attempt to crush the insurgent proletariat. *A writer saw the gen d'armes belonging to the Government forces bring some fugitives in; and these were treated with a severity which showed that they had met with no sympathizers. They were loaded with curses and abuse, struck with the butt-ends of rifles, and sometimes threatened with immediate death. On one occasion a general interfered to WAR — THK KVENTS OF APRII^. 55 some stout pedestrian lie down with alacrity and rise full of rage at his youthful tormenters, for whose amusement he had been reduced to such an undignified position. iadislas Dombrowski succeeded Bergeret in the command of the West. Kudes had charge of the forts on the South, where fighting went on constantly. Bergeret had been given charge of Neuilly, and was imprisoned after the defeat. When questioned as to the strength of the defensive works at that place, and the possibility of its falling, his reply was: "I have been there; I have fortified the place, and I defy the Versaillese." He is stated to have substituted his own authority for that of Cluseret on the night of the 7th. There was a dispute between them after the arrest of Bergeret, who refused to acknowledge Cluseret's authority, declaring that he would not save the lives of his prisoners, saying that the proper treatment of such men was to despise them. Even tlie badl}' wounded were jeered at, and the captives generally were told that there was no need of ropes for binding them, as they would be shot on making the slightest attempt to escape. "There can be little doubt that the Versaillese troops behaved with great ferocity to their prisoners. Several independent observers testify to this fact; and it was said that it even caused a reaction in their favor to spring up amongst the people of the Royalist town where the Government and the army had their headquarters; though many at Versailles joined in the outrages committed on the captives. When the prisoners were brought in, M. Picard, the Minister of the Interior, walked from group to group, mak- ing jokes; and Madame Thiers, surrounded by a be\y of ladies, sat looking on in a balcony of the Prefecture. Henry, (who a few days afterwards escaped, and got back again into Paris) produced a considerable effect He was young, handsome and manly, and conducted himself with courage and dignity. But for the most part it was a miserable sight; and the treatment of the Communist prisoners undoubtedly did much towards embittering a conflict which was not at all wanting in heat and venom."— CasscW. In consideration of the unexampled treatment of prisoners by the Versaillese, the citizens of Paris were addressed by the Communal author- ities in a proclamation which began:— " Versaillese do not wage war against you like civilized men, but like sav- ages. The Vendeans of Charettc, the agents of Pietri, shoot the prisoners, and massacre the wounded in the ambulances. Twenty times the wretches who dishonor the uniform of the Line have turned their muskets butt-end up- wards, and then traitorously fired upon our gallant men." 56 THE PARIS COMMUNK. ''obey a man who fought to continue slavery in the United States." This display of ignorance on the part of Bergeret may be taken as an indication of his general knowledge. Had his military talents and bravery equalled his self-esteem and love of display, he would have been the Colossus of the Communal defence. Reproaching Bergeret and others, Cluseret issued his sensible address con- demning the increasing use of gold lace, etc., and pointed out to them: ''That as workingmen who have accomplished a great revolution, they should not blush for their origin; the movement had been made in the name of virtue against vice, of duty against abuse, of honesty against corrup- tion, and had triumphed for that very reason," and concluded by announcing that any officer who added embellishments to the regulation dress, should be sent before a Council of Discipline. The ecclesiastics were examined by Rigault and Dacosta. M. Deguerry was thus interrogated: " What is this trade of yours ? " " It is not a trade; it is a profession, a moral ministry which we undertake for the amelioration of souls." "Ah, that is all blagues. We want to know what stories you tell the people." " We teach them the religion of Our lyord Jesus Christ. " " There are no lyords. We don't know any I^ords," said Rigault. Archbishop Darboy was conducted to the v^x-Prefecture of Police and brought before Raoul Rigault, who asked his name. " My children," — replied the Archbishop. " Citizen," interrupted Rigault, "leave off that wheedling and familiar tone; you are not before r WAR — THK EVKNTS OF APRII,. 57 children — we are men. You are in the presence of a magistrate. What is your profession ? " " I am a servant of God." "Where does he live ? " interrogated Rigault. ''Everywhere," responded the priest. "Send this man to the Conciergerie, and issue a warrant for the arrest of his Master, one called God, who has no permanent residence, and is consequently, contrary to law, living in a per- petualstate of vagabondage," was Rigault's order. Other interrogations by Rigault and Dacosta to Archbishop Darboy were made, and when Darboy told them the churches and the furnish- ings of the churches belonged to the clergy or the church, the questioners did not exhibit much regard for an ownership in property gained by efforts which to them seemed neither useful nor instructive in the community. During these days a large number of ecclesias- tics were arrested, and the churches turned into sleeping places for the Federates. The churches, buildings and valuables were confiscated to the Commune. Many of the edifices were turned into lecture rooms and meeting places for the populace. Louise Michel and Paule Minck were among the most noted of the woman speakers, who ad- dressed the large congregations. Their influence was immense. The woman who gained the most conspicuous place in the revolt of 1871— Louise Michel— in the popular mind is a virago, bringing in her wake petroleum, dynamite and destruction. In reality, a simple- hearted woman of a mystic temperament, ready to sacrifice her life for an idea, and so generous that she often gave away her own clothes to supply the needs of those poorer than herself. She will be known as a thoroughly good, kind-hearted woman. Governess and school teachefr learned and energetic, her wonderful earnestness and vigor in public address and her humanitarian efforts in nursing the wounded endeared her to friends of the uprising. After the fall of the Com- mune, she was sentenced to the New Caledonia penal colony, wbeie 55 THK PARIS COMMUNE. she immediately used her extraordinary talents to ameliorate the condition of the colonists and the education of the children. On her return from New Caledonia, she took up her residence in London, and acquired a high regard for the freedom vouchsafed by England She wrote many historical novels, her "Memoirs," and several other literally works; also two dramas, "Nadine" and "Le Coq Rouge," both of which were successfully produced in Paris. Louise Michel was born at Vroncourt, in the Department of Upper Marne, in 1836. With blue, clear and expressive eyes, and a slow but well modulated delivery, speaking absolutely pure French, her voice for decades pro- claimed the tenets of her belief, which made her hated by the privi- leged classes in every country, and beloved by the proletarians throughout the world. There was no lack of orators among the sup- porters of the Commune, and they lost no oppor- tunity for preaching secular doctrines to the people. The fearless curiosity of the Federates and their audacious invasions of the precincts of the edifices belonging to the church, filled the priests with horror and indignation.* So long accustomed to be reverenced in all respects, their being placed on a par with ordinary mortals in regard to their property and their persons was an obnoxious surprise for these dignitaries. This lack of affection for the clergy, and the absence of respect for all things pertaining to religion, are marked features of the Commune. Indeed it is remarkable, that from a population bred in the association of church and state, a body of men so unanimous upon this subject could be elected. Their position was certainly the result of the work- ers belief in the alliance of the church and their oppressors, and a unanimous opinion as to the utter uselessness of rites^ forms, ceremonies, The clergy are partly to blame for the irreligious attitude of many modern socialists. They have toj often made themselves the advocates of conservatism simply as conservatism, regardless of all abuses which it em- braced. In countries where Church and State are connected, the clergy have been too often a sort of police, assisting the government to maintain existing institutions, and to oppose change, a"ood or bad. They have favored the higher classes, upon whom their support has depended, and neglected the interests of the poor and down-trodden.— iiic/iard T. Ely. WAR — THK KVKNTS OF APRII,. 59 or symbols. The priests were considered siniply as parasitical members of the community; In several churches the following notice was posted : "This Shop to Let ! " The private property of the clergy was confiscated to the Commune, which procedure was much like that of the Romans in the 4th century, wbo wished to remove as much as possible the taint of worldliness and the cares of temporal possessions from those whose cares should only be for the spiritual welfare of the people. The actions of the Commune were proof posi- tive that they subscribed to the sls:eptical tenets which hold priests to be the advocates of human ignorance and a bar to the progress of the race. The following notice was posted on the closed doors of the church of St. Pierre, Montmartre : " Whereas, priests are thieves, and churches are haunts where the masses have been morally assassinated, the ex-Prefecture of Police orders the church of St. Pierre to be closed, and decrees the" arrest of the ecclesiastics and ignorantins." (Signed.) ''Le Moussuy Two Communal seals were affixed to the paper. An estimate made at the time indicated the number of the clergy in prison to be 300. Several churches and unoccupied houses were sacked by the independent military, whose opera- tions the Commune could neither advise nor punish, as their apprehension was almost impossible and their detention, trial or punishment were matters of secondary importance to the repelling of tHe Versailles. On April 7th a guillotine was set up and burned in the nth arrondissement,as an evidence of the detestation felt by the Paris populace for the murderous instrument of tyranny and despotisni. .do THE PARIS COMMUNE. Cluseret was appointed Delegate to the Ministry of War on April 8th. A Versailles decree published on April 8th announced the appointment of Marshal McMahon to the command of the Assembly's troops. The Siecle on the 8th contained an article in which it showed plainly the almost inevitable defeat of the Paris defence. Attention was called to the fact that the calibre of the guns defending the ramparts was of too light a character to success- fully exchange hostilities with the heavy siege guns being planted by the Versaillese. Referring to the operations of April ist-yth, the inability of the Federates to gain anything by the continu- ation of outside hostilities, was conclusively shown. The hope for aid from outside districts was indi- cated to be futile, as reports from emissaries of the Commune were not encouraging. The whole statement in the Siecle showed a preception of the situation not exhibited by any of the other papers of the day. The article closed with an appeal for a conciliatory movement as the only hope to avert complete defeat for the Commune. Between the 2d and 9th days of April the losses of the Federates exceeded 7,000 men. : The Chambers of Commerce of Paris repre- senting 8,000 merchants and traders, probably from business motives, attempted to bring about an amicable arrangement with the Versaillese. But they asked for the autonomy of Paris, of course without avail. The intolerance of the Assembly's represent- atives increased as their power extended. The workingmen who had been considered the proper defenders of the honor and interests of Paris against the Germans, were now denounced as criminals for WAR — ¥ME nvnn'tS OP APRlt. 6l daring to defend the right of their city to social autonomy. Many deputations of various peaceably in^ clined organizations tried to induce a cessation of hostilities, but Thiers, who now had military power, repulsed with increasing firmness any efforts toward reconcilation. It is said that he "received the delegations kindly." But the Versaii\ese were determined to carry out the programme ^i fieath and disgrace marked out for all who had the temerity to oppose the Assembly, now supported by those military chieftains who had proved themselves unable to cope with a foreign invader, but who were ambitious to regain their forever- lost prestige, even by conducting a campaign of extirpation against a portion of their countrymen. There was a continual bombardment through- out the 9th and loth. A shell struck the Arc de Triomphe on the 9th, not doing much damage. The Federates made slight gains and occupied the village of Boulogne on the loth. M. Jecker, a Mexican banker, was arrested for trying to obtain a passport under a false name. M. Parisel, member of the Commune, was delegated to gain information regarding the preparation of explosives.* The chemist to whom Parisel applied for information, quietly communi- cated with the Versaillese, and by dilatory methods prevented the carrying out of some plans which might have been of assistance in the defence. By a sort of tacit agreement, hostilities were suspended on the night of the loth-iith. The Federates repaired Porte Maillot, now much damaged by the incessant cannonade. * March. 6^ teK PARIS commun:^. Religious services in the prisons were, on the nth, by the Commune, ordered discontinued. On the night of the nth a vigorous assauU was 'made on Fort Van ves and another on Porte Maillot, both without accomplishing any measure of success. Porte Maillot was heavily bombarded On the i2th. The Federates made some gains- iri Neuilly, where the fighting was furious at times during the day. The destruction of the Vendome monument had been advocated by many of the most distinguished Frenchmen, among them A. Comte. M. Picard and others of the Government of the National i>e-' fence had believed it incompatible with ihe overthrow of the Second Empire to allow /this' staring statue of Imperialism co call to mind the murderous glory of the first Napoleon. Courbet, the painter, was a foremost advocate of its denip/- lition. The Commune added the sentiment of Inter- nationalism to the anti-Imperialist feeling in ithose who grasped the reins of power after the fall of lyouis Napoleon. . ' April i2th the following decree was issued: -;:;. "The Commune of Paris, considering^ithat thej Ithperial column in the Place Vendome::i&aIiinon:-' ument of barbarism, a symbol of hriite;Ifb3?ceLand false glory, an affirmation of militarism, a negation of international law, a permanent insult cast by the victors on the vanquished, a perpetual attack on one . of the great principles of the French Republic — Fraternit}^ — decrees the column of the Place Vendome shall be demolished." On the 13th the fighting continued with. little- cessation in the environing viriiages, Neuilly being the scene of a warm engagement in the latter part APRIL — THE EVENTS OF WAR. 63 of the day, but the evening showed little gain for either the Federate or Versaillese forces. In the artillery work of the day in connection with the forts, the Federates seem to have made a much better showing than usual. Cluseret's report to the Commune on this day was of a very cheerful character. A battery of the Federates at Trocadero Heights opened on Fort Valerien. and some shots were interchanged. Jaroslaw Dombrowski ( brother of General Dombrowski) and his corps were distinguished by capturing the Castle of Be'con, and Vinoy was defeated when he attempted to recover it. Gustave Chaudey, accused of ordering the firing of January 22d, on the National Guards from the Hotel de Ville, was arrested. The Convent of Picpus, two distinct build- ii-igg_one occupied by monks, the other by nuns* —was invaded by Phillipe Fenouillat, Chief of Legion of the 12th arrondissement. The monks, 13 in number, were arrest ed and taken to prison. *At tl;e extreme end of the garden were three little huts, side by side, resemhlin>'' white ant's nests; and when the convent was first occupied by the Na^ioiTal Guards, each of these huts was tenanted by an old woman, en- closed in a wooden ( a-e, like a chicken's pen. The buildins-s \vere six feet square bv seven in liei-ht, with a slate roof, through which dayliyht wai visible The three old women were hope'<;ss idiots. " The Lady Supcvur, continued the a-count, "admitted, when firft questioned, that the three sufTerers had lived in their hideous prison for ^.me years, in an atmosphere of stifiino-heatthrouo-hout the summer, and half-frozen with cold throii^^lv ovit the winter; ' butT' she added, ' they were idiots when they came. J he conductor of the inquirv replied that, if such were the case, it was ille-al to have admitted them to the convent at all, and that, even supposm- thcin to have been admitted, the place where they %Nere found was not a fit dwellmg- pla"e for a dog. A kev was discovered among her papers, labelled key ot the »-reat vault;' but where this great vault may be has not yet been tound out The Superior and her nuns keep a uniform and persistent silence upon the' point; excavations have been made at different points in the garden, and under the hiuh altar of the chapel, but hitherto without effect. "In a,n isolated buildingln the nuns' garden were found mattresses furnished with stiaps and buckles; also two iron corsets, an iron skull-cap, ana a sp*^"es of rack turned bv a cog-wheel, apparently intended for benamg back the body with force. ''The Superior," said the Times correspondent, explained that these were orthopx>dic instruments-a superficial falsehood. ihe mat- tresses and straps struck me as being easily accounted for; I have seen sucJi things used in French mid\\ifery, and in cases of violent delirium; but the rack and its adjuncts are justly objects of grave suspicion, for they imply a 64 THE PARIS COMMUNE. An investigation into the women's department dis- closed parts of human skeletons, instruments of torture and others for the procuring of abortion. Three women, in various stages of derangement, were confined in cage-like huts. The Communal authorities were convinced that relations existed between the monks and nuns not consistent with their profession, and that abortion and secret burials were the result of criminal proceedings, and that the forcible violation of women was also common in the institution. These charges were denied by the church authorities, as well as by the "respectable" portion of society. The con- clusions of the Communists have not been suc- cessfully controverted. The Church of St. Lau- rent also developed some extraordinary features for a religious institution. These developments made the populace, never too much enamored of the priests and their practices, still more vehe- ment in demands for their eviction from all property and public functions. M. Rochefort, in the Mot d' Ordre, said so far as the property of the church was concerned, " as Christ was born in a stable, the only property which the church should have is a bundle of straw." The Bank of France was summoned to give up the crown diamonds, the presence of which in use of brutal force which no disease at present known would justify. Ar- rived at the entrance gate, our guide nudged me, telling me in whispers to look at the old woman who was wandering about, followed by a younger one, stooping from time to time to pick up a leaf, or rub her hands with sand and gravel. ' That is Soeur Bernardine,' he said, ' one of the three prisoners of the wooden cages. She is the most sane in mind of the three, and we keep her here, under the care of one of our wives, to cheer her up. She is only fifty, though she looks past seventy. The other two have been removed, "as they were rendered violent by the crowd and change of scene.' I passed close to her, and she looked up— a soft, pale face, with sunken eyes shaded by the frills of a great cap. She looked at me dazedly, without tak- ing any notice, and, stooping, again filled her hands with refuse coffee- grounds, which she put into her mouth until prevented by her companion. " WAR — YHE KVENTS of APRIt. 65 the bank was indicated by documents in the pos- session of the Commune's officials. The depu- tation was told that the diamonds had been sent from Paris before the surrender, to keep them from falling into the hands of the Prussians. This ex- cuse, true or untrue, seems to have satisfied the Commune. In the early days of the struggle, the force of the Assembly was not of such magnitude nor loyalty but that the immense funds in the Bank of France could have won most of it, not only from the Versaillese, but to the defence of Paris. There probably never was a time but that the huge amounts of money and negotiable securities could have been so placed as to win from their allegiance the forem^ost of the opponents of the Commune, if we may judge by the financial and political records of most of them. It may be safely insisted that on no one point was the imbecility of the Commune so nakedly exposed as in their puerile conduct in allowing themselves to be so continually stultified by their soft-hearted agent and the bank officials. Funds there were in abundance, but the in- telligent courage to grasp and use them was not present. The hope that the National Guards in the bank would fraternize; the humane desire to prevent the fratricidal results of a forcible seizure; and a fear of bourgeois opinion, all held them from the taking of the deposits. These halting opinions were flagrant errors in the Commune.* The vigorous attack on Fort Vanves on the night of the I5th-i6th may be properly said to have been a failure, though a great loss of life was the result on both sides. On the 16th Eudes, •See Commune and the Bank. 66 the: PARIS COMMUNK. commanding the forts on the South, reported to Cluseret: "Our Federals are heroes; they fought like lions; the victory is one with pride to be inscribed upon the banner of the Commune; Vanves was the center of the attack; the Governor of the F'ortress of Vanves, Citizen Leroux, de- serves special mention." The 86th battalion and Commandant I^eroux of Vanves were specially mentioned by Cluseret in the reports of the dfiv. On the 15th, the Trocadero batteries, which were poorly manned, opened fire on Valerien and on Longchamps, where the Versaillese reserves were camped; the exceptionally fine marksman- ship of the gunners in the fort soon temporarily silenced them.* The fighting was heavy in Levallois; parts of the village were occupied by both armies. In this engagement the Federates made no gains, though assisted by mitrailleuses mounted on cars. Operations of the Assembly 's force now^ showed marked improvement; Marshal McMahon had organized his troops into three corps, commanded respectively by Generals Cissey, Ladmirau'ft and Du Barial. Each corps was composed of three divisions. General Vinoy was given charge of the reserve, which was also in three divisions, and to which another division was subsequently added. The Versaillese were moving rapidly in the completion of works by which their troops might be sheltered in their advancing attacks upon the city's defences. *The establishment of the battery at Ti-o"adero is said to have had a double purpose. To damage or silence Fort Valerien seemed its object, but the fact that it drew the fire of the fort on the district of Passy, which had refused to assist in the support of the Commune, gave rise to the belief that tlie battery had been placed for that purpose. Great damag'e was done in. Tassy by Valerien's shells; and after some days of cannonading, tlie inhabi- tants protested to the Commander of the fort and the shells thereafter were much more infrequent. The Trocadero battery did little damage to the furt or to the enemy. WAR — THK KVKNTS OF APRII,. ^7 At the station Colombes, where a seA'ere engagement took place, the railway batteries pro- tected the retreat of a body of Federates which otherwise must have been cut off by Versaillese cavalry. On Sunday, the i6th of April, the Belgian legation was invaded by Federates. This unw^ar- ranted and impolitic proceeding apparently went unpunished, although the Joiirnai Officiel declared the Commune's intention of bringing the offenders before a Council of War. Elections to fill 31 vacancies in the Commune, caused by resignation, etc., were held April i6"th, and called out less than half the vote of the last previous election. In this election 61,000 votes were cast in arrondissements which had on March 26th re- turned 146,000 votes. Tlie election law^s required an eighth of the votes for a candidate to elect; the smallness af the vote left six vacancies unfilled under this rule, and on April 17th the Commune by a vote of 26 to 13, declared elected those candidates re- ceiving the majority of votes cast. Twenty were elected, three — Menotti Garibaldi, (son of General Garibaldi ) Rogeard and Briosne never took their seats. • Members of Committee Central -G. Arnold, Pettier, Viard 3 Committee OF the 20 Arrondisskmen'ts -A. Dupont, Cluseret, Johannard, Longuet, Pillot, Sicard 6 Journalists -Vesinier, Andrieu, Longuet ..... 3 Speakers at Club and Public Meetings— Trirquet', Disfeure, Serailler, Philippe, Lionclas, Joliauuard, Durand,- Pettier . 8 r :.:;.;. ■;..., .■:2o w 'Joliannard, Durand, and Pettier also belonged to the Inter- ' ■ational Association . . . .. . . . • . v . ... .: 3 Total 17 6^ tHK PARIS COMMUNE. On the 17th a Military Commission was in- stituted, with Rossel as President, with full powers of punishment from the death penalty downward. At a sitting of this Military Court Cluseret asked some questions, but was interrupted and told that he was now expected to answer questions, and he was immediately asked "Why some battalions on the ramparts had no shoes and had been fed on salt meat for 15 days ? " Unauthorized troops, "Flourens Avengers," "Avengers of Paris," etc., attempted to hold place in the Commune's commissary, without being amenable to the discipline of the Federates. These guerrilla bands brought the Federates into general disrepute; for, while the latter confined its operations to searches and seizures of arms, provisions, etc., for the benefit of the defending forces, the irregular bodies foraged, consumed and destroyed, giving but little heed to any authority, and assisting, (with some exceptions,) but slightly in defensive operations. An attempt at systemization was now made in the official conduct of the Commune, the work of the committees originally selected not having been properly defined; but the results did not show much improvement. On the 17th an important engagement took place at Asnieres, in which the Federates were driven back, abandoning barricades and trenches. A rout ensued; many squads were cut off from the main force and captured by the Versaillese cavalry; one of the locomotive batteries was disabled by a cannon shot, and the railway track was blocked by the wreck. The pontoon bridge was cut while many had not yet crossed, and a large number lost their lives endeavoring to swim the Seine, while many were killed and many taken WAR — THE EVENTS OF APRII,. 69 prisoners. The Federates rallied under Dom- browski, and made a desperate attempt to retrieve the fortunes of the day. They were unsuccessful, though the charge was one of the most courageous recorded in the annals of war. The Versaillese under Colonel Davoust, Due d' Auerstadt, (a grandson of the great Napoleon's marshal of the same name ) carried the Chateau Becon. This action was made the subject of special mention by Thiers in a dispatch to the Sub-Prefects. General Van Pape, German Commander at St. Denis, speaking to a correspondent said the Prussians would not interfere unless the triumph of the Cornmune should jeopardize the payment of the indemnity.* On the 1 8th of April the " Union Republicaine of Paris" published an address condemning the Assembly for failing to give guarantees for the maintenance of the Republic or the establishment of Communal liberty. lyittle fighting was done on the i8th on account of heavy rain. Fort Valerien did some exceedingly effective cannonading. Many persons were injured in the city by the bursting of shells. On the 19th there appeared in the Journal Officiel, the Manifesto of the Commune, which had been prepared by a committee of five commissioned for that purpose. Pierre Denis, a journalist, and Delescluze are credited with its composition. The On April 4th Paschal Grousset addressed to General Fabrice some in- quires regarding the progress of the payment of the indemnities bj- the Assembly, and the probabilities of evacuation of some territory held by the Germans. This epistle was not answered by Fabrice. He turned it over to M. Favre, who visited at Rouen a few days after its receipt. Favre said he was "overcome with civilities" at the German headquarters by General Fabricel On April lOch M. Favre read Grousset's communication to Fabrice before the Assembly. It was read in tones so undignified and with postures and gestures so grotesque as to cause great merriment among, the members. Favre was ridiculed by the Gaulois for his attempts to bring contempt upon Grousset, and said that Favre surpassed Frederic Lemaitre, the actor. 70 THK PARIS COMMUNK. doctrine of decentralization, the entire autonomy of Communes, whether large or small, and some vague ideas of centralized representation by Communes were . incorporated in the document. Tlie Manifesto closed with these words: "As for ourselves, Citizens of Paris, we have a mission to accomplish, a modern revolution, the greatest and most fruitful of all those v^^hich have illuminated history." Their economic and political surroundings, as well as their reasonable and honorable opinion that the conduct of war in civilization is disgrace- ful to all concerned, accounts in large degree for the wavering course and unscientific procedure in the offensive and defensive operations by the Communists in Paris. The conflicts between the contrary instincts of humanity and passion were, except in the last days, almost universally given to the milder attribute. A hope for reconciliation was, almost until the end, apparent in Paris. This ignis-fatuus was largely the result of the specious acceptance of negotiations by the Versaillese, who diplomatically considered and suavely de- layed all conciliatory plans. Every days' delay was for the Assembly's advantage. Deputations were sent out to solicit help from the other large cities; the imperfectness of the plans offered, the uncertain character of instruction to the Commune's representatives, and the growing strength of the troops at Versailles made this mission of no great ultimate value to the Parisian government. The amount of money placed at the disposal of this service has been stated at 100,000 francs (almost $20,000), The imbecility of setting aside such a pittance when so much depended on this mission is not at variance with many other evidences of the continual oversight of the liberal .^■■? WAR — THK :eVKNTS OF APRIL. 7 1 programme which the funds of the Bank of France placed at the Commune's disposal. A correspondent of the Daily News, writing on April 17th, said that private crime had wonder- fully diminished. " In such a state of society," he remarked, " it might be expected that in- dividuals would take advantage of public disturb- ance and the dislocation of authority, to pursue their own private ends, robbing and killing at their pleasure. But here, on the contrary — it may be from terror — the people are so well behaved (putting their political passions out of ac- count) that I never felt more secure than I do now." " The Communal Guards taken in arms were now being tried at Versailles. They were con- fined in cellars under the stables of the Chateau d' Artois, and their examination was conducted before a Judge of Instruction, who sat in a large room on the ground-floor of the barracks facing the chateau, and who was assisted by five j^ounger magistrates. The treatment of these prisoners was. characterized by all that disregard of fairness which is commonly observed in the proceedings of French courts. The Judge, in' accordance with the habit of those functionaries in France, reviled the accused much as Sir Edward Coke reviled Sir Walter Raleigh on his trial for high-treason. Coke, however, was not the Judge, but the pros- ecuting counsel; so that the case was not so bad, though bad enough. Some old men among the captured Communal troops asked permission to sit down. The Judge refused, and one of the Assistant-Judges exclaimed, "Wretches who en- gage-in such a cause as yours have no claim upon the indulgence of the authorities. Stand where you are, and let there be no shifting to either 72 THE PARIS COMMUNE. right or left. We want to see your faces in all their ignominy of expression." " ^ On the 19th there was lively fighting at many points, particularly at Neuilly, Asnieres and Clichy. A body of Federates, bent on recovering the bridge at Neuilly, pushed a battery of six guns up within a short distance of the Versaillese at this point and opened fire on them unawares. This manoeuvre proved unfortunate for the Federates. They were charged furiously by superior numbers, lost their guns and fled. The cannon were turned against them, and they were mercilessly pursued to the gates, volleys of grape-shot being poured into their broken ranks as they ran. Their losses were terrible; each of the battalions engaged lost one-third of its men . This was one of the bloodiest battles and was most disastrous to the Federates. The official re ports of the Federate officers in charge were misleading as to the real character of the engagement, merely mentioning it as a sortie, but calling for 2,000 more men. On the 19th the Committee Central of the National Guard issued an address to the people of Paris and the Federates, which began by saying that " false rumors of disagreement between the two powers had prevailed and that from that day the Committee Central entered upon its functions in the administration of war ! " Le Sociele demanded the impeachment of the Members of the Committee Central, and the sup- pression of the body, and the radical press in general seemed to be inimical to this Committee. A kind of armistice was observed at Neuilly on the 2oth, on behalf of the inhabitants, who, being afraid of issuing out of their cellars, lest they should be shot, ran great risk of perishing *Cassell. APRIL — THK EVKNTS OF WAR. 73 with hunger. Indeed, it is said that some actually died in their subterranean retreats. An artillery duel took place on the 20th between Fort Valerien and the Federates at the Porte Maillot. As usual the former was much more accurate and effective in gunnery, and the intrepidity of the defenders of the gate has been the wonder of all acquainted with the extreme danger of the position. At the bridge of Clichy a sharp engagement took place, slightly favorable to the Federates. The Versaillese also made an unsuccessful attempt to seize the bridge at Asnieres, which was de- feated by the use of Federate field guns. A shot fell into and exploded the powder maga- zine of the Federates near the Porte d' Asnieres, doing great damage to persons and property. There were rnmors of an attempt to over- throw the Communal Government, and four battal- ions of Federates were stationed in the lyuxem- bourg as a precaution against any uprising which might be attempted. Dombrowski was chagrinned at the apathy shown by Cluseret; Rossel was disgusted with the latter's laxity of discipline and failure in the proper organizations of the commissary. All affairs connected with the war were in a highly ULisatisfactory condition. Complaints to the Commune were incessant. A Commission for the Control of the War was appointed April 21st, consisting of Delescluze, Tridon, Avrial, Ranvier and Arnold. Bergeret was released from prison. Pyat sent In his resig- nation to the Commune, alleging dissatisfaction with Its proceedings, Some of his colleagues ac- cused him of resigning to escape responsibility for the Commune's actions, which accusation. 74 THIC PARIS COMMUNE. judging from Pyat's general character, was prob- ably true. Delescluze here said that others dis- pleased with the detail work, would not desert, but " if necessary, find death at the ramparts de- fending the cause." Sharp quarrels were taking place in the Commune. Vermorel and Pyat exchanged heated words. Pyat was denounced as being the cause of the failure of the attempt to overthrow the government on October 31st. Vermorel charged Pyat with seeking to evade the results of the Commune's proceedings. Its formation had been advocated by Pyat, who had advised in his paper the most extreme measures. Pyat, whose threat to resign was the cause of these recriminations, decided to retain his seat. A Commission of Police Control was ap- pointed — Cournet, Ferre and Trinquet. Rigault, jealous of any infringement on his power as Prefect, resigned; Cournet was appointed in his stead, and Rigault was assigned to Cournet's place on the Commission of Control, which really left Rigault in power as before. The Executive Committee of the Commune was changed from its previous form, to that of nine members, one each from the Commissions, and the following delegates were named: Delegate of IFar— Cluseret. Finance— 3 oVRXyE.. Subsistence— ViART). Exterior Relations — GroUSSET. Labor and Exchange — Fbankel. Justice — Protot. Public &rCTce— Andrieu. Information— V ALLI ANT. General Surety — Rigault. A Committee of practical jewelers met at the Ministry of Finance to examine and estimate the WAR— THK KVKNTS OF APRIL. 75 value of a number of sapphires and pearls found in the building. Two of the pearls were as large as pigeon-eggs, and the whole collection was estimated at many millions of francs. Twelve unfriendly journals were suppressed by the Commune. An advance of the Federates on the 21st at the Park of Neuilly seemed successful, the Versaillese falling back. The Federates, flushed with success, were pressing on, when they were enfiladed by masked batteries of Gatling guns, which piled the road with the dead, and threw into the wildest disorder the troops who had escaped so imminent a danger. They fled to the barricades, and were met by the fixed bayonets of the Federate reserves. They again charged the murderous engines which no human line could overcome. Driven back, their retreat becamea rout; it was with difficulty they obtained admittance into the city, and that only by force at the St. Ouen gate. Wagon loads of the dead were brought in. Omnibusses and other conveyances were requisitioned for transportation of the wounded, whose number was enormous. This terrible slaughter was ioUowed in the city by almost innumerable funerals, and the scenes of death and the mournful corteges were being felt as lessening the vigor of the Federates, who complained loudly of tlie unsystematic dis- tribution of troops, of ammunition and of supplies, blaming their ill-success upon the Commune and all subordinate authorities, and in many instances charging their commanders with betrayal. On the night of the 22d, an advance was made by the Versaillese, who threw large bodies of troops across the Seine above Clichy, intending to 76 ...the: PARIS COMMUNE). take Clichy and L@vallois, thus cutting off that por- tion of the Federates on the right from the balance of the army. Dombrowski, by a vigorous and skillful disposition and movement of his troops, check- mated this operation and proved himself to be vigilant as well as valorous. Skirmishes only were reported on the 23d. The Assembl}^ now took measures to prevent even a desire for conciliation to be made public through publications of any kind in France* It was thus made plain that it was not peace, but the downfall of Parisian autonomy that was desired. f Cluseret requested an armistice on the 24th to bury the dead and allow the escape of the non- combatant inhabitants of Neuilly. The Federates supposed the terms and date were understood, but they were fired on when they commenced peaceful operations, and suffered considerable loss; being pressed, a determined stand was made, and the fighting resulted in great loss of life but no advantage was gained either side. Thiers, during the negotiation looking to an armistice, said : "As soon as the Germans evacuate the forts on the North I shall bombard Paris; the legitimate authority must be upheld; the power of this calumniated Assembly shall be maintained at any cost." Thiers visited St. Denis on the 24th, and had a long interview with the Crown Prince of Saxony and General Fabrice; he informed them that the Versailles army numbered 150,000 men, *M. Dufaure, Minister of .Tustice, with the assent of the Assembly on April 23d, issued orders to the procurators of the provinces to proceed against all journalists inimical to the Assembly government. " Some," said M. Dufaure, '"attacked the institutions of society openly and without reserve; others more dangerous still, impart to their criticisms a semblance of conciliation " It was evident that oi)position or voices for conciliatjoii would not be tolerated by the Assembly. tSee Modern Paris in another chapter. WAR — THE EVENTS OF APRIL. 77 and that they would be thoroughly prepared by the ist of May. On April 17th Thiers had issued a proclama- tion in which he said: " We persist in our system of temporization for two reasons, which we can avow; first of all, to collect forces so imposing that resis- tance will be impossible, and therefore not sanguin- ary] and secondly, to leave misled men the time to return to reason." Hostilities were suspended on April 25th to. allow the inhabitants of Neuilly (where the fight- ing had been heavy and almost continuous since. April ist)to leave their houses. Their homes had been alternately held by Federates and Ver- saillese, and the cellars had been the residence of the gr^test part of the population for many days. A committee of four was chosen, two by each of the opposing parties. M. Bonvalet, ex-Mayor 3d arrondissement, and M. Stupuy, a literary man, were the Commune's representatives; M. Adam and M. LoiseauPinson (both of whom had re- signed as members of the Commune) were the Versaillese representatives. This Committee was charged with attending to the carrying out of the essentials of the agreement for the armistice. The village was visited during this day of peace by crowds from Paris, among them many women, and the scenes of sufi'ering witnessed and the acts of kindness performed would require many pages : to narrate. At 5 p. m. hostilities were resumed. One writer says : "Nearly all the ruins were filled with dead insurgents, more or less in a state of decomposition; most of them had received bullet holes through the head, killed in the act of firing over the barricades or through loop- 78 THE PARIS COMMUNE. holes . "* The floors of many of the houses in Neuilly were soaked with blood. On the 26th the VersaillCvSe showed their real strength in their attacks upon the forts. They had been advancing lines of heavy guns and had almost reduced Issy to silence. It is said there were breaches in the redoubts of this fort through which a carriage might have been driven. The gunboats of the Federates on the Seine were of great service, doing much execution and sheltering themselves beneath the railway viaducts. One of these, the Liberty^ being of light draft, was particularly active, running out, firing, and re- turning to cover to reload. The fierceness of the cannonade increased on the 27th, Montrouge and Issy being the principal objects of assault. '' Issy, though dismantled, and, in spite of its escarpes tumbling into the ditch and its ruined barracks, still fought with desperation, throwing shell on Tour-des- Anglais, Clamart and Meudon. Montrouge was scarcely better off than Issy." The practices of the Versaillese were exempli- fied on April 27th. Four Federates were cap- tured. The captain of the Versaillese company, drawing his revolver, killed three of the prisoners and shot the other — Captain Scheffer — through the chest; he fell as if dead, but recovered suffi- ciently to escape to the Federate ranks. f Yet re- prisals were forbidden by Federates as " not ac- cording to civilized warfare." *As the Versaillese officers made a practice of shooting the prisoners through the head with their pistols, (rather than be troubled with their detention or than to lessen their forces by detailing a guard to conduct prisoners to the rear,) the bullet holes in the heads are otherwise explainable. tWhen Tolain interpellated War Minister Le Flo upon this matter in the Assembly, his voice was drowned by the howling of members, and Le Flo was, by the Assembly, forbidden to answer. WAR — the: kve:nts of APRII.. 79 Severe fighting took place on the West of Paris on the 28th. Thiers made a speech in the Assembly. He again and again declared his und3ang fealty to France, and in shielding himself from rumors of his attempts to re-establish the Orleanists, he was moved to tears and was encouraged by cries of "Goon!" "Goon!" As he related his sacrifices for his country he was again deeply moved. He closed this emotional address by avowing his inten- tion of carrying out the wishes of the Assembly. As a dramatic effort this oration is said to have been of great merit. Constant precautions were taken as the Ver- saillese gained ground to prevent the escape of any persons from the city. By the end of April Thiers had stopped provisions from coming into the city through the gates controlled by the Ver- saillese. But the neutral zone between the Ger- man lines and the walls was sufficient to scantily supply the city. The Department of Subsistence had no very great difficulties. The National Guards, loyal to the Versaillese, were constantly under suspicion, and any show of consideration for the prisoners was looked upon as treason. The soldiers of the line, (whose num- bers were constantly augmented by the prison- ers who arrived from Germany by Bismarck's orders,) were, to some extent, animated by a desire to conquer, and hoped by their valor and atrocities here, to somewhat atone before the world for their ignominous defeat by the Germans. Those who expressed sympathy for the Commune and for relatives of Communists, were treated with no pity; many were secretly killed and others, after a farcical trial, were executed at Versailles. 8o THE PARIS COMMUNE. No more significant occurrence was to be ob- served during the Commune's regime than the deter- mined stand taken in affairs by the Masonic fra- ternity in Paris. On April 26th they had decided, in mass meeting, to employ all means "to obtain the Communal liberties of Paris." On the 29th, 10,000 of them, representing 55 lodges, paraded. Members of the Commune, decorated with red sashes bordered with gold lace, reviewed the procession from the Court of Honor at the Hotel de Ville. It was decided to make one more attempt to obtain a peaceful arrangement with the Ver- saillese. " A balloon was sent up which let fall at intervals outside Paris, a manifesto of the Masons." M. Beslay, who for 56 years had been a Mason, made a vigorous and humane speech, in- sisting upon the necessity of the Freemasons of the city assisting in "arranging immediate terms of peace or of furnishing the city with their arms to defeat its enemies." He asked the honor of accom- panying the delegation as the senior member of the Commune and the senior Mason of Paris. Citizen heo Meillet then said: — "You have, just heard the only music to which we can listen before a definite peace. Here is the red flag which the Commune of Paris offers to the Masonic depu- tations. This flag should accompany your pacific banners; it is the flag of universal peace. It is the flag of the Commune of Paris, which the Com- mune is about to confide to the Freemasons." Citizen Terifocq took the red flag from the hands of Citizen Leo Meillet, addressed the assem- bly the following words: — "Citizens, brothers; I am of those who took the initiative to go and plant the standard of peace on our ramparts. We will APRII, — THK EVKNTS OF WAR. 8 1 say: Soldiers of the same country, come and fraternize with us; and if peace is accomplished, we will return to Paris convinced that we have gained the most glorious victory — that of humanity! If, on the contrary, we are not heard, but are fired upon, we will call every vengeance to our aid. We are certain that we shall be heard, and that the Masonry of ali the provinces of France will follow our example. We are sure that in whatever part of the country our brothers see troops directed upon Paris, they will go to meet them and call upon them to fraternize." Five members of the Commune, selected by lot, were in the procession, which was followed by 40,000 or 50,000 citizens to the x\rc d'Triomphe. A shower of shells fell here, killing many persons and wounding many others. These shells were fired in reply to a cannonade from Porte Maillot. The deputation placed its banner on the wall at Porte Maillot; the Versaillese commander at this point was a Freemason and ceased firing after the flag was planted. Pie explained to the deputation that the cessation of firing was necessarily only tem- porary. The delegates were furnished, by this commander with a carriage, in which they pro- ceeded to Versailles to interview M. Thiers. The delegates were received by M. Thiers, who replied: "There will be a few more houses shelled, and a few more men killed, but force must remain to the law." In answer to a communica-' tion afterwards sent to him, he declared that he had nothing to add to his previous reply. From its inability to obtain fresh horses, the deputation was forced to return to Paris on foot,, where they arrived at 6 o'clock in the morning OU: the 30th. ". 82 THK PARIS COMMUNE. The action of Thiers toward the committee showed all peace endeavors to be fruitless; and the Parisian Freemasons prepared to, and did thereafter, assist materially in the defence of the city. On April 29th Megy deserted Fort Issy. Cluseret ordered it re-occupied immediately on being apprised of the evacuation. But suspicion had fastened on Cluseret, and he was at once ar- rested and Rossel installed as Delegate of War. He at once instituted a second system of barricades, the construction of which was put in charge of Napoleon Gaillard, who, to enthusiasm in the cause added knowledge and industry, and the work was conducted with vigor and apparent ability. Nothing was ever done with Megy for his desertion of Issy. Cluseret had made himself generally unpopu- lar. Some of the newspapers had made an attack upon him, intimating that he only waited an opportunity to declare himself dictator; that a "coup d'etat" might be expected, etc. Nothing can be found to justify these insinuations; they were probably used to drive him from the head of the War Department. Dombrowski and some other ofiicers had tendered their resignations, but with- drew them after Cluseret's displacement. Cluseret was a Frenchman by birth and a naturalized American citizen. He was naturalized under the special act of Congress which provides for the naturalization of any one who had been two years in the military service of the United States. He had been made a Brigadier-General by President Lincoln upon the recommendation of Senator Sumner, who described Cluseret as a "gallant Frenchman who had come over to fight for the cause of the Union." He was never given a position in the Union Army commensurate with the rank of Brigadier-General, but was assigned to an obscure post in Baltimore by Secretary Stanton. He was for some time attached to the staff of General Fremont. Cluseret was with the Fenians in the WAR — THE EVENTS OF APRIL. 83 attack on Chester Castle in England in 1867, and afterwards was again in America, returning to France in 1870. Early in October, Cluseret walked out of Paris through the German lines, and was presently installed General-in Chief of the National Guards at Marseilles. He soon returned to Paris and became prominent in the Communal uprising. The unserviceability of the War Department under Cluseret is a prominent feature in the Commune's history. He is accused of insincerity as well as of incapacity, and from his conduct in office and in the last days, we are not impressed with a very high regard for either his military talents or his earnestness in the Com- munal cause. No record shows to us what Cluseret's ability was in handling troops In the field; but, if we may judge from the accounts of his life and character, he was more the diplomat than the soldier. His occupation is given by one writer* as an artist and by others as an agitator In writing to Varlin from New York, on the 17th of February, 1870, Cluseret observed:— "You say success is cer- tain. So it is if we prepare the ground beforehand. When the day arrives, we shall be ready; physically as well as morally ready. When that day shall come, it will be either us or nothing. Paris will be ours, or Paris will have ceased to be." In Lyons on April 30th, a manifesto was is- sued in which it was stated that pending an elec- tion, the Red Republican Party had appointed a temporary Commune, which "would no longer suffer a factious Assembly to wave in France the flag of civil war, but that in the meanwhile the members of the Commune * resolved, rather than to see victory taken from them, to convert into a mass of ruins a town sufficiently cowardly to allow Paris and the Republic to be assassinated.'" Furious fighting occurred in Lyons on April 30th and May ist; the Guards fought desperately behind barricades. They were outnumbered, and after suffering much loss, were forced to sur- render. After the defeat the National Guards were disarmed. Milliere, who had worked hard to organize the provincials in Paris ever since the early part ♦Latimer. 84 THK PARIS COMMUNK. of April, induced the "Republican Alliance of the Departments," consisting of provincials residing in Paris, to give a formal adhesion to the Com- mune; on the 30th of April, 15,000 men accom- panying Milliere to the Hotel de Ville, after hav- ing voted an address to the departments. Various requisitions had been made upon the Bank of France during the month of April. The amounts demanded by the Commune had rarely been paid in full, but with these monies, and the regular revenues, the expenses of the municipality had been carried on. The limits of this work preclude the possi- bility of a detailed recital of all the sanguinary contests of this struggle. But, from the records of the events of the conflict, sufficient has been already narrated to show the lack of discipline, lack of military leadership and lack of orderly atteiition in the distribution of ammunition and supplies for the Federates. Their courage at times was marvel- ous; their losses were appalling. The result of April's war operations were neither creditable nor favorable to the Commune. There is no evidence that the prisoners taken in battle by the Federates: were treated otherwise than with the considera-: tion due to prisoners of war. : On the other hand, the trained warriors of the Assembly's force were gaining steadily and surely. Their operations were conducted with precision and skillful purpose. Nor can it be said that, in the later daj^s, the Versaillese troops were less brave than were the Federates; the former, how- ever, were guided by men who depended much' more upon strategic procedure than upon the valor of the soldiery. But to this cautious wisdom in; cTjrnbHtth^re wa^ addM,~'by both'afifc-ers^and men' WAR-^THK KVKNTS OF APRII,. 85 of the Versaillese, a ferocious and disgraceful ill-treatment of prisoners that has left a record of helpless slain and needless suffering which those most friendly to the Assembly have sought in vain to justify or to extenuate. The Federates taken prisoners were the objects by which brutal abuse and assassination were established as prece- dents in "civilized" warfare — inexpressibly mourn- ful at best, and enormous in these iniquities. The murders of prisoners in April were as unnecessary as they were atrocious. The annals of extermination by the Assembly's troops would indicate their belief to have been that they were at war with wild beasts and not with human beings — men bound to them by a thousand ties of interest and of consanguinity. "War — it may be summed up to be the com- bination and concentration of all the liorrors, atrocities, crimes and sufferings of which human , nature, on this globe, is capable." No wars have been so sad as civil strifes; certainly not one of these ever furnislied a chronicle redder in blood or blacker in atrocities than did the revolt of 1871. 86 THE PARIS COMMUNE. V. May 1-20— The Fall of the Forts. On May ist, the commander of the forces at- tacking Fort Issy, (who was a former comrade of Rossel's,) sent him this message : " Immediate surrender of Issy will obtain for its defenders the rights of prisoners of war; otherwise the fort will be taken and the men shot." To which Rossel replied: " If you again send such an insolent message, I shall have your messenger shot in conformity with military usage." Miot, in the Commune's sitting, introduced a proposition for the election of a Committee of Pub- lic Safety to consist of five members; 44 members voted in favor of this proposal and 24 against it. Antoine Arnaud, I^eo Meillet, Gabriel Ranvier, Felix Pyat and Charles Gerardin were elected. Those who voted against the Committee's forma- tion, refused to take part in the election of its members. The nine heads of departments re- mained in office, notwithstanding the Committee of Public Safety was given full powers to act, al- though instituted especially to attend to the affairs of the w^ar. Jourde and others refrained from at- tending the sittings of the Commune, being op- posed to the delegating of full powers to the Com- mittee of Public Safety.* Rossel, who was a methodical tactician, at- tempted some improvements in discipline, and *This committee was instituted in imitation of one of the same name in the rpvojutjon of 1789. MAY I-20 — THE FAI.Iv OF THE FORTS- 87 consequently was unpopular with the Federates. Neither their organization nor their disposition had improved since the siege began. The Chateau d'Issy had been taken on the 30th of April by the Versaillese, and on May ist the Communists retook it. On the advance of the Versaillese on the 2d, the Federates made a sortie to meet them and in the action took nearly 300 prisoners and inflicted great losses on their antag- onists. They seemed to have achieved a decisive victory and were preparing to silence a battery be- tween the Chateau and the fort. Their three bat- talions, advancing in the early morning, were met by an overwhelming force, which drove the Federates from the Chateau and to the gates of the city. The pursuers inflicted great losses on the fugitives, who were denied admission, an order being operative that no Federate should be al- lowed to pass in. The Federates threatened to fire on the guard at the gate, but finally scattered and joined other battalions in the vicinity. The station at Clamart also fell into the hands of the Versaillese after a sharp engagement. Hand-to-hand conflicts were common, and when the Federates left the field, more than 200 of their men were dead, nearly all killed by either bayonet or sword. Attempts were made through various sources to arrange the exchange of Archbishop Darboy and three or four others of the hostages for Blanqui. United States Minister Washburn was particularly active in this affair; he was granted passes by Rigault and Cluseret to visit Mgr. Darboy in prison. Mr. Washburn, contrary to the prison regulations, brought wine and other articles into the prison for the Archbishop. > All advances in relation to the exchange were apparently SS the; PARIS COMMUNE. less summarily considered than were the applica- tions by peace deputations, but that Thiers even seriously considered the propositions of exchange is very doubtful.* Thiers evidently took the position regarding the exchange of prisoners, that, if the hostages were not executed, it would be evidence enough that there was no need of an exchange; if, on the other hand they were executed, it would be suffi- cient evidence of the necessity of the drastic measure so well planned and so determinedly carried out. On May 2d Fort Issy was three times as strong in men as when evacuated by Megy, but the con- dition of the fort and armament was such that a vigorous defense was not even intended. How- ever, the Versaillese advance was checked while the defences at the ramparts were strengthened. Rossel, on this day, sent a letter to several Paris papers in which he denied anything except the most friendly feeling between himself and Cluseret, and further said: " I feel bound not to make myself, by my silence, an accomplice to the malevolent rumors to which General Cluseret may be exposed in the unfortunate position in which he is placed, until the justice of the Commune has passed upon his acts." This appearance of fairness raised Rossel in the estimation of the populace. Rigault was vigorous in the suppression of spying and intriguing in favor of Versailles, and his acts of arrests and methods of imprisonment were distasteful to some of the members of the Commune. He was told that secret imprisonment *A message was sent to Versailles stating tliat unless a million francs ($200,000) were paid as a ransom for the Archbishop of Paris, he would be kJMed."—Qassell. MAY I-20 — THK FAI.I, OF THE FORTS. 89 was immoral. To these objections he made that famous answer, so often quoted : '' War is im- moral, yet we fight." The Versaillese on May 3d had a plan by which a gate of the city was to be opened. This failed, much to the chagrin of Thiers, who was persistent in attempts to buy an entrance. There is a suspicion, not well established by records, that some of the Commune's members took the Ver- saillese money, but failed to open the gates, which, in any event, were never opened by the means the Assembly's agents so unceasingly employed. May 4th, the Federates in Moulin-Saquet re- doubt, (one of the Commune's strongest positions garrisoned by between 600 and 800 men,) were surprised by a force of 1,200 Versaillese. Half the Federate force was butchered in cold blood, large numbers being bayonetted while not yet awake —overcome by days and nights of sleepless activity. Rossel blamed General Wroblewski for absenting himself from the fortification; and there was a clash of authority; it was proven that Felix Pyat, of the Committee of Public Safety, had ordered Wroblewski to leave the fort, although Pyat denied it until his written order was pro- duced. Wroblewski was exonerated. Thiers detailed this massacre to the Assembly with unseemly joy as soon as he was made aware of the facts. The surprise of Moulin-Saquet has been ascribed to many methods. One was that Versaillese disguised as peasants drove a herd of cattle up to the fort, the gates were opened, they rushed in and massacred the inmates. Another story was that a body of Assembly's troops presented them- selves, dressed in the uniform of the National Guard, and on pretence of being a patrol party, go THE PARTS COMMUNE. gave the countersign and gained admittance. The affair has been accounted for by the statement that the commandant or an officer had divulged the watchword in a coffee house. It has also been said that the affair was the result of bribery. Gal- lien, the commander was accused of having sold the countersign to the enemy.* There were vehement complaints of treacher}^ The lassi- tude which allowed the surprise was discred- itable, but the butchery by the victors was nothing less than infamous — a slaughter of helpless men, scarcely equalled in atrocity in the annals of the wars of savages. There has never been a doubt that all of the 300 or 400 men slain while asleep (or drunk, as some writers say), at Moulin-Saquet could have been taken prisoners. Few of the garrison escaped, most of those not killed being captured. The redoubt was cannonaded by Forts Ivry and Bic^tre as soon as the situation was made known to them, iand a large body of Fed- erates soon drove the Versaillese from the works, the latter taking with them their prisoners and six cannon, for the transportation of which they had come provided with horses. A deputation of the Republican Union inter- viewed Thiers on the 4th, but were met with the usual evasions. The Commune was also inter- viewed by a deputation of the same body, but no basis of conciliation could be agreed upon. Nearly 100 men were sent to prison for insub- ordination on May 5th. The plate taken from the churches and silver ingots were minted, by order of the Commune. Seven papers, inimical to the Commune, were ordered suppressed; but this order, like many others, was not systematic- ally carried out. Some newspapers ordered ♦ Fetridg-e. MAY 1-20— THK FAI,I, OF THK FORTS. 9I suppressed in the morning were allowed to be sold on the streets in the evening. A decree for the demolition of the Expiatory Chapel of Louis XVI, to be carried out within eight days, was passed by the Commune, which designated the administrator of the public lands as the recipient of the profits from the sale of the material and contents of the chapel. There was continual friction betw^een the Committee of Public Safety, the Committee Cen- tral and the Delegate of War. General Dombrowski was assigned to the command of the right bank of the Seine; General La Cecilia between the Seine and the left bank of the Bierre, with the title of General of the Center; General Wroblewski, the left wing; General Ber- geret, commander of the First Reserve Brigade; General Kudes, the command of Second Reserve Brigade. The officers named were given in- terior headquarters as follows: Dombrowski— PZace Vendome. La G^ciIjI a— Military School. Wroblewski— r/ie EUjsee. EuDES — Legion of Honor. Bergeret — Legislative Hall. The territory west of the city was being oc- cupied by the Versaillese, w^ho made great gains on the 5th, a large number of minor engagements taking place. The Federates, resisting stubborn- ly, were gradually giving way before the superior forces of disciplined, fresh and well-supplied troops. Skirmishes in the Park at Bagneux and at Neuilly resulted adversely to the Federate forces. The Assembly's troops were now entrenched 300 yards from Porte Maillot. The railway betw^een Forts Vanves and Issy was taken in the night of 92 THE PARIS COMMUNE. 5th-6th; this cut off communication between the forts. The Federates lost much ground on the 6th. On Sunday, the yth, Thiers issued a proclama- tion addressed to the Parisians from which the fol- lowing is an extract: " The Government which speaks to you would have preferred that you should liberate yourselves from a few tyrants who are playing with your liberties and your lives; but since you cannot do so, it must itself under- take the duty; And for that purpose it has col- lected an army beneath your walls — an army which comes, at the price of its blood, not to con- quer, but to deliver you. Up to the present time it has confined itself to attacking the outer walls. The moment has now arrived when, to abridge your sufferings, it must attack the enciente itself. It will not bombard Paris, as the people of the Commune and Committee of Public Safety will not fail to tell you it intends. A bombardment threatens a whole city, and renders it uninhabita- ble, and has for its object to intimidate the citizens, and constrain them to a capitulation. The Government will not fire a cannon except to force one of your gates, and will endeavor to limit to the point attacked, the ravages of war of which it is not the author." A grand concert was given in several halls in the Tuilleries on Sunday night the 7th, for the benefit of the families of the killed or wounded Federates. Those who gained admission were compelled to stand in line an hour, and many who purchased tickets were unable to enter.* The re- ceipts were more than ^2,400. *"Ten thousand people filled all the apartments, wandering everywhere at their ease, and examining- into every nook and corner of the vast palace. The comments of the rabble were most amusing. My secretary kept along with the crowd everywhere, seeing all that was to be seen and listep'ng to MAY I-20 — THK FAI.I, OF THE FORTS. 93 At this entertainment cloths were tied over the heads of the busts of Napoleon's generals. The members of the Commune in person were in charge of the affair. "By 8 o'clock the reception rooms were full and some 2,000 people still stood in a long string in the garden outside. They behaved with the wondrous good nature which characterizes a French crowd, laughing over the absurdity of their predicament and waving their tickets, which they would never be able to present, jestingly at one another. "t Thiers had for some time made daily visits to superintend hundreds of laborers and carpen- ters engaged in the work of building a gigantic battery at Montretout. This work was begun on April 29th and finished on May 4th. During these six days an immense amount of labor was performed. Powder magazines, etc., were a part of the work. It is said that more than 150,000 cubic feet of earth were moved in this construc- tion. The new fortification, about a mile in extent, and consisting of eight batteries, assisted by those surrounding it, assured the breaching of the ramparts. Over 70 cannon of large calibre, each supplied with 500 shells (some of which weighed 160 pounds) centralized their force upon a comparatively small portion of the city's walls, and with terrible effect. Marine pieces, all that was said. Great interest centered in the private apartments of the Empress. The g-orj^eous belongings were ever.ywhere commented upon by the mob. The bath-room of the Empress attracted great attention. It was represented as very handsome, and as a marvel of liixury, beauty and taste. It was surrounded by heavy plate mirrors. The tub was cut out of solid marble. The ceilings were all covered with rich blue silk velvet. The faucets in the bath were of solid silver. All that was seen was described by the Comnmnards as evidence of the profligacy and luxury of the Court, which accounted for the oppression of the people and for the vast increase of the taxes levied upon them. Not one man in the crowd, it is safe to say, had ever paid a cent of taxes in his life." — Wanhburn. ' t Fetridge, 94 THE PARIS COMMUNE. worked by sailors accustomed to their operation were of great assistance to the besiegers. The fire of this aggregation of heavy batteries began on Monday morning, centreing on Point du Jour. One hundred and fifty great guns were pour- ing shot and shell on Paris and the forts. Fort Valerien continued to direct a terrific fire on Porte Malliot and the adjacent ramparts, which displayed frightful defacements as a result. Unceasing activity in the construction of barricades marked the early days of May. Huge defenses rose at the Place de la Concorde, Rue Royale, Rue Rivoli and at the corner of the Tuil- leries. In front of each of these barricades was a wide ditch. Many of the defences were pierced for artillery, and in the embrasures were placed mitrailleuses.* Fort Issy was now in an untenable condition. A battalion which had reinforced it the day before had lost half its men, and, after making prepara- tions to blow up the fort, the garrison quietly evacuated it. About ii o'clock in the night of May Sth-gth, the Versaillese, getting no return fire, investigated and occupied the fort.f * A force, consisting- of 5,000 or 6,000 men, was for many days at work on the interior defences, under direction of a corps of engineers. The Arc d'Triomph was fortified. The barricade at the angle of the Rue de Rivoli and the Rue de St. Florentine was a veritable redoubt, supporting itself to the right on the Ministry of Marine, and to the left on the TuUeries; it was constructed of earth and sacks filled with earth, and was pierced with five embrasures. The Places Concorde, Vendome aud Madeleine and Hotel de Ville were strongly barricaded. On the Quai de Passy a strong barricade was erected near the Jesuit's College, which was also converted into a fortress; the walls of the college gardens were made into extemporized and connected fortifications. Houses were crenellated; the cellars were con- nected with each other and with the barricades by tunnels. These prepara- tions were made particularly in those parts of the city inhabited by the workingmen. fin Fort Issy, 119 guns were captured and 10 more in the village, as well as huge quantities of munitions and provisions. A short time after the o-eupation of the fort by the Assembly's troops, a considerable body of Federates advanced toward the fort, probablj' to reinforce its defence, evi- dently unaware of the state of affairs. They were met by a heavy fire and dvi\nn back, losiDg several of their number. MAY I-20 — THK FAI^L OF THK FORTS. 95 As a soldier, Rossel recognized that a passive defence against an increasing force, could but delay the fall of the fortifications. On assuming the head of the War Department, he had at once determined on instituting a plan for offensive warfare; this was nullifiedby thedilatorinessof the Commune's proceeding. Now, disgusted with the conflicts of authority, appreciating, in common with many of the leaders the hopelessness of a continuation of the methods in vogue; in power rather from a desire for place than through a love of the cause, he determined to cease his struggles with the legislators, debaters and committees, none of whom had shown any knowledge of military procedure, and few even of the necessities of action and the subordination of theories in war. Immediately on hearing of Fort Issy's occupation by the enemy, he posted notices all over Paris, many more in number than was usual in issuing proclamations — "The tri~color floats over the Fort Issy, abandoned last night by the garrison," — which certainly has more the sound of the announcement of a victory than of so dis- astrous a surrender. The next day, when Rossel's despatch was seen posted on the walls of Paris, and published in the Journal Officiel, a hurried meeting was held by the members of the Commune, and the follow- ing proclamation appeared: " It is by a regrettable error that the an- nouncement has been made, that the Fort of Issy had been taken and occupied by the Versaillese. Nothing of the sort has occurred, happily, and the flag of the Commune still floats on its ram- parts!" This contradiction was ordered to be posted and was sent to all the Mairies by Vesinier, ^ 96 THE PARIS COMMUNE. member of the Commune. The Journal Officiel, however, never published the contradiction. Rogsel tendered to the Commune his resigna- tion as Delegate of War, which was accepted. He related some very unpleasant truths in his letter, a very remarkable document, which he closed by asking for a cell at Mazas prison.* Eudes had, on May ist, been commissioned by Rossel to take charge of Fort Issy. Eudes had proceeded there unwillingly and had immediately sought to find means to get back, and finally did leave the fort, turning its command over to Collet, who evacuated it as stated. Rossel, Gerardin and probably Dombrowski, were parties to a secret attempt to overthrow the Commune, and place the conduct of the war in the hands of Rossel and Dombrowski. The choice of members for the Committee of Public Safety had been unfortunate in more than one instance. Pyat was particular!}^ violent in language, extravagant in ideas and uncertain in ♦Resignation of Rossel as Delegate of War. Paris, May 9th. "Citizens, members of the Commune: — Being charged by you vvith the provisional direction of the war-operations, I feel myself incapable of any longer supporting the responsibility of a command where every one de- liberates and no one obeys. "When a necessity existed for organizing the artillery, the Central Committee of that arm discussed but did not order anything. After two month's of revolution, the whole service of your cannons was still depen- dent on the energy of a few volunteers, whose number is insufficient. " At my arrival at the Ministry, when I desired to facilitate the concen- tration of arms, the requisition of horses, the pursuit of men evading ser- vice, I asked the Commune to turn to useful account the various Munici- palities of arrondissement. "That body deliberated, but came to no resolution. " Later, the Central Committee of the Federation came and ofifered, almost imperiously, its assistance in the administration of the war. Con- sulted by the Committee of Public Safety, I accepted that aid in the clearest manner, and I transferred to the Central Committee all the information I possessed relative to the organization. Since that time that body has beeii debating, but has not yet acted. During that delay the enemy enveloped the Fort of Issy with adventurous and imprudent attacks, which I should punish if I had the smallest military force disposable. ^ -» " The garrison, badly commanded, was seized with panic; and the MAY I-20— THB FAI.I. OF THE FORTS. 97 action. The resignation of the Committee of Public Safety was called for, tendered and accepted. A second Committee of Public Safety (the entire Com- mune concurring) was elected, consisting of Eudes, A. Arnaud, Delescluze, Gambon and Ranvier. Delescluze being now appointed Delegate of War, Billioray was elected in his stead on the Com- mittee of Public Safety, This body decided to sit in permanence at the Hotel de Ville, and the Commune's meetings were to be held three times each week instead of daily as heretofore. ^ The proceedings of the Commune were published in the Journal Officiel, except of the sessions in which mili- tary affairs were discussed. Rossel, who was ar- rested on the m orning of the loth, demanded a officers, having debated, drove away Captain Dumont, an energetic man who arrived to command them, and while consulting, evacuated their fort, after having foolishly spoken of blowing it up, a thing more impossible for them than to defend it. , ., , i. ^ . "That was not enough. Yesterday, while every one ought to have been at work or under fire, the chiefs of legions deliberated in order to sub- stitute a new system of organization for the one I had adopted, in order to make up for the improvidence of their authority, always uncertain and badly obeyed. The result of their meeting was a project, at the moment when men were wanted, and a declaration of principles, when acts were necessarv. My indignation brought them back to other thoughts, and they promised me for this day, as their final effort, an organized force of 12,000 men, with which I undertook to march against the enemy. Those men were to assemble at half -past eleven; it is now one, and they are not ready; instead of being 12,000, there are about 7,000, which is not at all the same thino- Thus, the nullitv of the Committee of Artillery prevented the oro-anization of that arm; the incertitude of the Central Committee arrested the administration; and the petty preoccupation of the chiefs of legions paralyzed the mobilization of the troops. ""l am not a man to recoil before repression, and yesterday, while those officers were deliberating; the execution-company awaited them in the court-vard. But I am unwilling to assume alone the initiative in an energetic imanner, to take on me the odium of the executions necessary to extract from their chaos organization, obedience, aud victory. Again, if I was protected by the publicity of my acts, I might retain niy command. But the Commune has not had the courage to make its proceedings known. Twice already I have given you the necessary information; and on both occasions, in spite of me, you have held a secret committee. "My predecessor was wrong to struggle in the midst of this absurd situation. Enlightened by his example, and knowing that the strength of a revolutionist consists solely in the precision of his position, I have two lines to choose from— either to crush the obstacle which hinders my action, or to withdraw. I shall not do the former, for the obstruction is you and your feebleness; and I am unwilling to make an attack on the public sovereignty. '• I therefore retire, and I have the honor to ask you for a cell at Mazas. " Rossel. 98 THK PARIS COMMUNK. trial, and Charles Gerardin was deputed to bring him before the Commune. After a considerable wait, the fact was disclosed that both Rossel and Gerardin had disappeared, and neither was again discovered until resurrected by the Versaillese.* A decree of accusation had been passed against Rossel by the Commune; in his post- humous papers he avers that he was accused of traitorously surrendering Fort Issy. Louis Nathaniel Rossel, though very young, was one of the most capable men the Commune produced. He was born in Brittany in 1844, and was the son of a French father and a Scotch mother. This admixture of blood seems to have given force and gravity to his dis- position. He has been described as entirely wanting in the showy and theatrical qualities of the French nature. Energetic, practical, and businesslike, he appears to have had a quiet contempt for the declamation and posturing which generally form so large a part of the life of French Republicans. He was with the army of Bazaine at Metz, as an inferior officer of Engineers; and, while there, was so impressed with the absolute in- capacity of the commanding officers that, even as early as the first half of August, 1870, he formed a plan for expelling the whole body. Immediately after the surrender of Metz, he escaped, first to Belgium, and from there went to England. Early in December Rossel re-entered his native country. He was presented to M. Gambetta at Tours, and ultimately accepted the position of Chief Engineer Officer in the camp at Nevers. The conclusion of peace excited in him the highest indignation. The force of these ideas induced Rossel, on the 19th of March, 1871, (the day following that on which the Commune may be said to have been born), to address to the Minister of War at Versailles a letter resigning his post at the camps of Nevers. He wrote :— " 1 have the honor to inform you that I am about to proceed to Paris, to place myself at the disposal of the Government forces which are about to be organized there. Having learned by a Versailles- despatch, pub- lished this day, that two parties are struggling for mastery in the country, I do not hesitate in joining the side which has not con- cluded peace, and which does not include in its ranks generals guilty of capitulation." ^ * *A court-martial, of which Collet was to be president, was already named, " I could not bear," writes Rossel, " the idea of appearing- as an accused before that Collet whom I had seen cowering- before the shells at Issy; and it w*s then that I determined to ev*de the justice uf the t'unjmung." MAY I-20 — THK FALI, OF THE FORTS. 99 When Rossel offered his services, he was questioned by the Federate officials as to what his sentiments were regarding Socialism. He frankly answered that he knew nothing about it. In his posthumous papers he said : " I was as much the enemy of the Commune as the sensible Republicans were; yet I still thought that the Commune could and ought to be beneficial." When a correspondent once asked him why he sat as President of the Military Court in plain clothes, and not in uniform, he replied, speaking in English: " Oh, you know, we aim at being rather Ameri- can in our ideas, and especially in our detestation of forms and cere- monies. We don't want to sit in wigs and gowns, like the English judges. If I happen to be in uniform, I go to Court in that way ; if I am in plain clothes, 1 do not change them." After his elevation to the position of Delegate of War, however, he thought it advisable to assume the dress of a general; but he had it made after a very sim- ple pattern. " As great an enemy to killing as to warfare," Rossel wrote, " I nevertheless accept all the consequences of the situations in which I am placed." We have no reasf^n to suppose he was not a man of humane disposition. The only sentence of death he pro- nounced in the Military Court was quashed, He seems to have had a mania for plotting. He plotted against his superior officers at Metz; insinuations of secret acts against Cluseret brought from Rossel a letter of denial; he was in at leastone plot tooverthrow the Commune. He was of middle height and slight build, and wore a short, fair beard. His quiet, self-confident look, his deliberate and thoughtful way of speaking, and his reserved manners, made him seem much more like an Englishman, an American, or a Prussian, than a i'renchman. Rossel had been Captain of Engineers of the French Army, Colonel under Gambetta, Chief of Staff under Cluseret, Delegate of War and President of the Military Court. After parting from Gerardin, Rossel got out of Paris, and, fail- ing to quit the country, was arrested on the 7th of June, as a deserter from the regular army. The Commune's artillerymen elected their of- ficers, who refused to obey Avrial, Commandant of Artillery appointed by Rossel. The Orphan Asylum of Belleville, a semi- religious institution was closed on the loth and the property of the asylum was confiscated. . On the morning of May loth. Fort Vanves was the point of attack. The garrison replied but feebly, and soon evacuated the fort, which re- mained vacant for some time. The commander, lOO THE PARIS COMMUNE. Durassier, until disabled by a shell, made the Federates hold the place at the point of the pistol. Some of the garrison, leaving the fort, fell into the hands of the Versaillese. A line of rifle pits for sharpshooters had been established 1,500 yards from the fort, and the gunners had been picked off as they worked the guns, and were subj ected to a terrific fire from the breaching batteries and mortars, which had prevented the garrison from sleeping for three successive night and completely incapacitated the defenders from a performance of their duties. The Versaillese, believing the fort to be mined, did not take possession. In the evening two battalions of Federates re- occupied the fortress and withstood a furious enfilade. On May loth at Frankfort-on-the-Main, Bismarck forced on Pouyer-Ouertier and Favre even more extortionate terms than were contained in the original peace stipulation. The Committee Central of the National Guard, the loth, added to the bewildering number of committees, by appointing a "Committee of Organ- ization," which proclaimed itself about to "give an irresistable impetus to the defence of Paris." On May nth, the Assembly at Versailles be- came turbulent, accused the Chiefs of the Govern- ment of cowardice and incapacity. Thiers, always diplomatic, asked for only eight days more to re- duce the Commune to submission. Federate Chief of Battalion Le Moussu was delegated, with a body of troops, to take charge of the Bank of France. The loyal Guards were well entrenched; the usual excuses were poured into the ears of the Communists by the bank officials and Beslay, and the taking over was put off. MAY I-20 — THK FALI. OF THE FORTS. lOl The Journal Officiel on the 12th published a proclamation emanating from the Committee of Public Safety, which intimidated that Rossel had been bribed, blaming him for the surrender of Issy, and closing said: "All the living force of the Revolution must group together for a supreme effort. Then and only then will triumph be assured." It was the intention of the city authorities to take overall movable property belonging to persons who had deserted Paris during the Commune, and to a large extent tliis was done. The prop- ertied classes were anxious, in some cases almost frantic, to leave the city; many persons, by false passports, forgery and various devices, such as per- sonating coachmen, hiding in vegetable wagons, etc., did pass the ramparts. The cannon of Montmartre opened fire on Chateau de Becon and Gennevilliers, but the marks- manship was so defective that the Federate forces in Clichy suffered greatly from this bom- barbment. An unsuccessful attempt was made on the 1 2th to bribe Dombrowski, the Versaillese recog- nising in him a dangerous adversary. The attempts to bribe the Division Commanders were so persis- tent and so ably supported by persuasion and funds, that the Commune at this time detailed some of its members to personally associate them- selves with the commanders. Dereure was assigned to Dombrowski; Johannard to La Cecilia, and Meillet to Wroblewski. Suspicion seemed the order of the day. Henry Rochefort is credited with saying : ''The Hotel de Ville distrusts the Department of War; the Department of War distrusts the Department of Marine; Fort Vanves distrusts Montrouge; I02 THE PARIS COMMUNK. Rigault distrusts the Delegate of War; Vesinier dis- trusts me." By decree of the Commune, on the 13th, the demolition of Thiers' home in Paris was com- menced, it being levelled on that and succeed- ing days. The material was used by or sold for the benefit of the Commune. By the decree the linen of the establishment was consigned to the hospitals to be used in the care of the wounded; the pictures and books were sent to the National Museum and the Public I^ibraries; the other prop- erty was sold at public auction, the proceeds of which went to the widows and orphans of the victims of the war. Perry Smith, a wealthy citizen of Chicago, 111., attempted to bid in the effects of M. Thiers to preserve them for the head of the Assembly government. This attempt was unsuccessful.* The Assembly afterwards decreed that the Theirs mansion should be replaced from the pub- lic funds. Thiers, signing himself Chief of the Gov- ernment of France, had posted a proclama- tion declaring that Paris was not being bom- barded. "Whilst," as read the Commune's decree, " each day women and children are victims of the fratricidal projectiles of the Versaillese troops." Communal elections had been held in France April 30th. A very large majority returned repre- sentatives not favorable to Versailles. f There was an attempt made to call the representatives of of the Communes together at Bordeaux; the Assem- bly seized correspondence, interdicted orders, inter- rupted telegraphic communication and were suc- * Washburn. tOut of 35,000 Communes, only 8,000 wished to uphold the continued pjwer of the Assembly. — Sketcldey. MAY I-20— the: FAI^I, OF THE FORTS. IO3 cessful in preventing the establishment of what might have proved another parliamentary body in France. This gathering was forbidden by the Assembly, on the basis of an Imperial law — a law of the same Empire which the men now com- posing the Assembly, almost without exception, had condemned during its entire existence.* At 2 p. m. on the 12th a parade of troops took place in Versailles. The chiefs were received by M. Thiers at the Palace, where the soldiers were addressed by M. I^eon de Malleville, Vice-Presi- dent of the National Assembly. May 13th Ferre displaced Cournet as head of the Police Department in Paris. Some slight successes were credited to Dom- browski's division on May 13th. This was wel- come news to the Commune's sympathizers after days of unvaried reports of defeats. M. lyasnier, a Versaillese agent, was, on May 13th, arrested w4th 30,000 francs upon his person, with which he had intended to bribe the Federates. A scheme was in operation in Paris to furnish tri-colored badges to friends of the Versaillese, in order to distinguish them from Communal sup- porters when the city was taken. A Madame I,e Gros, engaged in the manufacture of the badges, was arrested. The Commune issued an order that each citi- zen should carry a card of identification. The difficulties of carrying out this order may be sur- mised, as nearly every citizen was a Federate, and each one had the power to arrest any man found without it. *M. Thiers, in a proclamation, insisted that the Assembly was the su- preme power having- been placed in office by the sanction of the people; the legitimacy of the Empire had been repeatedly denied by Thiers and most of his colleagues, though the powers of government had been derived from the same source. I04 THE PARIS COMMUNE. Fort Vanves fell Sunday morning May i4tli and at 12:30 p. m. the news reached Versailles, where manifestations of joy were exhibited in the Assembly and by its supporters. The losses in killed and wounded had been very great to both parties about Vanves, and the final struggle was merciless and terrific* The defeated and escaping Federates, with some difiiculty, made their way through quarries and underground passages to the city, the Montrouge gate and to the military road between the Vanves and Vaugirard gates.f It has been said that the courage of the soldier is the commonest trait in mankind. Whatever arguments might be advanced in this connection, the intrepidity displayed by the Com- munists in the holding of the forts surrounding Paris is worthy of particular mention. New earth- works were continually thrown up to protect the victorious progress of the Versaillese infantry and artillery. The encroachments of the breaching batteries on grounds before the fortifications were constant, and the huge guns were furnished with an abundance of ammunition and plentifully supplied with men from the increasing numbers of the be- seigers. A progressive system of rifle pits enabled the Versaillese sharpshooters to do great execution among the defenders at the guns. The city's forti- fications were, for the most part, inadequately manned and imperfectly attended with supplies. * Captains Rosheim and Durand de Villers of the Assembly's troops were killed at the taking of Vanves. t There were 60 auns and 10 mortars captured in Vanves. For 10 suc- cessive hours during Sunday those who escaped throiigh the catecombs appeared in the city, fainting with hunger, dirty from their contact with the dingy walls of the receptacles for the dead and begrimmed with powder. These wanderers startled all who encountered them as they emerged. One party of 100 men, surprised a workman who was entering the catecombs to do some work. This party was led by a woman in officers clothes. She was the mistress of the Commandant of Vanves, and had for some time, previous to the fall of the fortification, assisted in pointing the guns and in all the work of defence. MAY I-20 — THK FAI^L OF THK FORTS. IO5 The continuous bombardment and overwhelming numbers of the assailants wearied the defenders and finally, one by one, the positions were wrung from the valor of the Federates. Fort Issy, once deserted by the troops of the Com- mune, was the scene of such bravery in the last occupation that it has called forth the praise even of the most malevolent supporters of what the world is pleased to call the representatives of ** order." Overmatched in numbers, in skill and in equipment, their zeal seemed inextinguishable; the Commune's soldiers exhibited a desperate heroism in every department far superior to their discipline, leadership or armament. The neglect of the Delegates of War, and in many cases the hopeless inefficiency of the officers, was such as to damp the ardor of less enthusiastic and fear- less men. In spite of untoward circumstances, the courage of the common soldier certainly rose to an uncommon height in the defense of the environs of Paris during the siege of the Commune. The Military Commission of Control was changed in personnel on May 14th. Bergeret, Cournet, Geresme, lycdroit, Lonclas, Sicard and Urbain were the members, of which there were now seven in place of five. Some structures of iincertain utility were, under orders of the New Military Commission, built to assist in the defence. These formed a system of barricades, but of such a character that they were of but little value, although a large amount of material and great labor was expended in their construction. On the 14th of May several unfriendly journals were suppressed by decree of the Com- mune — The National, Steele, Discussion, Corsaire, Avener National and Journal de Paris, io6 tiiK PARIS commun:^. The issue of the Cri du Peuple of May 15th contained the following: "We received some days since information pf the greatest gravity, and of the correctness of which we are now completely certain. Every measure has been 'taken to prevent the entry into Paris of any soldier of the enemy. The forts may be taken one after the other; the ramparts may fall. Not one man will penetrate into the city. If M. Thiers is a <:/l^w2>/ he will comprehend us." The owners of inflammables and explosives were ordered to turn them over to the Communal authorities. An address was published by Paschal Grousset in the Journal Officiel, calling on the sister cities to come to the assistance of Paris, "yet unwearied after two months of contest." It was particularly addressed to Lyons, Marseilles, Bordeaux, Toulouse, Nantes and Lisle. On May 15th, the differences of opinion in the Commune resulted in the declaration of an in- tended withdrawal b}^ a minority from its sessions, and on May i6th this went into effect. The conflicts between the Committee of Public Safety, with full powers, and the Heads of Departments, acting singly or together as an Executive Com- mittee, were constant. The minority included Jourde, Varlin, Beslay, Thiesz, Andrieu and Frankel. They continued their duties in their de- partments, but stated that they did not wish, by attending the sessions, to uphold the continuance of the Committee of Public Safety. The Manifesto of the minority, after stating unbelief in the propriety of the Commune's abdicating its functions into the hands of and " irresponsible committee" said: "As for us, we, no less than the 'majority,' desire the ac- M-AY I-20 — THE FAI.I, OF THE FORTS- lOf complishment of political and social reconstruction; but, contrary to its notions, we claim the right to be solely responsible for our acts before our electors without sheltering ourselves behind a supreme dictatorship which our mandate permits us neither to accept nor to recognize." The Manifesto further went on to state that the signa- tories, in order not to give rise to further dis- sension in the Council room, proposed retiring into their arrondissements, there to organize the resistance to the common enemy. The Manifesto concluded with a generous expression of the conviction that " we all, majority or minority, not- withstanding our divergences as to policy, pursue the same object, political liberty, and the emanci- pation of the workers." " I^ong live the Social Republic ! Long live the Commune ! ' ' The Manifesto bore the signatures of Beslay, Jourde, Theisz, lycfrancais, Gerardin, Vermorel, Clemence, Andrieu, Serailler, I^onguet, Arthur Arnould, Victor Clement, Aurial, Ostyn, Frankel, Varlin, Arnold, Valles, Tridon, Courbet, and Piridy. Malon subsequently gave in his adhesion. ■y The withdrawal of the minorit}^ at this time is unexplainable. They had all voted for the secot^d committee. The issuing of the Manifesto was evidently seen to have been an egregious error, for the minority repented its publication, and joined in the deliberations of the Commune two days later. On the i2th of April the decree for the destructidn of the Vendome Column was issued by the Commune. This Column was erected by Napoleon in 1806, in honor of the French arms. It was in the Doric order of architecture, copied after Trajan's Pillar at Rome. ro8 THE PARIS COMMUNE. The Journal Officiel announced that the fall of the Column would take place at 2 o'clock on the afternoon of the i6th. The carrying ont of the decree had been postponed from time to time; public interest was intense. Long before the hour named, windows, roofs and streets in the vicinity were filled with people. Bands played inspiring airs. Guards patroled the Place Vendome and kept back the crowd. The first attempt to pull down the Column failed, owing to the breaking of the tackle; two or three men were injured in the accident. Immediate arrangements were made to continue the work, and shortly before 6 p. m. the Column fell, breaking into four parts in the air as it descended. A bed of fagots and manure had been placed to receive the monument, and when it struck the ground an immense cloud of dust arose, though the shock (which it was feared would shatter the windows in the vicinity) was much less than was expected The Emperor's statue was separated from the column, and had fallen a little beyond the heap. It lay a wreck, with the head severed from the body, and one arm broken. The members of the Commune and their staif, in all about 200, attended on horseback. A few moments before the fall of the Column, Colonel Meyer, commanding in the Place Vendome', ascended the base, waved a small tri-colored flag, tore it into fragments and flung them to the ground. After the descent of the Column, Colonel Note— The height was 135 feet; the material cut stone; circumference at base, 35 feet: the base was 21 feet high and 20 feet square; 176 steps on a winding staircase led to the top. Bas-reliefs in bronze, in 276 plates were cast from the metal of 1200 cannon taken from the Austrians and Russians in 1805— over 2,000 figures, weighing 1,800 000 pounds. The figures wound spirally about the monument; they circled the pillar 22 times and formed a twisted band of 840 feet; the figures were three feet high. The pedestal was covered upon three sides with figures of flags, cannons, et\ The Column "k*^ s"J»it)unted by a statue of l>apoleon 11 feet in height. The whole cost MAY I-20 — THE FAi^L OF THE FORTS- IO9 Meyer leaped upon the ruins and waved the red flag. Bergeret, decorated with red scarf and tassels, mounted on the pedestal, and thus addressed the crowd: "Citizens: — The 26th of Floreal will be memorable in our history. Thus we triumph over military despotism — that bloody negation of the rights of man. The first Empire placed the collar of servitude about our necks — it began and ended in carnage, and left us a legacy of a second Empire, which was finally to end in the disgrace of Sedan," Miot and Ranvier made speeches, the bands played, and the red flag floated over the fallen statue of the Imperial idol.* Thus was laid low the splendid monument to the glory of one despot and to the defeat of others, whose wars had been at the expense of the lives and efforts of the classes whose condition was not to be altered by either victory or defeat. The position of the proletariat did not change whatever the result in the struggle for power — whether hereditary Hapsburg murderer, descend- ant of the ignoble Catherine or the Corsican who thought the world none too large for for his gigantic schemes of conquest, was triumphant. The Communists recognized these phases in, the consideration of the question, and justly ordered the destruction of the Column. This act was symbolical of the sentiment for International peace in the Commune and the hatred of national pride in the spoiliation indulged in by *'lAnd though in itself the destruction of the Vendome Column may seem but a small matter, yet considering the importance attached genenlly, and in France particularly, to such symbols, the dismounting- of that base piece of Napoleonic upholstery was another mark of the determination to hold no parley with the old jingo legends. — William Morris and E. Bel/or t Bax. no THK PARIS COMMUNE. the central figure in the First Empire. - Thfe demolition has been selected as the pet theme of bourgeois historians in examplifying the vandalism of the Communal government.* But there was a salutary lesson conveyed in its destruction not soon to be forgotten. No monument to perpetu- ate the glories of systematic murder has place in a true civilization, nor in any state where men have even turned their faces toward an intelligent social order. t By the destruction of the Vendome Column the regular soldiers were undoubtedly much irritated, considering it an insult offered to the military profession and spirit in France, and McMahon fed the dissatisfaction by a proclamation depicting the magnitude of the affront and in closing said: "We know how to give France another proof of bravery, devotion and patriotism." A public fete took place in Versailles at the same time the Vendome Column was being des- troj^ed. M. Grevy addressed the soldiers and com- plimented their bravery and devotion. * Paschal Grousset, in the Vengeur, said : " At last that Column Vendome is to be ^•emo^■ed— a ridicvilous and monstrous trophy, erected at the command of a blind despot, to perpetuate the remembrance of his in- sensate conquests and his culpable giory — a moiuiment, moreover, destitute of all artistic value -a cantata in bronze, a daub in metal instead of on canvas — in short, a wretched imitation of Trajan's column. Art will lose nothing by its destruction; good sense and patriotism will gain. For the fact is injudicious to leave under the eyes of the ignorant and the simple the stupid glorification of a cursed past. That Column of Vendome . I have never been able to look at it without my heart bounding with indigna- tion and disgust. In the time of the Empire there was always to be seen hanging on the railings and rotting in the rain, innumerable wreaths of a flaunting yellow or a dirtj- white : Souvenir, Regrets, Gloire, Victoire. Without the sentinel who watched over this rubbish with jealous care, one might have taken the place for the traditional shop always to be found next door to the marblemason's at the gates of the cemeteries." tOn the 22d of May, 1871, the National Assembly, decreed the f ilTowing law: " The Column of Place Vendome shall be rebuilt at the e-v, cnse of the State, and surmounted by a statue of France." MAY 1-20 — THE FAI.I. OF THE FORTS. HI Several journals were suppressed, among them one edited by Vermorel, a member of the minority of the Commune, who had attacked the policy of the majority. On May 17th, 66 members of the Commune, attended the meeting. The time of the sitting was consumed to a large extent in untimely disputes. The minority, which had withdrawn from the sittings, now again, with a few excep- tions, took part in the proceedings. It was stated in this meeting that an ambu- lance woman attending some wounded Federates, : had been repeatedly violated before being murdered by Versaillese. This called the attention of the Commune to the fact that their threat re- garding reprisals by executing the hostages seemingly had had a restraining effect on the murderous propensities of the Versaillese in the early part of April. Several members thought that the execution of ten of the hostages would be now in order; Miot proposed that five be at once shot. During this session the terrific explosion of the cartridge factory on the Avenue Rapp, which shook Paris and vicinity, took place. Its cause has never been definitely settled, but from the ' surrounding circumstances a reasonable con- clusion is that it was the work of paid agents of the Versaillese."!^ The devout and religious portion of Paris - attributed the fearful explosion on the Avenue *The blowing up of the Rapp Cartridge Factory was charged to the ma- chinations of the Assembly's agents. The workpeople (several hundred in number) left on that afternoon at 5 p. ni. whereas it was customary to leave at 6 p. m (or 7 p. m). This circumstance may be considered evidence that the workers had been warned of impending danger. The explosion occurred about 5:45 p. m. ; many persons were in the building and all these were killed. Scores of persons in the vicinity were killed and wounded by the flying projectiles and falling fragments of the building. The estimated number of victims was 100, 112 THE PARIS COMMUNE. Rapp to a j udgment on the insurgents for their sacrilegious violation of the Church of Notre Dame des Victores. On the 17th of May, about five o'clock, or one hour before the explosion, the church was entered by I Paris. He immediately founded another journal Le Reveil, whieli brought him three terms of imprisonment and as many fines withirt a year. He met Gambon on the way, Delescluze only said " Lost again. Humanity will look to another time, and may be to another place, but the final triumph cannot be far off. It will be sufficient reward if we hastened it. The people had been at their post in the midst of this horrible scene for 13 hours— many of them for two days. They were covered 176 THE PARIS COMMUNU. with sweat, many of them with blood, and blackened with powder. The ground was strewn with splinters, balls and fragments of shells. The gutters were flowing with blood. Delescluze took his place at the barricade and commenced firing with his revolver. The car- nage was now fearful. The walls were battered down and the people were falling thick under the fire of the chassepots About two o'clock they were fiercely assaulted at every point. Exhausted with fatigue, more than half of them dead on the ground, and overpowered on every side, the brave people, though they fought with the fury of despair, were all either killed or disarmed.^ Not a man, not a woman, not a child surrendered. Every one fought till the last; till the soldiers, sick of carnage, wrested their arms from them. Late in the afternoon the body of Delescluze was found riddled with balls and surrounded by the corpses of 28 soldiers. And the next day it was ofiftcially announced by the Versailles Government that " the too guilty Delescluze had been picked up dead by the troops of General Clinchant. Delescluze, forgetful of self, lived a life entirely devoted to the cause of the poor and oppressed; and when the hour came he em- braced death, as he had devoted his life without a murmur and with- out a regret. His heroism will ever live, in spite of all princes and politicians and priesthoods, to elevate the affection, clear the visions and strengthen the arms of heroes." Vermorel, who accompanied Delescluze, was wounded, captured and taken to Versailles, where he died three weeks later.* Vermorel was born at Denice near Lyons in 1841. His education was completed at a very early age and at twenty he was engaged on two opposition papers, Le Jeune France and La Jeunesse. These papers were quickly suppressed and Vermorel received a term of * Vermorel is said to have accompanied Delescluze for the purpose of watching him, as Delescluze had been accused by some of his colleagues of being about to desert. Delescluze, shortly before his death, declared the Commune's cause lost, "For me," he said, "I feel that my last political struggle against Monarchy and Imperialism is at an end. I shall die myself, I know; but I feel convinced that for every drop of mine and the Commune's blood, five men will one day spring forward to avenge us, and to establish, in a few years, that which, owing to our backwood education, have failed to estab- lish now." The body of Delescluze was secreted or destroyed by the Versaillese, for fear it might at some future time be buried with ceremonies which would arouse the insurrectionary spirit. Delescluze is the only man in military position during the Commune who wore no uniform, gold lace or insignia. It has been stated that Delescluze, recognizing his inability to fill the position of head of War Department, was in constant secret communication with Rossel, who gave advice regarding the conduct of military affairs. THK BI^OODY WEKK. 1 77 Imprisonment for his connection with them. He was subject to the vicissitudes of a revolutionary journalist's career, undergoing several years imprisonment and being compelled to abandon a journal which he had begun on account of the multiplicity of fines- imposed upon it, During the siege of Paris, he served as a private in the N'ational Guards.* The Mairie of the 20th arrondissement — Belle-, ville — was now the central point of the Communal defence, and the limited number of members of the Commune and of the Committee Central, who were on the scene of action, showed that there! had been many desertions from the central bodies. It was openly alleged that many had disguises prepared to aid in their escape ; some had been^ captured in disguise, and the disappearance of a member even for a few moments excited the distrust of the leaders. It was this suspicion which had met Delescluze, and recriminations re- garding the intentions of members were common | and open. The nearness of the approaching line: of battle increased every feeling of revenge and distrust in the hearts of the caged leaders of the .. declining defence. The universal thing in Paris was disorder. The populace, the Federates and Communal leaders - were filled with anxiety, confusion and despair ; nothing more clearly illustrates their condition than the running from one barricade to another ; the absence of discipline ; and in the awful disre- gard for death exhibited by the men at the last stands, or the women who, crying " Vive la Com- mune," rushed on the bayonets or sabres of thel invaders. t * Wm. Du Gas Trammell. t An English medical student writing of the Commune says: " I saw a battalion of women fighting with Snyder rifles. Among them were many pretty young girls. They fought like devils; far better than the men; and I : had the pain of seeing 52 of them shot down, even when they had been sur- . rounde'l by troops and disarmed." 1 78 THK PARIS COMMUNK. The courage of the Communists was uri- daunted. They fought with endless vigor and tenacity.* "That their position was desperate was beyond a doubt; and this they quite recognized, but ivere resolute to hold on to the bitter end. Their efforts were really heroic. * Above the smoke of the villainous gunpowder the summer sun was shining brightly, and spite of the powder- stench and the smell of blood the air was balmy." Bdouard Moreau, the prominent Central Com- mitteeman, in endeavoring to escape from the city, was captured, disguised as a woman; after a form of trial, he was shot at Versailles. A man was erroneously denounced as Biliioray, and although he protested, was shot without much effort to identify him. It was afterward discovered that the person shot was a peaceful noncombatant. Another by name Vaillant, thought to be the Communist of that name, narrowly escaped death. There were scores of such cases. The last vestige of con- sideration for human life had now left the invaders. The Place d' Chateau d' Eau fell into the hands of the Versaillese. It was the stronghold, next to Montmartre, most formidable yet encoun- tered. Its defence w^as valorous, but the lack of discipline and numbers finally yielded. The loss of life on both sides was very great. Brunei was wounded, and Lisbonne wounded and captured. At this encounter about 40,000 troops were engaged. * In many cases the National Guards, refusing to surrender, were hewn down behind the barricades. * * The fighting was long, desperate and severe. The insurgents fought at every step with fury and despair. — Washburne, The independent soldiery " Avengers of Paris " and others were active^ in the street fighting and the women and boys of the working-classes were a very considerable factor in the barricade building and defence; indeed it has been asserted that the women and boys contributed more to the energy and stubbornness of this branch of warfare than did the Federates. THE BLOODY WKKK. 179 The prisoners, taken by the Versaillese, abused and maltreated though they were while being hurried through the streets, bore in most instances upon their faces the pride of their cause. Advantageous positions for renewing the fray in the morning were taken by both sides, and the final struggles were fought by the desperate Fed- erates against such odds and numbers as to be absolutely hopeless^^partaking more of the aspect of a massacre than of a battle. Jules Favre addressed a telegram to all diplo- matic representation of France in foreign coun- tries, requesting to have stopped and returned all fugitives from the Commune. Treilhard was shot at the Place du Pantheon. Vesinier, for a time editor of the Journal Officiel of the Commune, was arrested. Saturday, May 27 — A day of sombre aspect, cloudy and rainy. Not less than 75,000 troops wc:re massed about the remnants of the Communal defence whose troops now numbered but a few thousands. On three sides the Communists were menaced by their adversaries and. on the fourth, outside the walls, was the German force which captured and hurried fugitives to the Versaillese headquarters. Numberless barricades faced the Assembly's troops and as fast as they were taken, others sprang up to oppose the advance. Paving stones, sacks of earth, household furniture — all furnished materials for the barri- cades. Youths of tender years proved adepts at overturning carts as a nucleus for the street defences, and men, women and children assisted in everymanner in the construction and maintenan<;e of the street positions. The belligerents forced all pedestrians to assist in the work of building barri- I So THE PARIS COMMUNE. cades; messengers, on the most important errands, were sometimes compelled to work for a half hour or an hour. Carriers of military orders were not excluded from these forced labors. In this way, the disadvantages of the Federates were increased by the uncertainty of communication between commanders and the consequent failure in the distribution of supplies. The transfer of ammunition was interrupted and at many of the barricades the Federates fought until their last shot was fired.* Refusing to sur- render, they were overcome in the hand-to-hand struggle by the force of numbers, and cut to pieces by the bayonets and sabres of the Versaillese. Wrobleski and Ranvier were foremost in the direction of defensive operations through this week of blood and fire. Ferre wished to take more prisoners and hos- tages from L,a Grande Roquette, but by con- nivance with the keepers, the prisoners barricaded themselves in their cells, which were locked and the keys hid by the prison attendants. Francois, the Governor of the prison, was ordered by Ferre to get the prisoners ready for transfer; this was now unsuccessfully attempted. Poiret, a warden of the prison, advised the prisoners to resist. An iniprisoned National Guard said " They want to kill the priests; let us not risk our lives for theirs." Nearly all those confined at length joined in the resistance. The prisoners, taken in battle, (1400 in number) were removed by Ferre's order from Petite Roquette to the Church of St. Jean Bap- tiste, with the intention, through them, of making more favorable terms with the Versaillese. This church was soon after taken by the Assembly's '*"NotFiing' could exceed the courage and the desperation of the insur- g-ents who fought until the last pound of ammunition was exhausted." — Wa^shburne. THK BLOODY WBKK. l8l troops. When Ferre returned to La Grand Roquette he also unsuccessfully attempted to dis- lodge the entrenched prisoners. Threats, prom- ises, smoke— all were of no avail, and, while this was going on, the alarm of the approach of the Versaillese caused the scattering of those who were endeavoring to remove the prisoners. Four of those in confinement — a government official and three priests, one of whom was Mgr. Serat — con- cluded to seek liberty. These were met by a party of Federates, who, on ascertaining who the four were, marched them to the wall of the Petite Roquette, where they were shot. The character of the engagements of Satur- day was even fiercer, more murderous and brutal in detail than those of the previous days. The guns at Montmartre were turned on the artillery position at the Buttes Chaumont; and other artil- lery, from a nearly opposite position, raked the Buttes and assisted the Versaillese in subduing these works and in the general engagement. A charge was made late in the evening upon the barricades, and the Buttes, with a large number of prisoners were taken, after severe losses on both sides. Huge amounts of ammunition and pro- visions fell into the hands of the Versaillese. At the close of the day, a mile in diameter was the extent of the Communist possessions, with the exception of the Fauburg du Temple, whose defenders had shown such a resistance as to hold the Versaillese at bay though the odds in numbers were immensely against them. During these last days, a body known as the Versaillese Court Martial sat at the Chatelet Theatre. It left no record of its proceedings, if it ever kept any and was rather a court of sentence than one of trial. The prisoners w^ho were brought 1 82 THK PARIS COMMUNE. before this fearful tribunal, with scarcely a single exception, found there way to the abattoir at the Lobau barracks. It is evident that this Court Martial was established for the sole purpose of giving a semblance of legality to slaughter of the Communards. The Versaillese would have ex- hibited as much regard for justice and humanity had they slain the prisoners as fast as captured as by subjecting them to this murderous farce of a military trial. Ivissagaray says the questions occupied about a quarter of a minute. "Were you taken with arms? Have you served the Commune? Show your hands," were the inquiries. The Court continued to sit until June 3d, when the decomposing bodies of thousands of the dead threatened a pestilence. Only then did it desist from its labor of assassination. L,ittle at- tempt was made to dispose of the corpses which lay festering in the sun and clouds of flesh-flies and flocks of crows filled in this horrid scene of wholesale human butchery which is without a parallel in modern times. The wholesale execu- tions were now not limited to the work of mus- ketry fire. The mitrailleuses were turned upon the crowds of prisoners, and the dead and dying, broken and mangled victims were piled up in heaps or left as they fell. Through the night of Friday-Saturday, and for days and nights follow- ing, groans and cries, from heaps of bodies, were of common occurrence. Such scenes, it may with safety be asserted, were never spread on civilized soil. St. Bertholomew's day called for its victims, but they were not penned up and mowed down with mitrailleuses. It was left for the incarnation of capitalism, the National Assembly, to use the machine-gun for satiating its blood lust against THE BIvOODY WEEK. 183 workers of Paris.* '' To compare these murderers with any members of the animal kingdom, let alone with savages, would be more than unjust to the brute or the savage."t "Outside the Madeleine Church, on one of the days of street fighting, a horrible scene occurred. A strong man, apparently in liquor, refused to con- tinue his route. He was seized by four troopers, and dragged along the ground, amid the hoots and yells of the crowd, until an of&cer shot him through the head, just as the people were coming out of the Madeleine, with their missals m their hands The crowd shrieked " Hurrah, hurrah ! with the exception of one man, who gave vent to an exclamation of horror, and was immediately seized by the soldiers, and dragged away. Among the prisoners were several children, not more than 12 years of age, and they appear to have been treated much as their elders were. The prisoners captured at barricades were generally shot olt- hand, and even those who were reserved for trial stood a very good chance of being slaughtered meanwhile on the slighest provocation." As the contest closed in on them the Com- munards sought every means of escape. Many thouo-ht they could retreat by the Prussian lines;; but all passage was refused them and they were left no resource but absolute surrender. end of a rifle. ^ He shaU be ^^_^||g^ring groaning, bundle of refuse bleedingarm and flung like a suttermg,g^ p l^i^^ ^ tBax. ^ 1 84 ^HK PARIS COMMUNE. The Last Days of flay— Sunday, May 28 — The war is over. The bloodiest week of the struggle is past. A contingent of caged and enraged insurrectionists are at the mercy of a huge army. The Commune's support is at its last gasp. No hope for relief, no possi- bility for a renewal of the combat bringing else than death and disaster. At 5 a. m. the Ver- saillese took the prison La Roquette. Varig was promptly shot and the hostages were released. The headquarters on Rue Haxo were soon taken from the Communists, with 2,000 prisoners. Tony Moillin was captured Saturday night and shot at 5 o'clock Sunday morning, the shooting being delayed that he might marry a woman with whom he lived, and who was enciente. The ceremony took place at 2 o'clock, being per- formed by Mayor Herisson, whom Moillin had, after two unsuccessful attempts, displaced from the Mairie of the 6th arrondissement on March 22d. When Grand Roquette prison w^as captured, the 140 Federates confined there were taken to Pere Lachaise cemetery by the Versaillese and shot in groups of ten. From Petite Roquette, 127 were also taken out and shot in groups — all this being done without the slightest formality of charge or trial, or even of sentence, by other than the lower officers of the Versaillese. Augustine Ranvier, Governor of St. Pelagie Prison, was found hung, having committed suicide. He was a brother of Gabriel Ranvier. The last places taken were Fanburg du Temple and the Rue de la Fontaine au Roi, where a few dozen Federates, under Piat, had made a particularly gallant stand but finally surrendered. The heights of Belleville was the place of the THE LAST DAYS OF MAY. 1 85 closing struggle. The Federates held out until their ammunition was exhausted and until every form of fortified defence was destroyed. Late in the afternoon a few hundred surrendered, march- ing to the Versaillese line with arms reversed, a silent and sorrowful procession. They laid down their arms and were surrounded and hurried away. The last red flag that floated for the Com- mune was at a barricade at the Rue Fontaine au Roi, where, after a feeble defence it was surren- dered at II a. m. The last entrenchment was taken at about noon on the Rue de Paris. This barricade was held by a single man for a quarter of an hour after his companions had fallen, and wonderful to relate, this last combatant escaped with his life.* Gambon, Geresme, T. Ferre, Lacord and several members of the Commune, on Sunday morning, accompanied by a guard of 40 Federates and 15 boys from the foundling asylum in the Rue d'Enfer, withdrew to the Mairie of the 20th arron- dissement. This was the last body which marched with the red flag in the Commune. Karly in the afternoon this body surrendered, Gambon first making a speech from a barricade. f The aspect of Sunday was even more dismal and oppressive than that of Saturday. The trees of the Tuileries Gardens, where the concert had been announced for the afternoon, were broken, singed and blackened. Foul odors from decom- posing corpses filled the air which a week before *Bax t " I have passed thirty years of my life in sacrificing myself for the Republic_and Liberty. I have given everything to the people, and to-day the people abandon me. I have made the sacrifice of my life for the cowards who flee from danger when it meets them face to face. I swear that if I escape I will never again give an instant of my life or one of my thoughts to these men. Citizens, the great cause is again lost; the Comnmne is killed by those who had sworn to make it triumph or to die, and v.-ho li^,ve not even dgf§nded it," 1 86 THK PARIS commun:^. was fragrant with the smell of verdure, and the sounds of music were supplanted by the rattle of guns, and the groans of the wounded and dying. Great numbers of those who had participated in the festivities of a week before were making an attempt to escape, were languishing in prison or had been killed and added to the heaps of corpses. The streets which had a week before been filled with the happy faces of the pleasure- loving populace, now echoed the monotonous tramp of the prisoner, whose begrimed and de- jected countenance told of battles fought and hopes deceived. Varlin, overcome with grave and melancholy reflections, every hope of h'S manly life over- thrown, ever}^ intention of his public acts de- feated, wandering, heart-sick and weary, sat down at midday on the curbstone in the midst of Ver- saillese patrols at the Square Montholon. A priest called the attention of the patrol and Varlin was arrested, his hands tied behind him, and he was marched for trial to Montmartre. On the way he was insulted by the fickle populace; his death was demanded; and the guard could scarcely get him to the Military Court. The Court sat in a house on the Rue de Rosiers — the house where Lecomte and Clement Thomas had been killed on March i8th. On the way Varlin was frightfully maltreated and disfigured — one eye being torn from its socket and his head was a mass of blood — he had to be carried at last. He was, after a slight interrogation, sentenced to death. This news, on being made known to the populace, was greeted with joyful shouts. They demanded that he be paraded around the Butte. His brains were finally dashed out with the butt-ends of the muskets of the soldiers. Thus perished one of THE LAST DAYS OF MAY. 1 87 the most intelligent, honest and zealous of the Communal leaders. In 1853, by Frencli governmental desire, a delegation of working- men was sent to London to visit the great exhibition and to study products and industries. Varlin, afterward so prominent in the Commune, was one of the delegates, and later, resulting from consul- tation in London, one of the founders of the International in France. His absolute honesty is conceded, even by those who hated and killed him. He was a bookbinder and worked for his uncle, and Varlin disdained the proposition to marry a relative, though by this he would have inherited the business of his uncle Varlin asserted in declin- ing that he would be ashamed to live from the product of the labor of others. Cluseret and Varlin became acquainted in 1868 while imprisoned in Paris for political offenses. Cluseret was in New York and in correspondence with Varlin in 1870. (See p. 83). Among men who are acquainted with the lives and characters of those foremost in the Communal uprising, there is an opinion generally entertained, that Varlin was, in all those essentials which mark the truly great man. the most distinguished. Though of very ordinary educational attainments, such as usually fall to the workingman of natural instincts of study, he had not accumulated habits of dissipation and the thoughtless use of leisure time, those habits which, unfMrtunately, are almost inseparable companions in the unambitious life of the average worker. From Varlin's early youth he was interested in the welfare of his fellow toilers, and his studious mind found most interest in the theories which purported to need but an opportunity to emancipate the objects of his solicitude. The natural associates of the intelligent young worker were those in his walks of life and those of similar tendencies toward the society in which he lived. He was honest, he was capable, and, in the labor organizations rose high in the approbation of his fellows. The International Workingmen's Association opened to him a field for broader work and perhaps for the fuliilment of his wishes As a representative in Central, National and International Congresses of his fellow- workers, he was often in conflict with those of less earnestness, he was at all times respected by opponents as well as supporters. On Sunday morning the government at Ver- sailles declared ** the expiations do not console us." J. Miot was shot at La Muette. Dufil, who, it is said ordered the shooting of Lecomte and Clement-Thomas, was shot to death with a pistol by the officer who captured him. 1 88 THE PARIS COMMUNE. The rattle of shots is heard occasionally in the abattoir of the Lobou barracks, which indicates the shooting of parties of prisoners.* A stray shot indicates a Federate in hiding brought to bay, making a last effort to oppose capture, or a shot sent after a fugitive seeking safety in flight. The Commune is dead. Monday, May 29 — The only remaining Com- munist position — Fort Vincennes, outside the walls on the Hast, was taken by the Versaillese. Commander Eudes desired to surrender to the Germans, thinking to get passports out of the country. Vincennes surrendered with a large number of prisoners on Monday morning. *The militarj' commanders of the four districts into which Paris had heen divided— Generals Ladmirault, Cissey, Douai and Vinoy— each held continu. ous Court Martials and the prisoners were now, by tlieir decree, mown down in rows by mitrailleuses. Marshal McMahon issued the following jjroclamation on Sunday : Republique Francaise. Inhabitants of Paris', "The Army of France is come to save you. Paris is freed. At 4 o'clock our soldiers carried tbje last positions occupied by the insurgents. To-day the struggle ended; order, labor and security begin anew. The Marshal of France Commander-in-Chief McMaiion, Hdqtrs., 28 May, 1871. Duke of Magenta, THE IvAST DAYS OF MAY. 1 89 Tuesday-Wkdnesday, May 30-31 — "Order reigned in Paris. Smoking ruins, corpses, and desolation were all that met the eye. One side of the Seine ran red with blood. The gutters ran blood. The roads were red with blood, as though the soil had been I^ondon clay. Clouds of flesh-flies rose from the heaps of corpses; flocks of crows hovered over the charnel house. Paris now subjugated, the assassins could organize the slaughter at their leisure. It has been proved that these massacres were arranged at Versailles before the entry of the troops, and indeed, the utterances of Thiers were of themselves quite sufficient to show this."* " The number of dead bodies created a horribly foul atmosphere, from which the worst results in the way of epidemic diseases were feared. The gutters ran blood; blood flowed in a separate stream along the waters of the Seine; blood was thick upon the pavements and the roadways; and the walls of houses were smeared with the same awful witness. This alone caused a dreadful corruption of the air; and the clouds of smoke overhanging the dolorous city prevented the still more offensive odor below from passing away. Many of the slaughtered insurgents were at once thrown into deep graves; but others lay about for a con- siderable time, and the general neglect of sanitary precautions threatened the most serious con- sequences. Moreover, the burial of persons who had died natural deaths was prevented for several days, owing to the state of the town; and at length the dead bodies were collected in carts, as in seasons of plague, and hastily interred."! Dozens beaten to death in the streets, thous- ands killed in battle, thousands shot in lines *Bax. tCassell, 190 THK PARIS COMMUNE. against the walls, thousands slaughtered in droves by machine-guns, scores buried alive^ — the living and the dead, the innocent and the guilty, the aged and the youthful — men, women, children — all mingled to fill the measure of revenge against the spirit of the social war." f Fugitives from their conquerors, fugitives from law, fugitives from society, the scattered survivors of this week of bloody revolt lay hidden in city or country, or furtive and sleepless, strove to reach the borders of some less hostile country than their own. No disguise was too absurd to serve their purpose. J The homes of the dead be- neath the city were the dwelling places of many, and the hunt for victims was systematic, energetic and pitiless. Parties of infantry traversed the alleys and explored the cellars in the city, cavalry patroled the environs, and agents of the Assembly, stationed in the departments of the nation, were vigorous, when opportunity offered, in capturing and forwarding fugitives to Versailles. All who had fought for, all who had assisted, all who had sympathized with the Commune were brought to gaol by the drag-net searches of the Versaillese. Nor were even these indications of 'crime' nec- * The horrible charge of burying the wounded alive, together with the dead, is supported by a relation to the same effect made in the Indepen- dance Beige, a paper strongly opposed to the Commune. t " To find a parallel for the conduct of Thiers and his bloodhounds, we must go back to the times of Sulla and the two Triumvirates of Rome. The same wholesale slaughter in cold blood; the same disregard, in massacre, of age and sex; the same system of torturing prisoners; the same proscriptions, but this time of a whole class; the same savage hunt after concealed leaders, lest one might escape; the same denunciations of political and private enemies; the same indifference for the butchery of entire strangers to the feud. There is but this difference, that the Romans had no mitrailleuses for the despatch, in the lump, of the proscribed, and that they had not "the law in their hands," nor on their lips the cry of civilizsition."— Address Int. W. A. I Reports had been circulated of Grousset's being seen in Belgium and of his arrival in London, these being intended to mislead the Versaillese. On June 3d he was apprehended, dressed as a woman, in apartments where ho had gone under the name of Miss Hacard. THB LAST DAYS OF MAY. 19I essary to insure seizure. The unmistakable marks which labor puts upon the laborer — the garb, the stoop, the expression — these were offenses not overlooked. To reside in the workingmen's quar- ter of the city, an exclamation of horror at the sight of murder — these were sufficiently flagitious to bring deportation or death. The press of Paris was, in almost every in- stance, in full symapthy with the massacres of prisoners and the general proceedings of the Assembly. T^i^ Independance Francaise yN^o\.Q.\ "At last Paris is freed from this gang of bandits, assas- sins, thieves and incendiaries. Our invincible and unvanquished soldiers have returned, bringing with them order and security in the folds of the glorious tri-color. Only one cry can proceed from our lips and that cry will be uttered by all French- men. ' No pity for these wretches. One punish- ment alone can expiate their crime — Death.'" The Paris Journal said: " If the Commune was without right, we shall be without pity." *' The effluvium at lya Roquette was terrific; and, to prevent infection, numerous bodies were partially burned with petroleum, and buried in the Champ de Mars, under the pavements of the streets and in the public gardens. At Belleville, a cafe chantant had been turned into an ambulance, and dead bodies lay about on the tawdrily-be- dizened stage, and in the little drinking arbors in front. The condition of the Pere-Iyachaise was particularly horrible. As late as the 31st of May, the dead lay about on the grass in a double tier, powdered over with a coating of chloride of lime; and,, as many of the tombstones and graves had been broken and torn up in the fighting, the de- composing remains of bodies that had long been buried were exposed to view, and added to the 192 TH£ PARIS COMMUMK. frightful condition of the air. Smoke yet arose in heavy vohimes from the chief centers of conflagration. "* "The prisoners at Satory were evidently much depressed in spirit. They would hardly answer any questions put to them, and many lay wearily on their fetid straw, or on the damp, filthy earth, heeding no one, and indifferent to all things. Holes were made in the walls of the enclosure, and cannon, loaded with grape and canister, were stationed at the apertures. One night, a prisoner persisted in looking through an embrasure thus guarded. The sentry three times warned him to withdraw, and then blew his brains out. The slightest sign of insubordination was at once punished with death; and this rigor was doubt- less unavoidable. On the 24th of May, about a thousand of the captured insurgents revolted, got rid of their handcuffs, and attempted to set fire to the arsenal. In the confusion, fifty-seven escaped. Extra troops, however, were summoned from Ver- sailles; the soldiers fired into the crowd, and three hundred of the rebels were shot." Arrests were made of the people e7i masse in the workingmens' districts where the last stands were made. Apprehension of Federates, domicilary searches and other lawful proceedings were now in order, nor did they cease for nearly a year after the Commune's fall. The streets presented a fearful and revolting sight. Dead bodies of Communists, stagnant pools of human blood and the debris of the fires covered the principal thoroughfares. The Federates' dead were, after a delay which made the air reek with unhealthy odors, dumped, * Fire engines and apparatus were forwarded from Brussels and other cities, and a tender of assistance was sent from London. THE I.AST DAYS OF MAY. 1 93 by wagon loads, into any vacant place capable of holding them and usually covered but sliglitly with earth. The street pavements had been torn up to build barricades, many of which still re- mained. The houses were discolored by smoke and disfigured by fire and the bombardment during the hostilities. In the open country the evil effects of war are less felt by the individual than in the circum- scribed limits of a great city, where every person is at least a spectator of the arena of destruction and murder. It was a mournful but instructive spectacle, the Paris of the last days of May. There was not an evidence of destruction but carried its lesson to the military commander, a me.ining to the philoso- pher and a w^arning to the !over of justice and of peace. No modern stoic could gaze unmoved upon the commingled corpses of the old, the young, the warlike and the peaceful; no one whose mind was pleased with a consideration of the grand and beautiful, could contemplate, without mental anguish, the ruthless ruin of those noble and historic buildings; no person, unless imbued with more than savage instincts, could look upon the destruction of man and his works except in sorrow pud regret. 194 ^iiS PARIS COMMtJN:^. VII. The Peace of June. "The peace that passeth all understanding."— floZr/ Writ. After the peace treaty (during the negotiation of which Bismarck strongly advised the disarming of the National Guard) had been signed, the uprising of the Parisians put a new phase on the position of the Germans encamped about Paris. The idea of a people's government was as obnoxious to Bismarck as it was to Thiers. A natural agreement was therefore consum- mated between the Prussian conquerors and the Versaillese in regard to the Commune. This engagement was the firm foundation on which waited the Assembly's careful preparation for the siege. Von Moltke says the German army was ready at any time to crush the insurrection, but Thiers feared the desertion of troops if the Germans invaded Paris. Faced by the fighting force of 150,000 Versaillese, and with 80,000 Germans under agreement to turn back all fugitives, the desperate position of the Federates in the last days may be clearly seen. Notwithstanding the excellent discipline of the German army, the Saxon army corps is said to have acted indulgently toward fugitives. That some got through the German line there is ample proof. The Northern and Eastern forts were occupied by the Germans, but they yielded at all times to the tHB JPEACE OF JUNE. 195. VersaiLlese such territory as the latter desired to carry out their plans. This action on the part of the Germans was of a very great advantage, es- pecially in the last days as it gave the Assembly's troops access to the city's gates on the North. It has been said that Prince Bismarck, actuated by his usual sentiments expressed a grim satis- faction at the temporary success of the Commune, because it would attract all the professed revolu- tionists of Europe to Paris, where they would be caught in a trap and exterminated.* Authorities seem to agree that the losses of the Versaillese troops in recapturing Paris amounted to 83 officers killed and 430 wounded; less than 1,000 private soldiers killed, but over 6,000 wounded. The number of missing was in- significant, being less than 200. These figures seem astonishingly small considering the huge number in the aggregate killed on the side of the Federates, who fought, for the most part, protected behind fortifications. If there ever was any record of the number of prisoners taken, such record was destroyed by the Assembly's agents. The number is variously es- timated at from 30,000 to 60,000, and as the records of sentences and acquittals show but a small part of those captured, the abattoirs at Satory and Lobau, together with heaps of corpses which lined the walls inside the city, tell the tale of tens of thousands who were murdered — helpless, untried and unrecorded. A correspondent of the London Times re- ported the number of *' Parisians killed in battle in the city at 6,000; the Versaillese shot 8,000 *" No mediation is possible in the struggle that has shaken Europe to its foundations. The principles involved rest on foundations which are utterly opposed to each other, and which exclude one another from the beginning.'* — Prince Bismarck. 196 THK PARIS COMMUNB. prisoners in cold blood; 80 were shot in one row at Pere-Lachaise," An Advertiser correspondent re- ported that he saw "400 or 500 shot one morning. A batch of prisoners was brought up while I was speaking to the officer in charge. He quietly looked them over and ordered them shot. No accusation, no trial, simply cold-blooded murder." "At Versailles they were shut up in the wine cellars of the Palace, 45 feet underground. * * The prisoners had only some old straw on the floors. In this place, 600 men were con- fined, and the torture they endured from the close air, the filth and the impossibility of lying down at night was terrible. Those condemned to death were shot at the Buttes Satory — an immense am- phitheatre holding 20,000 people." An Englishman — who was pressed into the service of the Commune as carrier of messages on horseback — writing for McMillan's Magazine of September and October, 1871, said he " saw no petroleuses * * nor did he believe in their existence." * * Those who remained at the barricades to the last, and were the most obstinate in their defence w^ere the boys of Paris ^ * from 12 to 16 years old. I was fortunately cap- tured without arms. * Those put to death were mostly officers of the National Guard H< ^ jK They all, without exception, met their death bravely and like men. There was no shrinking from death or entreaties to be spared, by those I saw killed. The Marquis de Gallifet (he who had served the Emperor in Mexico) passed slowly down the line. He stopped here and there select- ing several of our number, chiefly the aged and wounded, and ordered them to step out from the ranks. His commands were usually couched in THE PEACE OF JUNE. I97 abusive language. A young man near me said "I am an American. Here is my passport. I am innocent." "Silence! We have got foreigners and riff-raff more than enough. We got to get rid of them," was the general's reply. We thought the aged and wounded were to be spared and we expected to be shot at once. * * Those picked out of our ranks by General de Gallifet — over 80 in number — were shot before our eyes.f We * proceeded * toward Versailles. There was no water. Some, utterly worn out, would drop by the wayside. Our guard * * by kicks and blows * * would try to make him resume his place in the line. When these measures proved unavailing, a shot in the rear would tell us one of our number had ceased to exist. The guard would fall into his place, laughing and chatting gayly with his comrades. Arrived at Satory, we fell on our faces in the mud and lapped the water from the pools. It was useless to attempt to find a place to sleep. I counted that night 44 men bereft of reason." The Versaillese Assembly celebrated with "Thanksgiving" services, the restoration of ''order." t A writer in the Times, describing the events of the 25th, spoke of the horrible effect produced by the angry ring of the volleys of execution, the strings of men and women hurried off to their doom, the curses of the popu- lace, and the brutal violence of the soldiery. The civilians were fully as savage as the troops. Those, who but a few days before cowered beneath the dictation of Pyat, Delescluze and their associates, and did not dare to lift a hand or utter a word in their own defence, now vied with each other in pointing out concealed Communists, and shouting for their immediate death. When files of prisoners were led through the streets, the crowd would fre- quently exclaim, "Shoot the wretches! Show them no mercy!" They struck them with canes, yelled at them, or laughed and made hideous jokes when one was shot down in cold blood. The soldiers and the people some- times coalesce, and literally beat the miserable wretches to death with sticks and ttie butt-ends of muskets—" beat them to death," as an observer related, " after the style in which cruel boys smash frogs and toads." An eminent advocate was shocked to see an officer draw his sword upon a woman who tried to leave a line of prisoners, slash her across the face, and hack off part of her shoulder. Another officer, of more humane disposition, w^s arrested for speaking against sirnilar barbarity. 198 THE PARIS COMMUNE. Rossel was arrested on June yth. '' He denied that he was Rossel; was confused, broken-down and bewildered," says McMahon in his official re- port. The posthumous papers left by Rossel were written while he was hidden in the city, subse- quent to his disappearance with Gerardin. The obsequies of the Archbishop and other ecclesiastics killed in Paris by the Communal leaders, was held on June 7th. The aspect of the people on the streets did not show a very deep emotion. A solemn silence on the part of those who assisted in the ceremony, and an apathetic indifference in those who witnessed it were the characteristics of the occasion. The columns in the Cathedral of Notre Dame were draped in black and silver, and each column bore an embroidered escutcheon which contained the name of one of the deceased clerical hostages. f On the 29th of June, Thiers and McMahon re- viewed 80,000 French troops at lyongchamps, where four months before the victorious army of the Germans had been manoeuvred. McMahon was received with shouts of acclamation; the *Th3 Assembly set aside 6,000 francs for the funeral of the Archbishop and those shot with him. Above the central door of the Cathedral of Paris a shield was placed bearing the "arms" of the Archbishop with the motto " Lahore fideque." t"The Rev. F. Perraud, a priest of the Oratory discoursed on this subje3t in a funeral sermon on Monseignour Darboy, preached at Notre Dame on the 18th of July, before the Papal Nuncio and several French Bishops. 'We must take up our decision,' he remarked, ' between Jesus Christ and the Revolution ; between the Gospel, that sole foundation of social jiistice, and the lying systems which bring forth noting but ruin and desolation. It is time for us to make our ehoice between those who die and those who kill; between those who kill in the name of liberty, of universal fraternity, of civilization, of progress, and those who die as victims, like Christ, and, like unto Christ, die loving, blessing, forgiving, unto their last gasp. Those scenes, so justly called ' an awful mystery of iniquity,' are si nply the logic of evil pushed to its extreme consequences. Here we have th3m before us in their horrid nakedness, those perverse doctrines which we did not fear as long as they were shrotuled in a sober guise, as long as they were a measured and polite attack against God, against his Christ, against the Church, against the fundamental principles of morals and duty. This evil spirit hath shown himself in his whole hideous ugliness. God grant it may be for his eternal shame and his last condemnation." THK PEAC:^ OF JUNE. 199 soldiers were sullen and disgusted-looking as they filed by; Thiers gave way to copious tears when the people cheered him. The Peace of June : "The column of prisoners halted in the Avenue Uhrich, and was drawn up, four or five deep, on the footway facing to the road. General Marquis de Gallifet and his staff dismounted and commenced an inspection from the left of the line. Walking down slowly and eyeing the ranks, the General stopped here and there tapping a man on the shoulder or beckoning him out of the rear ranks. In most cases, without further parley, the individual thus selected was marched out into the centre of the road, where a small supplementary column was thus soon formed It was evident that there was considerable room for error. A mounted offic'cr pointed out to General Gallifet a man and woman for some particular offence. The woman, rushing out of the ranks, threw herself on her knees and, with outstretched arms, protested her innocence in passiona''e terms. The general waited for a pause, and then with most impassable face and un- moved demeanor, said, ' Madame, I have visited every theatre in Paris, your acting will have no effect on me' (ce n'est pas la peine de jouer la comedie ) It was not a good thing on that day to be noticeably taller, dirtier, cleaner, older, or uglier than one's neighbors. One individual in particular struck me as probably owing his speedy release from the ills of this world to his having a broken nose, .... Over a hundred being thus chosen, a firing party told off, and the column resumed its march, leav- ing them behind. A few minutes afterwards a dropjiing fire in our rear commenced, and continued for over a quarter of an hour. It was the execu- tion of these summarily-convicted wretches." — Paris Correspondent ^^ Daily News," June 8th. " The Temps, which is a careful journal, and not given to sensation, tells a dreadful story of people imijerfeotly shot and buried before life was extinct. A great immber were buried in the Square round St. Jacques-la-Bouchiere; some of them very supei-ficially. In the daytime the roar of the busy streets prevented any notice being taken; but in the stillness of the night the in- habitants of the houses in the neighborhood were roused by distant moans, and in the morning a clenched hand was seen protruding through the soil. In consequence of this, exhumations were ordered to take place. , . . . That many wounded have been buried alive I have not the slightest doubt. One case I can vouch for. When Brunei was shot with his mistress on the 24th ult. in the courtyard of a house in the Pla;e Vendome: the bodies lay there until -the afternoon of the 27th. When the burial party came to re- move the corpses, they found the woman living still, and took her to an am- bulance. Though she had received four bullets she is now out of danger." — Paris Correspondent "'■ Eueniny Standard." June 8th. 200 THK PARIS COMMUNE VIII. The Commune's Administration, " The Commune is the foundation of all political states, as the family is the embryo of human society. " It implies, as a political form, the republic, which is alone compatible with libertj' and popular sovereignty. " The most complete liberty to speak, to write, to meet, and to associate. " Respect for the individual, and the inviolability of opinion. " The sovereignty of universal suffrage— being for ever its own master, and constantly able to convoke and to manifest itself. "The electoral principle for every functionarj' and magistrate. " The responsibility of mandatories, and consequently their jiermanent revocability. " The suppression of the standing arm 3% so dangerous to liberty, and so burdensome to social econom3\ " Suppression of subsidies to creeds, theatres and the press. " Organization of a Communal assurance system, against all social risks crises, and failures. — Epitome of the Declaration of Principles. If we consider the issues involved, the forces at work and the circumstances surrounding the uprising of 1871, it becomes evident that the triumph of the revolution was an impossibility. A disastrous outcome was inevitable. The first sessions of the Commune were amicable and intelligent. But as soon as the discussion of war measures came on, the body was no longer the homogeneous representation of a united people, but became a discordant and factious assembly, vainly attempting to represent a brave but discontented and suspicious constitu- ency. From that time acrimony and personality pervaded its deliberations. There was a tone of moderation, of concilia- tion toward their opponents, seemingly quite out of place in a body of men who, in reality, represented THE COMMUNE S ADMINISTRATION. 20I a spirit of social revolution. It is evident that they did not to comprehend the necessities of the situation. The wisdom of experience should have told them that success was only possible by the victories of war. They forgot that " war legis- lates." * They seemed to eschew the lessons spread on the pages of history, all of which teach that to retain power it must be used. Engaged in a war with a rich, unscrupulous and implacable foe, they shifted about seeking for compromise in a struggle "where no mediation was possible, "and neglected to grasp and use the mine of wealth in the vaults of the Bank of France. So perverse and puerile was their conception of war ,that while the enemy was murdering their soldiers when made prisoners, the Commune found no more important work than turbulent bickering regarding the form w^iich the executive power should take. The internal dissensions and the nature of the discussions showed the Commune to be composed of men " imbued with the love of freedom but not possessed of the spirit of union;" agreed as to the end, but jealously disagreeing as to the means to be used. Unfortunately for the record of their wisdom, they vainly attempted to legislate much for the benefit of the city's inhabitants before they gained, by the success of arms, the powers of government. " Indeed one of the common and distinctive features of the Paris Commune was this, that each of its members was severally accessible to political conceptions and ideas of organization; but as a body it remained deaf to such ideas — a moon-struck assemblage of men individually sane."t The exigencies of immediate decision and action magnified, in those independent and polemical minds, the differences in opinion. ^'' William Gi'vieolje-k. t J. Andrieu. 202 THK PARIS COMMUNK. As orators they were superb; as writers, ex- cellent; as legislators, honorable; in the conduct of war, the most fatuous body the world has ever seen. The courageous defenders of the fortifica- tions were supplied without judgment, munitioned by chance and officered by gold lace and cries of "Vive la Republique," "Vive la Commune." " Delegates, Commanders of I^egions and Battal- ions, the most betasselled and bestriped staft" ever seen." The Commune was obliged to adopt the form of government and procedure adapted only to a social order organized under the beliefs diametrically opposed to the principles and policy by which it was necessary to put in action the Commune's intentions. This adoption was the result of fear of the social sentiment of the civilization of thedayand the dread of the army of the victorious Germans outside the city's walls, which stood ready to pounce upon and destroy them should they be successful in putting in operation even the slight infringements upon the property arrange- ments which they had thus been constrained to sanction. ■The uniformly hostile position of the Com- mune toward the clergy has made the former the target for much invective. The Com- mune of Paris simply found the ecclesiastics their enemies and treated them as such. The clergy made it known at all times by act and word that they were foes of the Commune and of the Communal doctrines. Guizot declares that " when any step was taken to establish per- manent institutions which might effectually protect liberty from the invasions of power in general; the church has alwa^^s ranged herselfon hi side of despotism." Whether this be true or THE communk's administration. 203 not, the priesthood had, to some extent, restrained the excesses of a barbarous age and protected the weak in society. But, as the French people ad- vanced in civilization, the ecclesiastics acted not as mediators between classes, but as a repressive factor on the intellectual and social progress of the people. The Communal authorities were keen in their appreciation of the inconsistent position of the clergy, who, while teaching abhorrence of pride and the hatred of riches, expected the utmost subservi- ency from others, the surrender of wealth to the churches and the use of luxuries to themselves.* It is not sufficient to deduce this hatred for the priests and established religion from the mere dislike for religion per se. The actions of the leaders and supporters of the Commune indicate not only a denial of the very elements of belief, but show their absolute conviction that the church was intimately bound up in the system they desired to destroy, and could not be made to coalesce in the new order they desired to establish .f What was the condition of Paris under the Commune? Even in those portions of Paris where crime is common, where virtue is the rare exception, where infancy is that knows no inno- *M. Regnard, a man of ability and discretion, while secretary to M. Cournet, in an interview, mentioned the fact that " the ecclesiastics were in constant communication with the Assembly's agents; the priests had se- creted in the churches many arms which had fallen into their hands during the Franco-German War." The discovery of these arms in several religious institutions, was sufficient reason for searches of all church property, and the necessity of apprehending all known to be actively assisting the Assembly made imperative the arrest of priests. t"It is urged further that Communism and Socialism would destroy religion and the familv institution. The reason of this complaint is evident enough. A number of social reformers ha^e been at the same time atheists and advocates of free love. The questions of atheism and free love are, however, totally different ftomthatof even Conjmunism, the most radical of all the reforms'proposed. There is no necessary connection whatever be- tween them. If it could once be shown that Communism were practicable, it would be easy to give many reasons for supposing that in such a society the love between man and wife and parents and children would be freer from selfish and sordid motives than at present.— iiic/iardr. Ely. 204 THE PARIS COMMUNK. cence, youth without shame, maturity that is ma- ture in nothing but suffering and guilt, blasted old age that is a scandal to the name we bear" — even these pestilential centers of iniquity failed to return their record of assaults, robberies, burg- laries, suicides and murders. It is conceded by all writers that while under the rule of the Com- mune, there was not a section of the city but that could be traversed with safety at any hour of the day or night. Has there been such a condition of affairs in Paris under royalty, under Empire or under the rule for profit by the bourgeoise ? Dr. Bridges, writing to the Bee Hive, July 8tli, 1871, said:— " I delib- erately say that the records of history may be searched in vain to find a revolutionary movement, the leaders of which stand out in history more pure from crime than the leaders of the Commune." An English lady, who left Paris on the advent of the Commune, returned after the city's subjugation by the Versaillese. She found that her apart- ments had been used for a military headquarters by the Federates. Of her three rooms, two were occupied by soldier^'; all her furniture and belong- ings had been stored in the third room, and not an article was missing, pieces of jewelry which had been left on the bureau remaining as she had even left them. Mr. Read, then in Paris, writing from Lalj^wood Road, Birmingham, to the Morning News, July 17th, proves the Commune never had the least in- tention of shooting the hostages. Mr. Read also proved that the hostages tvere not shot till three days after the Versaillese troops ivere masters of Paris, and the members of the Cotnmune Jailed or in flight. That during the reign of the Commune not one person was put to death officially or otherwise, and that Mr. Malet, of the British Embassj-, could prove the same. Mr. Malet also declared that during the Commune there was an almost total absence of crime. An English clergyman, living in Paris at the time, wrote to the Specta- tor, May 20th, 1871, on the state of Paris. He said: — " As to anarchy, never was Paris so quiet and orderly; never were persons or property so safe; you may go out at any hour, in any quarter, without fear or insult; and this is more than could be said of the place, when, besides the city police and the army of spies, it had twelve thousand police specially for the Emperor's pro- tection. ... Of personal liberty you can go where you please. Of drunkenness you see none in Paris. As to debauchery, the womeii have joined the Commune to put down prostitution." No more corpses at the Morgue, no nocturnal burglaries, scarcely any robberies; in fact, for the first time since the days of February, 1848, the streets of Paris were safe, and that without any police of any kind. " We," said aniember of the Commune, " hear no longer of assassination, theft, and personal assault; it seems, indeed, as if the police had dragged along with it to Versailles all. its Conservative friends. "-^^(?(?ress of Int. W. A. A Catholic woman, visiting Paris, met another woman returning from the flower -iiiarket carrying a bouquet. "Then rid one," said the visiter, poiritirig to the flowers, " need be afraid in Paris." " No woman," was the answer, " except of shells; but the men are in danger. "^iai*mer. THK commune's administration. 205 " I was constantly about the city during the whole reign of the Com- mune, but I was never interfered with nor was ever an affront offered to my person. My private secretary * * * was busy everj^where * * * " Going- through the prisons, etc. * * he was always treated with the ut- most respeot." — Washburne. The work of the administration in the municipality was divided into nine departments, (see p. 74) and these were, all things considered, creditably conducted, except that most important of them all, the Department of War. The War Department has been fullj' reyiewed in the preceding chapters. Its delegates were successively Lullier, swaggerer; Cluseret, diplomat; Rossel, insiiieere, and Delescluze, enthusiast. Cluseret must be credited with much wisdom on one point. He was not in favor of the centering of internal efforts on the locking up of the priests, while the Bank of France— the hostage of hostages— was left practically in the hands of their antagonists. Lullier contemplated leaving Paris about the middle of May, and he applied 10 Minister Washburne to get him a passport. He was about 83 years of age. He was a forcible and fearless speaker, and his public denunciations of the incapacity of the Commune's nailltary leaders made him unpopular with the Commune, and with its officials. Lullier took command of the flotilla of the Seine April 12th. It is charged that late in April Lullier desired the Assembly to secretly authorize him to organize a counter- revolution in Paris in favor of the Versaillese government, "Delescluze and the majority of the Commune understood nothing, and therefore accomplished nothing."— C^wserei. Beslay, .Jourde and Varlin were the Committee on Finance. A legal battalion of five hundred National Gviards, who were favorable to, the Assembly, were, from the opening of the difficulty, in charge of and en- ti-enched in the bank. It is said they had but twenty-five rounds of ammu- nition, but their strong position and the diplomatic stubborness of the bank authorities, together with the ignorance of the Federates as to the lack of munitions were sufficient to deter the Communal authorities from taking- over the institution. The bank officials also insisted that the moment the Commune took charge, the bank's notes would be practically valueless. The excuses, the lies, the deceptions, the bickerings which served to protect the bank and embarrass the Commune would of themselves fill a long and not uninteresting chapter. Six hundred millions of dollars, in vai-ious forms of value, were in the bank's vaults at this time, of which there was 8,826,866 francs to the credit of the City of Paris, and 1,390,000 francs were to the credit of the International Workingmen's Association. The latter fund was used by the Commune. Including this, the "total amount paid out by the Bank of France on the Commune's account was 7,200,000 francs [$1,440,000]. — Washburne. Beslay was made the Commune's agent in the bank and he was in- stalled in an office in that institution. Rouland, the governor, left on March 18th. The sub-governor. Marquis de Ploeuz, was in charge during the Com- mune, and testified before Commissioner of Inquest that without Besley the bank "would no longer exist." The bank continually protested against issuing funds and its excuses and evasions were directed from Versailles. The funds were parceled out in amounts insufficient to make a vigorous defense, but sufficient to satisfy the committee and to keep in abeyance the desire to take over the bank. This was several times 206 I'HR PARIS COMMUNE. threatened, and constantly advur-ated by all who had any adequate con- ception of the power of money in war. Besley's actions in endeavoring to lessen the demands on the bank are evidence that he deserved no punish- ment at the hands of the Versaillese. Thiers is said to have granted Beslej' a pass to Switzerland after the fall of the Commune. Jourde presided over the Commission of Finance, and with the assistance of Varlin, attended to the collection of funds and the payment of troops, etc. Thei'e was an evident desire, on the part of the Commune, to connect authority with merit in these appointments. Jourde, who had been a clerk and accountant, was honest and methodical. This department was carried on bj' men drawn from among the proletarians, at ordinary wages, and strict accou7iting was made of every item, although huge sums were in transfer, and the opportunities for irregularities were plentiful. Jourde made fre- quent accountings to the Commune. In all the vast sums handled by the Commission of Finance, the disposition of every sou was shown in the records. Jourde frequently- objected to what he believed to be the too-liberal use of the public mone\'S in some departments. These two who were chosen, Varlin and Jourde, were both distinguished for their jrtlain and simple apparel and fare, and for their orderly and abstemious habits of life. Jovirde twice resigned as head of the Finance Department owing to his dissatisfaction with some actions of the Commune; the completeness of his reports, and his unqviestioned integrity, caused a unanimous demand for his continuance in oflfice. Jourde protested vigorously against the payments made to the National Ciuard in the latter part of the struggle. He had 60,000 men on his pay roll and said he did not believe more than 30,000 were performing their duties. The red flag was never hoisted over the Bank of France. Beslay was an engineer by profession, He had been a deputy in 1830; bis father had been a deputy under the first Empire. " Jourde, a small, pale, thin man and a consumptive, thoroughly trustworthy— nothing more He defended the bank more than anyone —at any rate as much as Beslay/'— Cluseret. The Department of Subsistence was one which was easilj' and well managed. " Viard was an honest, straightforward man, incapable of a base act.*' — Ckiseiet. Elisee Re3lus and Benoit Gastneau were placed in charge of the National Library. Elisee Reclus was born at Sanita-Foy-la-Grandoand was 41 years of age in 1871. He is a distinguished geographer and scientist and the author of many notable works on physical geography. His prin- ciple books are " La Terre " and the •' Geographie Unlverselle." He has also written many pamphlets on Anarchism and is accounted as one of the leaders of Anarchist thought in Europe. He was tried for participation in the Commune and condemned to transportation for life, but, by the intercession of scientific men, the government was induced to commute this sentence to banishment. The Delegate of Labor took charge of the unemplojed; night work by bakers was abolished, all employers were forbidden to fine their laborers under any circumstances. " The prohibition, under penalt.y, of the employers' practice to reduce wages by levying upon their workpeople fines under manifold pretexts— a process in which the employer combines in his own person the parts of legislator, judge, and executioner, and filches the monej^ to boot." — Address of Int. W. A. "By decree all workshops not in actual operation were confiscated to the Commune to be operated co-operatively by trades-syndicates of workmen, " thus affirming the principle of the expropriation of the capitalist class by the working class." THK commune's ADMINISTRATION. 207 " The farce was to be gone through of liaving' a jury of arbitration to fix upon the amount of indemnity. — Such owners were not, of course, repre. sented on the jury and had no voice whatever in tlie matter." — Washhurne "The department of labor immediatelj^ set to work to systematically collect and arrange information regarding the condition of labor, and relations between emploj-ers and employed. " It was also entrusted with the revision of the customs and the transformation of the fiscal sj^stem." — Bax. " Frankel, small, thin, fair; with a subtle and methodical mind * * -"" thoroughly acquainted with the questions relative to labor."— C/?«.sej-ei. Foreign Affairs, with Grousset as Delegate, were carefully attended. It was evidently the intention of the Commune to placate the Germans as Paschal Grousset on April 20th, in the Affranche, declared Paris was ready to pay a just share of the indemnity to the Prussians. Department of .Justice, Protot, Delegate, was creditablj conducted. _ The judicial functionaries were to be divested of that sham independence which had but serveci to mask their abject subserviency to all succeeding governments to which, in turn, they had taken, and broken, the oaths of allegiance. Like the rest of public servants, magistrates and judges were to be elective, responsible, and revocable. — Address Int. W. A. Protot was 36 years of age. An enthusiast; intelligent and brave; his jaw was broken by a bullet while he was defending a barricade during the street fighting. The Public Service was, all thing-s considered, attended to in a remark- able efficient manner. Thiesz, a silver chaser by trade, was selected to take charge of the postal service. This absolutely necessary public utility had been purposelj^ de- moralized hy Rampon, the deserting head of this department under instruc- tion from Thiers, but under the hand of the Commune's delegate, order was restored and the service, it has been held by all historians, wovild have been creditable to a city in the midst of a prosperous peace instead of one in a state of siege and disorder. "Rampon appears to have taken advantage of the Committee's confi- dence, and to have sent away to Versailles all the conveyances and boxes used by the administration. The Comuiunal Council, receiving warning too late, only issued orders * * for the arrest of M. Rampon; but when the agents of the Commune reached the Post Office for that purpose, they found neither M. Rampon nor his clerks, neither registers nor postal cases, " not even the Post Office vans", was the report of the Commune's re- presentatives." The wages of the employes in the post office were ra'sed, the hours shortened and all arrangements showed marked diligence and great ability . Camelinet, a bronze worker, was given charge of the mint and in spite o^ the singular difficulties which surrounded its operation, the conduct o* this department was of such a character as to call for high praise. Treilhard, an old revolutionist, was put in charge of hospitals, and did systematic work for the attendance of the sick and wounded. Gustave Courbet, the painter, and a committee of artists superintended the museums and picture galleries. "Grustave Courbet, artist, was born in 1819 in the province of Franche-Comte, which lies on the eastern limits of France. His father was a well-to-do farmer, who had a cousin in Paris who was a lawyer. At 20, yuung Courbet was sent to Paris to study law with this relative. He abandoned himself to art. He painted his own portrait and for several succeeding years sent it to the Salon 2o8 THE PARIS COMMUNE. and each time it was sent it was refused. In two of his pictures "The Lovers in the Country" and "The Man with the Leather Girdle" his portrait is introduced. His first picture that attracted attention was in 1844. His fame began to grow In 1850, Courbet " awoke and found himself famous." After the suppression of the Commune in Paris, Courbet was sentenced to six months' imprisonment and to pay the cost of restoring the Column Vendome. The heavy cost was paid in part and on Courbet's death his devoted sister, who had the Gallic dreadof pecuniary dishonor in her family, assumed the remain- ing debt; that, however was cancelled by the Government."— Titus Munson Coan. ( Courbet's fine is generally stated to have been but 500 francs.) The Department of Education was unable, owing to the unsettled condi- tion of affairs to form any general system of procedure, but in the arrondes- sements, considerable local work was done. In one district the clothing and feeding of children was instituted. Another declared its mission as a com- munal institution to teach children to love their fellow creatures, to love justice and to bring home to them the duty of improving themselves, not for the sake of personal advancement, " but in the interests of all." At the same time teachers were instructed in future to exclusively employ " the ex- perimental and scientific method, that which starts from facts"^, physical, moral and intellectusl." Public Safety had as Delegates Rigault, Cournet and Ferre. The duties were in all cases diligently performed, unpleasant and arbitrary as they sometimes appeared. Soon after his appointment as Prosecutor, Rigault issued an order that no persons, military or civil, should be imi^risoned unless an official report, detailing the alleged offences and with the names and addresses of witnesses, were lodged at the clerks office by the citizens making the arrest. Raoul Rigault said on the 17th of May, " I would sooner let the guilty escape than strike an innocent person." Riel and Leballeur, assistants at the Prefecture, were imprisoned for being too extravagant with public moneys. Cournet, who was editor of the iiere?7, had been a deputy to the Assembly, but resigned to uphold the Communal cause, and was well known as a forcible writer and an unflinching advocate of the Com- munal tenets. Ferre had been a clerk before the breaking out of the war, and was a well known speaker and an active revolutionary agitator. He is described as a small, brisk man, with an immense capacity for disposing of business. Of an active mind, a ready tongue and a firm will. Ferre, when tried, refused to answer interrogations, made no defence and refused to have an advocate. He was 25 years of age. Gaston Pierre Dacosta, a journalist, was assistant procurator under Rigault, and seems to have had a character similar to that of his chief. Dacosta was but 22 years of age, but at 18 was sentenced to 15 days' imprisonment for uttering seditious cries. Pilotell, an artist, was one of Rigault's most vigorous lieutenants, and has been singled out much villification for carrying out the orders of the head of the department. Abbe Lamazou speaks of Rigault and Ferre as the two most depraved and bloodthirsty members of the Commune. The following are among the more important decrees of the Commune, some not before noted: April 2, The Commune declared that sinecures and overpav had no place m a genuine Republic, and that no official of the Commune should receive over $1200 per annum. THE COMMUNK^S ADMINISTRATION. 209 April 27, The Commune decreed the destruction of the Chapel Brea, erected in memory of General Brea, who was killed by a revolutionist in the uprising' of 1S48. A proclamation was issued April 29, outlining their policy, and another in which they remitted three-qiiarters ef rents, due October, 1870, January, 1871, and April, 1871, and all payments made previous to this decree were to be deducted from future payments; this applied to furnished apartments as well as houses. All leases were renewable at the option of the tenant; all notices to quit might be deferred three months at the pleasure of the tenant. Maj' 12, The Commune decreed a gratuitious delivery of all pledges in pawnshops, of a value less than twent.y francs [§4]. May 17, Decreed titles, coats of arms, liveries and aristocratic privileges abolished; all pensions, revenues and emoluments thereto are abolished and the Legion of Honor and all other Orders abolished. May 19, Public functionaries, guilty of extortion, depredation or thefts as long- as war lasts, shall be tried by Court Martial. A decree for arresting all drunkards and prostitutes, and another punishing theft with death was promulgated by the Commune. The widow of ever}^ National Guard was to have of 600 francs a year; the mistresses of National Guards to be placed on the same basis; each child, legitimate or illegitimate, was to have one franc per day until 18 years of age. Provisions were made for pensioning the aged and wounded defenders of the Commune. A court was established for the trial of all military offenders in the I'anks of the Federates, and was specially intenaed to consider the cases of those against whom charges of spying for the Versaillese were brought. The theatres were to be put under the administration of associations instead of individuals. The Cummune fed the families of those who fought against it and simpl.\' said " The Commvme has enough bread for all." Thus putting into action what is known as Christian charity so noticeable absent from Christian warfare. It was held by the Commune, as may be seen by their edicts, that the ecclesiastics had not only taken over to the church, and to their own use, the temporal possessions of the communit;^ but had systematicallv pauperized the mentality of those who were brought under their influence. M. Mortier, member of the Commune, expressed a desire to open the churches only for atheistic teachings and the annihilating of ancient super- stitions. "Having once got rid of the standing army and the police, the physical force elements of the old government, the Commune was anxious to break the spiritual force of repression, the " parson-power," by the disestablish- ment and disendowment of all churches as proprietary bodies. The priests were sent back to the recesses of private life, there to feed upon the alms of the faithful in imitation of their predecessors, the Apostles. The whole of the educational institutions were opened to the people gratuitously, and at the same time cleared of all interference of Church and State. Thus, not only was education made accessible to all, but science itself freed from the fetters which class prejudice and governmental force had imposed upon it." Notwithstanding the military failures of the Communal government, the splendid administra- tion of municipal afikirs by workingmen, with a machinery purposely disarranged by the former officials, proves this clavSS to possess the faculty of social iniative in a high degree and conclusively disproves the charge that this was a rebellion of 2IO THK PARIS COMMUNK. the incompetents — the socially unfit — who were bent upon escaping from needed restraints and in- augurating an orgy of pillage, lust and blood. The workman of Paris * * had admirable qualities. * * He is active, generous, unwearied in work and in pleasure, he is ardent, courageous naturally-inclined to all that is grand and lofty, with a passion for justice, sober (in spite of all that his calumniaters may have said on the progress of drunkenness, we keep this word, which is justified by the Pai'is workman's faculty of living on next to nothing) generally obliging, cordial and gay— and gaietj' is a noble gift in a being who has every thing to suffer." — A, Desinoulins. It is a strange fact. In spite of all the tall talk and all the immense literature, for the last sixty years, about Emancipation of Labor, no sooner do the working men anywhere take the subject into their own hands with a will, than uprises at once all the apologetic phraseolgy of the mouthpieces of present society with its two poles of Capital and Wage-slavery (the land- lord now is but the sleeping partner of the capitalist), as if capitalist society was still in its pin*est state of virgin innocence, with its antagonisms still undeveloped, with its delusions still unexploded, with its prostitute realities not yet laid bare. The Commune, they exclaim, intends to abolish property, the basis of all civilization ! Yes, gentlemen, the Commune intended to abolish that class-property which makes the labor of the many the wealth of the few. It aimed at the expropriation of the expropriators. It wanted to make individual property a truth by transforming the means of produc- tion, land and capital, now- chiefly the means of enslaving and exploiting labor, into mere instruments of free and associated labor. — Address of Int. W. A. It must be remembered that the administration^of Pans under the Com- mune was extremely economical; so mvich so as to cause the surprise and disgust of the ex-officials and ex-attaches of the municipality, who in the main acknowledged that Paris in war under the Commune cost less than Paris in peace under the Empire, notwithstanding all insinuations of dis- honesty against the Communal officials. NOTES. Hostages, Prisoners, and Public Buildings — It is not of record that the Commune ordered any deaths of hostages, the first executions took place on Maj' 24th. The date of the last sitting of the Commune was May 21st. Prisoners taken in battle by the Commune's forces were generally con- fined in churches and were alwaj's treated humanely. Extraordinary precautions were taken by the Commune to protect the public buildings from the bursting shells during the siege. Huge amounts of sand were placed in the yards of the public buildings to deaden the force of the projectiles. Loss in Mo7iey — Fetridge estimates the loss to the city of Paris by the Commune at 867,500,000 francs. Washburne estimates the loss by fire to have been 1200,000,000. Election of the Commune — The number of registered voters was 481,970; 224,197 or 46 per cent, of the voters took part in the election; 89,731 voters cast their votes for the 16 who resigned; those who had voted for those who had resigned added to the abstainers, formed a total ot 347,504 out of 482,970 registered electors. Voters, April 16, 53,679; abstainers, 205,173. The abstentions were 54 in 100 at first election; April 16, 80 in 100.— J. Simon. ( See pgs. 36 and 67.) MlSCKIvIvANKOUS COMMENT. 21 T li Frank fl. Pixley on The Commune. [Mr. Pixley was one of the most distinguished and conservative journalists on the Pacific Coast]. The Commune is held up as the personification of misrule and destruction. Communists are represented as that worst element of city life that delights in blood and conflagration, and Paris of 1871 is described as a scene of frightful disorder, submitting to anarchy, pillage and murder. I was present in the city of Paris during the entire period that the Commune held sway. I was there from the day of the entry of the Germans till the army of A^ersailles destroyed the Commune, and the experiment of communal government was wiped out of existence by the death of forty thousand citizens, who. fell in battle in the streets of the capital of France. I saw that great city of central Europe held for five weeks by the men of Vilette, Montmartre, and the Faubourg St. Antoine, by the artisans and laborers, who for the first time in seventeen years had had the opportunity to bear arms.* There was the Bank of France with its hoarded wealth of coin, the House of Eothschilds, the Bank of the Hopes of Amsterdam ; there were the great magazines and storehouses filled with costly fabrcs; shops with jewels of untold value; palaces with costliest gems of art; pictures and marbles of inestimable price. There was a vast population which had for months endured privation, hunger and distress. Tiie gendarmerie had been driven out, and there was no other government than that of the Commune. And yet during five weeks — weeks of menace from without and suffering within — I saw and heard of no single act of pillage and murder. For five wrecks the great forts of the enciente sent their destructive missiles to the heart of the city. From the * During the Empire there had been a separation of the workingmen's battalions from the others'— Revere des Deux Monds, 1872, 212 THE PARIS COMMUNE. Trocodero of a Sunday afternoon to the Pere la Chaise, the Commune soldiers contended against the Versailles troops. From barricade to barricade, from one open space to vanother, fighting inch by inch, in desperation the soldiers of the Commune with their wives fighting by their sides, sullenly disputing every stone, block and curb-stone, retreated to the cemetery, and there amid the graves of the dead, the last of the Communists laid down their lives in hopeless, desperate valor. They may have been wrong and misguided, but that they were thieves, murderers and incendiaries, I most indignantly deny. During five weeks I saw no act of vandalism ; 1 saw no plunder. I saw organization and order. During the week of Government victory I sawscenes of unparallelled brutality. I saw a hundred inexcusable bloody acts. I saw a well-dressed matron stabbed to death in the back and flung like a dead beast into an open port cochere in the boulevard Haussman, because she lagged behind in the train of prisoners. I saw^ five little girls lying dead in a heap near the Palace d'Industrie, with their little petticoats thrown over their faces, shot as petroleuse^ by Versailles soldiers. I saw a man torn from his carriage and killed by a hundred deadly bayonet thrusts. I saw hundreds and hundreds of Communists fusiladed and buried in a trench near the river Seine. I saw every sub- lieutenant of the army of France armed with the power to arrest, try, and execute citizens, and this after the fight was over. I tiave read the death decrees and the decrees of exile that for five years followed this communal uprising. I do not believe that the Communists either burned or attempted to burn Paris. I believe that the whole petroleum story comes from an absurd scare. The war of the Commune was to the Great Revolution what the mad raid of John Brown was to our civil war. It was the first electric burst from the overcharged clouds. It will ultimate in the adoption of all the great principles for which the Commune contended. The Commune was composed of the scholars and thinkers of France. It was a band of patriots. If it had in the mad element of fanaticism, it may be excused. If oppressed labor classes looked for it for relief it was but natural. If fanaticism and disorder enrolled themselves to fight under its banners it was because it was the first and only flag where they might enhst. If poverty, distress and desperation looked to it for a change it was but rational. miscki.i.ane;ous comment. 213 The history of the Commune is written by its enemies. Like all lost causes it will be misrepresented. What there was 01 good in it will be suppressed. What there was of bad in it will be exaggerate i. The efiort of an eye witness, at this late time and in these columns, is but a feeble effort at stemming the tide and current of opprobrium running against the Commun- ists of Paris. Nearly all the press of Anieiica and England, nearly every pulpit in Christendom, has denounced tbe Commune. The press has thundered its anathemas against it, and the throne of God has been bombarded from every Catholic and Protestant priest and preachers' desk with unstinted censure. Why the Roman clmrch should do so I may guess. Why the Protestant should I do not understand. This little fragmentary scrap of observation may be gathered up for history, and may help to swell the protest that in the interest of truth may sometime be made. To the facts of which I speak I bear the testimony of a living witness. Of the Commune I was a part. 1 helped to build the barricade at the Place de I'Opera. It was begun by a woman in a purple frock, and a lad of perhaps fourteen years of age. The rule was that every passer-by should add a stone from the Belgian pavement with which the boulevard was made. I made occasion to pass often. From my window in the Hotel de HoUande, rue de la Paix, I saw the bloody fight of the Place de I'Opera. At this barricade I saw this woman bring water, load the guns, and bear away the empty ones, and when the soldiers of the Commune were beaten oflf, I saw this purple-gowned amazon, with disheveled hair and bloody arms, alone defend the ramparts that she had aided to raise, till she was stabbed to death with bloody bayonets. I rode to two midnight sorties with Dombrowski, and I breakfasted with Ockelowitz in the Place Vendome, for the Americans had the universal pass with the officers and soldiers of the Commune. 1 treated a regin^ent of Vilette to halt a cask of red wine. It was cheap, and I was paid in hearing them cheer the toast I gave them in very bad French— *' The Two Republics — the Republic of France, and the Grand Republic of America." 1 shall live to see its realization. I rode in an open voiture at midnight to the heights of the Butte de Montmartre to witness the artillery duel between it and Valerian. I met with polite attention; I was not robbed. 214 THE PARIS COMMUNE. Let London, or New York, or San Francisco fall under the control of its worst citizens, and we should see scenes of pillage, rapine, violence, drunkenness, theft and murder. Yet in this great rich city of Paris, given over to the Com- mune for five weeks, with all its wealth and wine, 1 saw order, sobriety and respect to persons and property. Hence I feel it my duty to say that Communism does noi mean a forcible and unlawful distribution of property, nor is the word Communist a synonym for every crime. — San Francisco Argonaut. The Commune and The Bank. The occupancy of Paris by the first Socialistic govern- ment of the world was marked by one trait of lofty honesty that is unparalleled in the history of any time. Somewhat as in the first revolution of 1789 it was written by the revolters, " Whoever speaks to the King shall be beaten ; whoever insults him shall be shot," so in this last and greater one it was decreed "The wealth of our masters was stolen from us and belongs to us still, yet he among us who dishonor his hand by touching it, shall die." During the whole administration of the Commune the Bank of France had in its vaults two thousand nine hundred and eighty millions of francs equal to $596,000, 000. It was comprised as follows : 77,000,000 f. in coin. 11,000,000 f. in bullion. 7,000,000 f. in jewels. 900,000,000 f. in script. 800,000,000 f. in bank-notes. 166,000,000 f. in fractional notes. 899,000,000 f. in large notes. 120,000,000 f. in loan securities. The private bank of the Hopes of Amsterdam contained : 20,000,000 f. in coin. 5,000,000 f. in bullion. 190,000,000 f. in jewels and plate. 100,000,000 f. in notes and securities. . The private banks of the Rothschilds were s/iid by them to have contained double the amount of wealth held by the Bank of Finance. misce;IvI,ane:ous comment. 215 Over one hundred other 'private banks held the accumulated plunder of the Bourgeoisie — uncounted bil- lions, the gross amount of which cannot even be guessed at. Every sou of this was absolutely in the hands of the Commune; they had the power to confiscate and use in their battle for life every franc, every note, every jewel. And from the moment that the Versailles shot in cold blood the first prisoners taken, the Commune by all the rules of so-called "civilized " warfare had the right to con- ficate every penny piece. What they did confiscate was — nothing. The City of Paris througli its regularly elected repre- sentatives donated to the Government less than $2,000,000 of its private funds and this served as the sinews of war. Whether we doubt its wisdom or no, let us recognize and honor the lofty thought of the slave, that he would not sully his i^fingers with property which the masters had wrung from him in slavery. The world babbles with loquacious tongue of the heroes of ancient days, the soldiers and "statesmen" of modern times. Let us, whose brothers rose to the pinnacle of a true heroism, be slow to outrage their memory by joining in that flow of words which elevates the murderer, the thief, and the traitor above the honest man. And when we do break silence, let our voices few though they be, in protest or acclaim, salute not the sham but the real heroes of this world. — Truth, San Francisco, March 15, 1884. An Awful Retrospect. "The splendid struggle of the. Commune of 1871 has been character* ized by the "Edinburgh Review" as tho "greatest and most determined attempt that History has ever seen to settle the Social Question'by force of arms, the greatest and most determined attempt on the part of the workmen and their leaders to conquer a position from which they could, in the future, regulate Society in their own way." Viewed from the simple historical standpoint, this is exactly what it was. Looked at by the poet, the tale of those five weeks' strug= gle is a page torn from an epic of the Heroic Age. To the economist, it is the 'most brilliant uprising of the people in favor of a principle that the world has ever seen. To the Moralist, it is an overAvhelm = ing proof of the nobilty of man. To the S<)cialist, it is at once a dirge and a:war=cry A dirge for the dead, but not a sad one, for the dead Avere'OURS. They, who laid down their lives so magnificently, were striking for us. These men and women and little children, whom Immortality has gathered to her side, ^vere of and for us, the be» 2l6 THE) PARIS COMMUMK. cursed kicked and scourged \vage=slaves of the World. They dared to strike where we dare not move a finger. They dared to die where we tremble even in living. And our masters, finding their hacks not bent meekly to the whip, as are ours, shot them down in their tracks as wild beasts are shot. And not content with this, they have lied to us about these heroic martyrs who have died to set us free. Not content with their robbery while living — their murder when they dared resist— they have for thirteen years defamed the dead. It is time, at least, if we ourselves are too cowardly to break our own chains, that we have the decency to defend the memory of those who tried to break them for us. The blood of the men, the women, the little children of the Commune calls out to us from the shuddering earth, to=day, for vine dication. Let ns heed that call kow and then to work ! And by that work, unceasing, let us hope and pray that ere long, when that blood shall call as well for vengeance, we can respond as men, and not as quailing slaves. Friends, methinks we have but this one thing to do, to spread the light, to record the crimes of the robber- class, to print that record by the million and send it to every nook and corner of this land to make freedom sure. Even upon the report of Thiers himself we are content to rest our case. He reported this: "Number of insurgents airested from May 28th, 1871 to January 1st, 1872,38,578; died, 967; acquitted, 3,147; condemned to prison, 10,131; handed over to the civil courts, 212; dismissed, 1,090; shot, 23,121!!!" But Lissagaray, who chronicles onr side of the story swells this number by 20,000 more who fell unknown and unrecorded. Mind you, these people were not killed in battle, but after victory, singly, in couples, squads and droves, men, women and children — for the sole purpose of stamping out forever, in France, the doctrines which would emancipate, when put in practice, the working people of the world. After the fight was over, for one whole week in Paris the slaughter of the working people went on. The 24,000 shoemakers of Paris were reduced to 12,000: the bronze trade were reduced from 2,500 to 1,500 men; the tailors from 30,000 to 22,000; and other trades in proportion. Every sublieutenant of the conquering army was armed with power to execute prisoners summarily . In forty places everyday, firing parties were kept at work from morning until late at night at the bloody task. The proof of guilt was to smell of powder or to wear a blouse. "The condemned were sent to the firing parties in bands of from six to twenty; they fell in heap.s in all positions, a sanguinary mass. Of coursf., many resisted, and others threw themselves at the feet of the soldiers, protesting their innocence, embracing their knees and crying for mercy— mercy which was never accorded. Sometimes there was a wife that came in with her liusbandto bid himad'eu; anothei- time a father with his son; sometimes both or all, and even little children. But once in, none went forth again. In other places the metrailleuse mowed them down like grass. Against the eastern wall of Pere la Chaise, 1,148 souls were sent to eternity al once. A long trench had been dug, and the prisoners ranged along the edge of it were shot and made to fall in their own graves, and whilst struggling in the throes of death or agony were covered with earth. In one Fosse Commune repose 808 and in another 300." The words quoted above are from the pages of the history of the Commune, written by * * John Leighton, H. S. A., who said that this slaughter was a " retribution for the crime of desecrating the holy precincts of Gods-acre, and on that day of days, the Sabbath," re- ferring to the last stand made on Sunday, by the insurgents, in the cemetery of Pere=Lachaise.— ^iwne^e G. Haskell, ISSL MISCKlvIyANKOUS COMMENT. 217 In the Interest of *♦ Society." "As I drove up the broad avenue between Virofiay and Versailleg, I overtook a very miserable and dejected com- pany : in file after file of six "tramped a convoy of Commun- ist prisoners numbering over 2,000 souls. Patiently and with some apparent consciousness of pride they marched, linked closely arm in arm. Among them were many women, some of them fierce barricade Hecates, others mere girls, soft and timid, here seemingly because a parent was here also. All were bareheaded, foul with dust, inany powder-stained, and the burning sun beat down on the frowzy column. Not the sun only beat down, but also the flats of sabres, wielded by tho dashing Chasseurs d'Afrique who were the escorts of those unfortunates. Their own experience might have taught them humanity toward their captives. No sabre-blades had descended on their pates during that long, dreary march frotn Sedan to their German captivity; they were the pris- oners of soldiers. But they were prisoners now no longer, as they capered on their wiry barb stallions, and in their pride of cheap victory belabored unmercifully the miserables of the Commune. For many overwearied creatures who fell out or dropped there was short shrift; my driving-horse had been shying at the corpses on the road all the way from Sevres. , At the head of the somber column were 300 or 400 men lashed together with ropes— all powder-stained those — and among them not a few men is red breeches— deserters taken red-handed. I rather wondered what they did in this gang; they might as well have died fighting on the barri- cades, as survive to be made targets of a day or two later with their backs against a wall. On the following morning I visited Pere Lachaise, where the very last shots had been fired. Bivouac fires had been fed with souvenirs of pious sorrow, and the trappings of woe had been torn down lo be used as bedclothes. * * Shells had fallen freely, and the results were occasionally very ghastly. But the ghastliest sight in Pere- Lachaise was in the southeastern corner, where close to the boundary wall had been a natural hollow. The hollow was now filled up by dead. One could measure the dead by the rood. There they lay tier above tier, each tier powdered over with a. coating of chloride of lime, 200 of them patent to the eye, besides those underneath hidden by the earth covering layer after layer. Among the dead were many women. There, thrown up in the sunlight, was a well-rounded arm with a ring on one of the fingers; there again was a bust 2l8 THP: PARIS COMMUNE. shapely in death ; and there were faces which to look upon made one shudder — faces distorted out of humanity with ferocity and agony combined. The ghastly effect of the dusky white powder on the dulled eyes, the gnashed teeth, and the jagged beards cannot be described. How died those men and women ? Where they carted here and laid out in ghastly lying-in-state in this dead-hole of Pere- Lachaise ? Not so; the hole had been replenished from close by. There was no difficulty in reading the open book. Just there was where they were posted up against yonder pock-pitted wall, and shot to death as they stood or crouched," — Archibald Forbes. "The largest butcher pen of modern times is Satory. It is the form of a parallellogram and contains several acres. It was once used as an artillery park, and there still remained the stables used for the horses. But this it was before it had occured to the Govern- ment that they would serve the cause of Justice and Humanity by transporting hither 20,000 people, inclusive of those who fell on the way "by accident." to be shot. It is said that those 20,000 were the poorest animals ever slaughtered in Paris, which, indeed, is not won- derful, seeing that in the case of human animals the ordinary process must be reversed from fattening to starving. The butcher pen at Satory is surrounded by walls, and when the great drove of 20,000 victims, less what had fallen on the way "by accident" entered it, there were numerous holes in the walls through which ferocious cannons scowled ominously. When the vast drove arrived the old stables had already been filled to suffocation, and many thousands were huddled together here and there and enclosed by ropes. The drove was marched in a short distance from«the gate, and being huddled close together, a rope tied at convenient distance to stakes was drawn around them and a strong guard with chasse- pots placed over them. They were placed directly in front of several large guns charged with grape and canister, which were ordered to to fire into the crowd on the slightest manifestation of disorder. * The rain had now also commenced to pour again and beat upon the poor wretches incessantly. Many, as I have said, were wounded; some of their wounds were sore and some were still fresh and bleed- ing. So that when a squad was moved from one place to another for any cause, to be shot mainly, one might see stains of blood here and there, and little pools of bloody water. Some of these wounded had their friends with them who did all they could for them, which was very little; others were neglected. Many were very old; some were very young. Most of them were fainting from fatigue, and all of them were hungry. They were too tired to stand. They threw them- selves on the ground and the water settled around them, sometimes several inches deep. Guards were posted thickly everywhere; the poor captives were savage, mad, covered with wet and mud. The faces were begrimed with smoke and powder, which, mingling with the rain which beat in their faces, presented a frightful appearance. The wretched prison- ers were nearly all bare-headed, many bare-footed and the great majority scantily dressed or in dirty tatters. They were shivering; their lips pale and bloodless, and their teeth chattering in the cold drifting rain. One thing was observable on all hands: there was no repenting of what they had done, no curses, no revilings, no reproaches against their chiefs, but when they were shot they unanimously shouted: 'Vive la Commune'.'' — IFm. Du Gas Tramviell. MISCELLANEOUS COMMENT. 219 Megy in New York. Megy went to New York in 1878, and was interviewed by a reporter of the New York World and in brief made thie following statement : "I was born in 1844; had a common school education; was apprenticed to a machinist, and joined a secret society which had Blanqui for its head; at 20 I found work on the Suez canal; returned to Paris in 1866; was in the uprising of February 7th; and assisted in the raising of barricades; six police agents were sent to arrest me after the defeat and I killed the first with a pistol; 1 was overpowered, dragged to prison, sentenced to 20 years at New Caledonia, with hard labor; was released when the Republic was proclaimed. I was in the movement to deprive General Trochu of his command, and a warrant was issued for my arrest; I enlisted under another name and fought the Prussians; went to the South of France at the conclusion of the war; arrested the Prefect of Police at Marseilles and took his place for eight days; in April, 1871, came to Paris and commanded Fort Issy, and after its fall fought at the barricades; participated in the shooting of the hostages at I^a Roquette; I fought to the last; escaped in a coal cart; went to Geneva; have worked in lyondon and Birmingham, and am now working here in New York," The Advance of " Order " — "We have official proof that several houses to which National Guards had fled were surrounded by gen d'armes, and set fire to with petroleum, the bodies being afterward fetched out, in a half-burned state, by the ambulance, of the Press of Ternes. "—Sfcetchley. Rewarded by the Conquerors— Ducatel, who informed the Versaillese of the undefended condition of Porte St. Cloud, received the Cross of the Legion of Honor, and a public subscription brought him about $22,000. He also held a government ppointment for some years. 220 THE PARIS COMMUNE. Wm. DuQas Trammell. William Du Gas Trammel is the only native born American known to have fought at the barricades in defence of the Commune. The following sketch is from the Atlanta Constitution: Judge William DuGas Trammell, born in Harris County, Georgia, in 1848, died in Fort vvorth, Texas, June 6, 1884 Mr. Trammell was graduated from University of Georgia, 1870, when tliat famous school was under the control of Dr. A. A. Lipscomb, by whom Mr Trammell war regarded as a young man of remarkable talent and unusual promise; leaving school he engaged in the practice of law, but occa- sionally found recreation in literary pursuits, his chief literary work was "Ca Ira," a novel published about 1874, in which the author em- bodied views of the social, industrial and political relations of man- kind, that excited much comment. Judge Trammell was an earnest advocate of the common people, and at the the time of his death was a Vice-President of the " Workingmen's International Association," which had its headquarters in New York City. He was a devoted son, and a loving, affectionate brother; and the idol of the family— mother, sister and brother— who looked to him, and not in vain, for counsel and support. Wonderfully conversant with political history for one so young, fond of metaphysical and abstra.ct reasoning, with a keen relish fo)* all speculative philosophy and entertaining views of social and and political rights not wholly in sympathy with his time and genera- tion, he was regarded by many as an extremist. Yet his great capabilities were conceded by all who knew him, and, in a less utili- tarian age, with favorable surroundings, he would have attained eminence as a philosopher, as a student, as an expounder of political history. We trust that the great mystery of life, the great theme of his speculative mind, has been revealed to him in perpetual bliss. "So be it. There no shade can last. In that deep dawn behind the tomb. But clear from marge to marge shall bloom. The eternal landscape of the past." *' Recollections." "The city was delivered from the monstous oppression of the insur- Tectionists who, for 10 weeks, had held the pijople in terror, — murdering, robbin^% imprisoning, and making life one continual torment. Then came the reaction. When the orderly and peaceful citizens, relieved from the shocking tyranny of the Commune, began to get the upper hand as is ■atural to suppose, the.y were inspired Mdth a certain degree of rage which ^ it was almost impossible to control. No sooner had Paris been captured than the great work began of arresting the thousands of criminals — mur- ders, assassins, robbers, desperadoes, and outlaws of every description — who had so long made the beautiful city a, pandemoniwu. In the most insurrec- tionary jiarts of the town the people were arrested en ma^se, It would take too long to recount all the frightful incidents which - followed the capture of Paris. There were no less than fifty thousand insurgents arrestei; how many Vere summarily exesute.l will never be Jrnown. —Washbtirne. - MISCELLANEOUS COMMENT. 221 THE SPIRIT OF INTERNATIONALISM. The number of high positions held by foreign- ers under the Commune was very large : Anys-el-Biltar, Director of Manuscripts at National Library [Egyptian]. Biondetti, Surgeon-in-Chief, 233d battalion [Italian]. Babick, Member of the Commune [Pole]. Becka, Adjutant of the 207th battalion [Pole]. Cluseret, General, Delegate of War [Frenchman naturalized American]. Cernatesco, Surgeon-major [Pole]. Crapulinski, Colonel of the Staff [Pole], Capellaro, Member of Military Bureau [Italian]. Carneiro de Cunha, Surgeon-major of the 38th battalion [Portuguese]. Charalambo, Surgeon-major of the Federal sharpshooters (Pole). Cyprani, Italian, Aide to Flourens. Dombrowski, Ladislas, General of the forces of the Commune (PoleX Dombrowold, Jaroslaw — his brother — Colonel of the staff (Pole) Durnoff, Commandant of a legion (Pole) Echenlaub, Colonel of the 88th battalion (German). Ferrara Gola, Director-general of the ambulances (Portuguese). Frankel, Member of the Commune (Prussian). Giorok, Commandant (Wallachian). Grejorok, Commandant of the artillery at Montmartre (Wallachian). Kertzfeld, Director-in-chief of the ambulances (German). Iziquerdo, Surgeon-major of the 88th battalion (Polo). Jalowski, Surgeon-major of the Republican Zouaves (Polo). Kobosko, Placed in the order of day of army of the Commune (Pole). La Cecilia, General (Italian). Landowski, Aide-de-camp of General Dombrowski (Pole). Mizara, Commandant of the 104th battalion (Italian). Maratuck, Aide-major of the 72d battalion (Hungarian). Moro, Commandant of the 22d battalion (Italian). Okolowicz and his brothers, General and staff-officers (Poles) Ostyn, member of the Paris Commune (Belgian). Olinski, Chief of the 17th legion (Pole). Pisani, Aide-de-camp of Flourens (Italian). Potampeuki, Aide-de-camp of General Dombrowski (Pole). , Ploubinski, Staff officer (Pole\ Pazdzierswski, Commandant (Pole). Piazza, Chief of legion (Italian). Pugne, Musical-director at the opera (Italian). , Romanelli, Director of war materials (Italian). Rozzski, Surgeon-major of the 144th battalion (Pole). Rubinowicz, Staff-officer [Pole]. Rubinowicz, [P.,] Surgeon-major of the fusileers of marine [Pole]. Syneck, Surgeon -major of 151st battalion [German] Skalski, Surgeon-major of the 240th battalion [Pole], Soteriade, Surgeon-major [Spaniard]. Thaller, Sub-governor of Fort Bicetre I German]. Van Ostal. Commandant of the 115th battalion [Dutch], Vetzel, Commandant of the southern forts |Germaii|. Wrobleski, General Connnandant of the army of tlie South [Pole}. Wetten, Surgeon-major of the 72d battalion [uaturalized American). Zengerler, Surgeon-niajjr of tlie 74th battalion [German]. [This list is incomplete.] ^222 THE PARIS COMMUNE. MEMBERS. •*I" member Int. W. A. Names, Occupations, Punishments, etc. * Living. Adam, merchant, Allix, Jules, teacher, shot; Amouroux, hatter, transported for life; Andrieu, teacher, escaped to London; Arnaud, Antoine, railroad employe, I., shot; Arnold,* architect; Arnould, Arthur, man of letters; escaped to Switzerland; Assi, engineer, I., transported for life; Avrial,* engineer, L, escaped. Babick, laborer, escaped to Switzerland; Barre, tobacconist, escaped; Bergeret, printer, L, escaped. Beslay, civil engineer, I, escaped; Billio- ray, artist, I., transported for life; Blanchet, priest, I., shot; Blanqui, politi- cal economist and journalist, imprisoned; de Bouteiller, naval officer, Brelay, merchant, shot; Briosne;* Brunei,* traveller, Chalain, brass-turner, I., shot; Champy, chaser, transported for life, Chardon, coppersmith, escaped to Switzerland; Cheron, merchant, shot; Clemence, book-binder, I, escaped; Clement, Emil, shoemaker, shot; Clement, J. B., literary man, escaped to London; Clement, Victor, working dyer, three months in prison; Cluseret, agitator, I, escaped, Courbet, artist, six months in prison, and fine; Cournet, journalist, escaped. Delescluze, journalist, I., shot on the barricade; Demay, workman, un- known; Dereure, shoemaker, I., escaped to America; Decamps, iron founder " acquitted;" Demasrest, advocate, unknown; Dupont, G., bank clerk, shot; Dupont, Clovis, basket maker, I., shot; Durand, shoemaker, escaped; Duval, iron founder, I., shot. Eudes, reporter, L, . ■' ; ^ _% Ferre, accountant, shot; I'erry, Emile, unknown; Flourens, professor, Journalist, L, cut to death with sabre. Fortune, Henry, I., shot; Frankel, jeweler, I., shot; Fruneau, unknown. Gambon, ex-Deputy, L, shot; Garibaldi, M. declined office; Gerardin, Eugene, workman, unknown; Gerardin, Charles, traveller, unknown; Geresme, corset-maker, I., shot; Goupil, physician, "arrested;" Grousset Paschal, journalist, I, transported for life. Johannard, traveler, I. . " , Jourde, medical student, I., transported. Langevin, turner, I., shot; Ledroit, merchant, unknown; Lefevre, Ernest, journalist, I, shot; Lefrancais, accountant, I,, escaped to Geneva; Leroy, Albert, literary man, unknown; Loiseau-Pinson, unknown; Lonclas, hotel- keeper, escaped; Longniet, student, I., escaped. Malon, clerk, I., shot; Marmottan, physician, I., shot; Martelet, decora- tive painter, L, escaped to Geneva; Meillet, Leo,* law student, I., escaped; Meline, advocate, fate unknown; Miot, Jules, chemi«t, L, shot; Mortier, architect, I., shot; Murat, engineer, I., shot. Nast, unknown. Ostyn,* workman, I., Oudet, porcelain painter, I., shot. Parent, Ulysse, journalist, "acquitted;" Parisel, physician, L, shot; Phillippe, hotel-keeper, I., shot; Pillot, physician, I., shot; Pindy, joiner, I., escaped to London; Pottier, designer, I., shot; Protot,* advocate, escaped to Belgium; Puget, accountant, unknown; Pyat, escaped. Kane ; Ranvier, painter, escaped to London; Rastoul, physiciao, I., transported; Regere, veterinary surgeon, L, shot; Robinet, physician, I., unknown; Rigault,Rioul, law student, shot; Rogeard, man of letters, I., shot; Rochard, ) Serrailler, last-maker, I., escaped to London; Sicard, shoe-maker, L, unknown ; Serizier, currier, shot. Theisz, silver chaser, I., escaped to London; Tirard, jeweler, unknown; Tridon, medical student, reported died at Brussels; Triuquet, shoemaker, I,, hard labor for life. Urbain, school master, I., hard labor for life. Vaillant,* journalist, civil engineer, I; escaped to London; Valles, Jules, journalist, I., , "Varlin, book-binder, I., shot; Verdure, accountant, L, transported for life; Vermorel, journalist, shot; Vesinier, secretary to Eugene Sue, I., escaped; Viard, clerk, escai^ed. MISCEIvI^ANEOUS COMMKN'i. 223 PROMT'^.NT CHARACTERS "I" member Int. W. A, is'auies, Occupations, Punishments etc. ♦ Livins. Abadie, civil engineer, fate unknown; Alavoine, I,, fate unknown* Andignoux, wine merchant, L, prison for life; Anys-el-Biltar, mana"-er MSs' department National Library, I., fate unknown; Avoine Sr., modeler I es- caped; Avoine Jr., modeler, I., shot. ' '' Barraud, workman, fate unknown; Bastelica, I., organizer, escaped to London; Bouis, Casimir, journalist, unknown; Boullenger, C. C, prison for life; Boursier, wine merchant, I. , escaped. CameMnat, jeweler, I., unknown; Castioni, I., prison for life; Cavalier Georges, civil engineer, I., hard labor for life; Caveskv, butcher, unknown Charles, hair dresser, unknown: Chouteau, house painter, unknown* Com- batz, telegrapher, unknown; Combault, jeweler, I., unknown. ' Dacosta, journalist, I., prison; Debock, printer, I., escaped to London; Dennis, Pierre, editor, unknown; Dombrowski, Ladilas I Ex- OfEcer in Russian Army, shot May 23; Dombrowski, Jaroslaw, I. , served'with his brother, escaped; Du Bisson, ex-General, L, unknown; Durassier, shot Fabre, clerk, L, shot; Fontaine, professor of mathematics, L, shot in the Rue Bonaparte; Ferrat, man of letters, L, transported for life* Fosse unknown. ' * Gaillard Sr., shoe-maker, escaped; Ganiot, Pyrrhus, in prison; Ganier d'Abm, General in Chief of the King of Siam, L, unknown; Garnier' Eugene, actor, I., shot; Gaudier, shot; Genton, shot; Gouhier, I. shot' Grelier, bleacher, escaped; Groslard, circus, unknown; Guedeual. writer* unknown. ' Henry, actor, I„ unknown; Henry, artistic, L, imprisoned; Henry army officer, L, shot; Humbert, journalist, unknown. Jaclard, professor of mathematics, L, prison for life; Josselin, bank clerk, unknown Lacaille, unknown; La Cecilia, ex-professor of mathmatics at Ulm I escaped to England; Lacord, cook, unknown; Landeck, jeweler, I., esca'peci to Barcelona. Larocque, journalist, I., prison for life; Lavallette, draper I prison for life; Lebeau, ex-army officer, I., prison for life; Le Moussu, insur- ance, unknown; Levrault, wine merchant, unknown; Lisbonne, actor I wounded, prison for life; Lissagaray, journalist, L, escaped to England' Lulher, Charles, ex-naval officer, i. , * Maljournal, bookbinder, I., wounded, prison; Maret, journalist, fined 500 francs, Maroteau, journalist, 1., shot; Matuzewicz, army officer, I un- known; May, brothers, jewelers, L, unknown; Megy, engineer, I , escaped' Milhere, journalist, L, shot; Moreau, journalist, L,shot; Mourot, journalist' Aa ) snot. Napiar, Piquet, ]., shot. Ockolowiez, agitator, escaped from Satory. Painchaud, unknown: Passedouet, wine merchant, L, unknown- Peyron- ton, advocate, unknown; Peyrusset, naval officer, L, shot; Pilotell artist prison for life; Piat, P. escaped; Pougeret L, shot. ' Razoua, journalist, L, escaped to Geneva; Regnard, student, escaped* Kegmer, shot; Rochefort, journalist, 1., transported for life; Roman etti ex- army officer, unknown; Rossel, captain of engineers, shot; Rousseau, porter unknown. Salvador, musician, shot in the Rue Jacob; Secondigne, journalist' unk.iown; Sylvestre, unknown. Tony Moilin, physician, shot; Toupe un- known; Treilhard, solicitor, shot. Van der Hooven, unknown; Vermesch journahst, escaped; Vericq, Jean, officer, unknown; Volpesnil, unknown' Wrobleski, Russian general, shot. The Women. Madame Leroy, prison for life. Marchais, shot. Leo, Andre, escaped Bocquin 10 years in prison. Retitf , shot. Robert, prison for life Michel, Lomse, prison for life. Suetins, shot. Bojiar.l, prison for life Bonnefoy, prison for life. Jlinctk, Paule, escaped.' [This record is only partial]. 224 thp: pakis commune. LETTER FROM EDOUARD VAILLANT. 15 Villa du Bel Air, Paris, December 24, 1897. G. B. Benha7n Dear Sir — It is not an easy task for me to answer your letter at once. I do not know how many members of the Commune are now living; I tell you only what I know, of the following, now living members of the Commune : Cluseret, Paschal Grousset and myself, Edouard Vaillant, are now members of the French Chamber of Deputies. G. Lefrancais writes now in the French Socialist paper V Aurore. J. B. Clement, poet and writer, writes now in the Socialist paper La Petite Repiiblique. Longuet, Chief Inspector of the Teaching of the Modern Languages in the Schools of Paris. Brunei, Professor of the French language in the Royal Naval School, Woolwich, (or perhaps Dartmouth,) England. lyco Meillet, Professor of the French language in the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. Champy, conseiller prudhomme, (elected judge in trades disputes between employers and employed). Arnold, Architect, Teacher of Drawing in the School of Paris. Protot, Barrister. Avrial, Engineer. Ostyn, Manager of an insurance company. I have so told 3^ou either what I know or what I was told. Believe me, dear sir, yours very sincerely, Edouard Vaillant, M. R. C. S. Eng. THIERS ENEMIES OF THE COMMUNE. 225 X. Enemies of The Commune, That the National Assembly had been elected under a restricted mandate, has never been con- troverted. Its business was to decide on the question of peace or war, and then to dissolve, so that an Assembly, chosen as legislators by the people might take its place, bearing direct from the constituencies a clear expression of the public will on all the great questions of the day.* Cassell says : " That the Assembly did ulti- mately proceed to settle the form of government, does not at all show that it had any right to do so." I^ouis Adolphe Thiers was born April i6th, 1797, at Marseille; died September 5th, . 1877. Thiers was the son of a locksmith. He studied law, but met with little success as an advocate. His " History of the P'rench Revolution " raised him to celebrity. His " History of the Consulate and Empire " is considered his greatest work. Thiers " History of the French Revolution" founded his literary and helped his political fame. The well-known sentence of Carlisle that " it is as far as possible from meriting its high reputation" is in strictness justified in regard to all Thiers' historical works. They are all marked by extreme inaccuracy, by prejudice which passes the limit of accidental unfair- ness and sometimes seems to approach positive dishonesty. His works possess, however, in a high degree the gifts of clearness, liveliness and intelligible handling. In all his writings he displayed great knowledge of military operations. *The Assembly which gathered at Bordeaux consisted of Orleanists 400; Republicans, 150; Legitimists, 50; Bonapartists, 20; doubtful, 30. This body, whose acts have to some extent been referred to, was, as may be seen by the political beliefs represented, an exceedingly conservative Congress. The International Association of Workers was by the National Assembly on March, 1872, declared to be illegal, and to belong to it \vas a penal offence. 2 26 THK PARIS COMMUNE. "The chronicle of Thiers life is the record of the misfortunes of France." A Republican in 1830, he betrayed Lafiitte, excited mob riots against the clergy, and thus ingratiated himself with Louis Phillipe. The subsequent massacres of Republicans were largely his work, and the laws against association and a free press were the result of his exertions. It was his plan to fortify Paris in 1840. The Republicans denounced it a plan to endanger their their liberty. This he declared to be impossible. He sneered at rail- ways as wild chimeras, while a minister of Louis Phillipe. In 1848 he shook with horror when Palermo was bombarded bj' the government "because the city demanded its rights.'- Eighteen months after he defended the bom- bardment of Rome by French troops. Anxious for notoriety, he declared himself a revolutionist, not only in France, but of Europe. He left the first ministry a millionaire, though he went into office an impecunious ad- venturer. Again in office, his peculations exposed him to taunts in the Chamber of Deputies, to which he replied in copious tears. "He per- laetually harped on the French loss of prestige, and so contributed more than any one else to stir up that fatal spirit which brought on the war oi 1870, and while constantly weakening the government of his country, he gave no help nor even offered any." ( Enc. Brit.) Thiers was consistent only in his greed for wealth and in hatred of the men who produced it. The Second Empire had more than doubled the National debt; the municipalities had enormously increased their liabilities and now added to this was the huge amount of indebtedness necessarily inciirred to pay the demands of the victors. Patriot that he was, he was con- tent to endow himself with three million francs a j^ear in the Bordeaux Assembly, at a time when the financial downfall of France seemed thus impending. Beslay, a member of the Commune, (himself a capitalist) thus addressed Thiers: " The enslavement of labor by capital has always been the corner- stone of 3^our policy, and since the very day the Rei^ublic of Labor was installed in the Hotel de Ville, 30U have never ceased to cry ' these are criminals.' " A master in small state roguery, a virtuoso in perjury and treason, a craftsman in all the petty stratagems, cunning devices, and base perfidies of Parliamentarj^ party-warfare; never scrupling, when o it of office, to fan a revolution, and to stifle it in blood when at the helm of the State; with class prejudices standing him in the place of ideas, and vanity in the place of a heart; his private life as infamous as his public life is odious— even now, when plaving the part of a French Sulla, he cannot help setting off the abomi- nation of his deeds by the ridicule of his ostentation. — Address of Int. W. A. The London Spectator, speaking of Thiers, says : "At the age of 74, after passing through every conceivable shade of political opinion * without pretending to have anj' other guide to his gyrations than expediency. * * That he has ever understood what an historical principle, what a political principle, what even an economical principle means, we do not in the least believe. Poor France indeed with such a savior. He has lived his whole life on the hand to mouth principle both as a litterateur and statesman." In those artifices dependent on falsehood and insincerity, there has been scarcely a man in public life whose record equals that of Thiers. Every mask of political character seemed to fit him with singular exactness — Orieanist, Imperialist, Republican, Revolutionist— with all the inter- mediate shades of political complexion — he had assumed and discarded them ■with the inconstancy of a barlot and the flippancy of a mountebank. Of the prisoners brought to Versailles in earlj' April, (the barbarous treatment and killing of which were a spectacle enjoj'ed from a balcony by Madames Thiers and Favre,) Thiers said: " Mever have more degraded countenances of a degraded democracy met the afflicted gaze of honest men." While endeavoring to enlist the assistance of outside districts on March 25th he said : "Come what may, I shall send no army to Pai'is." On May 18th Thiers said : ''I desire to punish none but the murderei's of Lecomte and Clement Thomas." As the time for entering Paris drew near he said enemie:s of thk commune. 227 in the Assembl3^ " I shall be pitiless; the expiation shall be complete." On the ,22d he said "to-day I come to tell you our i;oal is reached." "Our soldiers merit our highest esteem" was Thiers' way in public reports, of encouraging- the continuance of the murders, which were not only opposed to the dic- tates of humanity, but contrary to the usages of 'civilized warfare.' ^^Under the exterior of a savant and a litterateur, was concealed the sanguinary disposition of a Caligula or Justinian II. Lacking the courage of a soldier, he displayed the malignity of a tyrant. From the abyss of darkness to which his heinous acts consign him, he will be dragged to view in days to come, to illustrate the crafty ambition of a sycophant, the conduct of an unprinci23led politician and the inhumanities of an aged despot. Thiers, when elected in the Assembly as President of the P^rench Republic, was given full powers to choose all his cabinet officers. He asserted " that in selecting them he had been guided solely by the public esteem they enjoyed and their character and capacities." His se- lections were as follows : Dufaure, Minister of Justice; Favre, Foreign Affairs; Picard, Interior; J. Simon, Public In- struction; Lambrecht, Commerce; General de Flo, War; Admiral Pathuau, Marine; de Larey, Public Works; Pouyer-Quertier, Finance. Jules Favre was a lawyer of note and had been a prominent member of the Republican party. He was born at Lyons, March 21st, 1809. Although Favre was an orator of much power "renowned for the Attic elegance of his language," he had little ability as a statesman, and his private life was singularly disgraceful. He died at Versailles January 20th, 1880. Mi'lere was shot bj' the express and standing order of Jules Favre. During the armistice between the Germans and the French, when Favre was candidate for the Peace Assembly, Millere wrote an article in which it was lleged that Favre had lived for many years in concubinage with the wife of a drunken resident of Algiers, and had, by a "daring concoction of forgeries spread over many years, contrived to grasp, in the name of the children of his adultery a large succession, which made him a rich man, and that in a law suit undertaken by the legitimate heirs, he only escaped exposure by the connivance of the Bonapartists tribunals " All this was incontro- vertably proven to be true in the courts in a case brought after the Commune by Favre, in which he sought damages from the man who had given Millere the information The evidence disclosed at the trial com- pletely wrecked Favre politically. Dufaure, Minister of Justice, was 84 years of age, lawyer of Orleanist sympathies, and bad been 228 THK PARIS COMMUNE. the "justiciary of the state of siege as now in 187 1 under Thiers, so in 1839 under Louis Bonaparte's Presidency." Dufaure distinguished himself by formulating laws of deportation which exceeded in speed and sweeping action the statutes which had been for the Second Empire sufficiently effective. Dufaure in a circular on April 23rd, commended the Assembly to treat the *'cry of con- ciliation as a crime." Pouyer-Quertier, Minister of Finance was a cotton spinner of Rouen, who had attained " emi- nence ' ' by his success in withholding from- the product of his employes sufficient amounts to make him recognized as a financial luminary. Picard, (with his brother, a notorious cri- minal) had used his official position to enrich himself in stock gambling while Paris was under- going the Prussian siege. Picard amused himself in Versailles by going from one group of captives to another j esting in loud tones on the nature of their wounds, their unwashed condition and the necessity for their death. As for those of the Ministry not specially mentioned here, there seems to have been nothing to distinguish them from the ordinary place- seekers of the time, who had gained Thiers esteem by the facility with .which they had advanced themselves during the infamous reign of the Third Napoleon. Marie Edme Patrice Maurice MacMahon, due de Magenta, was born in 1808, a son of a peer of France. His services in the Italian campaign for 1859, ^^^ particularly at the battle of Magenta gained for him his title. He was defeated at Worth and at Sedan in the Franco-German war of during the Second Empire. His action during the ENEMIES OF THE COMMUNE. 229 Commune was acceptable to the bouro^eois, and he was president of the French Republic 1873-79. McMahon and Bismarck, for many years after the Commune, were zealous in their efforts in dogging- those survivors who escaped the tribunals of the Versaillese. Almost every European country was willing and anxious to have any fugitives within their borders extradited and executed. Victor Hugo, called to Belgium by the death of a relative, notified the the world through the Brussels press on May 26th, that the asylum denied by Belgium he would offer in his private residence in Brussels. On the following night the lovers of " order " stoned his house; he narrowly escaped severe injury, and the Belgium government issued an order for his eiect- ment fron Belgium territorv. United States Minister Washburne was the only foreign representative who officially recog- nized the Commune. Washburne also represented the German and Mexican governments, and seems to have been general utility man for all enemies of the Commune. While ostensibly interesting him- self in the hostages and other matters as a private citizen he solicited and was granted favors never obtained by private individuals. Ferre had the courage to resent his constant meddling. Note— Megy in an interview (1878) characterized Minister Washburne as " a liar and a German spy during the Commune." Frank M. Pixley (after the publi'-ation of Wasbburne's book 1887) expressed substantiallv tlie same sentiments. COMMUNIST'S ARMS AND OCCUPATIONS There was taken from the Communists the following arms : 285,000 chassepots; 195,000 guns atabatiere; 68,000 guns a piston; that is, 548,000 guns of different models, with sabre bayonets, or bayonets with their corresponding shoulderbelt; 56,000 cavalry sabres of all forms and for all ranks; 14,000 carbines, mostly Enfield; 39,000 revolvers. Finally, 10,000 arms of every.kind, such as daggers, stilettoes, sword-canes, etc., giving a total of 667,000 weapons of every kind taken from the hands of the Com- munists, aud 1,700 pieces of cannon and mitrailleuses. There were from 15,000 to 20,000 arrested and transported. From the official report of General Appertz, we take the following nine classes of workmen :— Laborers, 2,901; locksmiths, 2,684; masons, 2,293; cabine makers', 1,687; shopmen, 1,598; servants, 1,402; clerks, 1,065; cabmen, 1,024; painters, 863— making .15,477, in nine categories out of 33, besides several men of property. Other classification by occupation on pages 40 and 216.) 230 THE PAEIS COMMUNE. ARRESTS, PUNISHMENTS, ETC. Tho following- is a list of arrested members of the Commune, appre- hended previous to 12 months after May 29, 1871: Ant. Arnaud, Assi, Amouroux, G. Arnold, Billioray, V. Clement, E. Clement, Courbet, Champy, A. Dupont, C. Dupont, Paschal Grousset, E. Gerardin, Geresme. Goupil, Jourde, Pillot. Reg'ere, Rastoul, Trinque'', Ur- bain. Verdure. All of these were sentenced to various penalties, varying from hard labor and transportation for life to thi'ee month's imprisonment, two also had fines to paj'. Jourde was sentenced to transportation; Rastoul had the same sentence. Assi, Grousset, Billioray, Regere, Verdure and Ferrat to deportation and confinement in a fortress. Courbet six months imprisonment, and fined 500 francs; Clement to three months. Trials were had on the absentees including the dead, and Rigault, Deles- cluze and Varlin were sentenced to death. Fifty members of the Commune had not been captured May 29, 1872, (many of them were dead) but they were tried, and, on various charges, 39 being- sentence to death, 11 to life im- prisonment. They were as follows: Allix, Avrial, A. Arnould, Andrieu, Babick, Blanchet, Bergeret, Brunei, Cluseret, Chardon, Cournet, J. B. Clement, Clemence, Chalain, Demay, Durand, Dereure, Frankel, Ch. Gerardin, Gambon, Henri Fortune, Loncla's, Lonquet, Langevin, Lefrancais, Ledroyt, Martelet, Mortier, Meillet, Miot, Malon, Ostyn, Oudet, Pindy, Pottier, Protot, Puget, Parisel, Pyat, Ranvier, Ranc, Sicard, Serailler, Theisz, Viard, Vesinier, Vaillant. Forty-five members of the Committee Central had been arrested within a year after the Commune's fall and 39 were uncaptured. Lullier, Maxime Lisbonne and Grelier, members of the Committee Cen- tral were sentenced to death. It was expected that Lullier would be acquitted on the grounds of insanity. Ulysee Parent, Lefevre and Descamps were acquitted, and the others captured were transported. The following- were executed on dates given, being- sentenced for offenses mentioned: Ferre, (Member of Commune), was executed Nov. 28, 1871, for com- plicity in the affair of the hostages ; Phillipe, ( Member Commune) Jan. 22(i, 1873, for incendiarism; Rossel, for bearing arms against France, 28th Nov., 1871. [It is said Thiers made efforts to save RosseFs life. 1 Serizier and Boin, complicity in the killing of the Dominicans May 25th, 1872; Rouillac, killing Chemist Dubois, July 6th, 1872; Lecroix and Lagrang, Federates, and Verdguer, Sergeant 88th regiment de marche, participation in the Liecomte-Clement-Thomas shooting, the first on Feb. 23d, the last two Feb. 22, 1872: Boudln, incendiarism, May 25, 1872. For shooting hostages inRueHaxo; Aubroy, Dalivoust, De Saint Omer, Francois, July 25, 1872, and Benot, Jan. 2-M, 1873. For shooting hostages at La Roquette; Genton, April 30th, 1872; Lolive, Sept. 18, 1372. Shooting Chauday; Preau de Vedel, March 19, 1872; for shooting Comte de Beaufort, Deniville, Sept. 19, 1872. There was a bitter feeling- among the French populace when the atroci- ties of the Versaillese were brought to their remembrances by the a-^tion of these Courts. The Deputies were averse to granting amnesty to the pris- oners and exiles, though various attempts were made to that end. However, in March, 1879, a partial amnesty was granted, which restored to full citizen- ship all but 400 fugitives, and all prisoners except about 300. On July 12, 1880, full amnesty to all prisoners or exiles was decreed and nearly all returned to France. London had been the home of very manj' of the exiles, some of whom had achieved distinction in English Governmental and other positions Some arrests and sentences took place as late as 1877. Total number of prisoners recorded as taken 38,578. Of these 1,090 were liberated after simply questioning; 967 died before trial; 1,957 ARRESTS, PUNISHMENTS, ETC 231 were men, 235 women, 77 children. The 36,309 unaccounted for above were arrested as follows: Before the entry into Paris 3,224 During the 8 days' fight 18,756 Fugitives handed over by Prussians . . . 625 After the fall of the Commune , . . 13,399 Captured at varitDus times outside Paris . . 305 36,309 The prisoners are classified as follows* Persons holding official position in Commune . 438 Federates, 16 or more years of age . . . 29,409 " under 16 years of age .... 93 Persons, not Federates, engaged in the insurrection (including some irregular bands of armed men) . 5,105 Women, 16 or more years of age .... 819 Girls, under 16 4 Boys, under 16, not attached to military . . 441 36,309 There were 1,725 foreigners, which included 27 Englishmen, 17 Americans and 81 Germans, and larger percentages of Belgians, Italians, Swiss, Poles and Dutch. Tried for Political Offenses 9,373 Of these there were— Men .... 9,262 Boys .... 51 Women ... 59 Girls . . . 1 Tried for Offenses against person .... 441 Of these there were— Men .... 393 Boys 2 Women ... 46 Tried for Offenses against property . . . . 323 Of these there were— Men .... 295 Boys .... 1 Women ... 27 Totals 10'137 10,137 After long detentions, averaging five months, on "no charge,;' 23,- 727 were liberated. To attend to trial of remaining 12,.o82, two Military Courts were established, which number was increased to 26, and two Courts of Revisions ; a Court of Pardons was also puj m operation m July 1871; 95 prisoners were sentenced to death, and 10,137 sentenced to various penalties, many to transportation, many to perpetual hard labor, a few to simple police surveillance. There were 139 sen- tences annulled out of 2,962 by the court on application. The sentence of 72 condemned to death were commuted to imprisonment. It is believed that the reports of the trials, sentences, etc, as here given, do not represent the total of persons taken and punished otherwise than by immediate killing-. There are conflicting statements regarding the matter, and it is stated bv many eminent writers that at least 15,000, and by some, that many more than 15,000 persons were transported. The mere number of sentences to transportation does not cover the real facts concerning the punishment of those convicted. " The cat o' nine tails, the irons in the ship's hold, the blows and insults of the warders, the semi starvation, all the refinements of cruelty " accompauied the unfortuna*-e rebels "on their way to their imprisonment and exile. Plato wrote: "A state in which classes exist is not one but two. The poor constitute one state and the rich another; and both, living in the closest proximity, are constantly on the watch against each other. 232 THI$ PARIS COMMUNK. L ; SOURCES OF INFORMATION, TITLE. AUTHOR. Histoire de la Comtnune de 1871 ..... Lissagaray History of the Commune of Paris in 1871 . . . Thomas March Rise and Fall of the Paris Commune of 1871 . . W. P. Fetndge A Short History of The Paris Commune . . . E. Belfort Bax Recollections of A Minister to France . . . JElihu B. Washburne France in the Nineteenth Century . . . Elizabeth W. Latimer Political History of France H. C. Loc/nvood History of the War between France and Germany . . Cassell Socialisna; Its Growth and Outcome . William Morris and E. Belfort Bax Review of European Society J. SketcMey Ca Ira William DuGas Trammell French and German Socialism in Modern Times . Richard T. Ely. History of the Franco-German War Von Moltlce Evolution of France Under the Third Republic . Baron de Courbertin A His tory of France . Victor Duruy The Government of Thiers Jides Simon PERIODICALS. The Revolution of the Commune, F.Harrison . Fortnightly Review, 1871 The Fall of The Commune, "' " "' " The Paris Workingman and the Commune, Desmoidins " " " The Paris Commune, J. Andrieu . . . . " " " The Militar'. Side of The Commune, Cluseret . " " 1873 Behind the Scenes at The Commune, " ... Eraser's, 1872 The Commune of Paris in 1871, " . . . . " 1873 The English Working Classes and The Paris Commune, . " 1871 Suum Cuique; the Moral of the Paris Catastrophe , . n a At Paris, Just Before the End, Vicar of Church of England •' " Oustave Courbet, Artist and Communist, T. Mimson Coan . Century, 1884 What I Saw of The Paris Commune, Archibald Forbes . . " 1892 The Commune and the International, . . Quarterly Review, 1871 Paris and Versailles, A Young English Gentleman . McMillen's, 1871 The Programme of The Commune, . . Littell's Living Age, 1871 Communal France, Edinburgh Review, 1871 In and About Paris, Edward King .... Scribner's, 1872 Last Days of The Commune, Joh7i B. Marsh . . Gentleman's, 1871 A History of tke Commune of Paris, A Resident . . Blackwood's, 1871 London " Times," (1871); London "News," (1871); San Francisco ■"Argonaut;" San Francisco "Truth," (1884.) PAMPHLETS. "Address of the International Workingmen's Association", 1871. "The Interrationale; Its Principles and Purposes," (1871) by George Wilkes. The Commune of Paris," by Peter Krapotkin. 233 APPENDIX. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES Condensed from the 0-erman Handbook of Socialism, Amottroux, Charles, born ia 1&43 at Chalabre, Aude; in 186.9 organized a union of hat makers at Nantes. He was sent by the Commune of Paris to Toulouse. St. Etienne, Lyons anci Marseilles. He was very successful in organizing the Communal iJprisings in those cities; was transporied for life after the Commune's defeat; returned after amnesty: was elected member of Paris Municipal Council 1882; to the Chamber of Deputies from St. Etienne 1885; died soon after his election. AVBIAL, Angus tin, born 1840 at Revel, Haute-Garonne. Left the army at the age of 25 and became a civil engineer. Organized a union of the workers in his profession; became a member of " Cercle des etudes Sooiales" ; belonged to the " Societes Ouvriers." Arrested May, 1870, and imprisoned for two months for participation in the International. Bbslay, born July 4, 1795 at Dinan. Well educated; became engineer; deputy in 1830; interested himself in social questions in early life and became an adherent in Socialistic beliefs ; started a machine foundry with his employees as profit sharers ; this under- taking failed, and Beslay lost a considerable fortune; his financial ruin was fully accomolished by means of a mutual bank. He was a Prudhonian; one of the founders of The French International and one of the most active meiibers of the society. He died Mar. 30, 1878, in Switzerland, which was his home after the fall of the Commune. Blanqui, Louis Auguste, born 1805 in Puget-Theniers, died Paris Jan 1, 1881; an educated man, in early life a teacher; fought on barri- cades at Paris in 1830, and was concerned in every revolutionary movement which took place in France up to the time of his death, except when prevented by his numerous and long imprisonments for political offeac3s. Conspiracy against governments through secret societies, in which organizations he was both promoter and partici- pator made up his program for the advancement of liberty. His followers who were numerous, were known as Blanquists Blanqui's importance to the Commune's cause was evidently much overrated, and the strenous attempts made for the exchange of Darboy and others for him seems to have been an effort on the part of the Corn- muae to get rid of inconvenient prisoners, which it would show weakness to release and ferocity to execute. Chalain, Louis, born Jan. 10, 1840. at Plessis-Dorne. He read a defence written by Thiesz and Avrial in the third prosecution of the International uneer the Empire. The writing of the defence was credited to him, and on the strength of this he was elected to the Commune, where he was a silent member. "He escaped to Austria after the fall of the Commune." 234 APPENDIX. • Clement, Jean Baptiste, born May, 1837, Boulogne-sur-Seine. At the age of 12 he was apprenticed as a coppersmith; in 7 years he^ became a skilled workman; educated himself, and wrote under name of '■Carmagnoles " a series of Paris stories which cost him a years' imprisonment. Returning to Paris after the amnesty he un- remittingly forwarded the propaganda of Socialism by pen and voice. In 1887 he wrote la Revanche des Communeiix, but became best known by his Chamom published in Paris in 1885. Cluseret, Gustave Paul, born Paris, June 13, 1823; pupil of military school of St. Cyr; took part in Garibaldi's campaign in Sicily. Participated in the uprising in Lyons in June, 1870; returned to Paris after the amnesty, and engaged in journalistic pursuits, writing for the Commune and the Marseillaise: for his writings he was condemned to 15 months imprisonment and 2,000 fr. fine; in Jan., 1881, he was sentenced to 2 years and 3 000 fr. fine for inciting the army to revolt. Elected deputy, 1889-1893 (See pages 82-38 1. CouRNET, Frederic, born Louvient, 1839. His father fought at the barricades in 1848, and found a tragic end in exile. Cournet, as early as 1852 participated in the insurrections against Napoleon III. In 1867 he joined the staff of the lieveil; imprisoned 83 days in Mazas 1869: in Feb. 1870 again imprisoned in Mazas In March, 1871, he was a member of the Committee Central; represented the 19th arrondisse- ment in the Commune. Was one of the last fighters at the barricades, but escaped to London, where he became member of the General Council of the Inte)national. He retired from the International after CouDci] at Hague. Became member of Municipal Council in Paris in 1881. Died, Paris, 1885. Dereure, Simon, born 1823; Internationalist; participator in Council of Hague. After amnesty was an active worker in the Socialist movement in Paris. DuPONT, Eugene-Clovis, born 1840. One of the original members of the International. After the fall of the Empire, he became one of the most popular speakers at the clubs. Had charge of the admin- istration of the 3d arrondissement during the Commune. After escaping from Paris, he became corresponding secretary for the General Council of t^e International at London. EuDES, Emile, born Roncey, Manche, on Sept. 12, 1844. Was an active pupil of Blanqui. During the fighting in Paris he was accompanied by his young wife, who, on horseback and armed with carbine and revolvers, was active in the defence, and raised the spirits and incited the efforts of the Communal resistance. Eudes escaped to Switzerland; engaged in revolutionary journalism; re- turned to Paris in 1880, and succeeded as leader of the Blanquists on the death of Blanqui. Eudes died August 5, 1888, and a monument was erected to him in 1893 in Pere Lachaise cemetary. Frankel, Leo, born Buda-Pesth, Feb. 14, 1844. One of the founders of the Lyons section of the International. Condemned in 1870 to two months' imprisonment for belonging to a secret organiza- tion. Escaped to London, became corresponding secretary of . Austro-Hungary for the International ; took part in Congress of Hague in- 1872; returned to Hungary, and was active iu Socialist movement; condemned to 18 months' imprisonment for violating press law; left Hungary; participated in Paris Congress in 1889; in 1881 at Brussels; in 1893 at Zurich. Was Paris correspondent of Berlin Vorwaerts; died Paris, 1897. APPENDIX. 235 GUESDE, Jules Basil, born Paris, November 11 1845- ediipntPr] by his father, who was a private tutor. Guesde early sTowS extra 2d Emnfrp'^n 'S ' 1^' ?? ^f ''^" ^ K"^'^^ journalist, Jnd opposed che to in^F.>P th.^^ti^' ^^.^lo^^se and Montpelier; in vain he attempted ^or!t S®- ^^^ ^^"•^'^ ^^^y ^^ JOi° i^ the Communal uprising which centered m Jrans m 1871. and of which he was a passionate supporter ftll^^JS m/ l^n^T ""^ the Jnternationalin Geneva; was driveS ^rom tho// ^^v: ^^^ ^^^ edited many Socialist papers in Paris since that time; has been a member of the Chamber of Deputies, where he has shown great oratorical power. His principal works are iS rle k^nt V^ ^'''''>'''i];:t(':<^'ollectrolsvie et RevohUion: Servicen Publics et Social- ^i>tue. He married a daughter of Karl Marx. nf th« ^^'^to^^^?' J^l?s, born Baume, 1843. Founded in 1870 a section ?™^ International m Fauberg St Denis. Was sentenced to several terms of imprisonment for belonging to a secret labor society; after the Commune he escaped to London, and became member of the General Council of the International. LArARGUE, Paul, born Cuba, 1840, of French parents- educaied at Bordeaux; studied medicine at Paris. When^O vears of age he was excluded from all French universities for partici- pating m demonstrations against the 2d Empire, and completed his medical education m London; was delegated by the Commune to southwestern France to raise the revolutionary spirit of those fii^^^^ I' ^^ °^?:^ ^^^^ ^° success. After the Commune Laf argue rSi^P^.^^^'A Jy^^^^u ^^ became a leader in the Social Democratic movement After his return to Paris he edited EnxtaUtv and The c^^^^e«., and wrote many valuable works -The Ecohitruii, of Property l^conomicMatericdUm, Religion of Capital, etc.; a constant con- triputer to Socialist papers, and an untiring exponent of the Marxian sch(X)l m France. He married a daughter of Karl Marx. LONGUET, Charles, born 1837 at Caen. Was a student of iuris- prudence at Paris; took his degree in 1 834. Edited the Journal UjTtcje^ during the Commune; escaped to England; returned to Paris in 1880; became one of the editors of Jaatice. Feb. 7, 1886 was elected member of Paris Municipal Council. He was a son in law of Karl • .T^^'^^h ^^ederic Felix, born Paris, 1839; joined International h\. i* After the dissolution of the International, he founded the i^ederation des Chambres Ouvrieres " and in it he represented the bronze workers. In 1868 he took part in the Brussels Congress In 1870 he was condemned to three months' imprisonment for participat- ing m the International. He spoke during his trial in his own defence ^"^11 hjs speech on this occasion gave him a wide celebrity. After the tall of the Commune he remained in Paris until July 29, then escaped to London, where he eked out an existence by hand labor. Returned to Paris m 1880, and was an active worker on many Socialist papers. Died January 10, 1881. ^ ir' ■ Vaillant, Marie Edouard, born Jan. 26, 1840, at Vierzon- edu- cated at Paris, studied medicine at Heidelberg, Tuebingen and Vienna; also a student of philosophy and economics; was a member of the International; entered National Guard in Paris in 1870 and with Frankel promulgated the tenets of the International; escaped to London after the Communes' fall; very active in work of the International. Returned to Paris in 1880; member of Paris Munici- pal Council in 1884; has been member Chamber of Deputies, where he upheld the Marxian CoUectivist principles. 236 APPENDIX. Paris, 1896. "The national assembly of 1871, after the downfall of the empire, gave back to Paris its elective council, but stopped there, promising that further concessions to the principles of self-govern- ment should be made at some subsequent time. Since then the suffrage, which was virtuallv universal, has been made entirel3' so. But Paris is still actirely governed, as under Louis Napoleon, by the prefect of the Seine and his colleague, the prefect of police, both of whom are appointed h\ the general government and are amenable directlv to the Minister of the Interior. In the smaller communes of France the police power is now confided to the municipal authorities, and is exercised actively by the mayors. In the larger ones a purely domestic police authority is exercised by the municipal officers, while a general control of police is vested in the prefect and his sub-prefects. But Paris is deemed too vast for the union of ordinarv business administration and police administration in the hands of the one prefect of the department, and the police authority, covering a wider range of functions than the simple organization of the police force and the management of the police courts and station-houses, is put in the hands of a sepa- rate chief, the prefect of police. Paris has now for many years been sub-divided into 20 arrondissements, and in each of them there is a central building called the 'mairie,' in which is the bureau of an officer called the 'maire' (mayor). He is assisted by three adjuncts. These men, who are appointed officers of the general government, and are, in fact, simply the agents or dele- gates of the prefect of the Seine, with a staff of clerks and assist- ants attend to a vast amount of routine business for the higher authorities and for the city, so far as the population of their several arrondissements is concerned. They record births, deaths, and weddings, and perform the civil ceremony of marriage. They receive taxes, have to do with matters of elementary education; administer the poor laws in their respective districts, — enroll un- der the armv-service acts those liable to military duty, and per- form various other routine functions. These 20 Parisian centers of local administration are admirably organized and conducted, and under any scheme whatsoever of a reconstructed municipal government thev would be allowed to remain. The municipal council consists of 80 members, four from each of the 20 arrondis- sements. Each arrondissement is sub-divided into four quarters, and each quarter elects a municipal councilor. They are elected for three years, and all retire together. The municipal council of Paris, plus a few representatives of the outlying communes of the department of the Seine, constitutes the council-general of the de- partment. These communes outside the fortifications of Paris have their electiA'e councils and distinct municipal organizations, but all come under the common executive control of the two pre- fects. The situation of the council is certainly humiliating and unsatisfactorv. It is dominated by the prefect, aa ho has the right lo attend its sessions and to take the floor whenever he pleases, and who is absolutely unaccountable to it for his management of the city's business. It must not be supposed that all elements in Paris are clamorous for a larger degree of municipal autonomy. The educated and propertied classes, as a rule, prefer that the gen- eral government should keep its strong hand upon Parisian ad- ministration. They are somewhat distrustful of the municipal council, w'hich thev regard as radical and socialistic in its tenden- cies. Paris will never have the government which is best for all its people until it entrusts Itself to the people."— A /feert Shaw. 237 ALPHABETICAL INDEX. A Adam, 38. 77. ' AUard, 156. Allix, 38. Amouroux, 38, 134. Ancelot, 31 . Andrieu, 67,74, 106. Appertz, 2:29. Arago, 7, 10. Arnaud, Ant., 38, 86, 97, 138. Arnold. G.,67, 73. Arnould, ArthUx, 38, 224. Assi, 23, 38, 50, sketch of 134. Aumale, due d', 53. Avoine, Jr., 41. Avrial, 38, 41, 73, 99, 224. B Babick. 23, 38, 41. Barre, 38. Barroud, 24, Bax, 160. Bazaine, 99. Beaufort, Comte de, 154. Bera^eret, 32, 38, 41, 46, 50, 55, 56, 73. 91, 105, 109. 122, 1^5. Beslay, 38, 80, 100, 106, 205, 206. Besson, 54. Billioray, 23, 38, 97, 112, 128, 138, 148, 178. Bismarck, 9,14,42,79, 194, 195, 229. Blanc, 29, 33. Blanchet 24,38. Blanqui, 10, 17, 37, 159, ItjO, 219. Boin, ld9. Bonaparte, P.. i:«. Bonjean, -19, 156, lo7. Bonne, 26. Bonvalec, 77. Boulanger, 137. Bourgoin, 53. Boursier, 23. Brelay, 38. Bridges, 204. Brioncel, 144. Briosne, 67. Brome, 112, 152. Brunei, 15, 38, 142, 143, 148, 178, 199, 224. Camelinet, 207. Canrobert, 25. Champy, 38, 224. Chanzy, 35. Chalain, 38. Charrette, 44. Chauday, 11, 63, 146, 147. Cberon, 38. Cissey,ti6, 122, 127,166. Ciemence, 38. Clement, Victor, 38. Clement, J. B.,38, 224. Clement, E..S8. Clement-Thomas, 20, 21, 23, 141, 186, 187. Clercq, 156. Clinchant 176. Cluseret, 8, 13, 41, 44, 50, 53, 55, 56, 60, 63, 67, 68, 73, 74, 76, sketch of 82, 88, 128, 140,154,187,205,224. Cochet, 31. Coke, 71. Comte, 62. Courbet, 62, sketch of 208. Cournet, 38, 74, 103, 105, 208. Cypriani. 47. Cusco, 144. D Dacosta, 58, 57, 208. Darboy, 51, 56, 57, 87, 139, 153, 156. sketch of 158 59,130. Davoust, 69. De Bouteiller, 38. Decoudray, 156. De Flo, 227. Deguerry, 51, 56, 156, 159. De Larey, 227. Delescluze, 8, 10, 13, 37, 38, 51, 69, 73, 97, 114, 125, 128, 129, 13S, 139, 154, 167, 168, sketch of 175, 177, 205. Demarest, 47. Demay, 38. Denis, 69. Dereure, 38, 67, 101, 148. Descamps, 38. Desmerest, 38. Dombrowski, Ladis- las,55, 69,73, 76,91, 96, 101, 122, 131-33, 138, 143, 167-68. Dombrowski, Javos- • lau, 63, 122, 168. Douai, 126, 127. Dubail, 27. Du Barial, 66. Ducatel, 126, 136, 137, 219. Dufaure, 227. Dufil, 187. Durand, 67. Durassier, 100. Dupont, A., 67. Dupont, C, 23, 38. Duval, 18, 38, 41, 46, 122. E Epilly, Madeline, 146. Eudes, 8 18, 38, 44, 46, 50,55165,91,96, 188. Fabre, 24. Fabrice, 76, 116. Favre, 7, 11, 14, 100, 179, sketch of 227. 238 ALPHABETICAI. INDEX. Fenouiliat, 63. ., Ferrat, 23. Ferre, 38, 74, 103, 120, 151, 154, 156, 17U, 172, 180, 185, 208. Ferry, E.,38. Ferry, J., 10.25. Fetridge, 210. Flourens, G. 8, H>, 17. 37, 38, 47, sketch of 48, 49. Flourens, P-. 48. Foutaine, 154. Forbes, 130,218. Fortune, 38. Frankel, 38, 74, 106, 207. Francois, 31. Francois, (prison gov- ernor ) 139, 170, 173. 180. Fremont, 82. Fruneau, 38. Gaillard, 82. Galbain, 143. Gallifet, 49, 196, 199 Gambetta, 7, 9, 12, 13, 99. Gambon, 13. 37, 38, 97, 138, 139, 175. 185. Garcin, 166, 172. Garibaldi, G., 18, 35, 50. Garibaldi, M., 67. Garreau, 170. Genton, 156. 172 . Gerardin, C., 38, 86, 96, 98, 99. Gerardin, E., 38. Geresme, 24, 38, 41, 105. Gastneau, 206. Gois, 170. Goupil, 38. Grcfllard, 24. Grousset, 8, 17, 26, 38. 74, 106, sketcb of 116-17, 125,207. Guizot, 202. Gushier, 23. Henrion, 156. Henry, 18, 41. Herisson, 184. Hottins^uer, 31. Hugo, 229. Humbert , 17- J Jecker, 61. 172. Johannard, 67, 101. Jourde. 23, 28, 38, 74, 86, 106, 205, 206. K H Haskell, 216. Helegion, 27. Kocti, 130. Laborde, 31. La Cecilia 91, 101, 14':'. Lacorde, 185. Ladrimault, 66, 122, 127. Lafitte, 226. Lamazou, 40, 208. Lambrecht, 227. Langevin, 38. Langlois, 24. Langourian, 35- Lasnier, 103. Lavalette, 23. Leballeur, 208. Lecomte, 19-22, 25, 141, 186, 187. Ledroyt, 38, 105. L-efever, 38. Le Flo, 78,227. Lefrancais, 36, 38, 224. Legat, 31. Le Gros, Mme., 103. Leighton, 216. Le Moussu, 59, 100, 112. Leroux, 66. Leroy, 38. Libmann, 154, Lincoln, 82. Lisbonne, 151, 178. Lissagaray, 182,216. Loiseau-Pinson, 38, 77. Lolive, 157, 158. Lonclas, 67, 105. Longuet, 67, 224. Louis XVI, 91, 154. LuUier. 18, 24, 29, 35, 50, 205. M Malet, 204. Maljournal, 3;, 41. Malleville, i^eon de. 103. Malon, 13, 38. Marie Antoinette, 154. Marmottou. 38. Martelet, c8. McMahon, 25. e6, 110, 198, 288, 229. Megv, 8, 8 •, 88. 12S- 136, 157. i:iy, 2.y. IVreillet, 38. 80, 224. Meline, 38. Meyer, 108-9. Michel, Louise, sketcb of 57. Milliere. 29,83, 148, 166. Minck, i-aule, 57. Miot, 38, 86, 109, 111, 128, 187. Moillin, 29, 184. Molinet, Vis. de. 31. Moreau, 15, 23, 28, 178, Mortier, ^3, 112, 209. Muller, 120. Murat, 38. N Napoleon I, 43, 62, 69, 93, 107. Napoleon III, 1, 3. 7, 20, 34. 62, 116, 160. Nast, 38. Nathan, 31. Noir, 2, 116. o Okolowitz, 122, 213. Ostyn, 38, 224. Oudet,38, 171. Paladines, 23, 26. Parent, H., 171. Parent, U., 38. Parisel, 38, 61. Pasquier, 44. Pathuau, 227. Patural, 155, ALPHABETICAL INDEX. 239 Pexhot, 54. Philippe, 67,230. Phillipe, Louis, 226. Piat, 184. Piazza, 11, 15. Picard. 6::^, 228. Pillot, 67. Pilotell. 112. 208. Pindv. 38, 148. Pius IX, 158. Pixley, 21 1,229. Plato, 122. Ploez, Marquisde,205, Poiret. 180. Pettier, 67. Pougerot, 24. Pou.ver-Quertier, 100, 228. Protot. 38, 74, 207, 224 . Proud hon, 147. Prudhomme, 129. 135. Pyac, Felix. 13. 17. 34, 37, 38. 73, 74. 86 89. 96, 136. Puget, 38. , o Quinet, 134. R Ranc, 38, 40. Ragi>wski, 168. Kampon. 207. R-aleigh, 71. Ranvier. A., 148. 184. Rauvier. G.. 38.73 86, 97. 109, 138, 139, 156. 157, 170, 180, 184. Rastoul. 38. Razoua, 136. Read, -^04. Reclus, 51,306. Regere. .38. Reyer, 31. Riel,208. Rigault. 8. 29. 38, 43, 5t). 57, 74, 88, 102, 120, 147, 151, 152, 208. Robinet, 38. Rochefort, 8. 13, 17, 43, 50, 64, 101, sketch of 118-19. Rogeard. 67. Rossel, 46. 68. 73, 86, 88, 95. 97 sketch of 98-99, 101, 160, 198, 2J5. Rothe, 173. Roullic, 153, Rousseati, 24, Saisset, 26, 27, 28. 32. Saxony, Crown Prince of, 76. Scheffer, 78 Segoyer, Marquis de, 173. Serailler, 67. Serat, 181. Serizier, 112, 153, 168, 169. Sheridan, SO. Sicard, 67, 105. Simon 117. Smith, 102. Stanton, 82. Stupuy. 77. Sulla, 190, 226. Sumner, 82. Tamisier, 21. Tancred, 175. Terifocq, 80. Thiers. 7, 13, 14. 15, 18, 24, 25, 26, 29, 41. 61, 76, 81, 88. 89, 100. 102, 112, 117, 123, 164.189.194, sketch of 225-26, 227. 228. Thiesz, 38, 106, 207. Tirard, 27, 38. Tolain, 13, 78. Train, 31. Trammell, 175, sketch of 220. Treilhard, 179, 207. Tridon, 13, 38, 73. Trinquet, 67, 74. 173. Troehu, 7, 9, 21, 35, 130. .u Urbain, 38, 105. V Vaillant, 38, 74, 178, letter from 224. Valles, 17, 36, 38. Valliot, 139. Van Pape, 69. Varlin, i3, 23, 28, 38, 106, 171 , 186, sketch of 187, 205. Verdure, 38. Verig, 139, 157, 173, 184. Vermesch. 17. Vermorel, 8, 15, 38. 74, 111, 142,167, sketch of 176-77. Vesenier, 13, 67, 95, 102, 148, 179. Veysset, 119,154. Viard, 67, 74, 206, Vinoy, 10, 14, 15, 24, 25, 44, 45, 66, 127, 137. Vitroley, 26. Von Moltke. 194. w Wahlin, 31. Washburne, 87, 116, 146,153 159,167,205, 210, 229. Wroblewski, 89, 91, 101. 122, 168, 180. 240 CONTENTS. Introduction ..... iii-vii I. France and The Second Empire . . . . 1-5 II. Paris— September 20 to March 1 . . . . 6-15 III. March, Montmartre and the Commune . . 16-41 IV. War— The Events of April 42-85 V. May 1-20— The Fall of the Forts . . . 86-125 VI. May 21-27— The Bloodv Week 126-183 ; The Last Days of May 1.84-193 .... 126-198 VII. The Peace of June 194-199 VIII. The Communes' Administration . . . 200-210 IX, Miscellaneous Comment — Pixley 211-214 ; Truth 214-215 ; Haskell 215-216 ; Archibald Forbes 217-218; Trammell 218; Megy219; Atlanta Constitution 220; Washburne 220 ; Spirit of Internationalism 221 ; Members 222; Prom- inent Characters 223 ; Vaillant224 . 211-224 X. Enemies of the Commune 225-229; Commnnist Arms and Occupations 229 ; Arrests, Pun- ishments, etc. 230-231 .... 225-231 Sources of Information . . . . 232 APPENDIX. Biographical Sketches— Amouroux, Avrial, iSes' Blanqui, Chalain233; Clement, Cluseret, C net, Dereure, Dupont, Kudes, Frankel Guesde, Johannard, I,afargue, lyon^ ^t, Thiesz, Vaillant 235 . . . . -'3o-23v'i Paris, 1896 ..... 236 Alphabetical Index ..... ^37-239 ,*^^^ ^■*;.^^ ■^^c.'i' " €» W - * ''^ * » / •» %.J ^^<^ y ^ y ^^ Ao^ -» o ^-..^^ 0'