Paris under the Commune eBook

John Leighton Stuart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 483 pages of information about Paris under the Commune.

Paris under the Commune eBook

John Leighton Stuart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 483 pages of information about Paris under the Commune.

A Place?—­no, a camp it might more properly be called.  Here and there, are seen a crowd of little tents, which would be white if they were washed, and littered about with straw.  Under the tents lie National Guards; they are not seen, but plainly heard, for they are snoring.  You remember the absurd old bit of chop-logic often repeated in the classes of philosophy?  One might apply it thus:  he sleeps well who has a good conscience; the Federals sleep well; ergo, the Federals have a good conscience.  Guards walk to and fro with their pipes in their mouths.  If I were to say that these honourable Communists show by their easy manner, gentlemanly bearing, and superior conversation, that they belong to the cream of Parisian society, you would perhaps be impertinent enough not to believe one word of what I said.  I think it, therefore, preferable in every way to assert the direct contrary.  There is a group of them flinging away their pay at the usual game of bouchon.  “The Soldier’s Pay and the Game of Cork” is the title that might be given by those who would write the history of the National Guard from the beginning of the siege to the present time.  And if to the cork they added the bottle, they might pride themselves upon having found a perfect one.  This is how it comes to pass.  The wife is hungry, and the children are hungry, but the father is thirsty, and he receives the pay.  What does he do?  He is thirsty, and he must drink; one must think of oneself in this world.  When he has satisfied his thirst, what remains?  A few sous, the empty bottle, and the cork.  Very good.  He plays his last sou on the famous game, and in the evening, when he returns home, he carries to his family—­what?—­the empty bottle!

On the Place two barricades have been made, one across the Rue de la Paix, and the other before the Rue Castiglione.  “Two formidable barricades,” say the newspapers, which may be read thus:  “A heap of paving stones to the right, and a heap of paving stones to the left.”  I whisper to myself that two small field-pieces, one on the place of the New Opera-house, and the other at the Rue de Rivoli, would not be long before they got the better of these two barricades, in spite of the guns that here and there display their long, bright cylinders.

The Federals have decidedly a taste for gallantry.  About twenty women—­I say young women, but not pretty women—­are selling coffee to the National Guards, and add to their change a few ogling smiles meant to be engaging.

As to the Column, it has not the least appearance of being frightened by the decree of the Commune which threatens it with a speedy fall.  There it stands like a huge bronze I, and the emperor is the dot upon it.  The four eagles are still there, at the four corners of the pedestal, with their wreaths of immortelles, and the two red flags which wave from the top seem but little out of place.  The column is like the ancient honour of France, that neither decrees nor bayonets can intimidate, and which in the midst of threats and tumult, holds itself aloft in serene and noble dignity.

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Paris under the Commune from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.