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.

[Illustration:  PALAIS ROYAL.]

The PALAIS ROYAL.—­The palace itself alone is destroyed; the galleries of the THEATRE FRANCAIS are preserved.  The Constitutionnel published the following account of the conflagration;—­

“It was at three o’clock that this fearful fire burst forth.  A shopkeeper of the PALAIS ROYAL, M. Emile Le Sache, came forward in all haste to offer his services.  A Communist captain, or lieutenant, threatened to fire on him if he did not retire on the instant; he added that the whole quarter was going to be blown up and burned.  In the teeth of this threat, however, two fire-engines were brought to the Place, and were worked by the people of the neighbourhood.  It was four o’clock.  No water in the Cour des Fontaines.  But some was procured by a line of people being placed along the passage leading from the Cour d’Honneur, who passed full buckets of water from hand to hand.

“A ladder was placed against the wall for the purpose of reaching the terrace of the Rue de Valois.  The insurgents proved so true to their word that the people were forced to renounce the attempt at saving the entire pavilion.  Fire and smoke burst forth from three windows just above the terrace.  In the midst of the balls showered from the barricade at the corner of the Rue de Rivoli, they succeeded in extinguishing the fire on that side.  At five o’clock M. O. Sauve, captain in the commercial service, with a handful of brave workmen, got a fire engine into the Cour d’Honneur, and thus saved a great quantity of pictures, precious marbles, furniture, hangings, etc.  Here another line of people was formed for the carrying of buckets, but unfortunately water ran short:  the pipes had been cut, the wretches had planned that the destruction should be complete.  At seven o’clock M. Bessignet, jun., hastened there with four Paris firemen, but already the Pavilion, where the flames were first apparent, was entirely consumed.

“On the arrival of the firemen they used every effort to prevent the fire communicating itself to the apartments of the Princess Clothilde; it had already reached the facade on the side of the Place.  Here, too, all the fittings and ornaments of the chapel were saved.

“At last, at seven o’clock, the soldiers of the line arrive.  ’Long live the line!’ is shouted on all sides.  ‘Long live France!’ Signals are made with the ambulance flags.  Help is come at last!

“Those present now regard their position with more coolness, and use every effort to combat the fire, pumping from the roofs and upper storeys of the neighbouring houses.  The fire continues, however, increasing and spreading on the theatre side.  Here is the greatest danger.  If the theatre catch light, all the quarter will most probably be destroyed.  They then determine to avail themselves of the water appliances of the theatre to stay the progress of the flames.  This is. rendered more difficult and dangerous by the continuous firing from the Communists installed in the upper story of the Hotel du Louvre.  M. Le Sache mounts on the roofs, with the principal engineer, to conduct this movement.  They are compelled to hide out of the way of the shower of balls coming from the Communists.

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Paris under the Commune from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.