had converted the terrace of the Tuileries, developed
their plan of action with great circumspection; two
strong columns were sent out to right and left that,
skirting the ramparts, should first seize Montmartre
and the Observatory and then, wheeling inward, swoop
down on the central quarters, surrounding them and
capturing all they contained, as a shoal of fish is
captured in the meshes of a gigantic net. About
two o’clock Maurice heard that the tricolor
was floating over Montmartre: the great battery
of the Moulin de la Galette had succumbed to the combined
attack of three army corps, which hurled their battalions
simultaneously on the northern and western faces of
the butte through the Rues Lepic, des Saules and du
Mont-Cenis; then the waves of the victorious troops
had poured back on Paris, carrying the Place Saint-Georges,
Notre-Dame de Lorette, the mairie in the Rue
Drouot and the new Opera House, while on the left
bank the turning movement, starting from the cemetery
of Mont-Parnasse, had reached the Place d’Enfer
and the Horse Market. These tidings of the rapid
progress of the hostile army were received by the
communards with mingled feelings of rage and terror
amounting almost to stupefaction. What, Montmartre
carried in two hours; Montmartre, the glorious, the
impregnable citadel of the insurrection! Maurice
saw that the ranks were thinning about him; trembling
soldiers, fearing the fate that was in store for them
should they be caught, were slinking furtively away
to look for a place where they might wash the powder
grime from hands and face and exchange their uniform
for a blouse. There was a rumor that the enemy
were making ready to attack the Croix-Rouge and take
their position in flank. By this time the barricades
in the Rues Martignac and Bellechasse had been carried,
the red-legs were beginning to make their appearance
at the end of the Rue de Lille, and soon all that
remained was a little band of fanatics and men with
the courage of their opinions, Maurice and some fifty
more, who were resolved to sell their lives dearly,
killing as many as they could of those Versaillese,
who treated the federates like thieves and murderers,
dragging away the prisoners they made and shooting
them in the rear of the line of battle. Their
bitter animosity had broadened and deepened since
the days before; it was war to the knife between those
rebels dying for an idea and that army, inflamed with
reactionary passions and irritated that it was kept
so long in the field.
About five o’clock, as Maurice and his companions were finally falling back to seek the shelter of the barricades in the Rue du Bac, descending the Rue de Lille and pausing at every moment to fire another shot, he suddenly beheld volumes of dense black smoke pouring from an open window in the Palace of the Legion of Honor. It was the first fire kindled in Paris, and in the furious insanity that possessed him it gave him a fierce delight. The hour had struck;


