Part 3 (1/2)
CHAPTER IV
THE FOURTH OF JULY
The first they knew of it in Paris--barring vague promises of ”something to remember” on the American fete that had appeared in modest items in the newspapers--was when a motor-bus, jammed to the guards with American soldiers, suddenly rolled into the Avenue de l'Opera from the Tuileries Gardens, and paraded up that august thoroughfare to the tune of incredible yelling from everybody on board. It was the afternoon of July 3.
A few picked Americans had known about it. A sufficient number of American and French officers and the newspaper correspondents had been told to appear at Austerlitz Station in the early morning of the 3d, and there they had seen the soldiers not merely arrive but tackle their first continental breakfast.
Neither was a sensation to be sneezed at. The soldiers were of the very finest, and in spite of their overnight journey they were all looking fit. They were anxious to fall right out of the train into the middle of Paris. To most of them it was a city of gallant and delightful scandal, filled even in war-time with that twinkle of gayety plus wickedness that is so intriguing when told about in Oscaloosa, behind the hand or the door. They said outright that they expected to see the post-cards all come to life when they set eyes first on Paris streets.
But even if Paris had had these fascinations in store, they were not for the soldiers that morning. Instead military precision, discipline, an orderly march to near-by barracks, and--a French breakfast: coffee and war-bread. Not even the French had a kind word for the war-bread, and no American ever spoke well of the coffee. But there it was--chronologically in order, and haply the worst of a Paris visit all over at once.
And most of the soldiers stayed right in barracks till it was time for the great processional the next day. It was a picked bunch that had the motor ride and informed Paris that they had come for a party. And if they didn't see the ladies with the unbehaving eyes, they did see the Louvre and the Tuileries, the Opera, the boulevards, and the Madeleine.
And Paris saw the soldiers.
There was no end of cheering and handclapping. The American flags that had been flying for Pers.h.i.+ng were brought out again, and venders appeared on the streets with all manner of emblems to sell. It was one of those cheerful afternoons when good feeling expresses itself gently, reserving its hurrahs for the coming event.
The soldiers were kept on the cars, but now and then a good Parisian threw them a package of cigarettes or a flower. All told, they touched off the fuse timed to explode on the morrow, and, having done that, went back to barracks.
The first ”Fourth” in Paris was a thoroughly whole-souled celebration.
The French began it, civilians and soldiers, by taking a band around to serenade General Pers.h.i.+ng the first thing in the morning. His house was on the left bank of the Seine, not far from American headquarters in the Rue Constantine, an historic old place with little stone balconies outside the upper windows.
On one of these General Pers.h.i.+ng appeared, with the first notes of the band. He was cheered and cheered again. A little boy who had somehow climbed to the top of a gas street-lamp squealed boastfully to Pers.h.i.+ng: ”See, I am an American, too, for I have a sky-sc.r.a.per!” (J'ai un gratte-ciel!) And with a wave of his hand General Pers.h.i.+ng acknowledged his compatriot.
It was in this crowd around Pers.h.i.+ng's house that a riot started, because a man who was being unpleasantly jostled said: ”Oh, do leave me in peace.” Those nearest him good-naturedly tried to give him elbow-room, but those a little distance away caught merely the ”peace”
of his e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.i.o.n and, with sudden loud cries of ”kill the pacifist,”
made for the unfortunate, and pommelled him roundly before the matter could be explained.
After the serenade and General Pers.h.i.+ng's little speech of thanks the band, with most of the crowd following, marched over to des Invalides, the appointed place for the formal ceremony.
Around the ancient hotel, overflowing into the broad boulevards that radiate from it, and packing to suffocation the Champs de Mars in front of it, there were just as many Frenchmen as could stand shoulder to shoulder and chin to back. Inside, where there were speeches and exchanges of national emblems, the crowd was equally dense, in spite of the fact that only the very important or the very cunning had cards of admission.
The real Fourth celebration was in the streets. The waiting crowds yelled thunderously when the first band appeared, heralding the parade.
Then came the Territorials, the escort troops, in their familiar horizon-blue. Then more bands, then officers, mounted and in motor-cars, and, finally, the Americans, manifestly having the proudest moment of their lives.
They were to march from des Invalides to Picpus Cemetery, the little private cemetery outside of Paris, where the Marquis de Lafayette is buried.
They crossed Solferino bridge, and made their way through a terrific crowd in the broad Place de la Concorde. The Paris newspapers, boasting of their conservatism, said there were easily one million Parisians that day within sight of des Invalides when the American soldiers left the building and started on their march.
To hear the soldiers tell it, there were easily one million Parisians, all under the age of ten, immediately under their feet before they had marched a mile.
From a balcony of the Hotel Crillon, on the north side of the Place de la Concorde, the marching Americans were wholly lost to view from the waist down. n.o.body could ever complain of the French birth-rate after seeing that parade. n.o.body ever saw that many children before in any one a.s.semblage in France. It was prodigious.
And the French youngsters had their own notions of how they were to take part in that French Fourth of July. The main notion was to walk between the soldiers' legs. They were ma.s.sed thick beside the soldiers, thick between them, impeding their knee action, terrorizing their steps. At a little distance, they looked like batter in a waffle-pan. But they did what they could to make the American soldiers feel among friends that day, and n.o.body could say they failed.
The parade turned along the picturesque old Rue de Rivoli on leaving the Place de la Concorde, and filed along the river, almost the length of the city. They had not gone far before the Frenchwomen had thrown them enough roses to decorate bayonets and hats and a few lapels. They made a brave sight, brave to n.o.bility. And though they were hara.s.sed by the eager children, abashed by the women, and touched to genuine emotion by the whole city, they wouldn't have grudged five years of their lives for the privilege of being there.