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CHAPTER VI. HOW WAR CAME TO NEW YORK § 1 The City of New York was in the year of the German attack
the largest, richest, in many respects the most splendid, and in some, the
wickedest city the world had ever seen. She was the supreme type of the City of
the Scientific Commercial Age; she displayed its greatness, its power, its
ruthless anarchic enterprise, and its social disorganisation most strikingly
and completely. She had long ousted London from her pride of place as the
modern Babylon, she was the centre of the world's finance, the world's trade,
and the world's pleasure; and men likened her to the apocalyptic cities of the
ancient prophets. She sat drinking up the wealth of a continent as Rome once
drank the wealth of the Mediterranean and Babylon the wealth of the east. In
her streets one found the extremes of magnificence and misery, of civilisation
and disorder. In one quarter, palaces of marble, laced and, crowned with light
and flame and flowers, towered up into her marvellous twilights beautiful,
beyond description; in another, a black and sinister polyglot population
sweltered in indescribable congestion in warrens, and excavations beyond the
power and knowledge of government. Her vice, her crime, her law alike were
inspired by a fierce and terrible energy, and like the great cities of
mediaeval Italy, her ways were dark and adventurous with private war. It was the peculiar shape of Manhattan Island, pressed in by
arms of the sea on either side, and incapable of comfortable expansion, except
along a narrow northward belt, that first gave the New York architects their
bias for extreme vertical dimensions. Every need was lavishly supplied them — money,
material, labour; only space was restricted. To begin, therefore, they built
high perforce. But to do so was to discover a whole new world of architectural
beauty, of exquisite ascendant lines, and long after the central congestion had
been relieved by tunnels under the sea, four colossal bridges over the east
river, and a dozen mono-rail cables east and west, the upward growth went on.
In many ways New York and her gorgeous plutocracy repeated Venice in the magnificence
of her architecture, painting, metal-work and sculpture, for example, in the
grim intensity of her political method, in her maritime and commercial
ascendancy. But she repeated no previous state at all in the lax disorder of
her internal administration, a laxity that made vast sections of her area
lawless beyond precedent, so that it was possible for whole districts to be
impassable, while civil war raged between street and street, and for Alsatias
to exist in her midst in which the official police never set foot. She was an
ethnic whirlpool. The flags of all nations flew in her harbour, and at the
climax, the yearly coming and going overseas numbered together upwards of two
million human beings. To Europe she was America, to America she was the gateway
of the world. But to tell the story of New York would be to write a social
history of the world; saints and martyrs, dreamers and scoundrels, the
traditions of a thousand races and a thousand religions, went to her making and
throbbed and jostled in her streets. And over all that torrential confusion of
men and purposes fluttered that strange flag, the stars and stripes, that meant
at once the noblest thing in life, and the least noble, that is to say, Liberty
on the one hand, and on the other the base jealousy the individual self-seeker
feels towards the common purpose of the State. For many generations New York had taken no heed of war, save
as a thing that happened far away, that affected prices and supplied the
newspapers with exciting headlines and pictures. The New Yorkers felt perhaps
even more certainly than the English had done that war in their own land was an
impossible thing. In that they shared the delusion of all North America. They
felt as secure as spectators at a bullfight; they risked their money perhaps on
the result, but that was all. And such ideas of war as the common Americans
possessed were derived from the limited, picturesque, adventurous war of the
past. They saw war as they saw history, through an iridescent mist, deodorised,
scented indeed, with all its essential cruelties tactfully hidden away. They
were inclined to regret it as something ennobling, to sigh that it could no
longer come into their own private experience. They read with interest, if not
with avidity, of their new guns, of their immense and still more immense
ironclads, of their incredible and still more incredible explosives, but just
what these tremendous engines of destruction might mean for their personal
lives never entered their heads. They did not, so far as one can judge from
their contemporary literature, think that they meant anything to their personal
lives at all. They thought America was safe amidst all this piling up of
explosives. They cheered the flag by habit and tradition, they despised other
nations, and whenever there was an international difficulty they were intensely
patriotic, that is to say, they were ardently against any native politician who
did not say, threaten, and do harsh and uncompromising things to the antagonist
people. They were spirited to Asia, spirited to Germany, so spirited to Great
Britain that the international attitude of the mother country to her great
daughter was constantly compared in contemporary caricature to that between a
hen-pecked husband and a vicious young wife. And for the rest, they all went
about their business and pleasure as if war had died out with the
megatherium.... And then suddenly, into a world peacefully busied for the
most part upon armaments and the perfection of explosives, war came; came the
shock of realising that the guns were going off, that the masses of inflammable
material all over the world were at last ablaze. § 2 The newspapers and magazines that fed the American mind — for
books upon this impatient continent had become simply material for the energy
of collectors — were instantly a coruscation of war pictures and of headlines
that rose like rockets and burst like shells. To the normal high-strung energy
of New York streets was added a touch of war-fever. Great crowds assembled,
more especially in the dinner hour, in Madison Square about the Farragut
monument, to listen to and cheer patriotic speeches, and a veritable epidemic
of little flags and buttons swept through these great torrents of swiftly
moving young people, who poured into New York of a morning by car and mono-rail
and subway and train, to toil, and ebb home again between the hours of five and
seven. It was dangerous not to wear a war button. The splendid music-halls of
the time sank every topic in patriotism and evolved scenes of wild enthusiasm,
strong men wept at the sight of the national banner sustained by the whole
strength of the ballet, and special searchlights and illuminations amazed the
watching angels. The churches re-echoed the national enthusiasm in graver key
and slower measure, and the aerial and naval preparations on the East River
were greatly incommoded by the multitude of excursion steamers which thronged,
helpfully cheering, about them. The trade in small-arms was enormously
stimulated, and many overwrought citizens found an immediate relief for their
emotions in letting off fireworks of a more or less heroic, dangerous, and
national character in the public streets. Small children's air-balloons of the
latest model attached to string became a serious check to the pedestrian in
Central Park. And amidst scenes of indescribable emotion the Albany legislature
in permanent session, and with a generous suspension of rules and precedents,
passed through both Houses the long-disputed Bill for universal military
service in New York State. Critics of the American character are disposed to consider —
that up to the actual impact of the German attack the people of New York dealt
altogether too much with the war as if it was a political demonstration. Little
or no damage, they urge, was done to either the German or Japanese forces by
the wearing of buttons, the waving of small flags, the fireworks, or the songs.
They forgot that, under the conditions of warfare a century of science had
brought about, the non-military section of the population could do no serious
damage in any form to their enemies, and that there was no reason, therefore,
why they should not do as they did. The balance of military efficiency was
shifting back from the many to the few, from the common to the specialised. The days when the emotional infantryman decided battles had
passed by for ever. War had become a matter of apparatus of special training
and skill of the most intricate kind. It had become undemocratic. And whatever
the value of the popular excitement, there can be no denying that the small
regular establishment of the United States Government, confronted by this
totally unexpected emergency of an armed invasion from Europe, acted with
vigour, science, and imagination. They were taken by surprise so far as the
diplomatic situation was concerned, and their equipment for building either
navigables or aeroplanes was contemptible in comparison with the huge German
parks. Still they set to work at once to prove to the world that the spirit
that had created the Monitor and the Southern submarines of 1864 was not dead.
The chief of the aeronautic establishment near West Point was Cabot Sinclair,
and he allowed himself but one single moment of the posturing that was so
universal in that democratic time. “We have chosen our epitaphs,” he said to a
reporter, “and we are going to have, 'They did all they could.' Now run away!” The curious thing is that they did all do all they could;
there is no exception known. Their only defect indeed was a defect of style.
One of the most striking facts historically about this war, and the one that
makes the complete separation that had arisen between the methods of warfare
and the necessity of democratic support, is the effectual secrecy of the
Washington authorities about their airships. They did not bother to confide a
single fact of their preparations to the public. They did not even condescend
to talk to Congress. They burked and suppressed every inquiry. The war was
fought by the President and the Secretaries of State in an entirely autocratic
manner. Such publicity as they sought was merely to anticipate and prevent
inconvenient agitation to defend particular points. They realised that the
chief danger in aerial warfare from an excitable and intelligent public would
be a clamour for local airships and aeroplanes to defend local interests. This,
with such resources as they possessed, might lead to a fatal division and
distribution of the national forces. Particularly they feared that they might
be forced into a premature action to defend New York. They realised with
prophetic insight that this would be the particular advantage the Germans would
seek. So they took great pains to direct the popular mind towards defensive
artillery, and to divert it from any thought of aerial battle. Their real
preparations they masked beneath ostensible ones. There was at Washington a
large reserve of naval guns, and these were distributed rapidly, conspicuously,
and with much press attention, among the Eastern cities. They were mounted for
the most part upon hills and prominent crests around the threatened centres of
population. They were mounted upon rough adaptations of the Doan swivel, which
at that time gave the maximum vertical range to a heavy gun. Much of this
artillery was still unmounted, and nearly all of it was unprotected when the
German air-fleet reached New York. And down in the crowded streets, when that
occurred, the readers of the New York papers were regaling themselves with
wonderful and wonderfully illustrated accounts of such matters as: —
AGED SCIENTIST PERFECTS ELECTRIC GUN TO ELECTROCUTE AIRSHIP CREWS BY UPWARD LIGHTNING WASHINGTON ORDERS FIVE HUNDRED WAR SECRETARY LODGE DELIGHTED SAYS THEY WILL SUIT THE GERMANS DOWN TO THE GROUND PRESIDENT PUBLICLY APPLAUDS THIS MERRY QUIP
Several of these guns, and especially that at Giffords and
the one on Beacon Hill above Matawan, were remarkably well handled. The former,
at a distance of five miles, and with an elevation of six thousand feet, sent a
shell to burst so close to the Vaterland that a pane of the Prince's forward
window was smashed by a fragment. This sudden explosion made Bert tuck in his
head with the celerity of a startled tortoise. The whole air-fleet immediately
went up steeply to a height of about twelve thousand feet and at that level
passed unscathed over the ineffectual guns. The airships lined out as they
moved forward into the form of a flattened V, with its apex towards the city,
and with the flagship going highest at the apex. The two ends of the V passed
over Plumfield and Jamaica Bay, respectively, and the Prince directed his
course a little to the east of the Narrows, soared over Upper Bay, and came to
rest over Jersey City in a position that dominated lower New York. There the
monsters hung, large and wonderful in the evening light, serenely regardless of
the occasional rocket explosions and flashing shell-bursts in the lower air. It was a pause of mutual inspection. For a time naive
humanity swamped the conventions of warfare altogether; the interest of the
millions below and of the thousands above alike was spectacular. The evening
was unexpectedly fine — only a few thin level bands of clouds at seven or eight
thousand feet broke its luminous clarity. The wind had dropped; it was an
evening infinitely peaceful and still. The heavy concussions of the distant
guns and those incidental harmless pyrotechnics at the level of the clouds
seemed to have as little to do with killing and force, terror and submission,
as a salute at a naval review. Below, every point of vantage bristled with
spectators, the roofs of the towering buildings, the public squares, the active
ferry boats, and every favourable street intersection had its crowds: all the
river piers were dense with people, the Battery Park was solid black with
east-side population, and every position of advantage in Central Park and along
Riverside Drive had its peculiar and characteristic assembly from the adjacent
streets. The footways of the great bridges over the East River were also
closely packed and blocked. Everywhere shopkeepers had left their shops, men
their work, and women and children their homes, to come out and see the marvel.
“It beat,” they declared, “the newspapers.” And from above, many of the occupants of the airships stared
with an equal curiosity. No city in the world was ever so finely placed as New
York, so magnificently cut up by sea and bluff and river, so admirably disposed
to display the tall effects of buildings, the complex immensities of bridges
and mono-railways and feats of engineering. London, Paris, Berlin, were
shapeless, low agglomerations beside it. Its port reached to its heart like
Venice, and, like Venice, it was obvious, dramatic, and proud. Seen from above
it was alive with crawling trains and cars, and at a thousand points it was
already breaking into quivering light. New York was altogether at its best that
evening, its splendid best. “Gaw! What a place!” said Bert. It was so great, and in its collective effect so pacifically
magnificent, that to make war upon it seemed incongruous beyond measure, like
laying siege to the National Gallery or attacking respectable people in an
hotel dining-room with battle-axe and mail. It was in its entirety so large, so
complex, so delicately immense, that to bring it to the issue of warfare was
like driving a crowbar into the mechanism of a clock. And the fish-like shoal
of great airships hovering light and sunlit above, filling the sky, seemed
equally remote from the ugly forcefulness of war. To Kurt, to Smallways, to I
know not how many more of the people in the air-fleet came the distinctest
apprehension of these incompatibilities. But in the head of the Prince Karl
Albert were the vapours of romance: he was a conqueror, and this was the
enemy's city. The greater the city, the greater the triumph. No doubt he had a
time of tremendous exultation and sensed beyond all precedent the sense of
power that night. There came an end at last to that pause. Some wireless
communications had failed of a satisfactory ending, and fleet and city
remembered they were hostile powers. “Look!” cried the multitude; “look!” “What are they doing?” “What?”... Down through the twilight sank five attacking
airships, one to the Navy Yard on East River, one to City Hall, two over the
great business buildings of Wall Street and Lower Broadway, one to the Brooklyn
Bridge, dropping from among their fellows through the danger zone from the
distant guns smoothly and rapidly to a safe proximity to the city masses. At
that descent all the cars in the streets stopped with dramatic suddenness, and
all the lights that had been coming on in the streets and houses went out
again. For the City Hall had awakened and was conferring by telephone with the
Federal command and taking measures for defence. The City Hall was asking for
airships, refusing to surrender as Washington advised, and developing into a
centre of intense emotion, of hectic activity. Everywhere and hastily the
police began to clear the assembled crowds. “Go to your homes,” they said; and
the word was passed from mouth to mouth, “There's going to be trouble.” A chill
of apprehension ran through the city, and men hurrying in the unwonted darkness
across City Hall Park and Union Square came upon the dim forms of soldiers and
guns, and were challenged and sent back. In half an hour New York had passed
from serene sunset and gaping admiration to a troubled and threatening
twilight. The first loss of life occurred in the panic rush from
Brooklyn Bridge as the airship approached it. With the cessation of the traffic
an unusual stillness came upon New York, and the disturbing concussions of the
futile defending guns on the hills about grew more and more audible. At last
these ceased also. A pause of further negotiation followed. People sat in
darkness, sought counsel from telephones that were dumb. Then into the
expectant hush came a great crash and uproar, the breaking down of the Brooklyn
Bridge, the rifle fire from the Navy Yard, and the bursting of bombs in Wall
Street and the City Hall. New York as a whole could do nothing, could
understand nothing. New York in the darkness peered and listened to these
distant sounds until presently they died away as suddenly as they had begun.
“What could be happening?” They asked it in vain. A long, vague period intervened, and people looking out of
the windows of upper rooms discovered the dark hulls of German airships,
gliding slowly and noiselessly, quite close at hand. Then quietly the electric
lights came on again, and an uproar of nocturnal newsvendors began in the
streets. The units of that vast and varied population bought and
learnt what had happened; there had been a fight and New York had hoisted the
white flag.
“We have surrendered. Dear me! Have we?” was rather
the manner in which the first news was met. They took it in the same
spectacular spirit they had displayed at the first apparition of the air-fleet.
Only slowly was this realisation of a capitulation suffused with the flush of
passion, only with reflection did they make any personal application. “We
have surrendered!” came later; “in us America is defeated.” Then they began to
burn and tingle. The newspapers, which were issued about one in the morning
contained no particulars of the terms upon which New York had yielded — nor did
they give any intimation of the quality of the brief conflict that had preceded
the capitulation. The later issues remedied these deficiencies. There came the
explicit statement of the agreement to victual the German airships, to supply
the complement of explosives to replace those employed in the fight and in the
destruction of the North Atlantic fleet, to pay the enormous ransom of forty
million dollars, and to surrender the flotilla in the East River. There came,
too, longer and longer descriptions of the smashing up of the City Hall and the
Navy Yard, and people began to realise faintly what those brief minutes of uproar
had meant. They read the tale of men blown to bits, of futile soldiers in that
localised battle fighting against hope amidst an indescribable wreckage, of
flags hauled down by weeping men. And these strange nocturnal editions
contained also the first brief cables from Europe of the fleet disaster, the
North Atlantic fleet for which New York had always felt an especial pride and
solicitude. Slowly, hour by hour, the collective consciousness woke up, the
tide of patriotic astonishment and humiliation came floating in. America had
come upon disaster; suddenly New York discovered herself with amazement giving
place to wrath unspeakable, a conquered city under the hand of her conqueror. As that fact shaped itself in the public mind, there sprang
up, as flames spring up, an angry repudiation. “No!” cried New York, waking in
the dawn. “No! I am not defeated. This is a dream.” Before day broke the swift
American anger was running through all the city, through every soul in those
contagious millions. Before it took action, before it took shape, the men in
the airships could feel the gigantic insurgence of emotion, as cattle and
natural creatures feel, it is said, the coming of an earthquake. The newspapers
of the Knype group first gave the thing words and a formula. “We do not agree,”
they said simply. “We have been betrayed!” Men took that up everywhere, it
passed from mouth to mouth, at every street corner under the paling lights of
dawn orators stood unchecked, calling upon the spirit of America to arise,
making the shame a personal reality to every one who heard. To Bert, listening
five hundred feet above, it seemed that the city, which had at first produced
only confused noises, was now humming like a hive of bees — of very angry bees.
After the smashing of the City Hall and Post-Office, the
white flag had been hoisted from a tower of the old Park Row building, and
thither had gone Mayor O'Hagen, urged thither indeed by the terror-stricken
property owners of lower New York, to negotiate the capitulation with Von
Winterfeld. The Vaterland, having dropped the secretary by a rope ladder,
remained hovering, circling very slowly above the great buildings, old and new,
that clustered round City Hall Park, while the Helmholz, which had done the fighting
there, rose overhead to a height of perhaps two thousand feet. So Bert had a
near view of all that occurred in that central place. The City Hall and Court
House, the Post-Office and a mass of buildings on the west side of Broadway,
had been badly damaged, and the three former were a heap of blackened ruins. In
the case of the first two the loss of life had not been considerable, but a
great multitude of workers, including many girls and women, had been caught in
the destruction of the Post-Office, and a little army of volunteers with white
badges entered behind the firemen, bringing out the often still living bodies,
for the most part frightfully charred, and carrying them into the big Monson
building close at hand. Everywhere the busy firemen were directing their bright
streams of water upon the smouldering masses: their hose lay about the square,
and long cordons of police held back the gathering black masses of people,
chiefly from the east side, from these central activities. In violent and extraordinary contrast with this scene of
destruction, close at hand were the huge newspaper establishments of Park Row.
They were all alight and working; they had not been abandoned even while the
actual bomb throwing was going on, and now staff and presses were vehemently
active, getting out the story, the immense and dreadful story of the night,
developing comment and, in most cases, spreading the idea of resistance under
the very noses of the airships. For a long time Bert could not imagine what
these callously active offices could be, then he detected the noise of the
presses and emitted his “Gaw!” Beyond these newspaper buildings again, and partially hidden
by the arches of the old Elevated Railway of New York (long since converted
into a mono-rail), there was another cordon of police and a sort of encampment
of ambulances and doctors, busy with the dead and wounded who had been killed
early in the night by the panic upon Brooklyn Bridge. All this he saw in the
perspectives of a bird's-eye view, as things happening in a big,
irregular-shaped pit below him, between cliffs of high building. Northward he
looked along the steep canon of Broadway, down whose length at intervals crowds
were assembling about excited speakers; and when he lifted his eyes he saw the
chimneys and cable-stacks and roof spaces of New York, and everywhere now over
these the watching, debating people clustered, except where the fires raged and
the jets of water flew. Everywhere, too, were flagstaffs devoid of flags; one
white sheet drooped and flapped and drooped again over the Park Row buildings.
And upon the lurid lights, the festering movement and intense shadows of this
strange scene, there was breaking now the cold, impartial dawn. For Bert Smallways all this was framed in the frame of the
open porthole. It was a pale, dim world outside that dark and tangible rim. All
night he had clutched at that rim, jumped and quivered at explosions, and
watched phantom events. Now he had been high and now low; now almost beyond
hearing, now flying close to crashings and shouts and outcries. He had seen
airships flying low and swift over darkened and groaning streets; watched great
buildings, suddenly red-lit amidst the shadows, crumple at the smashing impact
of bombs; witnessed for the first time in his life the grotesque, swift onset
of insatiable conflagrations. From it all he felt detached, disembodied. The
Vaterland did not even fling a bomb; she watched and ruled. Then down they had
come at last to hover over City Hall Park, and it had crept in upon his mind,
chillingly, terrifyingly, that these illuminated black masses were great
offices afire, and that the going to and fro of minute, dim spectres of
lantern-lit grey and white was a harvesting of the wounded and the dead. As the
light grew clearer he began to understand more and more what these crumpled
black things signified.... He had watched hour after hour since first New York had
risen out of the blue indistinctness of the landfall. With the daylight he
experienced an intolerable fatigue. He lifted weary eyes to the pink flush in the sky, yawned
immensely, and crawled back whispering to himself across the cabin to the
locker. He did not so much lie down upon that as fall upon it and instantly
become asleep. There, hours after, sprawling undignified and sleeping
profoundly, Kurt found him, a very image of the democratic mind confronted with
the problems of a time too complex for its apprehension. His face was pale and
indifferent, his mouth wide open, and he snored. He snored disagreeably. Kurt regarded him for a moment with a mild distaste. Then he
kicked his ankle. “Wake up,” he said to Smallways' stare, “and lie down
decent.” Bert sat up and rubbed his eyes. “Any more fightin' yet?” he asked. “No,” said Kurt, and sat down, a tired man. “Gott!” he cried presently, rubbing his hands over his face,
“but I'd like a cold bath! I've been looking for stray bullet holes in the
air-chambers all night until now.” He yawned. “I must sleep. You'd better clear
out, Smallways. I can't stand you here this morning. You're so infernally ugly
and useless. Have you had your rations? No! Well, go in and get 'em, and don't
come back. Stick in the gallery....”
So Bert, slightly refreshed by coffee and sleep, resumed his
helpless co-operation in the War in the Air. He went down into the little
gallery as the lieutenant had directed, and clung to the rail at the extreme
end beyond the look-out man, trying to seem as inconspicuous and harmless a
fragment of life as possible. A wind was rising rather strongly from the south-east. It
obliged the Vaterland to come about in that direction, and made her roll a
great deal as she went to and fro over Manhattan Island. Away in the north-west
clouds gathered. The throb-throb of her slow screw working against the breeze
was much more perceptible than when she was going full speed ahead; and the
friction of the wind against the underside of the gas-chamber drove a series of
shallow ripples along it and made a faint flapping sound like, but fainter
than, the beating of ripples under the stem of a boat. She was stationed over
the temporary City Hall in the Park Row building, and every now and then she
would descend to resume communication with the mayor and with Washington. But
the restlessness of the Prince would not suffer him to remain for long in any
one place. Now he would circle over the Hudson and East River; now he would go
up high, as if to peer away into the blue distances; once he ascended so
swiftly and so far that mountain sickness overtook him and the crew and forced
him down again; and Bert shared the dizziness and nausea. The swaying view varied with these changes of altitude. Now
they would be low and close, and he would distinguish in that steep, unusual
perspective, windows, doors, street and sky signs, people and the minutest
details, and watch the enigmatical behaviour of crowds and clusters upon the
roofs and in the streets; then as they soared the details would shrink, the
sides of streets draw together, the view widen, the people cease to be
significant. At the highest the effect was that of a concave relief map; Bert
saw the dark and crowded land everywhere intersected by shining waters, saw the
Hudson River like a spear of silver, and Lower Island Sound like a shield. Even
to Bert's unphilosophical mind the contrast of city below and fleet above
pointed an opposition, the opposition of the adventurous American's tradition
and character with German order and discipline. Below, the immense buildings,
tremendous and fine as they were, seemed like the giant trees of a jungle
fighting for life; their picturesque magnificence was as planless as the
chances of crag and gorge, their casualty enhanced by the smoke and confusion
of still unsubdued and spreading conflagrations. In the sky soared the German
airships like beings in a different, entirely more orderly world, all oriented
to the same angle of the horizon, uniform in build and appearance, moving
accurately with one purpose as a pack of wolves will move, distributed with the
most precise and effectual co-operation. It dawned upon Bert that hardly a third of the fleet was
visible. The others had gone upon errands he could not imagine, beyond the
compass of that great circle of earth and sky. He wondered, but there was no
one to ask. As the day wore on, about a dozen reappeared in the east with their
stores replenished from the flotilla and towing a number of drachenflieger.
Towards afternoon the weather thickened, driving clouds appeared in the
south-west and ran together and seemed to engender more clouds, and the wind
came round into that quarter and blew stronger. Towards the evening the wind
became a gale into which the now tossing airships had to beat. All that day the Prince was negotiating with Washington,
while his detached scouts sought far and wide over the Eastern States looking
for anything resembling an aeronautic park. A squadron of twenty airships
detached overnight had dropped out of the air upon Niagara and was holding the
town and power works. Meanwhile the insurrectionary movement in the giant city
grew uncontrollable. In spite of five great fires already involving many acres,
and spreading steadily, New York was still not satisfied that she was beaten. At first the rebellious spirit below found vent only in
isolated shouts, street-crowd speeches, and newspaper suggestions; then it
found much more definite expression in the appearance in the morning sunlight
of American flags at point after point above the architectural cliffs of the
city. It is quite possible that in many cases this spirited display of bunting
by a city already surrendered was the outcome of the innocent informality of
the American mind, but it is also undeniable that in many it was a deliberate
indication that the people “felt wicked.” The German sense of correctitude was deeply shocked by this
outbreak. The Graf von Winterfeld immediately communicated with the mayor, and
pointed out the irregularity, and the fire look-out stations were instructed in
the matter. The New York police was speedily hard at work, and a foolish
contest in full swing between impassioned citizens resolved to keep the flag
flying, and irritated and worried officers instructed to pull it down. The trouble became acute at last in the streets above
Columbia University. The captain of the airship watching this quarter seems to
have stooped to lasso and drag from its staff a flag hoisted upon Morgan Hall.
As he did so a volley of rifle and revolver shots was fired from the upper
windows of the huge apartment building that stands between the University and
Riverside Drive. Most of these were ineffectual, but two or three perforated
gas-chambers, and one smashed the hand and arm of a man upon the forward
platform; The sentinel on the lower gallery immediately replied, and the
machine gun on the shield of the eagle let fly and promptly stopped any further
shots. The airship rose and signalled the flagship and City Hall, police and
militiamen were directed at once to the spot, and this particular incident
closed. But hard upon that came the desperate attempt of a party of
young clubmen from New York, who, inspired by patriotic and adventurous
imaginations, slipped off in half a dozen motor-cars to Beacon Hill, and set to
work with remarkable vigour to improvise a fort about the Doan swivel gun that
had been placed there. They found it still in the hands of the disgusted
gunners, who had been ordered to cease fire at the capitulation, and it was
easy to infect these men with their own spirit. They declared their gun hadn't
had half a chance, and were burning to show what it could do. Directed by the
newcomers, they made a trench and bank about the mounting of the piece, and
constructed flimsy shelter-pits of corrugated iron. They were actually loading the gun when they were observed
by the airship Preussen and the shell they succeeded in firing before the bombs
of the latter smashed them and their crude defences to fragments, burst over
the middle gas-chambers of the Bingen, and brought her to earth, disabled, upon
Staten Island. She was badly deflated, and dropped among trees, over which her
empty central gas-bags spread in canopies and festoons. Nothing, however, had
caught fire, and her men were speedily at work upon her repair. They behaved
with a confidence that verged upon indiscretion. While most of them commenced
patching the tears of the membrane, half a dozen of them started off for the
nearest road in search of a gas main, and presently found themselves prisoners
in the hands of a hostile crowd. Close at hand was a number of villa
residences, whose occupants speedily developed from an unfriendly curiosity to
aggression. At that time the police control of the large polyglot population of
Staten Island had become very lax, and scarcely a household but had its rifle
or pistols and ammunition. These were presently produced, and after two or
three misses, one of the men at work was hit in the foot. Thereupon the Germans
left their sewing and mending, took cover among the trees, and replied. The crackling of shots speedily brought the Preussen and
Kiel on the scene, and with a few hand grenades they made short work of every
villa within a mile. A number of non-combatant American men, women, and
children were killed and the actual assailants driven off. For a time the
repairs went on in peace under the immediate protection of these two airships.
Then when they returned to their quarters, an intermittent sniping and fighting
round the stranded Bingen was resumed, and went on all the afternoon, and
merged at last in the general combat of the evening.... About eight the Bingen was rushed by an armed mob, and all
its defenders killed after a fierce, disorderly struggle. The difficulty of the Germans in both these cases came from
the impossibility of landing any efficient force or, indeed, any force at all
from the air-fleet. The airships were quite unequal to the transport of any
adequate landing parties; their complement of men was just sufficient to
manoeuvre and fight them in the air. From above they could inflict immense
damage; they could reduce any organised Government to a capitulation in the
briefest space, but they could not disarm, much less could they occupy, the
surrendered areas below. They had to trust to the pressure upon the authorities
below of a threat to renew the bombardment. It was their sole resource. No
doubt, with a highly organised and undamaged Government and a homogeneous and
well-disciplined people that would have sufficed to keep the peace. But this
was not the American case. Not only was the New York Government a weak one and
insufficiently provided with police, but the destruction of the City Hall — and
Post-Office and other central ganglia had hopelessly disorganised the
co-operation of part with part. The street cars and railways had ceased; the
telephone service was out of gear and only worked intermittently. The Germans
had struck at the head, and the head was conquered and stunned — only to
release the body from its rule. New York had become a headless monster, no
longer capable of collective submission. Everywhere it lifted itself
rebelliously; everywhere authorities and officials left to their own imitative
were joining in the arming and flag-hoisting and excitement of that afternoon. § 6 Overnight there had been a gun placed in Union Square. It
had never been mounted, much less fired, and in the darkness after the
surrender it was taken with its supplies and put out of the way under the
arches of the great Dexter building. Here late in the morning it was remarked
by a number of patriotic spirits. They set to work to hoist and mount it inside
the upper floors of the place. They made, in fact, a masked battery behind the
decorous office blinds, and there lay in wait as simply excited as children
until at last the stem of the luckless Wetterhorn appeared, beating and rolling
at quarter speed over the recently reconstructed pinnacles of Tiffany's.
Promptly that one-gun battery unmasked. The airship's look-out man must have
seen the whole of the tenth story of the Dexter building crumble out and smash
in the street below to discover the black muzzle looking out from the shadows
behind. Then perhaps the shell hit him. The gun fired two shells before the frame of the Dexter
building collapsed, and each shell raked the Wetterhorn from stem to stern.
They smashed her exhaustively. She crumpled up like a can that has been kicked
by a heavy boot, her forepart came down in the square, and the rest of her
length, with a great snapping and twisting of shafts and stays, descended,
collapsing athwart Tammany Hall and the streets towards Second Avenue. Her gas
escaped to mix with air, and the air of her rent balloonette poured into her
deflating gas-chambers. Then with an immense impact she exploded.... The Vaterland at that time was beating up to the south of
City Hall from over the ruins of the Brooklyn Bridge, and the reports of the
gun, followed by the first crashes of the collapsing Dexter building, brought
Kurt and, Smallways to the cabin porthole. They were in time to see the flash
of the exploding gun, and then they were first flattened against the window and
then rolled head over heels across the floor of the cabin by the air wave of
the explosion. The Vaterland bounded like a football some one has kicked and
when they looked out again, Union Square was small and remote and shattered, as
though some cosmically vast giant had rolled over it. The buildings to the east
of it were ablaze at a dozen points, under the flaming tatters and warping
skeleton of the airship, and all the roofs and walls were ridiculously askew
and crumbling as one looked. “Gaw!” said Bert. “What's happened? Look at the
people!” But before Kurt could produce an explanation, the shrill
bells of the airship were ringing to quarters, and he had to go. Bert hesitated
and stepped thoughtfully into the passage, looking back at the window as he did
so. He was knocked off his feet at once by the Prince, who was rushing headlong
from his cabin to the central magazine. Bert had a momentary impression of the great figure of the
Prince, white with rage, bristling with gigantic anger, his huge fist swinging.
“Blut und Eisen!” cried the Prince, as one who swears. “Oh! Blut und Eisen!” Some one fell over Bert — something in the manner of falling
suggested Von Winterfeld — and some one else paused and kicked him spitefully
and hard. Then he was sitting up in the passage, rubbing a freshly bruised
cheek and readjusting the bandage he still wore on his head. “Dem that Prince,”
said Bert, indignant beyond measure. “'E 'asn't the menners of a 'og!” He stood up, collected his wits for a minute, and then went
slowly towards the gangway of the little gallery. As he did so he heard noises
suggestive of the return of the Prince. The lot of them were coming back again.
He shot into his cabin like a rabbit into its burrow, just in time to escape
that shouting terror. He shut the door, waited until the passage was still, then
went across to the window and looked out. A drift of cloud made the prospect of
the streets and squares hazy, and the rolling of the airship swung the picture
up and down. A few people were running to and fro, but for the most part the
aspect of the district was desertion. The streets seemed to broaden out, they
became clearer, and the little dots that were people larger as the Vaterland
came down again. Presently she was swaying along above the lower end of
Broadway. The dots below, Bert saw, were not running now, but standing and
looking up. Then suddenly they were all running again. Something had dropped from the aeroplane, something that
looked small and flimsy. It hit the pavement near a big archway just underneath
Bert. A little man was sprinting along the sidewalk within half a dozen yards,
and two or three others and one woman were bolting across the roadway. They
were odd little figures, so very small were they about the heads, so very
active about the elbows and legs. It was really funny to see their legs going.
Foreshortened, humanity has no dignity. The little man on the pavement jumped
comically — no doubt with terror, as the bomb fell beside him. Then blinding flames squirted out in all directions from the
point of impact, and the little man who had jumped became, for an instant, a
flash of fire and vanished — vanished absolutely. The people running out into
the road took preposterous clumsy leaps, then flopped down and lay still, with
their torn clothes smouldering into flame. Then pieces of the archway began to
drop, and the lower masonry of the building to fall in with the rumbling sound
of coals being shot into a cellar. A faint screaming reached Bert, and then a
crowd of people ran out into the street, one man limping and gesticulating
awkwardly. He halted, and went back towards the building. A falling mass of
brick-work hit him and sent him sprawling to lie still and crumpled where he
fell. Dust and black smoke came pouring into the street, and were presently
shot with red flame.... In this manner the massacre of New York began. She was the
first of the great cities of the Scientific Age to suffer by the enormous
powers and grotesque limitations of aerial warfare. She was wrecked as in the
previous century endless barbaric cities had been bombarded, because she was at
once too strong to be occupied and too undisciplined and proud to surrender in
order to escape destruction. Given the circumstances, the thing had to be done.
It was impossible for the Prince to desist, and own himself defeated, and it
was impossible to subdue the city except by largely destroying it. The
catastrophe was the logical outcome of the situation, created by the
application of science to warfare. It was unavoidable that great cities should
be destroyed. In spite of his intense exasperation with his dilemma, the Prince
sought to be moderate even in massacre. He tried to give a memorable lesson
with the minimum waste of life and the minimum expenditure of explosives. For
that night he proposed only the wrecking of Broadway. He directed the air-fleet
to move in column over the route of this thoroughfare, dropping bombs, the
Vaterland leading. And so our Bert Smallways became a participant in one of the
most cold-blooded slaughters in the world's history, in which men who were
neither excited nor, except for the remotest chance of a bullet, in any danger,
poured death and destruction upon homes and crowds below. He clung to the frame of the porthole as the airship tossed and swayed, and stared down through the light rain that now drove before the wind, into the twilight streets, watching people running out of the houses, watching buildings collapse and fires begin. As the airships sailed along they smashed up the city as a child will shatter its cities of brick and card. Below, they left ruins and blazing conflagrations and heaped and scattered dead; men, women, and children mixed together as though they had been no more than Moors, or Zulus, or Chinese. Lower New York was soon a furnace of crimson flames, from which there was no escape. Cars, railways, ferries, all had ceased, and never a light lit the way of the distracted fugitives in that dusky confusion but the light of burning. He had glimpses of what it must mean to be down there — glimpses. And it came to him suddenly as an incredible discovery, that such disasters were not only possible now in this strange, gigantic, foreign New York, but also in London — in Bun Hill! that the little island in the silver seas was at the end of its immunity, that nowhere in the world any more was there a place left where a Smallways might lift his head proudly and vote for war and a spirited foreign policy, and go secure from such horrible things. |