<h2><SPAN name="BOOK_III" id="BOOK_III"></SPAN>BOOK III.</h2>
<h3>THE REVENGE.</h3>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I_III" id="CHAPTER_I_III"></SPAN>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<h3>A BLOW FOR FREEDOM.</h3>
<div class="right">
"<span class="smcap">'Daily Telegraph' Office.</span><br/>
"<i>Oct.</i> 1, 2 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span><br/></div>
<p>"Three days have passed since the revolt at King's
Cross, and each day, both on the Horse Guards' Parade
and in the Park, opposite Dorchester House, there have
been summary executions. Von Kronhelm is in evident
fear of the excited London populace, and is endeavouring
to cow them by his plain-spoken and threatening proclamations,
and by these wholesale executions of any
person found with arms in his or her possession. But
the word of command does not abolish the responsibility
of conscience, and we are now awaiting breathlessly for
the word to strike the blow in revenge.</p>
<p>"The other newspapers are reappearing, but all that is
printed each morning is first subjected to a rigorous
censorship, and nothing is allowed to be printed before
it is passed and initialled by the two gold-spectacled
censors who sit and smoke their pipes in an office to
themselves. Below, we have German sentries on guard,
for our journal is one of the official organs of Von Kronhelm,
and what now appears in it is surely sufficient to
cause our blood to boil."</p>
<p>"To-day, there are everywhere signs of rapidly increasing
unrest. Londoners are starving, and are now refusing
to remain patient any longer. The "Daily Bulletin"
of the League of Defenders, though the posting of it is
punishable by imprisonment, and it is everywhere torn
down where discovered by the Germans, still gives daily
brief news of what is in progress, and still urges the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</SPAN></span>
people to wait in patience, for 'the action of the Government,'
as it is sarcastically put.</p>
<p>"Soon after eleven o'clock this morning a sudden and
clearly premeditated attack was made upon a body of
the Bremen infantry, who were passing along Oxford
Street from Holborn to the Marble Arch. The soldiers
were suddenly fired upon from windows of a row of shops
between Newman Street and Rathbone Place, and before
they could halt and return the fire they found themselves
surrounded by a great armed rabble, who were emerging
from all the streets leading into Oxford Street.</p>
<p>"While the Germans were manœuvring, some unknown
hand launched from a window a bomb into the centre
of them. Next second there was a red flash, a loud report,
and twenty-five of the enemy were blown to atoms.
For a few moments the soldiers were demoralised, but
orders were shouted loudly by their officers, and they
began a most vigorous defence. In a few seconds the
fight was as fierce as that at King's Cross; for out of
every street in that working-class district lying between
the Tottenham Court Road and Great Portland Street on
the north, and out of Soho on the South, poured thousands
upon thousands of fierce Londoners, all bent upon
doing their utmost to kill their oppressors. From almost
every window along Oxford Street a rain of lead was
now being poured upon the troops, who vainly strove to
keep their ground. Gradually, however, they were, by
slow degrees, forced back into the narrow side-turnings
up Newman Street, and Rathbone Place into Mortimer
Street, Foley Street, Goodge Street, and Charlotte Street;
and there they were slaughtered almost to a man.</p>
<p>"Two officers were captured by the armed mob in
Tottenham Street and, after being beaten, were stood up
and shot in cold blood as vengeance for those shot during
the past three days at Von Kleppen's orders at Dorchester
House.</p>
<p>"The fierce fight lasted quite an hour; and though
reinforcements were sent for, yet curiously none arrived.</p>
<p>"The great mob, however, were well aware that very
soon the iron hand of Germany would fall heavily upon
them; therefore, in frantic haste, they began soon after
noon to build barricades and block up the narrow streets
in every direction. At the end of Rathbone Place, Newman
Street, Berners Street, Wells Street, and Great
Tichfield Street, huge obstructions soon appeared, while<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</SPAN></span>
on the east all by-streets leading into Tottenham Court
Road were blocked up, and the same on the west in
Great Portland Street, and on the north where the district
was flanked by the Euston Road. So that by two o'clock
the populous neighbourhood bounded by the four great
thoroughfares was rendered a fortress in itself.</p>
<p>"Within that area were thousands of armed men and
women from Soho, Bloomsbury, Marylebone, and even
from Camden Town. There they remained in defiance of
Von Kronhelm's newest proclamation, which stared one
in the face from every wall."</p>
<div class="right">"<i>Later.</i></div>
<p>"The enemy were unaware of the grave significance
of the position of affairs, because Londoners betrayed
no outward sign of the truth. Now, however, nearly
every man and woman wore pinned upon their breasts
a small piece of silk about two inches square, printed
as a miniature Union Jack—the badge adopted by the
League of Defenders. Though Von Kronhelm was unaware
of it, Lord Byfield, in council with Greatorex and
Bamford, had decided that, in order to demoralise the
enemy and give him plenty of work to do, a number of
local uprisings should take place north of the Thames.
These would occupy Von Kronhelm, who would experience
great difficulty in quelling them, and would no
doubt eventually recall the Saxons from West Middlesex
to assist. If the latter retired upon London they would
find the barricades held by Londoners in their rear and
Lord Byfield in their front, and be thus caught between
two fires.</p>
<p>"In each district of London there is a chief of the
Defenders, and to each chief these orders had been conveyed
in strictest confidence. Therefore, to-day, while
the outbreak occurred in Oxford Street, there were fully a
dozen others in various parts of the metropolis, each of
a more or less serious character. Every district has
already prepared its own secret defences, its fortified
houses, and its barricades in hidden by-ways. Besides
the quantity of arms smuggled into London, every dead
German has had his rifle, pistol, and ammunition stolen
from him. Hundreds of the enemy have been surreptitiously
killed for that very reason. Lawlessness is
everywhere, Government and Army have failed them, and
Londoners are now taking the law into their own hands.</p>
<p>"In King Street, Hammersmith; in Notting Dale, in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</SPAN></span>
Forest Road, Dalston; in Wick Road, Hackney; in
Commercial Road East, near Stepney Station; and in
Prince of Wales Road, Kentish Town, the League of
Defenders this morning—at about the same hour—first
made their organisation public by displaying our national
emblem, together with the white flags, with the scarlet
St. George's Cross, the ancient battle flag of England.</p>
<p>"For that reason, then, no reinforcements were sent
to Oxford Street. Von Kronhelm was far too busy in
other quarters. In Kentish Town, it is reported, the
Germans gained a complete and decisive victory, for
the people had not barricaded themselves strongly; besides,
there were large reinforcements of Germans ready
in Regent's Park, and these came upon the scene before
the Defenders were sufficiently prepared. The flag was
captured from the barricade in Prince of Wales Road,
and the men of Kentish Town lost over four hundred
killed and wounded.</p>
<p>"At Stepney, the result was the reverse. The enemy,
believing it to be a mere local disturbance and easily
quelled, sent but a small body of men to suppress it.
But very quickly, in the intricate by-streets off Commercial
Road, these were wiped out, not one single man
surviving. A second and third body were sent, but so
fiercely was the ground contested that they were at
length compelled to fall back and leave the men of
Stepney masters of their own district. In Hammersmith
and in Notting Dale the enemy also lost heavily, though
in Hackney they were successful after hard fighting.</p>
<p>"Every one declares that this secret order issued by
the League means that England is again prepared to give
battle, and that London is commencing by her strategic
movement of local rebellions. The gravity of the situation
cannot now, for one moment, be concealed. London
north of the Thames is destined to be the scene of the
fiercest and most bloody warfare ever known in the history
of the civilised world. The Germans will, of course,
fight for their lives, while we shall fight for our homes
and for our liberty. But right is on our side, and right
will win.</p>
<p>"Reports from all over the metropolis tell the same
tale. London is alert and impatient. At a word she will
rise to a man, and then woe betide the invader! Surely
Von Kronhelm's position is not a very enviable one.
Our two censors in the office are smoking their pipes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</SPAN></span>
very gravely. Not a word of the street fighting is to be
published. They will write their own account of it.</p>
<div class="right">"10 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span></div>
<p>"There has been a most frightful encounter at the
Oxford Street and Tottenham Court Road barricades—a
most stubborn resistance and gallant defence on the part
of the men of Marylebone and Bloomsbury.</p>
<p>"From the lips of one of our correspondents who was
within the barricade I have just learned the details. It
appears that just about four o'clock General Von Wilberg
sent from the City a large force of the 19th Division
under Lieutenant General Frankenfeld, and part of
these, advancing through the squares of Bloomsbury into
Gower Street, attacked the Defenders' position from the
Tottenham Court Road, while others coming up Holborn
and New Oxford Street entered Soho from Charing Cross
Road and threw up counter-barricades at the end of Dean
Street, Wardour Street, Berwick, Poland, Argyll, and the
other streets, all of which were opposite the defences of
the populace. In Great Portland Street, too, they adopted
a similar line, and without much ado the fight, commenced
in a desultory fashion, soon became a battle.</p>
<p>"Within the barricades was a dense body of armed and
angry citizens, each with his little badge, and every
single one of them was ready to fight to the death. There
is no false patriotism now, no mere bravado. Men make
declarations, and carry them out. The gallant Londoners,
with their several Maxims, wrought havoc among the
invaders, especially in the Tottenham Court Road, where
hundreds were maimed or killed.</p>
<p>"In Oxford Street, the enemy being under cover of
their counter-barricades, little damage could be done on
either side. The wide, open, deserted thoroughfare was
every moment swept by a hail of bullets, but no one was
injured. On the Great Portland Street side the populace
made a feint of giving way at the Mortimer Street barricade,
and a body of the enemy rushed in, taking the
obstruction by storm. But next moment they regretted
it, for they were set upon by a thousand armed men
and wild haired women, so that every man paid for his
courage with his life. The women, seizing the weapons
and ammunition of the dead Germans, now returned to
the barricade to use them.</p>
<p>"The Mortimer Street defences were at once repaired,
and it was resolved to relay the fatal trap at some other<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</SPAN></span>
point. Indeed, it was repeated at the end of Percy
Street, where about fifty more Germans, who thought
themselves victorious, were set upon and exterminated.</p>
<p>"Until dusk the fight lasted. The Germans, finding
their attack futile, began to hurl petrol bombs over the
barricades and these caused frightful destruction among
our gallant men, several houses in the vicinity being set
on fire. Fortunately, there was still water in the street
hydrants, and two fire engines had already been brought
within the beleaguered area in case of necessity.</p>
<p>"At last, about seven o'clock, the enemy, having lost
very heavily in attempting to take the well-chosen position
by storm, brought down several light field-guns from
Regent's Park; and, placing them at their counter-barricades—where,
by the way, they had lost many men
in the earlier part of the conflict while piling up their
shelters—suddenly opened fire with shell at the huge
obstructions before them.</p>
<p>"At first they made but little impression upon the
flagstones, etc., of which the barricades were mainly
composed. But before long their bombardment began
to tell; for slowly, here and there, exploding shells made
great breaches in the defences that had been so heroically
manned. More than once a high explosive shell burst
right among the crowd of riflemen behind a barricade,
sweeping dozens into eternity in a single instant.
Against the fortified houses each side of the barricades
the German artillery trained their guns, and very quickly
reduced many of those buildings to ruins. The air now
became thick with dust and smoke; and mingled with
the roar of artillery at such close quarters came the
screams of the injured and the groans of the dying. The
picture drawn by the eye-witness who described this was
a truly appalling one. Gradually the Londoners were being
overwhelmed, but they were selling their lives dearly, fully
proving themselves worthy sons of grand old England.</p>
<p>"At last the fire from the Newman Street barricade
of the Defenders was silenced, and ten minutes later, a
rush being made across from Dean Street, it was taken
by storm. Then ensued fierce and bloody hand-to-hand
fighting right up to Cleveland Street, while almost at
the same moment the enemy broke in from Great Portland
Street.</p>
<p>"A scene followed that is impossible to describe.
Through all those narrow, crooked streets the fighting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</SPAN></span>
became general, and on either side hundreds fell. The
Defenders in places cornered the Germans, cut them
off, and killed them. Though it was felt that now the
barricades had been broken the day was lost, yet every
man kept courage, and fought with all his strength.</p>
<p>"For half an hour the Germans met with no success.
On the contrary, they found themselves entrapped amid
thousands of furious citizens, all wearing their silken
badges, and all sworn to fight to the death.</p>
<p>"While the Defenders still struggled on, loud and
ringing cheers were suddenly raised from Tottenham
Court Road. The people from Clerkenwell, joined by
those in Bloomsbury, had arrived to assist them. They
had risen, and were attacking the Germans in the rear.</p>
<p>"Fighting was now general right across from Tottenham
Court Road to Gray's Inn Road, and by nine o'clock,
though Von Wilberg sent reinforcements, a victory was
gained by the Defenders. Over two thousand Germans
are lying dead and wounded about the streets and squares
of Bloomsbury and Marylebone. The League had struck
its first blow for Freedom.</p>
<p>"What will the morrow bring us? Dire punishment—or
desperate victory?"</p>
<div class="right">
"'<span class="smcap">Daily Chronicle' Office</span>,<br/>
"<i>Oct.</i> 4, 6 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span></div>
<p>"The final struggle for the possession of London is
about to commence. Through all last night there were
desultory conflicts between the soldiers and the people,
in which many lives have, alas! been sacrificed.</p>
<p>"Von Wilberg still holds the City proper, with the
Mansion House as his headquarters. Within the area
already shown upon the map there are no English, all
the inhabitants having been long ago expelled. The
great wealth of London is in German hands, it is true,
but it is Dead Sea fruit. They are unable either to make
use of it or to deport it to Germany. Much has been
taken away to the base at Southminster and other bases
in Essex, but the greater part of the bullion still remains
in the Bank of England.</p>
<p>"The most exciting stories have been reaching us
during the last twenty-four hours, none of which, however,
have passed the censor. For that reason I, one of
the sub-editors, am keeping this diary, as a brief record
of events during the present dreadful times.</p>
<p>"After the terrific struggle in Marylebone three days
ago,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</SPAN></span> Von Kronhelm saw plainly that if London were to
rise <i>en masse</i> she would at once assume the upper hand.
The German Commander-in-Chief had far too many
points to guard. On the west of London he was
threatened by Lord Byfield and hosts of auxiliaries, mostly
sworn members of the National League of Defenders; on
the south, across the river, Southwark, Lambeth, and
Battersea formed an impregnable fortress, containing
over a million eager patriots ready to burst forth and
sweep away the vain, victorious army; while within
central London itself the people were ready to rise.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h2>LEAGUE OF DEFENDERS.</h2>
<div class="center">
CITIZENS OF LONDON AND LOYAL PATRIOTS.</div>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>The hour has come to show your strength, and to
wreak your vengeance.</p>
<p>TO-NIGHT, OCT. 4, AT 10 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span>, rise, and strike
your blow for freedom.</p>
<p>A MILLION MEN are with Lord Byfield, already
within striking distance of London; a million follow
them, and yet another million are ready in South London.</p>
<p>RISE, FEARLESS AND STERN. Let "England for
Englishmen" be your battle-cry, and avenge the blood of
your wives and your children.</p>
</div>
<div class="center">
AVENGE THIS INSULT TO YOUR<br/>
NATION.<br/>
REMEMBER: TEN O'CLOCK TO-NIGHT!</div>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/i243-hi.png"><ANTIMG src="images/i243.png" width-obs="437" height-obs="550" alt="LEAGUE OF DEFENDERS. CITIZENS OF LONDON AND LOYAL PATRIOTS." title="" /></SPAN></div>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>"Reports<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</SPAN></span> reaching us to-day from Lord Byfield's headquarters
at Windsor are numerous, but conflicting. As
far as can be gathered, the authentic facts are as follows:
Great bodies of the Defenders, including many women,
all armed, are massing at Reading, Sonning, Wokingham,
and Maidenhead. Thousands have arrived, and are
hourly arriving by train, from Portsmouth, Plymouth,
Exeter, Bristol, Gloucester, and, in fact, all the chief
centres of the West of England, where Gerald Graham's
campaign has been so marvellously successful. Sturdy
Welsh colliers are marching shoulder to shoulder with
agricultural labourers from Dorset and Devon, and clerks
and citizens from the towns of Somerset, Cornwall,
Gloucestershire, and Oxfordshire are taking arms beside
the riff-raff of their own neighbourhoods. Peer and
peasant, professional man and pauper, all are now united
with one common object—to drive back the invader, and
to save our dear old England.</p>
<p>"Oxford has, it seems, been one of the chief points of
concentration, and the undergraduates who re-assembled
there to defend their colleges now form an advance-guard
of a huge body of Defenders on the march, by way of
Henley and Maidenhead, to follow in the rear of Lord
Byfield. The latter holds Eton and the country across
to High Wycombe, while the Saxon headquarters are
still at Staines. Frölich's Cavalry Division are holding
the country across from Pinner through Stanmore and
Chipping Barnet to the prison camp at Enfield Chase.
These are the only German troops outside West London,
the Saxons being now barred from entering by the huge
barricades which the populace of West London have
during the past few days been constructing. Every road
leading into London from West Middlesex is now either
strongly barricaded or entirely blocked up. Kew, Richmond,
and Kingston Bridges have been destroyed, and
Lord Byfield, with General Bamford at the Crystal
Palace, remains practically in possession of the whole of
the south of the Thames.</p>
<p>"The conflict which is now about to begin will be one
to the death. While, on the one hand, the Germans are
bottled up among us, the fact must not be overlooked
that their arms are superior, and that they are trained<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</SPAN></span>
soldiers. Yet the two or three local risings of yesterday
and the day previous have given us courage, for they
show that the enemy cannot manœuvre in the narrow
streets, and soon become demoralised. In London we
fail because we have so few riflemen. If every man who
now carries a gun could shoot, we could compel the
Germans to fly a flag of truce within twenty-four hours.
Indeed, if Lord Roberts' scheme of universal training in
1906 had been adopted, the enemy would certainly never
have been suffered to approach our capital.</p>
<p>"Alas! apathy has resulted in this terrible and crushing
disaster, and we have only now to bear our part, each
one of us, in the blow to avenge this desecration of our
homes and the massacre of our loved ones.</p>
<p>"To-day I have seen the white banners with the red
cross—the ensign of the Defenders—everywhere. Till
yesterday it was not openly displayed, but to-day it is
actually hung from windows or flown defiantly from
flagstaffs in full view of the Germans.</p>
<p>"In Kilburn, or, to be more exact, in the district
lying between the Harrow Road and the High Road,
Kilburn, there was another conflict this morning between
some of the German Garde Corps and the populace. The
outbreak commenced by the arrest of some men who
were found practising with rifles in Paddington Recreation
Ground. One man who resisted was shot on the spot,
whereupon the crowd who assembled attacked the German
picket, and eventually killed them to a man. This was
the signal for a general outbreak in the neighbourhood,
and half an hour later, when a force was sent to quell
the revolt, fierce fighting became general all through the
narrow streets of Kensal Green, especially at the big
barricade that blocks the Harrow Road where it is joined
by Admiral Road. Here the bridges over the Grand
Junction Canal have already been destroyed, for the
barricades and defences have been scientifically constructed
under the instruction of military engineers.</p>
<p>"From an early hour to-day it has been apparent that
all these risings were purposely ordered by the League of
Defenders to cause Von Kronhelm's confusion. Indeed,
while the outbreak at Kensal Green was in progress, we
had another reported from Dalston, a third from Limehouse,
and a fourth from Homerton. Therefore, it is
quite certain that the various centres of the League are
acting in unison upon secret orders from headquarters.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Indeed, South London also took part in the fray this
morning, for the Defenders at the barricade at London
Bridge have now mounted several field guns, and have
started shelling Von Wilberg's position in the City. It
is said that the Mansion House, where the General had
usurped the apartments of the deported Lord Mayor, has
already been half reduced to ruins. This action is, no
doubt, only to harass the enemy, for surely General
Bamford has no desire to destroy the City proper any
more than it has already been destroyed. Lower Thames
Street, King William Street, Gracechurch Street, and
Cannon Street have at any rate, been found untenable
by the enemy, upon whom some losses have been inflicted.</p>
<p>"South London is every moment anxious to know the
truth. Two days after the bombardment we succeeded
at night in sinking a light telegraph cable in the river
across from the Embankment at the bottom of Temple
Avenue, and are in communication with our temporary
office in Southwark Street.</p>
<p>"An hour ago there came, through secret sources, information
of another naval victory to our credit, several
German warships being sunk and captured. Here we
dare not print it, so I have just wired it across to the
other side, where they are issuing a special edition.</p>
<p>"Almost simultaneously with the report of the British
victory, namely, at five o'clock, the truth—the great and
all-important truth—became revealed. The mandate has
gone forth from the headquarters of the League of
Defenders that London is to rise in her might at ten o'clock
to-night, and that a million men are ready to assist us.
Placards and bills on red paper are everywhere.</p>
<p>"Frantic efforts are being made by the Germans all
over London to suppress both posters and handbills.</p>
<p>"It is now six o'clock. In four hours it is believed that
London will be one huge seething conflict. Night has
been chosen, I suppose, in order to give the populace
the advantage. The by-streets are for the most part still
unlit, save for oil-lamps, for neither gas nor electric light
are yet in proper working order after the terrible dislocation
of everything. The scheme of the Defenders is, as
already proved, to lure the Germans into the narrower
thoroughfares, and then exterminate them. Surely
in the history of the world there has never been such a
bitter vengeance as that which is now inevitable. London,
the greatest city ever known, is about to rise!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="right">"<i>Midnight.</i></div>
<p>"London has risen! How can I describe the awful
scenes of panic, bloodshed, patriotism, brutality, and
vengeance that are at this moment in progress? As I
write, through the open window I can hear the roar of
voices, the continual crackling of rifles, and the heavy
booming of guns. I walked along Fleet Street at nine
o'clock, and I found, utterly disregarding the order that
no unauthorised persons are to be abroad after nightfall,
hundreds upon hundreds of all classes, all wearing
their little silk Union Jack badges pinned to their coats,
on the way to join in their particular districts. Some
carried rifles, others revolvers, while others were unarmed.
Yet not a German did I see in the streets. It
seemed as though, for the moment, the enemy had
vanished. There was only the strong cordon across the
bottom of Ludgate Hill, men who looked on in wonder,
but without bestirring themselves.</p>
<p>"Is it possible that Von Kronhelm's strategy is to
remain inactive, and refuse to fight?</p>
<p>"The first shot I heard fired, just after ten o'clock, was
at the Strand end of Fleet Street, at the corner of Chancery
Lane. There, I afterwards discovered, a party of forty
German infantrymen had been attacked, and all of
them killed. Quickly following this, I heard the distant
booming of artillery, and then the rattle of musketry
and pom-poms became general, but not in the neighbourhood
where I was. For nearly half an hour I remained
at the corner of Aldwych; then, on going farther along
the Strand, I found that the defenders from the Waterloo
Road had made a wild sortie into the Strand, but could
find no Germans there.</p>
<p>"The men who had for a fortnight held that barricade
at the bridge were more like demons than human beings;
therefore I retired, and in the crush made my way back
to the office to await reports.</p>
<p>"They were not long in arriving. I can only give a
very brief <i>résumé</i> at the moment, for they are so numerous
as to be bewildering.</p>
<p>"Speaking generally, the whole of London has obeyed
the mandate of the League, and, rising, are attacking the
Germans at every point. In the majority of cases, however,
the enemy hold strong positions, and are defending
themselves, inflicting terrible losses upon the unorganised
populace. Every Londoner is fighting for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</SPAN></span>
himself, without regard for orders or consequences. In
Bethnal Green the Germans, lured into the maze of by-streets,
have suffered great losses, and again in Clerkenwell,
St. Luke's, Kingsland, Hackney and Old Ford.
Whitechapel too, devoid of its alien population, who
have escaped into Essex, has held its own, and the enemy
have had some great losses in the streets off Cable and
Leman Streets.</p>
<p>"With the exception of the sortie across Waterloo
Bridge, South London is, as yet, remaining in patience,
acting under the orders of General Bamford.</p>
<p>"News has come in ten minutes ago of a fierce and
sudden attack upon the Saxons by Lord Byfield from
Windsor, but there are, as yet, no details.</p>
<p>"From the office across the river I am being constantly
asked for details of the fight, and how it is progressing.
In Southwark the excitement is evidently
most intense, and it requires all the energy of the local
commanders of the Defenders to repress another sortie
across that bridge.</p>
<p>"There has just occurred an explosion so terrific that
the whole of this building has been shaken as though
by an earthquake.</p>
<p>"London has struck her first blow of revenge. What
will be its sequel?"</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />