<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II_III" id="CHAPTER_II_III"></SPAN>CHAPTER II.</h2>
<h3>SCENES AT WATERLOO BRIDGE.</h3>
<p>The following is the personal narrative of a young
chauffeur named John Burgess, who assisted in the defence
of the barricade at Waterloo Bridge.</p>
<p>The statement was made to a reporter at noon on
October 5, while he was lying on a mattress in the Church
of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, so badly wounded in the
chest that the surgeons had given him up.</p>
<p>He related his story in the form of a farewell letter
to his sister. The reporter chanced to be passing, and,
hearing him asking for some one to write for him, volunteered
to do so.</p>
<p>"We all did our best," he said, "every one of us.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</SPAN></span>
Myself, I was at the barricade for thirteen days—thirteen
days of semi-starvation, sleeplessness, and constant
tension, for we knew not, from one moment to another,
when a sudden attack might be made upon us. At
first our obstruction was a mere ill-built pile of miscellaneous
articles, half of which would not stop bullets;
but on the third day our men, superintended by several
non-commissioned officers in uniform, began to put
the position in a proper state of defence, to mount
Maxims in the neighbouring houses, and to place explosives
in the crown of two of the arches of the bridge,
so that we could instantly demolish it if necessity
arose.</p>
<p>"Fully a thousand men were holding the position, but
unfortunately few of them had ever handled a rifle. As
regards myself, I had learned to shoot rooks when a
boy in Shropshire, and now that I had obtained a gun
I was anxious to try my skill. When the League of Defenders
was started, and a local secretary came to us, we
all eagerly joined, each receiving, after he had taken his
oath and signed his name, a small silk Union Jack, the
badge of the League, not to be worn till the word went
forth to rise.</p>
<p>"Then came a period—long, dreary, shadeless days of
waiting—when the sun beat down upon us mercilessly
and our vigilance was required to be constant both night
and day. So uncertain were the movements of the
enemy opposite us that we scarcely dared to leave our
positions for a moment. Night after night I spent
sleeping in a neighbouring doorway, with an occasional
stretch upon somebody's bed in some house in the
vicinity. Now and then, whenever we saw Germans
moving in Wellington Street, we sent a volley into
them, in return receiving a sharp reply from their
pom-poms. Constantly our sentries were on the alert
along the wharves, and in the riverside warehouses,
watching for the approach of the enemy's spies in boats.
Almost nightly some adventurous spirits among the
Germans would try and cross. On one occasion, while
doing sentry duty in a warehouse backing on Commercial
Road, I was sitting with a comrade at a window overlooking
the river. The moon was shining, for the night was a
balmy and beautiful one, and all was quiet. It was about
two o'clock in the morning, and as we sat smoking our
pipes, with our eyes fixed upon the glittering water, we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</SPAN></span>
suddenly saw a small boat containing three men stealing
slowly along in the shadow.</p>
<p>"For a moment the rowers rested upon their oars, as
if undecided, then pulled forward again in search of a
landing-place. As they passed below our window I
shouted a challenge. At first there was no response.
Again I repeated it, when I heard a muttered imprecation
in German.</p>
<p>"'Spies!' I cried to my comrade, and with one accord
we raised our rifles and fired. Ere the echo of the first
shot had died away I saw one man fall into the water,
while at the next shot a second man half rose from his
seat, threw up his hands, and staggered back wounded.</p>
<p>"The firing gave the alarm at the barricade, and ere
the boat could approach the bridge, though the survivor
pulled for dear life, a Maxim spat forth its
red fire, and both boat and oarsman were literally
riddled.</p>
<p>"Almost every night similar incidents were reported.
The enemy were doing all in their power to learn the
exact strength of our defences, but I do not think their
efforts were very successful. The surface of the river,
every inch of it, was under the careful scrutiny of a
thousand watchful eyes.</p>
<p>"Each day the 'Bulletin' of our national association
brought us tidings of what was happening outside.</p>
<p>"At last, however, the welcome word came to us on
the morning of October 4, that at ten that night we were
to make a concerted attack upon the Germans. A scarlet
bill was thrust into my hand, and as soon as the report
was known we were all highly excited, and through the
day prepared ourselves for the struggle.</p>
<p>"A gun sounded from the direction of Westminster.
We looked at our watches, and found it was ten o'clock.
Our bugles sounded and we sprang to our positions, as we
had done dozens, nay, hundreds of times before. I
felt faint, for I had only had half a pint of weak soup
all day, for the bread did not go round. Nevertheless,
the knowledge that we were about to strike the blow
inspired me with fresh life and strength. Our officer
shouted a brief word of command, and next moment we
opened a withering fire upon the enemy's barricade in
Wellington Street.</p>
<p>"In a moment a hundred rifles and several Maxims
spat their red fire at us, but as usual the bullets flattened<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</SPAN></span>
themselves harmlessly before us. Then the battery of
artillery which Sir Francis Bamford had sent us three
days before got into position, and in a few moments began
hurling great shells upon the German defences.</p>
<p>"Behind us was a great armed multitude ready and
eager to get at the foe, a huge, unorganised body of
fierce, irate Londoners, determined upon having blood
for blood. From over the river the sound of battle was
rising, a great roaring like the sound of a distant sea,
with ever and anon the crackling of rifles and the boom
of guns, while above the night sky grew a dark blood-red
with the glare of a distant conflagration.</p>
<p>"For half an hour we pounded away at the barricade
in Wellington Street with our siege guns, Maxims, and
rifles, until a well-directed shell exploded beneath the
centre of the obstruction, blowing open a great gap and
sending fragments high into the air. Then it seemed
that all resistance suddenly ceased. At first we were
surprised at this; but on further scrutiny we found that
it was not our fire that had routed the enemy, but that
they were being attacked in their rear by hosts of armed
citizens surging down from Kingsway and the Strand.</p>
<p>"We could plainly discern that the Germans were
fighting for their lives. Into the midst of them we sent
one or two shells; but fearing to cause casualties among
our own comrades, we were compelled to cease firing.</p>
<p>"The armed crowd behind us, finding that we were
again inactive, at once demanded that our barricade
should be opened, so that they might cross the bridge
and assist their comrades by taking the Germans in the
rear. For ten minutes our officer in charge refused, for
the order of General Greatorex, Commander-in-Chief of
the League, was that no sortie was to be made at present.
However, the South Londoners became so infuriated
that our commander was absolutely forced to give way,
though he knew not into what trap we might fall, as
he had no idea of the strength of the enemy in the
neighbourhood of the Strand. A way was quickly
opened in the obstruction, and two minutes later we
were pouring across Waterloo Bridge in thousands,
shouting and yelling in triumph as we passed the ruins
of the enemy's barricade, and fell upon him with merciless
revenge. With us were many women, who were, perhaps,
fiercer and more unrelenting than the men. Indeed,
many a woman that night killed a German with her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</SPAN></span>
own hands, firing revolvers in their faces, striking with
knives, or even blinding them with vitriol.</p>
<p>"The scene was both exciting and ghastly. At the
spot where I first fought—on the pavement outside the
Savoy—we simply slaughtered the Germans in cold
blood. Men cried for mercy, but we gave them no
quarter. London had risen in its might, and as our
comrades fought all along the Strand and around Aldwych,
we gradually exterminated every man in German
uniform. Soon the roadways of the Strand, Wellington
Street, Aldwych, Burleigh Street, Southampton Street,
Bedford Street, and right along to Trafalgar Square, were
covered with dead and dying. The wounded of both
nationalities were trodden underfoot and killed by the
swaying, struggling thousands. The enemy's loss must
have been severe in our particular quarter, for of the
great body of men from Hamburg and Lübeck holding
their end of Waterloo Bridge I do not believe a single
one was spared, even though they fought for their lives
like veritable devils.</p>
<p>"Our success intoxicated us, I think. That we were
victorious at that point cannot be doubted, but with
foolish disregard for our own safety, we pressed forward
into Trafalgar Square, in the belief that our comrades
were similarly making an attack upon the enemy there.
The error was, alas! a fatal one for many of us. To fight
an organised force in narrow streets is one thing, but to
meet him in a large open space with many inlets, like
Trafalgar Square, is another.</p>
<p>"The enemy were no doubt awaiting us, for as we
poured out from the Strand at Charing Cross we were met
with a devastating fire from German Maxims on the
opposite side of the square. They were holding Whitehall—to
protect Von Kronhelm's headquarters—the
entrances to Spring Gardens, Cockspur Street, and Pall
Mall East, and their fire was converged upon the great
armed multitude which, being pressed on from behind,
came out into the open square only to fall in heaps beneath
the sweeping hail of German lead.</p>
<p>"The error was one that could not be rectified. We
all saw it when too late. There was no turning back
now, I struggled to get into the small side-street that
runs down by the bar of the Grand Hotel, but it was
blocked with people already in refuge there.</p>
<p>"Another instant and I was lifted from my legs by the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</SPAN></span>
great throng going to their doom, and carried right in the
forefront to the square. Women screamed when they
found themselves facing the enemy's fire.</p>
<p>"The scene was awful—a massacre, nothing more or
less. For every German's life we had taken, a dozen of
our own were now being sacrificed.</p>
<p>"A woman was pushed close to me, her grey hair
streaming down her back, her eyes starting wildly from
her head, her bony hands smeared with blood. Suddenly
she realised that right before her red fire was spitting
from the German guns.</p>
<p>"Screaming in despair, she clung frantically to me.</p>
<p>"I felt next second a sharp burning pain in my chest....
We fell forward together upon the bodies of our
comrades.... When I came to myself I found myself
here, in this church, close to where I fell."</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>On that same night desperate sorties were made from
the London, Southwark, and Blackfriars Bridges, and
terrible havoc was committed by the Defenders.</p>
<p>The German losses were enormous, for the South
Londoners fought like demons and gave no quarter.</p>
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