<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV_II" id="CHAPTER_IV_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<h3>BOMBARDMENT OF LONDON.</h3>
<p>Day broke. The faint flush of violet away eastward
beyond Temple Bar gradually turned rose, heralding
the sun's coming, and by degrees the streets, filled by<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</SPAN></span>
excited Londoners, grew lighter with the dawn. Fevered
night thus gave place to day—a day that was, alas!
destined to be one of bitter memory for the British
Empire.</p>
<p>Alarming news had spread that Uhlans had been seen
reconnoitring in Snaresbrook and Wanstead, had ridden
along Forest Road and Ferry Lane at Walthamstow,
through Tottenham High Cross, up High Street, Hornsey,
Priory Road, and Muswell Hill. The Germans were
actually upon London!</p>
<p>The northern suburbs were staggered. In Fortis
Green, North End, Highgate, Crouch End, Hampstead,
Stamford Hill, and Leyton the quiet suburban houses
were threatened, and many people, in fear of their lives,
had now fled southward into central London. Thus the
huge population of greater London was practically huddled
together in the comparatively small area from Kensington
to Fleet Street, and from Oxford Street to the Thames
Embankment.</p>
<p>People of Fulham, Putney, Walham Green, Hammersmith,
and Kew had, for the most part, fled away to the
open country across Hounslow Heath to Bedfont and
Staines; while Tooting, Balham, Dulwich, Streatham, Norwood,
and Catford had retreated farther south into Surrey
and Kent.</p>
<p>For the past three days thousands of willing helpers
had followed the example of Sheffield and Birmingham,
and constructed enormous barricades, obstructing at
various points the chief roads leading from the north
and east into London. Detachments of Engineers had
blown up several of the bridges carrying the main
roads out eastwards—for instance, the bridge at the end
of Commercial Road, East, crossing the Limehouse
Canal, while the six other smaller bridges spanning the
canal between that point and the Bow Road were also
destroyed. The bridge at the end of Bow Road itself was
shattered, and those over the Hackney Cut at Marshall
Hill and Hackney Wick were also rendered impassable.</p>
<p>Most of the bridges across the Regent's Canal were also
destroyed, notably those in Mare Street, Hackney, the
Kingsland Road, and New North Road, while a similar
demolition took place in Edgware Road and the Harrow
Road. Londoners were frantic, now that the enemy were
really upon them. The accounts of the battles in the
newspapers had, of course, been merely fragmentary, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</SPAN></span>
they had not yet realised what war actually meant.
They knew that all business was at a standstill, that
the City was in an uproar, that there was no work, and
that food was at famine prices. But not until German
cavalry were actually seen scouring the northern
suburbs did it become impressed upon them that they
were really helpless and defenceless.</p>
<p>London was to be besieged!</p>
<p>This report having got about, the people began building
barricades in many of the principal thoroughfares
north of the Thames. One huge obstruction, built mostly
of paving stones from the footways, overturned tramcars,
waggons, railway trollies, and barbed wire, rose in the
Holloway Road, just beyond Highbury Station. Another
blocked the Caledonian Road a few yards north of the
police-station, while another very large and strong pile
of miscellaneous goods, bales of wool and cotton stuffs,
building material, and stones brought from the Great
Northern Railway depôt, obstructed the Camden Road
at the south corner of Hilldrop Crescent. Across High
Street, Camden Town, at the junction of the Kentish
Town and other roads, five hundred men worked with
a will, piling together every kind of ponderous object
they could pillage from the neighbouring shops—pianos,
iron bedsteads, wardrobes, pieces of calico and flannel,
dress stuffs, rolls of carpets, floorboards, even the very
doors wrenched from their hinges—until, when it reached
to the second storey window and was considered of sufficient
height, a pole was planted on top, and from it
hung limply a small Union Jack.</p>
<p>The Finchley Road, opposite Swiss Cottage Station; in
Shoot Up-hill, where Mill Lane runs into it; across
Willesden Lane where it joins the High Road in Kilburn;
the Harrow Road close to Willesden Junction Station;
at the junction of the Goldhawk and Uxbridge roads;
across the Hammersmith Road in front of the Hospital,
other similar obstructions were placed with a view to
preventing the enemy from entering London. At a hundred
other points, in the narrower and more obscure thoroughfares,
all along the north of London, busy workers were
constructing similar defences, houses and shops being
ruthlessly broken open and cleared of their contents by
the frantic and terrified populace.</p>
<p>London was in a ferment. Almost without exception
the gunmakers' shops had been pillaged, and every rifle,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</SPAN></span>
sporting gun, and revolver seized. The armouries at the
Tower of London, at the various barracks, and the factory
out at Enfield had long ago all been cleared of their
contents; for now, in this last stand, every one was desperate,
and all who could obtain a gun did so. Many,
however, had guns but no ammunition; others had
sporting ammunition for service rifles, and others cartridges,
but no gun.</p>
<p>Those, however, who had guns and ammunition complete
mounted guard at the barricades, being assisted at
some points by Volunteers who had been driven in from
Essex. Upon more than one barricade in North London
a Maxim had been mounted, and was now pointed, ready
to sweep away the enemy should they advance.</p>
<p>Other thoroughfares barricaded, beside those mentioned,
were the Stroud Green Road, where it joins
Hanley Road; the railway bridge in the Oakfield Road
in the same neighbourhood; the Wightman Road, opposite
Harringay Station, the junction of Archway
Road and Highgate Hill; the High Road, Tottenham,
at its junction with West Green Road,
and various roads around the New River reservoirs,
which were believed to be one of the objectives
of the enemy. These latter were very strongly held by
thousands of brave and patriotic citizens, though the
East London reservoirs across at Walthamstow could
not be defended, situated so openly as they were. The
people of Leytonstone threw up a barricade opposite
the schools in the High Road, while in Wanstead a
hastily-constructed, but perfectly useless, obstruction
was piled across Cambridge Park, where it joins the Blake
Road.</p>
<p>Of course, all the women and children in the northern
suburbs had now been sent south. Half the houses in
those quiet, newly-built roads were locked up, and their
owners gone; for as soon as the report spread of the
result of the final battle before London, and our crushing
defeat, people living in Highgate, Hampstead, Crouch
End, Hornsey, Tottenham, Finsbury Park, Muswell Hill,
Hendon, and Hampstead saw that they must fly southward,
now the Germans were upon them.</p>
<p>Think what it meant to those suburban families of
City men! The ruthless destruction of their pretty,
long-cherished homes, flight into the turbulent, noisy,
distracted, hungry city, and the loss of everything they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</SPAN></span>
possessed. In most cases the husband was already
bearing his part in the defence of the Metropolis with
gun or with spade, or helping to move heavy masses of
material for the construction of the barricades. The
wife, however, was compelled to take a last look at all
those possessions that she had so fondly called "home,"
lock her front door, and, with her children, join in those
long mournful processions moving ever southward into
London, tramping on and on—whither she knew not
where.</p>
<p>Touching sights were to be seen everywhere in the
streets that day.</p>
<p>Homeless women, many of them with two or three little
ones, were wandering through the less frequented streets,
avoiding the main roads with all their crush, excitement,
and barricade-building, but making their way westward,
beyond Kensington and Hammersmith, which was now
become the outlet of the Metropolis.</p>
<p>All trains from Charing Cross, Waterloo, London
Bridge, Victoria, and Paddington had for the past three
days been crowded to excess. Anxious fathers struggled
fiercely to obtain places for their wives, mothers, and
daughters—sending them away anywhere out of the city
which must in a few hours be crushed beneath the iron
heel.</p>
<p>The South Western and Great Western systems carried
thousands upon thousands of the wealthier away to
Devonshire and Cornwall—as far as possible from the
theatre of war; the South Eastern and Chatham took
people into the already crowded Kentish towns and villages,
and the Brighton line carried others into rural
Sussex. London overflowed southward and westward
until every village and every town within fifty miles
was so full that beds were at a premium, and in various
places, notably at Chartham, near Canterbury, at Willesborough,
near Ashford, at Lewes, at Robertsbridge, at
Goodwood Park, and at Horsham, huge camps were
formed, shelter being afforded by poles and rick cloths.
Every house, every barn, every school, indeed every
place where people could obtain shelter for the night,
was crowded to excess, mostly by women and children
sent south, away from the horrors that it was known
must come.</p>
<p>Central London grew more turbulent with each hour
that passed. There were all sorts of wild rumours, but,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</SPAN></span>
fortunately, the Press still preserved a dignified calm.
The Cabinet were holding a meeting at Bristol, whither
the Houses of Commons and Lords had moved, and all
depended upon its issue. It was said that Ministers
were divided in their opinions whether we should sue
for an ignominious peace, or whether the conflict should
be continued to the bitter end.</p>
<p>Disaster had followed disaster, and iron-throated
orators in Hyde and St. James's Parks were now shouting
"Stop the war! Stop the war!" The cry was taken up
but faintly, however, for the blood of Londoners, slow to
rise, had now been stirred by seeing their country slowly
yet completely crushed by Germany. All the patriotism
latent within them was now displayed. The national
flag was shown everywhere, and at every point one heard
"God save the King" sung lustily.</p>
<p>Two gunmakers' shops in the Strand, which had
hitherto escaped notice, were shortly after noon broken
open, and every available arm and all the ammunition
seized. One man, unable to obtain a revolver, snatched
half a dozen pairs of steel handcuffs, and cried with
grim humour as he held them up: "If I can't shoot any
of the sausage-eaters, I can at least bag a prisoner or
two!"</p>
<p>The banks, the great jewellers, the diamond merchants,
the safe-deposit offices, and all who had valuables
in their keeping, were extremely anxious as to what
might happen. Below those dark buildings in Lothbury
and Lombard Street, behind the black walls of the Bank
of England, and below every branch bank all over London,
were millions in gold and notes, the wealth of the
greatest city the world has ever known. The strong
rooms were, for the most part, the strongest that modern
engineering could devise, some with various arrangements
by which all access was debarred by an inrush of water,
but, alas! dynamite is a great leveller, and it was
felt that not a single strong room in the whole of
London could withstand an organised attack by German
engineers.</p>
<p>A single charge of dynamite would certainly make a
breach in concrete upon which a thief might hammer
and chip day and night for a month without making
much impression. Steel doors must give to blasting
force, while the strongest and most complicated locks
would also fly to pieces.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The directors of most of the banks had met and an
endeavour had been made to co-operate and form a corps
of special guards for the principal offices. In fact, a
small armed corps was formed, and were on duty day
and night in Lothbury, Lombard Street, and the vicinity.
Yet what could they do if the Germans swept into
London? There was but little to fear from the excited
populace themselves, because matters had assumed such
a crisis that money was of little use, as there was practically
very little to buy. But little food was reaching
London from the open ports on the west. It was the
enemy that the banks feared, for they knew that the
Germans intended to enter and sack the Metropolis, just
as they had sacked the other towns that had refused to
pay the indemnity demanded.</p>
<p>Small jewellers had, days ago, removed their stock
from their windows and carried it away in unsuspicious-looking
bags to safe hiding in the southern and western
suburbs, where people for the most part hid their valuable
plate, jewellery, etc., beneath a floor-board, or
buried them in some marked spot in their small gardens.</p>
<p>The hospitals were already full of wounded from the
various engagements of the past week. The London, St.
Thomas', Charing Cross, St. George's, Guy's, and Bartholomew's
were overflowing; and the surgeons, with
patriotic self-denial, were working day and night in an
endeavour to cope with the ever-arriving crowd of suffering
humanity. The field hospitals away to the northward
were also reported full.</p>
<p>The exact whereabouts of the enemy was not known.
They were, it seemed, everywhere. They had practically
over-run the whole country, and the reports from the
Midlands and the North showed that the majority of
the principal towns had now been occupied.</p>
<p>The latest reverses outside London, full and graphic
details of which were now being published hourly by
the papers, had created an immense sensation. Everywhere
people were regretting that Lord Roberts' solemn
warnings in 1906 had been unheeded, for had we adopted
his scheme for universal service such dire catastrophe
could never have occurred. Many had, alas! declared it
to be synonymous with conscription, which it certainly
was not, and by that foolish argument had prevented
the public at large from accepting it as the only means
for our salvation as a nation. The repeated warnings<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</SPAN></span>
had been disregarded, and we had, unhappily, lived in a
fool's paradise, in the self-satisfied belief that England
could not be successfully invaded.</p>
<p>Now, alas! the country had realised the truth when
too late.</p>
<p>That memorable day, September 20, witnessed exasperated
struggles in the northern suburbs of London,
passionate and bloody collisions, an infantry fire of the
defenders overwhelming every attempted assault; and a
decisive action of the artillery, with regard to which
arm the superiority of the Germans, due to their perfect
training, was apparent.</p>
<p>A last desperate stand had, it appears, been made
by the defenders on the high ridge north-west of New
Barnet, from Southgate to near Potter's Bar, where a
terrible fight had taken place. But from the very first
it was utterly hopeless. The British had fought valiantly
in defence of London, but here again they were outnumbered,
and after one of the most desperate conflicts
in the whole campaign—in which our losses were terrible—the
Germans at length had succeeded in entering
Chipping Barnet. It was a difficult movement, and a
fierce contest, rendered the more terrible by the burning
houses, ensued in the streets and away across the low
hills southward—a struggle full of vicissitudes and alternating
successes, until at last the fire of the defenders
was silenced, and hundreds of prisoners fell into the
German hands.</p>
<p>Thus the last organised defence of London had been
broken, and the barricades alone remained.</p>
<p>The work of the German troops on the lines of communication
in Essex had for the past week been fraught
with danger. Through want of cavalry the British had
been unable to make cavalry raids; but, on the other
hand, the difficulty was enhanced by the bands of
sharpshooters—men of all classes from London who
possessed a gun and who could shoot. In one or two of
the London clubs the suggestion had first been mooted
a couple of days after the outbreak of hostilities, and
it had been quickly taken up by men who were in the
habit of shooting game, but had not had a military training.</p>
<p>Within three days about two thousand men had formed
themselves into bands to take part in the struggle and
assist in the defence of London. They were practically
similar to the Francs-tireurs of the Franco-German War,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</SPAN></span>
for they went forth in companies and waged a guerilla
warfare, partly before the front and at the flanks of the
different armies, and partly at the communications at
the rear of the Germans. Their position was one of constant
peril in face of Von Kronhelm's proclamation, yet
the work they did was excellent, and only proved that
if Lord Roberts' scheme for universal training had been
adopted the enemy would never have reached the gates of
London with success.</p>
<p>These brave adventurous spirits, together with "The
Legion of Frontiersmen," made their attacks by surprise
from hiding-places or from ambushes. Their adventures
were constantly thrilling ones. Scattered all over the
theatre of war in Essex and Suffolk, and all along the
German lines of communication, the "Frontiersmen"
rarely ventured on an open conflict, and frequently
changed scene and point of attack. Within one week
their numbers rose to over 8,000, and, being well served
by the villagers, who acted as scouts and spies for them,
the Germans found them very difficult to get at.
Usually they kept their arms concealed in thickets and
woods, where they would lie in wait for the Germans.
They never came to close quarters, but fired at a distance.
Many a smart Uhlan fell by their bullets, and many a
sentry dropped, shot by an unknown hand.</p>
<p>Thus they harassed the enemy everywhere. At need
they concealed their arms and assumed the appearance
of inoffensive non-combatants. But when caught red-handed
the Germans gave them "short shrift," as the
bodies now swinging from telegraph poles on various
high-roads in Essex testified.</p>
<p>In an attempt to put a stop to the daring actions of
the "Frontiersmen," the German authorities and troops
along the lines of communication punished the parishes
where German soldiers were shot, or where the destruction
of railways and telegraphs had occurred, by levying
money contributions, or by burning the villages.</p>
<p>The guerilla war was especially fierce along from
Edgware up to Hertford, and from Chelmsford down to
the Thames. In fact, once commenced, it never
ceased. Attacks were always being made upon small
patrols, travelling detachments, mails of the field post-office,
posts or patrols at stations on the lines of communication,
while field-telegraphs, telephones, and railways
were everywhere destroyed.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>In consequence of the railway being cut at Pitsea,
the villages of Pitsea, Bowers Gifford, and Vange had
been burned. Because a German patrol had been
attacked and destroyed near Orsett, the parish was compelled
to pay a heavy indemnity. Upminster, near Romford,
Theydon Bois, and Fyfield, near High Ongar, had
all been burned by the Germans for the same reason;
while at the Cherrytree Inn, near Rainham, five
"Frontiersmen" being discovered by Uhlans in a hayloft
asleep, were locked in and there burned alive.
Dozens were, of course, shot at sight, and dozens more
hanged without trial. But they were not to be deterred.
They were fighting in defence of London, and around
the northern suburbs the patriotic members of the
"Legion" were specially active, though they never
showed themselves in large bands.</p>
<p>Within London every man who could shoot game was
now anxious to join in the fray, and on the day that the
news of the last disaster reached the Metropolis, hundreds
left for the open country out beyond Hendon.</p>
<p>The enemy having broken down the defence at Enfield
and cleared the defenders out of the fortified houses, had
advanced and occupied the northern ridges of London
in a line stretching roughly from Pole Hill, a little to
the north of Chingford, across Upper Edmonton, through
Tottenham, Hornsey, Highgate, Hampstead, and Willesden,
to Twyford Abbey. All the positions had been well
reconnoitred, for at grey of dawn the rumbling of artillery
had been heard in the streets of those places already
mentioned, and soon after sunrise strong batteries were
established upon all the available points commanding
London.</p>
<p>These were at Chingford Green, on the left-hand side
of the road opposite the inn at Chingford; on Devonshire
Hill, Tottenham; on the hill at Wood Green; in
the grounds of the Alexandra Palace; on the high ground
about Churchyard Bottom Wood; on the edge of Bishop's
Wood, Highgate; on Parliament Hill, at a spot close to
the Oaks on the Hendon road; at Dollis Hill, and at a
point a little north of Wormwood Scrubs, and at Neasden,
near the railway works.</p>
<p>The enemy's chief object was to establish their artillery
as near London as possible, for it was known that
the range of their guns even from Hampstead—the
highest point, 441 feet above London—would not reach<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</SPAN></span>
into the actual city itself. Meanwhile, at dawn, the German
cavalry, infantry, motor-infantry, and armoured
motor-cars—the latter mostly 35-40 h.p. Opel-Darracqs,
with three quick-firing guns mounted in each, and
bearing the Imperial German arms in black—advanced
up the various roads leading into London from the north,
being met, of course, with a desperate resistance at the
barricades.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/i173-hi.png"><ANTIMG src="images/i173.png" width-obs="462" height-obs="400" alt="THE BOMBARDMENT and DEFENCES of LONDON on Sept. 20th & 21st" title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption">THE BOMBARDMENT and DEFENCES of<br/> LONDON<br/>
on Sept. 20th & 21st</span></div>
<p>On Haverstock Hill, the three Maxims, mounted upon
the huge construction across the road, played havoc with
the Germans, who were at once compelled to fall back,
leaving piles of dead and dying in the roadway, for the
terrible hail of lead poured out upon the invaders could
not be withstood. Two of the German armoured motor-cars
were presently brought into action by the Germans,
who replied with a rapid fire, this being continued for a
full quarter of an hour without result on either side.
Then the Germans, finding the defence too strong, again
retired into Hampstead, amid the ringing cheers of the
valiant men holding that gate of London. The losses
of the enemy had been serious, for the whole roadway<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</SPAN></span>
was now strewn with dead; while behind the huge wall
of paving-stones, overturned carts, and furniture, only
two men had been killed and one wounded.</p>
<p>Across in the Finchley Road a struggle equally as
fierce was in progress; but a detachment of the enemy,
evidently led by some German who had knowledge of
the intricate side-roads, suddenly appeared in the rear
of the barricade, and a fierce and bloody hand-to-hand
conflict ensued. The defenders, however, stood their
ground, and with the aid of some petrol bombs which
they held in readiness, they destroyed the venturesome
detachment almost to a man, though a number of houses
in the vicinity were set on fire, causing a huge conflagration.</p>
<p>In Highgate Road the attack was a desperate one, the
enraged Londoners fighting valiantly, the men with arms
being assisted by the populace themselves. Here again
deadly petrol bombs had been distributed, and men and
women hurled them against the Germans. Petrol was
actually poured from windows upon the heads of the
enemy, and tow soaked in paraffin and lit flung in
among them, when in an instant whole areas of the
streets were ablaze, and the soldiers of the Fatherland
perished in the roaring flames.</p>
<p>Every device to drive back the invader was tried.
Though thousands upon thousands had left the northern
suburbs, many thousands still remained bent on defending
their homes as long as they had breath. The
crackle of rifles was incessant, and ever and anon the
dull roar of a heavy field gun and the sharp rattle of a
Maxim mingled with the cheers, yells, and shrieks of
victors and vanquished.</p>
<p>The scene on every side was awful. Men were fighting
for their lives in desperation.</p>
<p>Around the barricade in Holloway Road the street
ran with blood; while in Kingsland, in Clapton, in West
Ham, and Canning Town the enemy were making an
equally desperate attack, and were being repulsed everywhere.
London's enraged millions, the Germans were
well aware, constituted a grave danger. Any detachments
who carried a barricade by assault—as, for instance,
they did one in the Hornsey Road near the station—were
quickly set upon by the angry mob and simply
wiped out of existence.</p>
<p>Until nearly noon desperate conflicts at the barricades<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</SPAN></span>
continued. The defence was even more effectual than
was expected; yet, had it not been that Von Kronhelm,
the German generalissimo, had given orders that the
troops were not to attempt to advance into London before
the populace were cowed, there was no doubt that
each barricade could have been taken in the rear by
companies avoiding the main roads and proceeding by
the side streets.</p>
<p>Just before noon, however, it was apparent to Von
Kronhelm that to storm the barricades would entail
enormous losses, so strong were they. The men holding
them had now been reinforced in many cases by regular
troops, who had come in in flight, and a good
many guns were now manned by artillerymen.</p>
<p>Von Kronhelm had established his headquarters at
Jack Straw's Castle, from which he could survey the
giant city through his field-glasses. Below lay the great
plain of roofs, spires, and domes, stretching away into the
grey mystic distance, where afar rose the twin towers
and double arches of the Crystal Palace roof.</p>
<p>London—the great London—the capital of the world—lay
at his mercy at his feet.</p>
<p>The tall, thin-faced General, with the grizzled moustache
and the glittering cross at his throat, standing
apart from his staff, gazed away in silence and in
thought. It was his first sight of London, and its gigantic
proportions amazed even him. Again he swept the
horizon with his glass, and knit his grey brows. He
remembered the parting words of his Emperor as he
backed out of that plainly-furnished little private cabinet
at Potsdam—</p>
<p>"You must bombard London and sack it. The
pride of those English must be broken at all costs. Go,
Kronhelm—go—and may the best of fortune go with
you!"</p>
<p>The sun was at the noon causing the glass roof of the
distant Crystal Palace to gleam. Far down in the grey
haze stood Big Ben, the Campanile, and a thousand
church spires, all tiny and, from that distance, insignificant.
From where he stood the sound of crackling
fire at the barricades reached him, and a little behind
him a member of his staff was kneeling on the grass with
his ear bent to the field telephone. Reports were coming
in fast of the desperate resistance in the streets, and
these were duly handed to him.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He glanced at them, gave a final look at the outstretched
city that was the metropolis of the world, and
then gave rapid orders for the withdrawal of the troops
from the assault of the barricades, and the bombardment
of London.</p>
<p>In a moment the field-telegraphs were clicking, the
telephone bell was ringing, orders were shouted in
German in all directions, and next second, with a deafening
roar, one of the howitzers of the battery in the close
vicinity to him gave tongue and threw its deadly shell
somewhere into St. John's Wood.</p>
<p>The rain of death had opened! London was surrounded
by a semi-circle of fire.</p>
<p>The great gun was followed by a hundred others as,
at all the batteries along the northern heights, the
orders were received. Then in a few minutes, from the
whole line from Chingford to Willesden, roughly about
twelve miles, came a hail of the most deadly of modern
projectiles directed upon the most populous parts of the
metropolis.</p>
<p>Though the Germans trained their guns to carry as far
as was possible, the zone of fire did not at first it seemed
extend farther south than a line roughly taken from
Notting Hill through Bayswater, past Paddington Station,
along the Marylebone and Euston Roads, then up to
Highbury, Stoke Newington, Stamford Hill and Walthamstow.</p>
<p>When, however, the great shells began to burst in
Holloway, Kentish Town, Camden Town, Kilburn,
Kensal Green, and other places lying within the area
under fire, a frightful panic ensued. Whole streets were
shattered by explosions, and fires were breaking out, the
dark clouds of smoke obscuring the sunlit sky. Roaring
flame shot up everywhere, unfortunate men, women, and
children were being blown to atoms by the awful projectiles,
while others distracted, sought shelter in any
cellar or underground place they could find, while their
houses fell about them like packs of cards.</p>
<p>The scenes within that zone of terror were indescribable.</p>
<p>When Paris had been bombarded years ago, artillery
was not at the perfection it now was, and there had
been no such high explosive known as in the present
day. The great shells that were falling everywhere, on
bursting filled the air with poisonous fumes, as well as
with deadly fragments. One bursting in a street would<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</SPAN></span>
wreck the rows of houses on either side, and tear a great
hole in the ground at the same moment. The fronts of
the houses were torn out like paper, the iron railings
twisted as though they were wire, and paving-stones
hurled into the air like straws.</p>
<p>Anything and everything offering a mark to the
enemy's guns was shattered. St. John's Wood and the
houses about Regent's Park suffered seriously. A shell
from Hampstead, falling into the roof of one of the houses
near the centre of Sussex Place, burst and shattered
nearly all the houses in the row; while another fell in
Cumberland Terrace and wrecked a dozen houses in the
vicinity. In both cases the houses were mostly empty,
for owners and servants had fled southward across the
river as soon as it became apparent that the Germans
actually intended to bombard.</p>
<p>At many parts in Maida Vale shells burst with
appalling effect. Several of the houses in Elgin Avenue
had their fronts torn out, and in one, a block of flats,
there was considerable loss of life in the fire that broke
out, escape being cut off owing to the stairs having been
demolished by the explosion. Abbey Road, St. John's
Wood Road, Acacia Road, and Wellington Road, were
quickly wrecked.</p>
<p>In Chalk Farm Road, near the Adelaide, a terrified
woman was dashing across the street to seek shelter
with a neighbour, when a shell burst right in front of
her, blowing her to fragments; while in the early stage
of the bombardment a shell bursting in the Midland
Hotel at St. Pancras caused a fire which in half an
hour resulted in the whole hotel and railway terminus
being a veritable furnace of flame. Through the roof of
King's Cross Station several shells fell, and burst close
to the departure platform. The whole glass roof was
shattered, but beyond that little other material damage
resulted.</p>
<p>Shots were now falling everywhere, and Londoners
were staggered. In dense, excited crowds they were
flying southwards towards the Thames. Some were caught
in the streets in their flight, and were flung down,
maimed and dying. The most awful sights were to be
witnessed in the open streets; men and women blown
out of recognition, with their clothes singed and torn
to shreds, and helpless, innocent children lying white
and dead, their limbs torn away and missing.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Euston Station had shared the same fate as St. Pancras,
and was blazing furiously, sending up a great
column of black smoke that could be seen by all London.
So many were the conflagrations now breaking out that
it seemed as though the enemy were sending into London
shells filled with petrol, in order to set the streets
aflame. This, indeed, was proved by an eye-witness,
who saw a shell fall in Liverpool Road, close to the
Angel. It burst with a bright red flash, and next second
the whole of the roadway and neighbouring houses were
blazing furiously.</p>
<p>Thus the air became black with smoke and dust, and
the light of day obscured in Northern London. And
through that obscurity came those whizzing shells in
an incessant hissing stream, each one, bursting in these
narrow, thickly populated streets, causing havoc indescribable,
and a loss of life impossible to accurately calculate.
Hundreds of people were blown to pieces in the
open but hundreds more were buried beneath the <i>débris</i>
of their own cherished homes, now being so ruthlessly
destroyed and demolished.</p>
<p>On every side was heard the cry: "Stop the war—stop
the war!"</p>
<p>But it was, alas! too late—too late.</p>
<p>Never in the history of the civilised world were there
such scenes of reckless slaughter of the innocent and
peace-loving as on that never-to-be-forgotten day when
Von Kronhelm carried out the orders of his Imperial
master, and struck terror into the heart of London's
millions.</p>
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