Ontario Community Newspapers

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 25 Jul 1890, p. 7

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F55 $51.8 IN JUNE. 1885. ,. Curious 51;}: of the Town In Waterloo ‘ Days. It is no easy task to reconstruct the pic- ture of Brussels on the eve of the “ glorions eighteenth.” The changes which have taken place since then are as numerous as they are sweeping; the contemporary journals seem to have dealt in everything except news, Summers. The house where the Duke lodged with the Mayor, ‘ Third Hussars, the First Battalion of the York Regiment, and the gallant Fifty- second, can still be pointed out. The honest Enghienois LOVED Tin; usuusn more than the Hanoverians and the Prus- sians. though there lives one very old man, and after the lapse of three-quarters of a the octogenarian Suisse of the church, who century very few eye-witnesses remain who saw an Lnglish soldier flogged for theft out- are still endowed with “ sound mind, meni- - side the town gate. my, and understanding.” liia word. the Brussels of 1590 has little or nothing in common with the Brussels of 1815. Ina vaulted chamber high up in the tower of the Hotel de Ville, M. Alphonse Wauters. the city architect, whose career began with the “forties,” unearthed for my edication a dusty tile of the Journal dc [a [Ir/yiqiic and the Oracle. It is evident from a cursory perusal of their contents that the Belgian world dur- ing that eventful Spring waggcd much as usual in spite of the din of war, the presence 0f foreign troops, and the preparations for the coming conflict. sympathizci's in Brussels, the CONFIDENCE 15 Ill“ DESTINY was widespread, and lie \vas generally sp')k~ en ofas‘ tlic l'liiipcror till Wellington returned "victorious, when he IIOU‘UIIC simple “ Bona- parte” or Something worse. It will be a surprise to many to learn that the great Duke contrived to combine business with pleasure during the time he was the guest of M. Van den Criiyce in the mansion now occupied by M_ Matthieu, the financier, iii the line l-loyale. On April 25' he gave a great dinner at the Hotel Bcllcviic, (where he afterward lodgcd,) having Admiral Sir Sidney Smith among his guests. It. was followed by a ball in the hall of the Grand Concert (or Concert Noble) iii the Rue liucalc. On May 15‘ hi: entertained ‘tlic l'riiiccs’ at a banquet in the imperial rooms at Lacken, and on May '28 he organ- ized 2:. second and more splendid fete in honor of Marshal Bluclicrat the Concert Noble. I'le visited l‘highien, Hbcut, (where he paid his respects to the courageous Duchessd’ Aiigoiilcinc,) and Ath ; he went with Bluclicr to 'l'irleiiiont and Graiiiniont ; lic patronized Catalani’s concerts twice at least ; lie was often present at the performances of the “Moiinaie" he sat for his bust to Ruxthicl ; he walked to dinner in the Allce Vertc, and he held frequent reviews on the plains of Montpluisir, now covered with bricks and mortar. The Journal of June 13 limits its military intelligence to the toast. proposed oy the Duke at (Ilicnt, “A l’hcroiiic dc France : a la delivraiice de la patric, et a la chute du tyran,” and an advertisement of “Elegant English horses, well worthy the attention of officers." Next day it tells its readers all about the paiiitcrs’ fctc at .-\iitwcrp and the Dutch Scientific Society at Huarlcm. On the 16th it makes no nicntioiiof the Duchess of Richmond’s ball, but reports that "Le Legs" was a success at the Grand Theatre, and that the l’arisians are singing : “Quund 1c priiitcmps scra passe. Quc dcviciidru la violcttc I" It is only on the 17th (when Wellington had won Qiiarti'c Bras and was marching back to Mont St. Jean) that Brussels was informed in print of the crossing of the froiiiiers~und the production of “Les Dcux l'igaros" at the Moniiaic. On Sunday, while the battle ragcd round Hougomoiit and La Hayc Saintc, Brussels learned that “'clliug ton had slept at llciiappc, but without the faintest mention of Quutrc Bras, although the Mayor ( Iarond’Hooglivorst) asks urgent- ly for beds and mattresses. Monday’s edi- tion (“Soilii=i.iiib1da" wusbciiig played at the Moniinic while Napoleon was flying toward the frontier !) omits Waterloo altogether, but announces the arrival of l)umoulin and Caiiibacercs as prisoners, and the ciiibaliii- ing of the Duke of Brunswick’s body. On the 'lllth the great triumph is proclaimed in three lines: the l'l'IIIJI' i:i.\'i:i.~n: or i;i-:i.i.s in honor of “the decisive victory" is duly i'ccordcd, and then comes, without any change of type oi‘othcr distinction, the coin- forting information that “Ilirscli, L‘orii Doctor, 15'.’ New S i'cct, formerly attached in that quality to her lloyul lliglincss Marie Clii‘htic, Hoveriicss of the Low Countries, is licensed to follow his art of curing coriis, nails, and cliilblaiiis without the least pain." “ Brussels now becomes one vast iiiiiriiiary. Fifteen hundred wounded Frenchmen are on- - camped on the Place dc la Monnaie, while the illiiiiiiiiatii‘nis for the (ifliu'rr (Iu'i'sii'i‘, 41-: [a lit/i]? -.-l.’/ianw are burning brightly, and the playgoers inside are roaring at the drollei‘ies of “ l.'.-\vocat l‘ulaliii." The Church of the Madeleine and the Sallie dcs Varictcs are alike full of the sick and dying : “ .Ioiics, Lieutenant L‘oloiicl," (the only English officer cxccpt “'cllingtoii cvei‘ mentioned .iii the Journal .') asks for the addresses of \voniide-l otiiccrs “tofacilitatc the researches of friends ;" tciit hospitals are crcctedout- sidc tfic Louvian and Naniur gates; for an -cntirc week the peasants are either burying the dead or bringing in the wounded and a great “ beiiciit" is orgiuizcdat tlic Moiinaiic. Then on June '24 came the latest news from l'.iris-â€"a salute of ll)“ guns has been tired to celebrate the victorv at Ligiiy ! 1n the suscccdiiig week We have “ Tc liciims" for the living and solemn masses for the dead. The wounded l'rince of Orange is able I) take cirriugc C\t‘l\‘l.~'t‘ : tlic L'oiiiiessc Cornet dc (irct. holds the plate " tor the wounded soldicis" at the. dnorof Ste. (iudulc: Dmitri, the. dentist. has changed his i'csi- dciicc ; a consignment of " excellent port winc and Ikirclay's brown smut, bottch in London." arrives : and c\:ictiy ten days after \\'.\tcrlno was \vun MM. l‘cnlcy «an ancestor possibly of " 'l'iic l’i'iVatc >cci‘câ€" tai'y ‘."i and doiics reopen the English season at the Park Theatre \vith “ 'l‘lic Clandestine Muri'irgc." " 'l'uiii Thumb." and " The dew and the lIoctor'" Ih-..'. .s' were so frequent during the months when followed \Vatcrlmi that all attempts at registration were aban- doncd : the supply of \Vnw. for coffins gave out, and a bill still exists for sacking used to bury the dead suldicis of the Scotch rc- gimeuts ciicniiilwd iii the fields now occupied by the hum-ruining s:.i:init. "he Duke of \\'clliug:nn‘s >l.t_\‘ in Brussels on .1 zinc 19 only last“: .\ 1. w ' started .it once for l'dl‘i -. (In scvcial sub- scqiunt ik‘c.‘\.~li\l‘..“ he i. \xsiud the swim 0! his c'wa'ningachicvciiicnt. and in Scptcudwr, 1331, he acted as guide to (George 1V. Engincn l.‘ >0 frequently mentioned in con. nectiun with the campaign of 1515 that 1 determined to 51': sciitething of the little town. which has apparentlv slumborml .Pt‘m‘t‘f‘ill)‘ through the past ’scvcntly-tive I \ \ ‘ r~ < I:H.:.‘:-, .l‘ 111‘ Napoleon hml man}- found silence which Joseph Lc Maitre still wears the gold ear-rings in vogue at the beginning of the century, and he has not yet finally resigned his ecclesiastical functions. He saw 0th \Vellington and Bluchcr in the streets of Bughieii, and often heard from the lips of his friend Patcriiots, the postilion who drove them to Urainiiiont, how the Marshal prod- ded him with his sword when he hesitated to go quickly down a steep slope. Le Maitre, then a boy of fourteen, laid himself down on the turf in the Due d’Ai-enlxerg’s park to heir the echoes of the cannon, but he says nothing impressed him so much as the pro- followed the last shot. He witnessed the departure of the troops for Braine-lc-Contc in the dead of night, and he used to play with the two soldiers billeted on his father. The survivors and c'inteiiiporaries of “'aterloo are more difficult to find in Belgium than in England. A solitary Belgian veteranâ€"J. Dcsmedt of Ghentâ€"answered to Gen. Van Merlcn’s roll call, but I have been fortunate cuougli to meet with several persons in Brussels, still well and hearty. who have cheerfully given me their reminiscences of that event- ful epoch. I have, however, failed to come across a single combatant, although many were alive ten years ago. M. Louis Spank was born in 180â€"1, and I found him busily engaged in his pleasant house on the Avenue des Arts, with sundry plans and projections for improving the coni- iniiiiicatioiis between the upper and lower sections of Brussels. He is unwilling even now to give up his work as an architect, and his only enemy is the asthma. In 1815 he lived with his father in the il'rui'ciibei'g, and when '1‘111-2 .si'x was izizsmi; on the morning of June 16 he saw the Duke of Brunswick and his suite (preceded by two of the Black Hussars with pistols in their hands) riding out to the battle of Quatrc- Bras. “Two of Picton's Scotch soldiers,” continued Mr. Spank, “were billctcd on us,’ as well as an officer named Jackson, whose servant Thomas used to let me ride on his charger. I remember Mr. Jackson return- ing here hurt and telling my father in bad French that it had “rained bullets,” as he showed him his horse’s nose pierced by a ball. I believe that our guest’s name was Basil, and that. he died only a very short time ago. I heard the guns firing from the old ramparts : I have never forgotten the endless procession of wounded, and I saw the brewers’ drays, laden with beer, rattl- ing over the stones of the cliaussee toward Waterloo. 011 the Sunday after the battle we drove out to the field where Hougomont was still smoking, and the country people were filling in the graves. I remember M. Sivcry, a professor of English in the Athence, one of my old friends, telling me a story about \Vatcrloo which you may care to hear. He helped, when a youth, to nurse a Scotch- inaii who was thought to be mortally wounded, during three months, but at last recovered and was furnished by M. Sivery with the means of returning to his home, whence he emigrated to America. Forty- two years after the professor was unexpect- edly summoned to the Hotel Bellevuc, and there saw a young man who placed in his hands a gold twenty-dollar piece, handsome- ly mounted in a case, He told him that it was the first money his father, (who had be- come a wealthy timber merchant and u Sena- tor for Massacliusctts,) had earned in Amer- ic-.i,a:id that he had commissioned his son while making the tour of I‘lurope, to seek out his foiiiier benefactorat Brussels and place it in his hands. Sivcry was himself a soldier, and wounded with a sabre at the battle ofGroes- beercii. The two men became inseparable friends. The memory of Mine. Z. Ippcrsicl, nee Lou iscFoullc, who was born with the century, is as clear as that of a woman of forty. Sit- ting in her bright salon overlooking the line Bclliard and thc trcc-lincd avenue, this dig- nified and still handsome lady talked to me for an hour over her reminiscences, which begin with the firing of the deafening salute - which greeted the arrival of the First Con- sul and Mme. Josephine. She was nearly ten when she faw the Emperor with Marie Louise (wearing the Brussels lace shawl just givcii lier) sitting at his side and driving to the gala performance at the Moniiaie. Then came the \\'aterloo days, when her father and mother went to the “'cllington fete at the Concert Noble, but they were not presâ€" ent at the Duchess of Richmond’s ball, which at the time was almost forgotten in the bus- tlc of the battle. The Foiilles lived in the Vicillc (‘our, now the Rue du Miisee, (where the l'liiglis‘h Club is at present situated.) and as her father was one of the city notables, Mlle. Louise was in the very centre of all that was going on. Her uncle. M. Alexandre l’oiithicurc dc Bcrlucrc, was an oilicer of the Seventh Bel- gian Battalion, commanded by ('01. Vandcii- saiidc, and his niece saw him depart for the war. Like everybody else. the Foulles went I to the ramparts T0 III"..\1‘.'I'IIl-‘.C.\N.\'UX on the Sunday afternoon after praying in the church. and as they crossed the l‘iace lioyalc one of their French friends riding p;le called out gayly, “1)eiiiaiii a Laekcii!” Shc knew Miiic. \Vcsciicr of ('liarleroi, and Joseph Parmentier, 13' absolutely untOuched ; the quarters of the "t l I '1 has heard her tell over and oxci‘ again the , story of her coming to Brussels on a common curt uiidcr covcr of the darkness of the night of the 15th to tell the Duke of \Vellingtoii. who was at the Duchess of Richmond's ball. that the French had crossed the fi‘ontierniid were advancing. Mlle. Foullc visited the hospitals of tlic Montaigne do la Cour. and :issiste'l in look- iiigaftera dozen wounded soldiers who found an asylum in her fathers linusc. 51n- saw the Duke of \\'e11iiigtoii frmplcntly. and says 1 be carried an umbrella emu when riding in civilian attire. Louis 1c Desire used to strut about the 1’;-.:'c with a gigantic cane, and the it‘lginli lil'lll“ 0i lliL- periml nilliiircil I-iillcll Ilighlaulcrs much more than the “ Ilzusk Brunswickcrs" or any other class of the de- 1i\'ox1gm_ Tim Harm Coiilhzr'iila! ruined the popularity of Napoleon. and caused endless misery in Iiruss‘e 5; no grade of societv was exempt fmm the doiniciliar' visits of the 1 I. H nip “.4: “rats” employed bv the fiscal authorities of i 1 y i i l 1 O (3 ‘1 l ‘ Stccrage $20. Apply to II. 1. .VllfltltAY. Gen- | shopping with her daughter. paid a Iouis for cause it was cheaper than cotton. Mlle. Marie Sacre is the daughter of Napo- leon's clockmaker. She lives with her younger brother, (a robust septuagenarian,) who has carried off countless prizes for the manufacture of mathematical instruments, and is the inventor of the balance used in half the mints of Europe. A eotiin clock made by M. Sacre pere toward the close 'of the last century ticks sonorously in the par~ see de “'avrc. where I talked to Mlle. Marie of the days when she used to accom- pany her father to Laeken. where she often saw the Emperor while the palace clocks were being wound up and adjusted. 1 a pound of sugar and purchased velvet be. ‘ lor behind his son's repositorv in the Chaus- ‘ “'hile living in the Rue de la Colleginle, on the French troops marching out to the Russian campaignâ€"Napoleon signed the de- claration of war in a room where one of M. Sacre's clocks graced the mantelpieceâ€"and she was seventeen when she watched the Duke of Brunswick and his officers, with their skull and cross-bone helmets, passing under the walls of Ste. Gudulc on their way to Quatre Bras. Four yeais previously Marie Louise had patted her on the head in the Laeken Gardens. saw the long convoy of wounded file by. One English I “' er, who was riding, had lost his arm and the stump was bandaged up in H Mlle. Sacrc helped to look after the wounded in the Petit Pare, canvas "like a ham. which, like the rest of Brussels, was turned into a hospital for at. least six weeks. Though in her iiiiity-tliird year, she is very proud of her brotliefis successes, and it is certainly a curious coincidence that. the son of the man who wound up Napoleon’s clocks at Laeken, and repaired his watch before he went to Moscow, should live to make com- passes for the Congo States, and gain the _'0ltl medal for Balances- rle precision. at the Paris Exhibition of 1878. It is now just seventy-five years since tllCSC'tllll‘lgS happen- ed, yet M. Spank, Mme. Ippersicl, and Mlle. Sicrc can speak of them as events of yester- day. Their personal remiiiisecnccs of those stirring tiiiu-s will, as far as the coming ‘IYaterloo’ day is concerned, have much greater interest than the ‘latest intolligencc’ of the forgotten Journal de Belg/{qua or the laconic sentences of its equally dull colleague tlic Oraw’z. The present has its claims as well as the past, and I must. leave the narra- tivcs of those who actually saw Duke Fred- erick “'illiaiii in his plumed head gear de< iart so bravely for his last battle-field, to go to Geiiappc, where, forty-eight hours hence, the obelisk destined to perpetuate his valor for all time is to be solemnly inaugurated on the seventy-fifth anniversary of his tragic death.” - _â€"«W‘ No man is so insignificant as to be sure his example can do no hurt.--[Lord Clareu~ don. Fancy brings us as many vain hopes as idle fears. .e- "'an 'xn4KI-1 ermuda Bottled? "You must go to Bermuda. If you do not I will not he responSi- g Me for the consequences." 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