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CHAPTER VII.
THE PEOPLE. BOSTON as
a city is
slow to anger, slow to hate, and slow to fear. It has become
proverbial, that
her people “always stop to think.” Their faith in each other, which is
a
characteristic of nobility next to faith in God, has also become a
proverb for
the people of the West. Whether it be literally true, as Pres. Woolsey
once
said, that “the inhabitants trust their all to the law and the
fire-department,
without a thought of danger to disturb their social parties or their
sweet
repose,” we cannot say: at all events, it so appears to the mere
observer. When
the alarm was sounded on that fatal Saturday night, there were
thousands within
sound of the bells who were to be losers, and yet who could scarcely
remember
afterwards that they heard the bells at all. There was heard the
clatter of
hastening feet on the sidewalks; for it was early in the evening, and
there
always follows a crowd of boys in the wake of the steam fire-engines:
but the
great thinking, losing masses gave the bells no thought, sipped their
tea, and
read their evening paper, with that sense of security which none feel
but those
whose faith in the integrity and heroism of humanity is strong and
unshaken. Even then,
when the
whistle of scores of engines and the shouts of firemen made the city
echo with
continual alarms, and when the rattle of horses’ hoofs and the clatter
of many
feet announced the hurried arrival of engines from Cambridge,
Charlestown,
Lynn, Dedham, Brookline, Providence, Worcester, Somerville, Salem,
Chelsea, and
other kind-hearted cities, the steady-going merchants of Boston
hesitated.
Could it be possible that the fire would spread farther? But when the
fire had
consumed the buildings and the great stocks of merchandise of many who
were not
present to care for their own, or who had hesitated too long, then
began the
awakening to danger. It was long, too long, but fully in accord with
conservative Boston, before the fear came which moved to action; but.
when it
was felt, the streets everywhere suddenly burst into noisy life. The
telegraph
called in the suburbans; messengers with pallid faces rushed from
street to
street, carrying the tidings that “Boston was all in flames.” Then came
the
rushing of multitudes, the rattle of heavy vehicles, and, alas! the
array of
thieves, hurrying with reckless speed toward the mountain of solid
flame. Rumors of
losses,
of dreadful deaths, and ghastly wounds, added to the excitement; and
thousands
of faces which even the glare could not flush gazed upon the volcano,
or
hurried past to save what they could from the almost sure destruction.
Then
came the bundles, bales, boxes, that blocked the sidewalks, and arose
in huge
heaps in the open streets; thousands hurrying toward the Common or some
distant
street, loaded with dry-goods, fancy goods, crockery, jewelry, money,
furniture, clothing, and some of every conceivable kind of wares,
jamming,
jostling, crowding, cursing, — more like denizens of some pandemonium
than men
of blood and brains. Some with worthless empty boxes whirled recklessly
through
the crowd, leaving behind, in their insanity, money, and stocks of
inestimable
value. Others carried valuable pieces of delicate fabrics for long
distances,
and then hastily tossed them down upon the sidewalk, or left them
unbroken in
the mud. Terror-stricken people, when once their confidence in the
fire-department was lost, knew nothing, it would appear, so reckless or
foolish, that they would not do it. Families, miles from the fire,
packed up
their all, and moved into the streets; while one lady on Tremont Street
threw
her best apparel into the well on the suggestion of a negro servant.
The towns
and cities poured their inhabitants into Boston from every road and
path; for
the light of the fire shone brightly on the trees and hills fifty miles
away. The wind —
which
rose and played with the streams and sparks, and now and then, with
apparent
delight, dashed into the crater with roaring whirlwinds, and carried up
to the
heavens blazing clouds, and huge ribbons of wildfire — wafted upwards,
in some
of the gusts, pieces of merchandise, account-books, and checks signed
and
unsigned, in pyrotechnic flashes, and sent them away, partially
consumed on the
upper currents, to notify the anxious losers in towns twenty miles away
that
their counting-rooms and stores had been invaded. Then it
was that
the hearts of all were filled with fear, and dismay was seen in every
countenance. Fire was consuming, water destroying, thieves robbing, and
no hope
of a cessation. Men became desperate. City Hall was besieged for the
mayor; but
as, in time of fire, the chief engineer has supreme command, the tide
of human
beings turned down Washington, Milk, and Water Streets, in search of
Mr.
Damrell. When these bands found the overburdened chieftain, they
advised,
threatened, gesticulated, and yelled, demanding a thousand impossible
things. But one
call was
heeded, and that was for powder and soldiers. They who so imperatively
demanded
guards were themselves a standing proof of the necessity for them. Then
came
the powder to mine and to shatter, and the soldiers to assist the
police in
regulating and protecting; but though powder scattered, engines roared,
and the
streets were packed with brave, disciplined firemen, the devastation
went on. The
numbers and
excitement increased with every hour. The noise of wheels, the yells of
the
truckmen, the cursing of hackmen, the deep murmuring of the . ocean of
human
life as it surged through the streets, were such as to impress the
hearer with
an undefined sense of terror, — feeling frightened, and yet hardly
knowing of
what. The great city flashed into gaslight as by a single stroke; and
windows
were illuminated, and doors left wide open, which years of nightly
darkness had
never seen by gaslight before. Every garret was lit up, every hall-lamp
in blaze,
every cellar lighted; while up and down, in and around, with wild haste
darted
the shadowy forms of men and women, gathering together their most
costly pieces
of furniture and clothing, preparing for the speedy flight. In some
localities
nearest the fire the front fences were crowded with clothing; sheets
flapping
in the wind, pillows and bolsters carpeting the sidewalk, chairs
overturned in
the yard, bedsteads partially protruding from chamber-windows, and the
same
confused voices and constantly disappearing and re-appearing
bundle-bearers
everywhere. In those
portions
of the city which were far removed from immediate danger, and which
were
usually so quiet, there could be heard the rush of footsteps, the
shrill-voiced
warnings, the clicking of latch-keys, the sharp cling of door-bells,
and the
continual rapping on door and window, summoning sleepers to a dawn of
fire, and
a reality worse than their most feverish dreams. Even dark
alleys
and the narrowest by-ways were startled into life by the flitting forms
of men
bearing homeward account-books, precious packages, and heavy boxes.
Whether
they were thieves or not, none but themselves could tell, and none
stopped to
inquire. But as the
night
went on, and the wild fire in its conscious power assaulted the very
heavens,
the scenes in the burning streets cannot be described. Firemen in
rubber-coats,
dragging long lines of snaky hose along the flooded pavement, pulling
it under,
over, and through the intricate netting of water-pipes already laid;
the curling
clouds of black smoke above the glittering engines, and the flashing
sparks
beneath; the swaying of ladders; the knocking-in of windows; the
spider-like
firemen clambering up ladders and along narrow projections; the shoots
of water
dashing upward from the street, and outward from almost every window
towards
the consuming blocks; the unhinging of doors, and the use of them as
shields
against the heat; men rolling in the pools by the curb-stones to
extinguish the
fire on their clothing; the pushing and gesticulating policemen; the
bee-hive
doorways of mercantile warehouses, with humming hundreds flying in and
out,
carrying away carefully-laid stores to the wagons around the corner;
the
revolving cylinders of the hose-carriages; the falling fabrics hastily
and
carelessly discharged upon the crowds below; the shouting hangers-on to
eaves
and chimneys; the groups of daring, thoughtless sewing-girls; the
up‑spurting
leakages on the overtaxed pipes, and the mists of spray and smoke, —
all,
combined with the thousands of kaleidoscopic changes that cannot be
recalled,
made hideous the night, and left impressions on the spectator which
ages of
earthly life cannot efface. These scenes grew wilder as the devastation
became
more widespread, and as the night advanced, until it was bewildering.
Men were
calmer, but worked harder. The work was better systematized with each
hour:
but, the better the arrangements, the more could work; and
consequently, like
complicated military movements, it seemed all the more a chaos to the
uninitiated. But in the glad light of day which softened the glare, and took away those imaginary evils that ever lurk in the shadows of night, the scene changed. The appearance of the burned district behind the fire, and the city elsewhere, on that memorable sabbath, was thus accurately and vividly described at the time by Mr. Edward King of “The Boston Journal:” — “The most
intense
excitement prevailed along all the lines of travel leading into Boston;
and the
early morning trains from New York were crammed with passengers from
the
way-stations, — insurance-agents hurrying to verify the rumors of their
losses;
prominent businessmen, who received the appalling news just as they
were
settling down for a quiet sabbath in their suburban homes; and a vast
number of
the ‘curious,’ who always flock to the scene of the great disaster.
Engines
were hastily prepared; and, when the Shore-Line train from New York
arrived
(six hours behind time on account of an accident to another train near
Saybrook) at Providence, a large police-force and an anxious and huge
delegation of business-men rushed into the already-crowded cars. Two
fire-engines were packed on a platform car, and attached to the train;
and as
it rapidly whirled towards Boston, and arrived at Mansfield, a dense
smoke, or
discoloration of the sky, — the dull, dun veil which the fire-fiend
draws over
his horrible work, as if afraid of affronting the purity of the sky, —
was
visible. At each little station the whole local population had
assembled, and
was listening with eagerness for a repetition of the explosions which
had been
heard during the forenoon, or pointing to the stained skies.
Businessmen, when
the train reached Boston, did not wait to arrive at the regular
station, but
rushed out en masse at the Back-Bay stopping-point, and took to their
legs
rapidly for down town. The panic seemed to have spread as fast as did
the
conflagration. “Approaching
the
burned district toward noon, one might readily have fancied himself in
a
recently captured and bombarded town. The crowds, although gayly
dressed and
rampant with curiosity, were far from jolly, and looked with frightened
and
dazzled air on the labyrinth of smoking ruins which had once been a
mass of
busy avenues of commerce. Boston’s centre seemed suddenly to have
vanished: the
‘old familiar paths’ existed no longer. Truck-wagons, light
express-teams,
carriages, hand-carts, crammed the side-streets which remained intact,
and were
loaded with household-goads or masses of costly fabrics which had been
removed
with trembling hands at an early hour in the morning, when it seemed as
if no
quarter of the city could be saved. Cordons of soldiery with fixed
bayonets
kept off the pressing crowd, or, capturing a host of citizens between
two lines
reaching from curb to curb, marched them to side-streets, and gently
expelled
them from the vicinity of the crumbling and overhanging ruins. The roll
of the
drum was heard on every side; the sonorous ‘Fall in’ echoed; and those
turbulently inclined among such of the spectators as had not directly
felt the
sting of loss by the conflagration were speedily subdued by the
militia-men,
who seemed to bear a full sense of their importance. Here and there a
group of
stout, fresh soldiers, wearing the traditional long blue overcoats and
white
gloves, but with their smoke-begrimed heads crowned with dilapidated
hats, kept
guard over some valuable merchandise piled on the sidewalks at a safe
distance
from the ruins. Now and then one saw a bustle, and heard indignant
cries, as
some ambitious thief, who thought to enrich himself during the mêlée,
was
hustled away to the Tombs; and on every side the weary firemen dragged
themselves along, covered with smoke and dirt, dauntless to the last,
although
the hand of Fate had proved stronger than their human arms. Every bit
of
vantage-ground, from the dread corner near which the fatal fire began
to the
water-side and along State, was crowded with the motley groups of
spectators,
each asking a hundred questions in as many breaths. The vista from the
vicinity
of Summer Street was grandiose and disheartening. Flames flickered up
from time
to time from the mass of broken, seared, disjointed masonry, played
around the
cracked and dismantled bases of the great carved iron pillars, and
sometimes
burst out vehemently from the interstices of the débris; and
great columns of
smoke rose majestically into the clear air, and then formed into
party-colored
clouds which cast dull shadows over the scene. At a little distance in
the
ruin-field, the smoke almost shut off the view; and the fragmentary
wall of an
ordinary business-block, or the tottering section of some huge furnace,
lately
a row of houses, took on fantastic forms. Looking from Kingston Street
through
the burnt district, one could perceive all the aspects of a
bombardment.
Bazeilles, Auteuil, and Château d’En, heaped together, would not have
made so
dread a view. St. Cloud was child’s play beside it. The scene was
picturesque
in its very desolation. Beyond the line of bayonets lay the ash-covered
ruins,
with a group of blue-coated soldiers standing out in strong relief
against the
dull background. A long line of workmen was tugging at a huge cable
destined to
pull down a wall. In the foreground a group of militia-men were
lunching from
provisions disposed on a hand-cart, and kissing their hands to the
ladies who
had served the welcome food. A sturdy policeman stood like a statue,
offering
his broad back as a buttress against the crowd; and here and there a
fire-engine puffed wearily, and shrieked impatiently, as if angry that
its task
had been so long and ineffectual. As evening approached, and it became
evident
that the fire was mainly under control, the firemen and their
improvised human
teams began to frolic as they drew the engines from point to point; but
the
levity created no echo in the crowd. With the descent of dusk over the
acres of
disaster came a gloom into the hearts of all Bostonians such as has
never been
felt before.” |