[Diary of the Besieged Resident in Paris by Henry Labouchere]@TWC D-Link book
Diary of the Besieged Resident in Paris

CHAPTER V
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I ventured to point out to my friend that perhaps a little discipline in the ouvrier battalions might not be a bad thing; but he insisted that the indiscipline was caused by their distrust of their rulers, and that they were ready to obey their officers.

"Take," he said "Flourens' battalions.

They do not, it is true, march as regularly as the bourgeois, and they have nothing but kepis and old muskets; but, as far as fighting goes, they are worth all the bourgeois put together." I do not say that Trochu is not wise to depend upon the bourgeois; all I say is, that as the Empire fell because it did not venture to arm any except the regular soldiers, so will Paris render itself the laughing stock of Europe, if its defence is to depend upon an apocryphal Army of the Loire, marines from the Navy, peasants from the provinces, and the National Guards of the wealthy quarters.

To talk of the heroic attitude of Paris, when the Parisians have not been under fire, is simply absurd.

As long as the outer forts hold out, it is no more dangerous to "man the ramparts" than to mount guard at the Tuileries.


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