A Group of Tourists in the Hall of Mirrors (Steve Miller Photo) |
At the end of the long narrow hall were row upon row of low, tightly bunched upholstered benches for the invited guests, the deputies and senators of the French parliament, and the delegation members. In front of these seats were tables for the secretaries of delegations. Beyond these administrative outposts, raised slightly on a short dais, rested the horseshoe table for the plenipotentiaries, extending along the mirrored side of the hall. At the middle of the table, facing the high, recessed windows, was the chair reserved for Clemenceau, president of the conference, premier of France, and symbol of victory. To his left, in the direction of the Hall of Peace, were places reserved for the delegates of Great Britain, the British dominions, and Japan. Here the angle in the table was reached, and then came chairs for Germany followed by the seats of Uruguay, Peru, Panama, Nicaragua, Honduras, Brazil, Haiti, Guatemala, Bolivia, and Ecuador.
At the right hand of the "Tiger" sat the commissioners from the United States, then France, Belgium, and Italy to the turn of the table, where the order was Greece, Poland, Cuba, Romania, the Hedjaz, Serbia, and Czechoslovakia. Behind this main table were tables for secretaries. To the rear of these, extending toward the Hall of War with its glorious ceiling of Le Brun paintings depicting Germany, Holland, and Spain alarmed by the mighty conquests of France, were chairs for the representatives of the press. Inside the main horseshoe table were smaller desks for secretaries, with an isolated table in front of the chairman's place set aside for the official interpreter of the conference, Lieutenant Paul Mantoux. Before these desks, like a lonely guillotine, rested the rose and sandalwood table on which lay the peace treaty. There were two additional tables holding two other documents to be signed simultaneously with it: the protocol, to be signed by all of the delegates, and the Rhine province agreement, to be signed by the great powers, Poland, and Germany. Only the places reserved for the Chinese delegation would not be occupied. The Chinese commissioners, in protest against the treaty clauses agreeing to the transfer of the German leaseholds to Japan, had decided to boycott the ceremonies and the treaty. As one of them put the issue, "If we sign we shall not have a Chinaman's chance in China."
Clemenceau and Wilson Arrive |
As the time for opening the historic session neared, the long hall filled with the throng of delegates, visitors, and newsmen from all over the world. The commissioners had put in almost an hour passing from table to table searching for autographs of men as notable as themselves. The guests bobbed up and down in their seats, stepping over the low bench-like stools to talk to friends or to observe the great men of the conference. Photographers unsuccessfully attempted to climb pillars for better picture-taking. A score of Gardes Municipaux provided security against souvenir hunters pilfering the pens and inkwells in the hall.
About 2:30 p.m., Georges Clemenceau entered the room and looked about him to see that all arrangements were in perfect order. He observed a group of wounded veterans at one side with their medals of valor pinned to their uniforms and, walking up to them, engaged them in a brief conversation. At 2:45 p.m. he moved up to the middle table and took his seat as the presiding officer. Observant spectators noted the singular fact that he sat almost directly under the ceiling decoration bearing the legend, "The king governs alone." The spot was as close as possible to the location of William I of Prussia when he had become the German Emperor in 1871.
The Diplomats Jamming the Hall of Mirrors |
Fine excerpt, KW.
ReplyDelete"like a lonely guillotine" - heh!
The Kingdom of Hejaz existed between 1916 and 1925 in what is now the western side of Saudi Arabia. Hussein bin Ali refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles.
ReplyDelete