Sunday 16 October 2016

Poem ~ A Swiss Spies for Germans - Monday, 16 October - Thursday, 19 October 1916

Impression sketch; recruitment of Swiss spy Felix Malherbe.

From neutral Switzerland came source
Of subjects, willing to sell services
For purposes of Germany's war intent.
Exact numbers to be then classified
By the French army - for their missions
Such recruited spies travelled miles.

A subject of Switzerland Felix Malherbe,
An electrician, later confessed how his
Involvement as a spy began - six months
Of war had passed, when in February
1915, Felix Malherbe was sat on a bench.
A man came to him asking his situation.

Felix Malherbe had no work or money.
The stranger talked to him asking about
His past, his knowledge and his ability
To speak French - studying his passport
Malherbe evidenced he could freely travel
About France - did he want to earn money?

In agreeing to idea of taking work Malherbe
Was asked to report to a brewery in Geneva.
On arrival there he met a German man from
Loerrach - being a German city close to the
Swiss border - Malherbe learned from him
About the German Intelligence Service.

Given 100 francs Malherbe then agreed
To go on an initial trip across France - war
Was still young and battles over frontiers
Had happened - in the proximity of Cernay
With the battle of Mulhouse, Malherbe
Was issued with specific orders to follow.

This was to be a trial to see how well he did
Various tasks - Malherbe was requested
First to travel via Bellegarda to Lyon, Dijon
And Duchy of Bar, to finally reach Troyes.
A return journey to take in Belfort and Delle,
Having gained information to make a report.

Specifically Felix Malherbe was ordered
To find out about cost of raw materials,
Commodities and resources - to observe
The French state of mind at Villefranche;
Where the engineering company Vermorel
Was engaged in manufacturing of shells.

The Germans wanted to know how many
Worked there - age groups and if men 
Or women. At Dijon Malherbe had to find
How well the army shops were supplied -
Onwards to Neufchâteau, where he would
Discover that a woman of the intelligence
Group had been arrested, as suspected.

At Brienne-le-Château Malherbe learnt
About artillery ammunition of the French.
With the trip going to plan, he returned to
Loerrach via Troyes - here questioned
At length - Malherbe was given 800 francs.
Next he was asked to travel to Cherbourg.

21 March 1915 Felix Malherbe set upon
A mission - meeting a woman of German
Secret Service who had passed him
A newspaper - a series of codes had been
Written In the margin that he conveyed
To Basel. Next he travelled to Cherbourg.

There he looked into state of naval guns,
Then onto Saint-Malo - Malherbe passed on
Information - along to coast from Manche
Into Brittany to arrive Brest; here to discover
About Bretagne Battleship progression and
Goods and coal being shipped to England.

Other boats Malherbe looked for information
On were transatlantic SS Paris, along with
SS France; turned into a merchant cruiser.
Also in Brittany Malherbe arrived in Nantes,
To spy on imports of British steel and state
Of plants; idle by lack of labor or materials?

After passing on information to a German
Spy in Nantes, Malherbe soon travelled
To Paris - to meet four German officers
Disguised as British Red Cross - at end
Of March Malherbe was back in Loerrach,
Providing the secret service with a report.

Handed a total of 1,100 francs Malherbe
Was asked to travel again - at Villefranche
His mission to look into Vermorel plants.
There discovering amounts of shells
Being made, also to find about industrial
Goods produced and moved out by train.

Journeying to Poitiers central France, the
Experienced spy Malherbe looked into
French army enrollment and movements
Across to Evereux in Normandy - after
To Rouen, where 20,000 British 40,000
French troops were being moved to front.

Whilst in Normandy, Malherbe found out
About shipping boats origins and cargos,
To observe unloading of army supplies
By the British - then he looks into numbers
Of wounded or sick troops, to consider
French women’s morality for reference.

German newspapers intentions to say
French immorality was rife and debauchery
Existed in the country - after trying to find
About barracks to house recruits, Malherbe
Moved onto Valbonne southeast France,
To spy on colonial and Montluel troops.

Close to Rhone Alps city Lyon, he sought
Information of troops stationed at Banne
Camp - in same region Malherbe paused
At a station of Saint-Germain-des-Fosses,
To watch troop transports and presence
Of artillery - noting details of an airfield.

After Orleans he found where British were
Stationed - Malherbe back in Paris delved
Into the city’s economy - from 29 March
Spy Malherbe had covered many miles -
Throughout April he had asked questions
To then look at Paris' people and defences.

On 4 May Malherbe journeyed to Troyes,
North central France - his subject there
To look into how factories operated again
And the moves of transport - this talented
Electrician started to falter, running out
Of luck; to be stopped at the train station.

With routine passport checks done more
Thoroughly, Felix Malherbe was detained
And quizzed - due to lack of a diplomatic
Signature - a further search of the Swiss
Subject had found he possessed details;
Regiment numbers and other information.

Imprisoned at Troyes Malherbe underwent
A trial - providing all details of his activities.
In his defence he made an appeal to Troyes
Protestant Chaplin - but charges were held;
Felix Malherbe had conspired with enemy
In 12 months. 12 May 1916 came sentence.

Whilst no immediate execution was made,
He sought a presidential pardon; time ran out.
Monday 9 October 1916 spy Felix Malherbe
Aged 41, finally faced his firing squad 5 a.m.
At Hauts-Clos, Troyes - to be given a small
Paragraph in the English Daily Telegraph.

by Jamie Mann.

Anon.,1916. Spy Shot In France. The Daily Telegraph, [online] 10 October 1916. P.6. Col.6. Available at: <http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ww1-archive/12213413/Daily-Telegraph-October-10-1916.html> [Accessed: 16 October 2016].

Source: File: Une affaire d'espionnage à Troyes. Available at: <http://www.jschweitzer.fr/notre-histoire/espionnage/m> [Accessed 16 October 2016]

Mann, J., 2016. 100 years Ago - Poems by Jamie Mann. [letter] (Personal communication, 16 October 2016). 



#WW1 #WW1centenary #GreatWar #WW1poem #GreatWar #WW1centenary #worldwarone #worldwaroneremembered #WW1Spies

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