The Coming Conquest of England eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 376 pages of information about The Coming Conquest of England.

The Coming Conquest of England eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 376 pages of information about The Coming Conquest of England.

THE FATE OF A SPY

Colonel Mercier-Milon reported from Brussels that he had arrested Countess Arselaarts and thought he had made a valuable capture.  The Countess was deeply in debt and lived very extravagantly.  A little time ago she had been assisted financially by an exalted personage, who had left the country.  Since then her resources had become exhausted, and it was supposed that she had acted as a spy for the English at a high salary.  He added that he was on the point of discovering a widespread network of espionage in France and Belgium.

Herr van Spranekhuizen and Hinnerk Brodersen of Schleswig had also been arrested the same morning.

“I wish we had trustworthy information as to the strength of the British fleet,” said the Lieutenant-Colonel, who had communicated the above report to Heideck.  “Sometimes I am really inclined to believe that this fleet is not so effective as all the world has hitherto assumed.  It is almost impossible for outsiders to get a clear insight into the condition of the English navy.  So far as I can remember, false reports are systematically published about the fleet—­officially, semi-officially, and privately.  From time to time a speaker is put up in Parliament by the Government to deliver a violent attack on the naval administration.  He is contradicted by a representative of the Admiralty, and dust is again thrown in the eyes of the world.  On one of Queen Victoria’s last birthdays a powerful squadron, as it was called, was assembled for review off Spithead.  But no foreigner was allowed a close inspection of these imposing fleets, and I am greatly inclined to think that it was another case of the famous movable villages, which Potemkin showed the Russian Empress on her journey to the Crimea.  Official statements give the number of English warships as more than four hundred, not including torpedo-boats, but amongst them is a large number of obsolete and inefficient vessels.”

Heideck nodded.

“If the English fleet were really so efficient as is believed, it would be difficult to understand why it has not attempted any decisive action up till now.”

“That is also my view.  The Copenhagen fleet would have attacked Kiel harbour long ago.  It was said that it was to hold the Russian fleet in check.  But that would be superfluous to start with, as long as the Gulfs of Bothnia and Finland were blocked with ice and the Russian squadrons were unable to move.  This way of making war reminds me forcibly of the state of things in the Crimean War, when a powerful English fleet set out with a great flourish of trumpets against Cronstadt and St. Petersburg, but did nothing except bombard Bomarsund, a place nobody cared about.  The English Press had great difficulty in excusing the fiasco of its world-renowned fleet.”

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The Coming Conquest of England from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.