The Man Who Knew Too Much eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 221 pages of information about The Man Who Knew Too Much.
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The Man Who Knew Too Much eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 221 pages of information about The Man Who Knew Too Much.

“Then I did the rest of what I had to do.  All through the night and into the daybreak and the daylight I went humming through the villages and markets of South England like a traveling bullet, till I came to the headquarters in the West where the trouble was.  I was just in time.  I was able to placard the place, so to speak, with the news that the government had not betrayed them, and that they would find supports if they would push eastward against the enemy.  There’s no time to tell you all that happened; but I tell you it was the day of my life.  A triumph like a torchlight procession, with torchlights that might have been firebrands.  The mutinies simmered down; the men of Somerset and the western counties came pouring into the market places; the men who died with Arthur and stood firm with Alfred.  The Irish regiments rallied to them, after a scene like a riot, and marched eastward out of the town singing Fenian songs.  There was all that is not understood, about the dark laughter of that people, in the delight with which, even when marching with the English to the defense of England, they shouted at the top of their voices, ’High upon the gallows tree stood the noble-hearted three . . .  With England’s cruel cord about them cast.’  However, the chorus was ’God save Ireland,’ and we could all have sung that just then, in one sense or another.

“But there was another side to my mission.  I carried the plans of the defense; and to a great extent, luckily, the plans of the invasion also.  I won’t worry you with strategics; but we knew where the enemy had pushed forward the great battery that covered all his movements; and though our friends from the West could hardly arrive in time to intercept the main movement, they might get within long artillery range of the battery and shell it, if they only knew exactly where it was.  They could hardly tell that unless somebody round about here sent up some sort of signal.  But, somehow, I rather fancy that somebody will.”

With that he got up from the table, and they remounted their machines and went eastward into the advancing twilight of evening.  The levels of the landscape were repeated in flat strips of floating cloud and the last colors of day clung to the circle of the horizon.  Receding farther and farther behind them was the semicircle of the last hills; and it was quite suddenly that they saw afar off the dim line of the sea.  It was not a strip of bright blue as they had seen it from the sunny veranda, but of a sinister and smoky violet, a tint that seemed ominous and dark.  Here Horne Fisher dismounted once more.

“We must walk the rest of the way,” he said, “and the last bit of all I must walk alone.”

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The Man Who Knew Too Much from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.