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Baron Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell Baden-Powell of Gilwell

My Adventures as a Spy

  • nihzancanarohas quoted10 years ago
    ed to grasp my intentions most fully. Far below t
  • nihzancanarohas quoted10 years ago
    once jumped to the conclusion that I was a Highlander, and asked whether I wore a kilt when I was at home.
    In the middle of our exchange of civilities the alarm w
  • nihzancanarohas quoted10 years ago
    was open, and before I had gone far the gendarmes spied me, and after a hurried consultation, dashed off at a gallop for the nearest bridge, half a mile away. I promptly turned back, replaced my bridge and recrossed the stream, throwing the plank into the river, and made my way past the village to the next station down the line while the horsemen were still hunting
  • nihzancanarohas quoted10 years ago
    I had come far and would have still further to go before I came across any habitation, and I was hard up for a lodging for the night.
  • nihzancanarohas quoted10 years ago
    guise is not so much one of a theatrical make-up—although this is undoubtedly a useful art—as of being able to assume a totally different character, change of voice and m
  • nihzancanarohas quoted10 years ago
    gs of leaves or on the butterflies' wings of the entomologist. Some examples of secret sketches of fortresses which have been used with success are shown on the following
  • nihzancanarohas quoted10 years ago
    ave even invited officials to look at their sketch-books, which, had they had any suspicion or any eyes in their heads, would have revealed plans and armaments of their own fortresses interpolated among the veins of th
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