Excerpt: ...of our allies. What more could any country ask than to have assured for them the absolute control of the sea?" "That's all very well," Norgate assented. "It might be our fair share on paper, and yet it might not be enough. What about our navy if Antwerp, Ostend, Dunkirk, Calais, Boulogne, and Havre were all German ports, as they certainly would be in an unassisted conflict between the French and the Germans?" They were within hearing now of the music of the band. Hebblethwaite quickened his pace a little ...
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Excerpt: ...of our allies. What more could any country ask than to have assured for them the absolute control of the sea?" "That's all very well," Norgate assented. "It might be our fair share on paper, and yet it might not be enough. What about our navy if Antwerp, Ostend, Dunkirk, Calais, Boulogne, and Havre were all German ports, as they certainly would be in an unassisted conflict between the French and the Germans?" They were within hearing now of the music of the band. Hebblethwaite quickened his pace a little impatiently. "Look here," he protested, "I came down here for a holiday, I tell you frankly that I believe in the possibility of war just as much as I believe in the possibility of an earthquake. My own personal feeling is that it is just as necessary to make preparations against one as the other. There you are, my German spy, that's all I have to say to you. Here are your friends. I must pay my respects to the Prince, and I should like to meet your charming companion." Anna detached herself from a little group of men at their approach, and Norgate at once introduced his friend. "I have only been able to induce Mr. Hebblethwaite to talk to me for the last ten minutes," he declared, "by promising to present him to you." "A ceremony which we will take for granted," she suggested, holding out her fingers. "Each time I have come to London, Mr. Hebblethwaite, I have hoped that I might have this good fortune. You interest us so much on the Continent." Mr. Hebblethwaite bowed and looked as though he would have liked the interest to have been a little more personal. "You see," Anna explained, as she stood between the two men, "both Austria and Germany, the two countries where I spend most of my time, are almost military ridden. Our great statesmen, or the men who stand behind them, are all soldiers. You represent something wholly different. Your nation is as great and as prosperous as ours, and yet you are a pacifist, are you not, Mr. Hebblethwaite? You...
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Seller's Description:
Used-Acceptable. Fair hardback (no dust jacket0. Reading copy only. Lacks all before title page, with surface damage to front pastedown; blue cloth discoloured on spine; both joints split & repaired, with some fraying to cloth.
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Very Good+ Book With ads. 1915 name front endpaper. Light edgewear. Solid Clarence Underwood frontis. very good+, no dj, black & gold-stamped brown cloth 308 pgs.
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Very Good. Hardcover Very Good Standard used condition May have some wear, highlighting, notes, creasing, previous owner's name, etc May or may not include supplements such as infotrac or other web access codes (the dust cover may be missing) Fast & reliable delivery Exceptional customer service.
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Underwood, Clarence F. (Frontispiece) Good. No Jacket. An aspiring but disillusioned British diplomat allows himself to be recruited by a German spy in the years leading up to World War I. First U.S. edition. Brown boards with black and gilt lightly bumped and rubbed, spine slightly darkened. Upper inch of the front end paper cut out, binding square and solid.