The Sword Maker by Robert Barr
page 19 of 445 (04%)
page 19 of 445 (04%)
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something like fivescore, now rest in the deepest part of the Rhine."
"Why do you call it an expedition of folly?" "Surely the result shows it to be such." "A plan may meet with disaster, even where every precaution has been taken. We did the best we could, and if the men we had paid for the protection of the flotilla had not, with base cowardice, deserted their posts, these barges would have reached Cologne." "Never! The defenders you chose were riff-raff, picked up in the gutters of Frankfort, and you actually supposed such cattle, undisciplined and untrained, would stand up against the fearless fighters of the Barons, swashbucklers, hardened to the use of sword and pike. What else was to be expected? The goods were not theirs, but yours. They had received their pay, and so speedily took themselves out of danger." "You forget, sir, or you do not know, that several hundred of them were cut to pieces." "I know that, also, but the knowledge does not in the least nullify my contention. I am merely endeavoring to show you that the heads you spoke of a moment ago were only older, but not necessarily wiser than mine. It would be impossible for me to devise an expedition so preposterous." "What should we have done?" "For one thing, you should have gone yourselves, and defended your own bales." |
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