Two Daring Young Patriots; or, Outwitting the Huns
Here come Benson's!
The speaker leaned over the edge of the tow-path and watched an eight-oared boat swing swiftly round a bend in the river a hundred yards away and come racing up to the landing-stage.
Eee—sy all—l! came in a sing-song from the coxswain, perched, for better sight, half upon the rear canvas, and eight oars instantly feathered the water as their boat slanted swiftly in towards the shore.
Hold her, Seven.
With almost provoking sloth, after the smartly executed movements already described, Number Seven dug his oar deeply into the water, making up somewhat for his tardiness by the fierceness of the movement. The nose of the boat turned outwards almost with a jerk, and the craft slid in close to and parallel with the landing-stage.
Seven's got the sulks again, Jones, commented the watcher on shore, a middle schoolboy named Walters, as he eyed the proceedings critically. His time's bad. It's just as well they get to work to-morrow.
Yes, assented his companion. But, you know, it beats me why they didn't put Montgomery at stroke instead of seven. He's a far better oar than Durend—the best in the school—and it would have upset nobody.
His style may be better, admitted Walters a little reluctantly, but he hasn't got that tremendous shove off the stretcher that makes the other so useful a man to follow. Besides, he has too much temper to be able to nurse and humour the lame ducks and bring them on as Durend has done.
Maybe—his temper certainly doesn't look sweet at the moment, replied Jones, gazing with a grim sort of amusement at Montgomery as the latter released his oar from the rowlock and stepped out of the boat, his handsome clean-cut face sadly marred by an undeniably ugly scowl.
Durend's work isn't showy, but I hear that Benson thinks a lot of it, Walters went on. It's a pity Monty takes it so badly, for the crew has come along immensely and with ordinary luck ought to make a cert of it.
W. P. Shervill
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TWO DARING YOUNG PATRIOTS
Or, Outwitting the Huns
Author of "Edgar the Ready"
LIKE A WHIRLWIND THEY FLUNG THEMSELVES UPON THE HATED FOE
Contents
Illustrations
TWO DARING YOUNG PATRIOTS
Or, Outwitting the Huns
Trouble in the Crew
The Races
Max Durend at Home
The Cataclysm
The Fall of Liége
A New Standpoint
BOTH LADS BEGAN TO HURL THE GREAT STONES UPON THE GERMAN SOLDIERY
A Few Words with M. Schenk
Treachery!
The Opening of the Struggle
Getting Ready for Bigger Things
The Attack on the Power-house
A CLOTH WAS CLAPPED OVER THE SOLDIER'S NOSE AND MOUTH
The Attack on the Munition-shops And Its Sequel
The German Counter-stroke
Schenk at Work Again
The Dash
In the Ardennes
"IT'S ALL RIGHT; WE'RE FRIENDS"
Cutting the Line
Reprisals
A Further Blow
Across the Frontier
The Great Coup
THE TWO WATCHERS GAVE A LOUD, FULL-THROATED BRITISH CHEER