My Adventures as a Spy: Autobiography. Robert Baden-Powell. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Robert Baden-Powell
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Документальная литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9788027248797
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       Robert Baden-Powell

      My Adventures as a Spy: Autobiography

      Published by

      Books

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       [email protected]

      2018 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-272-4879-7

      Table of Contents

       The Different Degrees of Spies

       Strategical Agents

       Tactical Agents

       Residential Spies

       Officer Agents

       Commercial Spying

       Germany's Invasion Plans

       Field Spies

       Catching a Spy

       Conveying Information

       Secret Signals and Warnings

       Spies in War Time

       The Pluck of a Spy

       Traitorous Spying

       The German Spy Organisation

       The Value of Being Stupid

       Concealing a Fort in a Moth's Head

       Butterfly Hunting in Dalmatia

       How Spies Disguise Themselves

       The Sport of Spying

       The Value of Hide-and-Seek

       Spying on Mountain Troops

       Posing as an Artist

       Fooling a German Sentry

       A Spy is Suspicious

       Hoodwinking a Turkish Sentry

       Tea and a Turk

       Sore Feet

       Austrian Officers

       An Interesting Task

       Encounter with the Police

       Success with the Balloon

       How to Enter a Fort

       How We Got the Secret Light

       How the Big River was Swum

       Caught at Last

       The Escape

       Conclusion

      It has been difficult to write in peace-time on the delicate subject of spies and spying, but now that the war is in progress and the methods of those much abused gentry have been disclosed, there is no harm in going more fully into the question, and to relate some of my own personal experiences.

      Spies are like ghosts—people seem to have had a general feeling that there might be such things, but they did not at the same time believe in them—because they never saw them, and seldom met anyone who had had first-hand experience of them. But as regards the spies, I can speak with personal knowledge in saying that they do exist, and in very large numbers, not only in England, but in every part of Europe.

      As in the case of ghosts, any phenomenon which people don't understand, from a sudden crash on a quiet day to a midnight creak of a cupboard, has an affect of alarm upon nervous minds. So also a spy is spoken of with undue alarm and abhorrence, because he is somewhat of a bogey.

      As a first step it is well to disabuse one's mind of the idea that every spy is necessarily the base and despicable fellow he is generally held to be. He is often both clever and brave.

      The term "spy" is used rather indiscriminately, and has by use come to be a term of contempt. As a misapplication of the term "spy" the case of Major André always seems to me to have been rather a hard one. He was a Swiss by birth, and during the American War of Independence in 1780 joined the British Army in Canada, where he ultimately became A.D.C. to General Sir H. Clinton.

      The American commander of a fort near West Point, on the Hudson River, had hinted that he wanted to surrender, and Sir H. Clinton sent André to treat with him. In order to get through the American lines André dressed himself in plain clothes and took the name of John Anderson. He was unfortunately caught by the Americans and tried by court martial and hanged as a spy.

      As he was not trying to get information, it seems scarcely right to call him a spy. Many people took this view at the time, and George III. gave his mother a pension, as well as a title to his brother, and his body was ultimately dug up and re-interred in Westminster Abbey.

      The