'The best story of adventure published in the last quarter of a century' John Buchan The perennial classic. Arguably the first spy novel ever written remains one of the finest examples of the genre to this day. While on a duck-hunting holiday sailing in the Frisian Isles, Carruthers and his friend Davies become suspicious of German naval activity off the North Sea Coast. The pair decide to investigate, and are soon embroiled in a world of suspense and intrigue, and the pair set about foiling nothing less than a plot to invade England. Initially published in 1903, The Riddle of the Sands proved a prescient vision of the Anglo-German conflict that was to culminate in the First World War. This thrilling adventure is now regarded as the first - and one of the best - spy novels ever written, inspiring later masters of the genre from John Buchan to John le Carre.
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I HAVE read of men who, when forced by their calling to live for long periods in utter solitude â save for a few black faces â have made it a rule to dress regularly for dinner in order to maintain their self-respect and prevent a relapse into barbarism. It was in some such spirit, with an added touch of self-consciousness, that, at seven oâclock in the evening of September 23 in a recent year, I was making my evening toilet in my chambers in Pall Mall. I thought the date and the place justified the parallel: to my advantage even; for the obscure Burmese administrator might well be a man of blunted sensibilities and coarse fibre, and at least he is alone with nature, while I â well, a young man of condition and fashion, who knows the right people, belongs to the right clubs, has a safe, possibly a brilliant future in the Foreign Office, may be excused for a sense of complacent martyrdom, when, with his keen appreciation of the social calendar, he is doomed to the outer solitude of London in September. I say âmartyrdom,â but in fact the case was infinitely worse. For to feel oneself a martyr, as everybody knows, is a pleasurable thing, and the true tragedy of my position was that I had passed that stage. I had enjoyed what sweets it had to offer in ever dwindling degree since the middle of August, when ties were still fresh and sympathy abundant. I had been conscious that I was missed at Morven Lodge party. Lady Ashleigh herself had said so in the kindest possible manner, when she wrote to acknowledge the letter in which I explained, with an effectively
austere reserve of language, that circumstances compelled me to remain at my office. âWe know how busy you must be just now,â she wrote, âand I do hope you wonât overwork: we shall all miss you very much.â Friend after friend âgot awayâ to sport and fresh air with promises to write and chaffing condolences, and, as each deserted the sinking ship, I took a grim delight in my misery, positively almost enjoying the first week or two after my world had been finally dissipated to the four bracing winds of heaven. I began to take a spurious interest in the remaining five millions, and wrote several clever letters in a vein of cheap satire, indirectly suggesting the pathos of my position, but indicating that I was broadminded enough to find intellectual entertainment in the scenes, persons, and habits of London in the dead season. I even did rational things at the instigation of others. For, though I should have liked total isolation best, I of course found that there was a sediment of unfortunates like myself who, unlike me, viewed the situation in a most prosaic light. There were river excursions, and so on, after office-hours; but I dislike the river at any time for its noisy vulgarity, and most of all at this season. So I dropped out of the fresh-air brigade and declined Hâââs offer to share a riverside cottage and run up to town in the mornings. I did spend one or two week-ends with the Catesbys in Kent; but I was not inconsolable when they let their house and went abroad, for I found that such partial compensations did not suit me. Neither did the taste for satirical observation last. A passing thirst, which I dare say many have shared, for adventures of the fascinating kind described in the New Arabian Nights led me on a few evenings into some shady haunts in Soho and farther eastward; but was finally quenched one sultry Saturday night after an hourâs immersion in the reeking atmosphere of a low music-hall in Ratcliffe Highway, where I sat next a portly female who suffered from the heat, and at frequent intervals refreshed herself and an infant from a bottle of tepid stout.
Only one thing was needed to fill my cup of bitterness, and this it was that specially occupied me as I dressed for dinner this evening. Two days more in this dead and fermenting city and my slavery would be at an end. Yes, but â irony of ironies! â I had nowhere to go to! The Morven Lodge party was breaking up. A dreadful rumour as to an engagement which had been one of its accursed fruits tormented me with the fresh certainty that I had not been missed, and bred in me that most desolating brand of cynicism which is produced by defeat through insignificance. Invitations for a later date, which I had declined in July with a gratifying sense of being much in request, now rose up spectrally to taunt me. There was at least one which I could easily have revived, but neither in this case nor in any other had there been any renewal of pressure, and there are moments when the difference between proposing oneself and surrendering as a prize to one of several eagerly competing hostesses seems too crushing to be contemplated. My own people were at Aix for my fatherâs gout; to join them was a pis-aller whose banality was repellent. Besides, they would be leaving soon for our home in Yorkshire, and I was not a prophet in my own country. In short, I was at the extremity of depression.
The usual preliminary scuffle on the staircase prepared me for the knock and entry of Withers. (One of the things which had for some time ceased to amuse me was the laxity of manners, proper to the season, among the servants of the big block of chambers where I lived.) Withers demurely handed me a letter bearing a German post-mark and marked âUrgent.â I had just finished dressing, and was collecting my money and gloves. A momentary thrill of curiosity broke in upon my depression as I sat down to open it. A corner on the reverse of the envelope bore the blotted legend âVery sorry, but thereâs one other thing, a pair of rigging screws from
Carey and Neilsonâs, size 1
I dare say youâll be surprised at hearing from me, as itâs ages since we met. It is more than likely, too, that what Iâm going to suggest wonât suit you, for I know nothing of your plans, and if youâre in town at all youâre probably just getting into harness again and canât get away. So I merely write on the offchance to ask if you would care to come out here and join me in a little yachting and, I hope, duck-shooting. I know youâre keen on shooting, and I sort of remember that you have done some yachting too, though I rather forget about that. This part of the Baltic â the Schleswig fiords â is a splendid cruising-ground â A1 scenery â and there ought to be plenty of duck about soon, if it gets cold enough. I came out here viĂą Holland and the Frisian Islands, starting early in August. My pals have had to leave me, and Iâm badly in want of another, as I donât want to lay up yet for a bit. I neednât say how glad I should be if you could come. If you can, send me a wire to the P.O. here. Flushing and on by Hamburg will be your best route, I think. Iâm having a few repairs done here, and will have them ready sharp by the time your train arrives. Bring your gun and a good lot of No. 4âs; and would you mind calling at Lancasterâs and asking for mine and bringing it too? Bring some oilskins. Better get the eleven-shilling sort jacket and trousers â not the âyachtingâ brand; and if you paint bring your gear. I know you speak German like a native, and that will be a great help. Forgive this hail of directions, but Iâve a sort of feeling that Iâm in luck and that youâll come. Anyway, I hope you and the F.O. both flourish. Good-bye.
Yours ever, Arthur H. Davies.
Would you mind bringing me out a prismatic compass, and a pound of Raven mixture?
Yet, as I smoked my cigar in the ghastly splendour of the empty smoking-room, the subject came up again. Was there anything in it? There were certainly no alternatives at hand. And to bury myself in the Baltic at this unearthly time of year had at least a smack of tragic thoroughness about it.
I pulled out the letter again, and ran down its impulsive staccato sentences, affecting to ignore what a gust of fresh air, high spirits, and good fellowship this flimsy bit of paper wafted into the jaded club-room. On re-perusal, it was full
of evil presage â âA1 sceneryâ â but what of equinoctial storms and October fogs? Every sane yachtsman was paying off his crew now. âThere ought to be duckâ â vague, very vague. âIf it gets cold enoughâ â cold and yachting seemed to be a gratuitously monstrous union. His pals had left him: why? âNot the âyachtingâ brandâ; and why not? As to the size, comfort, and crew of the yacht â all cheerfully ignored; so many maddening blanks. And, by the way, why in heavenâs name âa prismatic compassâ? I fingered a few magazines, played a game of fifty with a friendly old fogey, too importunate to be worth the labour of resisting, and went back to my chambers to bed, ignorant that a friendly Providence had come to my rescue; and, indeed, rather resenting any clumsy attempt at such friendliness.
Chapter 2
The âDulcibellaâ
THAT two days later I should be found pacing the deck of the Flushing steamer with a ticket for Hamburg in my pocket may seem a strange result, yet not so strange if you have divined my state of mind. You will guess, at any rate, that I was armed with the conviction that I was doing an act of obscure penance, rumours of which might call attention to my lot and perhaps awaken remorse in the right quarter, while it left me free to enjoy myself unobtrusively in the remote event of enjoyment being possible.
The fact was that, at breakfast on the morning after the arrival of the letter, I had still found that inexplicable lightening which I mentioned before, and strong enough now to warrant a revival of the pros and cons. An important pro which I had not thought of before was that after all it was a good-natured piece of unselfishness to join Davies; for he had spoken of the want of a pal, and seemed honestly to be in need of me. I almost clutched at this consideration. It was an admirable excuse, when I reached my office that day, for a resigned study of the Continental Bradshaw, and an order to Carter to unroll a great creaking wall-map of Germany and find me Flensburg. The latter labour I might have saved him, but it was good for Carter to have something to do; and his patient ignorance was amusing. With most of the map and what it suggested I was tolerably familiar, for I had not wasted my year in Germany, whatever I had done or not done since. Its people, history, progress, and future had interested me intensely, and I had still friends in Dresden and Berlin. Flensburg recalled the Danish war of â64, and by the time Carterâs researches had ended in success I had forgotten the task set him, and was wondering whether the prospect of seeing something of that lovely region of Schleswig-Holstein,1 as I knew from hearsay that it was, was at all to be set against such an uncomfortable way of seeing it, with the season so late, the company so unattractive, and all the other drawbacks which I counted and treasured as proofs of my desperate condition, if I were to go.
It needed little to decide me, and I think Kâââs arrival from Switzerland, offensively sunburnt, was the finishing touch. His greeting was âHullo, Carruthers, you here? Thought you had got away long ago. Lucky devil, though, to be going now, just in time for the best driving and the early pheasants. The heatâs been shocking out there. Carter, bring me a Bradshawâ â (an extraordinary book, Bradshaw, turned to from habit even when least wanted, as men fondle guns and rods in the close season).
By lunch-time the weight of indecision had been removed, and I found myself entrusting Carter with a telegram to Davies, P.O., Flensburg. âThanks; expect me 9.34 p.m. 26thâ; which produced, three hours later, a reply: âDelighted; please bring a No. 3 Rippingill stoveâ â a perplexing and ominous direction, which somehow chilled me in spite of its subject-matter.
Indeed, my resolution was continually faltering. It faltered when I turned out my gun in the evening and thought of the grouse it ought to have accounted for. It faltered again when I contemplated the miscellaneous list of commissions, sown broadcast through Daviesâs letter, to fulfil which seemed to make me a willing tool where my chosen rĂŽle was that of an embittered exile, or at least a condescending ally. However, I faced the commissions manfully, after leaving the office.
At Lancasterâs I inquired for his gun, was received coolly, and had to pay a heavy bill, which it seemed to have incurred, before it was handed over. Having ordered the gun and No. 4âs to be sent to my chambers, I bought the Raven mixture with that peculiar sense of injury which the prospect of smuggling in anotherâs behalf always entails; and wondered where in the world Carey and Neilsonâs was, a firm which Davies spoke of as though it were as well known as the...
Table of contents
Cover
Title Page
Contents
Preface to the original edition
List of Illustrations
1. The Letter
2. The âDulcibellaâ
3. Davies
4. Retrospect
5. Wanted, a North Wind
6. Schlei Fiord
7. The Missing Page
8. The Theory
9. I Sign Articles
10. His Chance
11. The Pathfinders
12. My Initiation
13. The Meaning of Our Work
14. The First Night in the Islands
15. Bensersiel
16. Commander von BrĂŒning
17. Clearing the Air
18. Imperial Escort
19. The Rubicon
20. The Little Drab Book
21. Blindfold to Memmert
22. The Quartette
23. A Change of Tactics
24. Finesse
25. I Double Back
26. The Seven Siels
27. The Luck of the Stowaway
28. We Achieve Our Double Aim
Epilogue
Postscript (March 1903)
Case Notes
About the Author
Copyright
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