[Colonel Thorndyke’s Secret by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link bookColonel Thorndyke’s Secret CHAPTER VII 10/33
When Mark gets a few years older I shall resign, and let him take my place on the bench.
I own, though, that I should be glad if these highway robberies could be suppressed.
Poaching and the ordinary offenses of drunkenness and assaults are disposed of without any trouble; but this stopping of the coaches, accompanied occasionally by the shooting of the coachman or guard, gives a great deal of trouble, and the worst of it is that we are practically powerless to put such crimes down.
Nothing short of patrolling the roads in parties of three or four between sunset and sunrise would put a stop to them, and the funds at our disposal would not support such an expenditure." "It is a pity that you cannot get up a corps like the yeomanry, and call it the Mounted Constabulary," said Mark.
"There are at least a dozen fellows I know who would, like myself, be glad to join it, and I dare say we could get a score of young farmers or farmers' sons." "It is not a bad idea, Mark, and I dare say that for a time the duty would be zealously performed, but before very long you would tire of it. A few wet nights or winter's cold, and you would cease to see the fun of it, especially as you may be sure that the news that the roads are well patrolled would soon come to the ears of these scoundrels, and they would cease to work in the district." "Perhaps you are right, sir; but I think that a few of us would stick to it." "Perhaps so, Mark, but I should be sorry to wager that the work would be thoroughly done.
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