[The Audacious War by Clarence W. Barron]@TWC D-Link bookThe Audacious War CHAPTER I 2/11
Outside of London not ten per cent of the people know anything concerning this boat or her finish. This word "finish" would be disputed in any newspaper or well-informed financial office in London where it is daily declared that although the "Audacious" met with an accident, her guns have been raised and will go aboard another ship of the same size, purchased, or just being finished, and named the "Audacious." Indeed, I was informed on "good authority" that the "Audacious" was afloat, had been towed into Birkenhead and that the repairs to her bottom were nearly finished. You can hear similar stories wherever the "accident" is discussed.
I have heard it so many times that I ought to believe it.
Yet if one hundred people separately and individually make assurances concerning something of which they have no personal knowledge, it does not go down with a true news man.
I was able to run across a man who saw the affair of the "Audacious." He laughed at the stories of shallow water and raised guns.
His position was such, both then and thereafter, that I was sure that he knew and told me the truth. Later I learned that the "Audacious" was too far off the Irish coast to permit of talk of shallow water, and that neither guns nor 30,000-ton warships are raised from fifty-fathom depths. Yet I am willing to narrate what has not been permitted publication in England, and I think not elsewhere: that the mines about Lough Swilly, along the Scotch and Irish coasts, and in the Irish Sea, were laid with the assistance of English fishing-boats flying the English flag.
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