Sometimes Ashley would draw together a score of troopers and, crossing the river in a ferryboat, would ride twenty miles north, dashing into quiet villages and astonishing the inhabitants with the sight of the Confederate uniform. Then the villagers would be questioned as to the news that had reached them of the movement of the troops; the post office would be seized and the letters broken open, any useful information contained in them being noted.
A Final Reckoning: A Tale of Bush Life in Australia
G.A. Henty
bookWulf the Saxon
G.A. Henty
bookCondemned as a Nihilist: A Story of Escape from Siberia
G.A. Henty
bookThrough Russians Snows
G.A. Henty
bookThe Dragon and the Raven
G.A. Henty
bookSaint Bartholomew’s Eve: A Tale of the Huguenot Wars
G.A. Henty
bookThe Young Franc Tireurs and Their Adventures in the Franco-Prussian War
G.A. Henty
bookWon by the Sword: A Tale of the Thirty Years’ War
G.A. Henty
bookHeld Fast for England: A Tale of the Siege of Gibraltar
G.A. Henty
bookBy Pike and Dyke
G.A. Henty
bookWith Moore at Corunna
G.A. Henty
bookWith Lee in Virginia: A Story of the American Civil War
G.A. Henty
book