Royal Espionage

王室谍报活动

新概念英语第四册 流利英语 美音

语言学习

2 分钟

第 9 集

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  • Lesson 9

  • Royal espionage

  • What important thing did King Alfred learn when he penetrated the Danish camp of Guthrum?

  • Alfred the Great acted as his own spy, visiting Danish camps disguised as a minstrel.

  • In those days wandering minstrels were welcome everywhere.

  • They were not fighting men, and their harp was their passport.

  • Alfred had learned many of their ballads in his youth and could vary his programme with acrobatic tricks and simple conjuring.

  • While Alfred's little army slowly began to gather at Athelney, the king himself set out to penetrate the camp of Guthrum, the commander of the Danish invaders.

  • These had settled down for the winter at Chippenham: thither Alfred went.

  • He noticed at once that discipline was slack: the Danes had the self-confidence of conquerors, and their security precautions were casual.

  • They lived well, on the proceeds of raids on neighbouring regions.

  • There they collected women as well as food and drink, and a life of ease had made them soft.

  • Alfred stayed in the camp a week before he returned to Athelney.

  • The force there assembled was trivial compared with the Danish horde.

  • But Alfred had deduced that the Danes were no longer fit for prolonged battle: and that their commissariat had no organization, but depended on irregular raids.

  • So, faced with the Danish advance, Alfred did not risk open battle but harried the enemy.

  • He was constantly on the move, drawing the Danes after him.

  • His patrols halted the raiding parties: hunger assailed the Danish army.

  • Now Alfred began a long series of skirmishes -- and within a month the Danes had surrendered.

  • The episode could reasonably serve as a unique epic of royal espionage!