From The Spectator
A Mysterious Crime
On Saturday, the 25th of November, 1809, about noon, a carriage with two travellers arrived before the house of the postmaster of Perleberg, a little town close to the frontier of the Prussian dominions, on the highroad from Berlin to Hamburg. The travellers were the Hon. Benjamin Bathurst, Envoy Extraordinary of the British Government, on a secret mission to the court of Vienna, and then on his return to England; and Herr Krause, his German courier. They had no sooner alighted when Mr. Bathurst gave orders for the immediate continuation of the journey, and while the horses were harnessed to the carriage, went into the hostelry adjoining the post-office to take some refreshment. The meal was soon finished, but various arrangements, particularly the local verification of passports in the name of “Merchant Koch” and “Fischer,” protracted the departure of the travellers until a late hour. It was not till towards nine in the evening that the news at last arrived of the horses being about to be harnessed to the carriage. On receiving this welcome announcement, Mr. Bathurst left his room and… Read More