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HN, as you will have an opportunity of finding out--hereafter. But to the argument. It is supposed that the British Fleet is at war with, indeed, the British Fleet. _Sir John._ A very clever idea. _Lord George._ I flatter myself it is, and novel too. It is true that occasionally the ships comprising the British Fleet have run into one another in the past just as if they had been at war, but then they were avowedly at peace, and now they are undoubtedly the reverse. Do you take my meaning? _Sir John._ Well, not clearly. How do you show that the British Fleet is at war with the British Fleet? _Lord George._ Ah, there comes in my art, and I think you will confess I have a very pretty wit. You see I divide the British Fleet into two parts--one part represents the enemy and the other part represents itself like the House of Commons, a most representative body. That is clear, I hope? _Sir John._ Certainly--one is the British Fleet, and the other is not the British Fleet. But is there no bond of union? _Lord George._ Most assuredly there is--you pay for both. But, pardon me, I beg you will not further interrupt me. So, now that we have the two Fleets face to face, or, I should say, bow to starn, we proceed exactly as if there were a real quarrel between them. We spend money on coal, we spend money on pay, we spend money on ammunition. Nay, by my life, we spend money on everything--just as we should do if war were really declared! That's simple enough. _Sir John._ I confess your plan _does_ seem simple. _Lord George._ And there is more behind. We are not satisfied with merely spending money--we learn a lesson as well. Come, you must confess _that_ surprises you? _Sir John._ Well, I admit that generally, where there is any spending of money, it is _I_ who learn the lesson. _Lord George._ Good--distinctly good! But let us be serious. Well, when we are carrying on a war by every means in our power, we fancy that one Fleet is chasing the other. They both have equal speed, and we give one Fleet twenty-four hours' start of the other, and will you believe me that, although the first follows the second as fast as may be from the beginning to the end of the manoeuvring, they never see one another! On my life--never! They never see the British Fleet, because it's not in sight! _Sir John_. But could you not have learned all this without so great an expenditure of money? _Lord George._ Well, no, Sir JOHN--not a
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