6 seconds sound clip from the The 39 Steps (1937) classic radio play.
You can hear this line at 00:41:56 in the radio play.
Quote context
[...]
- Lux Flakes remind me of women.
- And women, in turn, recall an amazing spy story I encountered during the World War.
- It concerns a Swiss opera singer who volunteered in the French Red Cross as an entertainer.
- For two years she made periodic visits to a home in Switzerland, each time using the same route, over the French border.
- One day she started to cross and found a new officer in charge.
- He took a good look at her and immediately ordered his women assistants to search her.
- They returned with the petticoat of this famous singer. Suspecting that it might contain invisible writing, Lieutenant called for hot irons and himself applied them to the petticoat.
- The heat revealed what had been invisibly written in lemon juice... the complete working drawings of a new French war tank.
- The reason Lieutenant had suspected Madame was that before the war he had been a style designer in Paris.
- One of the first things he observed about the singer was that while she was dressed in the height of fashion, she wore a starched petticoat and starched petticoats had been out of style for ten years.
- One of the truest utterances of the great French general, Marshal Foch, was his statement to a group of his espionage agents. 'You will die a thousand deaths, before oblivion comes, while the man in the trenches dies but once.'
[...]
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