Robbery under Arms

audiobook

Robbery under Arms

by Rolf Boldrewood

EN·~18 hours·53 chapters

Chapters

53 total
1

Preface to New Edition

1:00
2

Chapter 1

21:09
3

Chapter 2

16:31
4

Chapter 3

25:33
5

Chapter 4

15:14
6

Chapter 5

22:14
7

Chapter 6

19:23
8

Chapter 7

14:54
9

Chapter 8

12:06
10

Chapter 9

13:36

Description

Meet Dick Marston, a tough‑as‑iron bushranger who grew up amid the scrublands and gold‑rush towns of colonial Australia. He’s a horseman, a swimmer, a tracker—every skill the wild frontier demands—and he leads a band of roguish mates who live by daring raids on coaches and mail‑bags. Their exploits ripple through the dusty settlements, turning taverns into lively haunts and the police into relentless pursuers. The story paints the rugged landscape with vivid detail, from sun‑baked plains to moonlit outback camps.

Now Marston finds himself locked in a cold cell, staring at the inevitable gallows that loom over his fate. His inner monologue mixes bitter regret, dark humor, and a fierce pride in a life lived on the edge, giving listeners a raw glimpse into the psyche of a man torn between freedom and the law. As the chase intensifies, the narrative weaves together loyalty, betrayal, and the harsh realities of a world where survival often means crossing the line. Listeners are drawn into a tale that captures the spirit of an untamed continent and the timeless conflict between rebellion and redemption.

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Details

Full title

Robbery under Arms A Story of Life and Adventure in the Bush and in the Australian Goldfields

Language

en

Duration

~18 hours (1077K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Alan R. Light, and David Widger

Release date

1998-02-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Rolf Boldrewood

Rolf Boldrewood

1826–1915

Best known for the classic bushranger tale Robbery Under Arms, this Anglo-Australian novelist drew on a life spent in the colonies as a squatter, magistrate, and goldfields official. His stories helped shape how generations of readers imagined nineteenth-century Australia.

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