
audiobook
Transcriber's Note: Minor spelling and typographical errors have been corrected without note. Archaic, dialect and variant spellings remain as printed.
THE ARAB'S PLEDGE: A TALE OF MAROCCO IN 1830. - EDWARD L. MITFORD, CEYLON CIVIL SERVICE.
PREFACE.
EXPLANATIONS OF ARABIC TERMS USED.
THE ARAB'S PLEDGE. - CHAPTER I. THE CONSPIRACY.
CHAPTER II. THE ACCUSERS.
CHAPTER III. THE PLEDGE.
CHAPTER IV. THE HUNT.
CHAPTER V. THE SPY.
CHAPTER VI. THE SAHARA.
Set against the shadow of the Atlas peaks, the story opens in a bustling Moroccan town where date palms, orange groves and fragrant gardens mingle with stone citadels and crowded bazaars. The author's six‑year residence brings a richly detailed portrait of Moorish customs, language and daily life, letting listeners picture the heat‑kissed streets and the cool evenings spent beneath tangled vines. From the first page, the air hums with the uneasy coexistence of diverse peoples under a rigid social order.
At the heart of the tale lies a tightly knit Jewish quarter, its residents bound by a badge of black caps and forced barefoot reverence before mosques. When a sudden accusation threatens a young merchant with conversion or death, he swears a secret oath to protect his community and uncover the hidden plot. The narrative follows his desperate navigation of hostile officials, whispered conspiracies, and the fragile hope that justice might yet surface.
Against a backdrop of political intrigue and the looming presence of foreign diplomats, the story paints a vivid picture of resilience and moral choice. Listeners are invited to experience the tension of an era where loyalty, faith, and survival hang in a delicate balance.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (267K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Shaun Pinder, Stephen Blundell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2012-10-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
A Victorian traveler and civil servant whose writing grew out of years spent in Morocco, the Middle East, and Ceylon. Best known for his vivid travel memoirs, he turned long, difficult journeys into stories full of movement, observation, and adventure.
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