The Argus Pheasant

audiobook

The Argus Pheasant

by John Charles Beecham

EN·~7 hours·33 chapters

Chapters

33 total
1

BY - JOHN CHARLES BEECHAM

1:57
2

THE ARGUS PHEASANT

0:17
3

CHAPTER I - The Omniscient Sachsen

11:42
4

CHAPTER II - Ah Sing Counts his Nails

19:12
5

CHAPTER III - Peter Gross is Named Resident

12:17
6

CHAPTER IV - Koyala's Prayer

25:47
7

CHAPTER V - Sachsen's Warning

25:27
8

CHAPTER VI - The Pirate League

12:21
9

CHAPTER VII - Mynheer Muller Worries

20:03
10

CHAPTER VIII - Koyala's Warning

11:56

Description

In the heat of the Dutch East Indies, the governor‑general of Batavia prowls his opulent cabinet, his temper as sharp as the beak of a ruffled cock. Beneath the polished veneer of colonial administration, the islands simmer with unpaid taxes, failing harvests, and whispers of rebellion. As the governor lashes out at his nervous general, a shadowy figure named Koyala—dubbed the “witch‑woman” by the colonists—lurks behind the turmoil.

Van Schouten becomes fixated on capturing her, believing that the mythical Argus Pheasant’s dazzling feathers could be snared if she falls into his hands. The narrative follows the tangled motives of officials, soldiers, and locals, each pulling the fragile peace in different directions. With vivid descriptions of jungle camps, creaking ships, and the clash of cultures, the story promises a tense, atmospheric glimpse into a world on the brink of upheaval.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~7 hours (404K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Katie Hernandez, Suzanne Shell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2011-08-26

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

JC

John Charles Beecham

Best known for pulp-era adventure fiction, this early 20th-century writer is remembered today for fast-moving tales like The Argus Pheasant and The Yellow Spider. His work often mixed exotic settings, danger, and melodrama in the style popular with magazine readers of the time.

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