The Sirdar's Oath: A Tale of the North-West Frontier

audiobook

The Sirdar's Oath: A Tale of the North-West Frontier

by Bertram Mitford

EN·~5 hours·26 chapters

Chapters

26 total

Chapter One. - “The Stranger within thy Gates.”

11:49

Chapter Two. - The Day After.

12:09

Chapter Three. - “Above Rubies.”

11:43

Chapter Four. - A Timely Reconsideration.

10:49

Chapter Five. - Murad Afzul, Terror.

10:52

Chapter Six. - The Victim.

11:07

Chapter Seven. - A Surprise.

10:52

Chapter Eight. - The Mark of Murad Afzul.

9:00

Chapter Nine. - A Legacy of Vengeance.

12:29

Chapter Ten. - The Syyed’s Tangi.

12:40

Description

A feverish crowd swarms the streets outside the Mansion House, their voices a clamor of triumph and drunken song as news of distant battles spreads like wild fire. Amid the sea of hats and brass bands, a dignified, bearded Eastern gentleman—dressed in a European frock‑coat yet unmistakably foreign—finds himself the target of crude jeers and a frenzied attempt to shave his whiskers. The night’s electric lamps illuminate both the revelry and the sudden, brutal thrust of a mob that cannot tell the stranger from a notorious local thief, forcing him into a desperate defensive stance that only heightens the chaos.

The scene shifts as a disciplined group of athletic club members bursts through the chaos, their orderly blows a stark contrast to the surrounding pandemonium. Their intervention hints at an uneasy balance between lawlessness and a perverse sense of honor, while the bewildered outsider grapples with bewilderment and a burning need to survive. Listeners are drawn into a vivid portrait of Victorian London’s darker underbelly, where crowd psychology, cultural clash, and raw human aggression collide in a single, unforgettable night.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (298K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England

Release date

2011-07-03

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Bertram Mitford

Bertram Mitford

1855–1914

Best known for fast-moving adventure fiction set in southern Africa, this prolific late-Victorian novelist brought frontier settings and imperial-era tensions into dozens of popular stories. His books often mix action, atmosphere, and sharp opinions about colonial life.

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