With Kelly to Chitral

audiobook

With Kelly to Chitral

by Sir William George Laurence Beynon

EN·~2 hours·12 chapters

Chapters

12 total
1

STAFF OFFICER TO COLONEL KELLY'S RELIEF FORCE

0:10
2

MY DEAR MOTHER,

0:37
3

*CHITRAL BRIDGE AND FORT - NIZAM-UL-MULK, MEHTER OF CHITRAL - *A "PARI" ON THE ROAD TO GUPIS - *THE SHANDUR PASS - *RECONNAISSANCE SKETCH OF THE POSITION AT CHOKALWAT - *MASTUJ FORT - LOOKING UP THE NISA GOL NULLAH - *RECONNAISSANCE SKETCH OF THE POSITION AT NISA GOL - MAP SHOWING ROUTE OF COLONEL KELLY'S FORCES

0:39
4

WITH KELLY TO CHITRAL - CHAPTER I - INTRODUCTORY

7:25
5

CHAPTER II - THE MARCH BEGINS

10:45
6

CHAPTER III - THE SHANDUR PASS

30:32
7

CHAPTER IV - FROM LASPUR TO GASHT

15:57
8

CHAPTER V - CHOKALWAT

39:56
9

CHAPTER VII - THE FIGHT AT NISA GOL

21:18
10

CHAPTER VIII - THE MARCH RESUMED THROUGH KILLA DRASAN

14:40

Description

A modest yet vivid diary from a young lieutenant offers a window onto the British‑Indian frontier in the mid‑1890s. Written as a letter home, it captures the rhythm of daily life—marches through snow‑capped passes, cramped camps, shared tea on a suspension bridge, and the small jokes that keep spirits up. The narrative is peppered with the author’s own sketches, turning rugged forts and winding valleys into intimate illustrations.

The account follows the officer’s unexpected posting to Gilgit and his swift assignment to survey the route to Chitral, just as political unrest begins to stir. Readers travel alongside him as troops assemble, rifles are loaded, and the landscape shifts from icy ridges to sun‑lit valleys, all while the author records meals, weather, and the camaraderie of both British and Indian soldiers. It’s a grounded portrait of a frontier expedition, focused on the lived experience rather than grand battles.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (163K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-01-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Sir William George Laurence Beynon

Sir William George Laurence Beynon

1866–1955

A British Indian Army officer who turned hard-won frontier experience into vivid military writing, he is best remembered for his account of the Chitral campaign. His career stretched from regimental service to senior command, giving his work the perspective of someone who had seen empire and war at close range.

View all books

You may also like

The Relief of Chitral

The Relief of Chitral

by Sir Francis Edward Younghusband, G. J. (George John) Younghusband