
audiobook
Through a series of candid letters written by a diplomat who was inside the walled city, listeners hear the frantic rhythm of Beijing in the summer of 1900. The Boxer movement erupts into open violence, and foreign legations find themselves surrounded by an angry populace and a nervous Chinese authority. Each entry captures the hour‑by‑hour clash between panic and reluctant preparation, giving a palpable sense of a capital on the brink.
The correspondence goes beyond battlefield reports, revealing cramped negotiations among rival powers, whispered strategies of Chinese moderates, and the uneasy discipline of troops who oscillate between order and chaos. As the siege tightens, the writer’s sharp eye records moments of courage, desperation, and the subtle politics that keep catastrophe at bay. Listeners are offered a rare, ground‑level perspective that challenges the familiar myths about the conflict and the roles of the nations involved.
Full title
Indiscreet Letters From Peking Being the Notes of an Eye-Witness, Which Set Forth in Some Detail, from Day to Day, the Real Story of the Siege and Sack of a Distressed Capital in 1900—The Year of Great Tribulation
Language
en
Duration
~12 hours (695K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-11-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.