
An unvarnished chronicle from the front lines, this work strings together the original dispatches of a special correspondent who rode with the British expedition from its uneasy start in December 1867. Through his candid letters, listeners hear the mix of anticipation and anxiety that colored the march through rugged terrain, the early setbacks at Zulla, and the tense atmosphere as the army wrestled with logistics, morale, and leadership.
The narrative preserves the immediacy of a journalist writing under pressure, offering raw observations, personal doubts, and pointed judgments about the decisions that shaped the campaign. While it does not aim to be a formal military record, the account provides a vivid, human‑scale picture of the early days of the march toward Magdala, inviting listeners to experience the challenges and hopes that defined this historic venture.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (769K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2012-04-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1832–1902
Best known for fast-moving historical adventures, this prolific Victorian writer turned real wars, distant places, and imperial history into stories that thrilled generations of young readers. Before becoming a hugely popular novelist, he worked as a journalist and war correspondent, giving his fiction a strong sense of action and detail.
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