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In this 1898 volume, Rudolf Slatin recounts his captivity and service under the Mahdists in the Sudan. Relying solely on memory, he offers a truthful, unembellished account of his experiences, written to satisfy public interest rather than for literary merit.
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This volume was published in 1898.
From the book:
Prompted by the earnest entreaties of my friends rather than by any wish of my own to relate my experiences, I have written these chapters.
The few months which have elapsed since my escape
have been so much occupied in resuming my official duties, compiling reports, and satisfying the kindly interest displayed by a large number of people in my strange fate, that any attempt at quiet and steady literary work has been almost impossible.
During my captivity I was unable to make any notes or
keep any diaries ; in writing, therefore, the following pages, I have been dependent entirely on my memory, whilst the whirl of the busy European world, and the constant inter- ruptions to which I have alluded, have given me little time to collect my scattered thoughts.
When, therefore, after having been debarred for so many years from intercourse with outside affairs, and entirely out of practice in writing down my ideas, I find myself urged to lose no time in publishing an account of my adventures, I must beg my readers to excuse the many defects they may notice.
My experiences have no pretence to being of any literary or scientifi value, and the personal episodes I have described can lay claim to little importance ; I have merely attempted to give to those interested in Sudan affairs a true and faithful account of my life whilst fighting and serving the Mahdists.
Rudolf Slatin.
London,
October, 1895.
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