ABSTRACT

The critics of Charles George Gordon accused him of vacillation and of instability of character. His supporters refused to admit that he was inconstant; they took the position that it was the Gladstone Cabinet which manifested a spirit of indecision that was fraught with terrible consequences. General Gordon was a prolific letter-writer, and he also kept a journal. Many official notes and dispatches deal with his final mission to Khartoum. This book, first published in 1933, attempts to get at the truth of Gordon’s character and his time in the Sudan through these letters, this journal, these notes and despatches.

chapter I|6 pages

Introductory

chapter II|10 pages

Ismail, Khedive of Egypt

chapter III|9 pages

Gordon called to Central Africa

chapter V|9 pages

Gordon Leaves for Gondokoro

chapter VI|10 pages

Ever on the Trek

chapter VII|11 pages

Departs for Lake Albert

chapter VIII|12 pages

Surveys the Victoria Nile

chapter IX|13 pages

Returns to the Sudan

chapter X|12 pages

Inspects Darfur

chapter XI|11 pages

Finishes His Inspection

chapter XII|13 pages

Summoned to Cairo

chapter XIII|9 pages

The Debt Inquiry

chapter XIV|12 pages

The Aftermath of the Inquiry

chapter XVI|12 pages

The Sudan Abandoned

chapter XVII|15 pages

Gladstone drafts Gordon

chapter XVIII|9 pages

Gordon’s Instructions

chapter XIX|10 pages

At Cairo

chapter XX|12 pages

En Route to Khartoum

chapter XXI|10 pages

Arrival at Khartoum

chapter XXII|12 pages

First Days at Khartoum

chapter XXIII|11 pages

The Berber Expedition

chapter XXIV|10 pages

The Mahdi’s Letter

chapter XXV|12 pages

The Veil of Silence

chapter XXVI|13 pages

Demoted

chapter XXVII|12 pages

Alone

chapter XXVIII|17 pages

The Dash to Khartoum

chapter XXIX|15 pages

Too Late