Please be advised that this book has recently gone out of print, however it has been made available by the publisher as a POD (Printed on Demand) Title.

If you want a new copy of this book then this is the only way to get one. I am only allowed to submit POD orders to this publisher once a week. This is normally done sometime during business hours on a Monday (Although sometimes this can alter)

The publisher then instructs the printer & all POD books are printed & sent to me by courier in one large parcel. It takes about 10 working days after I submit the order for it to arrive with me, I then break the order down into my individual customers orders & onward ship first class post as the printer will not ship to private individuals so they have to come to me in bulk.

For this reason the estimated delivery time should be taken as a guide only as someone ordering this book from me on Sunday night for example will get it about a week earlier than someone ordering it on Monday night due to our submission to the publisher being  Monday daytime.

In this personal memoir the author sets out to remedy the lack of any record of the mutinies in Rajputana so that historians of the future will have a reference when studying and analysing the Indian Mutiny

The author of this book was an officer in the Bengal Army, the army that mutinied in 1857, and its scope is contained in the detail that appears on the title page after the main heading, and that reads as follows: "A Personal Narrative of the Mutiny at Nusseerabad (Nasirabad), with subsequent residence at Jodhpore, and journey across the desert into Sind, together with an account of the outbreak at Neemuch, and mutiny of the Jodhpore Legion at Erinpoora, and attack on Mount Aboo.” In the usual high-flown language of the early Victorian age the author explains the reason for writing this account, and that is that as far as he is aware that, whereas the history of the outbreak in almost every other part of India and every station has appeared in print, no narrative has so far been written of the mutinies in Rajpootana. This book is to provide that missing link and it is a remarkable story. Another reason for writing it is to provide a personal account that may be referred to by historians in the distant future when they take on the task of writing a real history of the mutiny, its origins and outcome.
 

GB/DS