An uncompromising eyewitness account of empire and failure. Truth collides with imperial pride. Wilfrid Scawen Blunt's Gordon at Khartoum is a personal narrative of events, published as a continuation of A Secret History of the English Occupation of Egypt. Composed in the wake of the late 1800s Sudan crisis, the book fuses the intimacy and moral candour of a Victorian era memoir with the procedural focus of a military expedition narrative. It functions as both a sudan conflict account and a rigorous egyptian occupation analysis, mapping decisions and dilemmas across the field and the drawing-room that defined nineteenth-century Africa. Blunt's sentences are at once forensic and irate, supplying evidence for readers drawn to readable reportage while offering the substance required by students of british colonial history. As a document it rewards cross-referencing with government correspondence and contemporary commentary, helping to illuminate why events in late 1800s Sudan provoked such heated contention at home and abroad. In tone and purpose it sits beside other works that interrogate imperial policy, and it remains a provocative complement to the secret history of egypt that Blunt first set down. Its literary and historical significance is plain: Blunt's voice stands among the dissenting registers of late-Victorian commentary, an indispensable vantage point for understanding the politics and personalities that shaped the british empire in Africa. Casual readers drawn to moral drama and vivid detail find immediate engagement; classic-literature collectors and scholars assembling a history enthusiasts collection regard it as an academic research resource and an instructive complement to later historiography, and a distinctive entry among Wilfrid Scawen Blunt works. Those exploring the secret history of Egypt, or tracing debates over policy in late 1800s Sudan, will encounter here a primary perspective that rewards both attentive reading and citation. The book's continued relevance for courses on british colonial history and for private collections underscores its dual appeal. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike.