After travelling for a year from Syria, through Najd, and on to Bahrain and Oman, Palgrave returned to Europe, where he wrote a narrative of his travels. This narrative became a bestseller and has been reprinted many times. It makes no mention of the covert motives for his journey. After writing this book, Palgrave made yet another
volte-face and renounced his vocation as a Jesuit priest in 1865. He then entered the
British Foreign Office and was appointed consul at Sukhum-Kale (
Sukhumi) in 1866, and moved to Trebizond (
Trabzon) in 1867. In 1868 he married Katherine, the daughter of George Edward Simpson of
Norwich, by whom he had three sons. He was appointed consul at
St. Thomas and
St. Croix in 1873, Manila in 1876, and in 1878 in newly liberated
Principality of Bulgaria, where he was appointed Consul-General. In 1879 he was moved to
Bangkok. In 1884 he was appointed Minister Resident and Consul-General to Uruguay, where he served until his death in 1888. Besides his work on
Central Arabia, Gifford Palgrave published a volume of
Essays on Eastern Questions, a narrative called
Hermann Agha, a sketch of
Dutch Guiana, and a volume of essays titled
Ulysses. Since his death, some have cast doubt on the veracity of his travel accounts.
St. John Philby, who retraced many of the routes Palgrave had travelled, suggested he may not have travelled as extensively as he claimed. Noting inaccuracies and discrepancies in his accounts, Philby accuses him of either basing his writing on second-hand accounts of local travellers, or fabricating them altogether.{{cite book|author=St. John Philby|title=The Heart of Arabia: A Record of Travel & Exploration Vol 2 ==References ==