With Clive in India:
Or, The Beginnings of an Empire
by G. A. Henty
In the following pages I have endeavoured to give a vivid picture of
the wonderful events of the ten years, which at their commencement saw
Madras in the hands of the French--Calcutta at the mercy of the Nabob of
Bengal--and English influence apparently at the point of extinction in
India--and which ended in the final triumph of the English, both in Bengal
and Madras. There were yet great battles to be fought, great efforts to be
made, before the vast Empire of India fell altogether into British hands;
but these were but the sequel of the events I have described.
The historical details are, throughout the story, strictly accurate,
and for them I am indebted to the history of these events written by Mr.
Orme, who lived at that time, to the "Life of Lord Clive," recently
published by Lieutenant Colonel Malleson, and to other standard
authorities. In this book I have devoted a somewhat smaller space to the
personal adventures of my hero than in my other historical tales, but the
events themselves were of such a thrilling and exciting nature that no
fiction could surpass them.
A word as to the orthography of the names and places. An entirely new
method of spelling Indian words has lately been invented by the Indian
authorities. This is no doubt more correct than the rough-and-ready
orthography of the early traders, and I have therefore adopted it for all
little-known places. But there are Indian names which have become
household words in England, and should never be changed; and as it would
be considered a gross piece of pedantry and affectation on the part of a
tourist on the Continent, who should, on his return, say he had been to
Genova, Firenze, and Wien, instead of Genoa, Florence, and Vienna; it is,
I consider, an even worse offence to transform Arcot, Cawnpoor, and
Lucknow, into Arkat, Kahnpur, and Laknao. I have tried, therefore, so far
as possible, to give the names of well-known personages and places in the
spelling familiar to Englishmen, while the new orthography has been
elsewhere adopted.
G. A. Henty.
A lady in deep mourning was sitting, crying bitterly, by a fire in
small lodgings in the town of Yarmouth. Beside her stood a tall lad of
sixteen. He was slight in build, but his schoolfellows knew that Charlie
Marryat's muscles were as firm and hard as those of any boy in the school.
In all sports requiring activity and endurance, rather than weight and
strength, he was always conspicuous. Not one in the school could compete
with him in long-distance running, and when he was one of the hares there
was but little chance for the hounds. He was a capital swimmer, and one of
the best boxers in the school. He had a reputation for being a leader in
every mischievous prank; but he was honorable and manly, would scorn to
shelter himself under the semblance of a lie, and was a prime favourite
with his masters, as well as his schoolfellows. His mother bewailed the
frequency with which he returned home with blackened eyes and bruised
face; for between Dr. Willet's school and the fisher lads of Yarmouth
there was a standing feud, whose origin dated so far back that none of
those now at school could trace it. Consequently, fierce fights often took
place in the narrow rows, and sometimes the fisher boys would be driven
back on to the broad quay shaded by trees, by the river, and there being
reinforced from the craft along the side, would reassume the offensive and
drive their opponents back into the main street.
It was but six months since Charlie had lost his father, who was the
officer in command at the coast guard station, and his scanty pension was
now all that remained for the support of his widow and children. His
mother had talked his future prospects over, many times, with Charlie. The
latter was willing to do anything, but could suggest nothing. His father
had but little naval interest, and had for years been employed on coast
guard service. Charlie agreed that, although he should have liked of all
things to go to sea, it was useless to think of it now, for he was past
the age at which he could have entered as a midshipman.
The matter had been talked over four years before, with his father; but
the latter had pointed out that a life in the navy, without interest, is
in most cases a very hard one. If a chance of distinguishing himself
happened, promotion would follow; but if not, he might be for years on
shore, starving on half pay and waiting in vain for an appointment, while
officers with more luck and better interest went over his head.
Other professions had been discussed, but nothing determined upon, when
Lieutenant Marryat suddenly died. Charlie, although an only son, was not
an only child, as he had two sisters both younger than himself. After a
few months of effort, Mrs. Marryat found that the utmost she could hope to
do, with her scanty income, was to maintain herself and daughters, and to
educate them until they should reach an age when they could earn their own
living as governesses; but that Charlie's keep and education were beyond
her resources. She had, therefore, very reluctantly written to an uncle,
whom she had not seen for many years, her family having objected very
strongly to her marriage with a penniless lieutenant in the navy. She
informed him of the loss of her husband, and that, although her income was
sufficient to maintain herself and her daughters, she was most anxious to
start her son, who was now sixteen, in life; and therefore begged him to
use his influence to obtain for him a situation of some sort. The letter
which she now held in her hand was the answer to the appeal.
"My dear Niece," it began, "Since you, by your own foolish conduct and
opposition to all our wishes, separated yourself from your family, and
went your own way in life, I have heard little of you, as the death of
your parents so shortly afterwards deprived me of all sources of
information. I regret to hear of the loss which you have suffered. I have
already taken the necessary steps to carry out your wishes. I yesterday
dined with a friend, who is one of the directors of the Honorable East
India Company, and at my request he has kindly placed a writership in the
Company at your son's service. He will have to come up to London to see
the board, next week, and will probably have to embark for India a
fortnight later. I shall be glad if he will take up his abode with me,
during the intervening time. I shall be glad also if you will favour me
with a statement of your income and expenses, with such details as you may
think necessary. I inclose four five-pound bank notes, in order that your
son may obtain such garments as may be immediately needful for his
appearance before the board of directors, and for his journey to London. I
remain, my dear niece, yours sincerely,
"Joshua Tufton."
"It is cruel," Mrs. Marryat sobbed, "cruel to take you away from us,
and send you to India, where you will most likely die of fever, or be
killed by a tiger, or stabbed by one of those horrid natives, in a
fortnight."
"Not so bad as that, Mother, I hope," Charlie said sympathizingly,
although he could not repress a smile; "other people have managed to live
out there, and have come back safe."
"Yes," Mrs. Marryat said, sobbing; "I know how you will come back. A
little, yellow, shrivelled up old man with no liver, and a dreadful
temper, and a black servant. I know what it will be."
This time Charlie could not help laughing.
"That's looking too far ahead altogether, Mother. You take the two
extremes. If I don't die in a fortnight, I am to live to be a shrivelled
old man. I'd rather take a happy medium, and look forward to coming back
before my liver is all gone, or my temper all destroyed, with lots of
money to make you and the girls comfortable.
"There is only one thing. I wish it had been a cadetship, instead of a
writership."
"That is my only comfort," Mrs. Marryat said. "If it had been a
cadetship, I should have written to say that I would not let you go. It is
bad enough as it is; but if you had had to fight, I could not have borne
it."
Charlie did his best to console his mother, by telling her how everyone
who went to India made fortunes, and how he should be sure to come back
with plenty of money; and that, when the girls grew up, he should be able
to find rich husbands for them; and at last he succeeded in getting her to
look at matters in a less gloomy light.
"And I'm sure, Mother," he said, "Uncle means most kindly. He sends
twenty pounds, you see, and says that that is for immediate necessities;
so I have no doubt he means to help to get my outfit, or at any rate to
advance money, which I can repay him out of my salary. The letter is
rather stiff and businesslike, of course, but I suppose that's his way;
and you see he asks about your income, so perhaps he means to help for the
girls' education. I should go away very happy, if I knew that you would be
able to get on comfortably. Of course it's a long way off, Mother, and I
should have liked to stay at home, to be a help to you and the girls; but
one can't have all one wishes. As far as I am concerned, myself, I would
rather go out as a writer there, where I shall see strange sights and a
strange country, than be stuck all my life at a desk in London.
"What is Uncle like?"
"He is a short man, my dear, rather stiff and pompous, with a very
stiff cravat. He used to give me his finger to shake, when I was a child,
and I was always afraid of him. He married a most disagreeable woman, only
a year or two before I married, myself. But I heard she died not very long
afterwards;" and so Mrs. Marryat got talking of her early days and
relations, and was quite in good spirits again, by the time her daughters
returned from school; and she told them what she was now coming to regard
as the good fortune which had befallen their brother.
The girls were greatly affected. They adored their brother, and the
thought that he was going away for years was terrible to them. Nothing
that could be said pacified them in the slightest degree, and they did
nothing but cry, until they retired to bed. Charlie was much affected by
their sorrow; but when they had retired, he took his hat and went out to
tell the news of his approaching departure to some of his chums.
The next day, Mrs. Marryat wrote thanking her uncle for his kindness,
and saying that Charlie would go round to London by the packet which
sailed on the following Monday; and would, if the wind were fair and all
went well, reach London on the Wednesday.
School was, of course, at once given up, and the girls also had a
holiday till their brother's departure. When the necessary clothes were
ordered, there was little more to do; and Charlie spent the time, when his
boy friends were in school, in walking with the girls along the shore,
talking to them of the future, of the presents he would send them home,
and of the life he should lead in India; while at other times he went out
with his favourite schoolfellows, and joined in one last grand battle with
the smack boys.
On Monday morning, after a sad farewell to his family, Charlie embarked
on board the Yarmouth Belle, a packet which performed the journey to and
from London once a fortnight. She was a roomy lugger, built for stowage
rather than speed, and her hold was crammed and her deck piled with
packages of salted fish. There were five or six other persons also bound
for London, the journey to which was, in those days, regarded as an
arduous undertaking.
As soon as the Yarmouth Belle issued from the mouth of the river, she
began to pitch heavily; and Charlie, who from frequently going out with
his father in the revenue cutter, was a good sailor, busied himself in
doing his best for his afflicted fellow passengers. Towards evening the
wind got up, and shifting ahead, the captain dropped anchor off Lowestoft.
The next morning was finer, and the Yarmouth Belle continued her way. It
was not, however, till Thursday afternoon that she dropped anchor in the
Pool.
Charlie was soon on shore, and giving his trunk to a porter, desired
him to lead the way to Bread Street, in which his uncle resided; for in
the last century, such things as country villas were almost unknown, and
the merchants of London for the most part resided in the houses where they
carried on their business. Keeping close to the porter, to see that he did
not make off with his trunk, for Charlie had received many warnings as to
the extreme wickedness of London, he followed him through the busy
streets, and arrived safely at his uncle's door.
It was now dusk, and Charlie, on giving his name, was shown upstairs to
a large room, which was lighted by a fire blazing in the hearth. Standing
with his back to this was a gentleman whom he at once recognized, from his
mother's description, as her uncle, although he was a good deal more
portly than when she had seen him last.
"So you are my grandnephew," he said, holding out what Charlie
considered to be a very limp and flabby hand towards him.
"Yes, Uncle," Charlie said cheerfully; "and we are very much obliged to
you, Mamma and I, for your kindness."
"Humph!" the old gentleman grunted.
"And how is it," he asked severely, "that you were not here yesterday?
My niece's letter led me to expect that you would arrive yesterday."
"We came as fast as we could, Uncle," Charlie laughed; "but of course
the time depends upon the wind. The captain tells me that he has been as
much as three weeks coming round."
Mr. Tufton grunted again as if to signify that such unpunctuality was
altogether displeasing to him.
"You are tall," he said, looking up at Charlie, who stood half a head
above him, "and thin, very thin. You have a loose way of standing, which I
don't approve of."
"I'm sorry I'm loose, sir," Charlie said gravely, "if you do not
approve of it; but you see, running about and playing games make one
lissome. I suppose, now that's all over and I am going to spend my time in
writing, I shall get stiffer."
"I hope so, I hope so," Mr. Tufton said encouragingly, and as if
stiffness were one of the most desirable things in life. "I like to see
young men with a sedate bearing.
"And you left my niece and grandnieces well, I hope?"
"Quite well, thank you, sir," Charlie said; "but, of course, a good
deal upset with parting from me."
"Yes," Mr. Tufton said; "I suppose so. Women are so emotional. Now
there's nothing I object to more than emotion."
As Charlie thought that this was probably the case, he was silent,
although the idea vaguely occurred to him that he should like to excite a
little emotion in his uncle, by the sudden insertion of a pin, or some
other such means. The silence continued for some little time, and then Mr.
Tufton said:
"I always dine at two o'clock; but as probably you are hungry--I have
observed that boys always are hungry--some food will be served you in the
next room. I had already given my housekeeper orders. No doubt you will
find it prepared. After that, you may like to take a walk in the streets.
I have supper at nine, by which hour you will, of course, have returned."
Charlie, as he ate his meal, thought to himself that his uncle was a
pompous old gentleman, and that it would be very hard work getting on with
him, for the next three weeks. However, he consoled himself by the
thought:
"Kind is as kind does after all, and I expect the old gentleman is not
as crusty as he looks."
Charlie had handed to Mr. Tufton a letter which his mother had given
him, and when he returned from a ramble through the streets, he found that
gentleman sitting by the fire, with lights upon a small table beside him.
Upon this Mrs. Marryat's letter lay open.
"So you have soon become tired of the streets of London, Grandnephew!"
he said.
"There is not much to see, sir. The lamps do not burn very brightly,
and the fog is coming on. I thought that, if it grew thicker, I might lose
my way, and in that case I might not have been in at the hour you named
for supper."
"Humph!" the other gentleman grunted. "So your mother has taught you to
be punctual to meals. But, no; boys' appetites teach them to be punctual
then, if never at any other time.
"And why, sir?" he asked severely, "Did my niece not write to me
before?"
"I don't know, sir," Charlie said. "I suppose she did not like--that
is, she didn't think--that is--"
"Think, sir! Like, sir!" said his uncle. "What right had she either to
think or to like? Her duty clearly was to have made me acquainted, at
once, with all the circumstances. I suppose I had a right to say whether I
approved of my grandnieces going tramping about the world as governesses,
or not. It isn't because a woman chooses, by her folly, to separate
herself from her family, that they are to be deprived of their rights in a
matter of this kind. Eh, sir, what do you say to that?" and Mr. Tufton
looked very angry, indeed.
"I don't know, sir," Charlie said. "I have never thought the matter
over."
"Why, sir, suppose she had made you a tinker, sir, and you turned out a
thief, as likely as not you would have done, and you'd been hung, sir,
what then? Am I to have such discredit as this brought upon me, without my
having any option in the matter?"
"I suppose not, sir," Charlie said. "I hope I shouldn't have turned out
a thief, even if I'd been a tinker; but perhaps it was because my mother
feared that this might be the case, that she did give you the option."
His uncle looked at him keenly; but Charlie, though with some
difficulty, maintained the gravest face.
"It is well she did so," Mr. Tufton said; "very well. If she had not
done so, I should have known the reason why. And you, sir, do you like the
thought of going to India?"
"Yes, Uncle, I like the thought very much, though I would rather, if I
may say so, have gone as a cadet."
"I thought so," Mr. Tufton said, sarcastically. "I was sure of it. You
wanted to wear a red coat and a sword, and to swagger about the streets of
Calcutta, instead of making an honorable living and acquiring a fortune."
"I don't think, sir," Charlie said, "that the idea of the red coat and
sword entered into my mind; but it seemed to me the choice of a life of
activity and adventure, against one as a mere clerk."
"Had you entered the military service of the Company, even if you
didn't get shot, you could only hope to rise to the command of a regiment,
ranking with a civilian very low down on the list. The stupidity of boys
is unaccountable. It's a splendid career, sir, that I have opened to you;
but if I'd known that you had no ambition, I would have put you into my
own counting house; though there, that wouldn't have done either, for I
know you would have blotted the ledger, and turned all the accounts
topsy-turvy.
"And now, sir, supper is ready;" and the old gentleman led the way into
the next room.
Upon the following day Charlie was introduced, by his uncle, to the
director who had given him his nomination, and was told by him that the
board would sit upon the following day, and that he must call at the India
House, at eleven o'clock. The ordeal was not a formidable one. He was
shown into a room where eight or ten elderly gentlemen were sitting round
a large table. Among these was his friend of the day before. He was asked
a question or two about his age, his father's profession, and his place of
education. Then the gentleman at the head of the table nodded to him, and
said he could go, and instructions would be sent to him, and that he was
to prepare to sail in the Lizzie Anderson, which would leave the docks in
ten days' time, and that he would be, for the present, stationed at
Madras.
Much delighted at having got through the ordeal so easily, Charlie
returned to his uncle's. He did not venture to penetrate into the latter's
counting house, but awaited his coming upstairs to dinner, to tell him the
news.
"Humph!" said his uncle; "it is lucky they did not find out what a fool
you were, at once. I was rather afraid that even the two minutes would do
it. After dinner, I will send my clerk round with you, to get the few
things which are necessary for your voyage.
"I suppose you will want to, what you call amuse yourself, to see the
beasts at Exeter Change, and the playhouses. Here are two sovereigns.
Don't get into loose company, and don't get drinking, sir, or out of the
house you go."
Charlie attempted to express his thanks, but his uncle stopped him
abruptly.
"Hold your tongue, sir. I am doing what is right; a thing, sir, Joshua
Tufton always has done, and doesn't expect to be thanked for it. All I ask
you is, that if you rob the Company's till and are hung, don't mention
that you are related to me."
After dinner was over, Charlie went out under the charge of an old
clerk, and visited tailors' and outfitters' shops, and found that his
uncle's idea of the few necessaries for a voyage differed very widely from
his own. The clerk, in each case, inquired from the tradesmen what was the
outfit which gentlemen going to India generally took with them, and
Charlie was absolutely appalled at the magnitude of the orders. Four dozen
shirts, ten dozen pairs of stockings, two dozen suits of white cotton
cloth, and everything else in proportion. Charlie in vain remonstrated,
and even implored the clerk to abstain from ordering what appeared to him
such a fabulous amount of things; and begged him, at any rate, to wait
until he had spoken to his uncle. The clerk, however, replied that he had
received instructions that the full usual outfit was to be obtained, and
that Mr. Tufton never permitted his orders to be questioned. Charlie was
forced to submit, but he was absolutely oppressed with the magnitude of
his outfit, to carry which six huge trunks were required.
"It is awful," Charlie said to himself, "positively awful. How much it
will all come to, goodness only knows; three or four hundred pounds, at
least."
In those days, before steam was thought of, and the journey to India
was often of six months' duration, men never came home more than once in
seven years, and often remained in India from the day of their arrival
until they finally retired, without once revisiting England. The outfits
taken out were, therefore, necessarily much larger than at the present
time, when a run home to England can be accomplished in three weeks, and
there are plenty of shops, in every town in India, where all European
articles of necessity or luxury can be purchased.
After separating from the clerk, Charlie felt altogether unable to
start out in search of amusement. He wandered about vaguely till supper
time, and then attempted to address his uncle on the subject.
"My dear Uncle," he began, "you've been so awfully kind to me, that I
really do not like to trespass upon you. I am positively frightened at the
outfit your clerk has ordered. It is enormous. I'm sure I can't want so
many things, possibly, and I would really rather take a much smaller
outfit; and then, as I want them, I can have more things out from England,
and pay for them myself."
"You don't suppose," Mr. Tufton said sternly, "that I'm going to have
my nephew go out to India with the outfit of a cabin boy. I ordered that
you were to have the proper outfit of a gentleman, and I requested my
clerk to order a considerable portion of the things to be made of a size
which will allow for your growing, for you look to me as if you were
likely enough to run up into a lanky giant, of six feet high. I suppose he
has done as I ordered him. Don't let me hear another word on the subject."
Chapter 2: The Young Writer.
For the next four days, Charlie followed his uncle's instructions and
amused himself. He visited Exeter Change, took a boat and rowed down the
river to Greenwich, and a coach and visited the palace of Hampton Court.
He went to see the coaches make their start, in the morning, for all
places in England, and marvelled at the perfection of the turnouts. He
went to the playhouses twice, in the evening, and saw Mr. Garrick in his
performance as Richard the Third.
On the fifth day, a great surprise awaited him. His uncle, at
breakfast, had told him briefly that he did not wish him to go out before
dinner, as someone might want to see him; and Charlie, supposing that a
messenger might be coming down from the India House, waited indoors; and
an hour later he was astonished, when the door of the room opened and his
mother and sisters entered.
With a shout of gladness and surprise, Charlie rushed into their arms.
"My dear mother, my dear girls, this is an unexpected pleasure, indeed!
Why, what has brought you here?"
"Didn't you know we were coming, Charlie? Didn't Uncle tell you?" they
exclaimed.
"Not a word," Charlie said. "I never dreamt of such a thing. What, has
he called you up here to stay till I go?"
"Oh, my dear, he has been so kind," his mother said; "and so funny! He
wrote me such a scolding letter, just as if I had been a very naughty
little girl. He said he wasn't going to allow me to bring disgrace upon
him, by living in wretched lodgings at Yarmouth, nor by his grandnieces
being sent out as governesses. So he ordered me at once--ordered me
Charlie, as if I had no will of my own--to give up the lodgings, and to
take our places in the coach, yesterday morning. He said we were not to
shame him by appearing here in rags, and he sent me a hundred pounds,
every penny of which, he said, was to be laid out in clothes. As to the
future, he said it would be his duty to see that I brought no further
disgrace upon the family."
"Yes, and he's been just as kind to me, Mother. As I told you when I
wrote, he had ordered an enormous outfit, which will, I am sure, cost
hundreds of pounds. He makes me go to the playhouses, and all sorts of
amusements; and all the time he has been so kind he scolds, and grumbles,
and predicts that I shall be hanged."
"I'm sure you won't," Kate, his youngest sister, said indignantly. "How
can he say such a thing?"
"He doesn't mean it," Charlie laughed. "It's only his way. He will go
on just the same way with you, I have no doubt; but you mustn't mind, you
know, and mustn't laugh, but must look quite grave and serious.
"Ah! Here he is.
"Oh, Uncle, this is kind of you!"
"Hold your tongue, sir," said his uncle, "and try and learn not to
speak to your elders, unless you are addressed.
"Niece Mary," he said, kissing her upon the forehead, "I am glad to see
you again. You are not so much changed as I expected.
"And these are my grandnieces, Elizabeth and Kate, though why Kate I
don't know. It is a fanciful name, and new to the family, and I am
surprised that you didn't call her Susanna, after your grandmother."
Kate made a little face at the thought of being called Susanna.
However, a warning glance from Charlie closed her lips, just as she was
about to express her decided preference for her own name. Mr. Tufton
kissed them both, muttering to himself:
"I suppose I ought to kiss them. Girls always expect to be kissed at
every opportunity.
"What are you laughing at, grandniece?"
"I don't think girls expect to be kissed, except by people they like,"
Kate said; "but we do like kissing you, Uncle," throwing her arms round
his neck, and kissing him heartily; "because you have been so kind to
Charlie, and have brought us up to see him again."
"You have disarranged my white tie, Niece," Mr. Tufton said,
extricating himself from Kate's embrace.
"Niece Mary, I fear that you have not taught your daughters to restrain
their emotions, and there is nothing so dreadful as emotional women."
"Perhaps I have not taken so much pains with their education, in that
way, as in some others," Mrs. Marryat said, smiling. "But of course,
Uncle, if you object to be kissed, the girls will abstain from doing so."
"No," Mr. Tufton said, thoughtfully. "It is the duty of nieces to kiss
their uncles, in moderation--in moderation, mind--and it is the duty of
the uncles to receive those salutations, and I do not know that the duty
is altogether an unpleasant one. I am, myself, unaccustomed to be kissed,
but it is an operation to which I may accustom myself, in time."
"I never heard it called an operation, Uncle," Lizzie said demurely;
"but I now understand the meaning of the phrase of a man's undergoing a
painful operation. I used to think it meant cutting off a leg, or
something of that sort, but I see it's much worse."
Her uncle looked at her steadily.
"I am afraid, Grandniece, that you intend to be sarcastic. This is a
hateful habit in a man, worse in a woman. Cure yourself of it as speedily
as possible, or Heaven help the unhappy man who may some day be your
husband.
"And now," he said, "ring the bell. The housekeeper will show you to
your rooms. My nephew will tell you what are the hours for meals. Of
course, you will want to be gadding about with him. You will understand
that there is no occasion to be in to meals; but if you are not present
when they are upon the table, you will have to wait for the next. I cannot
have my house turned upside down, by meals being brought up at all sorts
of hours.
"You must not expect me, Niece, to be at your beck and call during the
day, as I have my business to attend to; but of an evening I shall, of
course, feel it my duty to accompany you to the playhouse. It will not do
for you to be going about with only the protection of a hare-brained boy."
The remainder of Charlie's stay in London passed most pleasantly. They
visited all the sights of town, Mr. Tufton performing what he called his
duty with an air of protest, but showing a general thoughtfulness and
desire to please his visitors, which was very apparent even when he
grunted and grumbled the most.
On the evening before he started, he called Charlie down into his
counting house.
"Tomorrow you are going to sail," he said, "and to start in life on
your own account, and I trust that you will, as far as possible, be
steady, and do your duty to your employers. You will understand that,
although the pay of a writer is not high, there are opportunities for
advancement. The Company have the monopoly of the trade of India, and in
addition to their great factories at Bombay, Calcutta, and Madras, they
have many other trading stations. Those who, by their good conduct,
attract the attention of their superiors, rise to positions of trust and
emolument. There are many who think that the Company will, in time,
enlarge its operations; and as they do so, superior opportunities will
offer themselves; and since the subject of India has been prominently
brought before my notice, I have examined the question, and am determined
to invest somewhat largely in the stock of the Company, a step which will
naturally give me some influence with the board. That influence I shall,
always supposing that your conduct warrants it, exercise on your behalf.
"As we are now at war with France, and it is possible that the vessel
in which you are proceeding may be attacked by the way, I have thought it
proper that you should be armed. You will, therefore, find in your cabin a
brace of pistols, a rifle, and a double-barrel shotgun: which last, I am
informed, is a useful weapon at close quarters. Should your avocations in
India permit your doing so, you will find them useful in the pursuit of
game. I hope that you will not be extravagant; but as a matter of business
I find that it is useful to be able to give entertainments, to persons who
may be in a position to benefit or advance you. I have, therefore,
arranged that you will draw from the factor at Madras the sum of two
hundred pounds, annually, in addition to your pay. It is clearly my duty
to see that my nephew has every fair opportunity for making his way.
"Now, go upstairs at once to your mother. I have letters to write, and
am too busy for talking."
So saying, with a peremptory wave of his hand he dismissed his nephew.
"Well, Mother," Charlie said, after telling her of his uncle's
generosity, "thank goodness you will be all right now, anyhow. No doubt
Uncle intends to do something for you and the girls, though he has said
nothing at present, beyond the fact that you are not to be in wretched
lodgings, and they are not to go out as governesses. But even if he should
change his mind, and I don't think he ever does that, I shall be able to
help you.
"Oh, he is kind, isn't he?"
The parting was far less sad than that which had taken place at
Yarmouth. Charlie was now assured that his mother and sisters would be
comfortable, and well cared for in his absence; while his mother, happy in
the lightening of her anxiety as to the future of her daughters, and as to
the prospects of her son, was able to bear with better heart the thought
of their long separation.
Mrs. Marryat and the girls accompanied him on board ship. Mr. Tufton
declined to join the party, under the plea that, in the first place, he
was busy; and in the second, that he feared there would be an emotional
display. He sent, however, his head clerk with them, to escort the ladies
on their return from the docks.
The Lizzie Anderson was a fine ship, of the largest size, and she was
almost as clean and trim as a man of war. She carried twelve cannon, two
of them thirty-two pounders, which were in those days considered large
pieces of ordnance. All the ships of the Company, and, indeed, all
ocean-going merchantmen of the day, were armed, as the sea swarmed with
privateers, and the black flag of the pirates was still occasionally to be
seen.
The girls were delighted with all they saw, as, indeed, was Charlie;
for accustomed, as they were, only to the coasting vessels which
frequented the port of Yarmouth, this floating castle appeared to them a
vessel of stupendous size and power.
This was Charlie's first visit, also, to the ship, for his uncle had
told him that all directions had been given, that the trunks with the
things necessary for the voyage would be found in his cabin, at the time
of starting, and the rest of the luggage in the hold. Everything was in
order, and Charlie found that his cabin companion was a doctor in the
service, returning to Madras. He was a pleasant man, of some five or six
and thirty, and assured Mrs. Marryat that he would soon make her son at
home on board ship, and would, moreover, put him up to the ways of things
upon his arrival in India. There were many visitors on board, saying
goodbye to their friends, and all sat down to lunch, served in the saloon.
When this was over, the bell rang for visitors to go ashore. There was
a short scene of parting, in which Charlie was not ashamed to use his
handkerchief as freely as did his mother and sisters. Five minutes later,
the great vessel passed through the dock gates. Charlie stood at the
stern, waving his handkerchief as long as he could catch a glimpse of the
figures of his family; and then as, with her sails spread and the tide
gaining strength every minute beneath her, the vessel made her way down
the river, he turned round to examine his fellow passengers.
These were some twenty in number, and for the most part men. Almost all
were, in some capacity or other, civil or military, in the service of the
Company; for at that time their monopoly was a rigid one, and none outside
its boundary were allowed to trade in India. The Company was, indeed,
solely a great mercantile house of business. They had their own ships,
their own establishments, and bought and sold goods like other traders.
They owned a small extent of country, round their three great trading
towns; and kept up a little army, composed of two or three white
regiments; and as many composed of natives, trained and disciplined like
Europeans, and known as Sepoys. Hence the clergyman, the doctor, a member
of the council of Madras, four or five military officers, twice as many
civilians, and three young writers, besides Charlie, were all in the
employment of the Company.
"Well, youngster," a cheery voice said beside him, "take your last look
at the smoke of London, for it will be a good many years before you see it
again, my lad. You've blue skies and clear ones where you're going, except
when it rains, and when it does there is no mistake about it."
The speaker was the captain of the Lizzie Anderson, a fine sailor-like
man of some fifty years, of which near forty had been spent in the service
of the Company.
"I'm not a Londoner," Charlie said, smiling, "and have no regret for
leaving its smoke. Do you think we shall make a quick voyage?"
"I hope so," the captain said, "but it all depends upon the wind. A
finer ship never floated than the Lizzie Anderson; but the Company don't
build their vessels for speed, and it's no use trying to run, when you
meet a Frenchman. Those fellows understand how to build ships, and if they
could fight them as well as they build them, we should not long be
mistress of the sea."
Most of the people on board appeared to know each other, and Charlie
felt rather lonely, till the doctor came up and began to chat with him. He
told him who most of his fellow passengers were:
"That gentleman there, walking on the other side of the deck, as if not
only the ship but the river and banks on both sides belonged to him, is
one of the council. That is his wife over there, with a companion holding
her shawl for her. That pretty little woman, next to her, is the wife of
Captain Tibbets, the tall man leaning against the bulwarks. Those two
sisters are going out to keep house for their uncle, one of the leading
men in Madras; and, I suppose, to get husbands, which they will most
likely do before they have been there many weeks. They look very nice
girls.
"But you soon get acquainted with them all. It is surprising how soon
people get friendly on board ship, though, as a rule, they quarrel like
cats and dogs before they get to the end of it."
"What do they quarrel about?" Charlie asked, surprised.
"Oh, about anything or nothing," the doctor said. "They all get
heartily sick of each other, and of the voyage, and they quarrel because
they have nothing else to do. You will see, we shall be as happy a party
as possible till we get about as far as the Cape. After that, the rows
will begin, and by the time we get to India, half the people won't speak
to each other.
"Have you been down the river before? That's Gravesend. I see the
captain is getting ready to anchor. So, I suppose the tide has nearly run
out. If this wind holds, we shall be fairly out at sea when you get up
tomorrow.
"You snore, I hope?"
"No, sir, I don't think so," Charlie said.
"I hoped you did," the doctor said, "because I'm told I do, sometimes.
However, as I usually smoke a cigar on deck, the last thing, I hope you
will be fairly asleep before I am. If at any time I get very bad, and keep
you awake, you must shake me."
Charlie said it took a good deal to keep him awake, and that he should
probably get accustomed to it, ere long.
"It's better to do that," he said with a laugh, "than to keep on waking
you, for the next four or five months."
A week later, the Lizzie Anderson was running down the Spanish coast,
with all sail set. She was out of sight of land, and so far had seen
nothing likely to cause uneasiness. They had met many vessels, homeward
bound from the Mediterranean, and one or two big ships which the captain
pronounced to be Indiamen. That morning, however, a vessel was seen coming
out from the land. She seemed, to Charlie's eyes, quite a small vessel,
and he was surprised to see how often the captain and officers turned
their glasses towards her.
"I fancy our friend over there is a French privateer," the doctor
remarked to him; "and I should not be surprised if we found ourselves
exchanging shots with her, before many hours are over."
"But she's a little bit of a thing," Charlie said. "Surely she would
never venture to attack a ship like ours."
"It's the size of the guns, not the size of the ship, that counts, my
boy. She has the advantage of being able to sail three feet to our two;
and probably, small as she is, she carries half as many men again as we
do. However, we carry heavy metal, and can give a good account of
ourselves. Those thirty-twos will astonish our friend, if she comes within
range."
The stranger was a large schooner, and the tautness of the spars and
rigging showed that she was in beautiful order. She crossed the line upon
which the merchantman was sailing, some two miles in her rear; and then,
bearing up, followed in her wake.
Charlie stood near the captain, who, instead of watching her, was
sweeping the horizon with his glass. Presently he paused, and gazed
intently at a distant object.
"I thought so," he said to the first officer. "I fancied that fellow
wasn't alone. He would hardly have ventured to try his strength with us,
if he had been. Send a man up to the tops, and let him see what he can
make her out to be. I can only see her topmasts, but I can make out no
yards."
Presently the lookout came down, and reported that the distant vessel
appeared to be a large fore-and-aft schooner, bearing down upon them.
"She will not be up for two hours, yet," the captain said. "It will be
getting dark, then. It is not likely they will engage at night, but they
will keep close, and show their teeth at daybreak."
It soon became known that the belief of the captain was that the vessel
in their wake, and that which could be seen approaching on the beam, were
French privateers; and soon all were preparing, in their own way, for what
might happen. The sailors cleared the decks, and loosed the guns. The
gentlemen went below, and shortly returned bringing up rifles and fowling
pieces. Small arms and cutlasses were brought up, and piled round the
masts.
"Why don't you put on more sail, sir?" Mr. Ashmead, the member of the
council, said to the captain. "My wife, sir, objects to the sound of
firearms, and I must really beg that you will increase your speed. As it
is, we are losing rather than gaining upon that vessel behind. The duty of
the ships of the Company is to try not to fight."
"If they can help it," the captain added quietly. "Not to fight, if
they can help it, Mr. Ashmead. But unfortunately, the choice upon the
present occasion lies with the gentlemen yonder, and not with us. It is
not of the slightest use adding to the sail we carry, for at our very best
speed, those schooners could sail round and round us. As night comes on I
intend to shorten sail, and put the ship into fighting trim. In the
morning I shall again increase it, but I shall not make any attempt to
escape a combat which it depends entirely on those privateers to bring on,
or not, as they choose. I am sorry that Mrs. Ashmead should be exposed to
the unpleasantness of listening to the explosion of firearms, and that my
other lady passengers should be exposed to the danger which cannot but
arise, more or less, from a naval conflict.
"However, I hope, sir, that there need be no great anxiety as to the
result. The Company has given us a heavy armament, and you may be sure
that we shall all do our best."
Seeing the gentlemen go below for their guns, Charlie asked one of the
other young writers, a lad of about his own age, named Peters, with whom
he had become very friendly, to go below with him. He had not yet examined
the arms that his uncle had given him, for he had not thought of them
since he saw the gun cases under his berth, on his first arrival on board
ship. He found the doctor already in his cabin, putting together a heavy
double-barrelled gun.
"Well, youngster," he said, "so we're likely to have a brush. I see you
have a couple of gun cases under your berth. You are a good deal better
provided than most lads who go out as writers.
"Ah! That's a beautiful piece of yours," he said, as Charlie unlocked
one of the cases and took out a rifle, "a small bore and a heavy barrel,
and beautifully finished. With a greased patch and a heavy charge, that
ought to carry a bullet far and true. Have you had any practice?"
"Not with this gun, sir. I used, sometimes, to practise shooting at
gulls with a musket, on board the cutter my father commanded; and I got to
be a fair shot with it."
"Then you ought to be able to do good work, with such a piece as that.
What is in the other case?
"Ah! That's a beauty, too," he said, as he examined the double-barrelled
gun. "Made extra strong and heavy, I see, so as to carry bullets. You'll
find your shoulder ache, at first; but you'll get accustomed to it, in
time. I'm always in favour of heavy barrels. They shoot stronger and
straighter than your light guns, are not so liable to get bent or bruised,
if a stupid servant drops one across a stone; and, after all, two or three
pounds difference in weight does not make any material difference, when
you're accustomed to it. Although, I grant, a heavy gun does not come
quite so quickly up to the shoulder, for a snap shot."
"Now, Peters," Charlie said, "you take the double barrel. I will use
the rifle. Mine will come into play first, but, as my uncle said when he
gave it me, yours will do most execution at close quarters."
At dusk the schooners, having exchanged some signals by flags, took up
their positions, one on each quarter of the ship, at a distance of some
two miles.
"Do not you think," Charlie asked his friend the doctor, "that they are
likely to try and board us tonight?"
"No," the doctor said. "These privateers generally depend upon their
long guns. They know that we shall be on the watch all night, and that, in
a hand-to-hand fight, they would lose a considerable number of men; while
by keeping at a distance, and maintaining a fire with their long guns,
they rely upon crippling their opponents; and then, ranging up under their
stern, pouring in a fire at close quarters until they surrender.
"Another thing is that they prefer daylight, as they can then see
whether any other vessel is approaching. Were one of our cruisers to hear
a cannonade in the night, she would come down and take them unaware. No, I
think you will see that at daylight, if the coast is clear, they will
begin."
Such was evidently the captain's opinion also, as he ordered sail to be
still further shortened, and all, save the watch on deck, to turn in at
once. The lights were all extinguished, not that the captain had any idea
of evading his pursuers, but that he wished to avoid offering them a mark
for their fire, should they approach in the darkness.
Chapter 3: A Brush With Privateers.
The night passed quietly. Once or twice lights were seen, as the
schooners showed a lantern for a moment to notify their exact position to
each other.
As soon as dawn broke, every man on board the Lizzie Anderson was at
his post. The schooners had drawn up a little, but were still under easy
sail. The moment that the day grew clear enough for it to be perceived
that no other sail could be seen above the horizon, fresh sail was spread
upon the schooners, and they began rapidly to draw up.
On the previous evening the four heavy guns had been brought aft, and
the Indiaman could have made a long running fight with her opponents, had
the captain been disposed. To this, however, he objected strongly, as his
vessel was sure to be hulled and knocked about severely, and perhaps some
of his masts cut down. He was confident in his power to beat off the two
privateers, and he therefore did not add a stitch of canvas to the easy
sail under which he had been holding on all night.
Presently a puff of smoke shot out from the bow of the schooner from
the weather quarter, followed almost instantaneously by one from her
consort. Two round shot struck up the water, the one under the Indiaman's
stern, the other under her forefoot.
"The rascals are well within range," the captain said quietly. "See,
they are taking off canvas again. They intend to keep at that distance,
and hammer away at us. Just what I thought would be their tactics."
Two more shots were fired by the schooners. One flew over the deck
between the masts, and plunged harmlessly in the sea beyond. The other
struck the hull with a dull crash.
"It is lucky the ladies were sent into the hold," the captain said.
"That shot has gone right through their cabin.
"Now, my lads, have you got the sights well upon them? Fire!"
The four thirty-two pounders spoke out almost at the same moment, and
all gazed over the bulwarks anxiously to watch the effect, and a cheer
arose as it was seen how accurate had been the aim of the gunners. One
shot struck the schooner to windward in the bow, a foot or two above the
water level. Another went through her foresail, close to the mast.
"A foot more, and you would have cut his foremast asunder."
The vessel to leeward had been struck by only one shot, the other
passing under her stern. She was struck just above her deck line, the shot
passing through the bulwark, and, as they thought on board the
merchantman, narrowly missing if not actually striking the mainmast.
"There is some damage done," Dr. Rae said, keeping his glass fixed on
the vessel. "There is a good deal of running about on deck there."
It was evident that the display of the heavy metal carried by the
Indiaman was an unpleasant surprise to the privateers. Both lowered sail
and ceased firing, and there was then a rapid exchange of signals between
them.
"They don't like it," the captain said, laughing. "They see that they
cannot play the game they expected, and that they've got to take as well
as to give. Now it depends upon the sort of stuff their captains are made
of, whether they give it up at once, or come straight up to close
quarters.
"Ah! They mean fighting."
As he spoke, a cloud of canvas was spread upon the schooners and,
sailing more than two feet to the merchantman's one, they ran quickly down
towards her, firing rapidly as they came. Only the merchantman's heavy
guns replied, but these worked steadily and coolly, and did considerable
damage. The bowsprit of one of their opponents was shot away. The sails of
both vessels were pierced in several places, and several ragged holes were
knocked in their hulls.
"If it were not that I do not wish to sacrifice any of the lives on
board, unnecessarily," the captain said, "I would let them come alongside
and try boarding. We have a strong crew, and with the sixty soldiers we
should give them such a reception as they do not dream of. However, I will
keep them off, if I can.
"Now, Mr. James," he said to the first officer, "I propose to give that
vessel to leeward a dose. They are keeping about abreast, and by the
course they are making will range alongside at about a cable's length.
When I give the word, pour a broadside with the guns to port upon that
weather schooner.
"At that moment, gentlemen," he said, turning to the passengers, "I
shall rely upon you to pick off the steersman of the other vessel, and to
prevent another taking his place. She steers badly now, and the moment her
helm is free, she'll run up into the wind. As she does so, I shall bear
off, run across her bow, and rake her deck with grape as we pass.
"Will you, Mr. Barlow, order your men to be in readiness to open fire
with musketry upon her, as we pass?"
The schooners were now running rapidly down upon the Indiaman. They
were only able to use the guns in their bows, and the fire of the Indiaman
from the heavy guns on her quarter was inflicting more damage than she
received.
"Let all hands lie down on deck," the captain ordered. "They will open
with their broadside guns, as they come up. When I give the word, let all
the guns on the port side be trained at the foot of her mainmast, and fire
as you get the line. On the starboard side, lie down till I give the
word."
It was a pretty sight as the schooners, throwing the water high up from
their sharp cut-waters, came running along, heeling over under the breeze.
As they ranged alongside, their topsails came down, and a broadside from
both was poured into the Indiaman. The great ship shook as the shot
crashed into her, and several sharp cries told of the effect which had
been produced.
Then the captain gave the word, and a moment afterwards an irregular
broadside, as the captain of each gun brought his piece to bear, was
poured into the schooner from the guns on the port side. As the privateer
heeled over, her deck could be plainly seen, and the shot of the Indiaman,
all directed at one point, tore up a hole around the foot of the mainmast.
In an instant the spar tottered and, with a crash, fell alongside. At the
same moment, three of the passengers took a steady aim over the bulwark at
the helmsman of the other privateer and, simultaneously with the reports
of their pieces, the man was seen to fall. Another sprang forward to take
his place, but again the rifles spoke out, and he fell beside his comrade.
Freed from the strain which had counteracted the pressure of her
mainsail, the schooner flew up into the wind. The Indiaman held on her
course for another length, and then her helm was put up, and she swept
down across the bows of the privateer. Then the men leaped to their feet,
the soldiers lined the bulwarks, and as she passed along a few yards only
distant from her foe, each gun poured a storm of grape along her crowded
deck, while the troops and passengers kept up a continuous fire of
musketry.
"That will do," the captain said, quietly. "Now we may keep her on her
course. They have had more than enough of it."
There was no doubt of that, for the effect of the iron storm had been
terrible, and the decks of the schooner were strewn with dead and dying.
For a time after the merchantman had borne upon her course, the sails of
the schooner flapped wildly in the wind, and then the foremast went
suddenly over the side.
"I should think you could take them both, Captain Thompson," one of the
passengers said.
"They are as good as taken," the captain answered, "and would be forced
to haul down their flags, if I were to wear round and continue the fight.
But they would be worse than useless to me. I should not know what to do
with their crews, and should have to cripple myself by putting very strong
prize crews upon them, and so run the risk of losing my own ship and
cargo.
"No, my business is to trade and not to fight. If any one meddle with
me, I am ready to take my own part; but the Company would not thank me, if
I were to risk the safety of this ship and her valuable cargo for the sake
of sending home a couple of prizes, which might be recaptured as they
crossed the bay, and would not fetch any great sum if they got safely in
port."
An examination showed that the casualties on board the Lizzie Anderson
amounted to three killed and eight wounded. The former were sewn in
hammocks, with a round shot at their feet, and dropped overboard; the
clergyman reading the burial service. The wounded were carried below, and
attended to by the ship's surgeon and Doctor Rae. The ship's decks were
washed, and all traces of the conflict removed. The guns were again lashed
in their places, carpenters were lowered over the side to repair damages;
and when the ladies came on deck an hour after the conflict was over, two
or three ragged holes in the bulwarks, and a half dozen in the sails, were
the sole signs that the ship had been in action; save that some miles
astern could be seen the two crippled privateers, with all sails lowered,
at work to repair damages.
Two or three days afterwards, Charlie Marryat and his friend Peters
were sitting beside Doctor Rae, when the latter said:
"I hope that we sha'n't find the French in Madras, when we get there."
"The French in Madras!" Charlie exclaimed in surprise. "Why, sir,
there's no chance of that, is there?"
"A very great chance," the doctor said. "Don't you know that they
captured the place three years ago?"
"No, sir; I'm ashamed to say that I know nothing at all about India,
except that the Company have trading stations at Bombay, Madras, and
Calcutta."
"I will tell you about it," the doctor said. "It is as well that you
should understand the position of affairs, at the place to which you are
going. You must know that the Company hold the town of Madras, and a few
square miles of land around it, as tenants of the Nawab of the Carnatic,
which is the name of that part of India. The French have a station at
Pondicherry, eighty-six miles to the sou'west of Madras. This is a larger
and more important town than Madras, and of course the greatest rivalry
prevails between the English and French.
"The French are much more powerful than the English, and exercise a
predominating influence throughout the Carnatic. The French governor,
Monsieur Dupleix, is a man of very great ability, and far-seeing views. He
has a considerable force of French soldiers at his command, and by the aid
which he has given to the nawab, upon various occasions, he has obtained a
predominating influence in his councils.
"When war was declared between England and France, in the year '44, the
English squadron under Commodore Barnet was upon the coast, and the
Company sent out orders to Mr. Morse, the governor of Madras, to use every
effort to destroy the French settlement, of whose rising power they felt
the greatest jealousy. Dupleix, seeing the force that could be brought
against him, and having no French ships on the station, although he was
aware that a fleet under Admiral La Bourdonnais was fitting out and would
arrive shortly, dreaded the contest, and proposed to Mr. Morse that the
Indian colonies of the two nations should remain neutral, and take no part
in the struggle in which their respective countries were engaged. Mr.
Morse, however, in view of the orders he had received from the Company,
was unable to agree to this.
"Dupleix then applied to the nawab who, at his request, forbade his
European tenants to make war on land with each other, an order which they
were obliged to obey.
"In July, 1746, La Bourdonnais arrived with his fleet, and chased the
small English squadron from the Indian seas. Dupleix now changed his
tactics, and regardless of the injunction which he himself had obtained
from the nawab, he determined to crush the English at Madras. He supplied
the fleet with men and money, and ordered the admiral to sail for Madras.
The fleet arrived before the town on the 14th of September; landed a
portion of its troops, six hundred in number, with two guns, a short
distance along the coast; and on the following day disembarked the rest,
consisting of a thousand French troops, four hundred Sepoys, and three
hundred African troops, and summoned Madras to surrender.
"Madras was in no position to offer any effectual resistance. The fort
was weak and indefensible. The English inhabitants consisted only of a
hundred civilians, and two hundred soldiers. Governor Morse endeavoured to
obtain, from the nawab, the protection which he had before granted to
Dupleix, a demand which the nawab at once refused.
"I was there at the time, and quite agreed with the governor that it
was useless to attempt resistance to the force brought against us. The
governor, therefore, surrendered on the 21st. The garrison, and all the
civilians in the place not in the service of the Company, were to become
prisoners of war; while those in the regular service of the Company were
free to depart, engaging only not to carry arms against the French until
exchanged. These were the official conditions; but La Bourdonnais,
influenced by jealousy of Dupleix, and by the promise of a bribe of forty
thousand pounds, made a secret condition with Mr. Morse, by which he bound
himself to restore Madras in the future, upon the payment of a large sum
of money. This agreement Dupleix, whose heart was set upon the total
expulsion of the English, refused to ratify.
"A good many of us considered that, by this breach of the agreement, we
were released from our parole not to carry arms against the French; and a
dozen or so of us, in various disguises, escaped from Madras and made our
way to Fort Saint David, a small English settlement twelve miles south of
Pondicherry. I made the journey with a young fellow named Clive, who had
come out as a writer about two years before. He was a fine young fellow;
as unfitted as you are, I should think, Marryat, for the dull life of a
writer, but full of energy and courage.
"At Fort Saint David we found two hundred English soldiers, and a
hundred Sepoys, and a number of us, having nothing to do at our own work,
volunteered to aid in the defence.
"After Dupleix had conquered Madras, the nawab awoke to the fact of the
danger of allowing the French to become all-powerful, by the destruction
of the English, and ordered Dupleix to restore the place. Dupleix refused,
and the nawab sent his son Maphuz Khan to invest the town. Dupleix at once
despatched a detachment of two hundred and thirty French, and seven
hundred Sepoys, commanded by an engineer officer named Paradis, to raise
the siege.
"On the 2nd of November, the garrison of Madras sallied out and drove
away the cavalry of Maphuz Khan; and on the 4th, Paradis attacked his
army, and totally defeated it.
"This, lads, was a memorable battle. It is the first time that European
and Indian soldiers have come into contest, and it shows how immense is
the superiority of Europeans. What Paradis did then opens all sorts of
possibilities for the future; and it may be that either we or the French
are destined to rise, from mere trading companies, to be rulers of Indian
states.
"Such, I know, is the opinion of young Clive, who is a very long-headed
and ambitious young fellow. I remember his saying to me one night, when we
were, with difficulty, holding our own in the trenches, that if we had but
a man of energy and intelligence at the head of our affairs in Southern
India, we might, ere many years passed, be masters of the Carnatic. I own
that it appears to me more likely that the French will be in that
position, and that we shall not have a single establishment left there;
but time will show.
"Having defeated Maphuz Khan, Dupleix resolved to make a great effort
to expel us from Fort Saint David, our sole footing left in Southern
India; and he despatched an army of nine hundred Frenchmen, six hundred
Sepoys, and a hundred Africans, with six guns and mortars, against us.
They were four to one against us, and we had hot work, I can tell you.
Four times they tried to storm the place, and each time we drove them
back; till at last they gave it up in disgust, at the end of June, having
besieged us for six months.
"Soon after this Admiral Boscawen, with a great fleet and an army,
arrived from England; and on 19th of August besieged Pondicherry. The
besieging army was six thousand strong; of whom three thousand, seven
hundred and twenty were English. But Pondicherry resisted bravely, and
after two months the besiegers were forced to retire, having lost, in
attacks or by fever, one thousand and sixty-five men.
"At the end of the siege, in which I had served as a medical officer, I
returned to England. A few months after I left, peace was made between
England and France, and by its terms Dupleix had to restore Madras to the
English. I hear that fighting has been going on ever since, the English
and French engaging as auxiliaries to rival native princes; and especially
that there was some hot fighting round Devikota. However, we shall hear
about that when we get there."
"And what do you think will be the result of it all, Doctor Rae?"
"I think that undoubtedly, sooner or later, either the French or
ourselves will be driven out. Which it will be remains to be seen. If we
are expelled, the effect of our defeat is likely to operate disastrously
at Calcutta, if not at Bombay. The French will be regarded as a powerful
people, whom it is necessary to conciliate, while we shall be treated as a
nation of whom they need have no fear, and whom they can oppress
accordingly.
"If we are successful, and absolutely obtain possession of the Carnatic,
our trade will vastly increase, fresh posts and commands of all sorts will
be established, and there will be a fine career open to you young fellows,
in the service of the Company."
After rounding the Cape of Good Hope, the ship encountered a series of
very heavy gales, which drove her far out of her course up the eastern
coast of Africa. In the last gale her foremast was carried away, and she
put in to a small island to refit. She had also sprung a leak, and a
number of stores were landed, to enable her to be taken up into shallow
water and heeled over, in order that the leak might be got at.
The captain hurried on the work with all speed.
"Had it not been for this," Charlie heard him say to Mr. Ashmead, "I
would have rigged a jury-mast and proceeded; but I can't stop the leak
from the inside, without shifting a great portion of the cargo, and our
hold is so full that this would be difficult in the extreme. But I own
that I do not like delaying a day longer than necessary, here. The natives
have a very bad reputation, besides which it is suspected that one, if not
more, pirates have their rendezvous in these seas. Several of our
merchantmen have mysteriously disappeared, without any gale having taken
place which would account for their loss.
"The captain of a ship which reached England, two or three days before
we sailed, brought news that when she was within a fortnight's sail of the
Cape, the sound of guns was heard one night, and that afterwards a ship
was seen on fire, low down on the horizon. He reached the spot soon after
daybreak, and found charred spars and other wreckage; but though he
cruised about all day, he could find no signs of any boats. Complaints
have been made to government, and I hear that there is an intention of
sending two or three sloops out here to hunt the pirates up. But that will
be of no use to us."
Upon the day of their arrival at the island, a native sailing boat was
seen to pass across the mouth of the bay. When half across, she suddenly
tacked round and sailed back in the direction from which she had come.
Before proceeding to lighten the ship, the captain had taken steps to
put himself in a position of defence. For some distance along the centre
of the bay the ground rose abruptly, at a distance of some thirty yards
from the shore, forming a sort of natural terrace. Behind this a steep
hill rose. The terrace, which was forty feet above the water level,
extended for about a hundred yards, when the ground on either side of the
plateau dropped away, as steeply as in front.
The guns were the first things taken out of the ship, and, regardless
of the remonstrances of the passengers at what they considered to be a
waste of time, Captain Thompson had the whole of them taken up on the
terrace. A small battery was thrown up by the sailors, at the two corners,
and in each of these two of the thirty-two pounders were placed. The
broadside guns were ranged in line along the centre of the terrace.
"Now," the captain said when, at the end of the second day, the
preparations were completed by the transport of a quantity of ammunition
from the ship's magazine to the terrace, "I feel comfortable. We can
defend ourselves here against all the pirates of the South Seas. If they
don't come, we shall only have lost our two days' work, and shall have
easy minds for the remainder of our stay here; which we should not have
had, if we had been at the mercy of the first of those scoundrels who
happened to hear of our being laid up."
The next morning the work of unloading the ship began, the bales and
packages being lowered from the ship, as they were brought up from the
hold, into boats alongside; and then taken to the shore, and piled there
at the foot of the slope. This occupied three days, and at the end of that
time the greater portion of the cargo had been removed. The ship, now
several feet lighter in the water than before, was brought broadside to
shore until her keel touched the ground. Then the remaining cargo was
shifted, and by the additional aid of tackle and purchases on shore
fastened to her masts, she was heeled over until her keel nearly reached
the level of the water.
It was late one evening when this work was finished, and the following
morning the crew were to begin to scrape her bottom, and the carpenters
were to repair the leak, and the whole of the seams underwater were to be
corked and repitched. Hitherto all had remained on board; but previous to
the ship being heeled over, tents constructed of the sails were erected on
the terrace, beds and other articles of necessity landed, and the
passengers, troops, and crew took up their temporary abode there.
Chapter 4: The Pirates Of The Pacific.
A regular watch was set, both on the plateau and on board ship. Towards
morning, one of the watch on board hailed the officer above:
"I have fancied, sir, for some time, that I heard noises. It seems to
me like the splash of a very large number of oars."
"I have heard nothing," the officer said; "but you might hear sounds
down there, coming along on the water, before I do. I will go down to the
water's edge, and listen."
He did so, and was at once convinced that the man's ears had not
deceived him. Although the night was perfectly still, and not a breath of
wind was stirring, he heard a low rustling sound, like that of the wind
passing through the dried leaves of a forest, in autumn.
"You are right, Johnson, there is something going on out at sea, beyond
the mouth of the bay. I will call the captain, at once."
Captain Thompson, on being aroused, also went down to the waterside to
listen; and at once ordered the whole party to get under arms. He
requested Mr. Barlow, the young lieutenant in charge of the troops, to
place half his men across each end of the plateau. The back was defended
by a cliff, which rose almost perpendicularly from it to a height of some
hundred feet; the plateau being some thirty yards, in depth, from the sea
face to its foot. The male passengers were requested to divide themselves
into two parties, and to join the soldiers in defending the position
against flank attacks. The guns were all loaded, and the sailors then set
to work dragging up bales of goods from below, and placing them so as to
form a sort of breastwork before the guns along the sea face.
The noise at sea had, by this time, greatly increased; and although it
was still too dark to see what was passing, Captain Thompson said that he
had no doubt, whatever, that the boats had one or more large ships in tow.
"Had it not been for that," he said, "they would long ago have been
here. I expect that they hoped to catch us napping, but the wind fell and
delayed them. They little dream how well we are prepared. Did they know of
our fort here, I question whether they would have ventured upon attacking
us at all, but would have waited till we were well at sea, and then our
chance would have been a slight one.
"Well, gentlemen, you will allow that the two days were not wasted. I
think, now, the pirates are well inside the bay. In half an hour we shall
have light enough to see them.
"There, listen! There's the splash of their anchors. There, again! I
fancy there are two ships moored broadside on, stem and stern."
All this time, the work on shore had been conducted in absolute
silence, and the pirates could have had no intimation that their presence
was discovered. Presently, against the faintly dawning light in the east,
the masts of two vessels could be seen. One was a large ship, the other a
brig. Almost at the same time the rough sound of boats' keels grounding on
the shore could be heard.
"Just as I thought," the captain whispered. "They have guessed that
some of us will be ashore, and will make a rush upon us here, when the
ships open fire."
The word was passed along the guns that every one was to be double
shotted, and that their fire was at first to be directed at the brig. They
were to aim between wind and water, and strive to sink her as speedily as
possible.
As the light gradually grew brighter, the party on the plateau
anxiously watched for the moment when the hull of the Indiaman becoming
plain to the enemy. These would open fire upon it, and so give the signal
for the fight. At the first alarm the tents had all been levelled; and a
thick barricade of bales erected, round a slight depression of the plateau
at the foot of the cliff in its rear. Here the ladies were placed, for
shelter.
As the light increased, it could be seen that in addition to the two
ships were a large number of native dhows. Presently, from the black side
of the ship, a jet of fire shot out; and at the signal a broadside was
poured into the Indiaman by the two vessels. At the same moment, with a
hideous yell, hundreds of black figures leaped to their feet on the beach,
and rushed towards the, as yet, unseen position of the English.
The captain shouted "Fire!" and the twenty guns on the plateau poured
their fire simultaneously into the side of the brig. The captain then gave
orders that two of the light guns should be run along the terrace, to take
position on the flanks, and aid the soldiers against the attacks.
This time Charlie had lent his rifle to Peters, and was himself armed
with his double-barrel gun.
"Steady, boys," Mr. Hallam, the ensign who commanded the soldiers at
the side where Charlie was stationed, cried; "don't fire a shot till I
give the word, and then aim low."
With terrific yells the throng of natives, waving curved swords,
spears, and clubs, rushed forward. The steep ascent checked them, but they
rushed up until within ten yards of the line of soldiers on its brow. Then
Mr. Hallam gave the word to fire, and the soldiers and passengers poured a
withering volley into them.
At so short a distance, the effect was tremendous. Completely swept
away, the leading rank fell down among their comrades; and these, for a
moment, recoiled. Then gathering themselves together they again rushed
forward, while those in their rear discharged volleys of arrows over their
heads.
Among the defenders, every man now fought for himself, loading and
firing as rapidly as possible. Sometimes the natives nearly gained a
footing on the crest; but each time the defenders, with clubbed muskets,
beat them back again.
The combat was, however, doubtful, for their assailants were many
hundred strong; when the defenders were gladdened with a shout of "Make
way, my hearties. Let us come to the front, and give them a dose." In a
moment two ship's guns, loaded to the muzzle with bullets, were run
forward, and poured their contents among the crowded masses below.
The effect was decisive. The natives, shaken by the resistance they had
already experienced, and appalled by the destruction wrought by the
cannon, turned and fled along the shore, followed by the shots of the
defenders, and by two more rounds of grape, which the sailors poured into
them before they could reach their boats.
Similar success had attended the defenders of the other flank of the
position, and all hands now aided in swinging round the guns, which had
done such good service, to enable them to bear their share in the fight
with the ships. In the middle of the fight, the party had heard a great
cheer from those working the seaward guns, and they now saw its cause. The
brig had disappeared below the water, and the sailors were now engaged in
a contest with the ship.
The pirates fought their guns well, but they were altogether over
matched by the twenty guns playing upon them from a commanding position.
Already the dhows were hoisting their sails, and one of the cables of the
ship suddenly disappeared in the water, while a number of men sprang upon
the ratlines.
"Fire at the masts," Captain Thompson shouted. "Cripple her if you can.
Let all with muskets and rifles try to keep men out of the rigging."
The ship was anchored within three hundred yards of the shore, and
although the distance was too great for anything like accurate fire,
several of the men dropped as they ran up the shroud. The sailors worked
their guns with redoubled vigour, and a great shout arose as the mainmast,
wounded in several places, fell over the side.
"Sweep her decks with grape," the captain shouted, "and she's ours.
"Mr. James, take all the men that can be spared from the guns, man the
boats, and make a dash for the ship at once. I see the men are leaving
her. They're crowding over the side into their boats. Most likely they'll
set fire to her. Set all your strength putting it out. We will attend to
the other boats."
It was evident, now, that the pirates were deserting the ship. They had
fallen into a complete trap, and instead of the easy prey on which they
calculated, found themselves crushed by the fire of a heavy battery in a
commanding position. Captain Thompson, seeing that the guns of the ship
were silent, and that all resistance had ceased, now ordered the sailors
to turn their guns on the dhows and sink as many as possible. These,
crowded together in their efforts to escape, offered an easy mark for the
gunners, whose shot tore through their sides, smashing and sinking them in
all directions.
In ten minutes the last of those that floated had gained the mouth of
the bay and, accompanied by the boats, crowded with the crews of the two
pirate vessels, made off; followed by the shot of the thirty-two pounders,
until they had turned the low promontory which formed the head of the bay.
Long ere this Mr. James and the boats' crews had gained the vessel, and
were engaged in combating the fire, which had broken out in three places.
The boats were sent back to shore, and returned with Captain Thompson
and the rest of the sailors, and this reinforcement soon enabled them to
get the mastery of the flames. The ship was found to be the Dover Castle,
a new and very fast ship of the Company's service, of which all traces had
been lost since she left Bombay two years before. She was now painted
entirely black, and a snake had been added for her figurehead. The
original name, however, still remained upon the binnacle and ship's bell.
Her former armament had been increased and she now carried thirty guns, of
which ten were thirty-two pounders.
A subsequent search showed that her hold was stored with valuable
goods; which had, by the marks upon the bales, evidently belonged to
several ships; which she had, no doubt, taken and sunk after removing the
pick of their cargoes. The prize was a most valuable one, and the captain
felt that the board of directors would be highly delighted at the recovery
of their ship, and still more by the destruction of the two bands of
pirates.
The deck of the ship was thickly strewn with dead. Among them was the
body of a man who, by his dress, was evidently the captain. From some of
the pirates who still lived, Captain Thompson learned that the brig was
the original pirate, that she had captured the Dover Castle, that from her
and subsequent prizes they had obtained sufficient hands to man both
ships, all who refused to join being compelled to walk the plank. These
were the only two pirate ships in those seas, so far as the men knew.
Their rendezvous was at a large native town on the mainland, at the mouth
of a river three days' sail distant.
The news of the Indiaman being laid up, refitting at the island, was
brought by the native craft they had seen on the day after their arrival;
and upon its being known, the natives had insisted in joining in the
attack. The pirate captain, whose interest it was to keep well with them,
could not refuse to allow them to join, although he would gladly have
dispensed with their aid, believing his own force to be far more than
sufficient to capture the vessel, which he supposed to be lying an easy
prize at his hands.
Another ten days were spent in getting the cargo and guns on board the
Lizzie Anderson, and in fitting out both ships for sea. Then, Mr. James
and a portion of the crew being placed on board the prize, they sailed
together for India. The Dover Castle proved to be much the faster sailer,
but Captain Thompson ordered her to reduce sail, and to keep about a mile
in his wake, as she could at any time close up when necessary; and the
two, together, would be able to oppose a determined front, even to a
French frigate, should they meet with one on their way.
The voyage passed without incident save that, when rounding the
southern point of Ceylon, a sudden squall from the land struck them. The
vessel heeled over suddenly, and a young soldier, who was sitting on the
bulwarks to leeward, was jerked backwards and fell into the water.
Charlie Marryat was on the quarterdeck, leaning against the rail,
watching a shoal of flying fish passing at a short distance. In the noise
and confusion, caused by the sudden squall, the creaking of cordage, the
flapping of sails, and the shouts of the officer to let go the sheets, the
fall of the soldier was unnoticed; and Charlie was startled by perceiving,
in the water below him, the figure of a struggling man.
He saw, at once, that he was unable to swim. Without an instant's
hesitation Charlie threw off his coat, and kicked off his shoes, and with
a loud shout of "Man overboard!" sprang from the taffrail and, with a few
vigorous strokes, was alongside the drowning man. He seized him by the
collar, and held him at a distance.
"Now," he said, "don't struggle, else I'll let you go. Keep quiet, and
I can hold you up till we're picked up."
In spite of the injunction, the man strove to grasp him; but Charlie at
once let go his hold, and swam a pace back as the man sunk. When he came
up he seized him again, and again shouted:
"Keep quite quiet, else I'll leave go."
This time the soldier obeyed him and, turning him on his back, and
keeping his face above water, Charlie looked around at the vessel he had
left.
The Indiaman was still in confusion. The squall had been sudden and
strong. The sheets had been let go, the canvas was flapping in the wind,
and the hands were aloft reducing sail. She was already some distance away
from him. The sky was bright and clear, and Charlie, who was surprised at
seeing no attempt to lower a boat, saw a signal run up to the masthead.
Looking the other way, he saw at once why no boat had been lowered. The
Dover Castle was but a quarter of a mile astern. Carrying less sail than
her consort, she had been better prepared for the squall, and was running
down upon him at a great rate.
A moment later a boat was swung out on davits, and several men climbed
into it. The vessel kept on her course, until scarcely more than her own
length away. Then she suddenly rounded up into the wind, and the boat was
let fall, and rowed rapidly towards him.
All this time, Charlie had made no effort beyond what was necessary to
keep his own head, and his companion's face, above the water. He now
lifted the soldier's head up, and shouted to him that aid was at hand. In
another minute they were dragged into the boat. This was soon alongside
the ship, and three minutes later the Dover Castle was pursuing her
course, in the track of the Lizzie Anderson, having signalled that the
pair had been rescued.
Charlie found that the soldier was an Irish lad, of some nineteen years
old. His name, he said, was Tim Kelly, and as soon as he had recovered
himself sufficiently to speak, he was profuse in his professions of
gratitude to his preserver. Tim, like the majority of the recruits in the
Company's service, had been enlisted while in a state of drunkenness; had
been hurried on board a guard ship, where, when he recovered, he found a
number of other unfortunates like himself. He had not been permitted to
communicate with his friends on shore, but had been kept in close
confinement, until he had been put in uniform and conveyed on board the
Lizzie Anderson, half an hour before she sailed.
The Company's service was not a popular one. There was no fighting in
India, and neither honor, glory, nor promotion to be won. The climate was
unsuited to Europeans, and few, indeed, of those who sailed from England
as soldiers in the Company's service ever returned. The Company, then,
were driven to all sorts of straits to keep up even the small force which
they then maintained in India, and their recruiting agents were, by no
means, particular as to the means they employed to make up the tale of
recruits.
The vessels did not again communicate until they came to anchor in
Madras roads, as the wind was fair and Captain Thompson anxious to arrive
at his destination. During these few days, Tim Kelly had followed Charlie
about like a shadow. Having no duties to perform on board, he asked leave
to act as Charlie's servant; and Charlie was touched by the efforts which
the grateful fellow made to be of service to him.
Upon their arrival they saw, to their satisfaction, that the British
flag was waving over the low line of earthworks, which constitute the
British fort. Not far from this, near the water's edge, stood the white
houses and stores of the Company's factors; and behind these, again, were
the low hovels of the black town. The prospect was not an inviting one,
and Charlie wondered how on earth a landing was to be effected, through
the tremendous surf which broke upon the shore.
He soon found that, until the wind went down and the surf moderated
somewhat, no communication could be effected. The next morning, however,
the wind lulled, and a crowd of curious native boats were seen putting off
from the shore.
Charlie had, after the vessel anchored, rejoined his ship with Tim
Kelly, and he now bade goodbye to all on board; for only the doctor, two
civilians, and the troops were destined for Madras; all the rest going on
in the ship to Calcutta, after she had discharged that portion of her
cargo intended for Madras. Charlie had, during the last twelve hours, been
made a great deal of, on account of the gallantry he had displayed in
risking his life for that of the soldier. Peters and one of the other
young writers were also to land; and, taking his seat with these in a
native boat, paddled by twelve canoe men, he started for the shore.
As they approached the line of surf, Charlie fairly held his breath;
for it seemed impossible that the boat could live through it. The boatmen,
however, ceased rowing outside the line of broken water, and lay on their
paddles for three or four minutes.
At last a wave, larger than any of its predecessors, was seen
approaching. As it passed under them, the steersman gave a shout. In an
instant the rowers struck their paddles into the water, and the boat
dashed along, with the speed of a racehorse, on the crest of the wave.
There was a crash. For a moment the boat seemed, to the lads, engulfed in
white foam; and then she ran high up upon the beach. The rowers seized the
boys and, leaping out, carried them beyond the reach of the water, before
the next wave broke upon them; and then triumphantly demanded a present,
for their skilful management. This the lads were glad to give, for they
considered that their escape had been something miraculous.
For a while they stood on the shore, watching other boats, with the
soldiers and baggage, coming ashore; and then, being accosted by a
gentleman in the employment of the Company, followed him to the residence
of the chief factor. Here they were told that rooms would be given them,
in one of the houses erected by the Company for the use of its employees;
that they would mess with the other clerks residing in the same house; and
that, at nine o'clock in the morning, they would report themselves as
ready for work.
Charlie and his friends amused themselves by sauntering about in the
native town, greatly surprised by the sights and scenes which met their
eyes; for in those days very little was known of India, in England. They
were, however, greatly disappointed. Visions of oriental splendour, of
palaces and temples, of superbly dressed chiefs with bands of gorgeous
retainers, had floated before their mind's eye. Instead of this they saw
squalid huts, men dressed merely with a rag of cotton around them,
everywhere signs of squalor and poverty.
Madras, however, they were told that evening, was not to be taken as a
sample of India. It was a mere collection of huts, which had sprung up
round the English factories. But when they went to a real Indian city,
they would see a very different state of things.
After the young writers had seen the native town, they returned to the
beach, and spent the afternoon watching the progress of landing the cargo
of the Lizzie Anderson. They were pleased to see their own luggage safely
ashore; as it would have been greatly damaged, had the boat containing it
been swamped; a misfortune which happened to several of the boats laden
with cargo. It was very amusing, each time that one of these boats
arrived, to see a crowd of natives rush down into the water, waist deep,
seize it, and drag it up beyond the next wave. Many of them would be
knocked down, and some swept out by the retreating wave, only to return on
the next roller. All could swim like fish, and any of these events were
greeted with shouts of laughter by the rest.
When the packages were landed a rope was put round them, and through
this a long bamboo pole was inserted, which would be lifted on to the
shoulders of two, four, or six porters, according to its weight; and these
would go off, at a hobbling sort of trot, with their burden to the
factory.
Their own baggage was taken up to the quarters allotted to them, and at
the hour named for dinner the newcomers met, for the first time, those
with whom they were to be associated. All were dressed in white suits, and
Charlie was struck with the pallor of their faces, and the listless air of
most of them. The gentleman to whom they had first been introduced made
them acquainted with the others.
"How refreshingly healthy and well you look!" a young man of some six
and twenty years old, named Johnson, said. "I was something like that,
when I first came out here, though you'd hardly think it now. Eight years
of stewing, in this horrible hole, takes the life and spirits out of
anyone.
"However, there's one consolation. After eight or ten years of quill
driving in a stuffy room, one becomes a little more one's own master, and
one's duties begin to be a little more varied and pleasant. One gets a
chance of being sent up, occasionally, with goods; or on some message or
other to one of the native princes, and then one gets treated like a
prince, and sees that India is not necessarily so detestable as we have
contrived to make it here. The only bearable time of one's life is the few
hours after dinner, when one can sit in a chair in the veranda, and smoke
and look at the sea. Some of the fellows play billiards and cards; but if
you will take my advice, you won't go in for that sort of thing. It takes
a lot out of one, and fellows that do it are, between you and me, in the
bad books of the bigwigs. Besides, they lose money, get into debt, and all
sorts of mischief comes of it."
The speaker was sitting between Charlie and Peters, and was talking in
a tone of voice which would not be overheard by the others.
"Thank you," Charlie said. "I, for one, will certainly take your
advice. I suppose one can buy ponies here. I should think a good ride
every morning early, before work, would do one good."
"Yes, it is not a bad thing," Johnson said. "A good many fellows do it,
when they first come out here. But after a time they lose their energy,
you see, though some do keep it up.
"What appetites you fellows have! It does one good to see you eat."
"I have not the least idea what we are eating," Charlie said, laughing;
"but it's really very nice, whatever it is. But there seems an immense
quantity of pepper, or hot stuff of some kind or other; which one would
have thought, in this tremendous heat, would have made one hotter instead
of cooler."
"Yes," their new friend answered. "No doubt all this pepper and curry
do heat the blood; but you see, it is done to tempt the appetite. Meat
here is fearfully coarse and tasteless. Our appetites are poor, and were
it not for these hot sauces, we should eat next to nothing.
"Will you have some bananas?"
"They are nice and cool," Peters said as, having peeled the long fruit
as he saw his companion doing, he took a bite of one; "but they have very
little taste."
"Most of our fruit is tasteless," Johnson said, "except, indeed, the
mango and mangostine. They are equal to any English fruit in flavour, but
I would give them all for a good English apple. Its sharpness would be
delicious here.
"And now, as you have done, if you will come and sit in the veranda of
my room, we will smoke a cigar and have something cool to drink; and I
will answer, as well as I can, the questions you've asked me about the
state of things here."
When they had seated themselves in the extremely comfortable cane
chairs, in a veranda facing the sea, and had lit their cigars, their
friend began:
"Madras isn't much of a place, now; but you should have seen it before
the French had it. Our chiefs think of nothing but trade, and care nothing
how squalid and miserable is the place in which they make money. The
French have larger ideas. They transformed this place; cleared away that
portion of the native town which surrounded the factory and fort, made
wide roads, formed an esplanade, improved and strengthened the
fortifications, forbade the natives to throw all their rubbish and offal
on the beach; and made, in fact, a decent place of it. We hardly knew it
when we came back, and whatever the Company may have thought, we were
thoroughly grateful for the French occupation.
"One good result, too, is that our quarters have been greatly improved;
for not only did the French build several new houses, but at present all
the big men, the council and so on, are still living at Fort Saint David,
which is still the seat of administration. So you see, we have got better
quarters; we are rid of the stenches and nuisances of the native town; the
plague of flies which made our life a burden is abated; and we can sit
here and enjoy the cool sea breeze, without its being poisoned before it
reaches us by the heaped up filth on the beach.
"It must have wrung Dupleix's heart to give up the place over which
they expended so much pains, and after all it didn't do away with the
fighting. In April we sent a force from Fort Saint David--before we came
back here--four hundred and thirty white soldiers and a thousand Sepoys,
under the command of Captain Cope, to aid a fellow who had been turned out
of the Rajahship of Tanjore. I believe he was a great blackguard, and the
man who had taken his place was an able ruler liked by the people."
"Then why should we interfere on behalf of the other?" Charlie asked.
"My dear Marryat," their host said compassionately, "you are very young
yet, and quite new to India. You will see, after a time, that right has
nothing at all to do with the dealings of the Company, in their relations
to the native princes. We are, at present, little people living here on
sufferance, among a lot of princes and powers who are enemies and rivals
of each other. We have, moreover, as neighbours, another European colony
considerably stronger than we are. The consequence is, the question of
right cannot enter into the considerations of the Company. It may be said
that, for every petty kingdom in Southern India, there are at least two
pretenders, very often half a dozen. So far we have not meddled much in
their quarrels, but the French have been much more active that way. They
always side with one or other of these pretenders, and when they get the
man they support into power, of course he repays them for their
assistance. In this manner, as I shall explain to you presently, they have
virtually made themselves masters of the Carnatic, outside the walls of
Fort Saint David and this place.
"Well, our people thought to take a leaf out of the French book, and as
the ex-rajah offered us, in payment for our aid, the possession of
Devikota, a town at the mouth of the river Kolrun, a place likely to be of
great use to us, we agreed to assist him. Cope, with the land forces, had
marched to the border of the Tanjore territory, and the guns and heavy
baggage were to go by sea.
"But, unfortunately, we had a tremendous gale just after they sailed.
The admiral's flagship, the Namur, of seventy-four guns; the Pembroke, of
sixty; and the hospital ship, Apollo, were totally lost; and the rest of
the fleet scattered in all directions. Cope entered the Tanjore territory,
but found the whole population attached to the new rajah. It was useless
for him, therefore, to march upon Tanjore, which is a really strong town,
so he marched down to Devikota, where he hoped to find some of the fleet.
Not a ship, however, was to be seen, and as without guns Cope could do
nothing, he returned here, as we had just taken possession again.
"Then he went to Fort Saint David, and there was a great discussion
among the bigwigs. It was clear, from what Cope said, that our man had not
a friend in his own country. Still, as he pointed out, Devikota was a most
important place for us. Neither Madras nor Fort Saint David has a harbour;
and Devikota, therefore, where the largest ships could run up the river
and anchor, would be of immense utility to us.
"As this was really the reason for which we had gone into the affair,
it was decided to repeat the attempt. By this time Major Lawrence, who
commands the whole of the Company's forces in India, and who had been
taken a prisoner in one of the French sorties at the siege of Pondicherry,
had been released. So he was put at the head of the expedition; and the
whole of the Company's English troops, eight hundred in all, including the
artillery; and fifteen hundred Sepoys, started on board ship for Devikota.
I must tell you that Lawrence is a first-rate fellow, the only really good
officer we have out here, and the affair couldn't have been in the hands
of a better man.
"The ships arrived safely at the mouth of the Kolrun, and the troops
were landed on the bank of the river opposite the town, where Lawrence
intended to erect his batteries; as, in the first place, the shore behind
the town was swampy, and in the second the Rajah of Tanjore, who had got
news of our coming, had his army encamped there to support the place.
Lawrence got his guns in position and fired away, across the river, at the
earthen wall of the town. In three days he had a breach. The enemy didn't
return our fire, but occupied themselves in throwing up an entrenchment
across the side of the fort.
"We made a raft and crossed the river, but the enemy's matchlock men
peppered us so severely that we lost thirty English and fifty Sepoys in
getting over. The enemy's entrenchment was not finished, but in front of
it was a deep rivulet, which had to be crossed.
"Lawrence gave the command of the storming party to Clive. He is one of
our fellows; a queer, restless sort of chap, who was really no good here,
for he hated his work and always seemed to think himself a martyr. He was
not a favourite among us, for he was often gloomy and discontented, though
he had his good points. He was straightforward and manly, and he put down
two or three fellows here, who had been given to bully the young ones, in
a way that astonished them.
"He would never have made a good servant of the Company, for he so
hated his work that, when he had been out here about a year, he tried to
blow out his brains. He snapped the pistol twice at his head, but it
didn't go off, though it was loaded all right. Strange, wasn't it? So he
came to the conclusion that he wasn't meant to kill himself, and went on
living till something should turn up."
"Yes," Charlie said; "Doctor Rae spoke to us about him during the
voyage. He knew him at the siege of Fort Saint David, and Pondicherry."
"Yes," Johnson said. "He came out there quite in a new light. He got
transferred into the military service, and was always in the middle of the
fighting. Major Lawrence had a very high opinion of him, and so selected
him to lead the storming party. It really seems almost as if he had a
charmed life. Lawrence gave him thirty-three English soldiers, and seven
hundred Sepoys. The rest of the force were to follow as soon as Clive's
party gained the entrenchments. Clive led the way with his Europeans, with
the Sepoys supporting behind, and got across the rivulet with a loss of
only four men. He waited on the other bank till he saw the Sepoys climbing
up, and then again led the English on in advance towards the unfinished
part of the entrenchment.
"The Sepoys, however, did not move, but remained waiting for the main
body to come up. The enemy let Clive and his twenty-nine men get on some
distance in advance, and then their cavalry, who had been hidden by a
projection of the fort, charged suddenly down on him. They were upon our
men before they had time to form, and in a minute twenty-six of them were
cut to pieces. Clive and the other three managed to get through the
Tanjore horsemen and rejoin the Sepoys. That was almost as narrow a shave
for his life as with the pistol.
"Lawrence now crossed with his main body and advanced. Again the
Tanjore horsemen charged; but this time we were prepared, and Lawrence let
them come on till within a few yards, and then gave them a volley which
killed fourteen and sent the rest scampering away. Lawrence pushed
forward. The garrison, panic stricken at the defeat of their cavalry,
abandoned the breach and escaped to the opposite side of the town, and
Devikota was ours.
"A few days later we captured the fortified temple of Uchipuran. A
hundred men were left there, and these were afterwards attacked by the
Rajah of Tanjore, with five thousand men; but they held their own, and
beat them off. A very gallant business, that!
"These affairs showed the rajah that the English could fight; a point
which, hitherto, the natives had been somewhat sceptical about. They were
afraid of the French, but they looked upon us as mere traders. He had,
too, other things to trouble him as to the state of the Carnatic, and so
hastened to make peace. He agreed to pay the expenses of the war, and to
cede us Devikota and some territory round it; and to allow the wretched
ex-rajah, in whose cause we had pretended to fight, a pension of four
hundred a year, on condition that we kept him shut up in one of our forts.
"Not a very nice business on our side, was it? Still, we had gained our
point, and, with the exception of the ex-rajah, who was a bad lot after
all, no one was discontented.
"When the peace was signed, our force returned to Fort Saint David.
While they had been away, there had been a revolution in the Carnatic. Now
this was rather a complicated business; but as the whole situation at
present turns upon it; and it will, not improbably, cause our expulsion
from Southern India; I will explain it to you as well as I can.
"Now you must know that all Southern India, with the exception of a
strip along the west coast, is governed by a viceroy, appointed by the
emperor at Delhi. He was called the Subadar of the Deccan. Up till the end
of 'forty-eight, Nizam Ul-Mulk was viceroy. About that time he died, and
the emperor appointed his grandson, Muzaffar Jung, who was the son of a
daughter of his, to succeed him. But the subadar had left five sons. Four
of these lived at Delhi, and were content to enjoy their life there. The
second son, however, Nazir Jung, was an ambitious man, who had rebelled
even against his father. Naturally, he rebelled against his nephew.
"He was on the spot when his father died, while the new subadar was
absent. Nazir, therefore, seized the reins of government, and all the
resources of the state. The emperor has troubles enough of his own at
Delhi, and Muzaffar had no hope of aid from him. He therefore went to
Satarah, the court of the Mahrattas, to ask for their assistance.
"There he met Chunda Sahib. This man was the nephew of the last nawab
of the Carnatic, Dost Ali. Dost Ali had been killed in a battle with them,
in 1739; and they afterwards captured Trichinopoli, and took Chunda Sahib,
who commanded there, prisoner; and had since kept him at Satarah. Had he
been at liberty he would, no doubt, have succeeded his uncle, whose only
son had been murdered; but as he was at Satarah, the Subadar of the Deccan
bestowed the government of the Carnatic upon Anwarud-din.
"Chunda Sahib and Muzaffar Jung put their heads together, and agreed to
act in concert. Muzaffar, of course, desired the subadarship of the Deccan,
to which he had been appointed by the court of Delhi. Chunda Sahib wanted
the nawabship of the Carnatic, and advised his ally to abandon his
intention of asking for Mahratta aid, and to ally himself with the French.
A correspondence ensued with Dupleix, who, seeing the immense advantage it
would be to him to gain what would virtually be the position of patron and
protector of the Subadar of the Deccan, and the Nawab of the Carnatic, at
once agreed to join them.
"Muzaffar raised thirty thousand men, and Chunda Sahib six thousand--it
is always easy, in India, to raise an army; with a certain amount of
money, and lavish promises--marched down and joined a French force of four
hundred strong, commanded by D'Auteuil.
"The nawab advanced against them, but was utterly defeated at Ambur,
the French doing pretty well the whole of the work. The nawab was killed,
and one of his sons, Maphuz Khan, taken prisoner. The other, Muhammud Ali,
bolted at the beginning of the fight. Arcot, the capital of the Carnatic,
surrendered next day.
"Muzaffar Jung proclaimed himself Subadar of the Deccan, and appointed
Chunda Sahib Nawab of the Carnatic. Muzaffar Jung conferred upon Dupleix
the sovereignty of eighty-one villages adjoining the French territory.
Muzaffar, after paying a visit to Pondicherry, remained in the camp with
his army, twenty miles distant from that place. Chunda Sahib remained, as
the guest of Dupleix, at Pondicherry.
"On the receipt of the news of the battle of Ambur, Mr. Floyer, who is
governor at Fort Saint David, sent at once to Chunda Sahib to acknowledge
him as nawab; which, in the opinion of everyone here, was a very foolish
step. Muhammud Ali had fled to Trichinopoli, and sent word to Mr. Floyer
that he could hold the place, and even reconquer the Carnatic, if the
English would assist him. I know that Admiral Boscawen, who was with the
fleet at Fort Saint David, urged Mr. Floyer to do so, as it was clear that
Chunda Sahib would be a mere tool in the hands of the French.
"When Chunda Sahib delayed week after week at Pondicherry, Mr. Floyer
began to hesitate, but he could not make up his mind, and Admiral
Boscawen, who had received orders to return home, could no longer act in
contravention to them, and was obliged to sail.
"The instant the fleet had left, and we remained virtually defenceless,
Chunda Sahib, supplied with troops and money by Dupleix, marched out from
Pondicherry and joined Muzaffar Jung, with the avowed intention of
marching upon Trichinopoli. Had he done this at once, he must have taken
the place, and it was a question of weeks and days only of our being
turned altogether out of Southern India. Nothing, indeed, could have saved
us.
"Muzaffar Jung and Chunda Sahib, however, disregarding the plan which
Dupleix had marked out for them, resolved, before marching on Trichinopoli,
to conquer Tanjore, which is the richest city in Southern India. The rajah
had, only a few weeks before, made peace with us; and he now sent
messengers to Nazir Jung, Muzaffar's rival in the Deccan, and to the
English, imploring their assistance. Both parties resolved at once to
grant it, for alone both must have been overwhelmed by the alliance
between the two Indian princes and the French; and their only hope of a
successful resistance to this combination was in saving Trichinopoli.
"The march of these allies upon Tanjore opened the road to Trichinopoli;
and Captain Cope, with a hundred and twenty men, were at once despatched
to reinforce Muhammud Ali's garrison. Of this little force, he sent off
twenty men to the aid of the Rajah of Tanjore, and these, under cover of
the night, passed through the lines of the besiegers and into the city,
which was strongly fortified and able to stand a long siege.
"The English at once entered into a treaty with Nazir Jung, promising
him six hundred English troops; to assist him in maintaining his
sovereignty of the Deccan, and in aiding to place Muhammud Ali in the
nawabship of the Carnatic.
"Tanjore held out bravely. For some weeks the rajah had thrown dust in
the eyes of Chunda Sahib, by pretending to negotiate. Then, when the
allies attacked, he defended the city for fifty-two days, at the end of
which one of the gates of the town had been captured, and the city was
virtually at the mercy of the besiegers. He again delayed them by entering
into negotiations for surrender. In vain Dupleix continued to urge Chunda
Sahib to act energetically, and to enter Tanjore.
"Chunda Sahib, however, although he has a good head for planning, is
irresolute in action. His troops were discontented at the want of pay. The
French contingent also was demoralized, from the same cause. The troops
feared to engage in a desperate struggle, in the streets of a town
abounding with palaces, each of which was virtually a fortress; especially
as it was known that Nazir Jung was marching, with all speed, to fall upon
their rear. So at last the siege was broken up, and the army fell back
upon Pondicherry.
"Meanwhile Cope's detachment of a hundred men, with six thousand native
horsemen, escorted Muhammud Ali to join Nazir Jung at Valdaur, fifteen
miles from Pondicherry. Lawrence was busy at work at Fort Saint David,
organizing a force to go to his aid. Dupleix saw that it was necessary to
aid his allies energetically. The army, on its return from the siege of
Tanjore, was reorganized; the French contingent increased to two thousand
men; and a supply of money furnished, from his private means.
"The army set out to attack Nazir Jung and his ally at Valdaur. When
the battle began, however, the French contingent mutinied and refused to
fight; and the natives, panic stricken by the desertion of their allies,
fell back on Pondicherry. Chunda Sahib accompanied his men. Muzaffar Jung
surrendered to his uncle, the usurper.
"In three or four days the discipline of the French army was restored,
and on the 13th of April it attacked and defeated a detachment of Nazir
Jung's army; and a few days later captured the strong temple of Tiruvadi,
sixteen miles from Fort Saint David.
"Some months passed before the French were completely prepared; but on
September the first, D'Auteuil, who commanded the French, and Chunda Sahib
attacked the army of the native princes, twenty thousand strong, and
defeated it utterly, the French not losing a single man. Muhammud Ali,
with only two attendants, fled to Arcot, and the victory rendered Chunda
Sahib virtual master of the Carnatic.
"Muzaffar Jung, after his surrender to his uncle, had been loaded with
chains, and remained a prisoner in the camp; where, however, he managed to
win over several of the leaders of his uncle's army. Gingee was stormed by
a small French force, and the French officer there entered into a
correspondence with the conspirators, and it was arranged that, when the
French army attacked Nazir Jung, these should declare against him.
"On the 15th December the French commander, with eight hundred
Europeans, three thousand Sepoys, and ten guns, marched against Nazir
Jung, whose army of twenty-five thousand men opposed him. These, however,
he defeated easily. While the battle was going on, the conspirators
murdered Nazir Jung, released Muzaffar Jung, and saluted him as subadar.
His escape was a fortunate one, for his uncle had ordered him to be
executed that very day.
"Muzaffar Jung proceeded to Pondicherry, where he was received with
great honors. He nominated Dupleix Nawab of the Carnatic and neighbouring
countries, with Chunda Sahib as his deputy, conferred the highest
dignities upon him, and granted the French possession of all the lands and
forts they had conquered. He arranged with Dupleix a plan for common
action, and agreed that a body of French troops should remain permanently
at his capital."
Chapter 6: The Arrival Of Clive.
"I have nearly brought down the story to the present time," Mr. Johnson
said. "One event has taken place, however, which was of importance.
Muzaffar Jung set out for Hyderabad, accompanied by a French contingent
under Bussy. On the way, the chiefs who had conspired against Nazir Jung
mutinied against his successor. Muzaffar charged them with his cavalry.
Two of the three chief conspirators were killed and, while pursuing the
third, Muzaffar was himself killed.
"Bussy at once released from confinement a son of Nazir Jung,
proclaimed him Subadar of the Deccan, escorted him to Hyderabad, and
received from him the cession of considerable fresh grants of territory to
the French. The latter were now everywhere triumphant, and Trichinopoli
and Tanjore were, with the three towns held by the English, the sole
places which resisted their authority. Muhammud Ali, deeming further
resistance hopeless, had already opened negotiations with Dupleix for the
surrender of Trichinopoli. Dupleix agreed to his conditions; but when
Muhammud Ali found that Count Bussy, with the flower of the French force,
had been despatched to Hyderabad, he gained time by raising fresh demands,
which would require the ratification of the subadar.
"Luckily for us Mr. Floyer had been recalled, and his place taken by
Mr. Saunders; who is, everyone says, a man of common sense and
determination. Muhammud Ali urged upon him the necessity for the English
to make common cause with him against the enemy, for if Trichinopoli fell,
it would be absolutely impossible for the English to resist the French and
their allies. Early this year, then, Mr. Saunders assured him that he
should be assisted with all our strength, and Muhammud Ali thereupon broke
off the negotiations with the French.
"Most unfortunately for us, Major Lawrence had gone home to England on
sick leave. Captain Gingen, who now commands our troops, is a wretched
substitute for him. Captain Cope is no better.
"Early this year Mr. Saunders sent Cope, with two hundred and eighty
English and three hundred Sepoys, to Trichinopoli. Benefiting by the delay
which was caused before Dupleix, owing to the absence of his best troops
at Hyderabad, could collect an army, Cope laid siege to Madura, but was
defeated and had to abandon his guns. Three thousand of Muhammud Ali's
native troops thereupon deserted to the enemy.
"The cause of the English now appeared lost. Dupleix planted the white
flags, emblems of the authority of France, in the fields within sight of
Fort Saint David. With immense efforts, Mr. Saunders put into the field
five hundred English troops, a thousand Sepoys, a hundred Africans, and
eight guns; under the command of Captain Gingen, whose orders were to
follow the movements of the army with which D'Auteuil and Chunda Sahib
were marching against Trichinopoli.
"Luckily Chunda Sahib, instead of doing so at once, moved northwards to
confirm his authority in the towns of North and South Arcot, and to raise
additional levies. Great delay was caused by this. On arriving before the
important fortress of Valkonda, Chunda Sahib found before it the troops of
Captain Gingen, who had been reinforced by sixteen hundred troops from
Trichinopoli. The governor of the place, not knowing which party was the
stronger, refused to yield to either; and for a fortnight the armies lay
at a short distance from each other, near the fortress, with whose
governor both continued their negotiations.
"Gingen then lost patience and attacked the place, but was repulsed,
and the governor at once admitted the French within the fortress. The next
day the main body of the French attacked us, the guns of the fortress
opening fire upon us at the same time. Our men, a great portion of whom
were recruits just joined from England, fell into a panic and bolted,
abandoning their allies and leaving their guns, ammunition, and stores in
the hands of the enemy.
"Luckily, D'Auteuil was laid up with gout. If he had pressed on, there
remained only the two or three hundred men under Cope to offer the
slightest resistance. Trichinopoli must have fallen at once; and we,
without a hundred soldiers here, should have had nothing to do but pack up
and go. As it was, Gingen's beaten men were allowed to retreat quietly
towards Trichinopoli.
"The next day D'Auteuil was better, and followed in pursuit, and Gingen
had the greatest difficulty in reaching Trichinopoli. There, at the
present moment, we lie shut up, a portion of our force only remaining
outside the walls.
"The place itself is strong. The town lies round a lofty rock, on which
stands the fortress, which commands the country for some distance round.
Still, there is no question that the French could take it, if they
attacked it. Our men are utterly dispirited with defeat. Cope and Gingen
have neither enterprise nor talent.
"At present the enemy, who are now under the command of Colonel Law,
who has succeeded D'Auteuil, are contenting themselves with beleaguering
the place. But as we have no troops whatever to send to its rescue, and
Muhammud Ali has no friends elsewhere to whom to look for aid, it is a
matter of absolute certainty that the place must fall, and then Dupleix
will only have to request us to leave, and we shall have nothing else to
do but to go at once. So I should advise you not to trouble yourself to
unpack your luggage, for in all probability another fortnight will see us
on board ship.
"There, that's a tremendous long yarn I've been telling you, and not a
pleasant one. It's a history of defeat, loss of prestige and position. We
have been out fought and out diplomatized, and have made a mess of
everything we put our hand to. I should think you must be tired of it. I
am. I haven't done so much talking, for years."
Charlie and Peters thanked their new acquaintance, warmly, for the
pains he had taken in explaining the various circumstances and events
which had led to the present unfortunate position; and Charlie asked, as
they stood up to say goodnight to Mr. Johnson, "What has become of Clive,
all this time?"
"After the conquest of Devikota," Mr. Johnson said, "the civilians in
the service were called back to their posts; but to show that they
recognized his services, the authorities allowed Clive to attain the rank
of captain, which would have been bestowed upon him had he remained in the
military service, and they appointed him commissary to the army, a post
which would take him away from the office work he hated. Almost directly
afterwards, he got a bad attack of fever, and was forced to take a cruise
in the Bay of Bengal. He came back in time to go with Gingen's force; but
after the defeat of Valkonda he resigned his office, I suppose in disgust,
and returned to Fort Saint David. In July, some of the Company's ships
came in with some reinforcements. There were no military officers left at
Fort Saint David, so Mr. Pigot, a member of the council, started with a
large convoy of stores, escorted by eighty English and three hundred
Sepoys. Clive volunteered to accompany them. They had to march thirty or
forty miles to Verdachelam, a town close to the frontier of Tanjore,
through which the convoy to Trichinopoli would be able to pass unopposed,
but the intervening country was hostile to the English.
"However, the convoy passed unmolested, and after seeing it safely to
that point, Pigot and Clive set out to return, with an escort of twelve
Sepoys. They were at once attacked, and for miles a heavy fire was kept up
on them. Seven of the escort were killed, the rest reached Fort Saint
David in safety. Pigot's report of Clive's conduct, strengthened by that
previously made by Major Lawrence, induced the authorities to transfer him
permanently to the army. He received a commission as captain and was sent
off, with a small detachment remaining at Saint David's, to Devikota.
"There he placed himself under Captain Clarke, who commanded; and the
whole body, numbering altogether a hundred English, fifty Sepoys, with a
small field piece, marched up to Trichinopoli, and I hear managed to make
its way in safety. He got in about a month ago."
"And what force have we altogether, here and at Saint David's, in case
Trichinopoli falls?"
"What with the detachment that came with you, and two others which
arrived about ten days back, we have altogether about three hundred and
fifty men. What on earth could these do against all the force of the nawab,
the subadar, and three or four thousand French troops?"
The prospect certainly seemed gloomy in the extreme, and the young
writers retired to their beds, on this, the first night of their arrival
in India, with the conviction that circumstances were in a desperate
position.
The next day they set to work, and at its end agreed that they should
bear the loss of their situations, and their expulsion from the country,
with more than resignation. It was now August, the heat was terrible, and
as they sat in their shirtsleeves at their desks, bathed in perspiration,
at their work of copying invoices, they felt that any possible change of
circumstances would be for the better.
The next day, and the next, still further confirmed these ideas. The
nights were nearly as hot as the days. Tormented by mosquitoes, they
tossed restlessly in their beds for hours, dozing off towards morning and
awaking unrefreshed and worn out. When released from work at the end of
the third day, Charlie and Peters strolled down together to the beach, and
bewailed their hard fate.
"There are two ships coming from the south," Charlie said presently. "I
wonder whether they're from England, or Fort Saint David?"
"Which do you hope they will be?" Peters said.
"I hope they're from Saint David's," Charlie answered. "Even if they
made a quick voyage, they couldn't have left England many weeks after us;
and although I should be glad to get news from home, I am still more
anxious, just at present, for news from Saint David's. Between ourselves,
I long to hear of the fall of Trichinopoli. Everyone says it is certain to
take place before long, and the sooner it does, the sooner we shall be out
of this frightful place."
After dinner they again went down to the beach, and were joined by
Doctor Rae, who chatted with them as to the ships, which were now just
anchoring. These had already signalled that they were from Saint David's,
and that they had on board Mr. Saunders, the governor, and a detachment of
troops. Already the soldiers from the Lizzie Anderson, aided by a number
of natives, were at work pitching tents in the fort for the reception of
the newcomers, and conjecture was busy on shore, among the civilians, as
to the object of bringing troops from Saint David's to Madras, that is,
directly away from the scene of action.
"It is one of two things," Doctor Rae said: "Either Trichinopoli has
surrendered and they are evacuating Fort Saint David, or they have news
that the nawab is marching to attack us here. I should think it to be the
latter, for Fort Saint David is a great deal stronger than this place,
though the French did strengthen it during their stay here. If, then, the
authorities have determined to abandon one of the two towns, and to
concentrate all their force for the defence of the other, I should have
thought they would have held on to Saint David's.
"There is a boat being lowered from one of the ships, so we shall soon
have news."
A signal from the ship announced that the governor was about to land,
and the principal persons at the factory assembled on the beach to receive
him. Doctor Rae and the two young writers stood, a short distance from the
party. As the boat was beached, Mr. Saunders sprang out and, surrounded by
those assembled to meet him, walked at once towards the factory. An
officer got out from the boat and superintended the debarkation of the
baggage, which a number of coolies at once placed on their heads and
carried away.
The officer was following them, when his eye fell upon Doctor Rae.
"Ah! Doctor," he said, "how are you? When did you get out again from
England?"
"Only three or four days since, Captain Clive. I did not recognize you,
at first. I am glad to see you again."
"Yes, I have cast my slough," Captain Clive said, laughing, "and have,
thank God, exchanged my pen for a sword, for good."
"You were able to fight, though, as a civilian," Doctor Rae said,
laughing.
"Yes, we had some tough fighting behind the ramparts of Saint David's,
and in the trenches before Pondicherry; but we shall have sharper work,
still before us, or I am mistaken."
"What! Are they going to attack us here?" Doctor Rae exclaimed.
"Oh no, just the other way," Captain Clive said. "We are going to carry
the war into their quarters. It is a secret yet, and must not go farther."
And he included the two writers in his look.
"These are two fresh comers, Captain Clive. They came out in the same
ship with me. This is Mr. Marryat, this Mr. Peters. They are both brave
young gentlemen, and had an opportunity of proving it on the way out, for
we were twice engaged; the first time with privateers; the second, a very
sharp affair, with pirates. That ship lying off there is a pirate we
captured."
"Aha!" Captain Clive said, looking keenly at the lads. "Well, young
gentlemen, and how do you like what you have seen of your life here?"
"We hate it, sir," Charlie said. "We would, both of us, a thousand
times rather enlist under you as private soldiers. Oh, sir, if there is
any expedition going to take place, do you think there is a chance of our
being allowed to go as volunteers?"
"I will see about it," Captain Clive said, smiling. "Trade must be dull
enough here, at present, and we want every hand that can hold a sword or a
musket in the field.
"You are sure you can recommend them?" he said, turning to Doctor Rae
with a smile.
"Most warmly," the doctor said. "They both showed great coolness and
courage, in the affairs I spoke of. Have you any surgeons with you,
Captain Clive? If not, I hope that I shall go with any expedition that
will take place. The doctor here is just recovering from an attack of
fever and will not be fit, for weeks, for the fatigues of active service.
"May I ask who is to command the expedition?"
"I am," Clive said quietly. "You may well look surprised that an
officer who has but just joined should have been selected; but in fact,
there is no one else. Cope and Gingen are both at Trichinopoli, and even
if they were not--" he paused, and a shrug of the shoulders expressed his
meaning clearly. "Mr. Saunders is good enough to feel some confidence in
my capacity, and I trust that I shall not disappoint him.
"We are going--but this, mind, is a profound secret till the day we
march--to attack Arcot. It is the only possible way of relieving
Trichinopoli."
"To attack Arcot?" Doctor Rae said, astonished. "That does indeed
appear a desperate enterprise, with such a small body as you have at your
command, and these, entirely new recruits. But I recognize the importance
of the enterprise. If you should succeed, it will draw off Chunda Sahib
from Trichinopoli. It's a grand idea, Captain Clive, a grand idea, though
I own it seems to me a desperate one."
"In desperate times we must take desperate measures, Doctor," Captain
Clive said. "Now I must be going on after the governor. I shall see you
tomorrow.
"I will not forget you, young gentlemen."
So saying, he proceeded to the factory.
It was afterwards known that the proposal, to effect a diversion by an
expedition against Arcot, was the proposal of Clive himself. Upon arriving
at Trichinopoli, he had at once seen that all was lost, there. The
soldiers were utterly dispirited and demoralized. They had lost all
confidence in themselves and their officers, who had also lost confidence
in themselves. At Trichinopoli nothing was to be done, and it must be
either starved out, or fall an easy prey should the enemy advance to the
assault. Clive had, then, after a few days' stay, made his way out from
the town, and proceeded to Fort Saint David, where he had laid before the
governor the proposal, which he believed to be the only possible measure
which could save the English in India.
The responsibility thus set before Mr. Saunders was a grave one. Upon
the one hand, he was asked to detach half of the already inadequate
garrisons of Fort Saint David and Madras upon an enterprise which, if
unsuccessful, must be followed by the loss of the British possessions, of
which he was governor. He would have to take this great risk, not upon the
advice of a tried veteran like Lawrence, but on that of a young man, only
a month or two back a civilian; and it was to this young man, untried in
command, that the leadership of this desperate enterprise must be
intrusted.
Upon the other hand, if he refused to take this responsibility the fall
of Trichinopoli, followed by the loss of the three English ports, was
certain. But for this no blame or responsibility could rest upon him. Many
men would have chosen the second alternative; but Mr. Saunders had, since
Clive's return, seen a good deal of him, and had been impressed with a
strong sense of his capacity, energy, and good sense. Mr. Pigot, who had
seen Clive under the most trying circumstances, was also his warm
supporter; and Mr. Saunders at last determined to adopt Clive's plan, and
to stake the fortunes of the English in India on this desperate venture.
Accordingly, leaving a hundred men only at Fort Saint David, he decided
to carry the remainder to Madras; and that Clive, leaving only fifty
behind as a garrison there, should, with the whole available force, march
upon Arcot.
The next morning as Charlie and Peters were at breakfast, a native
entered with a letter from the chief factor, to the effect that their
services in the office would be dispensed with, and that they were, in
accordance with their request, to report themselves to Captain Clive as
volunteers. No words can express the joy of the two lads, at receiving the
intelligence, and they created so much noise, in the exuberance of their
delight, that Mr. Johnson came in from the next room to see what was the
matter.
"Ah!" he said, when he heard the cause of the uproar; "when I first
came out here, I should have done the same, and should have regarded the
certainty of being knocked on the head as cheerfully as you do. Eight
years out here takes the enthusiasm out of a man, and I shall wait quietly
to see whether we are to be transferred to Calcutta, or shipped back to
England."
A quarter of an hour later, Charlie and Peters joined Captain Clive in
the camp.
"Ah!" he said, "My young friends, I'm glad to see you. There is plenty
for you to do, at once. We shall march tomorrow, and all preparations have
to be made. You will both have the rank of ensign, while you serve with
me. I have only six other officers, two of whom are civilians who, like
yourselves, volunteered at Saint David's. They are of four or five year's
standing and, as they speak the language, they will serve with the Sepoys
under one of my military officers. Another officer, who is also an ensign,
will take the command of the three guns. The Europeans are divided into
two companies. One of you will be attached to each. The remaining officer
commands both."
During the day the lads had not a moment to themselves, and were
occupied until late at night in superintending the packing of stores and
tents; and the following morning, the 26th of August, 1751, the force
marched from Madras. It consisted of two hundred of the Company's English
troops, three hundred Sepoys, and three small guns. They were led, as has
been said, by eight European officers, of whom only Clive and another had
ever heard a shot fired in action, four of the eight being young men in
the civil service, who had volunteered.
Charlie was glad to find that among the company to which he was
appointed was the detachment which had come out with him on board ship;
and the moment these heard that he was to accompany them, as their
officer, Tim Kelly pressed forward and begged that he might be allowed to
act as Charlie's servant, a request which the lad readily complied with.
The march the first day was eighteen miles, a distance which, in such a
climate, was sufficient to try to the utmost the powers of the young
recruits. The tents were soon erected, each officer having two or three
native servants, that number being indispensable in India. Charlie and
Peters had one tent between them, which was shared by two other officers,
as the column had moved in the lightest order possible in India.
"Sure, Mr. Marryat," Tim Kelly said to him confidentially, "that black
hathen of a cook is going to pison ye. I have been watching him, and there
he is putting all sorts of outlandish things into the mate. He's been
pounding them up on stones, for all the world like an apothecary, and even
if he manes no mischief, the food isn't fit to set before a dog, let alone
a Christian and a gintleman like yourself. If you give the word, sir, I
knock him over with the butt end of my musket, and do the cooking for you,
meself."
"I'm afraid the other officers wouldn't agree to that, Tim," Charlie
said, laughing. "The food isn't so bad as it looks, and I don't think an
apprenticeship among the Irish bogs is likely to have turned you out a
first rate cook, Tim; except, of course, for potatoes."
"Sure, now, yer honor, I can fry a rasher of bacon with any man."
"Perhaps you might do that, Tim, but as we've no bacon here, that won't
help us. No, we must put up with the cook, and I don't think any of us
will be the worse for the dinner."
On the morning of the 29th Clive reached Conjeveram, a town of some
size, forty-two miles from Madras. Here Clive gained the first trustworthy
intelligence as to Arcot. He found the garrison outnumbered his own force
by two to one; and that, although the defences were not in a position to
resist an attack by heavy guns, they were capable of being defended
against any force not so provided. Clive at once despatched a messenger to
Madras, begging that two eighteen-pounders might be sent after him; and
then, without awaiting their coming he marched forward against Arcot.
Chapter 7: The Siege Of Arcot.
From Conjeveram to Arcot is twenty-seven miles, and the troops, in
spite of a delay caused by a tremendous storm of thunder and lightning,
reached the town in two days. The garrison, struck with panic at the
sudden coming of a foe, when they deemed themselves in absolute security,
at once abandoned the fort, which they might easily have maintained until
Chunda Sahib was able to send a force to relieve it. The city was
incapable of defence after the fort had been abandoned, and Clive took
possession of both, without firing a shot.
He at once set to work to store up provisions in the fort, in which he
found eight guns and an abundance of ammunition, as he foresaw the
likelihood of his having to stand a siege there; and then, leaving a
garrison to defend it in his absence, marched on the 4th of September with
the rest of his forces against the enemy, who had retired from the town to
the mud fort of Timari, six miles south of Arcot. After a few discharges
with their cannon they retired hastily, and Clive marched back to Arcot.
Two days later, however, he found that they had been reinforced, and as
their position threatened his line of communications, he again advanced
towards them. He found the enemy about two thousand strong, drawn up in a
grove under cover of the guns of the fort. The grove was inclosed by a
bank and ditch, and some fifty yards away was a dry tank, inclosed by a
bank higher than that which surrounded the grove. In this the enemy could
retire, when dislodged from their first position.
Charlie's heart beat fast when he heard the order given to advance. The
enemy outnumbered them by five to one, and were in a strong position. As
the English advanced, the enemy's two field pieces opened upon them. Only
three men were killed, and, led by their officers, the men went at the
grove at the double. The enemy at once evacuated it, and took refuge in
the tank, from behind whose high bank they opened fire upon the English.
Clive at once divided his men into two columns, and sent them round to
attack the tank upon two sides. The movement was completely successful. At
the same moment the men went with a rush at the banks, and upon reaching
the top opened a heavy fire upon the crowded mass within. These at once
fled in disorder.
Clive then summoned the fort to surrender; but the commander, seeing
that Clive had no battering train, refused to do so; and Clive fell back
upon Arcot again, until his eighteen-pounders should arrive.
For the next eight days, the troops were engaged in throwing up
defences, and strengthening and victualling the fort. The enemy, gaining
confidence, gathered to the number of three thousand, and encamped three
miles from the town, proclaiming that they were about to besiege; and at
midnight on the 14th Clive sallied out, took them by surprise, and
dispersed them.
The two eighteen-pounders, for which Clive had sent to Madras, were now
well upon the road, under the protection of a small body of Sepoys, and
were approaching Conjeveram. The enemy sent a considerable body of troops
to cut off the guns, and Clive found that the small number which he had
sent out, to meet the approaching party, would not be sufficient. He
therefore resolved to take the whole force, leaving only sufficient to
garrison the fort.
The post which the enemy occupied was a temple near Conjeveram, and as
this was twenty-seven miles distant, the force would be obliged to be
absent for at least two days. As it would probably be attacked, and might
have to fight hard, he decided on leaving only thirty Europeans and fifty
Sepoys within the fort. He appointed Doctor Rae to the command of the post
during his absence, and placed Charlie and Peters under his orders.
"I wonder whether they will have any fighting," Charlie said, as the
three officers looked from the walls of the fort after the departing
force.
"I wish we had gone with them," Peters put in; "but it will be a long
march, in the heat."
"I should think," Doctor Rae said, "that they are sure to have
fighting. I only hope they may not be attacked at night. The men are very
young and inexperienced, and there is nothing tries new soldiers so much
as a night attack. However, from what I hear of their own wars, I believe
that night attacks are rare among them. I don't know that they have any
superstition on the subject, as some African people have, on the ground
that evil spirits are about at night; but the natives are certainly not
brisk, after nightfall. They are extremely susceptible to any fall of
temperature, and as you have, of course, noticed, sleep with their heads
covered completely up. However, we must keep a sharp lookout here,
tonight."
"You don't think that we are likely to be attacked, sir, do you?"
"It is possible we may be," the doctor said. "They will know that
Captain Clive has set out from here, with the main body, and has left only
a small garrison. Of course they have spies, and will know that there are
only eighty men here, a number insufficient to defend one side of this
fort, to say nothing of the whole circle of the walls. They have already
found out that the English can fight in the open, and their experience at
Timari will make them shy of meeting us again. Therefore, it is just
possible that they may be marching in this direction today, while Clive is
going in the other, and that they may intend carrying it with a rush.
"I should say, today let the men repose as much as possible; keep the
sentries on the gates and walls, but otherwise let them all have absolute
quiet. You can tell the whites, and I will let the Sepoys know, that they
will have to be in readiness all night, and that they had better,
therefore, sleep as much as possible today. We will take it by turns to be
on duty, one going round the walls and seeing that the sentries are
vigilant, while the others sit in the shade and doze off, if they can. We
must all three keep on the alert, during the night."
Doctor Rae said that he, himself, would see that all went well for the
first four hours, after which Charlie should go on duty; and the two
subalterns accordingly made themselves as comfortable as they could in
their quarters, which were high up in the fort, and possessed a window
looking over the surrounding country.
"Well, Tim, what is the matter with you?" they asked that soldier, as
he came in with an earthenware jar of water, which he placed to cool in
the window. "You look pale."
"And it's pale I feel, your honor, with the life frightened fairly out
of me, a dozen times a day. It was bad enough on the march, but this place
just swarms with horrible reptiles. Shure an' it's a pity that the holy
Saint Patrick didn't find time to pay a visit to India. If he'd driven the
varmint into the sea for them, as he did in Ireland, the whole population
would have become Christians, out of pure gratitude. Why, yer honor, in
the cracks and crevices of the stones of this ould place there are bushels
and bushels of 'em. There are things they call centipades, with a million
legs on each side of them, and horns big enough to frighten ye; of all
sizes up to as long as my hand and as thick as my finger; and they say
that a bite from one of them will put a man in a raging fever, and maybe
kill him. Then there are scorpions, the savagest looking little bastes ye
ever saw, for all the world like a little lobster with his tail turned
over his back, and a sting at the end of it. Then there's spiders, some of
'em nigh as big as a cat."
"Oh, nonsense, Tim!" Charlie said; "I don't think, from what I've
heard, that there's a spider in India whose body is as big as a mouse."
"It isn't their body, yer honor. It's their legs. They're just cruel to
look at. It was one of 'em that gave me a turn, a while ago. I was just
lying on my bed smoking my pipe, when I saw one of the creatures (as big
as a saucer, I'll take my oath) walking towards me with his wicked eye
fixed full on me. I jumped off the bed and on to a bench that stood handy.
"'What are ye yelling about, Tim Kelly?' said Corporal Jones to me.
"'Here's a riotous baste here, corporal,' says I, 'that's meditating an
attack on me.'
"'Put your foot on it, man,' says he.
"'It's mighty fine,' says I, 'and I in my bare feet.'
"So the corporal tells Pat Murphy, my right-hand man, to tackle the
baste. I could see Pat didn't like the job ayther, yer honor, but he's not
the boy to shrink from his duty; so he comes and he takes post on the form
by my side, and just when the cratur is making up his mind to charge us
both, Pat jumps down upon him and squelched it.
"Shure, yer honor, the sight of such bastes is enough to turn a
Christian man's blood."
"The spider had no idea of attacking you, Kelly," Peters said,
laughing. "It might possibly bite you in the night, though I do not think
it would do so; or if you took it up in your fingers."
"The saints defind us, yer honor! I'd as soon think of taking a tiger
by the tail. The corporal, he's an Englishman, and lives in a country
where they've got snakes and reptiles; but it's hard on an Irish boy,
dacently brought up within ten miles of Cork's own town, to be exposed to
the like.
"And do ye know, yer honor, when I went out into the town yesterday,
what should I see but a man sitting down against a wall, with a little bit
of a flute in his hand, and a basket by his side. Well, yer honor, I
thought maybe he was going to play a tune, when he lifts up the top of the
basket and then began to play. Ye may call it music, yer honor, but there
was nayther tune nor music in it.
"Then all of a suddint two sarpents in the basket lifts up their heads,
with a great ear hanging down on each side, and began to wave themselves
about."
"Well, Tim, what happened then?" Charlie asked, struggling with his
laughter.
"Shure it's little I know what happened after, for I just took to my
heels, and I never drew breath till I was inside the gates."
"There was nothing to be frightened at, Tim," Charlie said. "It was a
snake charmer. I have never seen one yet, but there are numbers of them
all over India. Those were not ears you saw, but the hood. The snakes like
the music, and wave their heads about in time to it. I believe that,
although they are a very poisonous snake and their bite is certain death,
there is no need to be afraid of them, as the charmers draw out their
poison fangs when they catch them."
"Do they, now?" Tim said, in admiration. "I wonder what the regimental
barber would say to a job like that, now. He well nigh broke Dan
Sullivan's jaw, yesterday, in getting out a big tooth; and then swore at
the poor boy, for having such a powerful strong jaw. I should like to see
his face, if he was asked to pull out a tooth from one of them dancing
sarpents.
"I brought ye in some fruits, yer honors. I don't know what they are,
but you may trust me, they're not poison. I stopped for half an hour
beside the stall, till I saw some of the people of the country buying and
ating them. So then I judged that they were safe for yer honors."
"Now, Tim, you'd better go and lie down and get a sleep, if the spiders
will let you, for you will have to be under arms all night, as it is
possible that we may be attacked."
The first part of the night passed quietly. Double sentries were placed
at each of the angles of the walls. The cannons were loaded, and all ready
for instant action. Doctor Rae and his two subalterns were upon the alert,
visiting the posts every quarter of an hour to see that the men were
vigilant.
Towards two o'clock a dull sound was heard and, although nothing could
be seen, the men were at once called to arms, and took up the posts to
which they had already been told off on the walls. The noise continued. It
was slight and confused, but the natives are so quiet in their movements,
that the doctor did not doubt that a considerable body of men were
surrounding the place, and that he was about to be attacked.
Presently one of the sentries over the gateway perceived something
approaching. He challenged, and immediately afterwards fired. The sound of
his gun seemed to serve as the signal for an assault, and a large body of
men rushed forward at the gate, while at two other points a force ran up
to the foot of the walls, and endeavoured to plant ladders.
The garrison at once collected at the points of attack, a few sentries
only being left at intervals on the wall, to give notice should any
attempt be made elsewhere. From the walls, a heavy fire of musketry was
poured upon the masses below; while from the windows of all the houses
around, answering flashes of fire shot out, a rain of bullets being
directed at the battlements. Doctor Rae himself commanded at the gate; one
of the subalterns at each of the other points assailed.
The enemy fought with great determination. Several times the ladders
were planted and the men swarmed up them, but as often these were hurled
back upon the crowd below. At the gate the assailants endeavoured to hew
their way, with axes, through it; but so steady was the fire directed,
from the loopholes which commanded it, upon those so engaged, that they
were, each time, forced to recoil with great slaughter. It was not until
nearly daybreak that the attack ceased, and the assailants, finding that
they could not carry the place by a coup de main, fell back.
The next day, the main body of the British force returned with the
convoy. News arrived, the following day, that the enemy were approaching
to lay siege to the place.
The news of the capture of Arcot had produced the effect which Clive
had anticipated from it. It alarmed and irritated the besiegers of
Trichinopoli, and inspired the besieged with hope and exultation. The
Mahratta chief of Gutti and the Rajah of Mysore, with whom Muhammud Ali
had for some time been negotiating, at once declared in his favour. The
Rajah of Tanjore and the chief of Pudicota, adjoining that state, who had
hitherto remained strictly neutral, now threw in their fortunes with the
English, and thereby secured the communications between Trichinopoli and
the coast.
Chunda Sahib determined to lose not a moment in recovering Arcot,
knowing that its recapture would at once cool the ardour of the new native
allies of the English; and that, with its capture, the last hope of the
besieged in Trichinopoli would be at an end. Continuing the siege, he
despatched three thousand of his best troops, with a hundred and fifty
Frenchmen, to reinforce the two thousand men already near Arcot, under the
command of his son Riza Sahib. Thus the force about to attack Arcot
amounted to five thousand men; while the garrison under Clive's orders
had, by the losses in the defence of the fort, by fever and disease, been
reduced to one hundred and twenty Europeans, and two hundred Sepoys; while
four out of the eight officers were hors de combat.
The fort which this handful of men had to defend was in no way capable
of offering a prolonged resistance. Its walls were more than a mile in
circumference, and were in a very bad state of repair. The rampart was
narrow and the parapet low, and the ditch, in many places, dry. The fort
had two gates. These were in towers standing beyond the ditch, and
connected with the interior by a causeway across it. The houses in the
town in many places came close up to the walls, and from their roofs the
ramparts of the forts were commanded.
On the 23rd September Riza Sahib, with his army, took up his position
before Arcot. Their guns had not, however, arrived, with the exception of
four mortars; but they at once occupied all the houses near the fort, and
from the walls and upper windows kept up a heavy fire on the besieged.
Clive determined to make an effort, at once, to drive them from this
position, and he accordingly, on the same afternoon, made a sortie. So
deadly a fire, however, was poured into the troops as they advanced, that
they were unable to make any way, and were forced to retreat into the fort
again, after suffering heavy loss.
On the night of the 24th, Charlie Marryat, with twenty men carrying
powder, was lowered from the walls; and an attempt was made to blow up the
houses nearest to them; but little damage was done, for the enemy were on
the alert, and they were unable to place the powder in effective
positions, and with a loss of ten of their number the survivors with
difficulty regained the fort.
For the next three weeks the position remained unchanged. So heavy was
the fire which the enemy, from their commanding position, maintained, that
no one could show his head for a moment, without running the risk of being
shot. Only a few sentinels were kept upon the walls, to prevent the risk
of surprise, and these had to remain stooping below the parapet. Every day
added to the losses.
Captain Clive had a series of wonderful escapes, and indeed the men
began to regard him with a sort of superstitious reverence, believing that
he had a charmed life. One of his three remaining officers, seeing an
enemy taking deliberate aim at him through a window, endeavoured to pull
him aside. The native changed his aim, and the officer fell dead. On three
other occasions sergeants, who accompanied him on his rounds, were shot
dead by his side. Yet no ball touched him.
Provisions had been stored in the fort, before the commencement of the
siege, sufficient for sixty days; and of this a third was already
exhausted when, on the 14th of October, the French troops serving with
Riza Sahib received two eighteen-pounders, and seven smaller pieces of
artillery. Hitherto the besiegers had contented themselves with harassing
the garrison night and day, abstaining from any attack which would cost
them lives, until the arrival of their guns. Upon receiving these, they at
once placed them in a battery which they had prepared on the northwest of
the fort, and opened fire.
So well was this battery placed, and so accurate the aim of its gunner,
that the very first shot dismounted one of the eighteen-pounders in the
fort. The second again struck the gun and completely disabled it. The
besieged mounted their second heavy gun in its place, and were preparing
to open fire on the French battery, when a shot struck it also and
dismounted it. It was useless to attempt to replace it, and it was, during
the night, removed to a portion of the walls not exposed to the fire of
the enemy's battery. The besiegers continued their fire, and in six days
had demolished the wall facing their battery, making a breach of fifty
feet wide.
Clive, who had now only the two young subalterns serving under him,
worked indefatigably. His coolness and confidence of bearing kept up the
courage of his little garrison, and every night, when darkness hid them
from the view of the enemy's sharpshooters, the men laboured to prepare
for the impending attack. Works were thrown up inside the fort, to command
the breach. Two deep trenches were dug, one behind the other; the one
close to the wall, the other some distance farther back. These trenches
were filled with sharp iron three-pointed spikes, and palisades erected
extending from the ends of the ditches to the ramparts, and a house pulled
down in the rear to the height of a breastwork, behind which the garrison
could fire at the assailants, as they endeavoured to cross the ditches.
One of the three field pieces Clive had brought with him he mounted on
a tower, flanking the breach outside. Two he held in reserve, and placed
two small guns, which he had found in the fort when he took it, on the
flat roof of a house in the fort commanding the inside of the breach.
From the roofs of some of the houses around the fort the besiegers
beheld the progress of these defences; and Riza Sahib feared, in spite of
his enormously superior numbers, to run the risk of a repulse. He knew
that the amount of provisions which Clive had stored was not large, and
thinking that famine would inevitably compel his surrender, shrank from
incurring the risk of disheartening his army, by the slaughter which an
unsuccessful attempt to carry the place must entail. He determined, at any
rate, to increase the probability of success, and utilize his superior
forces, by making an assault at two points, simultaneously. He therefore
erected a battery on the southwest, and began to effect a breach on that
side, also.
Clive, on his part, had been busy endeavouring to obtain assistance.
His native emissaries, penetrating the enemy's lines, carried the news of
the situation of affairs in the fort to Madras, Fort Saint David, and
Trichinopoli. At Madras a few fresh troops had arrived from England, and
Mr. Saunders, feeling that Clive must be relieved at all cost, however
defenceless the state of Madras might be, despatched, on the 20th of
October, a hundred Europeans and a hundred Sepoys, under Lieutenant Innis.
These, after three days' marching, arrived at Trivatoor, twenty-two miles
from Arcot.
Riza Sahib had heard of his approach; and sent a large body of troops,
with two guns, to attack him. The contest was too unequal. Had the British
force been provided with field pieces, they might have gained the day;
but, after fighting with great bravery, they were forced to fall back;
with a loss of twenty English and two officers killed and many more
wounded, while the Sepoys suffered equally severely.
One of Clive's messengers reached Murari Reo, the Mahratta chief of
Gutti. This man was a ferocious free-booting chief, daring and brave
himself, and admiring those qualities in others. Hitherto, his alliance
with Muhammud Ali was little more than nominal, for he had dreaded
bringing upon himself the vengeance of Chunda Sahib and the French, whose
ultimate success in the strife appeared certain. Clive's march upon Arcot,
and the heroic defence which the handful of men there were opposing to
overwhelming numbers, excited his highest admiration. As he afterwards
said, he had never before believed that the English could fight, and when
Clive's messenger reached him, he at once sent back a promise of
assistance.
Riza Sahib learned, almost as soon as Clive himself, that the Mahrattas
were on the move. The prospects of his communications being harassed, by
these daring horsemen, filled him with anxiety. Murari Reo was encamped,
with six thousand men, at a spot thirty miles to the west of Arcot; and he
might, at any moment, swoop down upon the besiegers. Although, therefore,
Riza Sahib had for six days been at work effecting a new breach, which was
now nearly open to assault, he sent on the 30th of October a flag of
truce, with an offer to Clive of terms, if he would surrender Arcot.
The garrison were to be allowed to march out with their arms and
baggage, while to Clive himself he offered a large sum of money. In case
of refusal, he threatened to storm the fort, and put all its defenders to
the sword. Clive returned a defiant refusal, and the guns again opened on
the second breach.
On the 9th of November, the Mahrattas began to show themselves in the
neighbourhood of the besieging army. The force under Lieutenant Innis had
been reinforced, and was now under the command of Captain Kilpatrick, who
had a hundred and fifty English troops, with four field guns. This was now
advancing.
Four days later the new breach had attained a width of thirty yards,
but Clive had prepared defences in the rear, similar to those at the other
breach; and the difficulties of the besiegers would here be much greater,
as the ditch was not fordable.
The fifty days which the siege had lasted had been terrible ones for
the garrison. Never daring to expose themselves unnecessarily during the
day, yet ever on the alert to repel an attack; labouring at night at the
defences, with their numbers daily dwindling, and the prospect of an
assault becoming more and more imminent, the work of the little garrison
was terrible; and it is to the defences of Lucknow and Cawnpore, a hundred
years later, that we must look to find a parallel, in English warfare, for
their endurance and bravery.
Both Charlie Marryat and Peters had been wounded, but in neither case
were the injuries severe enough to prevent their continuing on duty. Tim
Kelly had his arm broken by a ball, while another bullet cut a deep seam
along his cheek, and carried away a portion of his ear. With his arm in
splints and a sling, and the side of his face covered with strappings and
plaster, he still went about his business.
"Ah! Yer honors," he said one day to his masters; "I've often been out
catching rabbits, with ferrits to drive 'em out of their holes, and sticks
to knock 'em on the head, as soon as they showed themselves; and it's a
divarshun I was always mightily fond of, but I never quite intered into
the feelings of the rabbits. Now I understand them complately, for ain't
we rabbits ourselves? The officers, saving your presence, are the ferrits
who turn us out of our holes on duty; and the niggers yonder, with their
muskets and their matchlocks, are the men with sticks, ready to knock us
on head, directly we show ourselves. If it plase Heaven that I ever return
to the ould country again, I'll niver lend a hand at rabbiting, to my
dying day."
Chapter 8: The Grand Assault.
The 14th of November was a Mohammedan festival, and Riza Sahib
determined to utilize the enthusiasm and fanatic zeal, which such an
occasion always excites among the followers of the Prophet, to make his
grand assault upon Arcot, and to attack at three o'clock in the morning.
Every preparation was made on the preceding day, and four strong columns
told off for the assault. Two of these were to attack by the breaches, the
other two at the gates. Rafts were prepared to enable the party attacking
by the new breach to cross the moat, while the columns advancing against
the gates were to be preceded by elephants, who, with iron plates on their
foreheads, were to charge and batter down the gates.
Clive's spies brought him news of the intended assault, and at midnight
he learned full particulars as to the disposition of the enemy. His force
was now reduced to eighty Europeans, and a hundred and twenty Sepoys.
Every man was told off to his post, and then, sentries being posted to
arouse them at the approach of the enemy, the little garrison lay down in
their places, to get two or three hours' sleep before the expected attack.
At three o'clock, the firing of three shells from the mortars into the
fort gave the signal for assault. The men leaped up and stood to their
arms, full of confidence in their ability to resist the attack. Soon the
shouts of the advancing columns testified to the equal confidence and
ardour of the assailants.
Not a sound was heard within the walls of the fort, until the elephants
advanced towards the gates. Then suddenly a stream of fire leaped out from
loophole and battlement. So well directed and continuous was the fire,
that the elephants, dismayed at the outburst of fire and noise, and
smarting from innumerable wounds, turned and dashed away, trampling in
their flight multitudes of men in the dense columns packed behind them.
These, deprived of the means upon which they had relied to break in the
gates, turned and retreated rapidly.
Scarcely less prolonged was the struggle at the breaches. At the first
breach, a very strong force of the enemy marched resolutely forward. They
were permitted, without a shot being fired at them, to cross the dry
ditch, mount the shattered debris of the wall, and pour into the interior
of the fort. Forward they advanced until, without a check, they reached
the first trench bristling with spikes.
Then, as they paused for a moment, from the breastwork in front of
them, from the ramparts, and every spot which commanded the trench, a
storm of musketry was poured on them; while the gunners swept the crowded
mass with grape, and bags of bullets. The effect was tremendous. Mowed
down in heaps, the assailants recoiled; and then, without a moment's
hesitation, turned and fled. Three times, strongly reinforced, they
advanced to the attack; but were each time repulsed, with severe
slaughter.
Still less successful were those at the other breach. A great raft,
capable of carrying seventy, conveyed the head of the storming party
across the ditch; and they had just reached the foot of the breach, when
Clive, who was himself at this point, turned two field pieces upon them,
with deadly effect. The raft was upset and smashed, and the column,
deprived of its intended means of crossing the ditch, desisted from the
attack.
Among those who had fallen, at the great breach, was the commander of
the storming party; a man of great valour. Four hundred of his followers
had also been killed, and Riza Sahib, utterly disheartened at his repulse
at all points, decided not to renew the attack. He had still more than
twenty men to each of the defenders; but the obstinacy of their
resistance, and the moral effect produced by it upon his troops; the
knowledge that the Mahratta horse were hovering in his rear, and that
Kilpatrick's little column was close at hand; determined him to raise the
siege.
After the repulse of the assault, the heavy musketry fire from the
houses around the fort was continued. At two in the afternoon he asked for
two hours' truce, to bury the dead. This was granted, and on its
conclusion the musketry fire was resumed, and continued until two in the
morning. Then suddenly, it ceased. Under cover of the fire, Riza Sahib had
raised the siege, and retired with his army to Vellore.
On the morning of the 15th, Clive discovered that the enemy had
disappeared. The joy of the garrison was immense. Every man felt proud,
and happy in the thought that he had taken his share in a siege, which
would not only be memorable in English history till the end of time, but
which had literally saved India to us. The little band made the fort
re-echo with their cheers, when the news came in. Caps were thrown high in
the air, and the men indulged in every demonstration of delight.
Clive was not a man to lose time. The men were at once formed up, and
marched into the abandoned camp of the enemy; where they found four guns,
four mortars, and a great quantity of ammunition. A cloud of dust was seen
approaching, and soon a mounted officer, riding forward, announced the
arrival of Captain Kilpatrick's detachment.
Not a moment was lost, for Clive felt the importance of, at once,
following up the blow inflicted by the repulse of the enemy. Three days
were spent, in continuous labour, in putting the fort of Arcot again in a
position of defence; and, leaving Kilpatrick in charge there, he marched
out with two hundred Europeans, seven hundred Sepoys, and three guns, and
attacked and took Timari, the little fort which before baffled him.
This done, he returned towards Arcot to await the arrival of a thousand
Mahratta horse, which Murari Reo had promised him. When these arrived,
however, they proved unwilling to accompany him. Upon their way, they had
fallen in with a portion of Riza Sahib's retreating force, and had been
worsted in the attack; and as the chance of plunder seemed small, while
the prospect of hard blows was certain, the free-booting horsemen refused,
absolutely, to join in the pursuit of the retreating enemy.
Just at this moment, the news came in that reinforcements from
Pondicherry were marching to meet Riza Sahib at Arni, a place seventeen
miles south of Arcot, twenty south of Vellore. It was stated that, with
these reinforcements, a large sum of money was being brought, for the use
of Riza Sahib's army. When the Mahrattas heard the news, the chance of
booty at once altered their intentions, and they declared themselves ready
to follow Clive. The greater portion of them, however, had dispersed,
plundering over the country, and great delay was caused before they could
be collected. When six hundred of them had been brought together, Clive
determined to wait no longer, but started at once for Arni.
The delay enabled Riza Sahib, marching down from Vellore, to meet his
reinforcements; and when Clive, after a forced march of twenty miles,
approached Arni, he found the enemy, composed of three hundred French
troops, two thousand five hundred Sepoys, and two thousand horsemen, with
four guns, drawn up before it. Seeing their immense superiority in
numbers, these advanced to the attack.
Clive determined to await them where he stood. The position was an
advantageous one. He occupied a space of open ground, some three hundred
yards in width. On his right flank was a village, on the left a grove of
palm trees. In front of the ground he occupied were rice fields, which, it
being the wet season, were very swampy, and altogether impracticable for
guns. These fields were crossed by a causeway which led to the village,
but as it ran at an angle across them, those advancing upon it were
exposed to the fire of the English front. Clive posted the Sepoys in the
village, the Mahratta horsemen in the grove, and the two hundred English,
with the guns, on the ground between them.
The enemy advanced at once. His native cavalry, with some infantry,
marched against the grove; while the French troops, with about fifteen
hundred infantry, moved along the causeway against the village.
The fight began on the English left. There the Mahratta cavalry fought
bravely. Issuing from the palm grove, they made repeated charges against
the greatly superior forces of the enemy. But numbers told, and the
Mahrattas, fighting fiercely, were driven back into the palm grove; where
they, with difficulty, maintained themselves.
In the meantime, the fight was going on at the centre. Clive opened
fire with his guns on the long column marching, almost across his front,
to attack the village. The enemy, finding themselves exposed to a fire
which they were powerless to answer, quitted the causeway, and formed up
in the rice fields fronting the English position. The guns, protected only
by a few Frenchmen and natives, remained on the causeway.
Clive now despatched two of his guns, and fifty English, to aid the
hard-pressed Mahrattas in the grove; and fifty others to the village, with
orders to join the Sepoys there, to dash forward on to the causeway, and
charge the enemy's guns.
As the column issued from the village along the causeway, at a rapid
pace, the French limbered up their guns and retired at a gallop. The
infantry, dispirited at their disappearance, fell back across the rice
fields; an example which their horsemen on their right, already dispirited
by the loss which they were suffering, from the newly-arrived English
musketry and the discharges of the field pieces, followed without delay.
Clive at once ordered a pursuit. The Mahrattas were despatched after
the enemy's cavalry, while he himself, with his infantry, advanced across
the causeway and pressed upon the main body. Three times the enemy made a
stand, but each time failed to resist the impetuosity of the pursuers, and
the night alone put a stop to the pursuit, by which time the enemy were
completely routed.
The material loss had not been heavy, for but fifty French and a
hundred and fifty natives were killed or wounded; but the army was broken
up, the morale of the enemy completely destroyed; and it was proved to all
Southern India, which was anxiously watching the struggle, that the
English were, in the field of battle, superior to their European rivals.
This assurance alone had an immense effect. It confirmed, in their
alliance with the English, many of the chiefs whose friendship had
hitherto been lukewarm; and brought over many waverers to our side.
In the fight, eight Sepoys and fifty of the Mahratta cavalry were
killed or disabled. The English did not lose a single man. Many of Riza
Sahib's soldiers came in, during the next few days, and enlisted in the
British force. The Mahrattas captured the treasure, the prospect of which
had induced them to join in the fight, and the governor of Arni agreed to
hold the town for Muhammud Ali.
Clive moved on at once to Conjeveram, where thirty French troops and
three hundred Sepoys occupied the temple, a very strong building. Clive
brought up two eighteen-pounders from Madras, and pounded the walls; and
the enemy, seeing that the place must fall, evacuated it in the night, and
retired to Pondicherry. North Arcot being now completely in the power of
the English, Clive returned to Madras; and then sailed to Fort Saint
David, to concert measures with Mr. Saunders for the relief of
Trichinopoli. This place still held out, thanks rather to the feebleness
and indecision of Colonel Law, who commanded the besiegers, than to any
effort on the part of the defenders.
Governor Dupleix, at Pondicherry, had seen with surprise the result of
Clive's dash upon Arcot. He had, however, perceived that the operations
there were wholly secondary, and that Trichinopoli was still the
all-important point. The fall of that place would more than neutralize
Clive's successes at Arcot; and he, therefore, did not suffer Clive's
operations to distract his attention here. Strong reinforcements and a
battering train were sent forward to the besiegers; and, by repeated
messages, he endeavoured to impress upon Law and Chunda Sahib the
necessity of pressing forward the capture of Trichinopoli.
But Dupleix was unfortunate in his instruments. Law was always
hesitating and doubting. Chunda Sahib, although clever to plan, was weak
in action; indecisive, at moments when it was most necessary that he
should be firm. So then, in spite of the entreaties of Dupleix, he had
detached a considerable force to besiege Clive. Dupleix, seeing this, and
hoping that Clive might be detained at Arcot long enough to allow of the
siege of Trichinopoli being brought to a conclusion, had sent the three
hundred French soldiers to strengthen the force of Riza Sahib.
He had still an overpowering force at Trichinopoli, Law having nine
hundred trained French soldiers, a park of fifty guns, two thousand Sepoys,
and the army of Chunda Sahib, twenty thousand strong. Inside Trichinopoli
were a few English soldiers under Captain Cope, and a small body of troops
of Muhammud Ali; while outside the walls, between them and the besiegers,
was the English force under Gingen, the men utterly dispirited, the
officer without talent, resolution, or confidence.
Before leaving the troops with which he had won the battle of Arni,
Clive had expressed, to the two young writers, his high appreciation of
their conduct during the siege of Arcot; and promised them that he would
make it a personal request, to the authorities at Fort Saint David, that
they might be permanently transferred from the civil to the military
branch of the service; and such a request, made by him, was certain to be
complied with. He strongly advised them to spend every available moment of
their time in the study of the native language; as, without that, they
would be useless if appointed to command a body of Sepoys.
Delighted at the prospect, now open to them, of a permanent relief from
the drudgery of a clerk's life in Madras, the young fellows were in the
highest spirits; and Tim Kelly was scarcely less pleased, when he heard
that Charlie was now likely to be always employed with him. The boys lost
not a moment in sending down to Madras, to engage the services of a native
"moonshee" or teacher. They wrote to their friend Johnson, asking him to
arrange terms with the man who understood most English, and to engage him
to remain with them some time.
A few days later, Tim Kelly came in.
"Plase, yer honors, there's a little shrivelled atomy of a man outside,
as wants to spake wid ye. He looks for all the world like a monkey,
wrapped up in white clothes, but he spakes English after a fashion, and
has brought this letter for you. The cratur scarce looks like a human
being, and I misdoubt me whether you had better let him in."
"Nonsense, Tim," Charlie said, opening the letter; "it's the moonshee
we are expecting, from Madras. He has come to teach us the native
language."
"Moonshine, is it! By jabers, and it's a mighty poor compliment to the
moon to call him so. And is it the language you're going to larn now?
Shure, Mr. Charles, I wouldn't demane myself by larning the lingo of these
black hathens. Isn't for them to larn the English, and mighty pleased they
ought to be, to get themselves to spake like Christians."
"But who's going to teach them, Tim?"
"Oh, they larn fast enough," said Tim. "You've only got to point to a
bottle of water, or to the fire, or whatever else you want, and swear at
them, and they understand directly. I've tried it myself, over and over
again."
"There, Tim, it's no use standing talking any longer. Bring in the
moonshee."
From that moment, the little man had his permanent post in a corner of
the boys' room; and, when they were not on duty, they were constantly
engaged in studying the language, writing down the names of every object
they came across and getting it by heart, and learning every sentence,
question, and answer which occurred to them as likely to be useful.
As for Tim, he quite lost patience at this devotion to study on the
part of his master; who, he declared to his comrades, went on just as if
he intended to become a nigger and a hathen himself.
"It's just awful to hear him, Corporal M'Bean, jabbering away in that
foreign talk, with that little black monkey moonshine. The little cratur
a-twisting his shrivelled fingers about, that looks as if the bones were
coming through the skin. I wonder what the good father at Blarney, where I
come from, you know, Corporal, would say to sich goings on. Faith, then,
and if he were here, I'd buy a bottle of holy water, and sprinkle it over
the little hathen. I suspict he'd fly straight up the chimney, when it
touched him."
"My opinion of you, Tim Kelly," the corporal, who was a grave
Scotchman, said; "is that you're just a fule. Your master is a brave young
gentleman, and is a deal more sensible than most of them, who spend all
their time in drinking wine and playing cards. A knowledge of the language
is most useful. What would you do, yourself, if you were to marry a native
woman, and couldn't speak to her afterwards."
"The saints defind us!" Tim exclaimed; "and what put such an idea in
yer head, Corporal? It's nayther more nor less than an insult to suppose
that I, a dacent boy, and brought up under the teaching of Father O'Shea,
should marry a hathen black woman; and if you weren't my suparior officer,
corporal, I'd tach ye better manners."
Fortunately, at this moment Charlie's voice was heard, shouting for his
servant; and Tim was therefore saved from the breach of the peace, which
his indignation showed that he meditated.
December passed quietly; and then, in January, 1752, an insurrection
planned by Dupleix broke out. The governor of Pondicherry had been
suffering keenly from disappointments; which, as time went on, and his
entreaties and commands to Law to attack Trichinopoli were answered only
by excuses and reasons for delay, grew to despair; and he resolved upon
making another effort to occupy the attention of the man in whom he
already recognized a great rival, and to prevent his taking steps for the
relief of Trichinopoli. Law had over and over again assured him that, in
the course of a very few weeks, that place would be driven by famine to
surrender; and, as soon as Clive arrived at Fort Saint David, Dupleix set
about taking steps which would again necessitate his return to the north,
and so give to Law the time which he asked for.
Supplies of money were sent to Riza Sahib, together with four hundred
French soldiers. These marched suddenly upon Punemalli and captured it,
seized again the fortified temple of Conjeveram, and from this point
threatened both Madras and Arcot.
Had this force possessed an active and determined commander, it could
undoubtedly have carried out Dupleix's instructions, captured Madras, and
inflicted a terrible blow upon the English. Fortunately, it had no such
head. It marched indeed against Madras, plundered and burnt the factories,
levied contributions, and obtained possession of everything but the fort;
where the civilians, and the few men who constituted the garrison, daily
expected to be attacked, in which case the place must have fallen. This,
however, the enemy never even attempted, contenting themselves with
ravaging the place outside the walls of the fort.
The little garrison of Arcot, two hundred men in all, were astonished
at the news; that the province, which they had thought completely
conquered, was again in flames; that the road to Madras was cut, by the
occupation of Conjeveram by the French; and that Madras itself was, save
the fort, in the hands of the enemy. The fort itself, they knew, might
easily be taken, as they were aware that it was defended by only eighty
men.
The change in the position was at once manifest, in the altered
attitude of the fickle population. The main body of the inhabitants of
Southern India were Hindoos, who had for centuries been ruled by foreign
masters. The Mohammedans from the north had been their conquerors, and the
countless wars which had taken place, to them signified merely whether one
family or another were to reign over them. The sole desire was for peace
and protection; and they, therefore, ever inclined towards the side which
seemed strongest. Their sympathies were no stronger with their Mohammedan
rulers than with the French or English, and they only hoped that whatever
power was strongest might conquer; and that, after the hostilities were
over, their daily work might be conducted in peace, and their property and
possessions be enjoyed in security. The capture and defence of Arcot, and
the battle of Arni, had brought them to regard the English as their final
victors; and the signs of deep and even servile respect, which greeted the
conquerors wherever they went, and which absolutely disgusted Charlie
Marryat and his friend, were really sincere marks of the welcome to
masters who seemed able and willing to maintain their rule over them.
With the news of the successes of Riza Sahib, all this changed. The
natives no longer bent to the ground, as the English passed them in the
streets. The country people, who had flocked in with their products to the
markets, absented themselves altogether, and the whole population prepared
to welcome the French as their new masters.
In the fort, the utmost vigilance was observed. The garrison laboured
to mend the breaches, and complete the preparations for defence.
Provisions were again stored up, and they awaited anxiously news from
Clive.
That enterprising officer was at Fort Saint David, busy in making his
preparations for a decisive campaign against the enemy round Trichinopoli,
when the news of the rising reached him. He was expecting a considerable
number of fresh troops from England, as it was in January that the
majority of the reinforcements despatched by the Company arrived in India;
and Mr. Saunders had written to Calcutta, begging that a hundred men might
be sent thence. These were now, with the eighty men at Madras, and the two
hundred at Arcot, all the force that could be at his disposal, for at Fort
Saint David there was not a single available man.
With all the efforts that Clive, aided by the authorities, could make,
it was not until the middle of February that he had completed his
arrangements. On the 9th, the hundred men arrived from Bengal, and,
without the loss of a day, Clive started from Madras to form a junction
with the garrison from Arcot, who, leaving only a small force to hold the
fort, had moved down to meet him.
Chapter 9: The Battle Of Kavaripak.
The troops from Arcot had already moved some distance on their way to
Madras, and Clive, therefore, with the new levies, joined them on the day
after his leaving Madras. The French and Riza Sahib let slip the
opportunity of attacking these bodies, before they united. They were well
aware of their movements, and had resolved upon tactics, calculated in the
first place to puzzle the English commander, to wear out his troops, and
to enable them finally to surprise and take him entirely at a
disadvantage.
The junction with the Arcot garrison raised the force under Clive's
orders to three hundred and eighty English, thirteen hundred Sepoys, and
six field guns, while the enemy at Vendalur, a place twenty-five miles
south of Madras, where they had a fortified camp, had four hundred French
troops, two thousand Sepoys, two thousand five hundred cavalry, and twelve
guns.
Hoping to surprise them there, Clive marched all night. When the force
approached the town they heard that the enemy had disappeared, and that
they had started, apparently, in several directions.
The force was halted for a few hours, and then the news was obtained
that the enemy had united their forces at Conjeveram, and that they had
marched away from that place in a westerly direction. Doubting not that
they were about to attack Arcot, which, weakened by the departure of the
greater portion of its garrison, would be in no position to defend itself
against a sudden coup de main by a strong force, Clive set his troops
again in motion. The French, indeed, had already bribed some of the native
soldiers within the fort; who were to reply to a signal made without, if
they were in a position to open the gates. However, by good fortune their
treachery had been discovered, and when the French arrived they received
no reply to their signal; and as Arcot would be sure to fall if they
defeated Clive, they marched away without attacking it, to take up the
position which they had agreed upon beforehand.
It was at nine in the evening that Clive, at Vendalur, obtained
intelligence that the enemy had assembled at Conjeveram. The troops had
already marched twenty-five miles, but they had had a rest of five hours,
and Clive started with them at once, and reached Conjeveram, twenty miles
distant, at four in the morning. Finding that the enemy had again
disappeared, he ordered the troops to halt for a few hours. They had
already marched forty-five miles in twenty-four hours, a great feat when
it is remembered that only the Arcot garrison were in any way accustomed
to fatigue, the others being newly raised levies. The greater portion of
the Sepoys had been enlisted within the fortnight preceding.
"I don't know, Mr. Marryat, whether the French call this fighting. I
call it playing hide and seek," Tim Kelly said. "Shure we've bin marching,
with only a halt of two or three hours, since yisterday morning; and my
poor feet are that sore that I daren't take my boots off me, for I'm shure
I'd never git 'em on agin. If the French want to fight us, why don't they
do it square and honest, not be racing and chasing about like a lot of
wild sheep."
"Have you seen the moonshee, Tim? He is with the baggage."
"Shure and I saw him," Tim said. "The cart come in just now, and there
was he, perched up on the top of it like a dried monkey. You don't want
him tonight, shure, yer honor."
"Oh no, I don't want him, Tim. You'd better go now, and get to sleep at
once, if you can. We may be off again, at any minute."
Arcot is twenty-seven miles from Conjeveram. Clive felt certain that
the enemy had gone on to that place; but, anxious as he was for its
safety, it was absolutely necessary that the troops should have a rest
before starting on such a march. They were, therefore, allowed to rest
until twelve o'clock; when, refreshed by their eight hours' halt and
breakfast, they started upon their long march towards Arcot, making sure
that they should not find the enemy until they reached that place.
Had Clive possessed a body of cavalry, however small, he would have
been able to scour the country, and to make himself acquainted with the
real position of the French. Cavalry are to a general what eyes are to a
man, and without these he is liable to tumble into a pitfall. Such was the
case on the present occasion. Having no doubt that the enemy were engaged
in attacking Arcot, the troops were plodding along carelessly and in loose
order; when, to their astonishment, after a sixteen-mile march, as they
approached the town of Kavaripak just as the sun was setting, a fire of
artillery opened upon them from a grove upon the right of the road, but
two hundred and fifty yards distant. Nothing is more confusing than a
surprise of this kind, especially to young troops, and when no enemy is
thought to be near.
The French general's plans had been well laid. He had reached Kavaripak
that morning, and allowed his troops to rest all day, and he expected to
obtain an easy victory over the tired men who would, unsuspicious of
danger, be pressing on to the relief of Arcot. So far his calculations had
been correct, and the English marched unsuspiciously into the trap laid
for them.
The twelve French guns were placed in a grove, round whose sides,
facing the point from which Clive was approaching, ran a deep ditch with a
high bank forming a regular battery. A body of French infantry were placed
in support of the guns, with some Sepoys in reserve behind the grove.
Parallel with the road on the left ran a deep watercourse, now empty, and
in this the rest of the infantry were stationed, at a point near the town
of Kavaripak, and about a quarter of a mile further back than the grove.
On either side of this watercourse the enemy had placed his powerful
cavalry force.
For a moment, when the guns opened, there was confusion and panic among
the British troops. Clive, however, ever cool and confident in danger, and
well seconded by his officers, rallied them at once. The position was one
of extreme danger. It was possible, indeed, to retreat, but in the face of
an enemy superior in infantry and guns, and possessing so powerful a body
of cavalry, the operation would have been a very dangerous one. Even if
accomplished, it would entail an immense loss of morale and prestige to
his troops. Hitherto, under his leading, they had been always successful;
and a belief in his own superiority adds immensely to the fighting power
of a soldier. Even should the remnant of the force fight its way back to
Madras, the campaign would have been a lost one, and all hope of saving
Trichinopoli would have been at an end.
"Steady, lads, steady," he shouted. "Form up quietly and steadily. We
have beaten the enemy before, you know, and we will do so again."
While the troops, in spite of the artillery fire, fell into line, Clive
rapidly surveyed the ground. He saw the enemy's infantry advancing up the
watercourse, and so sheltered by it as to be out of the fire of his
troops. He saw their cavalry sweeping down on the other side of the
watercourse, menacing his left and threatening his baggage. The guns were
at once brought up from the rear, but before these arrived the men were
falling fast.
Three of the guns he placed to answer the French battery, two of them
he hurried to his left, with a small body of English and two hundred
Sepoys, to check the advance of the enemy's cavalry. The main body of his
infantry he ordered into the watercourse, which afforded them a shelter
from the enemy's artillery. The baggage carts and baggage he sent half a
mile to the rear, under the protection of forty Sepoys and a gun.
While this was being done the enemy's fire was continuing, but his
infantry advanced but slowly, and had not reached a point abreast of the
grove when the British force in the watercourse met them. It would not
seem to be a very important matter, at what point in the watercourse the
infantry of the two opposing parties came into collision, but matters
apparently trifling in themselves often decide the fate of battles; and,
in fact, had the French artillery retained their fire until their infantry
were abreast of the grove, the battle of Kavaripak would have been won by
them, and the British power in Southern India would have been destroyed.
Clive moved confidently and resolutely among his men, keeping up their
courage by cheerful words, and he was well seconded by his officers.
"Now, lads," Charlie Marryat cried to the company of which he was in
command, "stick to it. You ought to be very thankful to the French, for
saving you the trouble of having to march another twelve miles before
giving you an opportunity of thrashing them."
The men laughed, and redoubled their fire on the French infantry, who
were facing them in the watercourse at a distance of eighty yards. Neither
party liked to charge. The French commander knew that he had only to hold
his position to win the day. His guns were mowing down the English
artillerymen. The English party on the left of the watercourse, with
difficulty, held their own against the charges of his horsemen, and were
rapidly dwindling away under the artillery fire, while other bodies of his
cavalry had surrounded the baggage, and were attacking the little force
told off to guard it. He knew, too, that any attempt the English might
make to attack the battery, with its strong defences, must inevitably
fail.
The situation was becoming desperate. It was now ten o'clock. The fight
had gone on for four hours. No advantage had been gained, the men were
losing confidence, and the position grew more and more desperate. Clive
saw that there was but one chance of victory. The grove could not be
carried in the front, but it was just possible that it might be open in
the rear.
Choosing a sergeant who spoke the native language well, he bade him
leave the party in the watercourse, and make his way round to the rear of
the grove, and discover whether it was strongly guarded there or not. In
twenty minutes, the sergeant returned with the news that there was no
strong force there.
Clive at once took two hundred of his English infantry, the men who had
fought at Arcot, and quietly left the watercourse and made his way round
towards the rear of the grove. Before he had gone far the main body in the
watercourse, surprised at the sudden withdrawal of the greater portion of
the English force, and missing the presence of Clive himself, began to
lose heart. They no longer replied energetically to the fire of the French
infantry. A movement of retreat began, the fire ceased, and in a minute or
two they would have broken in flight.
At this moment, Clive returned. As he moved forward, he had marked the
dying away of the English fire, and guessing what had happened, had given
over the command of the column to Lieutenant Keene, the senior officer,
and hurried back to the watercourse. He arrived there just as the troops
had commenced to run away.
Throwing himself among them, with shouts and exhortations, he succeeded
in arresting their flight; and, by assurances that the battle was as good
as won elsewhere, and that they had only to hold their ground for a few
minutes longer to ensure victory, he got them to advance to their former
position; and to reopen fire on the French, who had, fortunately, remained
inactive instead of advancing and taking advantage of the cessation of the
English fire.
In the meantime, Lieutenant Keene led his detachment, making a long
circuit, to a point three hundred yards immediately behind the grove. He
then sent forward one of his officers, Ensign Symmonds, who spoke French
perfectly, to reconnoitre the grove. Symmonds had proceeded but a little
way, when he came upon a large number of French Sepoys, who were covering
the rear of the grove; but who, as their services were not required, were
sheltering themselves there from the random bullets which were flying
about. They at once challenged; but Symmonds answering them in French
they, being unable to see his uniform in the darkness, and supposing him
to be a French officer, allowed him to advance.
He passed boldly forward into the grove. He proceeded nearly through
it, until he came within sight of the guns, which were still keeping up
their fire upon those of the English; while a hundred French infantry, who
were in support, were all occupied in watching what was going on in front
of them. Symmonds returned to the detachment, by a path to the right of
that by which he had entered, and passed out without seeing a soul.
Lieutenant Keene gave the word to advance and, following the guidance
of Mr. Symmonds, entered the grove. He advanced, unobserved, until within
thirty yards of the enemy. Here he halted, and poured a volley into them.
The effect was instantaneous. Many of the French fell, and the rest,
astounded at this sudden and unexpected attack, left their guns and fled.
Sixty of them rushed for shelter into a building at the end of the grove,
where the English surrounded them and forced them to surrender.
By this sudden stroke, the battle of Kavaripak was won. The sound of
the musketry fire, and the immediate cessation of that of the enemy's
guns, told Clive that the grove was captured. A few minutes later
fugitives, arriving from the grove, informed the commander of the enemy's
main body of infantry of the misfortune which had befallen them. The
French fire at once ceased, and the troops withdrew.
In the darkness, it was impossible for Clive to attempt a pursuit. He
was in ignorance of the direction the enemy had taken; his troops had
already marched sixty miles in two days; and he would, moreover, have been
exposed to sudden dashes of the enemy's cavalry. Clive, therefore, united
his troops, joined his baggage, which the little guard had gallantly
defended against the attacks of the enemy's cavalry, and waited for
morning.
At daybreak, not an enemy was to be seen. Fifty Frenchmen lay dead on
the field, and sixty were captives. Three hundred French Sepoys had
fallen. There were, besides, many wounded. The enemy's artillery had been
all captured. The British loss was forty English and thirty Sepoys killed,
and a great number of both wounded.
The moral effect of the victory was immense. It was the first time that
French and English soldiers had fought in the field against each other, in
India. The French had proved to the natives that they were enormously
their superiors in fighting power. Hitherto the English had not done so.
The defence of Arcot had proved that they could fight behind walls; but
the natives had, themselves, many examples of gallant defences of this
kind. The English troops, under Gingen and Cope, had suffered themselves
to be cooped up in Trichinopoli, and had not struck a blow in its defence.
At Kavaripak, the natives discovered that the English could fight as
well, or better than the French. The latter were somewhat stronger,
numerically, than their rivals. They had double the force of artillery,
were half as strong again in Sepoys, and had two thousand five hundred
cavalry, while the English had not a single horseman. They had all the
advantages of surprise and position; and yet, they had been entirely
defeated.
Thenceforth the natives of India regarded the English as a people to be
feared and respected; and, for the first time, considered their ultimate
triumph over the French to be a possibility. As the policy of the native
princes had ever been to side with the strongest, the advantage thus
gained to the English cause, by the victory of Kavaripak, was enormous.
On the following day, the English took possession of the fort of
Kavaripak, and marched to Arcot. Scarcely had they arrived there when
Clive received a despatch from Fort Saint David; ordering him to return
there at once, with all his troops; to march to the relief of Trichinopoli,
where the garrison was reported to be in the sorest straits, from want of
provisions.
The force reached Fort Saint David on the 11th of March. Here
preparations were hurried forward for the advance to Trichinopoli; and, in
three days, Clive was ready to start. Just as he was about to set out, a
ship arrived from England, having on board some more troops, together with
Major Lawrence and several officers, some of whom were captains senior to
Clive.
Major Lawrence, who had already proved his capacity and energy, of
course took command of the expedition; and treated Clive, who had served
under him at the siege of Pondicherry, and whose successes in the field
had attracted his high admiration, as second in command, somewhat to the
discontent of the officers senior to him in rank.
The force consisted of four hundred Europeans, eleven hundred Sepoys,
and eight guns, and escorted a large train of provisions and stores.
During these months which the diversion, caused by the attack of Riza
Sahib and the French upon Madras, had given to the besiegers of
Trichinopoli, they should have long since captured the town. In spite of
all the orders of Dupleix, Law could not bring himself to attack the town;
and the French governor of Pondicherry saw, with dismay, that the two
months and a half, which his efforts and energy had gained for the
besiegers, had been entirely wasted; and that it was probable the whole
fruits of his labours would be thrown away.
He now directed Law to leave only a small force in front of
Trichinopoli, and to march with the whole of his army, and that of Chunda
Sahib, and crush the force advancing under Lawrence to the relief of
Trichinopoli. Law, however, disobeyed orders; and, indeed, acted in direct
contradiction to them. He maintained six hundred French troops and many
thousands of native before Trichinopoli, and sent but two hundred and
fifty French, and about three hundred and fifty natives--a force
altogether inferior in numbers to that which it was sent to oppose--to
arrest the progress of Lawrence's advancing column.
The position which this French force was directed to occupy was the
fort of Koiladi, an admirable position. As the two branches of the Kavari
were, here, but half a mile apart, had Law concentrated all his force here
he could, no doubt, have successfully opposed the English.
Lawrence, however, when the guns of the fort opened upon him, replied
to them by the fire of his artillery; and, as the French force was
insufficient to enable its commander to fight him in the open, he was
enabled to take his troops and convoy in safety past the fort. When Law
heard this, he marched out and took his position round a lofty, and
almost, inaccessible rock called Elmiseram, and prepared to give battle.
Lawrence, however, after passing Koiladi, had been joined by a hundred
English and fifty dragoons, from Trichinopoli. These acted as guides, and
led him by a route by which he avoided the French position; and effected a
junction with two hundred Europeans, and four hundred Sepoys from
Trichinopoli; and with a body of Mahratta cavalry, under Murari Reo.
Law, having failed to attack the English force upon its march, now,
when its strength was nearly doubled, suddenly decided to give battle, and
advanced against the force which, wearied with its long march, had just
begun to prepare their breakfast. The French artillery at once put the
Mahratta cavalry to flight.
Lawrence called the men again under arms, and sent Clive forward to
reconnoitre. He found the French infantry drawn up, with twenty-two guns,
with large bodies of cavalry on either flank. Opposite to the centre of
their position was a large caravansary, or native inn, with stone
buildings attached. It was nearer to their position than to that occupied
by the English, and Clive saw at once that, if seized and held by the
enemy's artillery, it would sweep the whole ground over which the English
would have to advance.
He galloped back at full speed to Major Lawrence, and asked leave at
once to occupy the building. Obtaining permission, he advanced with all
speed to the caravansary, with some guns and infantry.
The negligence of the French, in allowing this movement to be carried
out, was fatal to them. The English artillery opened upon them from the
cover of the inn and buildings, and to this fire the French in the open
could reply only at a great disadvantage. After a cannonade lasting half
an hour, the French, having lost forty European and three hundred native
soldiers, fell back; the English having lost only twenty-one.
Disheartened at this result, utterly disappointed at the failure which
had attended his long operations against Trichinopoli, without energy or
decision, Law at once raised the siege of the town, abandoning a great
portion of his baggage; and, destroying great stores of ammunition and
supplies, crossed an arm of the Kavari and took post in the great
fortified temple of Seringam.
The delight of the troops; so long besieged in Trichinopoli; inactive,
dispirited, and hopeless, was extreme; and the exultation of Muhammud Ali
and his native allies was no less.
Captain Cope, towards the end of the siege, had been killed, in one of
the little skirmishes which occasionally took place with the French.
Charlie Marryat and Peters had, owing to some of the officers senior to
them being killed or invalided, and to large numbers of fresh recruits
being raised, received a step in rank. They were now lieutenants, and each
commanded a body of Sepoys, two hundred strong. At Charlie's request, Tim
Kelly was detached from his company, and allowed to remain with him as
soldier servant. After the retreat of the French, and the settling down of
the English force in the lines they had occupied, Charlie and his friend
entered Trichinopoli, and were surprised at the temples and palaces there.
Although very inferior to Tanjore, and in no way even comparable to the
cities of the northwest of India, Trichinopoli was a far more important
city than any they had hitherto seen. They ascended the lofty rock, and
visited the fort on its summit, which looked as if, in the hands of a
resolute garrison, it should be impregnable to attack.
The manner in which this rock, as well as that of Elmiseram and others
lying in sight, rose sheer up from the plain, filled them with surprise;
for, although these natural rock fortresses are common enough in India,
they are almost without an example in Europe. After visiting the fort they
rambled through the town, and were amused at the scene of bustle in its
streets; and at the gay shops, full of articles new and curious to them,
in the bazaars.
"They are wonderfully clever and ingenious," Charlie said. "Look what
rough tools that man is working with, and what delicate and intricate work
he is turning out. If these fellows could but fight as well as they work,
and were but united among themselves, not only should we be unable to set
a foot in India, but the emperor, with the enormous armies which he would
be able to raise, would be able to threaten Europe. I suppose they never
have been really good fighting men. Alexander, a couple of thousand years
ago, defeated them; and since then the Afghans, and other northern
peoples, have been always overrunning and conquering them.
"I can't make it out. These Sepoys, after only a few weeks' training,
fight almost as well as our own men. I wonder how it is that, when
commanded by their own countrymen, they are able to make so poor a fight
of it.
"We had better be going back to camp again, Peters. At any moment,
there may be orders for us to do something. With Major Lawrence and Clive
together, we are not likely to stop here long, inactive."
Chapter 10: The Fall Of Seringam.
Although called an island, Seringam is in fact a long narrow tongue of
land, running between the two branches of the river Kavari. In some places
these arms are but a few hundred yards apart, and the island can therefore
be defended against an attack along the land. But the retreat of the
French by this line was equally difficult, as we held the narrowest part
of the neck, two miles from Koiladi.
Upon the south, our forces at Trichinopoli faced the French across the
river. Upon the other side of the Kolrun, as the northern arm of the
Kavari is called, the French could cross the river and make their retreat,
if necessary, in any direction. The two principal roads, however, led from
Paichandah, a strong fortified position on the bank of the river, facing
the temple of Seringam.
Clive saw that a force crossing the river, and taking up its position
on the north, would entirely cut off Law's army in the island; would
intercept any reinforcements sent by Dupleix to its rescue; and might
compel the surrender of the whole French army. The attempt would, of
course, be a dangerous one. The French force was considerably stronger
than the English, and were the latter divided into two portions, entirely
cut off from each other, the central point between them being occupied by
the French, the latter would have an opportunity of throwing his whole
force upon one after the other.
This danger would have been so great that, had the French been
commanded by an able and active officer, the attempt would never have been
made. Law, however, had shown amply that he had neither energy nor
intelligence, and Major Lawrence therefore accepted Clive's proposal.
But to be successful, it was necessary that both portions of the
English force should be well commanded. Major Lawrence felt confident in
his own capacity to withstand Law upon the southern bank, and in case of
necessity he could fall back under the guns of Trichinopoli. He felt sure
that he could, with equal certainty, confide the command of the other
party to Captain Clive. There was, however, the difficulty that he was the
junior captain present; and that already great jealousy had been excited,
among his seniors, by the rank which he occupied in the councils of
Lawrence.
Fortunately, the difficulty was settled by the native allies. Major
Lawrence laid his plans before Muhammud Ali and his allies, whose
cooperation and assistance were absolutely necessary. These, after hearing
the proposal, agreed to give their assistance, but only upon the condition
that Clive should be placed in command of the expeditionary party. They
had already seen the paralysing effects of the incapacity of some English
officers. Clive's defence of Arcot, and the victories of Arni and
Kavaripak, had excited their intense admiration, and caused them to place
unbounded confidence in him. Therefore they said:
"If Captain Clive commands, we will go--unless he commands, we do not."
Major Lawrence was glad that the pressure thus placed upon him enabled
him, without incurring a charge of favouritism, to place the command in
the hands of the officer upon whom he most relied.
On the night of the 6th of April Clive set out; with a force composed
of four hundred English, seven hundred Sepoys, three thousand Mahratta
cavalry, a thousand Tanjore cavalry, six light guns and two heavy ones.
Descending the river, he crossed the island at a point three miles to the
east of Law's camping ground, and marched to Samieaveram, a town nine
miles north of the island, and commanding the roads from the north and
east.
The movement was just made in time. Dupleix, utterly disgusted with
Law, had resolved to displace him. D'Auteuil, the only officer he had of
sufficient high rank to take his place, had not, when previously employed,
betrayed any great energy or capacity. It appeared, nevertheless, that he
was at any rate superior to Law. On the 10th of April, therefore, he
despatched D'Auteuil, with a hundred and twenty French, and five hundred
Sepoys, with four guns and a large convoy, to Seringam, where he was to
take the command. When he arrived within fifteen miles of Samieaveram, he
learned that Clive had possession of that village, and he determined upon
a circuitous route, by which he might avoid him. He therefore sent a
messenger to Law, to acquaint him with his plans, in order that he might
aid him by making a diversion.
Clive, in the meantime, had been at work. On the day after his arrival
at Samieaveram, he attacked and captured the temple of Mansurpet, halfway
between the village and the island. The temple was lofty, and stood on
rising ground, and commanded a range of the country for many miles round.
On its top, Clive established a signal station. Upon the following day
he carried the mud fort of Lalgudi, which was situated on the north bank
of the river, two miles to the east of Paichandah, which now remained
Law's only place of exit from the island.
D'Auteuil, after sending word to Law of his intentions, marched from
Utatua, where he was lying, by a road to the west which would enable him
to move round Samieaveram to Paichandah. Clive captured one of the
messengers, and set off with his force to intercept him. D'Auteuil,
however, received information by his spies of Clive's movement, and not
wishing to fight a battle in the open, with a superior force, fell back to
Utatua, while Clive returned to Samieaveram.
Law, too, had received news of Clive's movement. Here was a chance of
retrieving the misfortunes of the campaign. Paichandah being still in his
hands, he could sally out with his whole force and that of Chunda Sahib,
seize Samieaveram in Clive's absence, and extend his hand to D'Auteuil, or
fall upon Clive's rear. Instead of this, he repeated the mistake he had
made before Trichinopoli; and, instead of marching out with his whole
force, he sent only eighty Europeans, of whom forty were deserters from
the English army, and seven hundred Sepoys.
The English returned from their march against D'Auteuil. The greater
portion of the troops were housed in two temples, a quarter of a mile
apart, known as the Large and Small Pagoda. Clive, with several of his
officers, was in a caravansary close to the Small Pagoda.
Charlie's company were on guard, and after paying a visit to the
sentries, and seeing that all were on the alert, he returned to the
caravansary. The day had been a long one, and the march under the heat of
the sun very fatiguing. There was therefore but little conversation, and
Charlie, finding, on his return from visiting the sentries, that his
leader and the other officers had already wrapped themselves in their
cloaks and lain down to rest, imitated their example.
Half an hour later, the French column arrived at Samieaveram. The
officer in command was a daring and determined man. Before reaching the
place, he had heard that the English had returned; and, finding that he
had been forestalled, he might well have returned to Law. He determined,
however, to attempt to surprise the camp. He placed his deserters in
front, and when the column, arriving near the Sepoy sentinel, was
challenged, the officer in command of the deserters, an Irishman, stepped
forward, and said that he had been sent by Major Lawrence to the support
of Captain Clive. As the other English-speaking soldiers now came up, the
sentry and native officer with him were completely deceived, and the
latter sent a soldier to guide the column to the English quarter of the
camp.
Without interruption, the column marched on through lines of sleeping
Sepoys and Mahrattas until they reached the heart of the village. Here
they were again challenged. They replied with a volley of musketry into
the caravansary, and another into the pagoda. Then they rushed into the
pagoda, bayoneting all they found there.
Charlie, who had just dropped off to sleep, sprang to his feet, as did
the other officers. While, confused by the noise and suddenness of the
attack, others scarcely understood what was happening, Clive's clear head
and ready judgment grasped the situation at once.
"Gentlemen," he said calmly, "there is no firing going on in the
direction of the Great Pagoda. Follow me there at once."
Snatching up their arms, the officers followed him at a run. The whole
village was a scene of wild confusion. The firing round the pagoda and
caravansary were continuous. The Mahratta horsemen were climbing into
their saddles, and riding away out into the plain; the Sepoys were running
hither and thither.
At the pagoda he found the soldiers turning out under arms, and Clive,
ordering his officers to do their best to rally the native troops in good
order against the enemy, at once moved forward towards the caravansary,
with two hundred English troops. On arriving there, he found a large body
of Sepoys firing away at random. Believing them to be his own men, for the
French and English Sepoys were alike dressed in white, he halted the
English a few yards from them, and rushed among them, upbraiding them for
their panic, striking them, and ordering them instantly to cease firing,
and to form in order.
One of the Sepoy officers recognized Clive to be an Englishman, struck
at him, and wounded him with his sword. Clive, still believing him to be
one of his own men, was furious at what he considered an act of insolent
insubordination; and, seizing him, dragged him across to the Small Pagoda
to hand him over, as he supposed, to the guard there. To his astonishment
he found six Frenchmen at the gate, and these at once summoned him to
surrender.
Great as was his surprise, he did not for a moment lose coolness, and
at once told them that he had come to beg them to lay down their arms,
that they were surrounded by his whole army, and that, unless they
surrendered, his troops would give no quarter. So impressed were the
Frenchmen with the firmness of the speaker that three of them at once
surrendered, while the other three ran into the temple to inform their
commander.
Clive took the three men who had surrendered, and returned to the
English troops he had left near the caravansary. The French Sepoys had
discovered that the English were enemies, and had moved quietly off.
Confusion still reigned. Clive did not imagine, for a moment, that so
daring an assault could have been made on his camp by a small body of
enemies, and expected every moment an attack by Law's whole force. The
commander of the French, in the pagoda, was disturbed by the news brought
in by the three men from the gate, and despatched eight of his most
intelligent men to ascertain exactly what was going on.
These, however, fell into the hands of the English; and the officer of
the party, not knowing that the Small Pagoda was in the hands of the
French, handed them over to a sergeant, and told him to take a party and
escort his eight prisoners, and the three Captain Clive had captured, to
that pagoda for confinement there.
Upon arrival at the gate the Frenchmen at once joined their comrades,
and these latter were also so bewildered at the affair, that they allowed
the English sergeant and his guard to march off again, unmolested.
By this time, owing to the absence of all resistance elsewhere, Clive
had learnt that the whole of the party who had entered the camp were in
the Lesser Pagoda; and, as he was still expecting, momentarily, to be
attacked by Law's main army, he determined to rid himself of this enemy in
his midst. The pagoda was very strong, and only two men could enter
abreast. Clive led his men to the attack, but so well did the French
defend themselves that, after losing an officer and fifteen men, Clive
determined to wait till morning.
The French officer, knowing that he was surrounded, and beyond the
reach of all assistance, resolved upon cutting a way through, and at
daylight his men sallied out from the temple. So fierce, however, was the
fire with which the English received him, that twelve of his men were
instantly killed, and the rest ran back into the temple.
Clive, hoping that their commander would now surrender without further
effusion of blood, advanced to the gateway and entered the porch to offer
terms. He was himself so faint, from the loss of blood from his wounds,
that he could not stand alone, but leaned against a wall, supported by two
sergeants. The officer commanding the deserters came out to parley, but,
after heaping abuse upon Clive, levelled his musket and discharged it at
him. He missed Clive, but killed the two sergeants who were supporting
him.
The French officer in command, indignant at this conduct, rushed
forward at once to disavow it; and stated that he had determined to defend
the post to the last, solely for the sake of the deserters, but that the
conduct of their officer had released him from that obligation, and he now
therefore surrendered at once.
The instant day broke, and Clive saw that Law was not, as he expected,
at hand, he despatched the Mahratta horse in pursuit of the French Sepoys.
These were overtaken and cut to pieces, and not one man, of the force
which Law had despatched against Clive returned to the island.
The English loss was heavy. The greater portion of the occupants of the
Small Pagoda were bayoneted by the French, when they entered; and, as
fifteen others were killed in the attack, it is probable that at least
one-fourth of the English force under Clive were killed.
Clive's own escapes were extraordinary. In addition to those of being
killed by the French Sepoys, among whom he ran by mistake, and of death at
the hands of the treacherous deserter, he had one almost as close, when
the French fired their volley into the caravansary. A box at his feet was
shattered, and a servant who slept close to him was killed.
Some days passed, after this attack, without any fresh movement on
either side. Major Lawrence then determined to drive back D'Auteuil. He
did not despatch Clive against him, as this would involve the risk that
Law might again march out to surprise Samieaveram. He therefore directed
Clive to remain at that place and watch the island, while he sent a force
of a hundred and fifty English, four hundred Sepoys, five hundred
Mahrattas, with four guns, to attack D'Auteuil; from his own force, under
Captain Dalton. This officer, in the advance, marched his troops near
Samieaveram; and, making as much show with them as he could, impressed
D'Auteuil with the idea that the force was that of Clive.
Accordingly, he broke up his camp at Utatua in the night, abandoned his
stores, and retreated hastily upon Valconda. Dalton then marched to
Samieaveram, and placed his force at Clive's disposal; and, to prevent any
disputes arising as to precedence and rank, offered himself to serve under
him as a volunteer.
Not only D'Auteuil, but Law, was deceived by Dalton's march. From the
lofty towers of Seringam he saw the force marching towards Utatua,
believed that Clive with his whole force had left Samieaveram, and did now
what he should have before done--crossed the river with all his troops.
Clive's lookout on the temple of Mansurpet perceived what was going on,
and signalled the news to Clive, who at once set out with his whole force;
and, before Law was prepared to issue out from Paichandah, Clive was
within a mile of that place. Law might still have fought with a fair
chance of success, as he was far stronger than his enemy, but he was again
the victim of indecision and want of energy, and, covered by Paichandah,
he fell back across the river again.
On the 15th of May Clive captured Paichandah, and then determined to
give a final blow to D'Auteuil's force; which had, he learned, again set
out to endeavour to relieve Law. He marched to Utatua to intercept him.
D'Auteuil, hearing of his coming, instantly fell back again to Valconda.
The native chief of this town, however, seeing that the affairs of the
French were desperate; and willing, like all his countrymen, to make his
peace with the strongest, had already accepted bribes from the English;
and upon D'Auteuil's return, closed the gates and refused to admit him.
Clive soon arrived, and D'Auteuil, caught between two fires, surrendered
with his whole force.
Had Law been a man of energy, he had yet a chance of escape. He had
still seven or eight hundred French troops with him, two thousand Sepoys,
and four thousand of Chunda Sahib's troops. He might, then, have easily
crossed the Kavari at night and fallen upon Lawrence, whose force there
now was greatly inferior to his own. Chunda Sahib, in vain, begged him to
do so. His hesitation continued until, three days after the surrender of
D'Auteuil, a battering train reached Lawrence; whereupon Law at once
surrendered, his chief stipulation being that the life of Chunda Sahib
should be spared.
This promise was not kept. The unfortunate prince had preferred to
surrender to the Rajah of Tanjore, who had several times intrigued
secretly with him, rather than to Muhammud Ali or the English, whom he
regarded as his implacable enemies. Had he placed himself in our hands,
his life would have been safe. He was murdered, by the treacherous rajah,
within twenty-four hours of his surrender.
With the fall of Seringam terminated the contest for the supremacy of
the Carnatic, between the English and French, fighting respectively on
behalf of their puppets, Muhammud Ali and Chunda Sahib. This stage of the
struggle was not a final one; but both by its circumstances, and by the
prestige which we acquired in the eyes of the natives, it gave us a moral
ascendency which, even when our fortunes were afterwards at their worst,
was never lost again.
Muhammud Ali had, himself, gained but little in the struggle. He was,
indeed, nominally ruler of the Carnatic, but he had to rely for his
position solely on the support of the English bayonets. Indeed, the
promises, of which he had been obliged to be lavish to his native allies,
to keep them faithful to his cause, when that cause seemed all but lost,
now came upon him to trouble him; and so precarious was his position, that
he was obliged to ask the English to leave two hundred English troops, and
fifteen hundred of their Sepoys, to protect the place against Murari Reo,
and the Rajahs of Mysore and Tanjore.
The fatigues of the expedition had been great and, when the force
reached the seacoast, Major Lawrence was forced to retire to Fort Saint
David to recover his health; while Clive, whose health had now greatly
broken down, betook himself to Madras; which had, when the danger of
invasion by the French was at an end, become the headquarters of the
government of the presidency.
There were, however, two French strongholds dangerously near to Madras,
Covelong and Chengalpatt. Two hundred recruits had just arrived from
England, and five hundred natives had been enlisted as Sepoys. Mr.
Saunders begged Clive to take the command of these, and reduce the two
fortresses. He took with him two twenty-four pounders, and four officers,
of whom two were Charlie Marryat and Peters; to both of whom Clive was
much attached, owing to their courage, readiness, and good humour.
Covelong was first attacked. It mounted thirty guns, and was garrisoned
by fifty French, and three hundred Sepoys.
"I don't like the look o' things, Mr. Charles," Tim Kelly said.
"There's nothing but boys altogether, white and black. Does it stand to
reason that a lot of gossoons, who haven't learnt the goose step, and
haven't as much as a shred of faith, ayther in themselves or their
officers, are fit to fight the French?"
"Oh, I don't know, Tim," Charlie said. "Boys are just as plucky as men,
in their way, and are ready to do all sorts of foolhardy things, which men
would hesitate to attempt."
"And that is so, Mr. Charles, when they've only other boys to dale
with; but as they're growing up, they take some time before they're quite
sure they're a match for men. That's what it is, yer honor, I tell ye, and
you will see it, soon."
Tim's predictions were speedily verified. The very morning after they
arrived before the fort, the garrison made a sally, fell upon the troops,
and killed one of their officers.
The whole of the new levies took to their heels, and fled away from the
fight. Clive, with his three officers, threw himself among them and, for
some time, in vain attempted to turn the tide. It was not, indeed, until
several had been cut down that the rout was arrested, and they were
brought back to their duty.
A day or two later a shot, striking a rock, killed or wounded fourteen
men; and excited such a panic, that it was some time before the rest would
venture near the front.
The enemy, with a considerable force, marched from Chengalpatt to
relieve the place. Clive left half his force to continue the siege, and
with the rest marched out and offered battle to the relieving force.
Daring and confidence, as usual, prevailed. Had the enemy attacked, there
is little doubt they would have put Clive's raw levies to flight. They
were, however, cowed by his attitude of defiance, and retreated hastily.
The governor of Covelong at once lost heart and surrendered the place;
which he might have maintained, for months, against the force before it;
and on the fourth day of the siege, capitulated.
A few hours afterwards the enemy from Chengalpatt, ignorant of the fall
of the fort, again advanced; and Clive met them with his whole force.
Taken by surprise, they suffered heavily. Clive pursued them to the gates
of their fort, to which he at once laid siege.
Fortunately for the English, the commander of this place, like him of
Covelong, was cowardly and incapable. Had it not been so, the fort, which
was very strong, well provisioned, and well garrisoned, might have held
out for an indefinite time. As it was, it surrendered on the fourth day,
and Clive took possession on the 31st of August.
He returned to Madras, and there, a short time afterwards, married Miss
Maskelyne. Finding his health, however, continuing to deteriorate, he
sailed for Europe in February, 1753. It was but five years since he had
first taken up arms to defend Fort Saint David, an unknown clerk, without
prospects and without fortune, utterly discontented and disheartened.
Madras was in the hands of the French. Everywhere their policy was
triumphant, and the soil surrounded by the walls of Saint David's, alone,
remained to the English in Southern India. In the five years which had
elapsed, all had changed. The English were masters of the Carnatic. The
French were broken and discredited. The English were regarded by the
natives throughout the country as the coming power; and of this great
change, no slight portion was due to the energy and genius of Clive,
himself.
Chapter 11: An Important Mission.
A few days after the return of the expedition against Covelong and
Chengalpatt, Charlie received a note from Governor Saunders, requesting
him to call upon him at eleven o'clock. Charlie, of course, attended at
Government House at the time named, and found Captain Clive with Mr.
Saunders.
"I have sent for you, Mr. Marryat, to ask you if you are ready to
undertake a delicate, and somewhat dangerous, mission. Captain Clive tells
me that he is convinced that you will be able to discharge the duties
satisfactorily. He has been giving me the highest report of your conduct
and courage, and he tells me that you speak the language with some
facility."
"I have been working hard, sir," Charlie said, "and have had a moonshee
for the last year; and as, except when on duty, I have spoken nothing but
the native language with him, I can now speak it almost as fluently as I
can English."
"So Captain Clive has been telling me," Mr. Saunders said; "and it is,
indeed, on that ground that I select you for the service. Your friend Mr.
Peters has equally distinguished himself in the field, Captain Clive tells
me, but he is greatly your inferior in his knowledge of the vernacular."
This was indeed the case. Peters had but little natural aptitude for
foreign languages; and after working hard, for a time, with the moonshee,
he found that he was making so little progress, in comparison with
Charlie, that he lost heart; and although he had continued his lessons
with the moonshee, he had done so only to the extent of an hour or so a
day, whereas Charlie had devoted his whole leisure time to the work.
"The facts of the case are these, Mr. Marryat. Owing to the failure, of
Muhammud Ali, to fulfil the ridiculously onerous terms extorted from him,
by some of his native allies, during the siege of Trichinopoli, several of
them are in a state of discontent, which is likely soon to break out into
open hostilities. The Rajahs of Mysore and Tanjore are, I have learned,
already in communication with Pondicherry; and will, I believe, shortly
acknowledge the son of Chunda Sahib, whom Dupleix has declared ruler of
the Carnatic. Murari Reo has already openly joined the French. Their
influence in the Deccan is now so great that Bussy may be said to rule
there.
"Now, there is a chief named Boorhau Reo, whose territory lies among
the hills, and extends from the plain nearly up to the plateau land of the
Deccan. His position, like that of many of the other small rajahs, is
precarious. In days like the present, when might makes right, and every
petty state tries to make profit out of the constant wars, at the expense
of its neighbour, the position of a chief, surrounded by half a dozen
others more powerful than himself, is by no means pleasant. Boorhau Reo
feels that he is in danger of being swallowed, by the nizam or by the
Mahrattas, and he earnestly desires to ally himself with us; believing, as
he says, that we are destined to be masters here. I have assured him that,
although gratified at his expressions of friendship, we can enter into no
alliance with him. The position of his territory would enable him to be of
great assistance to us, in any war in which the whole force of the Deccan,
controlled as it is at present at Bussy, might be utilized against us in
the Carnatic. He would be able to harass convoys, cut communications, and
otherwise trouble the enemy's movements. But, although we see that his aid
would be very useful to us, in case of such a war; we do not see how, on
our part, we could give him any protection. We have now, with the greatest
difficulty, brought affairs to a successful conclusion in the Carnatic;
but Dupleix is active and energetic, and well supported at home. Many of
the chiefs lately our allies have, as I have just said, declared against
us, or are about to do so; and it is out of the question, for us to think
of supporting a chief so far removed from us as Boorhau. I have,
therefore, told him that we greatly desire his friendship, but are at
present powerless to protect him, should he be attacked by his northern
neighbours.
"He is particularly anxious to train his men after the European
fashion, as he sees that our Sepoys are a match for five times their
number of the untrained troops of the Indian princes.
"This brings me to the subject before us. I have written to him, to say
that I will send to him an English officer, capable of training and
leading his troops, and whose advice may be useful to him upon all
occasions; but that as, were it known that he had received a British
officer, and was employing him to train his troops, it would excite the
instant animosity of Bussy and of the Peishwar; I should send one familiar
with the language, and who may pass as a native. Captain Clive has
strongly recommended you for this difficult mission."
"I fear, sir, that I could hardly pass as a native. The moonshee is
constantly correcting mistakes which I make, in speaking."
"That may be so," Mr. Saunders said; "but there are a score of dialects
in Southern India, and you could be passed upon nineteen of the twenty
peoples who speak them, as belonging to one of the other."
"If you think, sir, that I shall do," Charlie said; "I shall be glad to
undertake the mission."
"Very well, Mr. Marryat, that is understood, then. You will receive
full instructions in writing, and will understand that your duty is not
only to drill the troops of this chief; but to give him such advice as may
suit his and our interests; to strengthen his good feeling towards us; and
to form, as far as possible, a compact little force which might, at a
critical moment, be of immense utility. You will, of course, master the
geography of the country, of which we are all but absolutely ignorant;
find out about the passes, the mountain paths, the defensible positions.
All these things may someday be of the highest importance.
"You will have a few days to make your arrangements, and settle as to
the character you will adopt. This you had better do, in consultation with
someone who thoroughly understands the country. It is intended that you
shall go down to Trichinopoli, with the next convoy; and from there make
your way to the stronghold of Boorhau."
"Shall I take any followers with me?"
"Yes," Mr. Saunders said. "As you will go in the character of a
military adventurer, who has served among our Sepoys long enough to learn
European drill, you had better take two, three, or four men, as you like,
with you as retainers. You might pick out two or three trusty men, from
the Sepoys you command."
Charlie left Government House in high spirits. It was certainly an
honor, to have been selected for such a post. It was quite possible that
it would be a dangerous one. It was sure to be altogether different from
the ordinary life of a subaltern in the Company's army.
Peters was very sorry when he heard from Charlie that they were, at
last, to be separated. It was now nearly two years since they had first
met on board the Lizzie Anderson; and, since that time, they had been
constantly together, and were greatly attached to each other.
Charlie, perhaps, had taken the lead. The fact of his having a stock of
firearms, and being able to lend them to Peters, had given him, perhaps,
the first slight and almost imperceptible advantage. His feat of jumping
overboard, to rescue Tim Kelly, had been another step in advance; and,
although Charlie would have denied it himself, there was no doubt that he
generally took the lead, and that his friend was accustomed to lean upon
him, and to look to him always for the initiative. It was, therefore, a
severe blow to Peters, to find that Charlie was about to be sent on
detached service.
As for Tim Kelly, he was uproarious in his grief, when he heard that he
was to be separated from his master.
"Shure, Mr. Charlie, ye'll never have the heart to lave a poor boy,
that sarved ye be night and day for eighteen months. Tim Kelly would
gladly give his life for ye, and ye wouldn't go and lave him behind ye,
and go all alone among these black thaves of the world."
"But it is impossible that I can take you, Tim," Charlie said. "You
know, yourself, that you cannot speak ten words of the language. How then
could you possibly pass undetected, whatever disguise you put on?"
"But I'd never open my mouth at all, at all, yer honor, barring for
mate and drink."
"It's all very well for you to say so, Tim," Charlie answered; "but I
do not think that anything, short of a miracle, would silence your tongue.
But leave us now, Tim, and I will talk the matter over with Mr. Peters. I
should be glad enough to have you with me, if we could arrange it."
The moonshee was taken into their counsels, and was asked his opinion
as to the disguise which Charlie could adopt, with least risk of
detection. The moonshee replied that he might pass as a Bheel. These hill
tribes speak a dialect quite distinct from that of the people around them,
and the moonshee said that, if properly attired, Charlie would be able to
pass anywhere for one of these people; provided, always, that he did not
meet with another of the same race.
"You might assert," he said, "that your father had taken service with
some rajah on the plain, and that you had there learned to speak the
language. In this way, you would avoid having to answer any difficult
questions regarding your native place; but as to that, you can get up
something of the geography before you leave."
"There are several Bheels among our Sepoys," Charlie said. "I can pick
out three or four of them, who would be just the men for me to take. I
believe they are generally very faithful, and attached to their officers."
When Tim again entered the room, he inquired anxiously if his master
hit upon any disguise which would suit him.
"What do you say, Mr. Moonshine?" Tim said.
The moonshee shook his head. Between these two a perpetual feud had
existed, ever since the native had arrived at Arcot, to take his place as
a member of Charlie's establishment. In obedience to Charlie's stringent
orders, Tim never was openly rude to him; but he never lost an opportunity
of making remarks, of a disparaging nature, as to the value of Charlie's
studies.
The moonshee, on his part, generally ignored Tim's existence
altogether; addressing him, when obliged to do so, with a ceremonious
civility which annoyed Tim more than open abuse would have done.
"I think," he said gravely, in reply to Tim's demand; "that the very
worshipful one would have most chance of escaping detection if he went in
rags, throwing dust on his hair, and passing for one afflicted."
"And what does he mean by afflicted, Mr. Charles?" the Irishman said
wrathfully, as the two young officers laughed.
"He means one who is a born fool, Tim."
Tim looked furiously at the moonshee.
"It would," the latter said sententiously, "be the character which the
worshipful one would support with the greatest ease."
"The black thief is making fun of me," Tim muttered; "but I'll be aven
with him one of these days, or my name isn't Tim Kelly.
"I was thinking, yer honor, that I might represent one deaf and dumb."
"But you're always talking, Tim, and when you're not talking to others,
you talk to yourself. It's quite impossible you could go as a dumb man;
but you might go, as the moonshee suggests, as a half-witted sort of chap;
with just sense enough to groom a horse and look after him, but with not
enough to understand what's said to you, or to answer any questions."
"I could do that asy enough, Mr. Charles."
"And you have to keep from quarrelling, Tim. I hear you quarrelling, on
an average, ten times a day; and as, in such a character as we're talking
about, you would, of course, be exposed to all sorts of slights and
unpleasantnesses, you would be in continual hot water."
"Now, yer honor," Tim said reproachfully, "you're too hard on me,
entirely. I like a bit of a row as well as any many, but it's all for
divarsion; and I could go on, for a year, without quarrelling with a soul.
Just try me, Mr. Charles. Just try me for a month, and if, at the end of
that time, you find me in your way; or that I don't keep my character,
then send me back agin to the regiment."
It was arranged that the moonshee should remain with Peters, who,
seeing that Charlie owed his appointment, to a post which promised
excitement and adventure, to his skill in the native languages, was
determined that he would again set to, in earnest, and try and master its
intricacies. The moonshee went down to the bazaar, and purchased the
clothes which would be necessary for the disguises; and Charlie found, in
his company, four Sepoys who willingly agreed to accompany him, in the
character of his retainers, upon his expedition. As to their costume,
there was no difficulty. When off duty, the Sepoys in the Company's
service were accustomed to dress in their native attire. Consequently, it
needed only the addition of a tulwar, or short curved sword; a shield,
thrown over one shoulder; a long matchlock; and two or three pistols and
daggers, stuck into a girdle, to complete their equipment.
Charlie himself was dressed gaily, in the garb of a military officer in
the service of an Indian rajah. He was to ride, and a horse, saddle, and
gay housings were procured. He had, at last, given in to Tim's entreaties;
and that worthy was dressed as a syce, or horse keeper.
Both Charlie and Tim had had those portions of their skin exposed to
the air darkened, and both would pass muster, at a casual inspection.
Charlie, in thus concealing his nationality, desired only to hide the fact
that he was an officer in the Company's service. He believed that it would
be impossible for him to continue to pass as a Bheel. This, however, would
be of no consequence, after a time. Many of the native princes had
Europeans in their service. Runaway sailors, deserters from the English,
French, and Dutch armed forces in their possessions on the seacoast,
adventurers influenced either by a love of a life of excitement, or whom a
desire to escape the consequences of folly or crime committed at home had
driven to a roving life--such men might be found in many of the native
courts.
Once settled, then, in the service of the rajah, Charlie intended to
make but little farther pretence, or secrecy, as to his nationality.
Outwardly, he would still conform to the language and appearance of the
character he had chosen; but he would allow it to be supposed that he was
an Englishman, a deserter from the Company's service, and that his
comrades were Sepoys in a similar position. His employment, then, at the
court of the rajah, would have an effect the exact reverse of that which
it would have done, had he appeared in his proper character.
Deserters were, of all men, the most opposed to their countrymen, to
whom they had proved traitors. In battle they could be relied upon to
fight desperately, for they fought with ropes round their necks.
Therefore, while the appearance of an English officer, as instructor of
the forces of the rajah, would have drawn upon himself the instant
hostility of all opposed to the British; the circulation of a report that
his troops were being disciplined by some English and native deserters,
from the Company's forces, would excite no suspicion whatever.
To avoid attracting attention, Charlie Marryat and his party set out
before daylight from Madras. Their appearance, indeed, would have
attracted no attention, when they once had passed beyond the boundaries of
the portion of the town occupied by the whites. In the native quarter, the
appearance of a small zemindar, or landowner, attended by four or five
armed followers on foot, was of such common occurrence as to attract no
attention whatever; and, indeed, numbers of these come in to take service
in the Sepoy regiments, the profession of arms being always considered
honorable, in India.
For a fortnight they travelled, by easy stages, without question or
suspicion being excited that they were not what they seemed. They were now
among the hills, and soon arrived at Ambur, the seat of the rajah. The
town was a small one, and above it rose the fortress, which stood on a
rock rising sheer from the bottom of the valley, and standing boldly out
from the hillside. The communication was effected by a shoulder which,
starting from a point halfway up the rock, joined the hill behind it.
Along this shoulder were walls and gateways. An enemy attacking these
would be exposed to the fire from the summit of the rock. From the point
where the shoulder joined the rock, a zigzag road had been cut, with
enormous labour, in the face of the rock, to the summit.
"It is a strong place," Charlie said to Tim Kelly, who was walking by
his horse's head; "and should be able to hold out against anything but
starvation. That is to say, if properly defended."
"It's a powerful place, surely," Tim said; "and would puzzle the ould
boy himself to take. Even Captain Clive, who is afeard of nothing, would
be bothered by it."
As they rode up the valley, two horsemen were seen spurring towards
them, from the town. They drew rein before Charlie; and one, bowing, said:
"My master, the rajah, sends his greeting to you, and begs to know if
you are the illustrious soldier, Nadir Ali, for whom his heart has been
longing."
"Will you tell your lord that Nadir Ali is here," Charlie said, "and
that he longs to see the face of the rajah."
One of the horsemen at once rode off, and the other took his place by
the side of Charlie; and, having introduced himself as captain of the
rajah's bodyguard, rode with him through the town.
Had Charlie appeared in his character as English officer, the rajah and
all his troops would have turned out to do honor to his arrival. As it
was, a portion of the garrison, only, appeared at the gate and lined the
walls. Through these the little party passed, and up the sharp zigzags,
which were so steep that, had it not been that his dignity prevented him
from dismounting, Charlie would gladly have got off and proceeded on foot;
for it was as much as the animal could do, to struggle up the steep
incline.
At each turn there was a gateway, with little flanking towers; on which
jingalls, or small wall pieces, commanded the road.
"Faith, then, it's no fool that built this place. I shouldn't like to
have to attack it, wid all the soldiers of the King's army, let alone
those of the Company."
"It is tremendously strong, Tim, but it is astonishing what brave men
can do."
In the after wars which England waged, in India, the truth of what
Charlie said was over and over again proved. Numerous fortresses, supposed
by the natives to be absolutely impregnable, and far exceeding in strength
that just described, have been carried by assault, by the dash and daring
of English troops.
They gained, at last, the top of the rock. It was uneven in surface,
some portions being considerably more elevated than others. Roughly, its
extent was about a hundred yards, either way. The lower level was covered
with buildings, occupied by the garrison, and storehouses. On the upper
level, some forty feet higher, stood the palace of the rajah. It
communicated with the courtyard, below, by a broad flight of steps. These
led to an arched gateway, with a wall and battlements; forming an interior
line of defence, should an assailant gain a footing in the lower portion
of the stronghold.
Alighting from his horse at the foot of the steps, Charlie, followed by
his five retainers, mounted to the gateway. Here another guard of honor
was drawn up. Passing through these, they entered a shady courtyard, on
one side of which was a stone pavilion. The flat ceiling was supported by
massive columns, closely covered with intricate sculpture. The roof was
arabesqued with deeply cut patterns, picked out in bright colours. A
fountain played in the middle.
On the farther side the floor, which was of marble, was raised; and two
steps led to a wide recess, with windows of lattice stonework, giving a
view over the town and valley below. In this recess were piles of cushions
and carpets, and here reclined the rajah, a spare and active-looking man,
of some forty years old. He rose, as Charlie approached, the soldiers and
Sepoys remaining beyond the limits of the pavilion.
"Welcome, brave Nadir Ali," he said courteously; "my heart is glad,
indeed, at the presence of one whose wisdom is said to be far beyond his
years, and who has learned the arts of war of the infidels from beyond the
seas."
Then, inviting Charlie to take a seat on the divan with him, he
questioned him as to his journey, and the events which were taking place
in the plains; until the attendants, having handed round refreshments,
retired at his signal.
"I am glad to see you, Sahib," he said, when they were alone; "though,
in truth, I looked for one older than yourself. The great English governor
of Madras tells me, however, in a letter which I received four days since,
that you are skilled in war; that you fought by the side of that great
Captain Clive at Arcot, Arni, Kavaripak, and at Trichinopoli; and that the
great warrior, himself, chose you to come to me. Therefore, I doubt
neither your valour nor your prudence, and put myself in your hands,
wholly.
"The governor has already told you, doubtless, of the position in which
I am placed here."
"Governor Saunders explained the whole position to me," Charlie said.
"You are, at present, menaced on all sides by powerful neighbours. You
believe that the fortunes of the English are on the increase; and as you
think the time may come, ere long, when they will turn the French out of
the Deccan, and become masters there, as they have already become masters
in the Carnatic, you wish to fight by their side, and share their
fortunes. In the meantime, you desire to be able to defend yourself
against your neighbours; for, at present, the English are too far away to
assist you.
"To enable you to do this, I have been sent to drill and discipline
your troops, like our Sepoys; and to give you such advice as may be best,
for the general defence of your country. I have brought with me five
soldiers; four Bheels, and one of my countrymen. The latter will be of
little use in drilling your troops, for he is ignorant of the language,
and has come as my personal attendant. The other four will assist me in my
work.
"Your followers here will, no doubt, discover in a very short time that
I am an Englishman. Let it be understood that I am a deserter, that I have
been attracted to your court by the promise of high pay, and that I have
assumed the character of a Bheel, lest my being here might put you on bad
terms with the English."
Charlie then asked the rajah as to the strength of his military force.
"In time of peace," the rajah said, "I keep three hundred men under
arms. In case of taking the field, three thousand. To defend Ambur against
an attack of an enemy, I could muster ten thousand men."
"You could not call out three thousand men, without attracting the
attention of your neighbours?" Charlie asked.
"No," the rajah said; "that would bring my neighbours upon me, at
once."
"I suppose, however, you might assemble another five hundred men,
without attracting attention."
"Oh, yes," the rajah said; "eight hundred men are not a force which
could attract any great attention."
"Then I should propose that we begin with eight hundred," Charlie said.
"For a month, however, I will confine myself to the troops you at present
have. We must, in the first place, train some officers. If you will pick
out those to whom you intend to give commands, and subcommands; I will
choose from the men, after drilling them for a few days, forty of the most
intelligent as what we call noncommissioned officers.
"For the first month, we will work hard in teaching these officers and
sub-officers their duties. Then, when the whole eight hundred assemble, we
can divide them into four parties. There will be one of my drill
instructors to each party, ten under officers, and four or five of the
officers whom you will appoint. Six weeks' hard work should make these
eight hundred men fairly acquainted with drill. The English Sepoys have
often gone out to fight, with less. At the end of the six weeks, let the
five hundred men you have called out, in addition to your bodyguard of
three hundred, return to their homes; and replace them by an equal number
of fresh levies, and so proceed until you have your three thousand
fighting men, thoroughly trained. In nine months, all will have had their
six weeks of exercise, and could take their places in the ranks again, at
a day's notice.
"Two hundred of your men I will train in artillery; although I do not
belong to that branch of the service, I learned the duties at Arcot."
The rajah agreed, heartily, to Charlie's proposals; well pleased at the
thought that he should, before the end of a year, be possessed of a
trained force, which would enable him to hold his own against his powerful
neighbours, until an opportunity might occur when, in alliance with the
English, he should be able to turn the tables upon them, and to aggrandize
himself at their expense.
Chapter 12: A Murderous Attempt.
Handsome rooms, with a suite of attendants, were assigned to Charlie in
the rajah's palace; and he was formally appointed commander of his forces.
The four Sepoys were appointed to junior ranks, as was also Tim Kelly;
who, however, insisted on remaining in the position of chief attendant
upon his master; being, in fact, a sort of majordomo and valet in one,
looking after his comforts when in the palace, and accompanying him as
personal guard whenever he rode out.
"You niver know, yer honor, what these natives may be up to. They'll
smile with you one day, and stab ye the next. They're treacherous varmint,
yer honor, if you do but give 'em the chance."
At first, Charlie perceived that his position excited some jealousy in
the minds of those surrounding the rajah. He therefore did all in his
power to show to them that he, in no way, aspired to interfere in the
internal politics or affairs of the little state--that he was a soldier
and nothing more. He urged upon the rajah, who wished to have him always
by him, that it was far better that he should appear to hold aloof, and to
avoid all appearance of favouritism, or of a desire to obtain dominance in
the counsels of the rajah. He wished that the appointments to the posts of
officers in the new force should be made by the rajah, who should lend an
ear to the advice of his usual councillors; but that, once appointed, they
should be under his absolute command and control, and that he should have
power to dismiss those who proved themselves indolent and incapable, to
promote active and energetic men, wholly regardless of influence or
position.
The next morning, Charlie and his four assistants set to work to drill
the three hundred men of the garrison, taking them in parties of twenty.
They were thus able, in the course of a few days, to pick out the most
active and intelligent for the sub-officers; and these, with the existing
officers of the body, and the new ones appointed by the rajah, were at
once taken in hand to be taught their duty.
For a month, the work went on steadily and without interruption, and
from morn till night the courtyard echoed with the words of command. At
the end of that time, the twenty officers and forty sub-officers had
fairly learned their duty. The natives of India are very quick in learning
drill, and a regiment of newly-raised Sepoys will perform manoeuvres and
answer to words of command, in the course of a fortnight, as promptly and
regularly as would one of English recruits in three months.
A good many changes had taken place during the month's work. Many of
the officers became disgusted with hard and continuous work, to which they
were unaccustomed, while some of the sub-officers showed a deficiency of
the quickness and intelligence needed for the work. Their places, however,
were easily filled, and as the days went on, all took an increasing degree
of interest, as they acquired facility of movement, and saw how quickly,
according to the European methods, manoeuvres were gone through. At the
end of a month, then, the sixty men were able in turn to instruct others;
and, a body of five hundred men being called out, the work of drilling on
a large scale began.
The drill ground now was a level space in the valley below the town,
and the whole population assembled, day after day, to look on with
astonishment at the exercises. The four great companies, or battalions, as
Charlie called them, were kept entirely separate, each under the command
of one of the Sepoys, under whom were a proportion of the officers and
sub-officers. Every evening, Charlie came down for an hour, and put each
body through its drill, distributing blame or praise as it was deserved,
thus keeping up a spirit of emulation between the battalions. At the end
of a fortnight, when the simpler manoeuvres had been learned, Charlie, for
two hours each day, worked the whole together as one regiment; and was
surprised, himself, to find how rapid was the progress which each day
effected.
The rajah himself often came down to the drill ground, and took the
highest interest in the work. He himself would fain have had regular
uniforms, similar to those worn by the Sepoys in the service of the
European powers, provided for the men; but Charlie strongly urged him not
to do so. He admitted that the troops would look immensely better, if clad
in regular uniform; than as a motley band, each dressed according to his
own fancy. He pointed out, however, that while the news that the rajah was
having some of his men drilled by European deserters would attract but
little attention among his neighbours, the report that he was raising
Sepoy battalions would certainly be received by them in a hostile spirit.
"By all means," Charlie said, "get the uniforms made for the whole
force, and keep them by you in store. They can be at once served out in
case of war, and the sight of a number of Sepoy battalions, where they
expected only to meet an irregular force, will have an immense effect upon
any force opposed to you."
The rajah saw the force of this argument, and at once ordered five
thousand suits of white uniforms, similar to those worn by the Sepoys in
the English and French service, to be made and stored up in the magazines.
While his lieutenants were drilling the main body, Charlie himself took
in hand a party of forty picked men, and instructed them in the use of
field guns. The superiority of Europeans in artillery was one of the
reasons which gave to them such easy victory, in their early battles with
the native forces in India. The latter possessed a very powerful
artillery, in point of numbers, but there was no regular drill nor manner
of loading. They were in the habit, too, of allowing each gun to cool
after it was fired, before being loaded again. It was thought, therefore,
good practice if a gun were discharged once in a quarter of an hour. They
were, then, utterly astounded and dismayed at the effects of the European
guns, each of which could be loaded and fired twice, or even three times,
a minute.
So month passed after month, until Rajah Boorhau was in a position to
put, if necessary, five battalions of Sepoys, each seven hundred strong,
into the field; with thirty guns, served by trained artillerymen. So
quietly had the work gone on, that it attracted no attention among his
neighbours. The mere rumour that the rajah had some European deserters in
his service, and that these were drilling four or five hundred men, was
considered of so little moment that it passed altogether unheeded.
The accounts of the state of affairs in the Carnatic, which reached
Charlie, were not satisfactory--Dupleix, with his usual energy, was aiding
the son of Chunda Sahib, with men and money, in his combat with the
British protege; and most of the native allies of the latter had fallen
away from him. Trichinopoli was again besieged, and the fortunes of
England, lately so flourishing, were waning again. In the Deccan, French
influence was supreme. Bussy, with a strong and well-disciplined French
force, maintained Salabut Jung, whom the French had placed on the throne,
against all opponents. At one time it was the Peishwar, at another the
Mahrattas against whom Bussy turned his arms; and always with success, and
the French had acquired the four districts on the coast, known as the
Northern Sircas.
It was in vain that Charlie endeavoured to gain an accurate knowledge
of the political position, so quickly and continually did this change. At
one time the Peishwar and the Nizam, as the Subadar of the Deccan was now
called, would be fighting in alliance against one or other of the Mahratta
chiefs. At another time they would be in conflict with each other, while
the Rajah of Mysore, Murari Reo, and other chiefs were sometimes fighting
on one side, sometimes on another.
Proud of his rapidly increasing force, Boorhau Reo would, more than
once in the course of the year, have joined in the warfare going on
around. Charlie, however, succeeded in restraining him from doing so;
pointing out that the victor of one day was the vanquished of the next,
and that it was worse than useless to join in a struggle of which the
conditions were so uncertain, and the changes of fortune so rapid, that
none could count upon others for aid, however great the assistance they
might have rendered only a short time before.
"Were you to gain territory, Rajah, which you might, perhaps, largely
do, from the efficient aid which you might render to one party or the
other, you would be the object of a hostile combination against which you
could not hope to struggle."
The rajah yielded at once to Charlie's arguments; but the influence of
the latter added to the hostility, which the favour shown him by the rajah
had provoked, among many of the leading men of the state. Where the sides
were often so closely balanced as was the case in these intestine
struggles, the aid of every rajah, however small his following, was sought
by one or other of the combatants; and the counsellors of those able to
place a respectable force in the field were heavily bribed, by one side or
the other. Those around Rajah Boorhau found their efforts completely
baffled by the influence of the English commander of his forces, and a
faction of increasing strength and power was formed to overthrow him. The
rajah himself had kept his secret well, and one or two, only, of his
advisers knew that the Englishman was a trusted agent of the Company.
The soldiers were much attached to their English leader. They found him
always just and firm. Complaints were always listened to, tyranny or ill
treatment by the officers suppressed and punished, merit rewarded. Among
the officers the strictness of the discipline alienated many, who
contrasted the easy life which they had led before the introduction of the
European system, with that which they now endured. So long as they were
engaged in mastering the rudiments of drill they felt their disadvantage;
but when this was acquired, each thought himself capable of taking the
place of the English adventurer, and of leading the troops he had
organized to victory. Already, Charlie had received several anonymous
warnings that danger threatened him. The rajah was, he knew, his warm
friend; and he, in his delight at seeing the formidable force which had
been formed from his irregular levies, had presented him, as a token of
his gratitude, with large sums of money.
In those days, this was the method by which Indian princes rewarded
European officers who rendered them service, and it was considered by no
means derogatory to the latter to accept the money. This was, indeed, the
universal custom, and Charlie, knowing that Captain Clive had received
large presents of this kind, had no hesitation in following his example.
The treasures stored up by many of these Indian princes were immense, and
a lac of rupees, equivalent to ten thousand pounds, was considered by no
means a large present. Charlie, foreseeing that, sooner or later, the
little state would become involved in hostilities, took the precaution of
forwarding the money he had received down to Madras; sending it piecemeal,
in charge of native merchants and traders. It was, by these, paid into the
Madras treasury, where a large rate of interest, for all monies lent by
its employees, was given by the Company.
For those at home he felt no uneasiness. It was very seldom that their
letters reached him; but he learned that they were still in high favour
with his uncle, that his mother continued installed at the head of the
house, and that the girls were both at excellent schools.
Charlie mentioned, to the rajah, the rumours which had reached him of a
plot against him. The rajah assured him of his own support, under all
circumstances, and offered that a strong guard should be placed, night and
day, over the apartments he occupied.
This Charlie declined.
"A guard can always be corrupted," he said. "My Irish servant sleeps in
my anteroom, my four lieutenants are close at hand, and knowing that the
soldiers are, for the most part, attached to me, I do not think that open
force will be used. I will, however, cause a large bell to be suspended
above my quarters. Its ringing will be a signal that I am attacked, in
which case I rely upon your highness putting yourself at the head of the
guard, and coming to my assistance."
Tim Kelly was at once furious and alarmed, at the news that danger
threatened his master, and took every precaution that he could imagine to
ensure his safety. He took to going down to the town, himself, to purchase
provisions; and, so far as possible, prepared these himself. He procured
two or three monkeys, animals which he held in horror, and offered them a
portion of everything that came on the table, before he placed it before
his master.
Charlie at first protested against this, as his dinner became cold by
waiting; but Tim had an oven prepared, and ordered dinner half an hour
before the time fixed by his master. Each dish as brought in was, after a
portion had been given to a monkey, placed in the oven, and thus half an
hour was given to allow the poison to work. This was done without
Charlie's knowledge, the oven being placed in the anteroom, and the dishes
thence brought in, in regular order, by the body servant, whom even Tim
allowed to be devoted to his master.
One day, Charlie was just sitting down to his soup, when Tim ran in.
"For the love of Heaven, Mr. Charles, don't put that stuff to your
mouth. It's pisoned, or, at any rate, if it isn't, one of the other dishes
is."
"Poisoned, Tim! Nonsense, man. You are always thinking of poisonings
and plots."
"And it's lucky for your honor that I am," Tim said. "Jist come into
the next room, and look at the monkeys."
Charlie went in. One of the little creatures was lying upon the ground,
evidently in a state of great agony. The other was sitting up, rocking
itself backwards and forwards, like a human being in pain.
"They look bad, poor little beasts," Charlie said; "but what has that
got to do with my soup?"
"Shure, yer honor, isn't that jist what I keep the cratures for, just
to give them a taste of everything yer honor has, and I claps it into the
oven there to kape it warm till I've had time to see, by the monkeys,
whether it's good."
"It looks very serious," Charlie said, gravely. "Do you go quietly out,
Tim, call two men from the guardhouse, and seize the cook; and place one
or two men as sentries over the other servants. I will go across to the
rajah."
The latter, on hearing what had happened, ordered the cook to be
brought before him, together with the various dishes prepared for the
dinner. The man, upon being interrogated, vehemently denied all knowledge
of the affair.
"We shall see," the rajah said. "Eat up that plate of soup."
The man turned pale.
"Your highness will observe," he stammered, "that you have already told
me that one of these dishes is poisoned. I cannot say which, and whichever
I eat may be the fatal one."
The rajah made a signal to him to obey his orders, but Charlie
interposed.
"There is something in what he says, your highness. Whether the man is
innocent or guilty, he would shrink equally from eating any of them. It is
really possible that he may know nothing of it. The poison may have been
introduced into the materials beforehand. If the man is taken to a
dungeon, I think I could suggest a plan by which we could test him.
"I believe him to be guilty," he said, when the prisoner had been
removed.
"Then why not let him be beheaded at once?" the rajah asked.
"I would rather let ten guilty men escape," Charlie replied, "than run
the risk of putting one innocent one to death. I propose, sir, that you
order the eight dishes of food, which have been prepared for my dinner, to
be carefully weighed. Let these be all placed in the cell of the prisoner,
and there let him be left. In the course of two or three days he will, if
guilty, endeavour to assuage his hunger by eating little bits of food,
from every dish except that which he knows to be poisoned, but will take
such a small portion from each that he will think it will not be detected.
If he is innocent, and is really ignorant which dish is poisoned, he will
not touch any of them, until driven to desperation by hunger. Then he will
seize on one or more, and devour them to the end, running the chance of
death by poison, rather than endure the pangs of hunger longer."
"Your plan is a wise one," the rajah said. "It shall be tried. Let the
dishes be taken to him, every morning, and removed every evening. Each
evening they shall be weighed."
These orders were carried out, and on the following morning the dishes
were placed in the cell of the prisoner. When removed at night, they were
found to be untouched. The next evening several of the dishes were found
to have lost some ounces in weight. The third evening all but one had been
tasted.
"Let the prisoner be brought in again," the rajah ordered, when
informed of this.
"Dog," he said, "you have betrayed yourself. Had you been innocent, you
could not have known in which of the dishes the poison had been placed.
You have eaten of all but one. If that one contains poison, you are
guilty."
Then, turning to an attendant, he ordered him to take a portion of the
untouched food, and to throw it to a dog. Pending the experiment, the
prisoner was removed. Half an hour later, the attendant returned with the
news that the dog was dead.
"The guilt of the man is confirmed," the rajah said. "Let him be
executed."
"Will you give him to me, your highness?" Charlie asked. "His death
would not benefit me now, and to save his life, he may tell me who is my
enemy. It is of no use punishing the instrument, and letting the
instigator go free."
"You are right," the rajah agreed. "If you can find out who bribed him,
justice shall be done, though it were the highest in the state."
Charlie returned to his own quarters, assembled his lieutenants and
several other of his officers, and had the man brought before him.
"Hossein," he said, "you have taken money to take my life. I looked
upon you as my faithful servant. I had done you no wrong. It has been
proved that you attempted to poison me. You, when driven by hunger, ate
small quantities, which you thought would pass unobserved, of all the
dishes but one. That dish has been given to a dog, and he has died. You
knew, then, which was the poisoned dish. The rajah has ordered your
execution. I offer you life, if you will tell me who it was that tempted
you."
The prisoner preserved a stolid silence.
"We had better proceed to torture him, at once," one of the rajah's
officers said.
The man turned a little paler. He knew well the horrible tortures which
would, in such an instance, be inflicted to extort the names of those who
had bribed him.
"I will say nothing," he said, firmly, "though you tear me limb from
limb."
"I have no intention of torturing you," Charlie said. "A confession
extorted by pain is as likely to be false as true, and even did you tell
me one name, there might still be a dozen engaged in it who would remain
unknown. No, Hossein, you have failed in your duty, you have tried to slay
a master who was kind to you, and trusted you."
"No, sahib," the man exclaimed, passionately. "You did not trust me.
The food I sent you was tested and tried. I knew it; but I thought that
the poison would not have acted on the monkeys, until you had eaten the
dish. The fool who sold it me deceived me. Had you trusted me, I would
never have done it. It was only when I saw that I was suspected and
doubted, without cause, that my heart turned against you, and I took the
gold which was offered to me to kill you. I swear it by the Prophet."
Charlie looked at him steadily.
"I believe you," he said. "You were mistaken. I had no suspicions. My
servant feared for me, and took these precautions without telling me.
However, Hossein, I pardon you, and if you will swear to me to be
faithful, in future, I will trust you. You shall again be my cook, and I
will eat the food as you prepare it for me."
"I am my lord's slave," the man said in a low tone. "My life is his."
Charlie nodded, and the guard standing on either side of the prisoner
stepped back, and without another word he left the room, a free man.
Charlie's officers remonstrated with him upon having not only pardoned
the man, but restored him to his position of cook.
"I think I have done wisely," Charlie said. "I must have a cook, for
Tim Kelly here is not famous that way; and although he might manage for
me, when alone, he certainly could not turn out a dinner which would be
suitable, when I have some of the rajah's kinsmen and officers dining with
me. Did I get another cook, he might be just as open to the offers of my
enemies as Hossein has been; and do you not think that, after what has
passed, Hossein will be less likely to take bribes than any other man?"
Henceforth the oven was removed from the antechamber, and Charlie took
his meals as Hossein prepared them for him. The man said little, but
Charlie felt sure, from the glances that he cast at him, that he could
rely upon Hossein now to the death.
Tim Kelly, who felt the strongest doubts as to the prudence of the
proceeding, observed that Hossein no longer bought articles from men who
brought them up to sell to the soldiers, but that every morning he went
out early, and purchased all the supplies he desired from the shopkeepers
in the town. Tim mentioned the fact to his master, who said:
"You see, Tim, Hossein has determined that I shall not be poisoned
without his knowing it. The little peddlers who come up here with herbs,
and spices, and the ingredients for curry, might be bribed to sell Hossein
poisoned goods. By going down into the town, and buying in the open
market, it is barely possible that the goods could be poisoned. You need
have no more anxiety whatever, Tim, as to poison. If the attempt is made
again, it will probably be by sword or dagger."
"Well, yer honor," said Tim, "anything's better than pison. I've got to
sleep almost with one eye open. And you've got sentries outside your
windows. What a pity it is that we ain't in a climate where one can fasten
the windows, and boult the shutters! But now the wet season is over again,
ye might have yer bed put, as ye did last year, on the roof of your room,
with a canopy over it to keep off the dew. Ye would be safe then, except
from anyone coming through the room where I sleeps."
Charlie's bedroom was at the angle of a wall, and on two sides he could
look down from his windows, two hundred feet, sheer into the valley below.
The view from the flat terraced roof was a charming one, and, as Tim said,
Charlie had, in the fine weather, converted the terrace into a sleeping
room. A broad canopy, supported by poles at the corner, stretched over it,
and even in the hottest weather the nights were not unpleasant here.
Chapter 13: An Attempt At Murder.
The house, of which the bedroom occupied by Charlie formed part, was
elsewhere two stories higher; this room jutting out, alone, into the angle
of the wall. The rest of the suite of rooms were in the house itself, but
access could be obtained to this room through the window, which looked on
to the terrace of the wall. Charlie's lieutenants always took pains to
place men upon whom they could thoroughly rely as sentries, on this
terrace.
One night, a fortnight after the events which have been described,
Charlie was asleep on his bed, on the flats above his room. On one side
the house rose straight beside it. On two others was the fall to the
valley, on the fourth side was the wall, along which two sentries were
pacing to and fro. From time to time, from a door some distance along the
side of the house, opening on to the wall, a white figure came out,
stretched himself as if unable to sleep, looked for a while over the
parapet down into the valley, appeared to listen intently, and then
sauntered into the house again.
It was the cook, Hossein. It was his custom. Successive sentries had,
for many nights past, seen him do the same; but in a country where the
nights are hot, a sleepless servant attracts but little attention. Upon
the occasion of one of these visits to the parapet, he stood in an
attitude of deep attention, longer than usual. Then he carelessly
sauntered back. It was but a moment later that his face appeared at the
window next to that of Charlie's bedroom. He stretched his head out, and
again listened intently. Then he went to Tim, who was sleeping heavily on
a couch placed there, and touched him. He put his hand on his lips, as Tim
sprang up.
"Take arm," he said, in Hindostanee. "Bad man coming."
Tim understood the words and, seizing a sword and pistol which lay
close to the bedside, followed Hossein, who had glided up the stairs, with
a drawn tulwar in his hand. At the moment he did so, there was a noise of
heavy bodies dropping, followed by a sudden shout from Charlie. There was
a sound of clashing of arms, and the report of a pistol.
As Tim's eyes came on a level with the terrace, he saw Hossein bound
with uplifted blade into the midst of a group of men in the corner. Three
times the blade rose and fell, and each time a loud shriek followed. Then
he disappeared in the midst.
Tim was but a few seconds behind him. Discharging his pistol into the
body of one of the men, and running his sword into another, he, too, stood
by the side of his master. Charlie, streaming with blood, was half
sitting, half lying in the angle of the parapet. Hossein, his turban off,
his long hair streaming down his back, was standing over him, fighting
furiously against some ten men, who still pressed forward, while several
others lay upon the ground.
In spite of the arrival of Charlie's two allies, they still pressed
forward, but the shots of the pistols had been echoed by the muskets of
the sentries. Loud shouts were heard, showing that the alarm was sounding
through the palace.
One more desperate effort the assailants made, to beat the two men who
opposed them over the parapet, but Hossein and the Irishman stood firm.
The weight and numbers of their opponents, however, told upon them; when
the first of the sentries appeared upon the platform, followed closely by
his comrade; and both, with levelled bayonets, charged into the fray.
The assailants now thought only of escape, but their position was a
desperate one. Some rushed to the end of the terrace, and tried to climb
the ropes by which they had slid down from the upper roof of the house.
Others endeavoured to rush down the staircase; but Tim, with one of the
sentries, guarded this point, until a rush of feet below told that the
guard were coming to their assistance.
It was well that help was at hand, for the conspirators, desperate at
finding themselves in a trap, gathering themselves together, rushed with
the fury of wild beasts upon Tim and the sentry. One was impaled upon a
bayonet, another cut down by Tim, and then, borne back by the weight of
their opponents, they were hurled backwards down the stairs. As the
assailants followed them with a rush, the guard sprang through the open
window, from the terrace below, into the room.
There was a short and desperate conflict. Then two of the conspirators
bounded up the staircase on to the roof, ran to the parapet and leaped
over into the valley, two hundred feet below. They were the last of the
eighteen men who had lowered themselves, from the roof above, to attack
Charlie.
As soon as Tim picked himself up, he hastened to ascend the stairs
again, and to run to the side of his master. Charlie was insensible.
Leaning against the parapet, too weak to stand, but still holding his
sword, and ready to throw himself once more before him, stood Hossein; who
now, seeing Tim approach, and that all danger was over, dropped his sword
and sank upon the ground.
A minute or two later the rajah himself, sword in hand, hurried up. He
was greatly concerned, and excited, at the sight which met his eyes.
Charlie was at once lifted, and carried down to one of the rajah's own
rooms, where he was instantly attended to.
A hasty examination showed that only two of the attacking party still
breathed. None of those who had fallen above survived, so fiercely and
deadly had been the blows struck by Hossein and Tim. Charlie himself had
cut down one and shot another, before he fell, slashed in many places,
just as Hossein bounded through his assailants.
The bodies of the dead were, by the rajah's orders, laid together for
identification in the morning. The two who still lived were carried to the
guardroom, and their wounds dressed, in order that the names of their
employers might be obtained from them.
In the meantime, Charlie's lieutenants had hastily formed a body of
their soldiers together, and these at once fell upon a number of men who
were crowding up the steps to the palace, with shouts of "Death to the
Englishman." A few volleys poured among these effectually scattered them,
and they broke and hurried down the steep road, through the gates to the
town, the sentries on the way offering no opposition, but many falling
under the fire from the parapet of the fort.
In ten minutes, all was over. The gates were again closed, and a strong
guard placed over them, and the attempted insurrection was at an end.
The native surgeon, who attended Charlie, pronounced that none of the
five wounds he had received, although for the most part severe, were
necessarily fatal; and that there was every chance of his recovery.
Hossein's wounds, three in number, were pronounced to be more dangerous,
one being a deep stab in the body, given by a man who had rushed at him,
as he was guarding the blow of another. Tim's wounds were comparatively
slight, and he suffered more from the bruises he had received, when hurled
backwards down the stone staircase. However, with one arm in a sling, and
his head bandaged, he was able to take his place by his master's bedside.
Having heard, from him, that it was entirely due to Hossein that
Charlie's life had been saved, the rajah directed that every attention
should be paid to him; and several times, during the night, Tim stole away
to his bedside to press his hand, and call down blessings upon him.
The stanching of his wounds, and the application of strong
restoratives, presently caused Charlie to open his eyes.
"The Lord be praised, Mr. Charles," Tim said, "that you're coming to
yourself again. Don't you trouble, sir. We've done for the murdhering
rascals; and, plase God, you'll soon be about again. Jist drink this
draught, yer honor, and go off to sleep, if you can. In the morning I'll
tell you all about it.
"You're in the rajah's own room," he continued, seeing Charlie's eyes
wander wonderingly around him, "and all you've got to do is just to lie
still, and get well as soon as you can."
It was a fortnight before Charlie, still very weak and feeble, was able
to totter from his room to that in which Hossein was lying. He himself
knew nothing of what had passed after he fell. The conflict had, to him,
been little more than a dream. Awakened from sleep by the sound of his
assailants, as they dropped from the ropes, he had leaped up as a rush of
figures came towards him, catching up his sword and pistol as he did so.
He had shot the first, and cut down the next who rushed at him, but at the
same moment he had felt a sharp pain, and remembered no more.
Tim heard from Hossein, when the latter, two days after the fight, was
able to speak, that he had suspected that some renewed attempt might be
made upon his master's life; and that for many nights he had not slept,
contenting himself with such repose as he could snatch in the daytime,
between the intervals of preparing meals. A few minutes before the attack,
he fancied he heard a movement on the roof of the house; and running to
Charlie's room he had, from the window, seen some dark figures sliding
down the wall. Then he roused Tim, and rushed up to the rescue.
Tim eloquently described to his master the manner in which Hossein
sprung upon his foes, and cut his way through, in time to drive back those
who were hacking at him as he lay prostrate; and how he found him standing
over him, keeping at bay the whole of his assailants.
Charlie, with difficulty, made his way to the bedside of the brave
Mohammedan. The latter, however, did not know him. He was in the delirium
of fever. He was talking rapidly to himself.
"He trusted me," he said. "He gave me my life. Should I not give mine
for him? Anyone else would have had me hung as a dog. I will watch. I will
watch. He shall see that Hossein is not ungrateful."
Charlie's eyes filled with tears, as he looked at the wasted form of
his follower.
"Is there any hope for him?" he asked the doctor.
"It is possible, just possible that he may live," the latter said.
"Allah only knows."
"Do all you can to save him," Charlie said. "I shall be ever grateful
to you, if you do."
Tim, now that his master could dispense with his services, transferred
his attentions to the bedside of Hossein, and was unremitting in the care
and attention with which he kept the bandages on his head cool with fresh
water, and wetted his hot lips with refreshing drinks. It was another week
before his illness took a turn. Then the fever left him, and he lay weak
and helpless as an infant. Strong soups now took the place of the cooling
drinks, and in a few days the native doctor was able to say, confidently,
that the danger was passed, and that Hossein would recover.
In the meantime, the investigations of the rajah had brought to light
the details of the conspiracy. The wounded men had confessed that they
were employed by three of the principal persons at the rajah's court, one
of them being the rajah's brother. The information, however, was scarcely
needed; as it was found, in the morning, that their apartments were empty;
they having fled with the men who had attacked the gates of the palace.
These consisted partly of soldiers whom they had bribed, and of
desperadoes from the town, who had singly entered the fort during the day,
and had been concealed in the apartments of the conspirators, until the
signal for attack was given.
The intention of the conspirators was not only to kill the Englishman,
but to dethrone the rajah, and install his brother in his place. The
attack had commenced with the attempt upon Charlie's life, because it was
believed that his death would paralyse the troops who were faithful to the
rajah.
At the end of six weeks, Charlie was able to resume his duties, and his
appearance at the parade ground was hailed with enthusiastic shouts by the
soldiers. The rajah was more attached to him than ever, and had again made
him large presents, in token of the regret he felt at the sufferings he
had endured in his cause.
Drilling was now carried on with redoubled energy, and large numbers of
new levies had been summoned to the standard. A storm was gathering over
Ambur. The rajah's brother was raising a force to attack him, and had, by
means of large promises in case of success, persuaded Murari Reo to take
up his cause; and he had, it was said, also sent messages to the nizam,
pointing out that, in case of war with the English, the Rajah of Ambur
would be a thorn in his side. He told of the numbers of troops who had
been drilled, and how formidable such a force would be, if opposed to him
at a critical moment; while if he, the claimant, gained power, the army of
Ambur would be at the disposal of the nizam.
The rajah, on his side, had also sent messengers to Hyderabad, with
assurances to the nizam of his fidelity and friendship. He urged that the
preparations he had made were intended solely for the defence of his
state, against marauding bands of Mahrattas, and especially against those
of Murari Reo, who was a scourge to all his neighbours.
In the meantime, every effort was made to strengthen the defences of
Ambur. The walls surrounding the town were repaired, and although these,
in themselves, could have offered but a slight defence to a determined
assault, the approaches to the town were all covered by the guns of the
fort above.
The weak point of the defence was the hill behind the town. This sloped
up, gradually, to a point higher than the level of the projecting rock
upon which the castle stood. It then rose, in rugged cliffs, some two
hundred feet higher; and then fell away again, steeply, to its summit.
This was too far back for the fire of guns placed upon it to injure the
castle or town. Guns placed, however, at the foot of the rocky wall, would
dominate the castle and render it, at last, untenable.
Charlie had often looked, with an anxious eye, at this point; and one
morning, accompanied by the rajah, he rode up to examine the position. The
highest point of the slope, at the foot of the crag, was nearly opposite
the castle; and it was here that an active enemy, making his way along the
slope, would place his guns. Here, Charlie determined to establish a
battery.
News had arrived that the rajah's brother had raised a force of three
thousand men; and that, with seven thousand Mahrattas, he was about to
march. This force, Charlie felt certain that he could meet and defeat, in
the open. But more disquieting news was that Bussy, hearing that the
rajah's troops had been trained by an Englishman, had advised the nizam to
declare for his rival, and to send a considerable force to his assistance,
if necessary. Fresh messengers were sent off, with new assurances of the
rajah's loyalty to the nizam.
"It may not do much good," Charlie said, "but if we can induce him to
remain quiet, until we have defeated Murari Reo, it will be so much
gained."
Charlie himself despatched a messenger to Mr. Saunders, begging that
assistance might be sent to the rajah.
Having decided upon the position for a battery, energetic steps were
taken to form it. A space large enough for the construction of the
battery, and for the tents and stores of the artillerymen and two hundred
infantry, was marked out; and the rajah ordered the whole population of
Ambur, men, women, and children, to assist at the work. The troops, too,
were all employed; and under Charlie's superintendence, a wondrous change
was soon effected. The spot chosen was levelled, a strong earthwork was
erected round it, and then the surrounding ground was removed. This was a
work of immense labour, the ground consisting first of a layer of soil,
then of debris which had fallen from the face of the rock above, stones
and boulders, to the depth of some fifteen feet, under which was the solid
earth.
The slope resembled an anthill. The soldiers and able-bodied men broke
up the boulders and rock with sledgehammers; or, when necessary, with
powder, and blasted the rock, when needed. The women and children carried
away the fragments in baskets. The work lasted for a fortnight, at the end
of which a position of an almost impregnable nature was formed. At the
foot of the earthworks protecting the guns, both at the face and sides,
the ground, composed of great boulders and stones, sloped steeply out,
forming a bank fifteen feet deep. At its foot, again, the solid rock was
blasted away, so as to form a deep chasm, thirty feet wide and ten feet
high, round the foot of the fort. For a hundred yards on each side, the
earth and stones had been entirely removed down to the solid rock.
Ten guns were placed in the battery, and the fire of these swept the
slopes behind the town and castle, rendering it impossible, until the fort
was carried, for an enemy to attack the town on that side; or to operate,
in any way, against the only point at which an attack could be made upon
the castle.
The rajah was delighted at this most formidable accession to the
defensive power of his fortress, which was now in a position to defy any
attack which could be made against it. A store of provisions and
ammunition was collected there, and the command given to one of Charlie's
Sepoy lieutenants, with a hundred trained artillerymen, and two hundred
infantry. Numbers of cattle had been driven into the town and castle, and
stores of provisions collected.
It was but two days after the battery was complete that the news
arrived that the rajah's brother, with Murari Reo, had entered the rajah's
dominions, and was marching up the valley to the assault. The rajah had,
in the first place, wished to defend a strong gorge through which the
enemy would have to pass; this having hitherto been considered the
defensible point of his capital, against an invasion. Charlie pointed out,
however, that although no doubt a successful defence might be made here,
it would only be a repulse, which would leave the enemy but little
weakened for further operations. He argued that it was better to allow
them to advance to the point where the valley opened out into a plain,
some two miles wide. He had no doubt whatever that the rajah's troops
would be able to inflict a crushing defeat upon the invaders, who would be
so disheartened, thereby, that they would be little likely to renew the
attack.
Two bodies of troops, each three hundred strong, were sent down to the
gorge, with orders to remain in hiding among the heights, to allow the
invading army to pass unmolested, and then to inflict the greatest
possible loss upon them, as they returned. These were under the command of
another of Charlie's lieutenants, who received orders from him to erect
breastworks of rock on the slopes above the entrance to the gorge, after
the enemy had passed on; and to line these with a portion of his men, who
should pour a heavy fire into the enemy as they came down the valley;
while the rest were to line the heights above the gorge, and to roll down
rocks upon those who passed through the fire of their comrades.
The uniforms were served out to the soldiers, and Charlie surveyed,
with pride, the five battalions of trained troops which, with twelve guns,
marched down into the valley and took up their post beyond it, at a point
which he had carefully chosen, where the guns of the castle would be able
to play upon an advancing body of troops. A body of trained artillerymen
were told off for this service, and the last-raised levies were posted in
the castle and on the walls of the town.
The position was so chosen that the flanks of the line rested on the
slopes on either side. These were broken by inclosures and gardens; into
which, on either side, half a battalion was thrown forward, so as to
deliver a flanking fire upon an enemy advancing against the centre. Across
the valley, two hundred yards in front of the position, the stream which
watered it made a sharp turn, running for some distance directly across
it, and several small canals for the irrigation of the fields rendered the
ground wet and swampy. Across the line occupied by his troops, a
breastwork had been thrown up, and in front of this rows of sharp-pointed
stakes had been stuck in the ground. Altogether, the position was a
formidable one.
An hour or two after the position so carefully prepared had been taken
up, large bodies of Mahratta horse were seen dashing up the valley, and
smoke rising from several points showed that they had begun their usual
work, of plundering and destroying the villages on their way. A few
discharges from the field pieces--those in the castle had been ordered to
be silent until the raising of a white flag gave them the signal to open
fire--checked the advance of the horsemen, and these waited until their
infantry should arrive.
The force of Murari Reo was, at that time, the most formidable of any
purely native army of Southern India. Recruited from desperadoes from all
the Mahratta tribes, well disciplined by its leader, it had more than once
fought, without defeat, against bodies of Europeans; while it had, in all
cases, obtained easy victories over other native armies.
Presently the horsemen opened, and a compact body of three thousand
Mahratta infantry, accompanied by an equal number of the irregulars of the
rajah's brother, advanced to the attack; while the cavalry at their sides
swept down upon the flanks of the rajah's position, and thirty pieces of
artillery opened fire.
Not a shot was fired in return, Charlie ordering his men to lie down
behind the breastworks, until they received the word of command to show
themselves. The Mahratta horsemen, compelled by the bends of the stream to
keep near the foot of the slopes, came forward in gallant style; until
suddenly, from every wall and every clump of bushes on the slopes above
them, a tremendous fire of musketry broke out, while the twelve field
guns, six of which were posted on either side of Charlie's centre, poured
a destructive fire into them. So deadly was the rain of iron and lead that
the Mahratta horsemen instantly drew bridle and, leaving the ground strewn
with their dead, galloped back.
By this time the infantry, covered by the fire of their artillery, had
reached the stream. This was waist deep, and the banks were some two feet
above its level. As they scrambled up after crossing it, from the line of
embankment in front of them a tremendous fire was opened. Although mowed
down in scores, the seasoned warriors of the Mahratta chief, cheered on by
his voice as, recklessly exposing himself, he rode among them, pressed
forward. Ever increasing numbers gained a footing across the stream, those
in front keeping up a heavy fire at the breastwork, whose face was
ploughed by their cannon shot.
As they advanced the guns of the castle opened fire, not upon those in
front, for these were too near the line of entrenchment, but upon the
struggling mass still crossing the stream, into which a ceaseless fire of
musketry was poured from the slopes on their flanks. Still the Mahratta
infantry struggled bravely on, until within a few yards of the
entrenchments. Then, suddenly, with a mighty shout, the rajah's troops
leaped to their feet, poured a volley from the crest of the breastwork
into the enemy; and then, with fixed bayonets, flung themselves upon them.
The effect was decisive. The Mahrattas had, at the commencement of the
fight, scarcely outnumbered the troops of the rajah in front of them, and
had derived but little assistance from the levies of their ally; who,
indeed, had contented themselves with keeping up a fire upon the defenders
of the slopes. They had already suffered very severely, and the charge
made upon them, along the whole line, was irresistible.
Before the bayonets crossed they broke and fled, hotly pursued by the
troops of the rajah. These, in accordance with Charlie's orders, did not
scatter, but kept in a close line, four deep, which advanced, pouring
tremendous volleys into their foe.
In vain did Murari Reo endeavour to rally his men. His infantry, all
order lost, fled at the top of their speed, their flight covered by their
cavalry, who sacrificed themselves in two or three brilliant charges,
right up to the line of pursuers, although suffering terribly from the
withering volleys poured into their ranks.
The troops were now formed into heavy columns, and these rapidly
marched down the valley, after their flying enemy. An hour later, the
sound of heavy firing was heard in front, and at redoubled speed the
troops pressed onward. When they arrived, however, at the gorge, they
found that the last of the fugitives had passed through. The ground in
front was strewn with dead and dying, for as the mass of fugitives had
arrived at the gorge, the infantry from above had opened fire upon them.
Several times the frightened throng had recoiled, but at last, impelled by
the greater fear of their pursuers behind, they had dashed forward through
the fire, only to fall in hundreds in the gorge, crushed beneath the rain
of rocks showered down upon them from above.
Chapter 14: The Siege Of Ambur.
The victory was a complete and decisive one. A thousand of the best
troops of Murari Reo had fallen, besides some hundreds of their irregular
allies, whose loss was incurred almost wholly at the gorge in the retreat.
The rajah was in the highest state of delight at the splendid result,
obtained by the European training of his troops; and these, proud of their
victory over such formidable opponents, were full of enthusiasm for their
young English leader. The rejoicings in Ambur that night were great, and
all felt confident that the danger was at an end.
"What think you," the rajah said to Charlie, as, the long feast at an
end, they sat together in the divan, smoking their narghileys, "will be
the result, when the news of the defeat of Murari Reo reaches Hyderabad?"
"It is difficult to say," Charlie replied. "It is possible, of course,
that it may be considered that it is better to leave you in peace; but,
upon the other hand, it may be that they will consider that you are so
formidable a power, that it is absolutely necessary to crush you at once,
rather than to give you the chance of joining against them, in the war
which must sooner or later take place between them and the English. In
that case, it will be a very different affair from that which we have had
today.
"Still, I should send off a messenger tomorrow, to acquaint the nizam
with the defeat you inflicted upon the Mahrattas who have invaded you, to
assure him again of your loyalty, and to beg him to lay his authority upon
Murari Reo, not to renew the attack."
Ten days later a messenger arrived from the nizam, ordering the rajah
to repair, at once, to Hyderabad, to explain his conduct. The latter sent
back a message of humble excuses, saying that his health was so injured,
by the excitement of recent events, that he was unable to travel; but
that, when he recovered, he would journey to Hyderabad to lay his respects
at the feet of the nizam.
Two or three days later a messenger arrived from Mr. Saunders, with a
letter to Charlie. In this he expressed his great satisfaction at the
defeat Murari Reo had received; a defeat which would, for some time, keep
him quiet, and so relieve the strain upon the English. Affairs had, he
said, since the departure of Clive for England, been going badly. Dupleix
had received large reinforcements, and the English had suffered several
reverses. Mr. Saunders begged him to assure the rajah of the respect and
friendship of England, and to give him the promise that, if he should be
driven from his capital, he would be received with all honor at Madras,
and should be reinstated in his dominions, with much added territory, when
the English were again in a position to take the field in force, and to
settle their long feud with the French.
Ten days later, they heard that the army of the nizam, of fifteen
thousand troops, with eight hundred French under Bussy, were marching
against them; and that the horsemen of Murari Reo were devastating the
villages near the frontier. A council of war was held. Charlie would fain
have fought in the open again, believing that his trained troops, flushed
with their recent victory, would be a match even for the army of the nizam.
But the rajah and the rest of the council, alarmed at the presence of the
French troops, who had hitherto proved invincible against vastly superior
forces of natives, shrank from such a course; and it was decided that they
should content themselves with the defence of the town and castle.
Orders were accordingly issued that the old men, the women, and
children should at once leave the town; and, under guard of one battalion
of troops, take refuge in an almost impregnable hill fort some miles away.
One battalion was placed in garrison in the castle. The other three, with
the irregulars, took post in the town, whence they could, if necessary,
retreat into the castle.
The day following the removal of the noncombatants the enemy appeared,
coming down the valley, having marched over the hills; while the Mahratta
cavalry again poured up from below.
Charlie had taken the command of the town, as it was against this that
the efforts of the enemy would be first directed. It was an imposing
sight, as the army of the nizam wound down the valley; the great masses of
men with their gay flags, the elephants with the gold embroidery of their
trappings glistening in the sun, the bands of horsemen careering here and
there, the lines of artillery drawn by bullocks; and, less picturesque but
far more menacing, the dark body of French infantry, who formed the
nucleus and heart of the whole. The camp was pitched just out of range of
the guns of the fort, and soon line after line of tents, gay with the
flags that floated above them, rose across the valley.
Charlie had mounted to the castle, the better to observe the movements
of the enemy, and he presently saw a small body of horsemen ride out of
the camp, and mount the hillside across the valley. A glass showed that
some of these were native officers, while others were in the dark uniform
of the French.
"I have no doubt," Charlie said to the rajah, "that is the nizam
himself, with Bussy, gone up to reconnoitre the position. I wonder how he
likes the look of it. I wish we could have turfed the battery above, and
the newly stripped land. We might, in that case, have given them a
pleasant surprise. As it is, they are hardly likely to begin by an attack
along the slopes in the rear of the town, and you will see that they will
commence the attack at the farther face of the town. The battery above
cannot aid us in our defence there; and although the castle may help, it
will only be by a direct fire. If they try to carry the place by a coup de
main, I think we can beat them off, but they must succeed by regular
approaches.
"We must inflict as much loss as we can, and then fall back. However,
it will be sometime before that comes."
The next morning, Charlie found that the enemy had, during the night,
erected three batteries on the slopes facing the north wall of the town,
that farthest removed from the castle. They at once opened fire, and the
guns on the walls facing them replied, while those on the castle hurled
their shot over the town into the enemy's battery. For three days, the
artillery fire was kept up without intermission. The guns on the wall were
too weak to silence the batteries of the besiegers, although these were
much annoyed by the fire from the fort, which dismounted four of their
guns, and blew up one of their magazines. Several times the town was set
on fire by the shell from the French mortars; but Charlie had organized
the irregulars into bands with buckets, and these succeeded in
extinguishing the flames before they spread.
Seeing that the mud wall of the town was crumbling rapidly before the
besiegers' fire, Charlie set his troops to work, and levelled every house
within fifty yards of it, and with the stones and beams formed barricades
across the end of the streets beyond. Many of the guns from other portions
of the walls were removed, and placed on these barricades. The ends of the
houses were loopholed, and all was prepared for a desperate defence.
Charlie's experience at Arcot stood him in good stead, and he imitated
the measures taken by Clive at that place. When these defences were
completed, he raised a second line of barricades some distance further
back; and here, when the assault was expected, he placed one of his
battalions, with orders that, if the inner line of entrenchments was
carried, they should allow all the defenders of that post to pass through,
and then resist until the town was completely evacuated, when they were to
fall back upon the fort. He had, however, little fear that his position
would be taken at the first assault.
Upon the evening of the third day, the besiegers' fire had done its
work, and a gap in the wall some eighty yards wide was formed. The
garrison were ordered to hold themselves in readiness, and a strict watch
was set.
Towards morning, a distant hum in the nizam's camp proclaimed that the
troops were mustering for the assault. The besiegers' guns had continued
their fire all night, to prevent working parties from placing obstacles in
the breach. As the first shades of daylight appeared the fire ceased, and
a great column of men poured forward to the assault.
The few remaining guns upon the end wall opened upon them, as did the
infantry who lined the parapet, while the guns in the castle at once
joined in. The mighty column, however, composed of the troops of the nizam,
pressed forward, poured over the fragments of the wall, and entered the
clear space behind it.
Then, from housetop and loophole, and from the walls on either side, a
concentrated fire of musketry was poured upon them, while twelve guns,
four on each barricade, swept them with grape. The head of the column
withered away under the fire, long lines were swept through the crowded
mass; and, after a minute or two's wild firing at their concealed foes,
the troops of the nizam, appalled and shattered by the tremendous fire,
broke and fled.
The instant they had cleared the breach, the guns of the besiegers
again opened furiously upon it, to check any sortie which the besieged
might attempt.
An hour later, the besiegers hoisted a white flag, and requested to be
allowed to bury their dead, and remove their wounded. This Charlie agreed
to, with the proviso that these should be carried by his own men beyond
the breach, as he did not wish that the enemy should have an opportunity
of examining the internal defences. The task occupied some time, as more
than five hundred dead and dying lay scattered in the open space.
During the rest of the day, the enemy showed no signs of resuming the
assault. During the night they could be heard hard at work, and although a
brisk fire was kept up to hinder them, Charlie found that they had pushed
trenches, from the batteries, a considerable distance round each corner of
the town.
For four days the besiegers worked vigorously, harassed as they were by
the guns of the fort, and by those of the battery high up on the hillside,
which were now able to take in flank the works across the upper angle of
the town. At the end of that time, they had erected and armed two
batteries, which at daylight opened upon the walls which formed the flanks
of the clear space behind the breach. Although suffering heavily from the
fire of the besieged, and losing many men, these batteries kept up their
fire unceasingly, night and day, until great gaps had been made in the
walls, and Charlie was obliged to withdraw his troops from them, behind
the line of barricades.
During this time the fire of the batteries in front had been unceasing,
and had destroyed most of the houses which formed the connecting line
between the barricades. Each night, however, the besieged worked to repair
damages, and to fill up the gaps thus formed with piles of stones and
beams, so that, by the end of the fourth day after the repulse of the
first assault, a line of barricades stretched across the line of defence.
The enemy, this time, prepared to attack by daylight, and early in the
morning the whole army of the nizam marched to the assault. Heedless of
the fire of the castle, they formed up in a long line of heavy masses,
along the slope. One huge column moved forward against the main breach,
two advanced obliquely towards the great gaps in the walls on either side.
The latter columns were each headed by bodies of French troops.
In vain the guns of the fort, aided by those of the battery on the
hill, swept them. The columns advanced without a check until they entered
the breaches. Then a line of fire swept along the crest of the barricade
from end to end, and the cannon of the besieged roared out. Pressed by the
mass from behind, the columns advanced, torn and rent by the fire, and at
last gained the foot of the barricade.
Here, those in front strove desperately to climb up the great mound of
rubbish, while those behind covered them with a storm of bullets aimed at
its summit. More than once the troops of the rajah, rushing down the
embankment, drove back the struggling masses, but so heavily did they
suffer from the fire, when they thus exposed themselves, that Charlie
forbade them to repeat the attempt. He knew that there was safety behind,
and was unwilling that his brave fellows should throw away their lives.
In the centre of the position the native troops, although they several
times climbed some distance up the barricade, were yet unable to make way.
But the French troops at the flanks were steadily forcing their way up.
Many had climbed up by the ruins of the wall, and from its top were firing
down on the defenders of the barricade. Inch by inch they won their way up
the barricade, already thickly covered with dead; and then Charlie, seeing
that his men were beginning to waver, gave the signal.
The long blast of a trumpet was heard even above the tremendous din. In
an instant the barricades were deserted, and the defenders rushed into the
houses. The partition walls between these on the lower floors had already
been knocked down, and without suffering from the heavy fire which the
assailants opened, as soon as they gained the crest of the barricade, the
defenders retreated along these covered ways until in rear of the second
line of defence.
This was held by the battalion placed there, until the whole of the
defenders of the town had left it, by the gate leading up to the fort.
Then Charlie withdrew this battalion also, and the town remained in the
hands of the enemy; who had lost, Charlie reckoned, fully fifteen hundred
men in the assault.
During the fight Tim and the faithful Hossein, now fully recovered and
promoted to the rank of an officer, had remained close beside him; and
were, with him, the last to leave the town.
The instant the evacuation was complete, the guns of the hill battery
opened upon the town; and a tremendous fire of musketry was poured upon it
from every point of the castle which commanded it; while the guns, which
from their lofty elevation, could not be depressed sufficiently to bear
upon the town, directed their fire upon the bodies of troops still beyond
the walls. The enemy had captured the town, indeed, but its possession
aided them but little in their assault upon the fort. The only advantage
it gave them, would have been that it would have enabled them to attack
the lower gate of the fort, protected by its outer wall from the fire of
the hill battery. Charlie had, however, perceived that this would be the
case, and had planted a number of mines under the wall at this point.
These were exploded when the defenders of the town entered the fort, and a
hundred yards of the wall were thus destroyed; leaving the space, across
which the enemy must advance to the attack of the gate, exposed to the
fire of the hill battery, as well as of the numerous guns of the fort
bearing upon it.
Two days passed without any further operations on the part of the
enemy; and then Bussy, seeing that nothing whatever could be done towards
assaulting the fortress, so long as the battery remained in the hands of
the besieged, determined to make a desperate effort to carry it, ignorant
of its immense strength. At night, therefore, he ordered two bodies of
men, each fifteen hundred strong, to mount the hillside, far to the right
and left of the town; to move along at the foot of the wall of rock, and
to carry the battery by storm at daybreak.
Charlie, believing that such an attempt would be made, had upon the day
following the fall of the town taken his post there, and had ordered a
most vigilant watch to be kept up, each night; placing sentries some
hundred yards away, on either side, to give warning of the approach of an
enemy.
Towards daybreak on the third morning a shot upon the left, followed a
few seconds later by one on the right, told that the enemy were
approaching. A minute or two afterwards the sentries ran in, climbed from
the ditch by ladders which had been placed there for the purpose, and,
hauling these up after them, were soon in the battery, with the news that
large bodies of the enemy were approaching on either flank. Scarcely were
the garrison at their posts, when the French were seen approaching. At
once they broke into a run, and, gallantly led, dashed across the space of
cleared rock, in spite of the heavy fire of musketry and grape.
When they came, however, to the edge of the deep gulf in the solid
rock, they paused. They had had no idea of meeting with such an obstacle
as this. It was easy enough to leap down, but impossible to climb up the
steep face, ten feet high, in front of them; and which, in the dim light,
could be plainly seen. It was, however, impossible for those in front to
pause. Pressed upon by those behind, who did not know what was stopping
them, large numbers were compelled to jump into the trench, where they
found themselves unable either to advance or retreat.
By this time, every gun on the upper side of the castle had opened on
the assailing columns, taking them in flank, while the fire of the battery
was continued without a moment's intermission. Bussy himself, who was
commanding one of the columns, pushed his way through his struggling
soldiers to the edge of the trench; when, seeing the impossibility of
scaling the sides, unprovided as he was with scaling ladders, he gave the
orders to retreat; and the columns, harassed by the flanking fire of the
guns of the castle, and pursued by that of the battery, retreated, having
lost some hundreds of their number; besides a hundred and fifty of their
best men, prisoners in the deep trench around the battery.
These were summoned to surrender; and, resistance being impossible,
they at once laid down their arms. Ladders were lowered to them, and they
were marched as prisoners to the fort.
The next morning, when the defenders of the fortress looked over the
valley, the great camp was gone. The nizam and Bussy, despairing of the
possibility of carrying the position, at once so enormously strong by
nature, and so gallantly defended, had raised the siege; which had cost
them over two thousand of their best soldiers, including two hundred
French killed and prisoners, and retreated to the plateau of the Deccan.
The exultation of the rajah and his troops was unbounded. They felt
that, now and henceforth, they were safe from another invasion; and the
rajah saw that, in the future, he should be able to gain greatly increased
territory, as the ally of the English. His gratitude to Charlie was
unbounded, and he literally loaded him with costly presents.
Three weeks later, a letter was received by the latter from Mr.
Saunders, congratulating him upon the inestimable service which he had
rendered, and appointing him to the rank of captain in the Company's
service. Now that the rajah would be able to protect himself, should any
future assault be made upon him--an event most unlikely to happen, as
Bussy and the nizam would be unwilling to risk a repetition of a defeat,
which had already so greatly injured their prestige--he had better return
to Madras, where, as Mr. Saunders said, the services of so capable an
officer were greatly needed. He warned him, however, to be careful in the
extreme how he made his way back, as the country was in a most disturbed
state, the Mahratta bands being everywhere out plundering and burning.
Subsequent information, that the Mahrattas were swarming in the plains
below, determined Charlie to accept an offer which the rajah made him;
that he should, under a strong escort, cross the mountains, and make his
way to a port on the west coast, in the state of a friendly rajah, where
he would be able to take ship and coast round to Madras. The rajah
promised to send Charlie's horses and other presents down to Madras, when
an opportunity should offer; and Charlie, accompanied by the four Sepoys,
all of whom had been promoted to the rank of officers; by Tim Kelly and
Hossein, who would not separate himself a moment from his side, started
from Ambur, with an escort of thirty horsemen.
The rajah was quite affected at the parting; and the army, which he had
formed and organized, paraded before him for the last time, and then
shouted their farewell.
Charlie himself, although glad to return among his countrymen, from
whom he had been nearly two years separated, was yet sorry to leave the
many friends he had made. His position was now a very different one from
that which he held when he left Madras. Then he was a newly made
lieutenant, who had distinguished himself, indeed, under Clive, but who
was as yet unknown save to his commander, and who was as poor as when he
had landed, eighteen months before, in India. Now he had gained a name for
himself, and his successful defence of Ambur had been of immense service
to the Company. He was, too, a wealthy man; for the presents in money,
alone, of the rajah, had amounted to over twenty-five thousand pounds; a
sum which, in these days, may appear extraordinary, but which was small to
that frequently bestowed, by wealthy native princes, upon British officers
who had done them a good service. Clive himself, after his short campaign,
had returned to England with a far larger sum.
For several days, the party rode through the hills without incident;
and on the fifth day they saw, stretched at their feet, a rich flat
country dotted with villages, beyond which extended the long blue line of
the sea. The distance was greater than Charlie imagined, and 'twas only
after two days' long ride that he reached Calicut, where he was received
with great honor by the rajah, to whom the leader of the escort brought
letters of introduction from the Rajah of Ambur.
For four days Charlie remained as his guest, and then took a passage in
a large native vessel, bound for Ceylon, whence he would have no
difficulty in obtaining passage to Madras.
These native ships are very high out of water, rising considerably
towards the stem and stern, and in form they somewhat resemble the Chinese
junk; but are without the superabundance of grotesque painting, carving,
and gilding which distinguish the latter. The rajah accompanied Charlie to
the shore, and a salute was fired, by his followers, in honor of the
departure of the guest.
The weather was lovely, and the clumsy craft, with all sail set, was
soon running down the coast. When they had sailed some hours from Calicut,
from behind a headland, four vessels suddenly made their appearance. They
were lower in the water, and much less clumsy in appearance than the
ordinary native craft, and were propelled not only by their sails, but by
a number of oars on each side.
No sooner did the captain and crew of the ship behold these vessels,
than they raised a cry of terror and despair. The captain, who was part
owner of the craft, ran up and down the deck like one possessed, and the
sailors seemed scarcely less terrified.
"What on earth is the matter?" Charlie exclaimed. "What vessels are
those, and why are you afraid of them?"
"Tulagi Angria! Tulagi Angria!" the captain cried, and the crew took up
the refrain.
The name that they uttered fully accounted for their terror.
Sivagi, the founder of the Mahratta Empire, had, in 1662, seized and
fortified Yijiyadrug; or, as the English call it, Gheriah, a town at the
mouth of the river Kanui, one hundred and seventy miles south of Bombay;
and also the island of Suwarndrug, about half way between Gheriah and
Bombay. Here he established a piratical fleet. Fifty years later, Kanhagi
Angria, the commander of the Mahratta fleet, broke off this connection
with the successors of Sivagi, and set up as a pirate on his own account.
Kanhagi not only plundered the native vessels, but boldly preyed upon the
commerce of the European settlements. The ships of the East India Company,
the French Company, and the Dutch were frequently captured by these
pirates.
Tulagi Angria, who succeeded his father, was even bolder and more
successful; and when the man-of-war brig, the Restoration, with twenty
guns and two hundred men, was fitted out to attack him, he defeated and
captured her. After this, he attacked and captured the French man-of-war
Jupitre, with forty guns; and had even the insolence to assail an English
convoy guarded by two men-of-war; the Vigilant, of sixty-four guns, and
the Ruby, of fifty.
The Dutch, in 1735, sent a fleet of seven ships of war, two bomb
vessels, and a strong body of troops against Gheriah. The attack was,
however, repulsed with considerable loss. From that date the pirates grew
bolder and bolder, and were a perfect scourge to the commerce of Western
India.
Charlie Marryat had, of course, frequently heard of the doings of these
noted pirates, and the cry of "Tulagi Angria" at once explained to him the
terror of the master and crew.
"What is it, Mr. Charles, what on earth is the botheration about? Is it
the little ships they're afeared of?"
"Those ships belong to a pirate called Tulagi Angria," Charlie said,
"and I am very much afraid, Tim, that we are likely to see the inside of
his fortress."
"But shure, yer honor, we're not afeared of those four little boats."
"We are, Tim, and very much afraid, too. Each of those boats, as you
call them, carries four or five times as many men as this ship. They are
well armed, while we have only those two little guns, which are useless
except for show. If the crew were Englishmen, we might attempt a defence,
although even then the odds would be terribly against us; but with these
natives, it is hopeless to think of it, and the attempt would only ensure
our throats being cut."
It was clear that the idea of resistance did never even enter the minds
of the crew of the trader. Some ran to and fro, with gesticulations and
cries of despair. Some threw themselves upon the deck of the vessel, tore
their hair, and rolled as if in convulsions. Some sat down quietly, with
the air of apathetic resignation, with which the natives of India are used
to meet what they consider the inevitable.
Hossein, who, at the first alarm, had bounded to his feet with his hand
on his knife, subsided into an attitude of indifference, when he saw that
Charlie did not intend making any defence.
"It's mighty lucky," Tim said, "that yer honor left all your presents
to be forwarded to Madras. I thought you were wrong, Mr. Charles, when you
advised me to send them thousand rupees the rajah gave me, along with your
money. A hundred pounds wasn't a sum that Tim Kelly was likely to handle
again in a hurry, and it went agin the grain with me, to part with them
out of my hands. Sure and it's well I took yer honor's advice."
The four Sepoy officers also exchanged a few words with Charlie. They,
too, would have resisted, had he given the word, hopeless though the
effort would have been. But they acquiesced, at once, in his decision.
They had little to lose; but the thought of a prolonged captivity, and of
being obliged, perhaps, to enter the service of the Mahratta freebooters,
just when about to return to their wives and families at Madras, was a
terrible blow to them.
"Keep up your spirits," Charlie said. "It is a bad business, but we
must hope for the best. If we bide our time, we may see some chance of
escape. You had better lay down your arms in a pile, here. Then we will
sit down quietly, and await their coming on board. They will be here in a
minute, now."
Scarcely had the seven passengers taken their seats in a group, on the
poop, when the freebooters ranged alongside, and swarmed over the sides
onto the deck. Beyond bestowing a few kicks upon the crew, they paid no
attention whatever to them; but tore off the hatches, and at once
proceeded to investigate the contents of the hold. The greater portion of
this consisted of native grains, but there were several bales of
merchandise, consigned by traders at Calicut for Ceylon. The cargo was, in
fact, rather more valuable than that generally found in a native coaster,
and the pirates were satisfied.
The leader of the party, leaving to his followers the task of examining
the hold, walked towards the group on the poop. They rose at his approach.
"Who are you?" the Mahratta asked.
"I am an officer in the English Company's service," Charlie said, "as
are these five natives. The other Englishman is a soldier, under my
orders."
"Good," the Mahratta said, emphatically. "Tulagi Angria will be glad to
have you. When your people capture any of our men, which is not often,
they hang them. Tulagi is glad to have people he can hang, too."
After being stripped of any small valuables on their persons, the
captives were taken on board one of the pirate boats. A score of the
Mahrattas remained in charge of the trader. Her head was turned north,
and, accompanied by the four Mahratta boats, she proceeded up the coast
again. Another trader was captured on the way, but two others evaded the
pirates, by running into the port of Calicut.
The trader was a slow sailer, and they were eight days before they
approached Gheriah. Early in the morning a heavy cannonade was heard in
the distance, causing the greatest excitement among the Mahrattas. Every
sail was hoisted, the sweeps got out and, leaving the trader to jog along
in their rear, the four light craft made their way rapidly along the
coast. The firing became heavier and heavier, and as it became light,
three large ships could be seen, about two miles ahead, surrounded by a
host of smaller craft.
"That's a big fight, Mr. Charles," Tim exclaimed. "It reminds me of
three big bulls in a meadow, attacked by a host of little curs."
"It does, Tim; but the curs can bite. What a fire they are keeping up.
But those warships ought to thrash any number of them. Count the ports, I
can see them now."
"The biggest one," Tim said, "has got twenty-five."
"Yes; and the others eighteen and nine. They are two frigates, one of
fifty and the other of thirty-six guns; and a sloop of eighteen. I can't
make out the colours, but I don't think they're English."
"They're not English, yer honor," Tim said confidently, "or they would
soon make an end of them varmint that's tormenting them."
The scene, as the boats approached, was very exciting. The three ships
were pouring their broadsides, without intermission, into the pirate
fleet. This consisted of vessels of all sizes, from the Jupitre and
Restoration, down to large rowing galleys. Although many were sunk, and
more greatly damaged by the fire of the Dutch, they swarmed round the
great ships with wonderful tenacity; and, while the larger vessels fought
their guns against those of the men-of-war, the smaller ones kept close to
them, avoiding as much as possible their formidable broadsides, but
keeping up a perpetual musketry fire at their bulwarks and tops, throwing
stink pots, and shooting burning arrows through the ports; and getting
alongside under the muzzles of the guns, and trying to climb up into the
ports.
The four newly arrived craft joined in the fray.
"This is mighty unpleasant, yer honor," Tim said, as a shot from one of
the Dutch men-of-war struck the craft they were in, crashing a hole
through her bulwarks, and laying five or six of her crew upon the deck,
killed or wounded by the splinters. "Here we are, in the middle of a fight
in which we've no consarn whatever, and which is carried on without asking
our will or pleasure; and we are as likely to be killed by a Christian
shot, as these hathen niggers.
"Hear them yell, yer honor. A faction fight's nothing to it. Look, yer
honor, look! There's smoke curling up from a hatchway of the big ship. If
they haven't set her afire!"
It was as Tim said. A cloud of black smoke was rising from the Dutch
fifty-gun frigate. A wild yell of triumph broke from the Mahrattas. The
fire of their guns upon her redoubled, while that from the man-of-war died
away, as the crew were called off to assist in extinguishing the flames.
Now the smaller boats pressed still more closely round her, and a rain of
missiles was poured through the open ports. Several times the Mahrattas
climbed on board, but each time were driven out again. The smoke rose
thicker and thicker, and tongues of flame could be seen shooting up.
"She is doomed," Charlie exclaimed. "Even if unmolested, the crew could
not extinguish the fire, now. It has got too much hold.
"Ah! The other frigate is on fire now."
Fresh yells of triumph rose from the Mahrattas. On board the sloop
every sail was hoisted, in spite of the continued fire of muskets and
arrows, which killed many of the sailors employed. The Jupitre, however,
ran alongside her and grappled with her, and a furious combat could be
seen proceeding on the decks. Meanwhile, the flames mounted higher and
higher on board the two frigates. The crew now could be seen leaping
overboard from the ports, choosing any death rather than that by fire.
It was but a choice. Many were drowned, the rest cut or shot down by
the Mahrattas. Down came the Dutch flag, fluttering from the masthead of
the sloop, and the wild Mahratta yell proclaimed that the victory was
everywhere complete.
The frigates were now a sheet of flames, and the Mahratta craft drew
away from them; until, with two tremendous explosions, their magazines
blew up and they sank beneath the waters.
"I should scarcely have believed it possible," Charlie said, "that
three fine ships of war, mounting a hundred and four guns, could be
destroyed by a fleet of pirates, however numerous. Well, Tim, there is no
doubt that these natives can fight, when well led. It is just as well, you
see, that we did not attempt to offer any resistance, in that clumsy craft
we were on board."
"You're right there, yer honor. They would have aten us up in five
minutes. It makes my heart bleed, to think of the sailors of those two
fine ships. I don't believe that a soul has escaped; but in the small one,
some may have been taken prisoners."
When the fight was over, the craft in which were the captives ran
alongside the flagship of the pirate leader, and the captain reported to
him the capture he had made. Fortunately, Tulagi Angria was in a high
state of delight, at the victory he had just won; and, instead of ordering
them to be instantly executed, he told the captain to take them on to
Suwarndrug, and to imprison them there until his arrival. He himself, with
the rest of his fleet, and the captured Dutch sloop, sailed into Gheriah;
and the craft, in which Charlie and his companions were imprisoned,
continued her course to the island stronghold of the pirates.
Suwarndrug was built on a rocky island. It lay within gunshot of the
shore. Here, when Kanhagi Angria had first revolted from the authority of
the Mahratta kingdom, the ruler of the Deccan had caused three strong
forts to be built, in order to reduce the island fort. The pirates,
however, had taken the initiative, and had captured these forts; as well
as the whole line of seacoast, a hundred and twenty miles in length; and
the country behind, twenty or thirty miles broad, extending to the foot of
the mountains.
On their arrival at Suwarndrug, the prisoners were handed over to the
governor, and were imprisoned in one of the casemates of the fort. The
next day, they were taken out and ordered to work; and, for weeks, they
laboured at the fortifications, with which the pirates were strengthening
their already naturally strong position. The labour was very severe, but
it was a consolation to the captives that they were kept together.
By Charlie's advice they exerted themselves to the utmost, and thus
succeeded in pleasing their masters, and in escaping with but a small
share of the blows, which were liberally distributed among other
prisoners, native and European, employed upon the work. Charlie, indeed,
was appointed as a sort of overseer; having under him not only his own
party, but thirty others, of whom twenty were natives, and ten English
sailors, who had been captured in a merchantman. Although closely watched,
he was able to cheer these men, by giving them a hope that a chance of
escape from their captivity might shortly arrive. All expressed their
readiness to run any risk to regain their liberty.
From what he heard the pirates say, Charlie learned that they were
expecting an attack from an expedition which was preparing at Bombay. The
English sailors were confined in a casemate, adjoining that occupied by
Charlie and his companions. The guard kept over them was but nominal, as
it was considered impossible that they could escape from the island, off
which lay a large fleet of the pirate vessels.
One morning upon starting to work they perceived, by the stir in the
fortress, that something unusual was taking place; and presently, on
reaching the rampart, they saw in the distance a small squadron
approaching. They could make out that it consisted of a ship of forty-four
guns, one of sixteen, and two bomb vessels, together with a fleet of
native craft.
The pirate fleet were all getting up sail.
"It's a bold thing, Tim, to attack this fortress with only two ships,
when the pirates have lately beaten a Dutch squadron mounting double the
number of guns."
"Ah, yer honor, but then there is the Union Jack floating at the
masthead. Do you think the creeturs don't know the differ?"
"But the Dutchmen are good sailors, and fought well, Tim. I think the
difference is that in the last case they attacked the Dutch, while in the
present we are attacking them. It makes all the difference in the world,
with Indians. Let them attack you, and they'll fight bravely enough. Go
right at them, and they're done for.
"Look, the pirate fleet are already sailing away."
"And do you think the English will take the fort, yer honor?"
"I don't know, Tim. The place is tremendously strong, and built on a
rock. There are guns which bear right down on the ships, if they venture
in close, while theirs will do but little damage to these solidly built
walls. Suwarndrug ought to resist a fleet ten times as strong as that
before us."
"Shure then, yer honor, and will we have to remain here all our lives,
do ye think?"
"No, Tim, I hope not. Besides, I think that we ought to be able to
render some assistance to them."
"And how will we do it, yer honor? You have but to spake the word, and
Tim Kelly is ready to go through fire and water; and so is Hossein. Ye may
be shure of that."
Seeing that the pirates were now mustering round their guns, and that
the ships were ranging up for action, Charlie thought it prudent to
retire. Hitherto no attention had been paid to them, but 'twas probable
enough that, when the pirates' blood became heated by the fight, they
would vent their fury upon their captives. He therefore advised not only
the native officers, but the sailors, to retire to their casemates; which,
as the guns placed in them did not command the position taken up by the
ships, were at presented untenanted by any of the garrison.
Presently the noise of guns proclaimed that the engagement had begun.
The boom of the cannon of the ships was answered by an incessant fire from
the far more numerous artillery of the fortress, while now and then a
heavy explosion, close at hand, told of the bursting of the bombs from the
mortar vessels, in the fortress.
Charlie had been thinking of the best measures to be taken, to aid his
friends, ever since the squadron came in sight; and, after sitting quietly
for half an hour, he called his officers around him.
"I am convinced," he said, "that if unaided from within, the ships will
have no chance whatever of taking this fortress; but I think that we may
help them. The upper fort, which contains the magazine, commands the whole
of the interior. But its guns do not bear upon the ships where they are
anchored. Probably the place, at present, is almost deserted. As no one
pays any attention to us, I propose, with Tim Kelly and the ten English
sailors, to seize it. We can close the gate, and discharge the guns upon
the defenders of the sea face. We could not, of course, defend it for five
minutes if they attacked us; but we would threaten to blow up the
magazine, if they did so.
"I propose that, tomorrow morning, you four and Hossein shall strip to
your loincloths, and just before it becomes light go along the walls, and
stop up, with pieces of wood, the touch holes of as many of the cannon as
you can. It would not do to use nails, even if we had them. No one will
notice, in the dark, that you are not Mahrattas; and if you scatter about,
you may each manage to close up four or five guns, at least. It is, I
know, a desperate service, and if discovered you will be instantly killed.
But if it succeeds the pirates, scared by discovering, just as our ships
open fire, that a number of their guns are disabled; while we take them in
the rear, from the fort behind, may not improbably surrender at once. At
any rate, it's worth trying; and I, for one, would rather run the risk of
being killed, than be condemned to pass my life the slave of these
pirates, who may at any moment cut our throats, in case of any reverse
happening to them."
The four native officers at once stated their willingness to join in
the plan. Hossein did not consider any reply necessary. With him, it was a
matter of course to do whatever Charlie suggested.
The latter then went into the next casemate, and unfolded his plan to
the sailors, who heartily agreed to make an effort for their liberty.
The fire continued all day unabated; and at nightfall, when a man, as
usual, brought the captives food, he exultingly told them that no damage
whatever had been effected by the guns of the fleet.
In the evening, the party cut a number of pieces of wood; these,
measuring by the cannon in the casemate, they made of just sufficient size
and length to push down, with a slight effort, through the touch hole.
When pushed down to their full length, they touched the interior of the
cannon below, and were just level with the top of the touch hole. Thus, it
would be next to impossible to extricate them in a hurry. They might,
indeed, be broken and forced in by a solid punch, of the same size as the
touch hole; but this would take time, and would not be likely to occur, on
the moment, to the pirates.
The skewers, for this is what they resembled, were very strong and
tough; being made of slips of bamboo. The prisoners had all knives, which
they used for cutting their food. With these the work was accomplished.
Towards morning the five natives, with the skewers hidden away in their
loincloths, and their turbans twisted in Mahratta fashion, stole out from
the casemate. Charlie had ordered that, in case they should see that the
ships had drawn off from the position they occupied on the preceding day,
they should return without attempting to carry out their task.
He himself, with Tim, joined the sailors; and, first ascending the
ramparts and seeing that the ships were still at anchor, abreast of the
fort, he and his comrades strolled across the interior of the fort, in the
direction of the magazine. They did not keep together, nor did all move
directly towards the position which they wished to gain.
The place was already astir. Large numbers of the pirates thronged the
interior. Groups were squatted round fires, busy in cooking their
breakfasts. Numbers were coming from the magazine, with powder to fill up
the small magazines on the walls. Others, again, were carrying shot from
the pyramids of missiles, piled up here and there in the courtyard. None
paid any attention to the English prisoners.
Presently a dull boom was heard. There was a whistling sound; and with
a thud, followed by a loud explosion, a bomb fell and burst in the open
space.
This was the signal for action. The pirates, in a moment, hurried down
to the bastions overlooking the sea; and the Englishmen gathered, in a
group, near the entrance to the magazine. Besides their knives they had no
arms, but each had picked up two or three heavy stones.
A minute after the explosion of the shell, the cannonade of the ships
broke out. It was answered by only a few guns from the fortress, and yells
of astonishment and rage were heard to arise.
A moment later, five natives ran up to the group of Englishmen. Their
work had been well done, and more than three-fourths of the guns on the
sea face had been rendered temporarily useless.
Charlie gave the word, and with a rush they entered the upper fort.
There were but two or three men there, who were just hurrying out with
their bags of powder. These, before they realized the position, were
instantly knocked down and bound. The gate of the fort was then shut and
barred, and the party ran up to the bastion above.
Not a single pirate was to be seen there. The six guns, which stood
there, were at once loaded with grape; and a heavy discharge was poured
into the crowded masses of pirates, upon the bastions on the sea face.
These, already greatly disturbed at finding that most of their guns had,
in some way, been rendered useless; were panic stricken at this sudden and
unexpected attack from the rear. Many of them broke from their guns and
fled to shelter, others endeavoured to turn their cannon to bear upon the
magazine.
The wildest confusion raged. At last some of their leaders rallied the
men; and, with yells of fury, a rush was made towards the magazine. They
were received with another discharge of grape, which took terrible effect.
Many recoiled, but their leaders, shouting to them that the guns were
discharged, and there were but a dozen men there, led them on again.
Charlie leaped upon the edge of the parapet, and shouted:
"If you attack us, we will blow up the magazine. I have but to lift my
hand, and the magazine will be fired."
The boldest of the assailants were paralysed by the threat. Confusion
reigned throughout the fortress. The fleet kept up their fire with great
vigour; judging, by the feebleness of the reply, that something unusual
must be happening within the walls. The gunners, disheartened by finding
their pieces useless, and unable to extract the wooden plugs, while
Charlie's men continued to ply them with grape, left their guns and, with
the greater portion of the garrison, disorganized and panic stricken,
retired into shelter.
A shell from the ships, falling on to a thatched building, set it on
fire. The flames rapidly spread, and soon all the small huts occupied by
the garrison were in flames. The explosion of a magazine added to the
terror of the garrison, and the greater portion of them, with the women
and children, ran down to the water; and, taking boats, attempted to cross
to Fort Goa, on the mainland. They were, however, cut off by the English
boats, and captured.
Commodore James, who commanded the squadron, now directed his fire at
Fort Goa; which was being feebly attacked, on the land side, by a Mahratta
force; which had been landed from the Mahratta fleet, accompanying the
English ships, a few miles down the coast. The fort shortly surrendered;
but while the Mahrattas were marching to take possession, the governor,
with some of his best men, took boat and crossed over to the island; of
which, although the fire had ceased after the explosion of the magazine,
the English had not taken possession.
The fire from its guns again opened, and as Commodore James thought it
probable that the pirates would, in the night, endeavour to throw in large
reinforcements, he determined to carry it by storm. The ships opened fire
upon the walls; and, under cover of this, half the seamen were landed.
These ran up to the gate, and thundered at it with their axes.
Charlie and his companions aided the movement, by again opening a heavy
fire of grape upon the guns which bore upon the sally port; and when the
gates were forced the garrison, utterly dispirited by the crossfire to
which they were subjected, at once laid down their arms.
Commodore James was greatly astonished at the easy success which he had
gained. The extraordinary cessation of fire from the sea face, and the
sound of artillery within the walls, had convinced him that a mutiny among
the garrison must have taken place; but upon entering the fort he was
surprised, indeed, at being received with a hearty English cheer, from a
little body of men on the summit of an interior work. The gate of this was
at once thrown open, and Charlie, followed by his party, advanced towards
the commodore.
"I am Captain Marryat, sir, of the Company's service in Madras; and was
captured three months ago by these pirates. When you attacked the place,
yesterday, I arranged to effect a small diversion; and with the assistance
of these five native officers, of my soldier servant, here, and these ten
men of the merchant service, we have, I hope, been able to do so. The
native officers disabled the greater portion of the guns, during the
night; and when you opened fire this morning we seized this inner work,
which is also the magazine, and opened fire upon the rear of the sea
defences. By dint of our guns, and of menaces to blow up the place if they
assaulted it, we kept them at bay until their flag was hauled down."
"Then, sir," Commodore James said, warmly; "I have to thank you, most
heartily, for the assistance you have given. In fact, it is you who have
captured the fortress. I was by no means prepared to find it so strong;
and, indeed, had come to the conclusion, last night, that the force at my
command was wholly insufficient for its capture. Fortunately, I determined
to try the effect of another day's fire. But, had it not been for you,
this would assuredly have been as ineffectual as the first. You have,
indeed, performed a most gallant action; and I shall have great pleasure
in reporting your conduct to the authorities at home."
The sailors had now landed in considerable force. The garrison were
disarmed, and taken as prisoners on board the ships. Very large quantities
of powder were found, stored up, and strong parties at once began to form
mines, for the blowing up of the fortifications.
This was a labour of some days. When they were completed and charged, a
series of tremendous explosions took place. Many of the bastions were
completely blown to pieces. In others, the walls were shattered.
The prisoners were again landed, and set to work, aided by the sailors.
The great stones, which composed the walls, were toppled over the steep
faces of the rock on which the fort stood; and, at the end of a fortnight,
the pirate hold of Suwarndrug, which had so long been the terror of the
Indian Seas, had disappeared.
The fleet returned to Bombay; for it was, evidently, wholly
insufficient to attempt an assault on Gheriah; defended, as that place
would be, by the whole pirate fleet; which had, even without the
assistance of its guns, proved itself a match for a squadron double the
strength of that under the command of Commodore James.
The rejoicings at Bombay were immense, for enormous damage had been
inflicted on the commerce of that place, by this pirate hold, situated but
eighty miles from the port. Commodore James and his officers were feted,
and Charlie Marryat had his full share of honor; the gallant sailor,
everywhere, assigning to him the credit of its capture.
Charlie would now have sailed, at once, for Madras; but the authorities
wished him to remain, as Clive was shortly expected to arrive, with a
considerable force, which was destined to act against the French at
Hyderabad. The influence of Bussy, with the nizam, rendered this important
province little better than a French possession; and the territory of our
rivals, upon the seacoast, had been immensely increased by the grant of
the five districts, known as the Northern Sirdars, to Bussy.
It was all that the English could do to hold their own, around Madras;
and it was out of the question for them to think of attempting, single
handed, to dislodge Bussy from Hyderabad. Between the nizam, however, and
the Peishwar of the Deccan, there was a longstanding feud; and the Company
had proposed, to this prince, to aid him with a strong English force, in
an attack upon Hyderabad.
Colonel Scott had, in the first place, been sent out to command this
expedition; but when Clive, wearied with two years' life of inactivity in
England, applied to be appointed to active service, the directors at once
appointed him governor of Fort Saint David, and obtained for him the rank
of lieutenant colonel in the royal army. They directed him to sail at once
for Bombay, with three companies of the Royal Artillery, each a hundred
strong, and three hundred infantry recruits. Upon his arrival there, he
was to give Colonel Scott any assistance he required. That officer,
however, had died before Clive arrived.
Upon reaching Bombay, Clive found that events had occurred, in the
south, which would prevent the intended expedition from taking place. The
French government had suddenly recalled Dupleix, the great man whose
talent and statesmanship had sustained their cause. On his return to
France, instead of treating him with honor for the work he had done for
them, they even refused to repay him the large sums which he had advanced,
from his private fortune, to carry on the struggle against the English;
and Dupleix died in poverty and obscurity.
In his place, the French governor had sent out a man by the name of
Godchen, who was weak and wholly destitute of ability. At the time of his
arrival the English were hardly pressed, and a strong French fleet and
force were expected on the coast. When, however, Mr. Saunders proposed to
him a treaty of neutrality between the Indian possessions of the two
powers, he at once accepted it; and thus threw away all the advantages,
which Dupleix had struggled so hard to obtain. The result of this treaty,
however, was that the English were unable to carry out their proposed
alliance, with the peishwar, against the nizam and Bussy.
Upon Clive's arrival, Charlie at once reported himself to him. For a
time, however, no active duty was assigned to him, as it was uncertain
what steps would now be taken. Finally it was resolved that, taking
advantage of the presence of Clive and his troops, and of a squadron which
had arrived under Admiral Watson, the work commenced by Commodore James
should be completed, by the capture of Gheriah and the entire destruction
of the pirate power.
The peishwar had already asked them to aid him in his attack upon
Angria, and Commodore James was now sent, with the Protector and two other
ships, to reconnoitre Gheriah, which no Englishman then living had seen.
The natives described it as of enormous strength, and it was believed that
it was an Eastern Gibraltar.
Commodore James found the enemy's fleet at anchor in the harbour.
Notwithstanding this, he sailed in until within cannon shot, and so
completely were the enemy cowed and demoralized, by the loss of Suwarndrug,
that they did not venture out to attack him.
After ascertaining the position and character of the defences, he
returned, at the end of December, to Bombay; and reported that, while
exceedingly strong, the place was by no means impregnable. The Mahratta
army, under the command of Ramajee Punt, marched to blockade the place on
the land side; and on the 11th of February, 1756, the fleet, consisting of
four ships of the line, of seventy, sixty-four, sixty, and fifty guns; a
frigate of forty-four, and three of twenty; a native ship called a grab,
of twelve guns; and five mortar ships, arrived before the place. Besides
the seamen, the fleet had on board a battalion of eight hundred Europeans
and a thousand Sepoys.
The fortress of Gheriah was situated on a promontory of rock, a mile
and a quarter broad; lying about a mile up a large harbour, forming the
mouth of a river. The promontory projects to the southwest, on the right
of the harbour on entering; and rises sheer from the water in
perpendicular rocks, fifty feet high. On this stood the fortifications.
These consisted of two lines of walls, with round towers, the inner wall
rising several feet above the outer.
The promontory was joined to the land by a sandy slip, beyond which the
town stood. On this neck of land, between the promontory and the town,
were the docks and slips on which the pirate vessels were built or
repaired; and ten of these, among which was the Derby, which they had
captured from the Company, lay moored side by side, close by the docks,
when the fleet arrived off the place.
Charlie Marryat had been sent, by Clive, as commissioner with the
Mahratta army. A party of Mahratta horsemen came down to Bombay to escort
him to Chaule, at which place the Mahratta army were assembled for their
march. He was accompanied by Tim and Hossein, who were of course, like
him, on horseback.
A long day's ride took them to their first halting place, a few miles
from the foot of a splendid range of hills, which rise like a wall from
the low land, for a vast distance along the coast. At the top of these
hills--called in India, ghauts--lay the plateau of the Deccan, sloping
gradually away to the Ganges, hundreds of miles to the east.
"Are we going to climb up to top of them mountains, your honor?"
"No, Tim, fortunately for our horses. We shall skirt their foot, for a
hundred and fifty miles, till we get behind Gheriah."
"You wouldn't think that a horse could climb them," Tim said. "They
look as steep as the side of a house."
"In many places they are, Tim, but you see there are breaks in them. At
some points, either from the force of streams, or from the weather, the
rocks have crumbled away; and the great slopes, which everywhere extend
halfway up, reach the top. Zigzag paths are cut in these, which can be
travelled by horses and pack animals.
"There must be quantities of game," Charlie said to the leader of the
escort, "on the mountain sides."
"Quantities?" the Mahratta said. "Tigers and bears swarm there, and are
such a scourge that there are no villages within miles of the foot of the
hills. Even on the plateau above, the villages are few and scarce near the
edge, so great is the damage done by wild beasts.
"But that is not all. There are numerous bands of Dacoits, who set the
authority of the peishwar at defiance, plunder travellers and merchants
going up and down, make raids into the Deccan, and plunder the low land
nearly up to the gates of Bombay. Numerous expeditions have been sent
against them, but the Dacoits know every foot of the hills. They have
numerous, impregnable strongholds on the rocks; which you can see rising
sheer up hundreds of feet, from among the woods on the slopes; and can, if
pressed, shift their quarters, and move fifty miles away among the trees,
while the troops are, in vain, searching for them."
"I suppose there is no chance of their attacking us," Charlie said.
"The Dacoit never fights if he can help it, and then only when driven
into a corner, or when there appears a chance of very large plunder. He
will always leave a strong party of armed men, from whom nothing but hard
blows is to be got, in peace."
The journey occupied five days, and was most enjoyable. The officer of
the escort, as the peishwar's agent, would have requisitioned provisions
at each of the villages; but Charlie insisted, under one pretence or
another, on buying a couple of sheep or kids at each halting place, for
the use of his own party and the escort. For a few copper coins an
abundant supply of fruit and vegetables was obtainable; and as, each
night, they spread their rugs under the shade of some overhanging tree,
and smoked their pipes lazily after the very excellent meal which Hossein
always prepared, Charlie and Tim agreed that they had spent no pleasanter
time in India than that occupied by their journey.
Charlie was received with much honor by Ramajee Punt, and was assigned
a gorgeous tent, next to his own.
"People in England, Mister Charles," said Tim that evening, "turn up
their noses at the thought of living in tents, but what do they know of
them? The military tent is an uncomfortable thing, and as for the gipsy
tent, a dacent pig wouldn't look at it. Now this is like a palace, with
its carpet under foot, and its sides covered with silk hangings, and its
furniture fit for a palace. Father Murphy wouldn't believe me, if I told
him about it on oath. If this is making war, yer honor, I shall be in no
hurry for pace."
The Mahratta force took up its position, beleaguering the town on the
land side, some weeks before the arrival of the fleet; Commodore James,
with his two ships, blockading it at sea. There was little to do, and
Charlie accepted with eagerness an offer of Ramajee Punt, that they should
go out for two or three days' tiger hunting, at the foot of the hills.
"Well, Mr. Charles," Tim said, when he heard of the intention, "if you
want to go tiger hunting, Tim Kelly is not the boy to stay behind. But
shure, yer honor, if the creeturs will lave ye alone, why should you
meddle with them? I saw one in a cage at Arcot, and it's a baste I
shouldn't wish to see on a lone road on a dark night. It had a way of
wagging its tail that made you feel uncomfortable like, to the sole of yer
boots; and after looking at me for some time, the baste opened its mouth,
and gave a roar that shook the whole establishment. It's a baste safer to
let alone than to meddle with."
"But we shall be up on the top of an elephant. We shall be safe enough
there, you know."
"Maybe, yer honor," Tim said doubtfully; "but I mind me that, when I
was a boy, me and my brother Peter was throwing sods at an old tomcat of
my mother's, who had stolen our dinners, and it ran up a wall ten feet
high. Well, yer honor, the tiger is as big as a hundred tomcats, and by
the same token he ought to be able to run up a wall--"
"A thousand feet high, Tim? He can't do that. Indeed, I question
whether he could run up much higher than a cat.
"We are to start this evening, and shall be there by midnight. The
elephants have gone on ahead."
At sunset the party started. It consisted of Ramajee Punt, one of his
favourite officers, and a score of soldiers. An officer had already gone
on, to enlist the services of the men of two or three villages as beaters.
A small but comfortable tent had been erected for the party, and supper
prepared.
The native shikari, or sportsman of the neighbourhood, had brought in
the news that tigers were plentiful; and that one of unusual size had been
committing great depredations; and had, only the day before, carried off a
bullock into the thickets, a mile from the spot at which they were
encamped.
"The saints preserve us!" Tim said, when he heard the news; "a cat big
enough to carry off a mouse in her mouth as big as a bullock."
"It seems almost impossible, Tim, but it is a fact that tigers can
carry in their mouths full-sized bullocks, for considerable distances, and
that they can kill them with one stroke of their paw. However, they are
not as formidable as you would imagine, as you will see, tomorrow."
In the morning the elephants were brought out. Charlie took his place
in the front of a howdah, with Tim behind him. Three rifles were placed in
the seat, and these Tim was to hand to his master, as he discharged them.
Ramajee Punt and his officer were also mounted on elephants, and the party
started for their destination.
"It's as bad as being at sea, Mr. Charles," Tim said.
"It does roll about, Tim. You must let your body go with the motion,
just as on board ship. You will soon get accustomed to it."
On reaching the spot, which was a narrow valley, with steep sides
running up into the hill, the elephants came to a stand. The mouth of the
valley was some fifty yards wide, and the animal might break from the
trees at any point. The ground was covered with high, coarse grass.
Ramajee Punt placed himself in the centre, assigning to Charlie the
position on his right, telling him that it was the best post, as it was on
this side the tiger had been seen to enter. Soon after they had taken
their places, a tremendous clamour arose near the head of the valley.
Drums were beaten, horns blown, and scores of men joined in, with shouts
and howls.
"What on arth are they up to, Mr. Charles?"
"They are driving the tiger this way, Tim. Now, sit quiet and keep a
sharp lookout, and be ready to hand me a rifle, the instant I have fired."
The noise increased, and was plainly approaching. The elephant fidgeted
uneasily.
"That baste has more sinse than we have," said Tim; "and would be off,
if that little black chap, astraddle of his neck, didn't keep on patting
his head."
Presently, the mahout pointed silently to the bushes ahead, and Charlie
caught sight, for a moment, of some yellow fur. Apparently the tiger had
heard or scented the elephants, for it again turned and made up the
valley. Presently a redoubled yelling, with the firing of guns, showed
that it had been seen by the beaters. Ramajee Punt held up his hand to
Charlie, as a signal that next time the tiger might be expected.
Suddenly there was a movement among the bushes. A tiger sprang out,
about halfway between Charlie's elephant and that of Ramajee Punt. It
paused for a moment, on seeing them; and then, as it was about to spring
forward, two balls struck it. It sprang a short distance, however, and
then fell, rolling over and over. One ball had broken a foreleg, the other
had struck it on the head. Another ball from Ramajee Punt struck it, as it
rolled over and over, and it lay immovable.
"Why didn't you hand me the next rifle, Tim?" Charlie said sharply.
"It went clane out of my head, altogether. To think now, and you kilt
it in a moment. The tiger is a poor baste, anyhow. I've seen a cat make
ten times as strong a fight for its life.
"Holy Moses!"
The last exclamation was called from Tim's lips by a sudden jerk. A
huge tiger, far larger than that which had fallen, had sprung up from the
brushwood and leaped upon the elephant. With one forepaw he grasped the
howdah, with the other clung to the elephant's shoulder, an inch or two
only behind the leg of the mahout.
Charlie snatched the rifle from Tim's hand, and thrust the muzzle into
the tiger's mouth, just as the elephant swerved round with sudden fright
and pain. At the same moment the weight of the tiger on the howdah caused
the girths to give way; and Charlie, Tim and the tiger fell together on
the ground. Charlie had pulled his trigger, just as he felt himself going;
and at the same moment he heard the crack of Ramajee Punt's rifle.
The instant they touched the ground, Tim and Charlie cast themselves
over and over, two or three times; and then leaped to their feet, Charlie
grasping his rifle, to make the best defence he could if the tiger sprang
upon him. The creature lay, however, immovable.
"It is dead, Tim," Charlie exclaimed. "You needn't be afraid."
"And no wonder, yer honor, when I pitched, head first, smack onto his
stomach. It would have killed a horse."
"It might have done, Tim, but I don't think it would have killed a
tiger. Look there."
Charlie's gun had gone off at the moment when the howdah turned round,
and had nearly blown off a portion of the tiger's head; while, almost at
the same instant, the ball of Ramajee Punt had struck it in the back,
breaking the spine. Death had, fortunately for Tim, been instantaneous.
The tiger last killed was the great male which had done so much damage;
the first, a female. The natives tied the legs together, placed long
bamboos between them, and carried the animals off, in triumph, to the
camp. The elephant on which Charlie had ridden ran some distance, before
the mahout could stop him. He was, indeed, so terrified by the onslaught
of the tiger, that it was not considered advisable to endeavour to get him
to face another, that day. Ramajee Punt, therefore, invited Charlie to
take his seat with him, on his elephant, an arrangement which greatly
satisfied Tim, whose services were soon dispensed with.
"I'd rather walk on my own feet, Mister Charles, than ride any more on
those great bastes. They're uncomfortable, anyhow. It's a long way to
fall, if the saddle goes round; and next time one might not find a tiger
handy, to light on."
Two more tigers were killed that afternoon and, well pleased with his
day's sport, Charlie returned to the hunting camp.
The next day, Hossein begged that he might be allowed to accompany
Charlie in Tim's place; and as the Irishman was perfectly willing to
surrender it, the change was agreed upon. The march was a longer one than
it had been, on the previous morning. A notorious man-eating tiger was
known to have taken up his abode, in a large patch of jungle, at the foot
of an almost perpendicular wall of rock, about ten miles from the place
where the camp was pitched. The patch of jungle stood upon a steep
terrace, whose slopes were formed of boulders, the patch being some fifty
or sixty yards long and thirty deep.
"It is a nasty place," Ramajee Punt said, "to get him from. The beaters
cannot get behind to drive him out, and the jungle is too thick to
penetrate."
"How do you intend to proceed?" Charlie asked.
"We will send a party to the top of the hill, and they will throw down
crackers. We have brought some rockets, too, which we will send in from
the other side. We will take our places, on our elephants, at the foot of
the terrace."
The three elephants took their posts, at the foot of the boulder
covered rise. As soon as they had done so, the men at the top of the rock
began to throw down numbers of lighted crackers; while, from either side,
parties sent rockets whizzing into the jungle.
For some time the tiger showed no signs of his presence, and Charlie
began to doubt whether he could be really there. The shikaris, however,
declared that he was certainly in the jungle. He had, on the day before,
carried off a woman from a neighbouring village; and had been traced to
the jungle, round which a watch had been kept all night.
Suddenly, uttering a mighty roar, the tiger bounded from the jungle,
and stood at the edge of the terrace. Startled at his sudden appearance,
the elephants recoiled, shaking the aim of their riders. Three shots were,
however, fired almost at the same moment; and the tiger, with another
roar, bounded back into the jungle.
"I think," the rajah said, "that he is badly hit. Listen to his
roarings."
The tiger, for a time, roared loudly at intervals. Then the sounds
became lower and less frequent, and at last ceased altogether. In vain did
the natives above shower down crackers. In vain were the rockets
discharged into the jungle. An hour passed, since he had last been heard.
"I expect that he's dead," Charlie said.
"I think so, too," Ramajee Punt replied; "but one can never be certain.
Let us draw off a little, and take our luncheon. After that, we can try
the fireworks again. If he will not move, then we must leave him."
"But surely," Charlie said, "we might go in and see whether he's dead
or not."
"A wounded tiger is a terrible foe," the Ramajee answered. "Better
leave him alone."
Charlie, however, was anxious to get the skin to send home, with those
of the others he had shot, to his mother and sisters. It might be very
long before he had an opportunity of joining in another tiger hunt; and he
resolved that, if the tiger gave no signs of life when the bombardment of
the jungle with fireworks recommenced, he would go in and look for his
body.
Chapter 17: The Capture Of Gheriah.
After having sat for an hour under the shade of some trees, and
partaken of luncheon, the party again moved forward on their elephants to
the jungle. The watchers declared that no sound, whatever, had been heard
during their absence; nor did the discharge of fireworks, which at once
recommenced, elicit the slightest response.
After this had gone on for half an hour, Charlie, convinced that the
animal was dead, dismounted from his elephant. He had with him a heavy,
double-barrelled rifle of the rajah's; and Hossein, carrying a similar
weapon, and a curved tulwar which was sharpened almost to a razor edge,
prepared to follow immediately behind him. Three or four of the most
courageous shikaris, with cocked guns, followed in Hossein's steps.
Holding his gun advanced before him, in readiness to fire instantly,
Charlie entered the jungle at the point where the tiger had retreated into
it. Drops of blood spotted the grass, and the bent and twisted brushwood
showed the path that the tiger had taken. Charlie moved as noiselessly as
possible. The path led straight forward, towards the rocks behind, but it
was not until within four or five yards of this that any sign of the tiger
could be seen.
Then the bushes were burst asunder, and the great yellow body hurled
itself forward upon Charlie. The attack was so sudden and instantaneous
that the latter had not even time to raise his rifle to his shoulder.
Almost instinctively, however, he discharged both of the barrels; but was,
at the same moment, hurled to the ground, where he lay crushed down by the
weight of the tiger, whose hot breath he could feel on his face. He closed
his eyes, only to open them again at the sound of a heavy blow, while a
deluge of hot blood flowed over him. He heard Hossein's voice, and then
became insensible. When he recovered, he found himself lying with his head
supported by Hossein, outside the jungle.
"Is he dead?" he asked faintly.
"He is dead, Sahib," Hossein replied. "Let the Sahib drink some brandy,
and he will be strong again."
Charlie drank some brandy and water, which Hossein held to his lips.
Then the latter raised him to his feet.
Charlie felt his limbs and his ribs. He was bruised all over, but
otherwise unhurt, the blood which covered him having flowed from the
tiger. One of the balls which he had fired had entered the tiger's neck,
the other had broken one of its forelegs, and Charlie had been knocked
down by the weight of the animal, not by the blow of its formidable paw.
Hossein had sprung forward on the instant, and with one blow of his
sharp tulwar, had shorn clear through skin and muscle and bone, and had
almost severed the tiger's head from its body. It was the weight upon him
which had crushed Charlie into a state of insensibility. Here he had lain,
for four or five minutes, before Hossein could get the frightened natives
to return, and assist him to lift the great carcass from his master's
body.
Upon examination, it was found that two of the three bullets first
fired had taken effect. One had broken the tiger's shoulder, and lodged in
his body. The other had struck him fairly on the chest, and had passed
within an inch or two of his heart.
"I thought," Ramajee Punt said, as he viewed the body, "that one of his
legs must have been rendered useless. That was why he lay quiet so long,
in spite of our efforts to turn him out."
Charlie was too much hurt to walk, and a litter was speedily formed,
and he was carried back to the camp, where his arrival in that state
excited the most lively lamentations on the part of Tim. The next morning
he was much recovered; and was able, in the cool of the evening, to take
his place in a howdah, and to return to the camp before Gheriah.
A few days later the fleet made its appearance off the town, and the
same evening Tulagi Angria rode up to Ramajee Punt's camp. Charlie was
present at the interview, at which Angria endeavoured to prevail on
Ramajee Punt, and Charlie, to accept a large ransom for his fort; offering
them each great presents, if they would do their utmost to prevail on
Admiral Watson, and Colonel Clive, to agree to accept it.
Charlie said at once that he was sure it was useless, that the English
had now made a great effort to put a stop to the ravages which he, and his
father before him, had for so many years inflicted upon their commerce;
and that he was sure that nothing, short of the total destruction of the
fort and fleet, would satisfy them. The meeting then broke up; and
Charlie, supposing that Angria would return immediately, went back to his
tent; where he directed Hossein at once to mingle with the men who had
accompanied Angria, and to find out anything that he could concerning the
state of things in the fort.
Hossein returned an hour later.
"Sahib," he said, "Ramajee Punt is thinking of cheating the English. He
is keeping Angria a prisoner. He says that he came into his camp without
asking for a safe conduct; and that, therefore, he shall detain him.
"But this is not all. Angria has left his brother in command of the
fort; and Ramajee, by threatening Angria with instant execution, has
induced him to send an order to deliver the fort at once to him. Ramajee
wants, you see, Sahib, to get all the plunder of the fort for himself, and
his Mahrattas."
"This is very serious," Charlie said, "and I must let the admiral know,
at once, what is taking place."
When it became dark, Charlie, with Tim and Hossein, made his way
through the Mahratta camp, down to the shore of the river. Here were
numbers of boats, hauled up on the sand. One of the lightest of these was
soon got into the water, and rowed gently out into the force of the
stream. Then the oars were shipped, and they lay down perfectly quiet in
the boat, and drifted past the fort without being observed.
When they once gained the open sea, the oars were placed in the
rowlocks, and half an hour's rowing brought them alongside the fleet.
Charlie was soon on board the flagship, and informed the admiral, and
Colonel Clive, what Hossein had heard.
It was at once resolved to attack upon the following day. The two
officers did not think it was likely that the pirates would, even in
obedience to their chief's orders, surrender the place until it had been
battered by the fleet.
The next morning, the fort was summoned to surrender. No answer was
received, and as soon as the sea breeze set in, in the afternoon, the
fleet weighed anchor and proceeded towards the mouth of the river. The
men-of-war were in line, on the side nearest to the fort, to protect the
mortar vessels and smaller ships from its fire.
Passing the point of the promontory, they stood into the river, and
anchored at a distance of fifty yards from the north face of the fort. A
gun from the admiral's ship gave the signal, and a hundred and fifty
pieces of cannon at once opened fire, while the mortar vessels threw shell
into the fort and town. In ten minutes after the fire began, a shell fell
into one of Angria's large ships, and set her on fire. The flames soon
spread to the others, fastened together on either side of her, and in less
than an hour this fleet, which had for fifty years been the terror of the
Malabar coast, was utterly destroyed.
In the meantime the fleet kept up their fire, with the greatest vigour,
upon the enemy's works; and, before nightfall, the enemy's fire was
completely silenced. No white flag, however, was hung up, and the admiral
had little doubt that it was intended to surrender the place to the
Mahrattas.
As soon, therefore, as it became quite dark, Colonel Clive landed with
the troops, and took up a position between the Mahrattas and the fort;
where, to his great disappointment and disgust, Ramajee Punt found him in
the morning. The admiral again summoned the fort, declaring that he would
renew the attack, and give no quarter, unless it was surrendered
immediately. The governor sent back to beg the admiral to cease from
hostilities until next day, as he was only waiting for orders from Angria
to surrender. Angria declared that he had already sent the orders.
At four in the afternoon, therefore, the bombardment was renewed; and
in less than half an hour, a white flag appeared above the wall. As,
however, the garrison made no further sign of surrender, and refused to
admit Colonel Clive with his troops, when he advanced to take possession,
the bombardment was again renewed, more vigorously than ever. The enemy
were unable to support the violence of the fire, and soon shouted over the
walls, to Clive, that they surrendered; and he might enter and take
possession. He at once marched in, and the pirates laid down their arms,
and surrendered themselves prisoners.
It was found that a great part of the fortifications had been destroyed
by the fire, but a resolute garrison might have held the fort, itself,
against a long siege. Two hundred guns fell into the hands of the captors,
together with great quantities of ammunition, and stores of all kinds. The
money and effects amounted to a hundred and twenty thousand pounds, which
was divided among the captors. The rest of Angria's fleet, among them two
large ships on the stocks, was destroyed.
Ramajee Punt sent parties of his troops to attack the other forts held
by the pirates. These, however, surrendered without resistance, and thus
the whole country, which the pirates had held for seventy years, fell
again into the hands of the Mahrattas, from whom they had wrested it.
Admiral Watson and the fleet then returned to Bombay, in order to
repair the damages which had been inflicted upon them during the
bombardment. There were great rejoicings upon their arrival there; the joy
of the inhabitants, both European and native, being immense at the
destruction of the formidable pirate colonies, which had so long ravaged
the seas.
After the repairs were completed, the fleet, with the troops which had
formed the expedition, were to sail for Madras. Charlie, however, did not
wait for this; but, finding that one of the Company's ships would sail, in
the course of a few days after their return to Bombay, he obtained leave
from Colonel Clive to take a passage in her, and to proceed immediately to
Madras. Tim and Hossein, of course, accompanied him; and the voyage down
the west coast of India, and round Ceylon, was performed without any
marked incident.
When within but a few hours of Madras, the barometer fell rapidly.
Great clouds rose up upon the horizon, and the captain ordered all hands
aloft to reduce sail.
"We are in," he said, "for a furious tempest. It is the breaking up of
the monsoon. It is a fortnight earlier than usual. I had hoped that we
should have got safely up the Hoogly before it began."
Half an hour later the hurricane struck them, and for the next three
days the tempest was terrible. Great waves swept over the ship, and every
time that the captain attempted to show a rag of canvas, it was blown from
the bolt ropes. The ship, however, was a stout one, and weathered the
gale.
Upon the fourth morning the passengers, who had, during the tempest,
been battened below, came on deck. The sky was bright and clear, and the
waves were fast going down. A good deal of sail was already set, and the
hands were at work to repair damages.
"Well, captain," Charlie said to that officer, "I congratulate you on
the behaviour of the ship. It has been a tremendous gale, and she has
weathered it stoutly."
"Yes, Captain Marryat, she has done well. I have only once or twice
been out in so severe a storm, since I came to sea."
"And where are we now?" Charlie asked, looking round the horizon. "When
shall we be at Madras?"
"Well," the captain said with a smile, "I am afraid that you must give
up all idea of seeing Madras, just at present. We have been blown right up
the bay, and are only a few hours' sail from the mouth of the Hoogly. I
have a far larger cargo for that place than for Madras, and it would be a
pure waste of time for me to put back now. I intend, therefore, to go to
Calcutta first, discharge and fill up there, and then touch at Madras on
my way back.
"I suppose it makes no great difference to you."
"No, indeed," Charlie said. "And I am by no means sorry of the
opportunity of getting a glimpse of Calcutta, which I might never
otherwise have done. I believe things are pretty quiet at Madras, at
present; and I have been so long away, now, that a month or two sooner or
later will make but little difference."
A few hours later, Charlie noticed a change in the colour of the sea,
the mud-stained waters of the Hoogly discolouring the Bay of Bengal, far
out from its mouth. The voyage up was a tedious one. At times the wind
fell altogether and, unable to stem the stream, the ship lay for days at
anchor, the yellow tide running swiftly by it.
"The saints presarve us, Mr. Charles! Did you ever see the like?" Tim
Kelly exclaimed. "There's another dead body, floating down towards us, and
that is the eighth I've seen this morning. Are the poor hathen craturs all
committing suicide together?"
"Not at all, Tim," Charlie said, "the Hoogly is one of the sacred
rivers of India, and the people on its banks, instead of burying their
dead, put them into the river and let them drift away."
"I calls it a bastly custom, yer honor, and I wonder it is allowed. One
got athwart the cable this morning, and it frightened me nigh out of my
sinses, when I happened to look over the bow, and saw the thing bobbing up
and down in the water.
"This is tedious work, yer honor, and I'll be glad when we're at the
end of the voyage."
"I shall be glad, too, Tim. We have been a fortnight in the river
already. But I think there is a breeze getting up, and there is the
captain on deck, giving orders."
In a few minutes, the ship was under way again, and the same night
dropped her anchor in the stream, abreast of Calcutta. Charlie shortly
after landed, and, proceeding to the Company's offices, reported his
arrival, and that of the four Sepoy officers. Hossein, who was not in the
Company's service, was with him merely in the character of a servant.
As the news of the share Charlie had had in the capture of Suwarndrug
had reached Calcutta, he was well received; and one of the leading
merchants of the town, Mr. Haines, who happened to be present when Charlie
called upon the governor, at once invited him warmly to take up his
residence with him, during his stay. Hospitality in India was profuse, and
general. Hotels were unknown, and a stranger was always treated as an
honored guest.
Charlie, therefore, had no hesitation whatever in accepting the offer.
The four native officers were quartered in the barracks; and, returning on
board ship, Charlie, followed by Tim and Hossein, and by some coolies
bearing his luggage, was soon on his way to the bungalow of Mr. Haines.
On his way, he was surprised at the number and size of the dwellings of
the merchants and officials, which offered a very strong contrast to the
quiet and unpretending buildings round the fort of Madras. The house of
Mr. Haines was a large one, and stood in a large and carefully kept
garden. Mr. Haines received him at the door, and at once led him to his
room, which was spacious, cool, and airy. Outside was a wide veranda, upon
which, in accordance with the customs of the country, servants would
sleep.
"Here is your bathroom," Mr. Haines said, pointing to an adjoining
room. "I think you will find everything ready. We dine in half an hour."
Charlie was soon in his bath, a luxury which, in India, every European
indulges in at least twice a day. Then in his cool white suit, which at
that time formed the regular evening dress, he found his way to the
drawing room. Here he was introduced to the merchant's wife, and to his
daughter, a girl of some thirteen years old, as well as to several guests
who had arrived for dinner.
The meal was a pleasant one, and Charlie, after being cooped up for
some weeks on board ship, enjoyed it much. A dinner in India is, to one
unaccustomed to it, a striking sight. The punkah waving slowly to and fro,
overhead, drives the cool air which comes in through the open windows down
upon the table. Each guest brings his own servant, who, either in white or
coloured robes, and in turbans of many different hues and shapes,
according to the wearer's caste, stands behind his master's chair. The
light is always a soft one, and the table richly garnished with bright-coloured
tropical flowers.
Charlie was the hero of the hour, and was asked many questions
concerning the capture of Suwarndrug; and also about the defence of Ambur,
which, though now an old story, had excited the greatest interest through
India. Presently, however, the conversation turned to local topics; and
Charlie learned, from the anxious looks and earnest tones of the speakers,
that the situation was considered a very serious one. He asked but few
questions, then; but after the guests had retired, and Mr. Haines proposed
to him to smoke one more quiet cigar, in the cool of the veranda, before
retiring to bed; he took the opportunity of asking his host to explain to
him the situation, with which he had no previous acquaintance.
"Up to the death of Ali Kerdy, the old viceroy of Bengal, on the 9th
April, we were on good terms with our native neighbours. Calcutta has not
been, like Madras, threatened by the rivalry of a European neighbour. The
French and Dutch, indeed, have both trading stations like our own, but
none of us have taken part in native affairs. Ali Kerdy has been all
powerful, there have been no native troubles, and therefore no reason for
our interference. We have just gone on as for many years previously, as a
purely trading company.
"At his death, he was succeeded in the government by Suraja Dowlah, his
grandson. I suppose, in all India, there is no prince with a worse
reputation than this young scoundrel has already gained for himself, for
profligacy and cruelty. He is constantly drunk, and is surrounded by a
crew of reprobates, as wicked as himself. At the death of Ali Kerdy, Sokut
Jung, another grandson of Ali, set up in opposition to him, and the new
viceroy raised a large force to march against him. As the reputation of
Sokut Jung was as infamous as that of his cousin, it would have made
little difference to us which of the two obtained the mastery.
"Within the last few days, however, circumstances have occurred which
have completely altered the situation. The town of Dacca was, about a year
ago, placed under the governorship of Rajah Ragbullub, a Hindoo officer in
high favour with Ali Kerdy. His predecessor had been assassinated and
plundered, by order of Suraja Dowlah; and when he heard of the accession
of that prince, he determined at once to fly, as he knew that his great
wealth would speedily cause him to be marked out as a victim. He therefore
obtained a letter of recommendation from Mr. Watts, the agent of the
Company at their factory at Cossimbazar; and sent his son Kissendas, with
a large retinue, his family and treasures, to Calcutta.
"Two or three days after his accession, Suraja Dowlah despatched a
letter to Mr. Drake, our governor, ordering him to surrender Kissendas and
the treasures immediately. The man whom he sent down arrived in a small
boat, without any state or retinue; and Mr. Drake, believing that he was
an impostor, paid no attention to the demand, but expelled him from the
settlement. Two days ago a letter came from the viceroy; or, as we
generally call him, the nabob, to Mr. Drake, ordering him instantly to
demolish all the fortifications which he understood he had been erecting.
Mr. Drake has sent word back, assuring the nabob that he is erecting no
new fortifications, but simply executing some repairs in the ramparts
facing the river, in view of the expected war between England and France.
"That is all that has been done, at present; but, seeing the passionate
and overbearing disposition of this young scoundrel, there is no saying
what will come of it."
"But how do we stand here?" Charlie asked. "What are the means of
defence, supposing he should take it into his head to march, with the army
which he has raised to fight against his cousin, to the attack of
Calcutta?"
"Nothing could be worse than our position," Mr. Haines said. "Ever
since the capture of Madras, nine years ago, the directors have been
sending out orders that this place should be put in a state of defence.
During the fifty years which have passed peacefully here, the
fortifications have been entirely neglected. Instead of the space round
them being kept clear, warehouses have been built close against them, and
the fort is wholly unable to resist any attack. The authorities of the
Company here have done absolutely nothing to carry out the orders from
home. They think, I am sorry to say, only of making money with their own
trading ventures; and although several petitions have been presented to
them, by the merchants here, urging upon them the dangers which might
arise at the death of Ali, they have taken no steps whatever, and indeed
have treated all warnings with scorn and derision."
"What force have we here?" Charlie asked.
"Only a hundred and seventy-four men, of whom the greater portion are
natives."
"What sort of man is your commander?"
"We have no means of knowing," Mr. Haines said. "His name is Minchin.
He is a great friend of the governor's, and has certainly done nothing to
counteract the apathy of the authorities. Altogether, to my mind, things
look as bad as they possibly can."
A week later, on the 15th of June, a messenger arrived with the news
that the nabob, with fifty thousand men, was advancing against the town;
and that, in two days, he would appear before it. All was confusion and
alarm. Charlie at once proceeded to the fort, and placed his services at
the disposal of Captain Minchin. He found that officer fussy, and alarmed.
"If I might be permitted to advise," Charlie said, "every available man
in the town should be set to work, at once, pulling down all the buildings
around the walls. It would be clearly impossible to defend the place when
the ramparts are, on all sides, commanded by the musketry fire of
surrounding buildings."
"I know what my duty is, sir," Captain Minchin said, "and do not
require to be taught it, by so very young an officer as yourself."
"Very well, sir," Charlie replied, calmly. "I have seen a great deal of
service, and have taken part in the defence of two besieged towns; while
you, I believe, have never seen a shot fired. However, as you're in
command you will, of course, take what steps you think fit; but I warn you
that, unless those buildings are destroyed, the fort cannot resist an
assault for twenty-four hours."
Then, bowing quietly, he retired; and returned to Mr. Haines' house.
That gentleman was absent, having gone to the governor's. He did not come
back until late in the evening. Charlie passed the time in endeavouring to
cheer up Mrs. Haines, and her daughter; assuring them that, if the worst
came to the worst, there could be no difficulty in their getting on board
ship.
Mrs. Haines was a woman of much common sense and presence of mind; and,
under the influence of Charlie's quiet chat, she speedily recovered her
tranquillity. Her daughter Ada, who was a very bright and pretty girl, was
even sooner at her ease, and they were laughing and chatting brightly,
when Mr. Haines arrived. He looked fagged and dispirited.
"Drake is a fool," he said. "Just as, hitherto, he has scoffed at all
thought of danger, now he is prostrated at the news that danger is at
hand. He can decide on nothing. At one moment he talks of sending
messengers to Suraja Dowlah, to offer to pay any sum he may demand, in
order to induce him to retire; the next he talks of defending the fort to
the last. We can get him to give no orders, to decide on nothing, and the
other officials are equally impotent and imbecile."
On the 18th, the army of the nabob approached. Captain Minchin took his
guns and troops a considerable distance beyond the walls, and opened fire
upon the enemy. Charlie, enraged and disgusted at the folly of conduct
which could only lead to defeat, marched with them as a simple volunteer.
The result was what he had anticipated. The enemy opened fire with an
immensely superior force of artillery. His infantry advanced, and clouds
of horsemen swept round the flanks, and menaced the retreat. In a very few
minutes, Captain Minchin gave the order to retire; and, abandoning their
guns, the English force retreated in all haste to the town.
Charlie had, on setting out, told Mr. Haines what was certain to occur;
and had implored him to send all his valuables, at once, on board ship;
and to retire instantly into the fort. Upon the arrival of the troops at
the gate, they found it almost blocked with the throng of frightened
Europeans, and natives, flying from their houses beyond it to its
protection. Scarcely were all the fugitives within, and the gates closed,
when the guns of Suraja Dowlah opened upon the fort; and his infantry,
taking possession of the houses around it, began a galling musketry fire
upon the ramparts.
Captain Minchin remained closeted with the governor; and Charlie,
finding the troops bewildered and dismayed, without leading or orders,
assumed the command, placed them upon the walls, and kept up a vigorous
musketry fire in reply to that of the enemy.
Within, all was confusion and dismay. In every spot sheltered from the
enemy's fire, Europeans and natives were huddled together. There was
neither head nor direction. With nightfall the fire ceased, but still Mr.
Drake and Captain Minchin were undecided what steps to take. At two
o'clock in the morning, they summoned a council of war, at which Charlie
was present, and it was decided that the women and children should at once
be sent on board.
There should have been no difficulty in carrying this into effect. A
large number of merchantmen were lying in the stream, opposite the fort,
capable of conveying away in safety the whole of the occupants. Two of the
members of the council had, early in the evening, been despatched on board
ship to make arrangements for the boats being sent on shore; but these
cowardly wretches, instead of doing so, ordered the ships to raise their
anchors, and drop two miles farther down the stream. The boats, however,
were sent up the river to the fort.
The same helpless imbecility, which had characterized every movement,
again showed itself. There was no attempt, whatever, at establishing
anything like order or method. The watergate was open, and a wild rush of
men, women, and children took place down to the boats.
Charlie was on duty, on the walls. He had already said goodbye to Mrs.
Haines and her daughter, and though he heard shouts and screams coming
from the watergate, he had no idea what had taken place; until Mr. Haines
joined him.
"Have you seen them safely off?" Charlie asked.
"My wife has gone," Mr. Haines said. "My daughter is still here. There
has been a horrible scene of confusion. Although the boats were amply
sufficient to carry all, no steps whatever had been taken to secure order.
The consequence was, there was a wild rush. Women and children were
knocked down and trampled upon. They leaped into the boats in such wild
haste that several of these were capsized, and numbers of people drowned.
I kept close to my wife and child, till we reached the side of the stream.
I managed to get my wife into a boat, and then a rush of people separated
me from my daughter; and before I could find her again, the remaining
boats had all pushed off. Many of the men have gone with them, and among
them, I am ashamed to say, several of the officers.
"However, I trust the boats will come up again tomorrow, and take away
the rest. Two have remained, a guard having been placed over them, and I
hope to get Ada off to her mother, in the morning."
Towards morning, Mr. Haines again joined Charlie.
"What do you think?" he said. "Those cowardly villains, Drake and
Minchin, have taken the two boats, and gone off on board ship!"
"Impossible!" Charlie exclaimed.
"It is too true," Mr. Haines said. "The names of these cowards should
be held as infamous, as long as the English nation exists.
"Come, now, we are just assembling to choose a commander. Mr. Peeks is
the senior agent; but I think we shall elect Mr. Holwell, who is an
energetic and vigorous man."
It was as Mr. Haines had expected. Mr. Holwell was elected, and at once
took the lead. He immediately assigned to Charlie the command of the
troops. Little was done at the council, beyond speaker after speaker
rising to express his execration of the conduct of the governor and
Captain Minchin.
With daybreak, the enemy's fire recommenced. All day long Charlie
hurried from post to post, encouraging his men, and aiding in working the
guns. Two or three times, when the enemy showed in masses, as if intending
to assault, the fire of the artillery drove them back; and up to nightfall
they had gained but little success. The civilians as well as the soldiers
had done their duty nobly, but the loss had been heavy, from the fire of
the enemy's sharpshooters in the surrounding buildings; and it was evident
that, however gallant the defence, the fort could not much longer resist.
All day long, signals had been kept flying for the fleet, two miles
below, to come up to the fort; but although these could be plainly seen,
not a ship weighed anchor.
Chapter 18: The "Black Hole" Of Calcutta.
When the fire of the enemy slackened, Charlie went to Mr. Holwell.
"It is impossible, sir," he said, "that the fort can hold out; for in
another three or four days, the whole of the garrison will be killed. The
only hope of safety is for the ships to come up, and remove the garrison,
which they can do without the slightest danger to themselves. If you will
allow me, sir, I will swim down to the ships, and represent our situation.
Cowardly and inhuman as Mr. Drake has proved himself, he can hardly refuse
to give orders for the fleet to move."
"I don't know," said Mr. Holwell. "After the way in which he has
behaved, there are no depths of infamy of which I believe him incapable.
But you are my right hand here. Supposing Mr. Drake refuses, you could not
return."
"I will come back, sir," Charlie answered. "I will, if there be no
other way, make my way along by the river bank. It is comparatively free
of the enemy, as our guns command it. If you will place Mr. Haines at the
corner bastion, with a rope, he will recognize my voice, and I can regain
the fort."
Mr. Holwell consented, and as soon as it was perfectly dark, Charlie
issued out at the watergate, took off his coat, waistcoat, and boots, and
entered the stream. The current was slack, but he had no difficulty in
keeping himself afloat until he saw, close ahead of him, the lights of the
ships.
He hailed that nearest him. A rope was thrown, and he was soon on
board. Upon stating who he was, a boat was at once lowered, and he was
taken to the ship upon which Mr. Drake and Captain Minchin had taken
refuge. Upon saying that he was the bearer of a message from the gentleman
now commanding the fort, he was conducted to the cabin, where Mr. Drake
and Captain Minchin, having finished their dinner, were sitting
comfortably over their wine with Captain Young, the senior captain of the
Company's ships there.
"I have come, sir," Charlie said to Mr. Drake, "from Mr. Holwell; who
has, in your absence, been elected to the command of the fort. He bids me
tell you that our losses have been already very heavy, and that it is
impossible that the fort can hold out for more than twenty-four hours
longer. He begs you, therefore, to order up the ships tonight, in order
that the garrison may embark."
"It is quite out of the question," Mr. Drake said coldly. "Quite. It
would be extremely dangerous.
"You agree with me, Captain Young, that it would be most dangerous?"
"I consider that it would be dangerous," Captain Young said.
"And you call yourself," Charlie exclaimed indignantly, "a British
sailor! You talk of danger, and would desert a thousand men, women, and
children, including two hundred of your own countrymen, and leave them at
the mercy of an enemy!"
"You forget whom you are speaking to, sir," Mr. Drake said, angrily.
"I forgot nothing, sir," Charlie replied, trying to speak calmly.
"Then, sir, Mr. Holwell has charged me that if--which, however, he could
not believe for a moment to be possible--you refuse to move up the ships
to receive the garrison on board, that you would at least order all the
boats up, as these would be amply sufficient to carry them away. Even in
the daytime there would be no danger for the ships; and at night, at
least, boats might come up, without being exposed to any risk whatever."
"I shall certainly do nothing of the sort," Mr. Drake said. "The danger
is even greater for the boats than for the ships."
"And am I, sir, to return to the garrison of that fort, with the news
that you utterly desert them, that you intend to remain quietly here,
while they are sacrificed before your eyes? Is it possible that you are
capable of such infamy as this?"
"Infamy!" exclaimed the three men, rising to their feet.
"I place you in arrest at once, for your insolence," Mr. Drake said.
"I despise your arrest, as I do yourself.
"I did not believe it possible," Charlie said, at last giving vent to
his anger and scorn; "and England will not believe, that three Englishmen
so cowardly, so infamous as yourselves, are to be found.
"As for you, Captain Minchin, if ever after this I come across you, I
will flog you publicly first, and shoot you afterwards like a dog, if you
dare to meet me.
"As for you, Mr. Drake--as for you, Captain Young--you will be doomed
to infamy, by the contempt and loathing which Englishmen will feel, when
this deed is known.
"Cowards; base, infamous cowards!"
Charlie stepped back to go.
"Seize him!" Mr. Drake said, himself rushing forward.
Charlie drew back a step; and then, with all his strength, smote the
governor between the eyes, and he fell in a heap beneath the table. Then
Charlie grasped a decanter.
"Now," he said, "if either of you hounds move a finger, I'll brain
you."
The two officers stood paralysed. Charlie walked to the door, and
sprang up the cabin stairs; and, as he did so, heard shouts for assistance
from behind. He gained the deck, walked quietly to the bulwark and,
placing his hand upon it, sprang over the side into the river. He swam to
shore and, climbing up the bank, made his way along it back to the fort,
where he arrived without any misadventure.
A fury of indignation seized all in the fort, when the result of
Charlie's mission became known. With daybreak the attack recommenced; but
the garrison, all day, bravely repulsed every attempt of the enemy to gain
a footing. The fire from the houses was, however, so severe, that by
nightfall nearly half the garrison were killed or wounded.
All day the signals to the fleet were kept flying, but not a ship
moved. All night, an anxious watch was kept, in hopes that, at the last
moment, some returning feeling of shame might induce the recreants to send
up the boats of the ships. But the night passed without a movement on the
river, and in the morning the fleet were seen, still lying at anchor.
The enemy recommenced the attack, even more vigorously than before. The
men fell fast and, to Charlie's great grief, his friend Mr. Haines was
shot by a bullet, as he was standing next to him. Charlie anxiously knelt
beside him.
"It is all over with me," he murmured. "Poor little Ada. Do all you can
for her, Marryat. God knows what fate is in store for her."
"I will protect her with my life, sir," Charlie said earnestly.
Mr. Haines pressed his hand feebly, in token of gratitude; and, two or
three minutes later, breathed his last.
By midday, the loss had been so heavy that the men would no longer
stand to their guns. Many of the European soldiers broke open the spirit
stores, and soon drank to intoxication.
After a consultation with his officers, Mr. Holwell agreed that further
resistance was hopeless. The flag of truce was therefore hoisted, and one
of the officers at once started for the nabob's camp, with instructions to
make the best terms he could for the garrison. When the gates were opened
the enemy, seizing the opportunity, rushed in in great numbers; and as
resistance was impossible, the garrison laid down their arms.
Charlie at once hurried to the spot where Ada, and the only other
European lady who had not escaped, were anxiously awaiting news. Both were
exhausted with weeping.
"Where is papa, Captain Marryat?" Ada asked.
Charlie knew that the poor girl would need all her strength, for what
she might have to undergo; and at once resolved that, for the present at
least, it would be better that she should be in ignorance of the fate of
her father. He therefore said that, for the present, Mr. Haines was unable
to come, and had asked him to look after her.
It was not until five o'clock that the nabob entered the fort. He was
furious at hearing that only five lacs of rupees had been found in the
treasury, as he had expected to become possessed of a vastly larger sum.
Kissendas, the first cause of the present calamities, was brought before
him; but the capricious tyrant, contrary to expectation, received him
courteously, and told him he might return to Dacca. The whole of the
Eurasians, or half castes, and natives found in the fort were also allowed
to return to their homes.
Mr. Holwell was then sent for, and after the nabob had expressed his
resentment at the small amount found in the treasury, he was dismissed,
the nabob assuring him of his protection. Mr. Holwell returned to his
English companions, who, one hundred and forty-six in number, including
the two ladies, were drawn up under the veranda in front of the prison.
The nabob then returned to his camp.
Some native officers went in search of some building where the
prisoners could be confined, but every room in the fort had already been
taken possession of, by the nabob's soldiers and officers. At eight
o'clock, they returned with the news that they could find no place vacant,
and the officer in command at once ordered the prisoners into a small
room, used as a guardroom for insubordinate soldiers, eighteen feet
square.
In vain they protested that it was impossible the room could contain
them, in vain implored the officer to allow some of them to be confined in
an adjoining cell. The wretch was deaf to their entreaties. He ordered his
soldiers to charge the prisoners, and these, with blows of the butt ends
of the muskets, and prods of the bayonets, were driven into the narrow
cell.
Tim Kelly had kept close to his master, during the preceding days. The
whole of the four native officers, who had so distinguished themselves
under Charlie, were killed during the siege. Hossein, who would fain have
shared his master's fortunes, was forcibly torn from him, when the English
prisoners were separated from the natives.
The day had been unusually hot. The night was close and sultry, and the
arched veranda, outside, further hindered the circulation of the air. This
was still heavy with the fumes of powder, creating an intolerable thirst.
Scarcely were the prisoners driven into their narrow cell where, even
standing wedged closely together, there was barely room for them, than
cries for water were raised.
"Tim, my boy," Charlie said to his companion, "we may say goodbye to
each other now, for I doubt if one will be alive, when the door is opened
in the morning."
On entering Charlie, always keeping Ada Haines by his side, had taken
his place against the wall farthest from the window, which was closed with
iron bars.
"I think, yer honor," Tim said, "that if we could get nearer to the
window, we might breathe a little more easily."
"Ay, Tim; but there will be a fight for life round that window, before
long. You and I might hold our own, if we could get there, though it would
be no easy matter where all are struggling for life; but this poor little
girl would be crushed to death. Besides, I believe that what chance there
is, faint as it may be, is greater for us here than there. The rush
towards the window, which is beginning already, as you see, will grow
greater and greater; and the more men struggle and strive, the more air
they require.
"Let us remain where we are. Strip off your coat and waistcoat, and
breathe as quietly and easily as you can. Every hour the crowd will thin,
and we may yet hold on till morning."
This conversation had been held in a low voice. Charlie then turned to
the girl.
"How are you feeling, Ada?" he asked cheerfully. "It's hot, isn't it!"
"It is dreadful," the girl panted, "and I seem choking from want of
air; and oh, Captain Marryat, I am so thirsty!"
"It is hot, my dear, terribly hot, but we must make the best of it; and
I hope, in a few days, you will join your mamma on board ship. That will
be pleasant, won't it?"
"Where is papa?" the girl wailed.
"I don't know where he is now, my child. At any rate, we must feel very
glad that he's not shut up here, with us. Now take your bonnet off, and
your shawl, and undo the hooks of your dress, and loosen everything you
can. We must be as quiet and cheerful as possible. I'm afraid, Ada, we
have a bad time before us tonight. But try to keep cheerful and quiet; and
above all, dear, pray God to give you strength to carry you through it,
and to restore you safe to your mamma, in a few days."
As time went on, the scene in the dungeon became terrible. Shouts,
oaths, cries of all kinds, rose in the air. Round the window men fought
like wild beasts, tearing each other down, or clinging to the bars for
dear life, for a breath of the air without. Panting, struggling, crying,
men sank exhausted upon the floor, and the last remnants of life were
trodden out of them, by those who surged forward to get near the window.
In vain, Mr. Holwell implored them to keep quiet, for their own sakes.
His voice was lost in the terrible din. Men, a few hours ago rich and
respected merchants, now fought like maddened beasts for a breath of fresh
air. In vain, those at the window screamed to the guards without,
imploring them to bring water. Their prayers and entreaties were replied
to only with brutal scoffs.
Several times Charlie and Tim, standing together against the wall
behind, where there was now room to move, lifted Ada between them, and sat
her on their shoulders in order that, raised above the crowd, she might
breathe more freely. Each time, after sitting there for a while, the poor
girl begged to come down again; the sight of the terrible struggle, ever
going on at the window, being too much for her; and when released, leaning
against Charlie, supported by his arm, with her head against his shoulder,
and her hands over her ears to shut out the dreadful sounds which filled
the cell.
Hour passed after hour. There was more room now, for already half the
inmates of the place had succumbed. The noises, too, had lessened, for no
longer could the parched lips and throats utter articulate sounds. Charlie
and Tim, strong men as they were, leaned utterly exhausted against the
wall, bathed in perspiration, gasping for air.
"Half the night must be gone, Tim," Charlie said, "and I think, with
God's help, we shall live through it. The numbers are lessening fast, and
every one who goes leaves more air for the rest of us.
"Cheer up, Ada dear, 'twill not be very long till morning."
"I think I shall die soon," the girl gasped. "I shall never see papa or
mamma again. You have been very kind, Captain Marryat, but it is no use."
"Oh, but it is of use," Charlie said cheerfully. "I don't mean to let
you die at all, but to hand you over to mamma, safe and sound. There, lay
your head against me, dear, and say your prayers, and try and go off to
sleep."
Presently, however, Ada's figure drooped more and more, until her whole
weight leaned upon Charlie's arm.
"She has fainted, Tim," he said. "Help me to raise her well in my arms,
and lay her head on my shoulder. That's right. Now, you'll find her shawl
somewhere under my feet; hold it up, and make a fan of it. Now, try to
send some air into her face."
By this time, not more than fifty out of the hundred and forty-six who
entered the cell were alive. Suddenly a scream of joy, from those near the
window, proclaimed that a native was approaching with some water. The
struggle at the window was fiercer than ever. The bowl was too wide to
pass through the bars, and the water was being spilt in vain; each man who
strove to get his face far enough through to touch the bowl being torn
back, by his eager comrades behind.
"Tim," Charlie said, "you are now much stronger than most of them. They
are faint from the struggles. Make a charge to the window. Take that
little shawl and dip it into the bowl, or whatever they have there, and
then fight your way back with it."
"I will do it, yer honor," said Tim, and he rushed into the struggling
group.
Weak as he was from exhaustion and thirst, he was as a giant to most of
the poor wretches, who had been struggling and crying all night; and, in
spite of their cries and curses, he broke through them and forced his way
to the window.
The man with the bowl was on the point of turning away, the water being
spilt in the vain attempts of those within to obtain it. By the light of
the fire which the guard had lit without, Tim saw his face.
"Hossein," he exclaimed, "more water, for God's sake! The master's
alive yet."
Hossein at once withdrew, but soon again approached with the bowl. The
officer in charge angrily ordered him to draw back.
"Let the infidel dogs howl," he said. "They shall have no more."
Regardless of the order, Hossein ran to the window, and Tim thrust the
shawl into the water at the moment when the officer, rushing forward,
struck Hossein to the ground: a cry of anguish rising from the prisoners,
as they saw the water dashed from their lips.
Tim made his way back to the side of his master. Had those who still
remained alive been aware of the supply of water which he carried, in the
shawl, they would have torn it from him; but none save those just at the
window had noticed the act, and inside it was still entirely dark.
"Thank God, yer honor, here it is," Tim said; "and who should have
brought it, but Hossein. Shure, yer honor, we both owe our lives to him
this time, for I'm sure I should have been choked by thirst, before
morning."
Ada was now lowered to the ground and, forcing her teeth asunder, a
corner of the folded shawl was placed between her lips, and the water
allowed to trickle down. With a gasping sigh, she presently recovered.
"That is delicious," she murmured. "That is delicious."
Raising her to her feet, Charlie and Tim both sucked the dripping
shawl, until the first agonies of thirst were relieved. Then, tearing off
a portion, in case Ada should again require it, Charlie passed the shawl
to Mr. Holwell; who, after sucking it for a moment, again passed it on to
several standing round; and in this way many of those, who would otherwise
have succumbed, were enabled to hold on until morning.
Presently the first dawn of daylight appeared, giving fresh hopes to
the few survivors. There were now only some six or eight standing by the
window, and a few standing or leaning against the walls around. The room
itself was heaped high with the dead.
It was not until two hours later that the doors were opened, and the
guard entered; and it was found that, of the hundred and forty-six
Englishmen inclosed there the night before, but twenty-three still
breathed. Of these, very few retained strength to stagger out through the
door. The rest were carried out, and laid in the veranda.
When the nabob came into the fort in the morning, he ordered Mr.
Holwell to be brought before him. He was unable to walk, but was carried
to his presence. The brutal nabob expressed no regret for what had
happened, but loaded him with abuse, on account of the paucity of the
treasure, and ordered him to be placed in confinement. The other prisoners
were also confined in a cell. Ada, the only English female who had
survived the siege, was torn, weeping, from Charlie's arms, and conveyed
to the zenana, or ladies' apartments, of one of the nabob's generals.
A few days later, the English captives were all conveyed to
Moorshedabad, where the rajah also returned, after having extorted large
sums from the French and Dutch, and confiscated the whole of the property
of the English in Bengal.
The prospect was a gloomy one for the captives. That the English would,
in time, return and extort a heavy reckoning from the nabob, they did not
doubt for a moment. But nothing was more likely than that, at the news of
the first disaster which befell his troops, the nabob would order his
captives to be put to death.
Upon the march up the country Charlie had, by his cheerfulness and good
temper, gained the goodwill of the officer commanding the guard; and upon
arriving at their destination, he recommended him so strongly to the
commander of the prison that the latter, instead of placing him in the
apartment allotted to the remainder of the prisoners, assigned a separate
room to him; permitting Tim, at his request, to occupy it with him. It was
a room of fair size, in a tower on one of the angles of the walls. It had
bars, but these did not prevent those behind them looking out at the
country which stretched around. The governor of the prison, finding that
Charlie spoke the language fluently, often came up to sit with him,
conversing with him on the affairs of that unknown country, England.
Altogether, they were fairly treated. Their food was plentiful and,
beyond their captivity, they had little to complain of. Over and over
again, they talked about the possibilities of effecting an escape; but, on
entering the prison, they had noticed how good was the watch, how many and
strong the doors through which they had passed. They had meditated upon
making a rope and escaping from the window; but they slept on the divan,
each with a rug to cover them; and these, torn into strips and twisted,
would not reach a quarter of the way from their window to the ground; and
there was no other material of which a rope could possibly have been
formed.
"Our only hope," Charlie said one day, "is in Hossein. I am sure he
will follow us to the death; and if he did but know where we are confined,
he would not, I am certain, rest day or night, till he had opened a
communication with us.
"See, Tim, there is my regimental cap, with its gold lace. Let us
fasten it outside the bars, with a thread from that rug. Of course, we
must remove it when we hear anyone coming."
This was speedily done and, for the next few days, one or other
remained constantly at the window.
"Mr. Charles!" Tim exclaimed in great excitement, one day; "there is a
man I've been watching, for the last half hour. He seems to be picking up
sticks, but all the while he keeps getting nearer and nearer, and two or
three times it seems to me that he has looked up in this direction."
Charlie joined Tim at the window.
"Yes, Tim, you are right. That's Hossein, I'm pretty sure."
The man had now approached within two or three hundred yards of the
corner of the wall. He was apparently collecting pieces of dried
brushwood, for firing. Presently, he glanced in the direction of the
window. Charlie thrust his arm through the bar, and waved his hand. The
man threw up his arm with a gesture which, to a casual observer, would
have appeared accidental; but which the watchers had no doubt, whatever,
was intended for them. He was still too far off from them to be able to
distinguish his features, but they had not the least doubt that it was
Hossein.
"And what's to be done next, Mister Charles? That's Hossein, sure
enough, but it don't bring us much nearer to getting out."
"The first thing is to communicate with him in some way, Tim."
"If he'd come up to the side of the moat, yer honor might spake to
him."
"That would never do, Tim. There are sure to be sentries on the walls
of the prison. We must trust to him. He can see the sentries, and will
know best what he can do."
It was evident that Hossein did not intend doing anything, at present;
for, still stooping and gathering brushwood, he gradually withdrew farther
and farther from the wall. Then they saw him make his sticks into a
bundle, put them on his shoulder, and walk away. During the rest of the
day, they saw no more of Hossein.
"I will write," Charlie said, "--fortunately I have a pencil--telling
him that we can lower a light string down to the moat, if he can manage to
get underneath with a cord which we can hoist up, and that he must have
two disguises in readiness."
"I don't think Hossein can read," Tim said, "any more than I can,
myself."
"I daresay not, Tim, but he will probably have friends in the town.
There are men who were employed in the English factory at Kossimbazar,
hard by. These will be out of employment, and will regret the expulsion of
the English. We can trust Hossein. At any rate, I will get it ready.
"Now the first thing we have to do is to loosen one of these bars. I
wish we had thought of doing it before. However, the stonework is pretty
rotten, and we shall have no difficulty about that. The first thing is to
get a tool of some sort."
They looked round the room, and for some time saw nothing which could
in any way serve. The walls, floor, and wide bench running round, upon
which the cushions which served as their beds were laid, were all stone.
There was no other furniture, of any kind.
"Divil a bit of iron do I see in the place, Mister Charles," Tim said.
"They don't even give us a knife for dinner, but stew all their meats into
a smash."
"There is something, Tim," Charlie said, looking at the door. "Look at
those long hinges."
The hinges were of ornamented ironwork, extending half across the door.
Upon one of the scrolls of this ironwork they set to work. Chipping a
small piece of stone off an angle of the wall, outside the window; with
great difficulty they thrust this under the end of the scroll, as a wedge.
Another piece, slightly larger, was then pushed under it. The gain was
almost imperceptible, but at last the piece of iron was raised from the
woodwork sufficiently to allow them to get a hold of it, with their
thumbs. Then, little by little, they bent it upward; until at last they
could obtain a firm hold of it.
The rest was comparatively easy. The iron was tough and strong but, by
bending it up and down, they succeeded at last in breaking it off. It was
the lower hinge of the door, upon which they had operated, as the loss of
a piece of iron there would be less likely to catch the eye of anyone
coming in. They collected some dust from the corner of the room, moistened
it, and rubbed it on to the wood so as to take away its freshness of
appearance; and they then set to work with the piece of iron, which was of
a curved shape, about three inches long, an inch wide, and an eighth of an
inch thick.
Taking it by turns, they ground away the stone round the bottom of one
of the bars. For the first inch, the stone yielded readily to the iron;
but below that it became harder, and their progress was slow. They filled
the hole which they had made with water, to soften the stone, and worked
steadily away till night; when, to their great joy, they found that they
had reached the bottom of the bar. They then enlarged the hole inwards, in
order that the bar might be pulled back. Fortunately, it was much decayed
by age; and they had no doubt that, by exerting all their strength,
together they could bend it sufficiently to enable them to get through.
At the hour when their dinner was brought they had ceased their work,
filled up the hole with dust collected from the floor, put some dust of
the stone over it, and smoothed it down, so that it would not have been
noticed by anyone casually looking from the window.
It was late at night before they finished their work. Their hands were
sore and bleeding, and they were completely worn out with fatigue. They
had saved, from their dinner, a good-sized piece of bread. They folded up
into a small compass the leaf from his pocketbook, upon which Charlie had
written in Hindostanee his letter to Hossein, and thrust this into the
centre of the piece of bread. Then Charlie told Tim to lie down and rest
for three hours, while he kept watch; as they must take it in turns, all
night, to listen in case Hossein should come outside. The lamp was kept
burning.
Just as Charlie's watch was over, he thought he heard a very faint
splash in the water below. Two or three minutes later, he again thought he
heard the sound. He peered out of the window anxiously, but the night was
dark, and he could see nothing. Listening intently, it seemed to him,
several times, that he heard the same faint sound.
Presently something whizzed by him, and looking round, to his delight
he saw a small arrow, with a piece of very thin string attached. The arrow
was made of very light wood. Round the iron point was a thick wrapping of
cotton, which would entirely deaden its sound, as it struck a wall. It was
soaked in water, and Charlie had no doubt that the sound he heard was
caused by its fall into the moat, after ineffectual trials to shoot
through the window.
Round the centre of the arrow a piece of greased silk was wrapped.
Charlie took this off, and found beneath it a piece of paper, on which was
written in Hindostanee:
"If you have a bar loosed, pull the string and haul up a rope. If not,
throw the arrow down. I will come again, tomorrow night."
Tim had by this time joined Charlie, and they speedily began to pull in
the string. Presently a thicker string came up into their hands. They
continued to pull, and soon the end of a stout rope, in which knots were
tied every two feet, came up to them. They fastened this to one of the
bars, and then took hold of that which they had loosened; and, putting
their feet against the wall, exerted themselves to the utmost. The iron
was tougher than they had expected, but they were striving for liberty
and, with desperate exertions, they bent it inwards until, at last, there
was room enough for them to creep through.
"Can you swim, Tim?"
"Not a stroke, yer honor. Shure you should know that, when you fished
me out of the water."
"Very well, Tim. As I kept you up then, 'twill be easy enough for me,
now, to take you across the moat. I will go first, and when I get into the
water, will keep hold of the rope till you come down. Take off your boots,
for they would be heard scraping against the wall. Be sure you make as
little noise as possible, and lower yourself quietly into the water."
Charlie then removed his own boots, squeezed himself through the bars
and, grasping the rope tightly, began to descend. He found the knots of
immense assistance, for had it not been for them, unaccustomed as he was
to the work, he would have been unable to prevent himself from sliding
down too rapidly. The window was fully sixty feet above the moat, and he
was very thankful when, at last, he felt the water touch his feet.
Lowering himself quietly into it, he shook the rope, to let Tim know that
he could begin his descent.
Before Tim was halfway down, Charlie could hear his hard breathing, and
muttered ejaculations to himself:
"Shure I'll never get to the bottom at all, my arms are fairly
breaking. I shall squash Mr. Charles, if I fall on him."
"Hold your tongue, Tim," Charlie said in a loud whisper.
Tim was silent, but the panting and puffing increased, and Charlie swam
a stroke or two away, expecting every moment that Tim would fall. The
Irishman, however, held on; but let himself into the water with a splash,
which aroused the attention of the sentry above, who instantly challenged.
Tim and Charlie remained perfectly quiet. Again the sentry challenged.
Then there was a long silence. The sentry probably was unwilling to rouse
the place by a false alarm, and the splash might have been caused by the
fall of a piece of decayed stone from the face of the wall.
"Tim, you clumsy fellow," whispered Charlie, "you nearly spoiled all."
"Shure, yer honor, I was kilt entirely, and my arms were pulled out of
my sockets. Holy Mother, who'd have thought 'twould be so difficult to
come down a rope! The sailors are great men, entirely."
"Now, Tim, lie quiet. I will turn you on your back, and swim across
with you."
The moat was some twenty yards wide. Charlie swam across, towing Tim
after him, and taking the greatest pains to avoid making the slightest
splash. The opposite side was of stonework, and rose six feet above the
water. As soon as they touched the wall, a stout rope was lowered to them.
"Now, Tim, you climb up first."
"Is it climb up, yer honor? I couldn't do it, if it was to save my sowl.
My arms are gone altogether, and I'm as weak as a child.
"You go, Mister Charles. I'll hould on by the rope till morning. They
can but shoot me."
"Nonsense, Tim! Here, I will fasten the rope round your body. Then I
will climb up, and we will pull you up after me."
In another minute, Charlie stood on the bank, and grasped the hand of
his faithful follower. Hossein threw himself on his knees, and pressed his
master to him. Then he rose and, at a word from Charlie, they hauled Tim
to the top. The rope was taken off him and, noiselessly, they made their
way across the country. Not a word was spoken, till they were at a
considerable distance from the fort.
"Where are you taking us, Hossein?" Charlie asked, at last.
"I have two peasants' dresses, in a deserted cottage a quarter of a
mile away."
Not another word was spoken, until they reached the hut, which stood at
the end of a small village. When they had entered this, Charlie first
thanked, in the warmest terms, his follower for having rescued them.
"My life is my lord's," Hossein answered simply. "He gave it me. It is
his again, whenever it is useful to him."
"No, Hossein, the balance is all on your side, now. You saved my life
that night at Ambur. You saved it that night at Calcutta, for, without the
water you brought us, I question whether we could have lived till morning.
Now you have procured our freedom. The debt is all on my side now, my
friend."
"Hossein is glad that his lord is content," the Mohammedan murmured.
"Now, what will my lord do?"
"Have you any place in the town to which we could go, Hossein?"
"Yes, Sahib. I hired a little house. I was dressed as a trader. I have
been here for two months, but I could not find where you were confined,
although I have tried all means, until I saw your cap."
"It was foolish of me not to have thought of it before," Charlie said.
"Well, Hossein, for a little time we had better take refuge in your house.
They will not think of searching in the city; and, as Calcutta is in their
hands, there is nowhere we could go. Besides, I must discover, if
possible, where Miss Haines is kept a prisoner; and rescue her, if it can
be done."
"The white girl is in the zenana of Rajah Dulab Ram," Hossein replied.
"Where is the rajah's palace?"
"He has one in the city, one at Ajervam, twenty miles from here. I do
not know at which she is lodged."
"We must find that out presently," Charlie said. "It is something to
know she is in one of two houses.
"Now, about getting back into the town?"
"I have thought of that," Hossein said. "I have bought a quantity of
plantains, and two large baskets. After the gates are opened, you will go
boldly in with the baskets on your heads. No questions are asked of the
country people who go in and out. I have some stain here, which will
darken your skins.
"I will go in first in my merchant's dress, which I have here. I will
stop a little way inside the gate, and when I see you coming, will walk
on. Do you follow me, a little behind. My house is in a quiet street. When
I reach the door, do you come up and offer to sell me plantains. If there
are people about, I shall bargain with you until I see that no one is
noticing us. Then you can enter. If none are about, you can follow me
straight in."
Hossein now set about the disguises. A light was struck, and both Tim
and Charlie were shaved, up to the line which the turban would cover.
Charlie's whiskers, which were somewhat faint, as he was still under
twenty-one years old, gave but little trouble. Tim, however, grumbled at
parting with his much more bushy appendages. The shaven part of the heads,
necks, and faces were then rubbed with a dark fluid, as were the arms and
legs.
They were next wrapped in dark blue clothes, in peasant fashion, and
turbans wound round their heads. Hossein then, examining them critically,
announced that they would pass muster anywhere.
"I feel mighty quare," Tim exclaimed; "and it seems to me downright
ondacent, to be walking about with my naked legs."
Charlie laughed.
"Why, Tim, you are accustomed to see thousands of men, every day, with
nothing on but a loincloth."
"Yes, yer honor, but then they're hathens, and it seems natural for
them to do so; but for a dacent boy to go walking about in the streets,
with a thing on which covers no more than his shirt, is onnatural
altogether. Mother of Moses, what a shindy there would be, in the streets
of Cork, if I were to show myself in such a state!"
Charlie now lay down for a sleep till morning; while Tim, who had had
three hours' repose, settled himself for a comfortable chat with Hossein,
to whom sleep appeared altogether unnecessary.
Between Hossein and Tim there was a sort of brotherly attachment,
arising from their mutual love of their master. During the two years which
Tim had spent apart from all Europeans, save Charlie, he had contrived to
pick up enough of the language to make himself fairly intelligible; and,
since the day when Hossein had saved Charlie's life at Ambur, the warmest
friendship had sprung up between the good-humoured and warm-hearted
Irishman, and the silent and devoted Mohammedan.
Tim's friendship even extended so far as to induce a toleration of
Hossein's religion. He had come to the conclusion that a man who, at
stated times in the day, would leave his employment, whatever it might be,
spread his carpet, and be for some minutes lost in prayer, could not be
altogether a hathen; especially when he learned, from Charlie, that the
Mohammedans, like ourselves, worship one God. For the sake of his friend,
then, he now generally excluded the Mohammedans from the general
designation of heathen, which he still applied to the Hindoos.
He learned from Hossein that the latter, having observed from a
distance the Europeans driven into the cell at Calcutta, perceived at once
how fatal the consequences would be. He had, an hour or two after they
were confined there, approached with some water, but the officer on guard
had refused to let him give it. He had then gone into the native town, but
being unable to find any fruit there, had walked out to the gardens, and
had picked a large basketful. This he had brought as an offering to the
officer, and the latter had then consented to his giving one bowl of water
to the prisoners, among whom, as he had told him, was his master. For
bringing a second bowl, contrary to his orders, Hossein had, as Tim saw,
been struck down; but had the satisfaction of believing that his master,
and Tim, had derived some benefit from his effort.
On the following morning, to his delight, he saw them issue among the
few survivors from the dungeon; and had, when they were taken up the
country, followed close behind them, arriving at the town on the same day
as themselves. He had, ever since, been wandering round the prison. He had
taken a house, so close to it that he could keep a watch on all the
windows facing the town; and had, day after day, kept his eyes fixed upon
these without success. He had, at last, found out from one of the soldiers
that the white prisoners were confined on the other side of the prison;
but until he saw Charlie's cap, he had been unable to discover the room in
which they were confined.
In the morning, they started for the town. Groups of peasants were
already making their way towards the gate, with fruit and grain; and,
keeping near one of these parties, while sufficiently distant to prevent
the chance of their being addressed, Charlie and Tim made their way to the
gate; the latter suffering acutely, in his mind, from the impropriety of
his attire.
No questions were asked, as they passed the guard. They at once
perceived Hossein, standing a little way off, and followed him through the
busy streets. They soon turned off into a quieter quarter, and stopped at
a house, in a street in which scarcely anyone was stirring. Hossein
glanced round, as he opened the door, and beckoned to them to enter at
once. This they did, and were glad, indeed, to set down the heavy baskets
of plantains.
"My lord's room is upstairs," Hossein said, and led the way to a
comfortably furnished apartment. "I think that you might stay here, for
months, unsuspected. A sweeper comes, every day, to do my rooms
downstairs. He believes the rest of the house to be untenanted, and you
must remain perfectly quiet, during the half hour he is here. Otherwise,
no one enters the house but myself."
Hossein soon set to work, and prepared an excellent breakfast. Then he
left them, saying that he would now devote himself to finding out whether
the young white lady was in the town palace of the rajah. He returned in
the afternoon.
"She is here, Sahib," he said. "I got into conversation with one of the
retainers of the rajah; and by giving him some wonderful bargains, in
Delhi jewelry, succeeded in opening his lips. I dare not question him too
closely, but I am to meet him tomorrow, to show him some more silver
bracelets."
"It is fortunate, Hossein, that you have some money, for neither Tim
nor I have a rupee."
"Thanks to the generosity of my lord," Hossein said, "I am well
supplied."
The next day, Hossein discovered that the windows of the zenana were at
the back of the palace, looking into the large garden.
"I hear, however," he said, "that the ladies of the zenana are, next
week, going to the rajah's other palace. The ladies will, of course,
travel in palanquins; but upon the road I might get to talk with one of
the waiting women, and might bribe her to pass a note into the hands of
the white lady."
"I suppose they will have a guard with them, Hossein?"
"Surely, a strong guard," Hossein answered.
The time passed, until the day came for the departure of the rajah's
zenana. Charlie wrote a note, as follows:
"My dear Ada,
"I am free, and am on the lookout for an opportunity to rescue you.
Contrive to put a little bit of your handkerchief through the latticework
of the window of your room, as a signal to us which it is. On the second
night after your arrival, we will be under it with a ladder. If others, as
is probable, sleep in your room, lie down without undressing more than you
can help. When they are asleep, get up and go to the window, and open the
lattice. If any of them wake, say you are hot and cannot sleep, and wait
quietly till they are off again. Then stretch out your arm, and we shall
know you are ready. Then we will put up the ladder, and you must get out,
and come to us as quickly as possible. Once with us, you will be safe."
This note was wrapped up very small, and put into a quill. As soon as
the gates were open, Hossein and his companions left the town, and
proceeded as far as a grove, halfway between the town and the rajah's
country palace.
"They are sure to stop here, for a rest," Hossein said. "I will remain
here, and try to enter into conversation with one of them. It will be
better for you to go on, for some distance, and then turn aside from the
road. When they have all passed, come back into the road again, and I will
join you."
After waiting two hours, Hossein saw two carts full of women
approaching, and had no doubt that these were the servants of the zenana.
As he had expected, the drivers halted their cattle in the shade of the
trees; and the women, delighted to enjoy their liberty, alighted from the
carts and scattered in the grove. Presently one of them, a middle-aged
woman, approached the spot where Hossein had seated himself.
Hossein drew out a large and beautiful silver bracelet, of Delhi
workmanship.
"Would you like to buy this?" he asked.
"How should I buy it?" she said. "I am only a servant.
"It is very beautiful;" and she looked at it, with longing eyes.
"I have two of them," he said, "and they will both be yours, if you
will do me a service."
"What is it?" she asked.
"They will be yours, if you will give this quill to the little white
girl, who is in the zenana."
The woman hesitated.
"It is dangerous," she said.
"Not at all," Hossein replied. "It only gives her news of a friend,
whom she thought was dead. It will cheer her heart, and will be a kind
action. None can ever know it."
"Give them to me," the woman said, holding out her hand. "I will do
it."
"No," Hossein replied. "I will give you one now, the other when I know
that the note is delivered. I shall be watching, tomorrow. If she places
her handkerchief in her lattice, I shall know that she has got it. When
she does this, I will bury the other bracelet, a few inches in the ground,
just under that window. You can dig it up when you will."
"I understand," the woman said. "You can trust me. We all like the
white girl. She is very gentle, but very sad. I would gladly give her
pleasure."
Hossein handed to her the bracelet, and the quill. She hid them in her
dress, and sauntered away.
Hossein lay back, as if taking a sleep, and so remained until, half an
hour later, he heard the shouts of the drivers to the women, to take their
places in the carts. Then the sound of retreating wheels was heard.
Hossein was about to rise, when he heard the clatter of horses' hoofs.
Looking round he saw eight elephants, each carrying a closed pavilion,
moving along the road, escorted by a troop of horsemen. In the pavilions,
as he knew, were the ladies of the rajah's zenana.
Chapter 20: The Rescue Of The White
Captive.
After the cavalcade had passed, Hossein rose to his feet and followed
them, allowing them to go some distance ahead. Presently he was joined by
Charlie and Tim, and the three walked quietly along the road, until within
sight of the rajah's palace.
In front stood a great courtyard. Behind, also surrounded by a high
wall, was the garden. As this was always devoted to the zenana, they had
little doubt that the rooms of the ladies were on this side; and, two
hours later, they were delighted at seeing a small piece of white stuff,
thrust through one of the lattices. The woman had been faithful to her
trust. Ada had received the letter.
They then retired to a distance from the palace, and at once set to
work on the fabrication of a ladder. Hossein, followed by Charlie, who
better enacted the part than Tim, went into a village and purchased four
long bamboo poles, saying he wanted them for the carrying of burdens.
Charlie placed these on his shoulder, and followed Hossein.
When they arrived at the grove they set to work, having brought with
them all the necessary materials. The bamboos were spliced together, two
and two; and while Charlie and Tim set to, to bore holes in these, Hossein
chopped down a young tree and, cutting it into lengths, prepared the
rungs.
It took them all that evening, and the greater part of the next day,
before they had satisfactorily accomplished their work. They had, then, a
ladder thirty feet long, the height which they judged the window to be
above the terrace below. It was strong, and at the same time light.
They waited until darkness had completely fallen; and then, taking
their ladder, went round to the back of the garden. They mounted the wall
and, sitting on the top, dragged the ladder after them, and lowered it on
the other side. It was of equal thickness the whole length; and could,
therefore, be used indifferently either way.
They waited patiently, until they saw the lights in the zenana windows
extinguished. Then they crept quietly up, and placed the ladder under the
window at which the signal had been shown; and found that their
calculations were correct, and that it reached to a few inches below the
sill.
Half an hour later, the lattice above opened. They heard a murmur of
voices, and then all was quiet again. After a few minutes, Charlie climbed
noiselessly up the ladder and, just as he reached the top, an arm was
stretched out above him; and, a moment afterwards, Ada's face appeared.
"I am here, dear," he said, in a whisper. "Lean out, and I will take
you."
The girl stretched out over the window. Charlie took her in his arms,
and lifted her lightly out, and then slowly descended the ladder. No
sooner did he touch the ground than they hurried away; Ada sobbing, with
excitement and pleasure, on Charlie's shoulder; Tim and Hossein bearing
the ladder; Hossein having already carried out his promise of concealing
the second bracelet under the window.
In a few minutes they had safely surmounted the wall, and hurried
across the country, with all speed. Before leaving the town, Hossein had
purchased a cart with two bullocks; and had hired a man who was
recommended to him, by one of his co-religionists there, as one upon whose
fidelity he could rely. This cart was awaiting them at a grove.
Paying them the amount stipulated, Hossein took the ox goad and started
the bullocks, Tim walking beside him, while Charlie and Ada took their
places in the cart. They were sure that a hot pursuit would be set up. The
rage of the nabob at the escape of Charlie and his servant had been
extreme, and the whole country had been scoured by parties of horsemen;
and they were sure that the rajah would use every possible means to
discover Ada, before he ventured to report to the nabob that the prisoner
committed to his charge had escaped.
"Of course, I can't see you very well," Ada said, "but I should not
have known you, in the least."
"No, I am got up like a peasant," Charlie answered. "We shall have to
dress you so, before morning. We have got things here for you."
"Oh, how delighted I was," Ada exclaimed, "when I got your note! I
found it so difficult to keep on looking sad and hopeless, when I could
have sung for joy. I had been so miserable. There seemed no hope, and they
said, some day, I should be sent to the nabob's zenana--wretches! How poor
mamma will be grieving for me, and papa!--
"Ah! Captain Marryat, he is dead, is he not?"
"Yes, my dear," Charlie said gently. "He was killed by my side, that
afternoon. With his last breath, he asked me to take care of you."
"I thought so," Ada said, crying quietly. "I did not think of it at the
time. Everything was so strange, and so dreadful, that I scarcely thought
at all. But afterwards, on the way here, when I turned it all over, it
seemed to me that it must be so. He did not come to me, all that
afternoon. He was not shut up with us in that dreadful place, and everyone
else was there. So it seemed to me that he must have been killed, but that
you did not like to tell me."
"It was better for him, dear, than to have died in that terrible cell.
Thank God your mamma is safe, and some day you will join her again.
"We have news that the English are coming up to attack Calcutta. A
party are already in the Hoogly; and the nabob is going to start, in a few
days, to his army there. I hope, in a very very short time, you will be
safe among your friends."
After travelling for several hours, they stopped. Charlie gave Ada some
native clothes and ornaments, and told her to stain her face, arms, and
legs, to put on the bangles and bracelets, and then to rejoin them. Half
an hour later, Ada took her seat in the cart, this time transformed into a
Hindoo girl, and the party again proceeded.
They felt sure that Ada's flight would not be discovered until
daybreak. It would be some little time before horsemen could be sent off
in all directions, in pursuit; and they could not be overtaken until
between eleven and twelve.
The waggon was filled with grain, on the top of which Charlie and Ada
were seated. When daylight came, Charlie alighted and walked by the cart.
Unquestioned, they passed through several villages.
At eleven o'clock, Hossein pointed to a large grove, at some little
distance from the road.
"Go in there," he said, "and stay till nightfall. Do you then come out,
and follow me. I shall go into the next village, and remain there till
after dark. I shall then start, and wait for you half a mile beyond the
village."
An hour after the waggon had disappeared from sight, the party in the
grove saw ten or twelve horsemen galloping rapidly along the road. An hour
passed, and the same party returned, at an equal speed. They saw no more
of them and, after it became dark, they continued their way; passed
through the village, which was three miles ahead; and found Hossein
waiting, a short distance beyond. Ada climbed into the cart, and they
again went forward.
"Did you put the rajah's men on the wrong track, Hossein? We guessed
that you had done so, when we saw them going back."
"Yes," Hossein said. "I had unyoked the bullocks, and had lain down in
the caravanserai, when they arrived. They came in, and their leader asked
who I was. I said that I was taking down a load of grain, for the use of
the army at Calcutta. He asked where were the two men and the woman who
were with me. I replied that I knew nothing of them. I had overtaken them
on the road, and they had asked leave for the woman to ride in the cart.
They said they were going to visit their mother, who was sick.
"He asked if I was sure they were natives, and I counterfeited
surprise, and said that certainly they were; for which lie Allah will, I
trust, be merciful, since it was told to an enemy. I said that they had
left me, just when we had passed the last village; and had turned off by
the road to the right, saying they had many miles to go.
"They talked together and decided that, as you were the only people who
had been seen along the road, they must follow and find you; and so
started at once, and I daresay they're searching for you now, miles away."
Their journey continued without any adventure, until within a few miles
of Calcutta. Hossein then advised them to take up their abode in a ruined
mud hut, at a distance from the road. He had bought, at the last village,
a supply of provisions, sufficient to last them for some days.
"I shall now," he said, "go into the town, sell my grain, bullocks, and
cart, and find out where the soldiers are."
As soon as the news of the nabob's advance against Calcutta reached
Madras, Mr. Pigot, who was now governor there, despatched a force of two
hundred and thirty men, under the orders of Major Kilpatrick. The party
reached Falta, on the Hoogly, on the 2nd of August, and there heard of the
capture of Calcutta. By detachments, who came down from some of the
Company's minor posts, the force was increased to nearly four hundred. But
sickness broke out among them and, finding himself unable to advance
against so powerful an army as that of the nabob, Major Kilpatrick sent to
Madras for further assistance.
When the news reached that place, Clive had recently arrived with a
strong force, which was destined to operate against the French at
Hyderabad. The news, however, of the catastrophe at Calcutta at once
altered the destination of the force; and, on the 16th of October, the
expedition sailed for Calcutta. The force consisted of two hundred and
fifty men of the 39th Foot, the first regiment of the regular English army
which had been sent out to India; five hundred and seventy men of the
Madras European force; eighty artillerymen; and twelve hundred Sepoys.
Of the nine hundred Europeans, only six hundred arrived at that time at
the mouth of the Hoogly, the largest ship, the Cumberland, with three
hundred men on board, having grounded on the way. The remainder of the
fleet, consisting of three ships of war, five transports, and a fire ship,
reached Falta between the 11th and 20th of December.
Hossein had returned from Calcutta, with the news that the party
commanded by Major Kilpatrick had been, for some weeks, at Falta; and the
party at once set off towards that place, which was but forty miles
distant. Travelling by night, and sleeping by day in the woods, they
reached Falta without difficulty; and, learning that the force was still
on board ship, they took possession of a boat, moored by the bank some
miles higher up, and rowed down.
Great was their happiness, indeed, at finding themselves once more
among friends. Here were assembled many of the ships which had been at
Calcutta, at the time it was taken; and, to Ada's delight, she learned
that her mother was on board one of these. They were soon rowed there, in
a boat from the ship which they had first boarded; and Ada, on gaining the
deck, saw her mother sitting among some other ladies, fugitives like
herself.
With a scream of joy she rushed forward, and with a cry of, "Mamma,
Mamma!" threw herself into her mother's arms.
It was a moment or two before Mrs. Haines could realize that this
dark-skinned Hindoo girl was her child, and then her joy equalled that of
her daughter. It was some time before any coherent conversation could take
place; and then Ada, running back to Charlie, drew him forward to her
mother; and presented him to her as her preserver, the Captain Marryat who
had stayed with them at Calcutta.
Mrs. Haines' gratitude was extreme, and Charlie was soon surrounded,
and congratulated, by the officers on board, to many of whom, belonging as
they did to the Madras army, he was well known. Foremost among them, and
loudest in his expressions of delight, was his friend Peters.
"You know, Charlie, I suppose," he said presently, "that you are a
major now?"
"No, indeed," Charlie said. "How is that?"
"When the directors at home received the report of Commodore James,
that the fort of Suwarndrug had been captured entirely through you, they
at once sent out your appointment as major.
"You are lucky, old fellow. Here are you a major, while I'm a
lieutenant, still. However, don't think I'm jealous, for I'm not a bit,
and you thoroughly deserve all, and more than you've got."
"And this is Tim," Charlie said. "He has shared all my adventures with
me."
Tim was standing disconsolately by the bulwark, shifting uneasily from
foot to foot, with the feeling of the extreme shortness of his garments
stronger upon him than ever.
Peters seized him heartily by the hand.
"I am glad to see you, Tim, very glad. And so you've been with Major
Marryat, ever since?"
"For the Lord's sake, Mr. Peters," Tim said, in an earnest whisper, "git
me a pair of trousers. I'm that ashamed of myself, in the presence of the
ladies, that I'm like to drop."
"Come along below, Tim. Come along, Charlie. There are lots of poor
fellows have gone down, and uniforms are plentiful. We'll soon rig you out
again."
"There is one more introduction, Peters. This is my man, Hossein. He
calls himself my servant. I call him my friend. He has saved my life
twice, and has been of inestimable service. Had it not been for him, I
should still be in prison at Moorshedabad."
Peters said a few hearty words to Hossein, and they then went below;
returning on deck in half an hour, Charlie in the undress uniform of an
officer, Tim in that of a private in the Madras infantry.
Mrs. Haines and Ada had gone below, where they could chat, unrestrained
by the presence of others; and where an attempt could be made to restore
Ada to her former appearance. Mrs. Haines had heard of her husband's
death, on the day after the capture of Calcutta, Mr. Holwell having been
permitted to send on board the ships a list of those who had fallen. She
had learned that Ada had survived the terrible night in the dungeon, and
that she had been sent up country, a captive. She almost despaired of ever
hearing of her again, but had resolved to wait to see the issue of the
approaching campaign.
Now that Ada was restored to her, she determined to leave for England;
in a vessel which was to sail, in the course of a week, with a large
number of fugitives. Mr. Haines was a very wealthy man, and had intended
retiring, altogether, in the course of a few months; and she would,
therefore, be in the enjoyment of an ample fortune in England.
Among those on board the ships at Falta was Mr. Drake, who at once,
upon hearing of Charlie's arrival, ordered him to be arrested. Major
Kilpatrick, however, firmly refused to allow the order to be carried out,
saying that, as Charlie was under his orders as an officer in the Madras
army, Mr. Drake had no control or authority over him. He could, however,
upon Clive's arrival, lay the case before him.
A week later, Mrs. Haines and Ada sailed for England, the latter
weeping bitterly at parting from Charlie, who promised them that, when he
came home to England on leave, he would pay them a visit. He gave them his
mother's address; and Mrs. Haines promised to call upon her, as soon as
she reached England, and give her full news of him; adding that she hoped
that his sisters, the youngest of whom was little older than Ada, would be
great friends with her.
Very slowly and wearily the time passed at Falta. The mists from the
river were deadly, and of the two hundred and thirty men whom Kilpatrick
brought with him from Madras, in July, only about thirty remained alive;
and of these, but ten were fit for duty when Clive, at last, arrived.
The fleet left Falta on the 27th of December, and anchored off Moiapur
on the following day. The fort of Baj-baj, near this place, was the first
object of attack; and it was arranged that, while Admiral Watson should
bombard with the fleet, Clive should attack it on the land side.
Clive, who now held the rank of lieutenant colonel in the army, had
manifested great pleasure at again meeting the young officer who had
served under him at Arcot; and who had, in his absence, obtained a fame
scarcely inferior to his own, by the defence of Ambur and the capture of
Suwarndrug. A few hours after Clive's arrival, Mr. Drake had made a formal
complaint of the assault which Charlie had committed; but after hearing,
from Charlie, an account of the circumstances, Clive sent a contemptuous
message to Mr. Drake, to the effect that Charlie had only acted as he
should himself have done, under the same circumstances; and that, at the
present time, he should not think of depriving himself of the services of
one gallant soldier, even if he had maltreated a dozen civilians.
As Clive had been given paramount authority in Bengal, and as Mr. Drake
had every reason to suppose that he, himself, would be recalled as soon as
the circumstances attending the capture of Calcutta were known in England,
he was unable to do anything further in the matter, and Charlie landed
with Clive on the 28th. The force consisted of two hundred and fifty
Europeans, and twelve hundred Sepoys, who were forced to drag with them,
having no draft animals, two field pieces and a waggon of ammunition.
The march was an excessively fatiguing one. The country was swampy in
the extreme, and intersected with watercourses; and, after a terribly
fatiguing night march, and fifteen hours of unintermittent labour, they
arrived, at eight o'clock in the morning, at the hollow bed of a lake, now
perfectly dry. It lay some ten feet below the surrounding country, and was
bordered with jungle. In the wet season it was full of water. On the
eastern and southern banks lay an abandoned village, and it was situated
about a mile and a half from the fort of Baj-baj.
Clive was ill, and unable to see after matters himself. Indeed,
accustomed only to the feeble forces of Southern India, who had never
stood for a moment against him in battle, he had no thought of danger.
Upon the other hand the troops of the nabob, who had had no experience,
whatever, of the superior fighting powers of the Europeans; and who had
effected so easy a conquest at Calcutta, flushed with victory, regarded
their European foes with contempt, and were preparing to annihilate them
at a blow.
Manak Chand, the general commanding the nabob's forces, informed by
spies of the movements of the English troops, moved out with fifteen
hundred horses and two thousand foot. So worn out were the British upon
their arrival at the dried bed of the lake that, after detaching a small
body to occupy a village near the enemy's fort, from which alone danger
was expected; while another took up the post in some jungles, by the side
of the main road, the rest threw themselves down to sleep. Some lay in the
village, some in the shade of the bushes along the sides of the hollow.
Their arms were all piled in a heap, sixty yards from the eastern bank.
The two field pieces stood deserted, on the north side of the village. Not
a single sentry was posted.
Manak Chand, knowing that, after marching all night, they would be
exhausted, now stole upon them, and surrounded the tank on three sides.
Happily, he did not perceive that their arms were piled at a distance of
sixty yards from the nearest man. Had he done so, the English would have
been helpless in his hands. After waiting an hour, to be sure that the
last of the English were sound asleep, he ordered a tremendous fire to be
opened on the hollow and village.
Astounded at this sudden attack, the men sprang up from their deep
sleep, and a rush was instantly made to their arms. Clive, ever coolest in
danger, shouted to them to be steady, and his officers well seconded his
attempts. Unfortunately the artillerymen, in their sudden surprise,
instead of rushing to their cannon, joined the rest of the troops as they
ran back to their arms, and the guns at once fell into the hands of the
enemy.
These had now climbed the eastern bank, and a fire from all sides was
poured upon the troops, huddled together in a mass.
"Major Marryat," Clive said, "if we fall back now, fatigued as the men
are, and shaken by this surprise, we are lost. Do you take a wing of the
Sepoy battalion, and clear the right bank. I will advance, with the main
body, directly on the village."
"Come on, my lads," Charlie shouted, in Hindostanee; "show them how the
men of Madras can fight."
The Sepoys replied with a cheer, advanced with a rush against the bank,
drove the defenders at once from the point where they charged, and then
swept round the tank towards the village, which Clive had already attacked
in front.
The loss of Charlie's battalion was small, but the main body, exposed
to the concentrated fire, suffered more heavily. They would not, however,
be denied. Reaching the bank, they poured a volley into the village, and
charged with the bayonet; just as Charlie's men dashed in at the side. The
enemy fled from the village and, taking shelter in the jungles around,
opened fire. The shouts of their officers could be heard, urging them
again to sally out and fall upon the British; but at this moment, the
party which had been sent forward along the road, hearing the fray, came
hurrying up and poured their fire into the jungle.
Surprised at this reinforcement, the enemy paused as they were issuing
from the wood, and then fell back upon their cavalry. The British
artillerymen ran out, and seized the guns, and opened with them upon the
retiring infantry. Clive now formed up his troops in line, and advanced
against the enemy's cavalry, behind which their infantry had massed for
shelter.
Manak Chand ordered his cavalry to charge, but just as he did so, a
cannonball from one of Clive's field pieces passed close to his head. The
sensation was so unpleasant that he at once changed his mind. The order
for retreat was given, and the beaten army fell back, in disorder, to
Calcutta.
Chapter 21: The Battle Outside Calcutta.
After the defeat of the enemy, who had surprised and so nearly
annihilated him, Clive marched at once towards the fort of Baj-baj. On the
way he met Major Kilpatrick, who was advancing, with a force which had
been landed from the ships when the sound of firing was heard, to his
assistance.
The fleet had, at daybreak, opened a heavy fire upon the ramparts; and
by the afternoon effected a breach. As his men were greatly fatigued, and
had had but an hour's sleep, Clive determined upon delaying the attack
until the morning; and a party of two hundred and fifty sailors, with two
guns, were landed to take part in the storming.
Many of these sailors had drunk freely before landing, and as night
fell, some of them strolled towards the fort. One of the number, named
Strahan, moved along, unobserved by the enemy, to the foot of the breach,
climbed up it, and came suddenly upon a party of its defenders sitting
round a fire, smoking. Strahan immediately fired his pistol among them,
with a shout of, "The fort is mine!" and then gave three rousing cheers.
The enemy leaped to their feet and ran off for a little way. Then,
seeing Strahan was alone, they rushed back and attacked him, firing as
they came. Strahan, drawing his cutlass, defended himself vigorously for
some time; but his weapon broke off at the hilt, just as a number of
Sepoys and men of the 39th, who had been awakened from their sleep by the
shouting and firing, came running up. Reinforcements of the garrison also
joined their friends, but these were dispirited by the sudden and
unexpected attack; and, as the troops continued to stream up the breach,
the garrison were pressed; and, losing heart, fled through the opposite
gate of the fort.
The only casualty on the British side was that Captain Campbell,
marching up at the head of the Sepoys, was mistaken for an enemy by the
sailors, and shot dead. Strahan was, in the morning, severely reprimanded
by the admiral for his breach of discipline; and, retiring from the cabin,
said to his comrades:
"Well, if I am flogged for this here action, I will never take another
fort, by myself, as long as I live."
Manak Chand was so alarmed at the fighting powers shown by the English
in these two affairs, that, leaving only a garrison of five hundred men at
Calcutta, he retired with his army to join the nabob at Moorshedabad. When
the fleet arrived before the town, the enemy surrendered the fort at the
first shot, and it was again taken possession of by the English.
Major Kilpatrick was at once sent up, with five ships and a few hundred
men, to capture the town of Hoogly, twenty miles farther up. The defences
of the place were strong. It was held by two thousand men, and three
thousand horsemen lay around it. The ships, however, at once opened a
cannonade upon it, and effected a breach before night, and at daybreak the
place was taken by storm.
Two days after the capture of Calcutta, the news arrived that war had
again been declared between England and France. It was fortunate that this
was not known a little earlier; for had the French forces been joined to
those under Manak Chand, the reconquest of Calcutta would not have been so
easily achieved.
The nabob, furious at the loss of Calcutta, and the capture and sack of
Hoogly, at once despatched a messenger to the governor of the French
colony of Chandranagore, to join him in crushing the English. The
governor, however, had received orders that, in the event of war being
declared between England and France, he was, if possible, to arrange with
the English that neutrality should be observed between them. He therefore
refused the nabob's request, and then sent messengers to Calcutta, to
treat.
The nabob had gathered an army of ten thousand foot and fifteen
thousand horse, and advanced against Calcutta, arriving before the town on
the 2nd February, 1757. Clive's force had now, owing to the arrival of
some reinforcements from Europe, and the enlisting of fresh Sepoys, been
raised to seven hundred European infantry, a hundred artillerymen, and
fifteen hundred Sepoys, with fourteen light field pieces.
The whole of the town of Calcutta was surrounded by a deep cut, with a
bank behind, called the Mahratta Ditch. A mile beyond this was a large
saltwater lake, so that an enemy advancing from the north would have to
pass within a short distance of Clive's intrenched position outside the
town, affording him great opportunities for a flank attack. On the day of
their arrival Clive marched out, but the enemy opened a heavy fire, and he
retired.
Clive determined to attack the enemy, next morning. Admiral Watson, at
his request, at once landed five hundred and sixty sailors, under the
command of Captain Warwick of the Thunderer. A considerable portion of the
enemy had crossed the Mahratta Ditch, and encamped within it. The nabob
himself pitched his tent in the garden of Omichund (a native Calcutta
merchant who, though in the nabob's camp from motives of policy,
sympathized entirely with the English), which occupied an advanced bastion
within the Mahratta Ditch. The rest of the army were encamped between the
ditch and the saltwater lake.
Clive's intentions were to march first against the battery which had
played on him so effectually the day before; and, having carried this, to
march directly against the garden in which the nabob was encamped. The
force with which he started, at three o'clock in the morning of the 3rd,
consisted of the five hundred and sixty sailors, who drew with them six
guns, six hundred and fifty European infantry, a hundred European
artillery, and eight hundred Sepoys. Half the Sepoys led the advance, the
remainder covered the rear.
Soon after daybreak, the Sepoys came in contact with the enemy's
advanced guard, placed in ditches along a road leading from the head of
the lake to the Mahratta Ditch. These discharged their muskets, and some
rockets, and took to flight. One of the rockets caused a serious disaster.
The Sepoys had their ammunition pouches open, and the contents of one of
these was fired by the rocket. The flash of the flame communicated the
fire to the pouch of the next Sepoy, and so the flame ran along the line,
killing, wounding, and scorching many, and causing the greatest confusion.
Fortunately the enemy were not near, and Captain Eyre Coote, who led the
British infantry behind them, aided Charlie, who led the advance, in
restoring order, and the forward movement again went on.
A new obstacle had, however, arisen. With the morning a dense fog had
set in, rendering it impossible for the troops to see even a few yards in
advance of them. Still they pushed on and, unopposed, reached a point
opposite Omichund's garden, but divided from it by the Mahratta Ditch.
Presently they heard the thunder of a great body of approaching
cavalry. They waited quietly until the unseen horse had approached within
a few yards of them, and then poured a mighty volley into the fog. The
noise ceased abruptly, and was followed by that of the enemy's cavalry in
retreat.
The fog was now so dense that it was impossible even to judge of the
directions in which the troops were moving. Clive knew, however, that the
Mahratta Ditch was on his right and, moving a portion of his troops till
they touched this, he again advanced, his object being to gain a causeway
which, raised several feet above the country, led from Calcutta, across
the Mahratta Ditch, into the country beyond. Towards this Clive now
advanced, his troops firing, as they marched, into the fog ahead of them,
and the guns firing from the flanks, obliquely, to the right and left.
Without experiencing any opposition Clive reached the causeway, and the
Sepoys, turning to their right, advanced along this towards the ditch. As
they crossed this, however, they came in the line of fire of their own
guns, the officer commanding them being ignorant of what was taking place
in front, and unable to see a foot before him. Charlie, closely
accompanied always by Tim, was at the head of his troops when the iron
hail of the English guns struck the head of the column, mowing down
numbers of men. A panic ensued, and the Sepoys, terror stricken at this
discharge, from a direction in which they considered themselves secure,
leaped from the causeway into the dry ditch and sheltered themselves
there. Charlie and his companion were saved by the fact that they were a
few paces ahead of the column.
"Run back, Tim," Charlie said. "Find Colonel Clive, and tell him that
we are being mowed down by our own artillery. If you can't find him, hurry
back to the guns, and tell the officer what he is doing."
Charlie then leaped down into the ditch, and endeavoured to rally the
Sepoys. A few minutes later Clive himself arrived, and the Sepoys were
induced to leave the ditch, and to form again by the side of the causeway,
along which the British troops were now marching.
Suddenly, however, from the fog burst out the discharge of two heavy
guns, which the enemy had mounted on a bastion flanking the ditch. The
shouts of the officers, and the firing of the men, indicated precisely the
position of the column. The grapeshot tore through it, and twenty-two of
the English troops fell dead and wounded. Immediately afterwards another
discharge followed, and the column, broken and confused, bewildered by the
dense fog, and dismayed by the fire of these unseen guns, fell back.
Clive now determined to push on to the main road, which he knew crossed
the fields half a mile in front of him. The country was, however, here
laid out in rice fields, each inclosed by banks and ditches. Over these
banks it was impossible to drag the guns, and the sailors could only get
them along by descending into the ditches, and using these as roads. The
labour was prodigious, and the men, fatigued and harassed by this battle
in darkness, and by the fire from the unseen guns which the enemy
continued to pour in their direction from either flank, began to lose
heart.
Happily, however, the fog began to lift. The flanks of the columns were
covered by bodies of troops, thrown out on either side, and after more
than an hour's hard work, and abandoning two of the guns which had broken
down, Clive reached the main road, again formed his men in column, and
advanced towards the city.
The odds were overwhelmingly against him. There were guns, infantry,
and cavalry, both in front and behind them. The column pressed on, in
spite of the heavy fire, crossed the ditch, and attacked a strong body of
the enemy drawn up on the opposite side. While it did so, a great force of
the nabob's cavalry swept down on the rear, and for a moment captured the
guns. Ensign Yorke, of the 39th Foot, faced the rear company about, and
made a gallant charge upon the horsemen, drove them back, and recaptured
the guns.
Clive's whole army was now across the ditch, and it was open to him
either to carry out his original plan of attacking Omichund's garden, or
of marching forward into the fort of Calcutta. Seeing that his men were
fatigued, and worn out with six hours of labour and marching under the
most difficult circumstances, he took the latter alternative, entered
Calcutta, and then, following the stream, marched back to the camp he had
left in the morning.
His loss amounted to thirty-nine Europeans killed, and eighteen Sepoys;
eighty-two Europeans wounded, and thirty-five Sepoys; the casualties being
caused almost entirely by the enemy's cannon.
The expedition, from a military point of view, had been an entire
failure. He had carried neither the battery nor Omichund's garden. Had it
not been for the fog he might have succeeded in both these objects; but,
upon the other hand, the enemy were as much disconcerted by the fog as he
was, and were unable to use their forces with any effect. Military critics
have decided that the whole operation was a mistake; but although a
mistake and a failure, its consequences were no less decisive.
The nabob, struck with astonishment at the daring and dash of the
English, in venturing with so small a force to attack him, and to march
through the very heart of his camp, was seized with terror. He had lost
thirteen hundred men in the fight, among whom were twenty-four rajahs and
lesser chiefs, and the next morning he sent in a proposal for peace.
A less determined man than Clive would, no doubt, have accepted the
proposal. Calcutta was still besieged by a vastly superior force, supplies
of all kinds were running short, the attack of the previous day had been a
failure. He knew, however, the character of Asiatics, and determined to
play the game of bounce. The very offer of the nabob showed him that the
latter was alarmed. He therefore wrote to him, saying that he had simply
marched his troops through his highness' camp to show him of what British
soldiers were capable; but that he had been careful to avoid hurting
anyone, except those who actually opposed his progress. He concluded by
expressing his willingness to accede to the nabob's proposal, and to
negotiate.
The nabob took it all in. If all this destruction and confusion had
been wrought by a simple march through his camp, what would be the result
if Clive were to take into his head to attack him in earnest? He therefore
at once withdrew his army three miles to the rear, and opened
negotiations. He granted all that the English asked: that all the property
and privileges of the Company should be restored, that all their goods
should pass into the country free of tax, that all the Company's
factories, and all moneys and properties belonging to it or its servants,
should be restored or made good, and that permission should be given to
them to fortify Calcutta as they pleased.
Having agreed to these conditions, the nabob, upon the 11th of
February, retired with his army to his capital; leaving Omichund with a
commission to propose to the English a treaty of alliance, offensive and
defensive, against all enemies. This proposal was a most acceptable one,
and Clive determined to seize the opportunity to crush the French. His
previous experiences, around Madras, had taught him that the French were
the most formidable rivals of England in India. He knew that large
reinforcements were on their way to Pondicherry, and he feared that the
nabob, when he recovered from his panic, might regret the conditions which
he had granted, and might ally himself with the French in an effort,
again, to expel the English.
He therefore determined at once to attack the French. The deputies sent
by Monsieur Renault, the governor of Chandranagore, had been kept waiting
from day to day, under one pretence or another; and they now wrote to the
governor that they believed that there was no real intention, on the part
of the English, to sign an agreement of neutrality with him; and that they
would be the next objects of attack. Monsieur Renault immediately sent
messengers to the nabob, urging upon him that, if the English were allowed
to annihilate the French, they would be more dangerous enemies than ever;
and Suraja-u-Dowlah, having now recovered from his terror, wrote at once
to Calcutta, peremptorily forbidding any hostilities against the French.
To show his determination, he despatched fifteen hundred men to Hoogly,
which the English had abandoned after capturing it, with instructions to
help the French if attacked; and he sent a lac of rupees to Monsieur
Renault, to aid him in preparing for his defence.
Clive, unwilling to face a coalition between the French and the nabob,
was in favour of acceding to the nabob's orders. The treaty of neutrality
with the French was drawn up, and would have been signed, had it not been
for the obstinate refusal of Admiral Watson to agree to it. Between that
officer and Clive there had never been any cordial feeling, and from the
time of their first connection, at the siege of Gheriah, differences of
opinion, frequently leading to angry disputes, had taken place between
them. Nor was it strange that this should be so. Both were brave and
gallant men; but while Watson had the punctilious sense of honor which
naturally belongs to an English gentleman, Clive was wholly unscrupulous
as to the means which he employed to gain his ends.
Between two such men, it is not singular that disagreements arose.
Admiral Watson, impelled by feelings of personal dislike to Clive, often
allowed himself to be carried to unwarrantable lengths. On the occasion of
the capture of Calcutta, he ordered Captain Eyre Coote, who first entered
it, to hold it in the king's name, and to disobey Clive's orders, although
the latter had been granted a commission in the royal army as lieutenant
colonel, and was, moreover, the chief authority of the Company in all
affairs on land. Upon Clive's asserting himself, Admiral Watson absolutely
threatened to open fire upon his troops. Apparently from a sheer feeling
of opposition, he now opposed the signing of the treaty with the French,
and several days were spent in stormy altercations.
Circumstances occurred, during this time, which strengthened the view
he took, and changed those of Clive and his colleagues of the council.
Just then, the news reached Suraja-u-Dowlah that Delhi had been captured
by the Afghans; and, terrified at the thought that the victorious northern
enemy might next turn their arms against him, he wrote to Clive, begging
him to march to his assistance, and offering a lac of rupees a month
towards the expense of his army.
On the same day that Clive received the letter, he heard that Commodore
James and three ships, with reinforcements from Bombay, had arrived at the
mouth of the Hoogly; and that the Cumberland, with three hundred troops,
which had grounded on her way from Madras, was now coming up the river.
Almost at the same moment he heard, from Omichund, who had accompanied
the nabob to Moorshedabad, that he had bribed the governor of Hoogly to
offer no opposition to the passage of the troops up the river.
Clive was now ready to agree to Admiral Watson's views, and to advance
at once against Chandranagore; but the admiral again veered round, and
refused to agree to the measure, unless the consent of the nabob was
obtained. He wrote, however, himself, a threatening, and indeed violent
letter to the nabob, ordering him to give his consent. The nabob, still
under the influence of his fears from the Afghans, replied in terms which
amounted to consent, but the very next day, having received news which
calmed his fears as to the Afghans, he wrote peremptorily, forbidding the
expedition against the French. This letter, however, was disregarded, and
the expedition prepared to start.
It consisted of seven hundred Europeans and fifteen hundred native
infantry, who started by land; a hundred and fifty artillery proceeding in
boats, escorted by three ships of war and several smaller vessels, under
Admiral Watson.
The French garrison consisted only of a hundred and forty-six French,
and three hundred Sepoys. Besides these were three hundred of the European
population, and sailors of the merchant ships in port, who had been
hastily formed into a militia.
The governor, indignant at the duplicity with which he had been
treated, had worked vigorously at his defences. The settlement extended
along the river banks for two miles. In the centre stood the fort, which
was a hundred and twenty yards square, mounting ten thirty-two pounder
guns on each of its four bastions. Twenty four-pounder guns were placed on
the ramparts, facing the river on the south. On an outlying work
commanding the watergate eight thirty-two pounders were mounted. Monsieur
Renault set to work to demolish all the houses within a hundred yards of
the fort, and to erect batteries commanding the approaches. He ordered an
officer to sink several ships in the only navigable channel, about a
hundred and fifty yards to the south of the fort, at a point commanded by
the guns of one of the batteries.
The officer was a traitor. He purposely sank the ships in such a
position as to leave a channel, through which the English ships might
pass; and then, seizing his opportunity, deserted to them.
On approaching the town Clive, knowing that Charlie could speak the
native language fluently, asked him whether he would undertake to
reconnoitre the position of the enemy, with which he was entirely
unacquainted. Charlie willingly agreed. When, on the night of the 13th of
March, the army halted a few miles from the town, Charlie, disguising
himself in a native dress and accompanied by Hossein, left the camp and
made his way to the town. This he had no difficulty in entering. It
extended a mile and a half back from the river, and consisted of houses
standing in large gardens and inclosures. The whole of the Europeans were
labouring at the erection of the batteries, and the destruction of the
houses surrounding them; and Charlie and his companion, approaching
closely to one of these, were pounced upon by the French officer in
command of a working party, and set to work, with a number of natives, in
demolishing the houses.
Charlie, with his usual energy, threw himself into the work, and would
speedily have called attention to himself, by the strength and activity
which he displayed, had not Hossein begged him to moderate his efforts.
"Native man never work like that, sahib. Not when he's paid ever so
much. Work still less, no pay. The French would soon notice the sahib, if
he laboured like that."
Thus admonished, Charlie adapted his actions to those of his companions
and, after working until dawn approached, he managed, with Hossein, to
evade the attention of the officer; and, drawing off, hurried away to
rejoin Clive. The latter was moving from the west, by a road leading to
the northern face of the fort. It was at the battery which Renault was
erecting upon this road that Charlie had been labouring. The latter
informed Clive of the exact position of the work, and also, that although
strong by itself, it was commanded by many adjoining houses; which the
French, in spite of their efforts, had not time to destroy.
This news decided Clive to advance immediately, without giving the
enemy further time to complete their operations.
As the English troops advanced, they were met on the outskirts of the
settlement by the enemy, who contested bravely every garden and inclosure
with them. The British force was, however, too strong to be resisted, and
gradually the French were driven back, until they formed in rear of the
battery. Clive at once took possession of the houses surrounding it, and
from them kept up, all day, a heavy fire upon the defenders; until, at
nightfall, these fell back upon the fort, after spiking their guns. The
loss of this position compelled the French to abandon the other outlying
batteries, from which, during the night, they withdrew their guns into the
fort.
The next four days Clive spent in bringing up the guns landed from the
fleet, and establishing batteries round the fort; and on the 19th he
opened fire against it. On the same day the three men of war; the Kent of
sixty-four guns, the Tiger of sixty, and the Salisbury of fifty, anchored
just below the channel, which the governor believed he had blocked up. The
next four days were spent by the fleet in sounding, to discover whether
the statements of the French deserter were correct.
During this time, a heavy cannonade was kept up unceasingly between
Clive and the fort. In this the garrison had the best of it, silenced some
of the English guns, killed many of the assailants, and would certainly
have beaten off the land attack, had the fleet not been able to interfere
in the struggle.
All this time, the governor was hoping that aid would arrive from the
nabob. The latter, indeed, did send a force under Rajah Dulab Ram, but the
governor of Hoogly, bribed by Omichund, sent messages to this officer
urging him to halt, as Chandranagore was about to surrender, and he would
only incur the anger of the English, uselessly.
On the morning of the 23rd, having ascertained that a channel was free,
the fleet advanced. The Tiger, leading, made her way through the passage
and, taking up a position abreast of the northeast bastion of the fort,
opened a heavy fire upon it with her guns, and harassed the besieged with
a musketry fire from her tops. The Kent was on the point of anchoring
opposite the watergate, when so heavy a fire was poured upon her that, in
the confusion, the cable ran out; and the ship dropped down, till she
anchored at a point exposed to a heavy crossfire from the southeast and
southwest bastions. Owing to this accident, the Salisbury was forced to
anchor a hundred and fifty yards below the fort.
The French fought with extreme bravery. Vastly superior as were the
English force and guns, the French fire was maintained with the greatest
energy and spirit, the gunners being directed and animated by Monsieur De
Vignes, captain of one of the ships which had been sunk. No advantage was
gained by the Tiger, in her struggle with the northeast bastion, and the
guns of the southwest bastion galled the Kent so severely that the
admiral, neglecting the southeast bastion, was forced to turn the whole of
his guns upon it.
De Vignes concentrated his fire against one point in the Kent, and
presently succeeded in setting her on fire. The conflagration spread, a
panic ensued, and some seventy or eighty men jumped into the boats
alongside.
The officers, however, rallied the rest of the crew. The fire was
extinguished, the men returned to their duty, and the cannonade was
recommenced.
After the battle had raged for two hours, the fire of the fort began to
slacken, as one after another of the guns was dismounted. Monsieur Renault
saw that the place could be no longer defended. Of his hundred and
forty-six soldiers, over ninety had been killed and wounded. Collecting
the remainder, and their officers, with twenty Sepoys, the governor
ordered them to leave the fort immediately; making a detour to avoid the
English, who were aiding the fleet by attacking the land side, and to
march to Kossimbazar to join Monsieur Law, who commanded there. Then,
there remaining in the fort only the clerks, women, and wounded, he
hoisted a flag of truce.
Terms were speedily arranged. The governor, and all the civilians and
natives, were allowed to go where they chose, with their clothes and
linen. The wounded French soldiers were to remain, as prisoners of war.
Chandranagore cost the English two hundred and six men. The attack upon
the French colony was blamed by many, at the time, for in the hour of
English distress they had offered to remain neutral, instead of joining
the nabob in crushing us. Upon the other hand, there was force in the
arguments with which Admiral Watson had defended his refusal to sign the
treaty of neutrality. That treaty would not be binding, unless ratified by
Pondicherry; and to Pondicherry it was known that the most powerful fleet
and army France had ever sent to India was on its way. It was also known
that Bussy, at the court of the Nizam of the Deccan, was in communication
with the nabob. Thus, then, in a short time English interests in India
might be menaced more formidably than ever before, and the crushing out of
the French colony, almost at the gates of Calcutta, was a measure of
extreme importance. It was hard upon the gallant governor of Chandranagore,
but public opinion generally agreed that the urgency of the case justified
the course adopted by the English authorities at Calcutta.
Suraja-u-Dowlah was filled with fury, at the news of the capture of
Chandranagore; but hearing a rumour, two days later, that the Afghans were
upon their march to attack him, he wrote letters to Clive and Watson,
congratulating them upon their success, and offering to them the territory
of Chandranagore, on the same terms upon which it had been held by the
French.
But the young tyrant of Moorshedabad was swayed by constantly
fluctuating feeling. At one moment his fears were uppermost; the next, his
anger and hate of the English. Instead of recalling the army of Rajah
Dulab Ram, as he had promised, he ordered it to halt at Plassey, a large
village twenty-two miles south of Moorshedabad.
The English were represented at his court by Mr. Watts, who had the
greatest difficulty in maintaining his position, in the constantly
changing moods of the nabob. One day the latter would threaten to order
him to be led to instant execution, the next he would load him with
presents.
Besides Mr. Watts, the English affairs were conducted by Omichund who,
aided by the Sets, or native bankers, whom Suraja-u-Dowlah had plundered
and despoiled, got up a conspiracy among the nabob's most intimate
followers.
The history of these intrigues is the most unpleasant feature in the
life of Clive. Meer Jaffier, the nabob's general, himself offered to Mr.
Watts to turn traitor, if the succession to the kingdom was bestowed upon
him. This was agreed to, upon his promise to pay, not only immense sums to
the Company, but enormous amounts to the principal persons on the English
side. So enormous, indeed, were these demands, that even Meer Jaffier,
anxious as he was to conclude the alliance, was aghast. The squadron was
to have two million and a half rupees, and the same amount was to be paid
for the army. Presents amounting to six millions of rupees were to be
distributed between Clive, Major Kilpatrick, the governor, and the members
of the council. Clive's share of these enormous sums amounted to two
million, eighty thousand rupees. In those days, a rupee was worth half a
crown. Never did an English officer make such a bargain for himself.
But even this is not the most dishonorable feature of the transaction.
Omichund had, for some time, been kept in the dark as to what was going
forward; but, obtaining information through his agents, he questioned Mr.
Watts concerning it. The latter then informed him of the whole state of
affairs, and Omichund, whose services to the English had been immense,
naturally demanded a share of the plunder.
Whether or not he threatened to divulge the plot to the nabob, unless
his demands were satisfied, is doubtful. At any rate, it was considered
prudent to pacify him, and he was accordingly told that he should receive
the sum he named. Clive, and the members of the council, however, although
willing to gratify their own extortionate greed, at the expense of Meer
Jaffier, determined to rob Omichund of his share. In order to do this, two
copies of the treaty with Meer Jaffier were drawn up, on different
coloured papers. They were exactly alike, except that, in one, the amount
to be given to Omichund was entirely omitted. This was the real treaty.
The other was intended to be destroyed, after being shown to a friend of
Omichund, in order to convince the latter that all was straight and
honorable.
All the English authorities placed their signatures to the real treaty,
but Admiral Watson indignantly refused to have anything to do with the
fictitious one; or to be a party, in any way, to the deceit practised on
Omichund. In order to get out of the difficulty, Clive himself forged
Admiral Watson's signature to the fictitious treaty.
A more disgraceful transaction was never entered into, by a body of
English gentlemen. That Mr. Drake and the members of his council, the
pitiful cowards who fled from Calcutta, and refused to allow the ships to
draw off its brave garrison, should consent to such a transaction was but
natural; but that Clive, the gallant and dashing commander, should have
stooped to it, is sad, indeed.
It may be said that, to the end of his life, Clive defended his conduct
in this transaction, under the excuse that Omichund was a scoundrel. The
Indian was not, indeed, an estimable character. Openly, he was the friend
and confidant of the nabob while, all the time, he was engaged in bribing
and corrupting his officers, and in plotting with his enemies. This,
however, in no way alters the facts that he rendered inestimable service
to the English; and that the men who deceived and cheated him were, to the
full, as greedy and grasping as himself; without, in the case of the
governor and his council, having rendered any service whatever to the
cause.
At last, the negotiations were complete. More and more severely did
Clive press upon the nabob. Having compelled him to expel Law and the
French, first from Moorshedabad and then from his dominions, he pressed
fresh demands upon him; until the unfortunate prince, driven to despair,
and buoyed up with the hope that he should receive assistance from Bussy,
who had just expelled the English from their factory at Vizapatam, ordered
Meer Jaffier to advance, with fifteen thousand men, to reinforce Rajah
Dulab Ram at Plassey.
Clive, in fact, forced on hostilities. His presence, with that of a
considerable portion of his army, was urgently required at Madras. He was
sure, however, that the instant he had gone, and the English force was
greatly weakened, the nabob would again commence hostilities; and the
belief was shared by all in India. He was, therefore, determined to force
on the crisis, as soon as possible; in order that, the nabob being
disposed of, he should be able to send reinforcements to Madras.
While these negotiations had been going on, Charlie Marryat had
remained in Calcutta. He had been severely wounded in the attack on
Chandranagore, and was carried down to Calcutta in a boat. On arriving
there, he heard that the Lizzie Anderson had just cast anchor off the
fort. He caused himself at once to be conveyed on board, and was received
with the greatest heartiness and pleasure, by his old friend, the captain;
and assiduously attended by the doctor of the ship. In order that he might
have as much air as possible, the captain had a sort of tent, with a
double covering, erected on deck. During the daytime the sides of this
were lifted, so that the air could pass freely across the bed.
Charlie's wound was a severe one and, had he been nursed in a hospital
on shore, it is probable that it would have been fatal. Thanks, however,
to the comforts on board ship, the freshness and coolness of the
situation, and the care of all surrounding him, he was, after some weeks'
illness, pronounced convalescent; and was sufficiently recovered to join
the force with which Clive marched against Plassey.
This force consisted of nine hundred and fifty European infantry, a
hundred artillerymen, fifty sailors, and two thousand one hundred Sepoys.
The artillery consisted of eight six-pounders and two small howitzers. The
army of the nabob was fifty thousand strong, and against such a force it
was, indeed, an adventurous task for an army of three thousand men, of
whom only one-third were Europeans, to advance to the attack. Everything
depended, in fact, upon Meer Jaffier and his two colleagues in treachery,
Rajah Dulab Ram and Yar Lutf Khan.
The nabob, on hearing of Clive's advance, had sent to Monsieur Law; who
was, with a hundred and fifty men, at a place over a hundred miles
distant; to which he had, in accordance with the orders of Clive, been
obliged to retire; and begged him to advance to join him, with all speed.
The nabob had with him forty or fifty Frenchmen, commanded by Monsieur
Saint Frais, formerly one of the council of Chandranagore. These had some
field pieces of their own, and also directed the native artillery, of
fifty-three guns; principally thirty-two, twenty-four, and eighteen
pounders.
Had Clive been sure of the cooperation of Meer Jaffier and his
confederates, who commanded three out of the four divisions of the nabob's
army, he need not have hesitated. But he was, till the last moment, in
ignorance whether to rely upon them. The nabob, having become suspicious
of Meer Jaffier, had obtained from him an oath, sworn on the Koran, of
fidelity; and although the traitor continued his correspondence with
Clive, his letters were of a very dubious character, and Clive was in
total ignorance as to his real intentions. So doubtful, indeed, was he
that, when only a few miles of ground and the river Bhagirathi lay between
him and the enemy, Clive felt the position so serious that he called a
council of war; and put to them the question whether they should attack
the nabob, or fortify themselves at Katwa, and hold that place until the
rainy season, which had just set in with great violence, should abate.
All the officers above the rank of subalterns, twenty in number, were
present. Clive himself, contrary to custom, gave his vote first in favour
of halting at Katwa. Major Kilpatrick, who commanded the Company's troops,
Major Grant of the 37th, and ten other officers voted the same way. Major
Eyre Coote declared in favour of an immediate advance. He argued that the
troops were in high spirits, and had hitherto been everywhere successful,
and that a delay would allow Monsieur Law and his troops to arrive. He
considered that, if they determined not to fight, they should fall back
upon Calcutta. Charlie Marryat supported him, as did five other officers,
all belonging to the Indian service.
The decision taken, the council separated, and Clive strolled away to a
grove, and sat down by himself. There he thought over, in his mind, the
arguments which had been advanced by both sides. He saw the force of the
arguments which had been adduced by Major Eyre Coote and Charlie Marryat;
and his own experience showed him that the daring course is always the
most prudent one, in fighting Asiatics. At last, he came to a conclusion.
Rising, he returned to the camp; and, meeting Major Coote on the way,
informed him that he had changed his mind, and would fight the next day.
Charlie returned to his tent after the council broke up, disheartened
at the result. He was greeted by Tim.
"Shure, yer honor, Hossein is in despair. The water has filled up the
holes, where he makes his fires, and the rain has soaked the wood. Yer
dinner is not near cooked yet, and half the dishes are spoilt."
"It does not matter a bit, Tim," Charlie said. "You know I'm not
particular about my eating, though Hossein will always prepare a dinner
fit for an alderman."
"We are going to fight them tomorrow, yer honor, I hope," Tim said.
"It's sick to death I am of wading about here in the wet, like a duck.
It's as bare as the bogs of ould Ireland, without the blessings of the
pigs and potatoes, to say nothing of the colleens."
"No, Tim, I'm afraid we're going to stop where we are, for a bit. The
council of war have decided not to fight."
"Shure and that's bad news," Tim said. "The worst I've heard for many a
day. What if there be fifty thousand of 'em, Mister Charles, haven't we
bate 'em at long odds before, and can't we do it agin?"
"I think we could, Tim," Charlie replied; "but the odds of fifty-three
heavy cannon, which the spies say they've got, to our ten popguns, is
serious. However, I'm sorry we're not going to fight, and I'm afraid that
you must make up your mind to the wet, and Hossein his to giving me bad
dinners for some weeks to come; that is to say, if the enemy don't turn us
out of this."
A few minutes later, Lieutenant Peters entered the tent.
"Is it true, Charlie, that we are not going to fight, after all?"
"True enough," Charlie said. "We are to wait till the rains are over."
"Rains!" Peters said, in disgust; "what have the rains got to do with
it? If we had a six weeks' march before us, I could understand the wet
weather being a hindrance. Men are not water rats, and to march all day in
these heavy downpours, and to lie all night in the mud, would soon tell
upon our strength. But here we are, within a day's march of the enemy, and
the men might as well get wet in the field as here. Everyone longs to be
at the enemy, and a halt will have a very bad effect.
"What have you got to drink, Charlie?"
"I have some brandy and rum; nothing else," Charlie said. "But what
will be better than either for you is a cup of tea. Hossein makes it as
well as ever. I suppose you have dined?"
"Yes, half an hour ago."
Just as Charlie finished his meal, Major Eyre Coote put his head into
the tent.
"Marryat, the chief has changed his mind. We cross the river the first
thing in the morning, and move at once upon Plassey."
"Hurrah!" Charlie shouted; "Clive is himself again. That is good news,
indeed!"
"You will move your Sepoys down to the river at daybreak, and will be
the first to cross. There is no chance of any opposition, as the spies
tell us that the nabob has not arrived yet at Plassey."
Several other officers afterwards dropped into the tent, for the news
rapidly spread through the camp. There was, as had been the case at the
council, considerable differences of opinion as to the prudence of the
measure; but among the junior officers and men, the news that the enemy
were to be attacked, at once, was received with hearty satisfaction.
"Here, major," a fellow subaltern of Peters' said, as he entered the
tent, followed by a servant; "I have brought in half a dozen bottles of
champagne. I started with a dozen from Calcutta, and had intended to keep
these to celebrate our victory. But as, in the first place, all heavy
baggage is to be left here; and in the second, it has occurred to me that
possibly I may not come back to help to drink it; we may as well turn it
to the good purpose of drinking success to the expedition."
Some of the bottles were opened, and a merry evening was spent; but the
party broke up early, for they had a heavy day's work before them, on the
morrow.
At daybreak, the troops were in movement towards the banks of the
Bhagirathi. They had brought boats with them from Chandranagore, and the
work of crossing the river continued, without intermission, until four in
the afternoon, when the whole force was landed on the left bank. Here
Clive received another letter from Meer Jaffier, informing him that the
nabob had halted at Mankarah, and intended to entrench himself there. He
suggested that the English should undertake a circuitous march, and attack
him in the rear; but as this march would have exposed Clive to being cut
off from his communications, and as he was still very doubtful of the good
faith of the conspirators, he determined to march straight forward; and
sent word to Meer Jaffier, to that effect.
From the point where Clive had crossed the Bhagirathi it was fifteen
miles to Plassey, following, as they did, the curves of the river. It was
necessary to do this, as they had no carriage; and the men were obliged to
tow their supplies in boats, against the stream.
Orders were issued that, as soon as the troops were across, they should
prepare to eat their dinners, as the march was to be resumed at once. The
rain was coming down in a steady pour as the troops, drenched to the skin,
started upon their march. The stream, swollen by the rains, was in full
flood, and the work of towing the heavy-laden barges was wearisome in the
extreme. All took a share in the toil. In many cases the river had
overflowed its banks, and the troops had to struggle through the water, up
to their waists, while they tugged and strained at the ropes.
Charlie, as a mounted officer, rode at the head of his Sepoys; who
formed the advance of the force. Three hundred men preceded the main body,
who were towing the boats, to guard them from any sudden surprise. Tim
marched beside him, occasionally falling back, and taking a turn at the
ropes.
"This is dog's work, Mister Charles," he said. "It's lucky that it's
raining, for the river can't make us wetter than we are. My hands are
fairly sore, with pulling at the ropes."
"Ah, Tim, you're not fond of ropes, you know. You remember that night
at Moorshedabad."
"Faith, yer honor, and I'll not forget it, if I live to be as old as
Methuselah. Well, yer honor, it will be hard on us if we do not thrash
them niggers, tomorrow, after all the trouble we are taking to be at
them."
At one o'clock in the morning, the weary troops reached the village of
Plassey. They marched through it, and halted and bivouacked in a large
mango grove, a short distance beyond.
Scarcely had the soldiers taken off their packs, when the sound of
martial music was heard. Charlie was speaking, at the time, to Major Coote.
"There are the enemy, sure enough," the latter said. "That old rascal,
Meer Jaffier, must have been deceiving us when he said that the nabob had
halted at Mankarah. I'm afraid he means to play us false."
"I expect," Charlie remarked, "that he does not know what he means,
himself. These Asiatics are at any time ready to turn traitors, and to
join the strongest. At present, Jaffier does not know what is the
stronger; and I think it likely enough that he will take as little share
as he can in the battle, tomorrow, till he sees which way it is going.
Then, if we are getting the best of it, the rascal will join us, for the
sake of the advantages which he expects to gain. If the day is going
against us, he will do his best to complete his master's victory; and
should proofs of his intended treachery ever come to light, he will clear
himself by saying that he intended to deceive us all along, and merely
pretended to treat with us, in order to throw us off our guard, and so
deliver us into the hands of his master."
"Yes," Major Eyre Coote replied. "These Mohammedan chiefs are indeed
crafty and treacherous rascals. The whole history of India shows that
gratitude is a feeling altogether unknown to them; and that, whatever
favours a master may have lavished upon them, they are always ready to
betray him, if they think that by so doing they will better their
position.
"Now I shall lie down, and try to get a few hours' sleep before
morning. I am wet to the skin, but fortunately in these sultry nights that
matters little."
"I must go my rounds," Charlie said, "and see that the sentries are on
the alert. If the men were not so tired, I should have said that the best
plan would have been to make a dash straight at the enemy's camp. It would
take them quite unprepared, even if they know, as I daresay they do, that
we are close at hand; and they would lose all the advantage of their
artillery."
"Yes, if we had arrived an hour before sunset, so as to be able to
learn something of the nature of the ground, that would be our best
course," Major Coote agreed. "But, even if the troops had been fresh, a
night attack on an unknown position is a hazardous undertaking.
"Good night. I must see Clive, and take his last orders."
At daybreak the English were astir, and the position of the enemy
became visible. He occupied strongly intrenched works, which the Rajah
Dulab Ram had thrown up during his stay. The right of these works rested
on the river; and extended inland, at a right angle to it, for about two
hundred yards; and then swept round to the north, at an obtuse angle, for
nearly three miles. At the angle was a redoubt, mounted with cannon. In
advance of this was a mound, covered with jungle. Halfway between the
intrenchments and the mango grove were two large tanks, near the river,
surrounded by high mounds of earth. These tanks were about half a mile
from the English position. On the river bank, a little in advance of the
grove, was a hunting box belonging to the nabob, surrounded by a masonry
wall. Clive took possession of this, immediately he heard the sound of the
nabob's music, on his arrival.
Soon after daylight, the nabob's troops moved out from their
intrenchments, and it was evident that he was aware of the position of the
English. The French, with their four field guns, took up their post on the
mound of the tank nearest to the grove, and about half a mile distant from
it; and in the narrow space between them and the river two heavy guns,
under a native officer, were placed.
Behind the French guns was the division of Mir Mudin Khan, the one
faithful general of the nabob. It consisted of five thousand horse, and
seven thousand foot. Extending, in the arc of a circle, towards the
village of Plassey, were the troops of the three traitor generals Rajah
Dulab Ram, Yar Lutf Khan, and Meer Jaffier. Thus, the English position was
almost surrounded; and in advancing against the camp, they would have to
expose themselves to an attack in rear by the troops of the conspirators.
These generals had, between them, nearly thirty-eight thousand troops.
From the roof of the hunting box, Clive watched the progress of the
enemy's movements. He saw, at once, that the position which they had taken
up was one which would entail the absolute destruction of his force,
should he be defeated; and that this depended entirely upon the course
taken by the conspirators. Against such a force as that opposed to him, if
these remained faithful to their master, success could hardly be hoped
for.
However, it was now too late to retreat, and the only course was to
show a bold front. Clive accordingly moved his troops out, from the mango
trees, to a line with the hunting box. The Europeans were formed in the
centre, with three field pieces on each side. The native troops were on
either flank. Two field guns, and the two howitzers, were placed a little
in advance of the hunting box, facing the French position on the mound.
At eight o'clock in the morning, of the 23rd of June, a memorable day
in the annals of India, the preparations on both sides were complete; and
Saint Frais opened the battle, by the discharge of one of his guns at the
English. At the signal, the whole of the artillery round the long curve
opened their fire. The ten little guns replied to this overwhelming
discharge, and for half an hour continued to play on the dense masses of
the enemy. But, however well they might be handled, they could do little
against the fire of the fifty pieces of cannon, concentrated upon them.
Had these been all served by European artillerymen, the British force
would have been speedily annihilated as they stood. The natives of India,
however, were extremely clumsy gunners. They fired but slowly, and had the
feeblest idea of elevation. Consequently their balls, for the most part,
went far over the heads of the English; and the four field guns of Saint
Frais did more execution than the fifty heavy pieces of the nabob. At the
end of half an hour, however, Clive had lost thirty of his men, and
determined to fall back to the mango grove.
Leaving a party in the hunting box, and in the brick kilns in front of
it, in which the guns had been posted, to harass Saint Frais' battery with
their musketry fire, he withdrew the rest of his force into the grove.
Here they were in shelter, for it was surrounded by a high and thick bank.
Behind this the men sat down, while parties set to work, piercing holes
through the banks as embrasures for the guns.
The enemy, on the retreat of the British within the grove, advanced
with loud shouts of triumph; and, bringing their guns closer, again opened
fire. The British had, by this time, pierced the holes for their field
pieces; and these opened so vigorously that several of the enemy's cannon
were disabled, numbers of their gunners killed, and some ammunition
waggons blown up. On the other hand the English, now in perfect shelter,
did not suffer at all, although the tops of the trees were cut off, in all
directions, by the storm of cannon balls which swept through them.
Although the English fire was producing considerable loss among the
enemy, this was as nothing in comparison to his enormous numbers; and, at
eleven o'clock, Clive summoned his principal officers around him; and it
was agreed that, as Meer Jaffier and his associates, of whose position in
the field they were ignorant, showed no signs of drawing off, or of
treachery to their master, it was impossible to risk an attack upon the
front; since they would, as they pressed forward, be enveloped by the
forces in the rear. It was determined, therefore, that unless any
unexpected circumstance occurred, they should hold their present position
till nightfall; and should, at midnight, attack the enemy's camp.
A quarter of an hour later, a tremendous tropical shower commenced, and
for an hour the rain came down in torrents. Gradually the enemy's fire
slackened. The English had tarpaulins to cover their ammunition, which,
therefore, suffered no injury. The natives had no such coverings, and
their powder was soon completely wetted, by the deluge of rain. Mir Mudin
Khan, knowing that his own guns had been rendered useless, believed that
those of the English were in a similar condition; and, leading out his
cavalry, made a splendid charge down upon the grove.
The English were in readiness. As the cavalry swept up, a flash of fire
ran from a thousand muskets, from the top of the embankments; while each
of the field guns sent its load of grapeshot, through the embrasures, into
the throng of horsemen.
The effect was decisive. The cavalry recoiled before the terrible fire,
and rode back, with their brave leader mortally wounded. This blow was
fatal to the fortunes of Suraja Dowlah. When the news of the death of his
brave and faithful general reached him, he was struck with terror. He had
long suspected Meer Jaffier of treachery, but he had now no one else to
rely upon. Sending for that general he reminded him, in touching terms, of
the benefits which he had received at the hands of his father; and
conjured him to be faithful to him. Throwing his turban upon the ground,
he said:
"Jaffier, you must defend that turban."
Jaffier responded with assurances of his loyalty and sincerity, and
promised to defend his sovereign with his life. Then, riding off, he at
once despatched a messenger to Clive, informing him of what had happened,
and urging him to attack at once.
As long as Mir Mudin Khan lived, it is probable that Meer Jaffier was
still undecided as to the part he should play. While that general lived it
was possible, even probable, that the English would be defeated, even
should the traitors take no part against them. His death, however, left
the whole management of affairs in the hands of the three conspirators,
and their course was now plain.
Scarcely had Meer Jaffier left the nabob, than the unhappy young man,
who was still under twenty years old, turned to Rajah Dulab Ram for
counsel and advice. The traitor gave him counsel that led to his
destruction. He told him that the English could not be attacked in their
position; that his troops, exposed to the fire of their guns, were
suffering heavily and losing heart; and he advised him, at once, to issue
orders for them to fall back within their intrenchments. He also advised
him to leave the field himself, and to retire to Moorshedabad, leaving it
to his generals to annihilate the English, should they venture to attack
them.
Suraja Dowlah, at no time capable of thinking for himself, and now
bewildered by the death of the general he knew to be faithful to him, and
by his doubts as to the fidelity of the others, fell into the snare. He at
once issued orders for the troops to retire within their intrenchments;
and then, mounting a swift camel, and accompanied by two thousand
horsemen, he left the field, and rode off to Moorshedabad.
The movement of retirement at once commenced. The three traitor
generals drew off their troops, and those of Mir Mudin Khan also obeyed
orders, and fell back. Saint Frais, however, refused to obey. He saw the
ruin which would follow upon the retreat, and he pluckily continued his
fire.
Clive, after the council had decided that nothing should be done till
nightfall, had lain down in the hunting box to snatch a little repose, his
thoughts having kept him awake all night. Major Kilpatrick, seeing the
retirement of the enemy; and that the French artillerymen remained,
unsupported, on the mound; at once advanced, with two hundred and fifty
Europeans, and two guns, against it; sending word to Clive what he was
doing. Clive, angry that any officer should have taken so important a
step, without consulting him, at once ran after the detachment, and
severely reprimanded Major Kilpatrick, for moving from the grove without
orders. Immediately, however, that he comprehended the whole position, he
recognized the wisdom of the course Kilpatrick had taken, and sent him
back to the grove, to order the whole force to advance.
Saint Frais, seeing that he was entirely unsupported, fired a last
shot; and then, limbering up, fell back in perfect order to the redoubt at
the corner of the intrenchment, where he again posted his field pieces, in
readiness for action.
Looking round the field, Clive saw that two of the divisions which
formed the arc of the circle were marching back towards the intrenchments;
but that the third, that on the left of their line, had wheeled round and
was marching towards the rear of the grove. Not having received the letter
which Meer Jaffier had written to him, he supposed that this movement
indicated an intention to attack his baggage; and he therefore detached
some European troops, with a field gun, to check the advance. Upon the gun
opening fire, the enemy's division halted. It ceased its advance, but
continued apart from the rest of the enemy. In the meantime, Clive had
arrived upon the mound which Saint Frais had left; and, planting his guns
there, opened fire upon the enemy within their intrenchments.
The Indian soldiers and inferior officers, knowing nothing of the
treachery of their chiefs, were indignant at being thus cannonaded in
their intrenchments by a foe so inferior in strength; and horse, foot, and
artillery poured out again from the intrenchments, and attacked the
British.
The battle now raged in earnest. Clive posted half his infantry and
artillery on the mound of the tank nearest to the enemy's intrenchments,
and the greater part of the rest on rising ground, two hundred yards to
the left of it; while he placed a hundred and sixty picked shots,
Europeans and natives, behind the tank close to the intrenchments, with
orders to keep up a continuous musketry fire upon the enemy, as they
sallied out.
The enemy fought bravely. Saint Frais worked his guns unflinchingly at
the redoubt, the infantry poured in volley after volley, the cavalry made
desperate charges right up to the British lines. But they had no leader,
and were fighting against men well commanded, and confident in themselves.
Clive observed that the division on the enemy's extreme left remained
inactive, and detached from the army; and it, for the first time, struck
him that this was the division of Meer Jaffier. Relieved for the safety of
his baggage, and from the attack which had hitherto threatened in his
rear, he at once determined to carry the hill in advance of Saint Frais's
battery, and the redoubt occupied by the French leader.
Strong columns were sent against each position. The hill was carried
without opposition, and then so heavy and searching a fire was poured into
the intrenched camp that the enemy began to fall back, in utter confusion.
Saint Frais, finding himself isolated and alone in the redoubt, as he had
before been on the mound, was forced to retire.
At five o'clock the battle was over, and the camp of the Nabob of
Bengal in the possession of the English. The British loss was trifling.
Seven European and sixteen native soldiers were killed, thirteen Europeans
and thirty-six natives wounded. It was one of the decisive battles of the
world, for the fate of India hung in the balance. Had Clive been defeated,
and his force annihilated, as it must have been if beaten, the English
would have been swept out of Bengal. The loss of that presidency would
have had a decided effect on the struggle in Madras, where the British
were, with the greatest difficulty, maintaining themselves against the
French.
Henceforth Bengal, the richest province in India, belonged to the
English; for although, for a time, they were content to recognize Meer
Jaffier and his successors as its nominal rulers, these were but puppets
in their hands, and they were virtual masters of the province.
After the battle, Meer Jaffier arrived. Conscious of his own
double-dealing, he by no means felt sure of the reception he should meet
with. It suited Clive, however, to ignore the doubtful part he had played,
and he was saluted as Nabob of Bengal.
It would have been far better for him, had he remained one of the great
chiefs of Bengal. The enormous debt, with which Clive and his colleagues
had saddled him, crushed him. The sum was so vast that it was only by
imposing the most onerous taxation upon his people that he was enabled to
pay it, and the discontent excited proved his destruction.
Omichund had no greater reason for satisfaction, at the part which he
had played in the ruin of his country. The fact that he had been deceived,
by the forged treaty, was abruptly and brutally communicated to him; and
the blow broke his heart. He shortly afterwards became insane, and died
before eighteen months were over.
Suraja Dowlah fled to Moorshedabad, where the remnants of his army
followed him. At first, the nabob endeavoured to secure their fidelity by
issuing a considerable amount of pay. Then, overpowered by his fears of
treachery, he sent off the ladies of the zenana, and all his treasures, on
elephants; and, a few hours afterwards, he himself, accompanied by his
favourite wife, and a slave with a casket of his most valuable jewels,
fled in disguise.
A boat had been prepared, and lay in readiness at the wharf of the
palace. Rowing day and night against the stream, the boat reached Rajmahal,
ninety miles distant, on the night of the fourth day following his flight.
Here the rowers were so knocked up, by their exertions, that it was
impossible to proceed further; and they took refuge in a deserted hut, by
the bank.
The following morning, however, they were seen by a fakir, whose ears
the young tyrant had had cut off, thirteen months previously; and this
man, recognizing the nabob even in his disguise, at once took the news to
Meer Jaffier's brother, who happened to reside in the town. The latter
immediately sent a party of his retainers, who captured the nabob without
difficulty. He was again placed in the boat, and taken back to
Moorshedabad, where he was led into the presence of Meer Jaffier.
The wretched young man implored the mercy of his triumphant successor,
the man who owed station and rank and wealth to his grandfather; and who
had, nevertheless, betrayed him to the English. His entreaties so far
moved Meer Jaffier that he was irresolute, for a time, as to the course he
should pursue. His son, however, Mirav, a youth of about the same age as
the deposed nabob, insisted that it was folly to show mercy; as Meer
Jaffier would never be safe, so long as Suraja Dowlah remained alive; and
his father, at last, assigned the captive to his keeping, knowing well
what the result would be.
In the night, Suraja Dowlah was murdered. His mangled remains were, in
the morning, placed on an elephant, and exposed to the gaze of the
populace and soldiery.
Suraja Dowlah was undoubtedly a profligate and rapacious tyrant. In the
course of a few months, he alienated his people, and offended a great
number of his most powerful chiefs. The war which he undertook against the
English, although at the moment unprovoked, must still be regarded as a
patriotic one; and, had he not soiled his victory by the massacre of the
prisoners, which he first permitted and then approved, the English would
have had no just cause of complaint against him.
From the day of the arrival of Clive at Calcutta, he was doomed. It is
certain that the nabob would not have remained faithful to his
engagements, when the danger which wrung the concessions from him had
passed. Nevertheless, the whole of the circumstances which followed the
signature of the treaty, the manner in which the unhappy youth was
alternately cajoled and bullied to his ruin, the loathsome treachery in
which those around him engaged, with the connivance of the English; and,
lastly, the murder in cold blood, which Meer Jaffier, our creature, was
allowed to perpetrate; rendered the whole transaction one of the blackest
in the annals of English history.
A few days after Plassey, Colonel Clive sent for Charlie.
"Marryat," he said, "I must send you back, with two hundred men, to
Madras. The governor there has been writing to me, by every ship which has
come up the coast, begging me to move down with the bulk of the force, as
soon as affairs are a little settled here. That is out of the question.
There are innumerable matters to be arranged. Meer Jaffier must be
sustained. The French under Law must be driven entirely out of Bengal. The
Dutch must be dealt with. Altogether, I have need of every moment of my
time, and of every man under my orders, for at least two years.
"However, I shall at once raise a Bengal native army, and so release
the Sepoys of Madras. If there be any special and sore need, I must, of
course, denude myself here of troops, to succour Madras; but I hope it
will not come to that. In the meantime, I propose that you shall take back
two hundred of the Madras Europeans. Lawrence will be glad to have you,
and your chances of fighting are greater there than they will be here.
Bengal is overawed, and so long as I maintain the force I now have, it is
unlikely in the extreme to rise; whereas battles and sieges, great and
small, are the normal condition of Madras."
The next day Charlie, with two hundred European troops, marched down
towards Calcutta. Clive had told him to select any officer he pleased to
accompany him, as second in command; and he chose Peters, who, seeing that
there were likely to be far more exciting times in Madras than in Bengal
at present, was very glad to accompany him. Three days after reaching
Calcutta, Charlie and his party embarked on board a ship, which conveyed
them without adventure to Madras.
The authorities were glad, indeed, of the reinforcement; for the
country was disturbed from end to end. Since the departure of every
available man for Calcutta, the Company had been able to afford but little
aid to Muhammud Ali, and the authority of the latter had dwindled to a
mere shadow, in the Carnatic. The Mahrattas made incursions in all
directions. The minor chiefs revolted and refused to pay tribute, and many
of them entered into alliance with the French. Disorder everywhere reigned
in the Carnatic, and Trichinopoli was, again, the one place which Muhammud
Ali held.
The evening after landing, Charlie Marryat had a long chat with Colonel
Lawrence; who, after explaining to him exactly the condition of affairs in
the country, asked him to tell him, frankly, what command he would like to
receive.
"I have thought for some time," Charlie said, "that the establishment
of a small force of really efficient cavalry, trained to act as infantry,
also, would be invaluable. The Mahratta horsemen, by their rapid
movements, set our infantry in defiance; and the native horse of our
allies are useless against them. I am convinced that two hundred horsemen,
trained and drilled like our cavalry at home, would ride through any
number of them. In a country like this, where every petty rajah has his
castle, cavalry alone could, however, do little. They must be able to act
as infantry, and should have a couple of little four-pounders to take
about with them. A force like this would do more to keep order in the
Carnatic than one composed of infantry, alone, of ten times its strength.
It could act as a police force, call upon petty chiefs who refuse to pay
their share of the revenue, restore order in disturbed places, and permit
the peasants to carry on their agricultural work, upon which the revenue
of the Company depends; and, altogether, render valuable services.
"Among the soldiers who came down with me is a sergeant who was at one
time a trooper in an English regiment. He exchanged to come out with the
39th to India, and has again exchanged into the Company's service. I would
make him drill instructor, if you will give him a commission as ensign.
Peters I should like as my second in command; and, if you approve of the
plan, I should be very much obliged if you would get him his step as
captain. He's a good officer, but has not had such luck as I have."
Colonel Lawrence was very much pleased at the idea, and gave Charlie
full authority to carry it out. The work of enlistment at once commenced.
Hossein made an excellent recruiting sergeant. He went into the native
bazaars; and by telling of the exploits of Charlie at Ambur and Suwarndrug,
and holding out bright prospects of the plunder which such a force would
be likely to obtain, he succeeded in recruiting a hundred and fifty of his
co-religionists. In those days, fighting was a trade in India; and in
addition to the restless spirits of the local communities, great numbers
of the hardy natives of northern India, Afghans, Pathans, and others, were
scattered over India, ever ready to enlist in the service of the highest
bidder. Among such men as these, Hossein had no difficulty in obtaining a
hundred and fifty picked horsemen.
Charlie had determined that his force should consist of four troops,
each of fifty strong. Of these one would be composed of Europeans, and he
was permitted to take this number from the party he had brought down. He
had no difficulty in obtaining volunteers, for as soon as the nature of
the force was known, the men were eager to engage in it. To this troop,
the two little field pieces would be committed.
A few days after the scheme had been sanctioned, Ensign Anstey was at
work drilling the recruits as cavalry. Charlie and Peters were instructed
by him, also, in the drill and words of command, and were soon able to
assist. Two months were spent in severe work and, at the end of that time,
the little regiment were able to execute all simple cavalry manoeuvres
with steadiness and regularity. The natives were all men who had lived on
horseback from their youth, and therefore required no teaching to ride.
They were also, at the end of that time, able to act as infantry, with
as much regularity as the ordinary Sepoys. When so engaged, four horses
were held by one man, so that a hundred and fifty men were available for
fighting on foot.
The work had been unusually severe, but as the officers did not spare
themselves, and Charlie had promised a present to each man of the troop,
when fit for service, they had worked with alacrity, and had taken great
interest in learning their new duties. At the end of two months, they were
inspected by Colonel Lawrence and Governor Pigot, and both expressed their
highest gratification and surprise at their efficiency, and anticipated
great benefits would arise from the organization.
So urgent, indeed, was the necessity that something should be done for
the restoration of order, that Charlie had with difficulty obtained the
two months necessary to attain the degree of perfection which he deemed
necessary.
The day after the inspection, the troop marched out from Madras. Ensign
Anstey commanded the white troop, the other three were led by native
officers. Captain Peters commanded the squadron composed of the white
troop and one of the others. A Lieutenant Hallowes, whom Peters knew to be
a hard working and energetic officer, was, at Charlie's request, appointed
to the command of the other squadron. He himself commanded the whole.
They had been ordered, in the first place, to move to Arcot, which was
held by a garrison of Muhammud Ali. The whole of the country around was
greatly disturbed. French intrigues, and the sight of the diminished power
of the English, had caused most of the minor chiefs in that neighbourhood
to throw off their allegiance. A body of Mahratta horse were ravaging the
country districts; and it was against these that Charlie determined, in
the first place, to act.
He had been permitted to have his own way in the clothing and arming of
his force. Each man carried a musket, which had been shortened some six
inches, and hung in slings from the saddle, the muzzle resting in a piece
of leather, technically termed a bucket. The ammunition pouch was slung on
the other side of the saddle, and could be fastened in an instant, by two
straps, to the belts which the troopers wore round their waists. The men
were dressed in brown, thick cotton cloth, called karkee. Round their
black forage caps was wound a long length of blue and white cotton cloth,
forming a turban, with the ends hanging down to protect the back of the
neck and spine from the sun.
Having obtained news that the Mahratta horse, two thousand strong, were
pillaging at a distance of six miles from the town, Charlie set off the
day following his arrival to meet them. The Mahrattas had notice of his
coming; but hearing that the force consisted only of two hundred horse,
they regarded it with contempt.
When Charlie first came upon them they were in the open country; and,
seeing that they were prepared to attack him, he drew up his little force
in two lines. The second line he ordered to dismount, to act as infantry.
The two guns were loaded with grape, and the men of the first line were
drawn up at sufficient intervals to allow an infantryman to pass between
each horse.
With shouts of anticipated triumph, the Mahratta horse swept down. The
front line of English horsemen had screened the movements of those behind,
and when the enemy were within fifty yards, Charlie gave the word. The
troopers already sat, musket in hand, and between each horse an infantry
soldier now stepped forward; while towards each end, the line opened and
the two field pieces were advanced.
The Mahratta horsemen were astonished at this sudden manoeuvre; but,
pressed by the mass from behind, they still continued their charge. When
but fifteen yards from the English line, a stream of fire ran along this,
from end to end. Every musket was emptied into the advancing force, while
the guns on either flank swept them with grape.
The effect was tremendous. Scarcely a man of the front line survived
the fire, and the whole mass halted, and recoiled in confusion. Before
they could recover themselves, another volley of shot and grape was fired
into them. Then Charlie's infantry ran back; and the cavalry, closing up,
dashed upon the foe, followed half a minute afterwards by the lately
dismounted men of the other two troops; ten white soldiers, alone,
remaining to work and guard the guns.
The effect of the charge of these two hundred disciplined horse, upon
the already disorganized mob of Mahratta horsemen, was irresistible; and
in a few minutes the Mahrattas were scattered, and in full flight over the
plain, pursued by the British cavalry, now broken up into eight half
troops. The rout was complete, and in a very short time the last Mahratta
had fled, leaving behind them three hundred dead upon the plain.
Greatly gratified with their success; and feeling confident, now, in
their own powers, the British force returned to Arcot.
Charlie now determined to attack the fort of Vellore, which was
regarded as impregnable. The town lay at the foot of some very steep and
rugged hills, which were surmounted by three detached forts. The rajah,
encouraged by the French, had renounced his allegiance to Muhammud Ali,
and had declared himself independent. As, however, it was certain that he
was prepared to give assistance to the French, when they took the field
against the English, Charlie determined to attack the place.
The French had received large reinforcements, and had already captured
many forts and strong places, around Pondicherry. They were, however,
awaiting the arrival of still larger forces, known to be on the way,
before they made a decisive and, as they hoped, final attack upon the
English.
The rajah's army consisted of some fifteen hundred infantry, and as
many cavalry. These advanced to meet the English force. Charlie feigned a
retreat, as they came on; and retired to a village, some thirty miles
distant. The cavalry pursued at full speed, leaving the infantry behind.
Upon reaching the village, Charlie at once dismounted all his men,
lined the inclosures, and received the enemy's cavalry, as they galloped
up, with so heavy a fire that they speedily drew rein. After trying for
some time to force the position, they began to fall back; and the English
force again mounted, dashed upon them, and completed their defeat. The
broken horsemen, as they rode across the plain, met their infantry
advancing; and these, disheartened at the defeat of the cavalry, fell back
in great haste; and, abandoning the town, which was without fortification,
retired at once to the forts commanding it.
Charlie took possession of the town, and spent the next two days in
reconnoitering the forts. The largest, and nearest, of these faced the
right of the town. It was called Suzarow. The second, on an even steeper
hill, was called Guzarow. The third, which lay some distance behind this,
and was much smaller, was called Mortz Azur.
Charlie determined to attempt, in the first place, to carry Guzarow; as
in this, which was considered the most inaccessible, the rajah himself had
taken up his position, having with him all his treasure. Charlie saw that
it would be next to impossible, with so small a force, to carry it by a
direct attack, by the road which led to it, as this was completely covered
by its guns. It appeared to him, however, that the rocks upon which it
stood were, by no means, inaccessible.
He left twenty men to guard his guns, placed a guard of ten upon the
road leading up to the fort, to prevent the inhabitants from sending up
news of his intentions to the garrison, who had, with that of Suzarow,
kept up a fire from their guns upon the town, since his arrival there. The
moon was not to rise until eleven o'clock, and at nine Charlie marched,
with a hundred and seventy men, from the town. Making a considerable
detour, he found himself, at half past ten, at the foot of the rocks,
rising almost sheer from the upper part of the hill.
He was well provided with ropes and ladders. The most perfect silence
had been enjoined upon the men and, in the darkness, the march had been
unseen by the enemy. While waiting for the moon to rise, the troopers all
wound pieces of cloth, with which they had come provided, round their
boots, to prevent these from making a noise, by slipping or stumbling on
the rocks.
When the moon rose, the ascent of the rocks began at the point which
Charlie had, after a close inspection through a telescope, judged to be
most accessible. The toil was very severe. One by one, the men climbed
from ledge to ledge, some of the most active hill men, from northern
India, leading the way, and aiding their comrades to follow them, by
lowering ropes, and placing ladders at the most inaccessible spots. All
this time, they were completely hidden from the observation of the
garrison, above.
At last, the leaders of the party stood at the foot of the walls, which
rose a few feet from the edge of the cliff. The operation had been
performed almost noiselessly. The ammunition pouches had been left behind,
each man carrying ten rounds in his belt. Every piece of metal had been
carefully removed from their uniforms, the very buttons having been cut
off, lest these should strike against the rocks; and the muskets had been
swathed up in thick coverings.
The men, as they gained the upper ridge, spread along at the foot of
the walls, until the whole body had gathered there. They could hear the
voices of the sentries, thirty feet above them; but these, having no idea
of the vicinity of an enemy, did not look over the edge of the wall.
Indeed, the parapets of the Indian fortifications were always so high,
that it was only from projecting towers that the foot of the wall could be
seen.
When the English force were assembled, the ladders, which, like
everything else, had been muffled, were placed against the walls; and,
headed by their officers, the troops ascended. The surprise was complete.
Not until the leaders of the storming party stood upon the parapet was
their presence perceived. The guards discharged their firelocks, and fled
hastily.
As soon as twenty men were collected on the wall, Charlie took the
command of these, and hurried forward towards the gate. Hallowes was to
lead the next party along the opposite direction. Peters was to form the
rest up, as they gained the wall, and to follow Charlie with fifty more;
while Anstey was to hold the remainder in reserve, to be used as
circumstances might demand.
The resistance, however, was slight. Taken absolutely by surprise, the
enemy rushed out from their sleeping places. They were immediately fired
upon from the walls. The greater part ran back into shelter, while some of
the more determined, gathering together, made for the gate. But of this
Charlie had already taken possession, and received them with so vigorous a
fire that they speedily fell back.
When the whole circuit of the walls was in his possession, Charlie took
a hundred of his men, and descended into the fort. Each building, as he
reached it, was searched; and the garrison it contained made to come out,
and lay down their arms, and were then allowed to depart through the gate.
Upon reaching the rajah's quarters, he at once came out and surrendered
himself. Two guns were discharged, to inform the little body in the town
of the complete success of the movement; and the guard on the road then
fell back, and joined the party with the guns.
Thus, without losing a man, the fort of Guzarow, regarded by the
natives as being impregnable, was carried. Fifteen lacs of rupees were
found in the treasury. Of these, in accordance with the rules of the
service, half was set aside for the Company, the remainder became the
property of the force. Of this half fell to the officers, in proportion to
their rank, and the rest was divided among the men. The share of each
trooper amounted to nearly two hundred pounds.
Knowing how demoralizing the possession of such a sum would be, Charlie
assembled his force next morning. He pointed out to them that, as the
greater part of the plunder was in silver, it would be impossible for them
to carry it on their persons. He advised them, then, to allow the whole
sum to remain in the treasury, to be forwarded under an escort to Madras;
each soldier to receive an order, for the amount of his share, upon the
treasury there. This was agreed to, unanimously, and Charlie then turned
his attention to the other forts.
The guns of Guzarow were turned against these, and a bombardment
commenced. Suzarow, which extended partly down the slope, was much exposed
to the fire from Guzarow; and although no damage could be done to the
walls at so great a distance, the garrison, suffering from the fire, and
intimidated by the fall of Guzarow, lost heart. Large numbers deserted,
and the governor, in the course of two days, thought it prudent to obey
the orders which the rajah had, upon being made captive, sent to him to
surrender. The next day the governor of Mortz Azur followed his example;
and Vellore, and its three strong forts, were thus in the possession of
the English.
At Vellore, Charlie nearly lost one of his faithful followers. Early in
the morning, Hossein came into Charlie's room.
"Sahib," he said, "something is the matter with Tim."
"What is the matter?" Charlie said, sitting up in his bed.
"I do not know, sahib. When I went to him, he did not move. He was wide
awake, and his eyes are staring. When I went beside him, he shook his head
a little, and said, 'S-s-s-h.' He seems quite rigid, and is as pale as
death."
Charlie leaped out, and hurried to Tim. The latter was lying on the
ground, in the next room. He had carried off three or four cushions, from
the rajah's divan, and had thrown these down, and had spread a rug over
him. He lay on his back, exactly as Hossein had described.
As Charlie hurried up, Tim again gave vent to the warning "S-s-s-h."
"What is the matter, Tim? What is the matter, my poor fellow?"
Tim made a slight motion, with his head, for his master to bend towards
him. Charlie leant over him, and he whispered:
"There is a sarpent in bed with me."
"Are you quite sure, Tim?"
"He woke me with his cold touch," Tim whispered. "I felt him crawling
against my foot, and now he is laying against my leg."
Charlie drew back for a minute, and consulted with Hossein.
"Lie quite still, Tim," he said, "and don't be afraid. We will try to
kill him, without his touching you; but even if he should bite you, with
help ready at hand, there will be no danger."
Charlie now procured two knives; the one a sharp surgical knife, from a
case which he had brought; the other he placed in a charcoal fire, which
one of the men speedily fanned, until the blade had attained a white heat.
Charlie had decided that, if the snake bit Tim, he would instantly make a
deep cut through the line of the puncture of the fangs, cutting down as
low as these could penetrate, and immediately cauterize it, by placing the
hot knife in the gash so made. Six men were called in, with orders to
seize Tim on the instant, and hold his leg firm, to enable the operation
to be performed. Two others were to occupy themselves with the snake.
These were armed with sticks.
Hossein now approached the bed, from which, hitherto, they had all kept
well aloof. The snake, Tim said, lay against his leg, between the knee and
the ankle, and the spot was marked by a slight elevation of the rug.
Hossein drew his tulwar, examined the edge to see that nothing had
blunted its razor-like keenness, and then took his stand at the foot of
the bed. Twice he raised his weapon; and then let it fall, with a drawing
motion. The keen blade cut through the rug, as if it had been pasteboard;
and, at the same instant, Tim sprang from the other side of the bed, and
fainted in the arms of the men. Hossein threw off the rug, and there,
severed in pieces, lay the writhing body of a huge cobra.
Tim soon recovered, under the administration of water sprinkled in his
face, and brandy poured down his throat. But he was some time, ere he
thoroughly recovered from the effects of the trying ordeal through which
he had passed. Many of the buildings in the fort were in a very bad
condition, and Charlie had several of the most dilapidated destroyed,
finding in their walls several colonies of cobras, which were all killed
by the troops.
Chapter 25: Besieged In A Pagoda.
A few days later Charlie received a message from the Rajah of Permacoil,
saying that he was besieged by a strong native force, aided by the French.
He at once moved his force to his assistance. He found that the besiegers,
among whom were two hundred French troops, were too strong to be attacked.
He therefore established himself in their rear, attacked and captured
convoys, and prevented the country people from bringing in provisions.
Several times the besieging infantry advanced against him, but before
these he at once fell back, only to return as soon as they retired to
their camp. Whenever their horse ventured out against him, he beat them
back, with considerable loss.
Ten days after his arrival, the enemy, finding it impossible to
maintain themselves in the face of so active an enemy, and suffering
greatly from want of provisions, raised the siege and fell back.
As soon as they had drawn off, Charlie entered the fort. The rajah
received him with the greatest warmth. He was, however, much distressed at
the capture of a hill fort, at some distance from Permacoil. In this he
had stowed his wives and treasure, thinking that it would be unmolested.
The French, however, had, just before Charlie's arrival, detached a strong
force with some guns, and these had captured the place. The force which
had accomplished this had, he now heard, marched to Trinavody, a fort and
town thirty miles away, upon the road by which the force which had
besieged the town was retiring. The treasure was a considerable one,
amounting to seven lacs of rupees, and as the rajah stated his willingness
that the troops should take possession of this, if they could but rescue
his women, Charlie at once determined to attempt the feat.
The main body of the enemy would not reach the place, until the
afternoon of the following day. Charlie soon collected his men and, making
a detour through the country, arrived next morning within a mile of
Trinavody.
The town was a small one, and the fort one of the ordinary native
forts, built in a parallelogram with flanking towers. The place, however,
contained a very large and solidly built pagoda or temple. It was
surrounded by a wall, forty feet high; and at the gateway stood an immense
tower, with terraces rising one above the other.
Capturing a native, Charlie learnt that the fort was tenanted only by
the troops of the native rajah of the place, the French detachment being
encamped in the pagoda. He at once rode forward with his troops, dashed
through the native town, and in through the wide gateway of the tower,
into the courtyard within. Beyond two or three straggling shots from the
sentries, he had so far encountered no opposition, and the native troops
in the courtyard, thrown into wild confusion by this sudden appearance of
a hostile force, threw down their arms and cried for mercy. From the
temple within, however, the French infantry, a hundred strong, opened a
brisk fire.
Charlie sent some of his men on to the tower, whence their fire
commanded the flat roof of the temple, and these speedily drove the
defenders from that post. The field pieces were unlimbered, and directed
towards the gate of the inner temple, while a musketry fire was kept up
against every window and loophole in the building. The gate gave way after
a few shots had been fired, and Charlie led his party to the assault.
The French defended themselves bravely, but they were outnumbered and
were driven, fighting, from room to room, until the survivors laid down
their arms. The assault, however, had cost the British a loss of
twenty-five men.
The Rajah of Permacoil's treasure, and his women, fell into the hands
of the captors. Charlie ordered the chests to be brought down, and placed
in bullock waggons. Just as he was about to order his men, who were
scattered through the temple looting, to form up, he heard a shout from
the tower; and, looking up, saw one of his men there gesticulating wildly.
He ran up the tower, and on reaching the first terrace saw, to his
surprise, the whole of the force which he believed to be fifteen miles
distant, already entering the town.
The French officer in command, knowing the activity and dash of his
opponent, and fearing that an attempt might be made to carry Trinavody and
recapture the rajah's treasure, had marched all night. When within a mile
of the place, he heard what had happened, and at once pushed forward.
Charlie saw that, already, his retreat was cut off; and, running to the
edge of the terrace, shouted to Peters to hurry out with all the men
already in the courtyard, to occupy the houses outside the gate, and to
keep back the advancing enemy. Summoning another party to the tower, four
guns upon the terrace were at once loaded, and these opened upon the head
of the enemy's column, as they entered the street leading to the temple.
In a short time, a brisk fight began. The enemy planted guns to bear
upon the tower. The cannon of the fort joined in the assault, the infantry
pressed forward through the houses and inclosures to the temple, and were
soon engaged with the men under Captain Peters, while the guns and
musketry from the tower also opened upon them.
Having seen that the preparations to repulse an immediate attack were
complete, Charlie again ran down to the courtyard. The weak point of the
defences was the gateway. This was fifty feet wide, and unprovided with
gates; and Charlie at once set a strong party to work, to form a barricade
across it.
For some hours, the party outside the gates maintained their position,
but they were gradually driven back; and towards evening, by Charlie's
orders, they retired within the temple. The barricade was now eight feet
high. The face was formed of large slabs of stone, piled one upon another,
backed by a considerable thickness of earthwork. This, however, although
capable of resisting a sudden rush of infantry, would, Charlie knew, be
incapable of resisting artillery.
During the night, he divided his men in two parties, which alternately
slept and worked at the inner defences which he had designed. These
consisted of two walls, running from each side of the gateway to the
temple. They were placed a few feet farther back than the edge of the
gateway, so that an enemy advancing to the storm would not see them, until
within the gate. These walls he intended to be eight feet high; and to be
backed with earth, four feet high, so as to form a bank on which the
defenders could stand, and fire into the space between them. To obtain
materials, he pulled down several buildings forming a part of the temple.
The distance from the gateway to the temple was fifty yards, and although
the men worked without ceasing, the wall had made but little progress when
daylight dawned.
During the night, Charlie lowered one of his men from the wall farthest
from the enemy; with instructions to make his way, as fast as possible, to
Madras to ask for succour. In the morning, Charlie found that the enemy
had, on their side, been also busy. A house, which faced the end of the
street leading to the temple, had been pulled down; and a battery of four
guns erected there.
As soon as it was light, the combat began. The enemy had sixteen pieces
of artillery, besides those on the fort; and while the four guns in front
played unceasingly upon the barricade across the gateway, the others
cannonaded the tower, whence the English guns kept up a fire on the
battery in front. So well were these directed, and so heavy was the
musketry, that the enemy's guns were several times silenced, and the
artillerymen driven from them.
Behind the barricade, a working party threw up fresh earth, to
strengthen the part most shaken by the enemy's fire, and then set to work
to form a similar barricade, in a line with the back of the gateway. This
was completed by nightfall, by which time the enemy's guns had completely
shattered the stone facing of the outer barricade, rendering it possible
for it to be carried with a rush. As, from the windows of the houses, they
could see the new work behind it; they would, Charlie judged, not attempt
an assault, until this also was destroyed.
During the night, large quantities of fresh earth were piled on the
outer barricade, which was now useful as forming a screen to that behind
it from the guns. All night the work at the parallel walls continued, and
by morning these had reached a height of three feet.
During the next two days the fight continued, without much advantage on
either side. Each day the enemy's guns shattered the outer barricade, but
this was as regularly repaired at night, in spite of the heavy artillery
and matchlock fire which they kept up towards the spot.
On the fourth day the enemy pulled down a house, standing just in the
rear of their battery, and Charlie found that behind it they had erected
another. It was a solidly built work, of fifteen feet in height, and the
enemy must have laboured continuously at it, every night. It had a strong
and high parapet, of sandbags, protecting the gunners from the musketry
fire of the tower. The muzzles of four guns projected through embrasures,
which had been left for them, and these opened fire over the heads of the
gunners in the lower battery.
In spite of the efforts of the besieged, the enemy kept up so heavy a
fire that, by the afternoon, the inner as well as the outer barricade was
knocked to pieces. By this time, however, the inner walls were completed,
and the English awaited the storm with confidence. The doorway of the
temple had been closed, and blocked up behind; but the doors had been
shattered to pieces, by the shot which had passed through the gateway, and
the entrance now stood open.
Inside the temple, out of the line of fire, Charlie had the two little
field pieces, each crammed to the muzzle with bullets, placed in readiness
to fire. The lower floor of the tower had been pierced, above the gateway,
and here two huge caldrons filled with boiling lead, stripped from the
roof, stood ready for action.
At three in the afternoon, after a furious cannonade, the fire of the
enemy's battery suddenly ceased. They had formed communications between
the houses, on either side of the street; and, at the signal, the troops
poured out from these in large bodies, and rushed to the assault.
The guns from the tower, which had been awaiting the moment, poured
showers of grape among them; but, believing that the temple now lay at
their mercy, the enemy did not hesitate, but rushed at the gateway.
Not a shot was fired, as they entered. Scrambling over the remains of
the two barricades, the enemy poured with exulting shouts into the
courtyard. Then those in front hesitated. On either hand, as far as the
doorway of the temple, extended a massive wall, eight feet high; roughly
built, certainly, but far too strong to be battered down, too steep to be
scaled. They would have retreated, but they were driven forward by the
mass which poured in through the gateway behind them; and, seeing that
their only safety was in victory, they pressed forward again.
Not a defender showed himself, until the head of the column had reached
a point two-thirds of the distance across the courtyard. Then suddenly, on
either side, the wall was lined by the British, who at once opened a
tremendous fire on the mass below. At the same moment, the guns were run
into the doorway, and poured their contents into the struggling mass.
Pent up between the walls, unable to return the fire poured down upon
them, with lanes torn through them by the discharge of the cannon, the
greater portion of the mass strove to turn and retire. The officer in
command, a gallant Frenchman, called upon the survivors of the fifty
French infantry, who had led the attack, to follow him; and rushed forward
upon the guns. Here, however, Charlie had posted his Europeans, and these,
swarming out from the temple, poured a volley into the advancing French,
and then charged them with the bayonet.
The pressure from behind had now ceased. Streams of boiling lead,
poured through the holes above the archway, had effectually checked the
advance; and through this molten shower, the shattered remnants of the
assaulting column now fled for their lives, leaving two hundred and fifty
of their best men dead behind them.
As the last of the column issued out, the guns of the battery again
angrily opened fire. As Charlie had anticipated, the enemy, finding how
strong were the inner defences, abandoned all further idea of attack by
the gateway; and, leaving only two guns there to prevent a sortie, placed
their whole artillery on the western side of the pagoda, and opened fire
to prepare a breach there.
For a week the siege continued, and then Charlie determined to evacuate
the place. The rajah's treasure was made up into small sacks, which were
fastened to the horses' croups. Had it not been for these animals, he
would have defended the place to the last, confident in his power to
devise fresh means to repel fresh assaults. The store of forage, however,
collected by the enemy for their own use in the temple, was now exhausted.
Charlie directed Peters, with twenty men, to sally out from the gate at
midnight, to enter the nearest house on the right hand side, and to follow
the communications made by the enemy before the assault, until they came
to the end of the street. Lieutenant Hallowes, with a similar party, was
to take the left side. If they found any guards within the houses, they
were to overpower these; and, rushing straight on, to attack the battery,
and spike the guns. Should they find the houses deserted, they were to
gather in the houses nearest the battery, when Peters was to fire his
pistol as a signal to Hallowes, and both parties were to attack the
battery.
One of the inner walls had been pulled down, and the main body of the
force, having the wounded and the ladies of the rajah's zenana in their
centre, were to sally out, the instant the guns were taken.
The plan was carried out with the greatest success. The houses on both
sides of the street were found to be deserted, and as Peters fired his
pistol, the party dashed at the flanks of the battery. The French gunners
leaped to their feet and, believing that they were attacked in front,
discharged their cannon. The grapeshot swept along the empty street, and
through the gateway; and Charlie, leading one of the troops, at once
dashed down the street.
At their first rush, Peters and Hallowes had carried the battery,
cutting down the gunners. Immediately behind, however, the enemy had
posted a support, several hundred strong, and these speedily advanced to
recover the battery.
Leaving their horses in charge of a small party, Charlie dismounted his
men and joined Peters, and his fire quickly checked the assault. In the
meantime, the rest of the defenders of the temple rode down the street
and, leaving a few men with the horses of Peters' and Hallowes'
detachments, rode out into the open country. After driving back his
assailants, Charlie led his party back to their horses, mounted them, and
speedily rejoined the main body. An hour later they were well on their way
towards Permacoil, which they reached, next day.
The rajah was delighted at recovering his family. The treasure was
divided, and the portion belonging to the troops was, with the Company's
share, sent down under a strong escort to Madras.
For a considerable time, Charlie's force were occupied with small
undertakings. Lally had now arrived, from France, and had taken the
command. He had, at his orders, a European force considerably exceeding
any that had hitherto been gathered in India, and he boasted that he was
going to capture Madras, and drive the English out of India. Nothing could
have been more unfortunate for the French than the choice of such a man,
and his appointment was destined to give the last blow to French influence
in India, as the supercession of Dupleix had given the first.
Monsieur Lally had one virtue. He was personally brave; but he was
arrogant, passionate, and jealous. He had no capacity, whatever, for
either awing or conciliating those with whom he came in contact. He
treated the natives with open contempt, and was soon as much hated, by
them, as by his own soldiers.
His first step had been to order Bussy down, from Hyderabad, with the
whole of his force. Bussy, a man of great genius, of extreme tact, of
perfect knowledge of the Indian character; had, for eight years,
maintained French influence supreme at that court, and had acquired for
France the Northern Sirkars, a splendid and most valuable province, on the
seacoast north of Madras. Salabut Jung, the ruler of Hyderabad, the
protege of the French, heard with dismay the order which Bussy had
received. To Bussy himself, the blow was a heavy one, and he saw that his
departure would entail the ruin of the edifice of French influence, which
he had built up by so many years of thought and toil.
However, he obeyed at once; and marched, with two hundred and fifty
Europeans and five hundred native troops, into the Sirkars. He made over
the charge of this treaty to the Marquis de Conflans, whom, although but
just arrived from Europe, and entirely new to Indian affairs, Count de
Lally had sent to replace Monsieur Moracin, who had, for years, ably
managed the province. He then marched, with his troops, to join the main
army under Count de Lally.
This force, having taken Fort Saint David, had operated against Tanjore,
where it had suffered a repulse. The news of this reached the Northern
Sirkars, soon after the departure of Bussy; and Anandraz, the most
powerful chief of the country, rose in rebellion, and sent a messenger to
Calcutta, begging the assistance of the English to drive out the French.
While the rest of the Bengal council, seeing that Bengal was, at the
time, threatened with invasion from the north, and menaced with troubles
within, considered that it would be an act little short of madness to send
troops, at a time when they could be so little spared, to assist a chief,
who, even from his own accounts, was only able to raise three thousand
irregular followers, Clive thought otherwise. He saw the great value of
the Northern Sirkars, whose possession would complete the line of British
territory, along the seacoast, from Calcutta down to Madras. He saw, too,
that a movement here would effect a diversion, in favour of Madras. The
situation there appeared very serious, and he could spare no troops which
would suffice to turn the scale. But even should Madras be lost, the gain
of the Northern Sirkars would almost compensate for the disaster.
Having gained the council to his views, he sent Lieutenant Colonel
Forde, who commanded the Company's troops in Bengal, with five hundred
Europeans, two thousand natives, and six six-pounders, by sea to
Vizagapatam, a port which Anandraz had seized. These landed on the 20th of
October, 1758.
Had Conflans been an efficient officer, he could have crushed Anandraz
long before the arrival of the English. He had, under his orders, a force
composed of five hundred European troops, men trained by Bussy, and
accustomed to victory; four thousand native troops, and a brigade of
artillery. Instead of marching at once to crush the rebellion, he sent
messenger after messenger to Lally, begging for assistance. It was only
when he heard, from Lally, that he had directed Moracin, with three
hundred European troops, to support him, that he moved against Anandraz.
His opportunity had, however, slipped from his hands. He had thrown
away six weeks; and when, upon the march, the news reached him of the
landing of the English, he took up the very strong position within sight
of the fort Peddapur, and intrenched himself there.
Clive had sent to Madras the news that he was despatching Colonel Forde
to the Sirkars, and begged that any body of troops who might be available
might be forwarded. Charlie's corps had already been recalled towards
Madras, to keep the bodies of French who were converging in that direction
at a distance, as long as possible, so as to allow the victualling of
Madras to go on uninterrupted. Mr. Pigot now instructed Charlie to hand
over the command of that force to Peters; and, with fifty men, to make his
way north and to effect a junction with Forde, who was entirely deficient
in cavalry.
Avoiding the French force, Charlie reached Vizagapatam upon the 2nd of
December, and found that Forde had marched on the previous day. He started
at once, and on the evening of the 3rd came up to Forde, who had arrived
in sight of the French position.
Charlie had already made the acquaintance of Colonel Forde in Bengal,
and Forde was glad to obtain the assistance, and advice, of an officer who
had seen so much service. An hour after arriving, Charlie rode out with
his commander and reconnoitred the French position; which was, they
concluded, too strong to be attacked. In point of numbers, the forces were
about even. Conflans had, in addition to his five hundred Europeans, six
thousand native infantry, five hundred native cavalry, and thirty guns.
Forde had four hundred and seventy Europeans, one thousand nine hundred
Sepoys, and six guns. Anandraz had forty Europeans, five thousand
infantry, five hundred horsemen, and four guns. These five thousand men
were, however, a mere ragged mob, of whom very few had firearms, and the
rest were armed with bows and arrows. His horsemen were equally worthless,
and Forde could only rely upon the troops he had brought with him from
Calcutta, and the troop of fifty natives under Charlie Marryat.
Finding that the French position was too strong to be attacked, Forde
fell back to a strong position at Chambol, a village nearly four miles
from the French camp. Here, for four days, the two armies remained
watching each other, the leaders of both sides considering that the
position of the other was too strong to be attacked.
Chapter 26: The Siege Of Madras.
At last, weary of inactivity, the Marquis de Conflans and Colonel Forde
arrived simultaneously, on the 8th of December, at a determination to
bring matters to a crisis. Conflans had heard, from a deserter, that Forde
had omitted to occupy a mound which, at a short distance from his camp,
commanded the position. He determined to seize this during the night, and
to open fire with his guns, and that his main army should take advantage
of the confusion, which the sudden attack would occasion, to fall upon the
English. Forde, on his part, had determined to march at four o'clock in
the morning to a village named Condore, three miles distant, whence he
could threaten the French flank.
Ignorant of each other's intentions, the English and French left their
camps at night. Forde marched at a quarter past four, as arranged with
Anandraz; but the rajah and his people, with the usual native aversion to
punctuality, remained quietly asleep, and a few minutes after daybreak
they were roughly awakened, by a deadly fire poured by six guns into the
camp. The rajah sent messenger after messenger to Forde, urging him to
return; and he himself, with his frightened army, hurried towards Condore.
Forde had, indeed, retraced his steps immediately he heard the fire of the
guns, and soon met the rajah's rabble in full flight; and, uniting with
them, marched back to Condore.
Conflans supposed that the fire of his guns had driven the whole of his
opponents in a panic from Chambol; and, determining to take advantage of
the confusion, marched with his force against them. Forde at once prepared
for the battle. In the centre he placed the English, including the rajah's
forty Europeans. Next to these, on either side, he placed his Sepoys, and
posted the troops of Anandraz on the right and left flanks. He then
advanced towards the enemy.
The French guns opened fire. Forde halted. In the position in which he
found himself, his centre occupied a field of Indian corn, so high that
they were concealed from the enemy. Conflans had moved towards the English
left, with the intention, apparently, of turning that flank; and after the
artillery battle on both sides had continued for forty minutes, he ordered
his troops to advance.
In Madras, both the English and French dress their Sepoys in white. In
Bengal, however, since the raising of Sepoy regiments after the recapture
of Calcutta, the English had clothed them in red. Conflans, therefore,
thought that the force he was about to attack was the English contingent;
and that, if he could defeat this, the rout of his enemy would be secured.
The French advanced with great rapidity, and attacked the Sepoys in front
and flank, so vigorously that they broke in disorder. The rajah's troops
fled instantly; and, in spite of the exhortations of Forde, the Sepoys
presently followed their example, and fled with the rajah's troops to
Chambol, pursued by the enemy's horse.
They would have suffered even more severely than they did, in this
pursuit, had not Charlie Marryat launched his little squadron at the
enemy's horse. Keeping his men well together, he made repeated charges,
several times riding through and through them; until at last they desisted
from the pursuit and, forming in a compact body, fell back towards the
field of battle; Charlie, who had already lost twelve men, not thinking it
prudent again to attack so strong a force.
Conflans' easy success over the Sepoys was fatal to him. Believing that
he had defeated the English, he gave orders to several companies of the
French troops to press on in pursuit, without delay. They started off in
hot speed, proceeding without much order or regularity, when they were
suddenly confronted by the whole line of English troops, in solid order,
advancing from the high corn to take the place lately occupied by the
Sepoys. In vain, the scattered and surprised companies of the French
endeavoured to reform, and make head against them. So heavy was the fire
of musketry opened by the British line, immediately they had taken up
their position, that the French broke their ranks, and ran back as fast as
they could to regain their guns, which were fully half a mile in the rear.
In the meantime, the French Sepoys on their left had been gradually
driving back the English right; but Forde, disregarding this, pressed
forward in hot pursuit of the French with his English, behind whom the
greater portion of the beaten Sepoys had already rallied. Keeping his men
well together, he advanced at the fullest speed, following so closely upon
the enemy that the latter had only time to fire one or two rounds, with
their thirteen guns, before the English were upon them. The French, who
had already lost heart by the serious check which had befallen them, were
unable to stand the shock, and at once retreated, leaving their guns
behind them.
As Forde had anticipated, the French Sepoys, seeing their centre and
right defeated, desisted from their attack on the English right, and fell
back upon their camp. The English Sepoys at once marched forward, and
joined Forde's force. The rajah's troops, however, the whole of whom had
fled, remained cowering in the shelter of a large dry tank.
Forde did not wait for them; but, leaving his guns behind him, pressed
forward, an hour after the defeat of the French, against their camp. To
reach this, he had to pass along a narrow valley, commanded by the French
heavy guns. These opened fire, but the English pressed forward without
wavering. The defenders, not yet recovered from the effects of their
defeat in the plain, at once gave way, and retreated in the utmost
confusion towards Rajahmahendri. Had the cavalry of Anandraz been at hand
to follow up the advantage, great numbers might have been captured. As it
was, Charlie Marryat, with his little force, harassed them for some miles;
but was unable to effect any serious damage on so strong a body. The
English captured thirty-two pieces of cannon, and all the stores,
ammunition, and tents of the French.
Forde at once despatched a battalion of Sepoys, under Captain Knox, in
pursuit; and this officer pressed on so vigorously that he approached
Rajahmahendri the same evening. Two more native battalions reached Knox
during the night.
So thoroughly dispirited were the enemy, that the sight of the
red-coated Sepoys of Knox, whom they could not distinguish from English,
induced them to abandon Rajahmahendri in all haste, although it contained
a strong mud fort, with several guns. The Godavery is two miles wide, and
all night the passage of the river in boats continued; and when, at
daybreak next morning, Knox broke into the town, he found fifteen
Europeans still on the banks, expecting a returning boat. These he
captured; and seeing, upon the opposite bank, a party about to disembark
guns and stores from another boat, he opened fire from the guns of the
fort towards it; and, although the shot could scarcely reach halfway
across the river, such was the terror of the enemy that they forsook the
boat, and fled. Knox at once sent a boat across, and brought back that
containing the guns.
The French retreated to Masulipatam, the capital of the province, a
port which rivalled Madras in its commerce. Forde determined to follow
them there, but he was hindered by want of money to pay his troops. This
the Rajah Anandraz, who had promised to supply money, now, excited and
arrogant by the victory which he had done nothing towards gaining, refused
to supply; and many weeks were spent in negotiations, before Forde was
able to move forward.
Charlie was no longer with him. The very day before the fight of
Condore, letters had arrived from Madras, stating the urgency of the
position there; and, upon the night after the battle, Colonel Forde
ordered Charlie to return to aid in the defence of that city, before which
the French had appeared on the 29th of November.
Several skirmishes took place outside the city, and the English then
retired within the fort. The force consisted of sixteen hundred white
troops, and two thousand three hundred Sepoys. The nabob, who had also
retired into the town, had two hundred horse and a huge retinue of
attendants.
On the morning of the 14th the French occupied the town, and the next
day the English made a sortie, with six hundred men. These, for a while,
drove the French before them through the streets of Madras; but as the
French gradually rallied, the fire upon the English was so heavy that the
sortie was repulsed, with a loss of two hundred soldiers and six officers
killed, wounded, and prisoners. The French loss had been about the same.
Had not a large quantity of the French troops broken into the wine stores
on their arrival, and drunk to a point of intoxication, it is probable
that none of the British party would have returned to the fort. The sortie
had, however, the effect that Saubinet, one of the best of the French
officers, was killed, and Count D'Estaign, an able general, taken
prisoner.
For some time, the siege proceeded slowly, the French waiting for the
arrival of their siege artillery, by ship, from Pondicherry. The fort of
Madras was now a far more formidable post than it had been when the French
before captured it. In the year 1743 Mr. Smith, an engineer, had marked
out the lines for a considerable increase in the fortifications. The ditch
was dug and faced with brick, but on account of the expense, nothing
further had been done. The French had added somewhat to the fortifications
during their stay there in 1750. Nothing had been done by the English when
they recovered the town, until the news of the preparations which the
French were making for the siege of the place had been received. Four
thousand natives were then set to work; and these, in eighteen months, had
completed the fortifications, as designed by Mr. Smith, just before the
arrival of the French.
The latter determined to attack from the northern side. Here the fort
was protected by a demi-bastion, next to the sea; and by the Royal
Bastion, the wall between the two being covered by a work known as the
North Ravelin. The defence was also strengthened by the fire of the
northwest lunette, and Pigot's Bastion.
Against these the French threw up four batteries. Lally's Battery,
erected by the regiment of that name, was on the seashore directly facing
the demi-bastion. To its right was the Burying Ground Battery, facing the
Royal Bastion. Against the western face of this position the French
regiment of Lorraine erected a strong work, while farther round to the
west, on a rising ground, they threw up a battery called the Hospital
Battery, which kept up a crossfire on the English position.
To prevent the French from pressing forward along the strip of shore
between the fort and the sea, the English erected a strong stockade,
behind which was a battery called the Fascine Battery.
A few days after the siege began, it was found that the numbers crowded
up in the fort could scarcely be accommodated; and the rajah was,
therefore, invited to leave by sea, on board a ship which would land him
at the Dutch settlement of Negapatam, whence he might journey through the
Tanjore country to Trichinopoli. This proposal he willingly accepted, and
embarked with his wife, women, and children, his other followers leaving
by the land side, opposite to that invested by the French. Thus the
garrison were relieved of the embarrassment, and consumption of food,
caused by four hundred men and two hundred horse.
Charlie rode, with his troop, without interruption through the country,
avoiding all bodies of the enemy until he reached the sea, fifteen miles
north of Madras. Here he hired a native boat and, leaving the troops under
the command of Ensign Anstey, sailed for Madras; in order to inform the
garrison of Forde's victory over the French, and to concert, with the
governor, as to the measures which he wished him to carry out to harass
the enemy. He was accompanied only by Tim and Hossein.
The wind was fair and, starting an hour before sunset, the boat ran
into Madras roads two hours later. The Harlem, which had that day arrived
with artillery for the French from Pondicherry, fired at the little craft;
and the native boatmen were about to turn the head of the craft northward
again. Charlie, however, drew his pistol, and Hossein took his place with
his drawn tulwar by the helmsman. The boatmen, thereupon, again continued
their course; and, though several shots fell near them, they escaped
untouched, and anchored just outside the surf, abreast of the fort.
The English had taken the precaution of erecting a number of huts under
the walls of the fort for the boatmen, in order to be able to communicate
with any ship arriving, or to send messages in or out. As soon as the boat
anchored, a catamaran put out, and brought Charlie and his followers to
shore. There was great joy at the receipt of his news, and the guns of the
fort fired twenty-one shots towards the enemy, in honor of the victory.
Governor Pigot was in general command of the defence, having under him
Colonel Lawrence, in command of the troops. The latter, after inquiring
from Charlie the character of the officer he had left in command of his
troop, and finding that he was able and energetic, requested Charlie to
send orders to him to join either the force under Captain Preston, at
Chingalpatt, or that of a native leader, Mahomed Issoof, both of whom were
ravaging and destroying the country about Conjeveram, whence the French
besieging Madras drew most of their provisions. Charlie himself was
requested to remain in the fort, where his experience in sieges would
render him of great value.
At daybreak on the 2nd of January, the Lorraine and Lally Batteries
opened fire. The English guns, however, proved superior in weight and
number, dismounted two of the cannon, and silenced the others. The French
mortars continued to throw heavy shell into the fort, and that night most
of the European women and children were sent away, in native boats. The
French batteries, finding the superiority of the English fire, ceased
firing until the 6th, when seven guns and six large mortars from Lally's
Battery, and eight guns and two mortars from the Lorraine Battery, opened
upon the town.
The cannonade now continued without intermission, but the enemy gained
but little advantage. Every day, however, added to their strength, as
fresh vessels with artillery continued to arrive from Pondicherry. They
were now pushing their approaches from Lally's Battery towards the demi-bastion.
The losses on the part of the besieged were considerable, many being
killed and wounded each day. This continued to the end of the month, in
spite of many gallant sorties by parties of the besiegers, who repeatedly
killed and drove out the working parties in the head of the French
trenches. These progressed steadily, and reached to the outworks of the
demi-bastion.
On the 25th the Shaftesbury, one of the Company's trading vessels,
commanded by Captain Inglis, was seen approaching. The five French ships
hoisted English colours. A catamaran was sent out to warn her, and at nine
o'clock in the evening she came to anchor. She had on board only some
invalids, but brought the welcome news that three other ships, with
troops, would soon be up. She had on board, too, thirty-seven chests of
silver, and many military stores, among them hand grenades and large
shell, which were most welcome to the garrison, who had nearly expended
their supply. The native boats went off from the fort, and brought on
shore the ammunition and stores.
In the afternoon the Shaftesbury was attacked by the two French ships,
the Bristol and the Harlem. She fought them for two hours, and then sailed
in and anchored again near the fort. The French ships lay off at a
distance, and these and one of their batteries played upon the Shaftesbury
after she had anchored, and continued to do so for the next three days.
Many of the guns of the fort were dismounted by the artillery fire,
which had continued, with scarcely any intermission, for a month. The
parapets of the ramparts were in many places beaten down, and the walls
exposed to the enemy's fire greatly damaged. The enemy now opened their
breaching battery close to the works, and on the 7th two breaches had been
effected, and Lally ordered his principal engineer and artillery officers
to give their opinion as to the practicability of an assault.
These, however, considered that the assault would have no prospect of
success, as the guns commanding the ditch were still uninjured, and the
palisades which stormers must climb over before reaching the breach
untouched. So heavy a crossfire could be brought to bear by the besieged
upon an assaulting column, that it would be swept away before it could
mount the breach. These officers added their opinion that, considering the
number of men defending the fort in comparison with those attacking it,
final success could not be looked for, and further prosecution of the
works would only entail a useless loss of life.
On the 9th of February, the French attacked Mahomed Issoof's men and
those of Captain Preston; the whole under the command of Major Calliaud,
who had come up from Trichinopoli, and had taken station three miles in
rear of the French position. The greater part of the natives, as usual,
behaved badly; but Calliaud, with the artillery and a few Sepoys, defended
himself till nightfall; and then drew off.
For the next week the French continued to fire, and their approaches
were pushed on. Several sorties were made, but matters remained unchanged
until the 14th, when six English ships were seen standing into the roads;
and that night the French drew out from their trenches, and retreated. The
next morning six hundred troops landed from the ships, and the garrison,
who had so stoutly resisted the assaults made upon them for forty-two
days, sallied out to inspect the enemy's works. Fifty-two cannon were left
in them, and so great was the hurry with which the French retreated that
they left forty-four sick in the hospital behind.
The fort fired, during the siege, 26,554 rounds from their cannon, 7502
shells, threw 1990 hand grenades, and expended 200,000 musketry
cartridges. Thirty pieces of cannon and five mortars had been dismounted
during the siege. Of the Europeans, the loss in killed, wounded, and
prisoners was five hundred and seventy-nine. Three hundred and twenty-two
Sepoys were killed and wounded, and four hundred and forty deserted during
the siege.
In spite of the resolution with which the French had pushed the siege,
it was, from the first, destined to failure. The garrison were well
provisioned, had great stores of ammunition, and plenty of spare cannon to
replace those disabled or dismounted. The works were strong, and the
garrison not greatly inferior in number to the besiegers. The French, on
the other hand, had to bring their artillery, ammunition, and stores by
water from Pondicherry; and the activity of the English parties in their
rear rendered it extremely difficult for them to receive supplies of food,
by land. Lally had disgusted even the French officers and soldiers by his
arrogance, and passionate temper; while by the Sepoys he was absolutely
hated.
During the siege, Charlie had been most active in the defence. Colonel
Lawrence had assigned no special post to him, but used him as what would
now be called his chief of the staff. He was ever where the fire was
thickest, encouraging the men; and, during the intervals of comparative
cessation of fire, he went about the fort, seeing to the comforts of the
men in their quarters, to the issue of stores, and other matters.
Upon the very morning after the French had withdrawn, he asked to be
allowed to rejoin his troop, which was with Major Calliaud, and at once
started to rejoin Colonel Forde. He wished to take the whole of his corps
with him; but Colonel Lawrence considered that these would be of extreme
use in following up the French, and in subsequent operations, as cavalry
was an arm in which the English were greatly deficient.
Colonel Forde had been terribly delayed by the conduct of Rajah
Anandraz, and the delay enabled the French again to recover heart. He was
not able to move forward until the 1st of March. On the 6th he arrived
before Masulipatam, and the following day Charlie joined him, with his
troop.
The fort of Masulipatam stood in an extremely defensible position. It
was surrounded by a swamp, on three sides. The other face rested on the
river. From the land side, it was only approachable by a causeway across
the swamp, and this was guarded by a strong ravelin, which is the military
name for an outwork erected beyond the ditch of a fortress. It was, in all
respects, capable of a prolonged defence. In form it was an irregular
parallelogram, about eight hundred yards in length and six hundred yards
wide, and on the walls were eleven strong bastions. The morass which
surrounded it was of from three to eighteen feet in depth.
On the approach of Forde, Conflans evacuated the town; which, also
surrounded by swamps, and lying two miles to the northwest of the fort,
was itself a most defensible position; and retired across the narrow
causeway, more than a mile long, to the fort.
"I am heartily glad that you have come, Marryat," Colonel Forde said,
as Charlie rode up. "I have got here at last, as you see, but that is a
very different thing from getting in. An uglier place to attack I never
saw; and in other respects, matters are not bright.
"Anandraz is a constant worry and trouble to me. He has everything to
gain by our success, and yet will do nothing to aid it. His men are worse
than useless in fight, and the only thing which we want and he could give
us--money--he will not let us have.
"Will you ride with me, to the spot where I'm erecting my batteries,
and you will see the prospect for yourself?"
The prospect was, as Charlie found when he saw it, the reverse of
cheerful. The point which Forde had selected to erect his batteries was on
some sandbanks, eight hundred yards from the eastern face of the fort. It
would be impossible to construct approaches against the walls; and, should
a breach be made, there still remained a wide creek to be crossed, beyond
which lay the deep, and in most parts absolutely impassable, swamp.
Charlie and his men were employed in bringing in provisions from the
surrounding country; but a short distance in the rear, a French column
under Du Rocher, with two hundred European and two thousand native troops,
with four field pieces, watched the British, and rendered the collection
of provisions difficult. Du Rocher had several strong places, with
European and Sepoy garrisons, near him, in which to retire in case Forde
should advance against him.
"Well, Mister Charles," Tim said, one morning, "this is altogether a
quare sort of a siege. Here we are, with a place in front of us with ten
times as many guns as we have got, and a force well nigh twice as large.
Even if there were no walls, and no guns, I don't see how we could get at
'em, barring we'd wings, for this bog is worse than anything in the ould
country. Then behind us we've got another army, which is, they say, with
the garrisons of the forts, as strong as we are. We've got little food and
less money, and the troops are grumbling mightily, I can tell you."
On the 18th of March, while his batteries were still incomplete, Forde
received certain news that the Nizam of the Deccan, the old ally of the
French, was advancing with an army of forty thousand men to attack him. No
British commander ever stood in a position of more imminent peril.
This completed the terror of Anandraz. Du Rocher had caused reports to
be circulated that he intended to march against that chief's territories,
and the news of the approach of the nizam, who was his suzerain lord,
completed his dismay. He refused to advance another penny. Colonel Forde
had already expended the prize money gained by the troops, his own private
funds, and those of his officers, in buying food for his troops; and the
men were several months in arrear of their pay.
"I'm afraid, yer honor," Tim said that evening to Charlie, "that
there's going to be a shindy."
"What do you mean by a shindy, Tim?"
"I mane, yer honor, that the men are cursing and swearing, and saying
the divil a bit will they fight any longer. It's rank mutiny and
rebellion, yer honor; but there's something to be said for the poor boys.
They have seen all the prize money they have taken spent. Not a thraneen
have they touched for months. Their clothes are in rags, and here they are
before a place which there's no more chance of their taking than there is
of their flying up to the clouds. And now they hear that, besides the
French behind us, there's the nizam with forty thousand of his men
marching against us. It's a purty kettle of fish altogether, yer honor.
"It isn't for myself I care, Mr. Charles. Haven't I got an order in my
pocket, on the treasury at Madras, for three hundred pound and over; but
it's mighty hard, yer honor, just when one has become a wealthy man, to be
shut up in a French prison."
"Well, Tim, I hope there will be no trouble; but I own that things look
bad."
"Hossein has been saying, yer honor, that he thinks that the best way
would be for him and me to go out and chop off the heads of half a dozen
of the chief ringleaders. But I thought I'd better be after asking yer
honor's pleasure in the affair, before I set about it."
To Tim's great disappointment, Charlie told him that the step was one
to which he could hardly assent, at present.
The next morning, the troops turned out with their arms, and threatened
to march away. Forde spoke to them gently, but firmly. He told them that
he could not believe that men who had behaved so gallantly, at Condore,
would fail now in their duty. He begged them to return to their tents, and
to send two of their number, as deputies, to him.
This they did. The deputies came to the colonel's tent, and told him
that all were resolved to fight no more; unless they were immediately paid
the amount of prize money due to them, and were assured of the whole
booty, in case Masulipatam should be taken. Colonel Forde promised that
they would receive their prize money out of the very first funds which
reached him. As to the booty which might be taken in Masulipatam, he said
he had no power to change the regulations of the Company, but that he
would beg them, under consideration of the hardships which the troops had
endured, and their great services, to forego their half of the plunder.
Directly Masulipatam was taken, he said, he would divide one half among
them, and hold the other until he obtained the Company's answer to his
request. Then he would distribute it, at once. With this answer the troops
were satisfied, and returned at once to their duty.
On the 25th, the guns of the battery opened fire upon the fort, but the
damage which they did was inconsiderable. On the 27th, news came that the
French army of observation had retaken Rajahmahendri; and that the nizam,
with his army, had arrived at Baizwara, forty miles distant. Letters came
in, from the nizam to Anandraz, ordering him instantly to quit the English
camp, and join him. The rajah was so terrified that, that night, he
started with his troops without giving any information of his intentions
to Colonel Forde; and dilatory as were his motions in general, he, on this
occasion, marched sixteen miles before daybreak.
The instant Colonel Forde heard that he had left, he sent for Charlie
Marryat.
"I suppose you have heard, Marryat, that that scoundrel Anandraz has
bolted. Ride off to him with your troop, and do your best to persuade him
to return."
"I will do so, sir," Charlie said; "but really, it seems to me that we
are better without him than with him. His men only consume our provisions,
and cause trouble, and they are no more good fighting than so many sheep."
"That is so," Colonel Forde said. "But in the first place, his five
thousand men, absolutely worthless as they are, swell our forces to a
respectable size. If Conflans and Du Rocher saw how small is our really
fighting body, they would fall upon us together, and annihilate us. In the
second place, if Anandraz goes to the nizam he will at once, of course,
declare for the French, and will give up Vizapatam and the rest of the
ground we won by the battle of Condore. The whole of the fruits of the
campaign would be lost, and we should only hold that portion of the
Northern Sirkars on which our troops here are encamped."
"I beg your pardon, Colonel," Charlie said. "You are right, and I am
wrong. I will start at once."
Putting himself at the head of his five-and-twenty men, Charlie rode
off at once in pursuit of the rajah. He found him encamped in a village.
Charlie had already instructed his men as to the course which they were to
pursue, and halted them at a distance of fifty yards from the rajah's
tent. Then dismounting, and followed by Tim as his orderly, and Hossein as
his body servant, he walked to the tent.
He found Anandraz surrounded by his chief officers. The rajah received
him coldly; but Charlie, paying no attention to this, took a seat close to
him.
"I am come, Rajah," he said, "from Colonel Forde, to point out to you
the folly of the course which you have pursued. By the line which you have
taken so far, it is evidently your intention to cross the Godavery, and
retire to your own country. What chance have you of accomplishing this? By
this time, the cavalry of the nizam will be scattered over the whole
country between this and the Godavery. At Rajahmahendri is Du Rocher, with
his army, who will take you in flank. Even supposing that you reach your
own country, what is the future open to you? If the English are finally
successful, they will deprive you of your rank and possessions for
deserting them now. If the French are victorious, they and the nizam will
then turn their attention to you; and you cannot hope to escape with life,
when your treason has brought such troubles upon them."
The rajah looked for a minute doubtful; and then, encouraged by the
murmurs of the officers around him, who were weary of the expedition and
its labours, although their troops had not fired a single shot, he said
obstinately:
"No more words are needed. I have made up my mind."
"And so have I," Charlie said, and with a sudden spring he leaped upon
the rajah, seized him by the throat, and placed a pistol to his ear.
Hossein drew his sword, and rushed to his side. Tim ran outside and
held up his arm, and the little body of cavalry at once rode up; and, half
of them dismounting, entered the tent with drawn swords.
So astounded were the officers of the rajah, at Charlie's sudden
attack, that for a moment they knew not what to do; and before they could
recover from their surprise, Charlie's troopers entered.
"Take this man," Charlie said, pointing to the rajah, "to that tree,
and hang him at once. Cut down any of these fellows who move a finger."
The rajah was dragged to the tree, almost lifeless with terror.
"Now, Rajah," Charlie said, "you either give instant orders for your
army to march back to Masulipatam, or up you go on that branch above
there."
The terrified rajah instantly promised to carry out Charlie's orders,
and to remain faithful to the English. The officers were brought out from
the tent, and received orders from the rajah to set his troops instantly
in motion on their way back. The rajah was led to his tent, and there kept
under a guard, until the army was in motion. When the whole of it was well
on its way, Charlie said:
"Now, Rajah, we will ride on. We will say no more about this little
affair, and I will ask Colonel Forde to forgive your ill behaviour in
leaving him. But mind, if at any future time you attempt to disobey his
orders, or to retire from the camp, I will blow out your brains; even if I
have to follow you, with my men, into the heart of your own palace."
Upon their return to the British camp, Charlie explained to Colonel
Forde the measures which he was obliged to take, to convince the rajah of
the soundness of his arguments; and of these Colonel Forde entirely
approved. He told Charlie that he had sent off, to open negotiations with
Salabut Jung, so as to detain him as long as possible at Baizwara.
Without any intermission, the batteries continued to play on the fort
from the 25th of March to the 6th of April. Several houses had been
destroyed, and some breaches effected; but these the French repaired in
the night, as fast as they were made. They were aware of the position of
the English, and regarded the siege with contempt.
On the morning of the 7th, news came that the nizam was advancing from
Baizwara to attack the English; and that Du Rocher was hurrying from
Rajahmahendri, to effect a junction with him. The same morning, the senior
artillery officer reported to Colonel Forde that only two days' ammunition
for the batteries remained in store. He learned, too, that a ship with
three hundred French soldiers would arrive, in the course of a day or two.
The position was, indeed, a desperate one, and there remained only the
alternatives of success against the fort, or total destruction. He
determined to attack. All day, his batteries kept up a heavier fire than
ever, maintaining an equal fire against all the bastions in order that, if
the enemy should obtain any information of the projected attack, they
would not know against which point it was directed. Colonel Forde had
ascertained that fishermen were in the habit of making their way, across
the swamp, to the southwest angle of the fort, that on the sea face
opposite to the British frontiers. He determined to effect a diversion, by
an attack upon that side; and therefore ordered Captain Knox, with seven
hundred Sepoys, to make a detour to cross the swamp, and to attack upon
that side. Still further to distract the attention of the garrison, he
instructed Anandraz to advance with his men along the causeway, and to
open fire against the ravelin. The main attack, which consisted of the
rest of the force, composed of three hundred and twenty European infantry,
thirty gunners, thirty sailors, and seven hundred Sepoys, was to be
delivered against the breach in the bastion, mounting ten guns, in the
northeast angle of the fort.
At ten o'clock, the force drew up under arms. The fire of the batteries
was kept up, much later than usual, in order that the enemy should have no
time to repair the breaches. The hour of midnight was fixed for the
attack, as at that time the tide was at its lowest, and the water in the
ditches round the ramparts not more than three feet deep.
Captain Knox and his party started first. The main body should have set
out half an hour later, but were detained, owing to the unaccountable
absence of Captain Callender, the officer who was to command it. As this
officer was afterwards killed, the cause of his absence was never
explained. The party started without him, and before they could reach the
ditch, they heard the sound of firing from the farther corner of the fort,
telling that Knox was already at work.
"Shure, yer honor," muttered Tim, as he made his way through the swamp,
knee deep, beside his master, "this is worse than the day before Plassey.
It was water then, but this thick mud houlds one's legs fast at every
step. I've lost one of my boots, already."
It was indeed hard work; but at last, the head of the column reached
the ditch, just as a fresh burst of firing told that the Rajah Anandraz
was attacking the ravelin. The French, in their belief in the absolute
security of the place, had taken but few precautions against an attack;
and it was not until the leading party had waded, nearly breast high,
through the ditch; and began to break down the palisade beyond it, that
they were discovered. Then a heavy artillery and musketry fire from the
bastions on the right and left was opened upon the assailants.
Captain Fisher with the first division attacked the breach; Captain
Maclean with the second covered them, by opening fire upon the bastion on
their right; while the third, led by Captain Yorke, replied to that on
their left. Charlie, although superior in rank to any of these officers,
had no specific command, but accompanied the party as a simple volunteer.
The storming party soon mounted the breach, and Yorke's division joined
it on the top. Yorke, turning to the left, seized the bastion which was
firing on Maclean; while Fisher turned along the ramparts to the right, to
secure the bastions in that direction.
Just as Yorke was setting out he saw a strong body of French Sepoys,
advancing between the foot of the ramparts and the buildings of the town.
These had been sent, directly the firing was heard, to reinforce the
bastion just carried. Without a moment's hesitation, Yorke ran down the
rampart, seized the French officer who commanded, and ordered him to
surrender at once, as the place was already taken. Confused and
bewildered, the officer gave up his sword, and ordered the Sepoys to lay
down their arms. They were then sent, as prisoners, into the bastion.
Yorke now pushed forward, with his men, at the foot of the rampart; and
carried two out of three of the bastions on that side. The men, however,
separated from the rest, and alone in the unknown town, were beginning to
lose heart. Suddenly they came upon a small magazine, and some of the men
called out, "A mine!" Seized with a sudden panic, the whole division ran
back, leaving Yorke alone with two native drummer boys, who continued to
beat the advance. The soldiers, however, did not stop running until they
reached the bastion.
Captain Yorke went back, and found that many of the soldiers were
proposing to leave the fort, altogether. He swore that he would cut down
the first man who moved, and some of the men who had served with him in
the 39th, ashamed of their conduct, said that they would follow him.
Heading the thirty-six men who had now come to their senses, Captain Yorke
again advanced, with the drummer boys.
Just as he was setting out, Charlie, who had at first gone with
Fisher's division, hearing an entire cessation of fire on the other side,
ran up to see what was going on.
"Major Marryat," Captain Yorke said, "will you rally these fellows, and
bring them after me. They've been frightened with a false alarm of a mine,
and have lost their heads altogether."
Charlie, aided by Tim, exerted himself to the utmost to encourage and
command the soldiers, shaming them by telling them that while they,
European soldiers, were cowering in the bastion, their Sepoy comrades were
winning the town.
"Unless," he said, "in one minute the whole of you are formed up ready
to advance, I will take care that not one shall have a share in the prize
money that will be won tonight."
The men now fell in, and Charlie led them after Captain Yorke. The
first retreat of the latter's division had given the French time to rally
a little, and as he now made along the rampart towards the bastion on the
river, the French officer in command there, having turned a gun and loaded
it with grape, discharged it when the English were within a few yards.
Captain Yorke fell, badly wounded. The two black drummer boys were killed,
as were several of the men, and sixteen others were wounded.
Charlie, hurrying along with the rest of the party, met the survivors
of Captain Yorke's little band coming back, carrying their wounded
officer.
"There," Charlie shouted to his men, "that is your doing. Now retrieve
yourselves. Show you are worthy of the name of British soldiers."
With a shout, the men rushed forward and carried the bastion, and this
completed the capture of the whole of the wall, from the northeast angle
to the river.
In the meantime Captain Fisher, with his division, was advancing to the
right along the rampart. Maclean's men had joined him, and they were
pushing steadily forward. Colonel Forde continued with the reserve at the
bastion first taken, receiving reports from both divisions as they
advanced, and sending the necessary orders. As fast as the prisoners were
brought in, they were sent down the breach into the ditch, where they were
guarded by Sepoys, who threatened to shoot any that tried to climb up.
Meanwhile, all was disorder in the town. Greatly superior as were the
besieged to their assailants in number, they could, if properly handled,
have easily driven them back. Instead, however, of disregarding the attack
by Knox at the southwest angle, which was clearly only a feint; and that
of Anandraz on the ravelin, which might have been disregarded with equal
safety; and concentrating all their forces against the main attack, they
made no sustained effort against either of the columns, which were rapidly
carrying bastion after bastion. Conflans appeared to have completely lost
his head, as messenger after messenger arrived at his house, by the river,
with news of the progress of the English columns.
As Fisher's division advanced towards the bastion in which was the
great gate, the French who had gathered there again attempted to check his
progress. But his men reserved their fire, until close to the enemy; and
then, discharging a volley at a few yards' distance, they rapidly cleared
the bastion. Fisher at once closed the great gates, and thus cut off all
the defenders of the ravelin, and prevented any of the troops within from
joining these, and cutting their way through the rajah's troops, which
would have been no difficult matter.
Just as the division were again advancing, Captain Callender, to the
astonishment of everyone, appeared and took his place at its head. A few
shots only were fired after this, and the last discharge killed Captain
Callender.
By this time Conflans, bewildered and terrified, had sent a message to
Colonel Forde, offering to surrender on honorable terms. Colonel Forde
sent back to say that he would give no terms whatever; that the town was
in his power and further resistance hopeless; and that, if it continued
longer, he would put all who did not surrender to the sword. On the
receipt of this message, Conflans immediately sent round orders that all
his men were to lay down their arms, and to fall in, in the open space by
the water.
The English assembled, on the parade, by the bastion of the gateway.
Captain Knox's column was marched round, from the southwest, into the
town. A strong body of artillery kept guard over the prisoners till
morning. Then the gate was opened, and the French in the ravelin entered
the fort, and became prisoners with the rest of the garrison. The whole
number of prisoners exceeded three thousand, of whom five hundred were
Europeans and the rest Sepoys. The loss of the English was twenty-two
Europeans killed, and sixty-two wounded. The Sepoys had fifty killed and a
hundred and fifty wounded. The rajah's people, who had kept up their false
attack upon the ravelin with much more bravery and resolution than had
been expected, also lost a good many men.
Considering the natural strength of the position, that the garrison
was, both in European troops and Sepoys, considerably stronger than the
besiegers, that the fort mounted a hundred and twenty guns, and that a
relieving army, enormously superior to that of the besiegers, was within
fifteen miles at the time the assault was made, the capture of Masulipatam
may claim to rank among the very highest deeds ever performed by British
arms.
Chapter 28: The Defeat Of Lally.
A large quantity of plunder was obtained at Masulipatam. Half was at
once divided among the troops, according to promise, and the other half
retained until the permission, applied for by Colonel Forde, was received
from Madras for its division among them.
The morning after the capture of the town, the Mahratta horse of
Salabut Jung appeared. The nizam was furious when he found that he had
arrived too late; but he resolved that when the three hundred French
troops, daily expected by sea, arrived, he would besiege Forde in his
turn; as, with the new arrivals, Du Rocher's force would alone be superior
to that of Forde, and there would be, in addition, his own army of forty
thousand men.
The ships arrived off the port three days later, and sent a messenger
on shore to Conflans. Finding that no answer was returned, and that the
fire had entirely ceased, they came to the conclusion that the place was
captured by the English, and sailed away to Pondicherry again. Had Du
Rocher taken the precaution of having boats in readiness to communicate
with them, inform them of the real state of affairs, and order them to
land farther along the coast and join him, Forde would have been besieged
in his turn, although certainly the siege would have been ineffectual.
Rajah Anandraz, greatly terrified at the approach of the nizam, had,
two days after the capture of the place, received a portion of the plunder
as his share, and marched away to his own country; Forde, disgusted with
his conduct throughout the campaign, making no effort whatever to retain
him.
When Salabut Jung heard that the French had sailed away to Pondicherry,
he felt that his prospects of retaking the town were small; and, at the
same time receiving news that his own dominions were threatened by an
enemy, he concluded a treaty with Forde, granting Masulipatam and the
Northern Sirkars to the English, and agreeing never again to allow any
French troops to enter his dominions. He then marched back to his own
country.
Colonel Forde sailed with a portion of the force to Calcutta, where he
shortly afterwards commanded at the battle of Chinsurah, where the Dutch,
who had made vast preparations to dispute the supremacy of the English,
were completely defeated; and thenceforth they, as well as the French,
sunk to the rank of small trading colonies under British protection, in
Bengal.
Charlie returned to Madras, and journeying up the country he joined the
main body of his troop, under Peters. They had been engaged in several
dashing expeditions, and had rendered great service; but they had been
reduced in numbers, by action and sickness; and the whole force, when
reunited, only numbered eighty sabres--Lieutenant Hallowes being killed.
Peters had been twice wounded. The two friends were greatly pleased to
meet again, and had much to tell each other of their adventures, since
they parted.
The next morning, a deputation of four of the men waited upon Charlie.
They said that, from their share of the booty of the various places they
had taken, all were now possessed of sums sufficient, in India, to enable
them to live in comfort for the rest of their lives. They hoped,
therefore, that Charlie would ask the authorities at Madras to disband the
corps, and allow them to return home. Their commander, however, pointed
out to them that the position was still a critical one; that the French
possessed a very powerful army at Pondicherry, which would shortly take
the field; and that the English would need every one of their soldiers, to
meet the storm. If victorious, there could be no doubt that a final blow
would be dealt to French influence, and that the Company would then be
able to reduce its forces. A few months would settle the event, and it
would, he knew, be useless to apply for their discharge before that time.
He thought he could promise them, however, that by the end of the year, at
latest, their services would be dispensed with.
The men, although rather disappointed, retired, content to make the
best of the circumstances. Desertions were very frequent in the Sepoy
force of the Company, as the men, returning to their native villages and
resuming their former dress and occupation, were in no danger whatever of
discovery. But in Charlie's force not a single desertion had taken place
since it was raised; as the men knew that, by leaving the colours, they
would forfeit their share of the prize money, held for them in the Madras
treasury.
"Have you heard from home lately?" Peters asked.
"Yes," Charlie said. "There was a large batch of letters lying for me,
at Madras. My eldest sister, who has now been married three years, has
just presented me with a second nephew. Katie and my mother are well."
"Your sister is not engaged yet?" Peters asked.
"No. Katie says she's quite heart whole at present. Let me see--how old
is she now? It is just eight years and a half since we left England, and
she was twelve years old then. She is now past twenty.
"She would do nicely for you, Peters, when you go back. It would be
awfully jolly, if you two were to fall in love with each other."
"I feel quite disposed to do so," Peters said, laughing, "from your
descriptions of her. I've heard so much of her, in all the time we've been
together; and she writes such bright merry letters, that I seem to know
her quite well."
For Charlie, during the long evenings by the campfires, had often read
to his friend the lively letters which he received from his sisters.
Peters had no sisters of his own; and he had more than once sent home
presents, from the many articles of jewelry which fell to his share of the
loot of captured fortresses, to his friend's sisters, saying to Charlie
that he had no one in England to send things to, and that it kept up his
tie with the old country; for he had been left an orphan, as a child.
The day after the deputation from his men had spoken to Charlie, Tim
said:
"I hope, yer honor, that whin the troop's disbanded, you will be going
home for a bit, yourself."
"I intend to do so, Tim. I have been wanting to get away, for the last
two years, but I did not like to ask for leave until everything was
settled here. And what is more, when I once get back, I don't think they
will ever see me in India again. I have sufficient means to live as a
wealthy man in England, and I've seen enough fighting to last a lifetime."
"Hooroo!" shouted Tim. "That's the best word I've heard for a long
time. And I shall settle down as yer honor's butler, and look after the
grand house, and see that you're comfortable."
"You must never leave me, Tim, that's certain," Charlie said. "At
least, till you marry and set up an establishment of your own."
"If I can't marry without leaving yer honor, divil a wife will Tim
Kelly ever take."
"Wait till you see the right woman, Tim. There is no saying what the
strongest of us will do, when he's once caught in a woman's net. However,
we'll talk of that when the time comes."
"And there's Hossein, yer honor. Fire and water wouldn't keep him away
from you, though what he'll do in the colds of the winter at home is more
than I know. It makes me laugh to see how his teeth chatter, and how the
creetur shivers of a cold morning, here. But, cold or no cold, he'd follow
you to the north pole, and climb up it if yer honor told him."
Charlie laughed.
"He is safe not to be put to the test there, Tim. However, you may be
sure that if Hossein is willing to go to England with me, he shall go. He
has saved my life more than once; and you and he shall never part from me,
so long as you are disposed to stay by my side."
For some months, no great undertaking was attempted on either side.
Many petty sieges and skirmishes took place, each party preparing for the
great struggle, which was to decide the fate of Southern India.
At last, in January, 1760, the rival armies approached each other.
Captain Sherlock, with thirty Europeans and three hundred Sepoys, were
besieged by the French in the fort of Vandivash, which had shortly before
been captured by them from the French.
Lally was himself commanding the siege, having as his second in command
Monsieur Bussy, of whom, however, he was more jealous than ever. Lally's
own incapacity was so marked that the whole army, and even Lally's own
regiment, recognized the superior talents of Bussy. But although Lally
constantly asked the advice of his subordinate, his jealousy of that
officer generally impelled him to neglect it.
When the English, under Colonel Coote, who now commanded their forces
in Madras, were known to be advancing against him, Bussy strongly advised
that the siege should be abandoned, and a strong position taken up for the
battle. The advice was unquestionably good, but Lally neglected it, and
remained in front of Vandivash until the English were seen approaching.
The French cavalry, among whom were three hundred European dragoons, and a
cloud of Mahratta horse moved forward against the English, whose troops
were scattered on the line of march.
Colonel Coote brought up two guns, and these, being kept concealed from
the enemy until they came within two hundred yards, opened suddenly upon
them, while the Sepoys fired heavily with their muskets. The Mahrattas
rapidly turned and rode off, and the French cavalry, finding themselves
alone, retired in good order.
Colonel Coote now drew up his army in order of battle, and marched his
troops so as to take up a position in front of some gardens, and other
inclosures, which extended for some distance from the foot of the
mountains out on to the plain. These inclosures would serve as a defence,
in case the army should be forced to retire from the open.
The French remained immovable in their camp. Seeing this, Colonel Coote
marched his troops to the right, the infantry taking up their post in the
stony ground at the foot of the mountain, at a mile and a half from the
French camp. Some of the French cavalry came out to reconnoitre; but,
being fired upon, returned.
Finding that the French would not come out to attack, Colonel Coote
again advanced until he reached a point where, swinging round his right,
he faced the enemy in a position of great strength. His right was now
covered by the fire of the fort, his left by the broken ground at the foot
of the hills.
As soon as the English had taken up their position, the French sallied
out from their camp and formed in line of battle. The French cavalry were
on their right; next to these was the regiment of Lorraine, four hundred
strong; in the centre the battalion of India, seven hundred strong. Next
to these was Lally's regiment, four hundred strong, its left resting upon
an intrenched tank, which was held by three hundred marines and sailors
from their fleet, with four guns. Twelve other guns were in line, three
between each regiment. Four hundred Sepoys were in reserve, at a tank in
rear of that held by the marines. Nine hundred Sepoys held a ridge behind
the position, but in front of the camp, and at each end of this ridge was
an intrenchment, guarded by fifty Europeans. A hundred and fifty Europeans
and three hundred Sepoys remained in the batteries, facing Vandivash. The
whole force consisted of two thousand four hundred Europeans, and sixteen
hundred Sepoys. The Mahrattas, three thousand strong, remained in their
own camp, and did not advance to the assistance of their allies.
The English army consisted of nineteen hundred Europeans, of whom
eighty were cavalry, two thousand one hundred Sepoys, twelve hundred and
fifty irregular horse, and twenty-six field guns. The Sepoys were on the
flanks, the Company's two battalions in the centre, with Coote's regiment
on their right and Draper's on their left. The four grenadier companies of
the white regiments were withdrawn from the fighting line; and, with two
hundred Sepoys on each flank, were held as a reserve. Ten field pieces
were in line with the troops; two, with two companies of Sepoys, were
posted a little on the left; the rest were in reserve. The English line
was placed somewhat obliquely across that of the French, their left being
the nearest to the enemy.
As the English took up their position, Lally led out his cavalry, made
a wide sweep round the plain, and then advanced against the English horse,
who were drawn up some little distance behind the reserve. Upon seeing
their approach, the whole of the irregular horse fled at once, leaving
only Charlie's troop remaining. The Sepoys with the two guns on the left
were ordered to turn these round, so as to take the advancing French in
flank; but the flight of their horse had shaken the natives, and the
French cavalry would have fallen, unchecked, on Charlie's little troop,
which was already moving forward to meet them, had not Captain Barlow, who
commanded the British artillery, turned two of his guns and opened fire
upon them.
Fifteen men and horses fell at the first discharge, throwing the rest
into some confusion; and at the next deadly discharge, the whole turned
and rode off. Seeing the enemy retreating, many of the irregular horse
rode back, and, joining Charlie's troop, pursued them round to the rear of
their own camp.
For a short time a cannonade was kept up by the guns on both sides, the
English fire, being better directed, causing some damage. Upon Lally's
return to his camp with the cavalry, he at once gave the order to advance.
Coote ordered the Europeans of his force to do the same, the Sepoys to
remain on their ground.
The musketry fire began at one o'clock. The English, according to
Coote's orders, retained theirs until the enemy came close at hand.
Following the tactics which were afterwards repeated many times in the
Peninsula, the Lorraine regiment, forming a column twelve deep, advanced
against that of Coote, which received them in line. The French came on at
the double. When within a distance of fifty yards, Coote's regiment poured
a volley into the front and flanks of the column. Although they suffered
heavily from this fire, the French bravely pressed on with levelled
bayonets, and the head of the column, by sheer weight, broke through the
English line.
The flanks of the English, however, closed in on the sides of the
French column, and a desperate hand-to-hand fight ensued. In this, the
English had all the advantage, attacking the French fiercely on either
side, until the latter broke and ran back to the camp.
Colonel Coote, who was with his regiment, ordered it to form in regular
order again, before it advanced, and rode off to see what was going on in
the rest of the line. As he was passing on, a shot struck an ammunition
waggon in the intrenched tank held by the French. This exploded, killing
and wounding eighty men, among whom was the commander of the post. The
rest of its occupants, panic stricken by the explosion, ran back to the
next tank. Their panic communicated itself to the Sepoys there, and all
ran back together to the camp.
Colonel Coote at once sent orders to Major Brereton, who commanded
Draper's regiment, to take possession of the tank, before the enemy
recovered from the confusion which the explosion would be sure to cause.
The ground opposite that which Draper's regiment occupied was held by
Lally's regiment, and in order to prevent his men being exposed to a
flanking fire from these, Draper ordered them to file off to the right.
Bussy, who commanded at this wing, endeavoured to rally the fugitives, and
gathering fifty or sixty together, added two companies of Lally's regiment
to them, and posted them in the tank; he then returned to the regiment.
As Major Brereton, moving up his men, reached the intrenchment, a heavy
fire was poured upon him. Major Brereton fell, mortally wounded, and many
of his men were killed. The rest, however, with a rush carried the
intrenchment, and firing down from the parapet on the guns on Lally's
left, drove the gunners from them. Two companies held the intrenchment,
and the rest formed in the plain on its left, to prevent Lally's regiment
attacking it on this side.
Bussy wheeled Lally's regiment, detached a portion of it to recover the
intrenchment, and with the rest marched against Draper's troops in the
plain. A heavy musketry fire was kept up on both sides, until the two
guns, posted by Draper's regiment, and left behind when they attacked the
intrenchment, came up and opened on the French. These began to waver.
Bussy, as the only chance of gaining the day, put himself at their head,
and endeavoured to lead them forward to attack the English with the
bayonet. His horse, however, was struck with a ball and soon fell; the
English fire was redoubled, and but twenty of Lally's men kept round him.
Two companies of the English rushed forward and surrounded the little
party, who at once surrendered. Bussy was led a prisoner to the rear, and
as he went was surprised at the sight of the three hundred grenadiers, the
best troops in the English army, remaining quietly in reserve.
While on either flank the French were now beaten, the fight in the
centre, between the European troops of the English and French Companies,
had continued, but had been confined to a hot musketry and artillery fire.
But upon seeing the defeat of their flanks, the enemy's centre likewise
fell back to their camp.
From the moment when the Lorraine regiment had been routed, four field
pieces kept up an incessant fire into their camp, to prevent them from
rallying. The three English regiments now advanced in line, and entered
the enemy's camp without the least opposition. The Lorraine regiment had
passed through it, a mass of fugitives. The India regiment and Lally's
went through rapidly, but in good order.
Lally had, in vain, endeavoured to bring the Sepoys forward to the
attack, to restore the day. The French cavalry, seeing the defeat of
Lorraine's regiment, advanced to cover it, their appearance completely
intimidating the English irregular horse. Charlie's troop were too weak to
charge them single handed.
Reanimated by the attitude of their cavalry, the men of the Lorraine
regiment rallied, yoked up four field pieces which were standing in the
rear of the camp, and moved off in fair order. They were joined in the
plain by Lally's regiment and the India battalion, and the whole, setting
fire to their tents, moved off in good order. The four field pieces kept
in the rear, and behind these moved the cavalry. As they retired, they
were joined by the four hundred and fifty men from the batteries opposite
Vandivash.
Colonel Coote sent orders to his cavalry to harass the enemy. These
followed them for five miles, but as the native horse would not venture
within range of the enemy's field guns, Charlie, to his great
disappointment, was able to do nothing.
Upon neither side did the Sepoys take any part in the battle of
Vandivash. It was fought entirely between the two thousand two hundred and
fifty French, not including those in their battery, and sixteen hundred
English, excluding the grenadiers, who never fired a shot. Twenty-four
pieces of cannon were taken, and eleven waggons of ammunition, and all the
tents, stores, and baggage that were not burned. The French left two
hundred dead upon the field. A hundred and sixty were taken prisoners, of
whom thirty died of their wounds before the next morning. Large numbers
dropped upon the march, and were afterwards captured. The English had
sixty-three killed, and a hundred and twenty-four wounded.
The news of this victory reached Madras on the following morning, and
excited as much enthusiastic joy as that of Plassey had done at Calcutta;
and the event was almost as important a one. There was no longer the
slightest fear of danger, and the Madras authorities began to meditate an
attack upon Pondicherry. So long as the great French settlement remained
intact, so long would Madras be exposed to fresh invasions; and it was
certain that France, driven now from Bengal, would make a desperate effort
to regain her shaken supremacy in Madras.
The force, however, at the disposal of the Madras authorities, was
still far too weak to enable them to undertake an enterprise like the
siege of Pondicherry; for their army did not exceed, in numbers, that
which Lally possessed for its defence. Accordingly, urgent letters were
sent to Clive to ask him to send down, in the summer, as many troops as he
could spare, other reinforcements being expected from England at that
time. The intervening time was spent in the reduction of Chittapett,
Karical, and many other forts which held out for the French.
After the battle of Vandivash, Charlie kept his promise to his men. He
represented to Mr. Pigot that they had already served some months over the
time for which they were enlisted, that they had gone through great
hardships, and performed great services, and that they were now anxious to
retire to enjoy the prize money they had earned. He added that he had
given his own promise that they should be allowed to retire, if they would
extend their service until after a decisive battle with the French. Mr.
Pigot at once assented to Charlie's request, and ordered that a batta of
six months' pay should be given to each man, upon leaving.
The troop, joined by many of their comrades, who had been at different
times sent down sick and wounded to Madras, formed up there on parade for
the last time. They responded with three hearty cheers to the address
which Charlie gave them, thanking them for their services, bidding them
farewell, and hoping that they would long enjoy the prize money which they
had gallantly won. Then they delivered over their horses to the
authorities, drew their prize money from the treasury, and started for
their respective homes, the English portion taking up their quarters in
barracks, until the next ship should sail for England.
"I am sorry to leave them," Charlie said to Peters, as they stood alone
upon the parade. "We have gone through a lot of stirring work together,
and no fellows could have behaved better."
"No," Peters agreed. "It is singular that, contemptible as are these
natives of India when officered by men of their own race and religion,
they will fight to the death when led by us."
Chapter 29: The Siege Of Pondicherry.
As the health of the two officers was shaken by their long and arduous
work, and their services were not, for the moment, needed, they obtained
leave for three months, and went down in a coasting ship to Columbo, where
several English trading stations had been established. Here they spent two
months, residing for the most part among the hills, at the town of a rajah
very friendly to the English; and with him they saw an elephant hunt, the
herd being driven into a great inclosure, formed by a large number of
natives who had, for weeks, been employed upon it. Here the animals were
fastened to trees by natives, who cut through the thick grass unobserved;
and were one by one reduced to submission, first by hunger, and then by
being lustily belaboured by the trunks of tamed elephants. Tim highly
appreciated the hunt, and declared that tiger shooting was not to be
compared to it.
Their residence in the brisk air of the hills completely restored their
health, and they returned to Madras perfectly ready to take part in the
great operations which were impending. Charlie, on his return, was
appointed to serve as chief of the staff to Colonel Coote; Captain Peters
being given the command of a small body of European horse, who were, with
a large body of irregulars, to aid in bringing in supplies to the British
army, and to prevent the enemy from receiving food from the surrounding
country.
Early in June, the British squadron off the coast was joined by two
ships of the line, the Norfolk and Panther, from England; and a hundred
Europeans, and a detachment of European and native artillery came down
from Bombay.
Around Pondicherry ran a strong cactus hedge, strengthened with
palisades, and the French retired into this at the beginning of July. They
were too strongly posted there to be attacked by the force with which the
English at first approached them, and they were expecting the arrival of a
large body of troops from Mysore, with a great convoy of provisions.
On the 17th these approached. Major Moore, who was guarding the English
rear, had a hundred and eighty European infantry; fifty English horse,
under Peters; sixteen hundred irregular horse; and eleven hundred Sepoys.
The Mysoreans had four thousand good horse, a thousand Sepoys, and two
hundred Europeans, with eight pieces of cannon.
The fight lasted but a few minutes. The British native horse and Sepoys
at once gave way; and the English infantry retreated, in great disorder,
to the fort of Trivadi, which they gained with a loss of fifteen killed
and forty wounded. Peters' horse alone behaved well. Several times they
charged right through the masses of Mysorean horse; but when
five-and-twenty were killed, and most of the rest, including their
commander, severely wounded, they also fell back into the fort.
Colonel Coote, when the news of the disaster reached him, determined,
if possible, to get possession of the fort of Vellenore, which stood on
the river Ariangopang, some three miles from Pondicherry, and covered the
approaches of the town from that side. The English encampment was at
Perimbe, on the main road leading, through an avenue of trees, to
Pondicherry. Colonel Coote threw up a redoubt on the hill behind Perimbe,
and another on the avenue, to check any French force advancing from
Pondicherry. These works were finished on the morning of the 19th of July.
The next morning the French army advanced along the river Ariangopang,
but Coote marched half his force to meet them, while he moved the rest as
if to attack the redoubts, interspersed along the line of hedge. As the
fall of these would have placed the attacking force in his rear, Lally at
once returned to the town. The same evening the Mysoreans, with three
thousand bullocks carrying their artillery and drawing their baggage, and
three thousand more laden with rice and other provisions, arrived on the
other bank of the Ariangopang river, crossed under the guns of the redoubt
of that name, and entered the town.
The fort of Vellenore was strong, but the road had been cut straight
through the glacis to the gate, and the French had neglected to erect
works to cover this passage. Coote took advantage of the oversight, and
laid his two eighteen-pounders to play upon the gate, while two others
were placed to fire upon the parapet. The English batteries opened at
daybreak on the 16th, and at nine o'clock the whole of the French army,
with the Mysoreans, advanced along the bank of the river.
Coote at once got his troops under arms, and advanced towards the
French, sending a small detachment of Europeans to reinforce the Sepoys
firing at the fort of Vellenore. By this time the batteries had beaten
down the parapet, and silenced the enemy's fire. Two companies of Sepoys
set forward, at full run, up to the very crest of the glacis.
The French commander of the place had really nothing to fear, as the
Sepoys had a ditch to pass, and a very imperfect breach to mount, and the
fort might have held out for two days, before the English could have been
in a position to storm it. The French army was in sight, and in ten
minutes a general engagement would have begun. In spite of all this, the
coward at once hoisted a flag of truce, and surrendered. The Europeans and
Sepoys ran in through the gate, and the former instantly turned the guns
of the fort upon the French army. This halted, struck with amazement and
anger, and Lally at once ordered it to retire upon the town.
A week afterwards six ships, with six hundred fresh troops from
England, arrived.
The Mysoreans, who had brought food into Pondicherry, made many
excursions in the country, but were sharply checked. They were unable to
supply themselves with food, and none could be spared them from the stores
in the magazines. Great distress set in among them, and this was
heightened by the failure of a party, with two thousand bullocks with
rice, to enter the town. This party, escorted by the greater portion of
the Mysorean horse from Pondicherry, was attacked and defeated, and nine
hundred bullocks, laden with baggage, captured. Shortly afterwards the
rest of the Mysorean troops left Pondicherry, and marched to attack
Trinomany.
Seeing that there was little fear of their returning to succour
Pondicherry, the English now determined to complete the blockade of that
place. In order to have any chance of reducing it by famine, it was
necessary to obtain possession of the country within the hedge; which,
with its redoubts, extended in the arc of a circle from the river
Ariangopang to the sea. The space thus included contained an area of
nearly seven square miles, affording pasture for the bullocks, of which
there were sufficient to supply the troops and inhabitants for many
months. Therefore, although the army was not yet strong enough to open
trenches against the town, and indeed the siege artillery had not yet
sailed from Madras, it was determined to get possession of the hedge and
its redoubts.
Before doing this, however, it was necessary to capture the fort of
Ariangopang. This was a difficult undertaking. The whole European force
was but two thousand strong, and if eight hundred of these were detached
across the river to attack the fort, the main body would be scarcely a
match for the enemy, should he march out against them. If, on the other
hand, the whole army moved round to attack the fort, the enemy would be
able to send out and fetch in the great convoy of provisions collected at
Jinji.
Mr. Pigot therefore requested Admiral Stevens to land the marines of
the fleet. Although, seeing that a large French fleet was expected, the
admiral was unwilling to weaken his squadron; he complied with the
request, seeing the urgency of the case, and four hundred and twenty
marines were landed.
On the 2nd of September two more men-of-war, the America and Medway,
arrived, raising the fleet before Pondicherry to seventeen ships of the
line. They convoyed several Company's ships, who had brought with them the
wing of a Highland regiment.
The same evening Coote ordered four hundred men to march to invest the
fort of Ariangopang; but Colonel Monson, second in command, was so
strongly against the step that, at the last moment, he countermanded his
orders. The change was fortunate, for Lally, who had heard from his spies
of the English intentions, moved his whole army out to attack the--as he
supposed--weakened force.
At ten at night fourteen hundred French infantry, a hundred French
horse, and nine hundred Sepoys marched out to attack the English, who had
no suspicion of their intent. Two hundred marines and five hundred Sepoys
proceeded, in two columns. Marching from the Valdore redoubt, one party
turned to the right to attack the Tamarind redoubt, which the English had
erected on the Red Hill. Having taken this, they were to turn to their
left and join the other column. This skirted the foot of the Red Hill, to
attack the redoubt erected on a hillock at its foot, on the 18th July.
Four hundred Sepoys and a company of Portuguese were to take post at
the junction of the Valdore and Oulgarry avenues. The regiments of
Lorraine and Lally were to attack the battery in this avenue, Lorraine's
from the front, while Lally's, marching outwards in the fields, was to
fall on its right flank. The Indian battalion, with the Bourbon
volunteers, three hundred strong, were to march from the fort of
Ariangopang, across the river, to the villages under the fort of Vellenore;
and, as soon as the fire became general, were to fall upon the right rear
of the English encampment.
At midnight a rocket gave the signal, and the attack immediately
commenced. The attack on the Tamarind redoubt was repulsed, but the
redoubt on the hillock was captured, and the guns spiked. At the
intrenchment on the Oulgarry Road the fight was fierce, and Colonel Coote
himself brought down his troops to its defence. The attack was continued,
but as, owing to some mistake, the column intended to fall upon the
English rear had halted, and did not arrive in time, the regiments of
Lorraine and Lally drew off, and the whole force retired to the town.
The ships arriving from England brought a commission appointing Monson
to the rank of Colonel, with a date prior to that of Colonel Coote;
ordering him, however, not to assert his seniority, so long as Coote
remained at Madras. Coote, however, considered that it was intended that
he should return to Bengal, and so handing over the command to Monson, he
went back to Madras.
Colonel Monson at once prepared to attack the hedge, and its redoubts.
Leaving sufficient guards for the camp, he advanced at midnight, with his
troops divided into two brigades, the one commanded by himself, the other
by Major Smith. Major Smith's division was first to attack the enemy,
outside the hedge in the village of Oulgarry; and, driving them hence, to
carry the Vellenore redoubt, while the main body were to make a sweep
round the Red Hill, and come down to the attack of the Valdore redoubt.
Smith, moving to the right of the Oulgarry avenue, attacked that
position on the left; and the advance, led by Captain Myers, carried by
storm a redoubt in front of the village, and seized four pieces of cannon.
Major Smith, heading his grenadiers, then charged the village, tore down
all obstacles, and carried the place.
The day had begun to dawn when Colonel Monson approached the Valdore
redoubt. But at the last moment, making a mistake in their way, the head
of the column halted. At this moment the enemy perceived them, and
discharged a twenty-four pounder, loaded with small shot, into the column.
Eleven men were killed and twenty-six wounded by this terrible discharge,
among the latter Colonel Monson himself, his leg being broken. The
grenadiers now rushed furiously to the attack, swarmed round the redoubt
and, although several times repulsed, at last forced their way through the
embrasures and captured the position.
The defenders of the village of Oulgarry had halted outside the
Vellenore redoubt; but, upon hearing the firing to their right, retreated
hastily within it. Major Smith pressed them hotly with his brigade, and
followed so closely upon their heels that they did not stop to defend the
position, but retreated to the town. Major Smith was soon joined by the
Highlanders, under Major Scott, who had forced a way through the hedge
between the two captured redoubts.
Thus the whole line of the outer defence fell into the hands of the
English, with the exception of the Ariangopang redoubt on the left, which
was held by the India regiment. Major Gordon, who now took the command,
placed the Bombay detachment, of three hundred and fifty men, in the
captured redoubts; and encamped the whole of the force in the fields to
the right of Oulgarry.
Major Smith advised that at least a thousand men should be left, near
at hand, to succour the garrisons of the redoubts; which, being open at
the rear, were liable to an attack. Major Gordon foolishly refused to
follow his advice, and the same night the French attacked the redoubts.
The Bombay troops, however, defended themselves with extreme bravery until
assistance arrived.
Three days later the French evacuated and blew up the fort of
Ariangopang, which the English were preparing to attack, and the India
regiment retired into the town, leaving, however, the usual guard in the
Ariangopang redoubt.
Colonel Coote had scarcely arrived at Madras when he received a letter
from Colonel Monson, saying that he was likely to be incapacitated by his
wound for some months, and requesting that he would resume the command of
the army. The authorities of Madras strongly urged Coote to return,
representing the extreme importance of the struggle in which they were
engaged. He consented, and reached camp on the night of the 20th. He at
once ordered the captured redoubts to be fortified, to prevent the enemy
again taking the offensive; and erected a strong work, called the North
Redoubt, near the seashore and facing the Madras redoubt.
A few days later, on a party of Sepoys approaching the Ariangopang
redoubt, the occupants of that place were seized with a panic, abandoned
the place, and went into the town. The English had now possession of the
whole of the outward defences of Pondicherry, with the exception of the
two redoubts by the seashore.
A day or two later Colonel Coote, advancing along the sea beach as if
with a view of merely making a reconnaissance, pushed on suddenly, entered
the village called the Blancherie, as it was principally inhabited by
washerwomen, and attacked the Madras redoubt. This was carried, but the
same night the garrison sallied out again, and fell upon the party of
Sepoys posted there. Ensign MacMahon was killed, but the Sepoys, although
driven out from the redoubt, bravely returned and again attacked the
French; who, thinking that the Sepoys must have received large
reinforcements, fell back into the village; from which, a day or two
later, they retired into the town.
The whole of the ground outside the fort, between the river Ariangopang
and the sea, was now in the hands of the English. The French still
maintained their communications with the south by the sandy line of coast.
By this time the attacks, which the English from Trichinopoli and Madura
had made upon the Mysoreans, had compelled the latter to make peace, and
recall their army, which was still hovering in the neighbourhood of
Pondicherry.
Charlie, who had been suffering from a slight attack of fever, had for
some time been staying on board ship, for change. In the road of
Pondicherry three of the French Indiamen, the Hermione, Baleine, and the
Compagnie des Indes, were at anchor, near the edge of the surf, under the
cover of a hundred guns mounted on the sea face of the fort. These ships
were awaiting the stormy weather, at the breaking of the monsoon, when it
would be difficult for the English fleet to maintain their position off
the town. They then intended to sail away to the south, fill up with
provisions, and return to Pondicherry.
Admiral Stevens, in order to prevent this contingency, which would have
greatly delayed the reduction of the place, determined to cut them out.
Charlie's health being much restored by the sea breezes, he asked leave of
the admiral to accompany the expedition, as a volunteer. On the evening of
the 6th, six-and-twenty of the boats of the fleet, manned by four hundred
sailors, were lowered and rowed to the Tiger, which was at anchor within
two miles of Pondicherry, the rest of the fleet lying some distance
farther away.
When, at midnight, the cabin lights of the Hermione were extinguished,
the expedition started. The boats moved in two divisions, one of which was
to attack the Hermione, the other the Baleine. The third vessel lay nearer
in shore, and was to be attacked if the others were captured.
The night was a very dark one, and the boats of each division moved in
line, with ropes stretched from boat to boat, to ensure their keeping
together in the right direction. Charlie was in one of the boats intended
to attack the Hermione. Tim accompanied him, but the admiral had refused
permission for Hossein to do so, as there were many more white volunteers
for the service than the boats would accommodate. They were within fifty
yards of the Hermione before they were discovered, and a scattering musket
fire was at once opened upon them.
The crews gave a mighty cheer and, casting off the ropes, separated;
five making for each side of the ship, while two rowed forward to cut the
cables at her bows. The Compagnie des Indes opened fire upon the boats,
but these were already alongside the ship, and the sailors swarmed over
the side at ten points.
The combat was a short one. The seventy men on board fought bravely,
for a minute or two, but they were speedily driven below. The hatches were
closed over them, and the cables being already cut, the mizzen topsail,
the only sail bent, was hoisted; and the boats, taking towropes, began to
row her away from shore.
The instant, however, that the cessation of fire informed the garrison
the ship was captured, a tremendous cannonade was opened by the guns of
the fortress. The lightning was flashing vividly, and this enabled the
gunners to direct their aim upon the ship. Over and over again she was
struck, and one shot destroyed the steering wheel, cut the tiller rope,
and killed two men who were steering. The single sail was not sufficient
to assist in steering her, and the men in the boats rowed with such energy
that the ropes continually snapped.
The fire continued from the shore, doing considerable damage; and the
men in the boats, who could not see that the ship was moving through the
water, concluded that she was anchored by a concealed cable and anchor.
The officer in command, therefore, called up the Frenchmen from below,
telling them he was about to fire the ship. They came on deck and took
their places in the boats, which rowed back to the Tiger.
Upon arriving there Captain Dent, who commanded her, sternly rebuked
the officer; and said that, unless the boats returned instantly and
brought the Hermione out, he should send his own crew in their boats to
fetch her. The division thereupon returned, and met the ship half a mile
off shore, the land wind having now sprung up.
The Baleine had been easily captured and, having several sails bent,
she was brought out without difficulty. No attempt was made to capture the
third vessel.
The rains had now set in, but the English laboured steadily at their
batteries. The French were becoming pressed for provisions, and Lally
turned the whole of the natives remaining in the town, to the number of
fourteen hundred men and women, outside the fortifications. On their
arrival at the English lines they were refused permission to pass, as
Colonel Coote did not wish to relieve the garrison of the consumption of
food caused by them. They returned to the French lines, and begged to be
again received; but they were, by Lally's orders, fired upon, and several
killed.
For seven days the unhappy wretches remained without food, save the
roots they could gather in the fields. Then Colonel Coote, seeing that
Lally was inflexible, allowed them to pass.
On the 10th of November the batteries opened, and every day added to
the strength of the fire upon the town. The fortifications, however, were
strong, and the siege progressed but slowly. On the 30th of December a
tremendous storm burst, and committed the greatest havoc, both at land and
sea. The Newcastle, man-of-war; the Queenborough, frigate; and the
Protector, fire ship were driven ashore and dashed to pieces; but the
crews, with the exception of seven, were saved. The Duke of Aquitaine, the
Sunderland, and the Duke, store ship, were sunk, and eleven hundred
sailors drowned. Most of the other ships were dismasted.
The fire of the batteries increased, and by the 13th of January the
enemy's fire was completely silenced. The provisions in the town were
wholly exhausted, and on the 16th the town surrendered, and the next
morning the English took possession. Three days afterwards Lally was
embarked on board ship, to be taken a prisoner to Madras; and so much was
he hated that the French officers and civilians assembled, and hissed and
hooted him; and, had he not been protected by his guard, would have torn
him to pieces. After his return to France he was tried for having, by his
conduct, caused the loss of the French possessions in India, and being
found guilty of the offence, was beheaded.
At Pondicherry two thousand and seventy-two military prisoners were
taken, and three hundred and eighty-one civilians. Five hundred cannon and
a hundred mortars, fit for service; and immense quantities of ammunition,
arms, and military stores fell into the hands of the captors.
Pondicherry was handed over to the Company; who, a short time
afterwards, entirely demolished both the fortress and town. This hard
measure was the consequence of a letter which had been intercepted, from
the French government to Lally, ordering him to raze Madras to the ground,
when it fell into his hands.
Charlie, after the siege, in which he had rendered great services,
received from the Company, at Colonel Coote's earnest recommendation, his
promotion to the step of lieutenant colonel; while Peters was raised to
that of major. A fortnight after the fall of Pondicherry, they returned to
Madras, and thence took the first ship for England. It was now just ten
years since they had sailed, and in that time they had seen Madras and
Calcutta rise, from the rank of two trading stations, in constant danger
of destruction by their powerful neighbours, to that of virtual capitals
of great provinces. Not as yet, indeed, had they openly assumed the
sovereignty of these territories; but Madras was, in fact, the absolute
master of the broad tract of land extending from the foot of the mountains
to the sea, from Cape Comorin to Bengal; while Calcutta was master of
Bengal and Oressa, and her power already threatened to extend itself as
far as Delhi. The conquest of these vast tracts of country had been
achieved by mere handfuls of men, and by a display of heroic valour and
constancy scarce to be rivalled in the history of the world.
The voyage was a pleasant one, and was, for the times, quick, occupying
only five months. But to the young men, longing for home after so long an
absence, it seemed tedious in the extreme.
Tim and Hossein were well content with their quiet, easy life, after
their long toils. They had nothing whatever to do, except that they
insisted upon waiting upon Charlie and Peters, at meals. The ship carried
a large number of sick and wounded officers and men, and as these gained
health and strength, the life on board ship became livelier, and more
jovial. Singing and cards occupied the evenings, while in the daytime they
played quoits, rings of rope being used for that purpose, and other games
with which passengers usually wile away the monotony of long voyages.
It was late in June when the Madras sailed up the Thames; and, as soon
as she came to anchor, the two officers and their followers landed. The
din and bustle of the streets seemed almost as strange, to Charlie, as
they had done when he came up a boy, from Yarmouth. Hossein was astonished
at the multitude of white people, and inquired of Charlie why, when there
were so many men, England had sent so few soldiers to fight for her in
India; and for once, Charlie was unable to give a satisfactory reply.
"It does seem strange," he said to Peters, "that when such mighty
interests were at stake, a body of even ten thousand troops could not have
been raised, and sent out. Such a force would have decided the struggle at
once; and in three months the great possessions, which have cost the
Company twelve years' war, would have been at their feet. It would not
have cost them more; indeed, nothing like as much as it now has done, nor
one tithe of the loss in life. Somehow, England always seems to make war
in driblets."
Charlie knew that his mother and Kate had, for some years, been
residing at a house which their uncle had taken, in the fashionable
quarter of Chelsea. They looked in at the office, however, to see if
Charlie's uncle was there; but found that he was not in the city, and,
indeed, had now almost retired from the business. They therefore took a
coach, placed the small articles of luggage which they had brought with
them, from the ship, on the front seats; and then, Hossein and Tim taking
their places on the broad seat beside the driver, they entered the coach
and drove to Chelsea.
Charlie had invited Peters, who had no home of his own, to stay with
him, at least for a while. Both were now rich men, from their shares of
the prize money of the various forts and towns, in whose capture they had
taken part; although Charlie possessed some twenty thousand pounds more
than his friend, this being the amount of the presents he had received,
from the Rajah of Ambur.
Alighting from the carriage, Charlie ran up to the door and knocked.
Inquiring for Mrs. Marryat, he was shown into a room in which a lady,
somewhat past middle age, and three younger ones were sitting. They looked
up, in surprise, as the young man entered. Ten years had changed him
almost beyond recognition, but one of the younger ones at once leaped to
her feet, and exclaimed, "Charlie!"
His mother rose with a cry of joy, and threw herself into his arms.
After rapturously kissing her, he turned to the others. Their faces were
changed, yet all seemed equally familiar to him, and in his delight he
equally embraced them all.
"Hullo!" he exclaimed, when he freed himself from their arms. "Why,
there are three of you! What on earth am I doing? I have somebody's pardon
to beg; and yet, although your faces are changed, they seem equally
familiar to me. Which is it?
"But I need not ask," he said, as a cloud of colour flowed over the
face of one of the girls, while the others smiled mischievously.
"You are Katie," he said, "and you are Lizzie, certainly, and this
is--why, it is Ada!
"This is a surprise, indeed; but I sha'n't beg your pardon, Ada, for I
kissed you at parting, and quite intended to do so when I met again, at
least if you had offered no violent objection.
"How you are all grown and changed, while you, Mother, look scarcely
older than when I left you.
"But there, I have quite forgotten Peters. He has come home with me,
and will stay till he has formed his own plans."
He hurried out and brought in Peters; who, not wishing to be present at
the family meeting, had been paying the coachman, and seeing to the things
being brought into the house. He was warmly received, by the ladies, as
the friend and companion of Charlie in his adventures; scarcely a letter
having been received, from the latter, without mention having been made of
his comrade.
In a minute or two Mr. Tufton, who had been in the large garden behind
the house, hurried in. He was now quite an old man; and under the
influence of age, and the cheerful society of Mrs. Marryat and her
daughters, he had lost much of the pomposity which had before
distinguished him.
"Ah! Nephew," he said, when the happy party had sat down to dinner,
their number increased by the arrival of Mrs. Haines, who had a house
close by; "wilful lads will go their own way. I wanted to make a rich
merchant of you, and you have made of yourself a famous soldier. But
you've not done badly for yourself after all; for you have, in your
letters, often talked about prize money."
"Yes, Uncle. I have earned, in my way, close upon a hundred thousand
pounds; and I certainly shouldn't have made that if I had stuck to the
office at Madras, even with the aid of the capital you offered to lend me,
to trade with on my own account."
There was a general exclamation of surprise and pleasure, at the
mention of the sum; although this amount was small, in comparison to that
which many acquired, in those days, in India.
"And you're not thinking of going back again, Charlie?" his mother
said, anxiously. "There can be no longer any reason for your exposing
yourself to that horrible climate, and that constant fighting."
"The climate is not so bad, Mother, and the danger and excitement of a
soldier's life there, at present, render it very fascinating. But I have
done with it. Peters and I intend, on the expiration of our leave, to
resign our commissions in the Company's service, and to settle down under
our own vines and fig trees. Tim has already elected himself to the post
of my butler, and Hossein intends to be my valet and body servant."
Immediately after their arrival, Charlie had brought in his faithful
followers and introduced them to the ladies; who, having often heard of
their devotion and faithful services, had received them with a kindness
and cordiality which had delighted them.
Lizzie, whose appearance at home had been unexpected by Charlie, for
her husband was a landed gentleman at Seven Oaks, in Kent, was, it
appeared, paying a visit of a week to her mother; and her three children,
two boys and a little girl, were duly brought down to be shown to, and
admired by, their Uncle Charles.
"And how is it you haven't married, Katie? With such a pretty face as
yours, it is scandalous that the men have allowed you to reach the mature
age of twenty-two, unmarried."
"It is the fault of the hussy herself," Mr. Tufton said. "It is not
from want of offers, for she has had a dozen, and among them some of the
nobility at court; for it is well known that John Tufton's niece will have
a dowry such as many of the nobles could not give, to their daughters."
"This is too bad, Kate," Charlie said, laughing. "What excuse have you
to make for yourself for remaining single, with all these advantages of
face and fortune?"
"Simply that I didn't like any of them," Katie said. "The beaux of the
present day are contemptible. I would as soon think of marrying a wax
doll. When I do marry; that is, if ever I do, it shall be a man, and not a
mere tailor's dummy."
"You are pert, miss," her uncle said.
"Do what I will, Charlie, I cannot teach the hussy to order her
tongue."
"Katie's quite right, Uncle," Charlie laughed. "And I must make it my
duty to find a man who will suit her taste; though, according to your
account of her, he will find it a hard task to keep such a Xanthippe in
order."
Katie tossed her head.
"He'd better not try," she said saucily, "or it will be worse for him."
Two days later, Charlie's elder sister returned with her family to her
house at Sevenoaks; where Charlie promised, before long, to pay her a
visit. After she had gone, Charlie and Peters, with Katie, made a series
of excursions to all the points of interest, round London; and on these
occasions Ada usually accompanied them.
The natural consequences followed. Charlie had, for years, been the
hero of Ada's thoughts; while Katie had heard so frequently of Peters that
she was, from the first, disposed to regard him in the most favourable
light. Before the end of two months, both couples were engaged; and as
both the young officers possessed ample means, and the ladies were
heiresses, there was no obstacle to an early union.
The weddings took place a month later; and Tim was, in the exuberance
of his delight, hilariously drunk for the first and only time during his
service with Charlie. Both gentlemen bought estates in the country, and
later took their seats in Parliament, where they vigorously defended their
former commander, Lord Clive, in the assaults which were made upon him.
Tim married, seven or eight years after his master, and settled down in
a nice little house upon the estate. Although, henceforth, he did no work
whatever; he insisted, to the end of his life, that he was still in
Colonel Marryat's service.
Hossein, to the great amusement of his master and mistress, followed
Tim's example. The pretty cook of Charlie's establishment made no
objection to his swarthy hue. Charlie built a snug cottage for them, close
to the house, where they took up their residence; but Hossein, though the
happy father of a large family, continued, to the end of a long life, to
discharge the duties of valet to his master.
Both he and Tim were immense favourites with the children of Charlie
and Peters, who were never tired of listening to their tales of the
exploits of their fathers, when with Clive in India.
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