<h2><SPAN name="Ch5" name="Ch5">Chapter 5</SPAN>: Madras.</h2>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>The speaker was sitting between Charlie and Peters, and was
talking in a tone of voice which would not be overheard by the
others.</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"What appetites you fellows have! It does one good to see you
eat."</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"Will you have some bananas?"</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>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:</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>"Then why should we interfere on behalf of the other?" Charlie
asked.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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!</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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.</p>
<p>"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."</p>
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