<h2><SPAN name="Ch8" name="Ch8">Chapter 8</SPAN>: The Grand Assault.</h2>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>A few days later, Tim Kelly came in.</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>"But who's going to teach them, Tim?"</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>"There, Tim, it's no use standing talking any longer. Bring in
the moonshee."</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
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