<h2><SPAN name="Ch25" name="Ch25">Chapter 25</SPAN>: Besieged In A Pagoda.</h2>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
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