<h2><SPAN name="Ch26" name="Ch26">Chapter 26</SPAN>: The Siege Of Madras.</h2>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
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