^^. .A •- %,,^''' <,>^ %. , N c ♦/'b ' ""' .o'^'■^•'"'"•/• ^^^i.<^ •^^'"^ . ,^' : x^ ■^- ^ ^^^ ^_ * '.' °. ^^ * N ■^ C^ .x\^'' ^-^^ '^^ '«.\*' \'^ \"^^^^SJ ''^.^ v^ :'<^ >'-^, ^ . . . ■%<^^ V'*.; O^ „ V " f C 'T'^ Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2010 with funding from The Library of Congress http://www.archive.org/details/indianmutinyof1801mall The Indian 3VIutiny of i^z^y ,M'^Uo--//yn-l6a/yy?Ji//^// a/h-i //'ft ■///.> J£o^W' nly,{^^^ . THE INDIAN MUTINY OF 1857 BY COLONEL G. B. MALLESON, C.S.I. With Portraits and Plafis EIGHTH EDITION LONDON SEELEY AND CO. LIMITED 38 Great Russell Street 1901 -1^ f^f3/ PREFACE. In writing this short History of the Indian Mutiny of 1857 I have aimed at the compilation of a work which, complete in itself, should narrate the causes as well as the consequences of a movement unforeseen, undreamt of, sudden and swift in its action, and which taxed to the utmost the energies of the British people. Preceding writers on the same subject, whilst dealing very amply with the consequences, have, with one exception, but dimly shadowed forth the causes. The very actors in the Mutiny failed to detect them. Sir John Lawrence himself, writing with the fullest knowledge of events in which he played a very conspicuous part, mistook the instrument for the chief cause. He stopped at the greased cartridge. But the greased cartridge was never issued to the great body of the troops, it indeed to any. There must have been a latent motive power to make of an unissued cartridge a grievance so terrible as to rouse into revolt men whose fathers and whose fathers' fathers had vi • Preface. contributed to the making of the British Empire in India. The greased cartridge, too, did not concern those landowners and cultivators of Oudh and the North-western Provinces, who rose almost to a man. What that latent motive power was I have described fully, and I believe truly, in this volume. My belief in this respect is founded on personal knowledge and personal observation. Locally chief of the Commissariat Department at Kanhpur when, in January 1856, Sir James Outram crossed the Ganges to depose the King of Oudh, I had witnessed the indignation which the very rumour of his purpose caused among the sipahis of my own guard. I reported their excited state to my superiors, and was laughed at for my pains. But, impressed with the accuracy of my forecast, viz., that the annexation of Oudh would rouse indigna- tion and anger in the sipdhi army, I continued then, and after my transfer, two months later, to an appointment in the Military Audit Department in Calcutta, to keep a careful record of the several occurrences, all apparently of minor import, which supervened when the effects of the annexation of Oudh had been thoroughly realised by the sipdhis. My observations led to the conclusion that they were thoroughly angered, and, a little later, that their minds were being mysteriously worked upon. I kept copious notes of the matters I observed, and I discussed them with my brother officers, Preface, vii without, however, finding that my views were shared by any one of them. It would seem, however, that the officer who held the responsible post of Town Major, Major Orfeur Cavenagh, had, from his own observation, arrived at con- clusions not dissimilar. He has narrated in his admirable work ^ the observations forced upon him by the changed demeanour of the natives"^ of the North-western Provinces in 1856. But he, too, stood, amongst high-placed Europeans, almost alone in his convictions. The fact is that, up to the very outbreak of the Mutiny at Mirath, no one, from highest to lowest, believed in the possibility of a general combination. Those, and they could be counted on the fingers of one hand, who endeavoured to hint at an opposite conclusion were ridiculed as alarmists. So ingrained was the belief in the loyalty of the sipdhis, and so profound was the ignorance as to the manner in which their minds were affected, that neither the outbreak of Mirath nor the seizure of Dehli entirely removed it. The tone of the governing classes was displayed when the Home Secretary prated about 'a passing and groundless panic,' and when the acting Commander-in-Chief, an old officer of sipdhis, babbled, in June 1857, of reorganisation. But the fact, nevertheless, re- ^ Reminiscences of an Indian Official. By Sir Orfeur Cavenagh. On the subject of the services rendered by this officer, in 1857, I have entered fully in the sixth volume of my larger history. viii Pi'eface, mained: Circumstances had proved to me that extraneous causes were at work to promote an ill-feeling, a hatred not personal but national, in the minds of men who for a century had been our truest and most loyal servants. When the Mutiny had been quelled I renewed my researches regarding the origin of this feeling, and, thanks to the confidences of my native friends in various parts of the country, I arrived at a very definite conclusion. That conclusion I placed on record, in 1880, when I published the then concluding volume of a History of the Mutiny, begun by Sir John Kaye, but left unfinished by that distinguished writer. After the publication of that volume I again visited India, and renewed my inquiries among those of my native friends best qualified to arrive at a sound opinion as to the real origin of the Mutiny. The lapse of time had removed any restraints which might have fettered their freedom of speech, and they no longer hesitated to declare that, whilst the action of the Government of India, in Oudh and elsewhere, had undermined the loyalty of the sipahis, and prepared their minds for the conspirators, the conspirators themselves had used all the means in their power to foment the excitement. Those conspirators, they de- clared, were the Maulavi of Faizdbad, the mouthpiece and agent of the discontented in Oudh ; Nana Sahib ; one or two great personages Preface, ix in Lakhnao ; the Rani of Jhansi ; and Kunwar Singh. The action of the land system introduced into the North-west Provinces by Mr Thomason, had predisposed the population of those provinces to revolt. There remained only to tiie con- spirators to find a grievance which should so touch the strong religious susceptibilities of the sipdhfs as to incite them to overt action. Such a grievance they found in the greased cartridge. By the circulation of chapatfs they then intimated to the rural population that the time for action was approaching. This version of the immediate causes of the Mutiny is known to be true by some at least who will read these pages ; it is known to be true by all who have taken the trouble to dive below the surface. I have accordingly given it a prominent place in this volume. The task of compressing within about four hundred pages the story of a Mutiny which abounded in scenes of action, so many, so varied, so distinct from each other ; of a Mutiny in which every station occupied by English men and English women was either a camp or a battle- ground ; in the outset of which our countrymen, in the several sub-divisions of India, were in the position of detached parties of a garrison, unable to communicate with headquarters or with one another, suddenly surprised and set upon by men whom they had implicitly trusted ; has been one X Preface. • the difficulty of which I never realised until I had taken it in hand. When a writer has at his command unlimited space, his task is compara- tively easy. He can then do justice to all the actors in the drama. But I have found it most difficult to mention the names of all who have deserved in a volume every page of which must be devoted to the relation of events. And although my publishers, with a generosity I can- not sufficiently acknowledge, permitted me to increase, by an additional fourth, the number of pages allotted to the series of which this volume is the second issue, I am conscious that I have not sufficiently dwelt upon the splendid individual achievements of many of those who contributed to the final victory. The fact is that there are so many of them. There never has been an event in History to which the principle of the Order of the Day, published by Napoleon on the morrow of Austerlitz, applies more thoroughly than to the Mutiny of 1857. '" It will be enough for one of you to say," said the Emperor, in his famous bulletin, " I was at the Battle of Austerlitz," for all your fellow-citizens to exclaim, " There is a brave man ! " ' Substitute the words ' Indian Mutiny ' for the ' Battle of Austerlitz ' and the phrase applies to that band of heroes whose constancy, whose courage, and whose devotion saved India in 1857. One word as to the spelling I have adopted. It is similar to the spelling which appears in the Preface, xi cabinet edition of Kayes and Mallesons History^ to the spelling adopted by Captain Eastwick in Murray's admirable guide-books for India, and it is the correct spelling. Some critics have igno- rantly remarked that the natives of India employ no definite spelling for their proper names. But this remark betrays the prejudice of the traveller who disdains to learn. The natives use not only a well-defined spelling for their proper names, but every name has a distinct meaning. The bar- baric method adopted by our forefathers a century and a half since, when they were ignorant of the native languages, and wrote simply according to the sound which reached ears unaccustomed to the precise methods of an Oriental people, totally alters and disfigures that meaning. Take, for example, the word * Kdnhpur,' written, in accordance with barbaric custom, * Cawnpore.' Now, *Kdnhpur* has a definite meaning. * Kinh,' or * husband,' is one of the favourite names of ' Krishna.' * Pur ' means * a city.' The combination of the two words signifies * Krishna's city.' But what is the meaning of ' Cawnpore ' ? It does not even corre- spond to the pronunciation as the name of the place is pronounced by the natives. It serves to remind us of a period of ignorance and indifference to native methods over which it is surely kind to draw the veil. The same reasoning applies to every proper name in India. It is true I have spelt 'Calcutta,' * Bombay,' and the 'Ganges* ac- xii Preface. cordirrg to the conventional method ; but the two places and the river have a long European record, and their names thus spelt are so ingrafted in the connection between India and Europe that it would be pedantry to alter them. But Kdnhpur and the places to the north-west and north of it were but little knowm before the Mutiny, and it seems becoming that the events which brought them into European prominence should introduce them under the names which properly belong to them, and which no European prejudice can permanently alter. It remains for me now only to acknowledge gratefully the courteous manner in which Messrs W. H. Allen & Co. granted me permission to use, in a reduced form, the plans they had prepared for their larger history of the Indian Mutiny. G. B. MALLESON. 27 West Cromwell Road, October 10, 1890. CONTENTS. PREFACE. FACE I. INTRODUCTORY, . . . *. I II. THE CONSPIRATORS, . . . ,21 III. THE FIRST MUTTERINGS OF THE STORM, . 34 IV. THE SPREAD OF THE EPIDEMIC, . . 43 V. BARRACKPUR, CALCUTTA, AND THE NORTH- WEST TO THE 9TH OF MAY, . . 5 1 VI. THE REVOLT AT MIRATH AND THE SEIZURE OF DEHLf, . . . . .64 VIL THE EFFECT, THROUGHOUT INDIA, OF THE SEIZURE OF DEHLI, . . . 87 VIII. THE PROGRESS OF THE INSURRECTION IN THE NORTH-WEST IN MAY AND JUNE, . . 99 IX. THE MARCH TO DEHLI, . . . .112 X. KANHPUR, LAKHNAO, AND ALLAHABAD, . 1 28 XL CALCUTTA IN JUNE AND JULY, . . ,151 XII. THE LEAGUER OF KANHPUR, . . • ^59 XIII. NEILL AT BANARAS AND ALLAHABAD HAVE- LOCK's RECOVERY OF KANHPUR, . . 17^ XiV. THE RESIDENCY OF LAKHNAO AFTER CHINHAT HAVELOCK's FIRST ATTEMPTS TO RE- LIEVE IT, . . . . . 203 XIV Contents, XV. CALCUTTA AND WESTERN BIhAr IN JULY AND AUGUST, . . . . .213 XVL THE FIRST RELIEF OF THE LAKHNAO RESIDENCY, 23 1 XVII. THE LEAGUER OF AGRA, . . .246 XVin. EVENTS IN THE SAGAR AND NARBADA TERRI- TORIES, CENTRAL INDIA, RAJPUTANA, THE MfRATH DISTRICTS, ROHILKHAND, AND THE PANJAB, . . . .254 XIX. THE SIEGE AND STORMING OF DEHLf, . .278 XX. FROM DEHLI TO AGRA AND KANHPUR SIR COLIN CAMPBELL AT KANHPUR, . . 313 XXI. THE SECOND RELIEF OF THE LAKHNAO RESI- DENCY — WINDHAM AND THE GWALiAr CON- TINGENT, ..... 323 XXII. SIR COLIN CAMPBELL RECOVERS THE DUAB, . 34c XXIII. EASTERN BENGAL, EASTERN BIhAr, AZAMGARH, ALLAHAbAD, AND EASTERN OUDH, . 345 XXIV. THE STORMING OF LAKHNAO, . . -355 XXV. AZAMGARH — RECONQUEST OF ROHILKHAND, OF OUDH, OF THE AZAMGARH AND WESTERN BIHAR DISTRICTS, .... 370 XXVI. WESTERN AND CENTRAL INDIA, . . . 381 XXVII. THE LAST EMBERS OF THE REVOLT, . . 398 XXVIII. CONCLUSION, ... - 403 INDEX, . . . ■> » .412 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. PORTRAIT OP SIR COLIN CAMPBELL, AFTERWARDS LORD CLYDE, ....... Frontispiece PORTRAIT OF SIR HENRY LAWRENCE, . , . a 6o PORTRAIT OF SIR HENRY HAVELOCK, . . . . l88 PORTRAIT OF SIR JAMES OUTRAM, .... 236 PLAN TO ILLUSTRATE THE OPERATIONS OF THE BRITISH ARMY BEFORE DEHLI IN 1857, ..... 27S SKETCH OF OPERATIONS FOR THE RELIEF AND WITHDRAWAL OF THE LAKHNAO GARRISON, .... . 328 PLAN TO ILLUSTRATE THE OPERATIONS BEFORE LAKHNAO IN MARCH 1858, ....... 358 / *«* Tlie Portraits of Lord Clyde, Sir H. Lawrence and Sir H. Havelock are engraved by permission of Messrs Henry Graves &" Cc. The Indian Mutiny of 1857 CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY. In the history of the world there is no more wonderful story than that of the making of the British Empire in India. It was not the result of deliberate design. The early English settlers on the coasts of India thought only of protecting the small tracts of territory conceded to them against aggression from native princes and Euro- pean rivals. For a long time they never dreamt even of questioning the sovereign rights of the native princes who exercised authority in the territories nearest to their possessions. The instructions which the agents on the spot received from the directors of the parent Company at home indicated, in the plainest language, that their busi- ness was to trade ; that to trade advantageously, it was necessary to humour the native princes, to display courtesy and civility, to put away from them all thoughts of aggression. The object of the Company was to pay good dividends. Such a result could only be obtained by the development of peaceful enterprise. Suddenly there came a change in the action of the English agents on the Coromandel coast. The English A i T^ie Ea7'ly Eii^^opean Settlements. had beeivthe third European nation which had sought to opki a profitable trade with India, and which, for that purpose, had secured lodgments on her coasts. Of the two nations which had preceded them, the Portuguese had declined ; the Dutch were declining. The vigour and energy of the race which inhabits England was producing, in the rapid increase of the trade, the results which in- variably follow the development of those qualities, when a fourth power, France, the hereditary rival of England in Europe, began, under the influence of MM. Dumas and Dupleix, to develop, in an extraordinary manner, the resources of a settlement which one of her children, Francois Martin, had made, under very difficult circum- stances, on the same coast. This settlement, called from the town of which Martin had obtained possession Pondi- chery, had reached a high state of prosperity under the careful nursing of the immediate predecessor of Dupleix, M. Benoit Dumas. This able man had known how to conciliate the friendship of the native princes on the coast In return for many civilities and good offices, he had been granted permission to enlist sipdhis and to erect fortifications. Between Pondichery and the English settlement of Madras there had been in his time no thought of hostility. Peace between the rival powers reigned in Europe, and no temptation arose in India to disturb the happy relations of friendship. In October 1741 M. Dupleix succeeded Dumas at Pondichery. A man remarkably gifted, endowed with a genius which could conceive the largest schemes, he con- tinued that system of ingratiating himself with the native princes, which had been attended with such favourable results in the time of his predecessor. The policy was soon to bear the most brilliant fruits. In 1743 the English and French had taken opposite sides in the war Rivalry between the French and English, 3 of the Austrian succession. The battle of Dettingen had been fought (June 16, 1743) before war had actually been declared. But the declaration soon followed, and it was not long before warlike operations, begun in Europe, ex- tended to India. Both nations despatched squadrons to the Indian seas. The English squadron, preceded by instructions from the directors of the East India Company to its agent at Madras, Mr Morse, to use it to destroy the French settle- ment at Pondichery, arrived first. But before Morse could carry out his instructions he was compelled to ask the sanction to the undertaking of the ruler of the country of which Madras formed a part, the Nuwdb of the Karnatik. But that prince was under the spell exercised by Dumas and Dupleix. He refused the permission, and Pondichery was saved. Two years later the position of the two principal European powers on the Coromandel coast was inverted. The English squadron was absent : the French squadron was on the spot. Dupleix then prepared for his rivals the fate with which they had threatened him. In vain did the English appeal to the Nuwab of the Karnatik. That prince, gained by Dupleix, declined to interfere in the quarrel between the settlers. The result was that, on September 21, 1746, Madras surrendered to the French, and was promptly occupied by a garrison composed of French troops and of sipahis trained by French officers. The capture of Madr^is by the French is an im- portant event in the history of the connection of France and England with India ; for it was indirectly the cause of the development of that sipahi army, the great out- break of which, against its masters, it is my object to describe in this volume. It would .seem that Dupleix, when pleading to the Nuwab for permission to attack 4 The First Sipdhi Army, Madras, had promised that prince that he would transfer it, after he had captured it, to the Nuwdb for disposal. But when the Nuwab called upon him to fulfil his pro- mise, he displayed great unwillingness to comply. He wished, at least, to level its fortifications, to dismantle it before making it over. The Nuwab, however, had despatched his son with a force to take possession. To dismantle the place in the presence of that force was impossible. Dupleix determined then to use every diplo- matic means at his disposal to persuade the Nuwab to allow him to retain it. But the young prince who re- presented the Nuwab was impatient, and precipitated a contest by cutting off the water supply of the town and fort. The French governor, Despremesnil, despatched then 400 men and two guns to recover the water springs. It was the first contest on the Coromandel coast between the settlers of either nation and the indigenous popula- tion. Up to that time French and English had carefully refrained from all acts of hostility towards the children of the soil. In the princes of the coast they had recog- nised their landlords, their masters, to whose complaisance they owed the permission to maintain trading stations on the coast. They were to be courted, persuaded, won over, but never opposed. The sortie from Madras of the 2d November 1746 was, then, a rude infringement of a custom till then religiously observed. Its consequences were momentous. The fire of the two French field-pieces, well directed and continuous, put to flight the cavalry of the Nuwdb. The water springs were regained without the loss by the French of a single man, whilst about seventy Mughal horsemen bit the dust. The son of the Nuwab, Maphuz Khdn by name, was not present on this occasion. When he heard of it he attributed the result to accident, to bad leading, to any First Victory of the Europeans, 5 cause but the right one. He would show himself, he said, how these Europeans should be met. He had heard, the very day of the defeat of his cavalry, that a small force, composed of 230 Frenchmen and 700 trained sipahis, was approaching Madras from Pondichery, and would attempt to cross the little river Adyar, near St Thome, on the 4th (November). Maphuz Khan had at his disposal 10,000 men. He took at once a resolution worthy of a great commander. He marched with his whole army to St Thome, occupied a position on the northern bank of the Adyar, so strong and so commanding that he could not fail, if the combatants were at all equal in military qualities, to crush the little force marching on Madras. Maphuz Khan was on the chosen spot, eager for combat, when the small French force appeared in sight. Paradis, who commanded it, was an engineer, a man who knew not fear, and who was not easily moved from his purpose. He saw the serried masses in front of him, barring his way. To attack them he must wade through the river, exposed to their fire. Had he hesitated an instant the story of the Europeans in India might have been different. But Paradis recognised, as many English commanders after him have recognised, that the one way for the European to pursue when combating Asiatics is to go forward. He did not hesitate a moment. Without waiting even to reconnoitre, he dashed into the river, scrambled up the bank, formed on it in line, delivered a volley, and charged. The effect was momentous. Never was there fought a more decisive battle, a battle more pregnant with consequences. The army of the Nuwdb was completely defeated. Vigorously pursued, it vanished, never again to appear in line against a European enemy, unless supported by the presence of that enemy's European rival. 6 Consequences of the Victory, It is impossible to over-estimate the effects on the minds of the native princes and native soldiers of Southern India of the victory gained by the French at St Thome. The famous historian, Mr Orme, who was almost a con- temporary, wrote of it that it broke the charm which had invested the Indian soldiers with the character of being *a brave and formidable enemy.' Another writer^ has recorded of it that, ' of all the decisive battles fought in India, there is not one more memorable than this. The action at St Thome completely reversed the positions of the Nuwab and the French governor. Not only that, but it inaugurated a new era, it introduced a fresh order of things, it was the first decided step to the conquest of Hindustan by a European power.' There can be no doubt but that the result of the battle gave birth in the mind of Dupleix to ideas of conquest, of supremacy, even of empire, in Southern India. It is no part of this work to follow the course he adopted to secure the triumph of those ideas ; but this at least has to be admitted, that the scheme of forming a regular force of trained native soldiers, if it did not actually date from the victory of St Thome, acquired from it a tremendous im- petus. Thereafter the spectacle was witnessed of the re- presentatives of two European nations, longtime enemies in Europe, taking opposite sides in the quarrels of native princes in Southern India, and for that purpose employing not only their own countrymen but natives armed and drilled on the European system, led by European officers, vying with their European comrades in deeds of daring and devotion, and becoming by degrees the main supports of their European masters. After the lapse of a few years the European nation which inaugurated the new system ^ The Decisive Battles of India, fro7n 1 746 to 1 849 inclusive. New Edition Page 16. A Hu7idred Years Later. 7 was completely vanquished by its rival. But before that could be accomplished the system had taken a firm hold of that rival. When, in 1756, Clive set out from Madras to recover Calcutta from the hands of Suraju-daulah, he took with him, in addition to his 900 Europeans, 1200 sipahis, natives of Southern India, armed and drilled on the European system. These men formed the nucleus of that glorious native army which, led by European officers, helped their English masters to win Bengal and Bihar from the satraps of the Mughals ; to wrest Banaras and the delta of the Ganges from the Nuwab Wazir of Oudh ; to expel the Marathas from the North-west Provinces ; to establish a frontier on the Satlaj ; to invade Afghanistan ; and, finally, to acquire the Panjab. In another work^ I have told in detail the principal achievements of that army up to the time when Lord Dalhousie annexed the Panjab (1849). During that period of a hundred years the organisation of the native army had been more than once altered, but the spirit of devotion to its European officers had been manifested throughout all the changes on many memorable occa- sions. In the time of Clive the sipahis had stood firmly by their European masters (1766) when the European troops in India, officers and men, had mutinied. They had never shrunk from following their European officer whithersoever he would lead them. And if, on some rare occasions, some few of them had displayed momentary disaffection, that disaffection had been, up to 1857, the result of feelings in which there was not the smallest tinge of patriotism. Speaking broadly, the result in each instance was the consequence of an attempt, well meant but clumsily carried out, to graft western ideas upon an 1 The Decisive Batiks of India. LondoxT : W. II. Allen & Co, iSSS. New Edition. 8 Forcing Western Ideas . oriental people. The secret of the influence of the Englishman in India has lain in the fact that he had so conducted himself, in all his relations with the children of the soil, that his word had come to be regarded as equal to his bond. It was only when the sipahi, at Vellor in 1806, at Barrackpur in 1824 and again in 1852, in the North-western Provinces in 1844, in the Panjab in 1849-50, deemed that the promises made to him on his enlist- ment had been deliberately violated, that he displayed an obstinate determination to break with his master rather than to continue service on terms which, it seemed to him, could be disregarded at that master's pleasure. Action of a different character, although based on the same principle, so dear to the untravelled Englishman, of forcing the ideas in which he has been nurtured upon the foreign people with whom he is brought into contact, assisted, especially after the first Afghan war, to loosen the bonds of discipline, which, up to that period, had bound the sipdhi to his officer. In the time of Clive the sipahi army had been officered on the principle which, in India, is known as the irregular system. The men were dressed in the oriental fashion, the companies were commanded by native officers ; the European officers attached to each battalion, few in number, were picked men, selected entirely for their fitness to deal with and command native troops. The powers of the com- manding officer were large. He was, to the sipahi, the impersonification of the British power in India. His word was law. Beyond him the mind of the sipdhi did not care to travel. The sipahi did not concern himself with regu- lations and appeals to the Commander-in-Chief. The system had answered admirably. It was in force through- out the reigns of Clive and Warren Hastings, and in no single respect had it failed. upon an Eastern People, 9 But in course of time the idea came to the ruling authorities in India that great advantage would accrue {{ the sipahi regiments were to be remodelled on the system then prevailing in the British army. Just before the great Marquess Wellesley, then Lord Mornington, arrived in India, such a scheme was carried into effect (1796). The dress of the sipdhis was assimilated to that of his European comrades. The native officers, though maintained, were relegated to an inferior position. The English system, with its list of captains, lieutenants, and ensigns, supervised by a colonel, a lieutenant-colonel, and a major, was introduced into the native army, and that army was brought more completely than it had ever been before into the European centralising system. Fortunately for the tranquillity of British India it was only gradually, almost imperceptibly, that the great powers of the commanding officer were interfered with. Under the new system the sipdhis fought well against Tipu Sahib, against the Marathas, against the Pindaris, and against the Peshwa. They conducted themselves with their accustomed courage and resolution in the first war with Burma, 1825-6. Then came a period of peace, to be broken only in 1838 by the first invasion of Afghanistan. That the disasters of the first Afghan war had an effect on the feelings with which the sipahi had until then regarded his English master is undeniable. During that war he had behaved with remarkable courage, self-denial, and devotion. A distinguished officer who served in it declared on a public occasion, after the return of the troops, that his personal experience had convinced him that, properly led, the sipahi would follow his English officer anywhere, and would bear uncomplainingly any amount of hardships. But the imagination exercises upon the mind of an oriental an influence which is often not at 10 The First Afghdn War. all understood by the colder nature of the Englishman. Notwithstanding the triumphs of Nott and Pollock in the last phases of the war, the sipahi recognised that for the first time the enterprise of his English master against a native power had failed. There was no disguising the fact that the English troops had suffered greatly, and had finally retreated; that the soldiers of the Punjab, a terri- tory which they had traversed on sufferance, had scoffed and jeered at them whenever they came in contact with them. They realised that a heavy blow had been dealt to British prestige. Possibly, with that tendency to ex- aggeration which characterises imaginative natures, they thought the blow greater than it actually had been. But the retreat from Afghanistan was but the begin- ning of many evils. Within two years of the return of the army Lord Ellenborough annexed the province of Sind. The annexation was absolutely necessary, and had the Government of India been ruled by men of Indian experience, that is, by men possessing experience of the natives of India north-west of Bengal, the annexation might have been made a source of strength, instead of for a time weakening the relations of the Government with its native army, and in the end impairing its efficiency. The first step taken by the Government shook the confidence of the sipahis in its promises. Up to that time certain extra allowances for food had been granted to all sipahi regiments serving beyond the then British frontier. Now, service in the hot and arid regions of Sind had always been distasteful to the sipahi of the Bengal Presidency, but he was reconciled to the discomforts by the promise that, whilst employed in that province, he should receive a considerable addition to his pay. But the Government of India argued that the incorporation of Sind within the British territories had cancelled the pre- Mistakes of the Indian Government. 1 1 vailing regulations referring to service beyond the Indus, and they notified the fact to the several divisional com- manders. The result was to create so great a revulsion in the minds of the sipahis that the native regiments under orders for Sind refused to march thither. Ultimately the difficulty was got over, but in a manner not very creditable to the Government. The Bengal troops were relieved of the necessity of garrisoning Sind, and their place was taken by native troops from Bombay. One commanding officer was dismissed the service be- cause, to induce his men to march, he had guaranteed them the allowances to which they considered them- selves entitled, as indeed, upon the principles of abstract justice, they were. One regiment was disbanded. Sipahis in others were selected for punishment. The Government of India believed they had by these and kindred measures stayed the plague, when in reality they had shaken to the core the confidence of the sipahis in their justice, and laid the foundation of the evils which followed thirteen years later. Those evils were precipitated by the conduct of the Commanders-in-Chief sent out from England, often without the smallest experience of India, to command, that is, to administer, an army of sipahis outnumbering, in the pro- portion of five to one, the European garrison — men born under a different sky, bred in a religion and in the respect of customs regarding which the Commanders-in-Chief knew nothing and desired to know nothing, and animated by sentiments which prompted them either to be the most docile of followers or the most importunate of solicitors. These Commanders-in-Chief were, up to the close of the Mutiny, men trained in the traditions of the Horse Guards, and who, in their narrow view, regarded any deviation from those traditions as an evil to be at all cost eradicated. 12 Mistakes of Military Administration. For a long time they had chafed at the largeness of the powers exercised by commanding officers of native regi- ments. They were eager to introduce into the guiding of those regiments the rule of red tape and routine. For some time the Adjutants-General, men trained in the native army, and placed at their elbow to prevent the too great exercise of a mischievous zeal, had restrained their action. But after the first Afghan war there arose a series of courtly Adjutants-General who, far from checking, even stimulated the narrow instincts of their chief. It gradually became the fashion at army Headquarters to quote the Horse Guards as the model for all that was practical and military. When it is recollected that in those days the military in- stincts of the Horse Guards had been displayed by devis- ing a clothing for the European soldier so tight that if he were to drop his bayonet he could scarcely stoop to pick it up, that the weapon known as * Brown Bess * was lauded up, from the Commander-in-Chief downwards, as the most perfect of weapons, that inventions tending to improve our military system were steadily discouraged, that the highest authorities of the British army — the great Duke himself — deliberately preferred to live in a fool's paradise, declaring that because the British army had been able to go any- where and do anything in 1814, therefore, without taking advantage of the improvements developed in the course of thirty years of peace, it could accomplish the same results in 1844, it can easily be understood why the Com- manders-in-Chief in India, the nominees and adulators of one great man, should do their utmost to bring the native army within the fold of red tape, the fold which they had been taught to regard as the most perfect in the world. By degrees, then, after the first return from Afghanistan, and when the refusal of the sipahis to march to Sind afforded an excuse for the contention that the discipline Discipline undermined. 1 3 of the native army required to be looked to, the Com- manders-in-Chief in India reduced that army to the Horse Guards' standard. They restricted the powers of the com- manding officers ; they encouraged appeals to army Head- quarters ; they insisted that promotion to the rank of native officer should be regulated, not by merit, but by seniority. They issued order after order the tendency of which was to impress upon the mind of the imaginative oriental the conviction that the Government desired to pet the sipahi at the expense of his actual commandant. In this way they undermined the discipline of the army, and made their European regimental officers contempti- ble in the eyes of their men. The sipdhis have always obeyed a master who knows how to command. But they will not obey a lay figure. Nor, equally, will they transfer their respect to an unseen authority residing in the lofty hill ranges which overlook the plains of Hindustan. They may use that unseen authority, indeed, to vex and annoy and baffle their own commandant. And that was the manner in which, for a few years immediately prior to the Mutiny, the sipahis did use it. By petitions against the rulings of the officers appointed to command them, petitions examined and acted upon by the authority in the hills who did not know them, they in many cases rendered the enforcement of a rigid state of discipline impossible. Whilst the determination of inexperienced Com- manders-in-Chief, that is, of Commanders-in-Chief unac- quainted with the oriental mind, but tied hand and foot to the traditions of the Horse Guards, was thus under- mining the discipline of native regiments, other causes were supervening to alarm them as to their personal in- terests. The sipahis of the Bengal army were enlisted, with the exception of those of six regiments, for service in 1 4 Mistakes of the Government. • India only. They were never to be required to cross the sea. It happened, however, in 1852, whilst the second Burmese war was being waged, that the Governor-Gen- eral, Lord Dalhousie, desired to send a native regiment to that country in addition to those then employed there. There were many ways of accomplishing this end without riding roughshod over the rights and engagements of the sipahis. Lord Dalhousie might have despatched one of the six regiments pledged to service across the sea, or he might have called for volunteers. He did neither. He arbitrarily selected a regiment stationed at Barrackpur, the sipahis of which had enlisted on the condition that they were to serve in Hindustan, and in Hindustan only. The sipahis, whose minds had been emancipated, by the process referred to in the preceding page, from all respect for their commanding officer, had none for a Governor-Gen- eral who trod upon their privileges. They flatly refused to embark. Lord Dalhousie was placed by his own act in the invidious position of having to succumb. The story spread like wildfire all over India. The effect^ of it was most disastrous to discipline. In the lines and huts of the sipahis the warmest sympathy was expressed for a regiment which could thus successfully defy a Governor- General. Then followed the crowning act : the act which touched to the quick nine-tenths of the sipahis in the Bengal army, and many of those serving in the Bombay Presidency. The sipahis serving in Madras were not affected by it. When the storm came, in 1857, the Madras sipahis then took no part in the revolt. The case may thus be stated. The majority of the sipahis serving in the Bengal Presidency, and a proportion of those serving in the Bombay army, were recruited from the kingdom of Oudh. The sipahf ^ I am writing from my own personal experience. The Annexation of Oudh. 1 5 so recruited possessed the right of petitioning the British Resident at the Court of Lakhnao (Lucknow) on all matters affecting his own interests, and the interests of his family in the Oudh dominion. This right of petition was a privilege the value of which can be realised by those who have any knowledge' of the working of courts of justice in a native state. The Resident of Lakhnao was, in the eyes of the native judge, the advocate of the petitioning sipahi. The advantage of possessing so influential an advocate was so great that there was scarcely a family in Oudh which was not represented in the native army. Service in that army was consequently so popular that Oudh became the best recruiting ground in India. Events subsequent to the Mutiny have shown that the reason why it was so re- garded lay in the enormous benefits accruing to the sipahf from a system which made the British Resident his advo- cate. All at once this privilege was swept away. The British Government decided to annex Oudh. Oudh was annexed. Sir James Outram was sent from Calcutta to take possession. I happened, at the time, to be the officer at Kanhpur (Cawnpore) upon whom devolved the duty of supplying carriage to the force which was to cross the Ganges and march upon Lakhnao. Never shall I forget the agitation which prevailed in the sipahi guard over my official quarters when the object of the expedition oozed out. Most of those forming it were Oudh men, and I had to use all the influence I possessed to prevent an outbreak. My native subordinates in the Commissariat department assured me that a similar feeling was being manifested in the lines of the sipahis. I reported the matter to the general, and I mentioned it to one of the highest of the new officials who passed through the station to take up his post in Oudh. My warnings were dis- 1 6 The Annexation of Oudk, m regarded ; but when the crisis at Kanhpur arose, and when those regiments displayed against British officers, their own included, a truculent hatred not surpassed, and scarcely equalled, at any other station, they were re- membered. The annexation of Oudh was felt as a personal blow by every sipahi in the Bengal army, because it deprived him of an immemorial privilege exercised by himself and his forefathers for years, and which secured to him a posi- tion of influence and importance in his own country. With the annexation that importance and that influence disappeared, never to return. English officials succeeded the native judges. The right of petition was abolished. The great inducement to enlist disappeared. Nor was the measure more palatable to the large land- owners. The two officers to whom the Government of India confided the administration of the newly annexed province, Mr Coverley Jackson and Mr Gubbins, had been trained in the school the disciples of which, endeavouring to graft western ideas upon an eastern people, had done their best in the North-west Provinces to abolish land- lordism in the sense in which landlordism had flourished in those provinces since the time of Akbar. The result of their revolutionary proceedings was shown, in 1857, by the complete sympathy displayed by the civil districts in the North-west Provinces with the revolted sipahis. It was shown in Oudh by the rising of the landowners throughout the province. The causes I have stated had brought the mind of the sipahi, in 1856, to fever heat. He had lost faith in the Government he served. The action of army Head- quarters had deprived him of all respect for his officers. He was ready to be practised upon by any schemer. His mind was in the perturbed condition which disposes The Conspirators. 17 a man to believe any assertion, however improbable in itself. Conspirators to work upon so promising a soil were not wanting to the occasion. There was a large amount of seething discontent in many portions of India, In Oudh, recently annexed ; in the territories under the rule of the Lieutenant-Governor of the North-west Provinces, revolu- tionised by the introduction of the land-tenure system of Mr Thomason ; in the Southern Maratha territory, the chiefs of which had been exasperated to the very verge of revolt by an inquiry, instituted under the auspices of a commission, called the Inam Commission, into the titles of estates which they and their forefathers had held without question since the beginning of the century, men's minds were excited and anxious. Suddenly, shortly after the annexation of Oudh, this seething discontent found expression. Who all the active conspirators were may probably never be known. One of them, there can be no question, was he who, during the progress of the Mutiny, was known as the Maulavi7 The Maulavi was a very remarkable man. His name Was Ahmad-uUah, and his native place was Faizabad in Oudh. In person he was tall, lean, and muscular, with large deep-set eyes, beetle brows, a high aquiline nose, and lantern jaws. Sir Thomas Seaton, who enjoyed, during the suppression of the revolt, the best means of judging him, described him ' as a man of great abilities, of undaunted courage, of stern determination, and by far the best soldier among the rebels.' Such was the man selected by the discontented in Oudh to sow throughout India the seeds which, on a given signal, should spring to active growth. Of the ascertained facts respecting his action this at least has been proved, that very soon after the annexation of Oudh ^ The word 'Maulavi' signifies *a learned man,' also *a doctor of law.' B 1 8 The Conspirators. he travelled over the North-west Provinces on a mission which was a mystery to the European authorities ; that he stayed some time at Agra ; that he visited Dehli, Mirath, Patnd, and Calcutta ; that, in April 1857, shortly after his return, he circulated seditious papers throughout Oudh ; that the police did not arrest him ; that the executive at Lakhnao, alarmed at his progress, despatched a body of troops to seize him ; that, taken prisoner, he was tried and condemned to death ; that, before the sentence could be executed, the Mutiny broke out ; that, escaping, he be- came the confidential friend of the Begum of Lakhnao, the trusted leader of the rebels. That this man was the brain and the hand of the con- spiracy there can, I think, be little doubt. During his travels he devised the scheme known as the chapatf scheme. Chapdtis are cakes of unleavened bread, the cir- culation of which from hand to hand is easy, and causes no suspicion. The great hope of the Maulavi was to work upon the minds, already prone to discontent, of the sipahis. When the means of influencing the armed men in the service of the British Government should have been so matured that, on a given signal, they would be prepared to rise simultaneously, the circulation of chapatis amongst the rural population of the North-west Provinces would notify to them that a great rising would take place on the first favourable opportunity. It is probable that, whilst he was at Calcutta, the Maulavi, constantly in communication with the sipahis stationed in the vicinity of that city, discovered the in- strument which should act with certain effect on their already excited natures. It happened that, shortly before, the Government of India had authorised the introduction in the ranks of the native army of a new cartridge, the exterior of which was smeared with fat. These cartridges The Greased Cartridge, 19 were prepared in the Government factory at Dam-Dam, one of the suburbs of Calcutta. The practice with the old paper cartridges, used with the old musket, the * Brown Bess/ already referred to, had been to bite off the paper at one end previous to ramming it down the barrel. When the conspirators suddenly lighted upon the new cartridge, not only smeared, but smeared with the fat of the hog or the cow, the one hateful to the Muhammadans, the other the sacred animal of the Hindus, they recognised that they had found a weapon potent enough to rouse to action the armed men of the races which professed those religions. What could be easier than to persuade the sipahis that the greasing of the new cartridges was a well-thought-out scheme to deprive the Hindu of his caste, to degrade the Muhammadan ? If the minds of the sipahis had not been excited and rendered suspicious of their foreign masters by the occur- rences to which I have adverted, the tale told by the con- spirators would have failed to affect them. For, after all, they, up to January 1857, had had no experience of the greased cartridges. A new musket had been partially issued, and a certain number of sipahis from each regiment at Bar- rackpur were being instructed in its use at Dam-Dam. But up to that period no greased cartridges had been issued. The secret of their preparation was, however, disclosed in January, by a lascar employed in their manufacture to a sipahf, and the story, once set rolling, spread with indescrib- able celerity. In the olden days, the days before the confi- dence between the sipahi and his officer had been broken, the sipahi would at once have asked his officer the reason for the change. But, in 1857, they sullenly accepted the story. They had been told that the object of their foreign masters was to make them all Christians. The first step in the course to Christianity was to deprive them of their caste, 20 The Sipdhi had been undermined. This end could be accomplished insidiously by the defile- ment to be produced by biting the greased cartridge. Ex- istence without a religion was in their minds intolerable. Deprived of their own, having become outcasts by their own act, they must, in despair, accept the religion of their masters. That such was the reasoning which influenced them subsequent events fully proved. In the times of the earlier invasions of India by the Muhammadan princes who preceded the Mughals the conqueror had employed compulsion and persecution as the one mode of converting the Hindus. The sipahis, alarmed and suspicious, could conceive no other. It was in vain that, in the earlier stages of the Mutiny, General Hearsey, an accomplished linguist, addressing the sipahis in their own language, told them that such ways were essentially foreign to the Christian's conception of Christianity ; that the Christian's religion was the religion of the Book ; and that conver- sion could only be founded on the conviction of the mind. They heard, but heeded not. What was this argument but a wile to entrap them ? The conspirators had done their work too well. Before the hot season of 1857 had set in there were but few sipahis in the Bengal Presi- dency who were not firmly convinced that the greased cartridge was the weapon by means of which their foreign masters had resolved to deprive them of their religion. No sooner had it become certain that this idea had taken a firm root in their minds than chapatis passed from village to village in the rural districts of the North-west Provinces, announcing to the population that grave events were impending for which it became them to be prepared. CHAPTER n. THE CONSPIRATORS. On the 29th of February 1856 Charles John, Viscount Canning, succeeded Lord Dalhousie as Governor-General of India. Lord Canning possessed many qualities which fitted him for the onerous office. The second son of an illustrious statesman, he had himself received the educa- tion which trains a man to enter upon a Parliamentary career. He had sat in both Houses, had filled with credit some high offices, and had been a member of the Cabinet of Lord Palmerston which had decided to annex Oudh. To that annexation Lord Canning, as a member of the Cabinet, had given his assent. He was a large-minded man, possessing noble and generous instincts, a taking presence, was a thorough worker, conscientious, scrupulous, and resolute. The only objection which the most captious critic could have made to the appointment was an objec- tion which would have equally applied to the great Marquess Wellesley, and to all the intermediate rulers of India — he possessed no practical knowledge of India and its people. A statesman, however gifted, despatched from England to rule a country with a population of two hundred and fifty millions, must be for some time after his arrival dependent on the councillors bequeathed to him by his predecessor. Now, the predecessor of Lord Canning had been a very masterful man : a born ruler of men ; a man 22 Lord Canning ajtd his Council. who required, not councillors with whom to consult, but servants to carry out his orders. In one sense it was a misfortune for Lord Canning that immediately after his arrival he had to depend upon those servants for advice. Amongst them, doubtless, were some very able men. The ablest of all, Mr John Peter Grant, was a member of his Council. Mr Grant was, in every sense of the term, a statesman. His views were large and liberal. He saw at a glance the point of a question. He decided quickly ; unravelled, with remarkable clearness, the most knotty questions, and spoke out with the fearlessness which becomes a real man. If Mr Grant had had a larger personal experience of the people, he would have been one of the greatest of the civil servants of India. But his service had been mainly spent in close connection with Calcutta, and he had no personal knowledge of the country to the north-west of Patna, or of its people. The military member of Council, General Low, was likewise a man of ability ; but he had passed the greater part of his service as Political Agent or as Resident of native Courts. His experience of the native army was, therefore, somewhat rusty. The legal member of Council, Mr Barnes Peacock, was remarkable for his sound legal acquirements, but he had no experience outside Calcutta. Of the others, and of all the principal secretaries, it must suffice to state that they were excellent clerks ; but not having been accustomed to act on their own initiative, having been accustomed to take their orders from the imperious lips of Lord Dalhousie, they were little fitted to act as councillors to a newly arrived master at a moment when the country was about to pass through Not a Cloud on the .Horizon, 23 a crisis — a crisis the more terrible in that there was not one of them who would allow himself to regard it as possible ; not one of them, with the exception of Mr Grant, who believed in its immensity even when it was upon them. But, at the moment of Lord Canning's arrival, it seemed as though clerks would be as useful to him as councillors. The surface was calm and unbroken. There was not visible on the horizon even the little cloud no bigger than a man's hand. On his journey homewards Lord Dalhousie had written a minute, in which he had painted in roseate hues the condition of India, the con- tentment of the sipahis, and the improbability of disturb- ance from any cause whatever. He had quitted India amid the applause, largely mingled with regret at his departure, of multitudes of sorrowing disciples. By these he was reverenced as the greatest of men. If some captious subaltern dared to insinuate that the discipline of the army had deteriorated, that the minds of the sipahis were inflamed against their masters, he was silenced by the contemptuous remark that it was im- probable that his knowledge could be more deep-reaching than was that of Lord Dalhousie. On the 29th of Febuary, then, and for the rest of the year 1856, all was calm and smiling on the surface, and Lord Canning was well content with his clerks. Nor, during the remaining months of 1856, did there occur any overt act on the part of the many discontented throughout India to weaken the impression that the pic- ture painted by Lord Dalhousie in his elaborate minute was absolutely correct. As far as appearances went, the prevailing impression made on the minds of those residing in the great centres of the several provinces was that it was a year of more than ordinary humdrum. It was 24 Sif Henry Lawrence sent to Oiidli. argued that the strong impression made by Lord Dalhousie on the country and its diverse races remained active even after his departure. Lord Canning simply administered the country on the principles and by means of the men bequeathed to him by his predecessor. He had experi- enced, indeed, some difficulty with Oudh. Not, indeed, that the question, which was recurring with increasing in- tensity every day to the minds of the sipdhis,^ as to the injurious effects which the annexation had produced on their prospects, ever pi'esented itself to Lord Canning or his councillors. The difficulty was caused by the squabbles, amounting to a public scandal, between the two senior members of the Commission whose administration had 8 upplanted that of the deposed king, Mr Coverley Jackson and Mr Martin Gubbins. The scandal lasted throughout the year, and was only terminated by the removal of Mr Jackson, in January of the year following, and the appoint- ment in his place of one of the most illustrious of the men who have contributed to the securing on a firm foundation of the British rule in India — the wise and virtuous Sir Henry Lawrence. The task bequeathed to Sir Henry was no light one ; for the principle which had sown dis- content throughout the North-west Provinces, the principle of grafting western ideas on an eastern people — a principle which he had combated all his life — had made every land- owner in Oudh a rebel at heart. There was another event, outside India indeed, but con- nected with India, which occupied the attention of Lord Canning during the first year of his incumbency of office, and which temporarily somewhat diminished his power of grappling with any military difficulty which might arise. I refer to the war with Persia. Up to the year 1856, certainly, it had been a cardinal ^ Vide page 15. The War with Persia. 25 principle of British policy that Persia was never to possess Herdt. Herdt and Kandahdr were the two points in Western Afghanistan which commanded the lines always followed, from the time of Alexander to that of Ahmad Shah, by the invaders of India, and which, therefore, it was necessary should be held by the friends of British India, if not by British India herself. During the first war waged by Great Britain with Afghanistan, Persia had posed as a pawn pushed forwards by Russia to gain a dominant position on the Indian frontier. But, in 1838, Russia was disinclined to support her pawn. She was more prepared for action when the Crimean war broke out. But when the Shah of Persia realised the fact that the powerful nation which had filched from him some of his most fertile provinces was in deadly grip with England and France, he suspended his insidious action regarding Herat until he should be able to form a definite opinion as to the result of the struggle. He resumed that insidious action as soon as he recognised that the peace of Paris had given Russia a free hand to subdue the barrier of the Caucasus. Re- garding Russia as fully occupied, and England as ex- hausted, he despatched an army to besiege Herat. The ruler of the province of which Herat was the capital, who occupied a position of semi-independence, at once hoisted British colours, and implored the assistance of the Amir Dost Muhammad. Various circumstances, into which it is not necessary to enter, gave indications that the Persians would be resisted to the last. However, it was not so, and before any steps could be taken Herat had fallen. The clear mind of the then Prime Minister of Great Britain, the resolute Lord Palmerston, had already recog- nised the importance of the situation, and he resolved to compel Persia to retire. The means he adopted were those 26 Close of the Persian War. best calculated to obtain the result aimed at with the smallest expenditure of blood and money. He directed the formation of a mixed force of English and Indian troops, to be commanded by Sir James Outram, to attack Persia on the side of the Persian Gulf, and he authorised the Governor-General of India to come to a cordial un- derstanding with the Amir of Afghanistan. Before the army could land on the Persian coast, Herat, I have said, had fallen. But very soon afterwards the Commissioner of the Panjab, Mr John Lawrence, held at Peshawar (January 1857) that interview with Dost Muham- mad which resulted in a cordial understanding between that sagacious prince and the stern and resolute repre- sentative of the might of Great Britain. Later still, Out- ram, landing at Bushir, gained two victories, which had the effect of forcing the Shah to sue for peace. The consequence was that, in May 1857, he resigned all claim to Herdt, which he surrendered, and signed, by his agents, at Paris, a treaty of peace. The troops composing Outram's force were thus available in May for any service which Lord Canning might require at their hands. During the year the circumstances attendant upon the refusal of the 38th Regiment N. I. to proceed by sea to Burma had caused Lord Canning to look up an Act, already drafted, having for its object the so altering of the terms of the enlistment of the sipdhi as to make, in the future, every regiment available for service across the seas. The Act did not touch the interests of sipahis already en- listed. It referred simply to those who might enter the service thereafter. In July 1856 that Act became law. In itself the Act was a just and righteous Act. Issued at any other time, it would have caused no feeling whatever. The men of the six regiments already enlisting for general Other Conspirators, 27 service were of as high a caste as were the men who engaged only to serve locally. But the minds of the sipahis were excited. The annexation of Oudh had caused them to lose faith in their foreign masters. And it is quite possible that the alteration, which did not escape the watchful eyes of the men who were fomenting disorder, acted as an additional argument to prove that gradual steps were to be taken to deprive them of their caste. I have already referred to the action of the Maulavi of Faizabad as being instrumental in creating and increas- ing the undercurrent of hostility to British rule through Bengal and the North-west Provinces. It is impossible, however, to leave this subject without mentioning the action of the son of the ex-Peshwa, Baji Rao, and his agent, Azim-uUah Khan. It is the more necessary that such mention should be made, because, whatever may be the opinion of Europeans saturated with the western ideas, and with the conceit those ideas often engender, there can be no doubt but that, during the Mutiny, on the morrow of the Mutiny, and at the present day, the culti- vated natives of India attributed and attribute a great deal of the bitterness attendant on the uprising to the treatment meted out to Nana Sahib by the Government of India. I know that it has been contended, and recently most ably contended,^ that that treatment was absolutely just. It was just according to western ideas. But the oriental mind does not admit of the validity of an agree- ment which deprives a man of his kingdom and makes no provision for his family after his death. Such was the grievance of Nana Sahib. He had no title in law. But the natives of India believed then, they believe still, that he had a moral claim superior to all law. 1 Sir William Hunter's Dalhousie^ 162-3. 28 Ndnd SdJiib. The case may thus be stated. The Peshwd had been, by virtue of his title, the lord of all the Mardthd princes. Of all the Peshwds, Baji Rao had been the most false to his own countrymen, and the worst. But for many years he had been loyal to the British. Tempted, however, in 1 8 17, by the rising of Holkar and the war with the Pinddris, and hoping to recover the lost influence of his House, he had risen, had been beaten, and, in 181 8, had thrown him- self on the mercy of the British. He was deprived of his dominions, and granted a pension for life of eight lakhs of rupees. He took up his residence at Bithor, near the military station of Kanhpur, adopted a son, and lived a quiet life till his death in 1851. The Government of India permitted his adopted son, whose name was Dhundu Pant, but who was generally known as Nana Sahib, to inherit the savings of Baji Rao, and they presented to him the fee-simple of the property at Bithor. But Nana Sahib had to provide for a very large body of followers, bequeathed to his care by Baji Rao; and the two British Commissioners who, in succession, superintended the administration of the estate supported the proposal made from Bithor that a portion of the late ex-Peshwa's allowance should be reserved for the support of the family. They had some reason for their suggestion, for when, some little time before his death, Baji Rao had petitioned the Home Government that his adopted son might succeed to the title and pension of Peshwd, whilst the grant of the title was refused absolutely, the question of the pension was reserved for future consideration, that is, until the seat of the ex-Peshwd should be vacant It seems to me that high policy should have shown some consideration for the heir of one who had been the lord of Western India, and whose territories we had taken. A slight relaxation of the hard and fast policy character- Nd7id Sdhib. 29 istic of Lord Dalhousie's rule might have saved the British from many future troubles. When, in 1844, the House of Sindhia, defeated in battle, was at the feet of Lord Ellen- borough, that nobleman imposed upon it no penalty. His generosity bore splendid fruit in 1857-8. Far different was the result of the policy pursued towards Nana Sahib. Lord Dalhousie declared the recommendation made by the two Commissioners in his favour to be * uncalled for and unreasonable.' He directed that * the determination of the Government of India may be explicitly declared to the family without delay.' The determination was conse- quently so declared. Ought we to wonder that, in 1857, the crab-tree did produce the crab-apple ? Nana Sahib appealed to the Court of Directors against the decision of the Governor-General of India. His appeal was couched in logical, temperate, and convincing lan- guage. He asked why the heir to the Peshwd should be treated differently from other native princes who had fallen before the Company. He instanced the case of Dehli and of Maisur ; and with reference to the assumption made in argument against him that the savings of his father were sufficient to support him, he asked whether it was just that the economical foresight of the father should militate against the moral claims of the son. The argument, which would have been accepted in any native Court in India, which was convincing to the two hundred and fifty millions who inhabited that country, had no effect whatever on the minds of the western rulers who governed the country from Leadenhall Street. Their reply emulated in its curt- ness and its rudeness the answer given by Lord Dalhousie. They directed the Governor-General to inform the memo^ rialist *that the pension of his adoptive father was not hereditary, that he has no claim whatever to it, and that his application is wholly inadmissible.' The date of the 30 Azim-ullah Kkdn, reply was May 1853. It bore its fruit at Kdnhpur In June 1857. Ndna Sahib accepted it with apparent composure, but it rankled in his bosom. To prosecute his claims he had, early in the year, despatched to England a young Muham- madan in his service, Azim-uUah Khan by name, of a pleasant presence and a taking address. Before Azim- ullah could reach England judgment had already been recorded. Being in the receipt of a sufficient allowance from his master, the young man stayed in England, and entered freely into the pleasures of English life. But he always had an eye to the interests of Nana Sahib. Whilst he was yet in England the Crimean war broke out. Shortly afterwards there came from the seat of war those stories of suffering which, from his place in the House of Commons, the late Lord John Russell described as 'horrible and heart- rending.' The imaginative mind of the young oriental came to the conclusion that some terrible disaster was about to befall the British army. Were such to occur, there might be some hope for Nana Sahib. He pro- ceeded, then, to the seat of war, entered into communica- tion with foreigners of diverse nations, and from his con- versations with them, and from his own personal inspection, came to the conclusion that England, the England which had asserted herself with so much haughtiness in India, was on the brink of destruction, that it would require but a united effort on the part of the princes and people of her great dependency to ' push her from her stool.' With these convictions fresh and strongly rooted in his mind he re- turned, in 1856, to the Nana at Bithor. Shortly after his return the Nana paid a somewhat mysterious visit to Lakhnao, accompanied by Azim-ullah and a considerable following. I have called his visit 'mysterious/ for it so impressed the English authorities in that city that Sir The Thomasonian System, 31 Henry Lawrence, who was then Chief- Commissioner, wrote to Sir Hugh Wheeler, commanding at Kanhpur, to caution him not to depend upon the loyalty of Nana Sahib. It is not to be doubted that Nana Sahib took advantage of his visit to enter into negotiations with the discontented nobles of the province, and to concert with them the outlines, at least, of a general plan of action. Whilst the province of Oudh and the district of Bithor were thus fast becoming hotbeds of conspiracy, a similar process was taking place through the length and breadth of the North-west Provinces. That the system known as 'the village system/ under which the heads of villages represented, before the law, the communities of which they were the hereditary chiefs, may not have been a system which recommended itself theoretically to a ruler nurtured in western ideas may be conceded. But that system was rooted in the soil. The great Akbar, when engaged in the task of consolidating and systematising the territories he had conquered, had attempted to intro- duce reforms which would have tended to greater central- isation. But, after a few months of experiment, he shrunk from a task which, he recognised, would rouse against him the feelings of his subjects. Where Akbar had feared to tread, the English, guided by the rash hand of Mr Thomason, had rushed in. The result was that through- out the districts over which he had ruled, in Juanpur and Azamgarh, in Agra, Kanhpur, and the adjoining districts, throughout Bundelkhand, there reigned a discontent which lent itself very readily to the schemes of the major conspirators. The advocates of Mr Thomason's reforms have endeavoured, under the shield of anonymous criticism, to controvert this assertion. But facts are stub- born things. I have had it from the mouths of many in- 32 The Rani of Jhdnsi. fluential native gentlemen, and from English officials con- cerned, that the grievance which caused disaffection was the harsh introduction, and the still harsher enforcement, of the Thomasonian system. And there remains the fact, which cannot be controverted, that in India the dis- affection was greatest, and the hatred against Europeans most pronounced, in the districts to which that system had been applied. ^ Not very far distant from Agra there was a powerful chieftain who, from causes similar to those which had influenced Nana Sahib, regarded herself as having been grievously wronged, and who therefore hated the English with all the bitterness of a woman who had been con- temned. This chieftain was the Rani of Jhansi. She was largely gifted, possessed great energy, had borne, up to the period upon which I am entering, ' a high character,' being 'much respected by everyone at Jhdnsi.^ But the hand of the despoiler had lashed her into a fury which was not to be governed. Under Hindu law she possessed the right to adopt an heir to her husband when he died childless in 1854. Lord Dalhousie refused to her the exercise of that right, and declared that Jhansi had lapsed to the paramount power. In vain did the Rani dwell upon the services which in olden days the rulers of Jhansi had rendered to the British Government, and quote the warm acknowledgments made by that Government Lord Dalhousie was not to be moved. He had faith in his legions. With a stroke of his pen he deprived this high-spirited woman of the rights which she believed, and which all the natives of India believed, to be heredi- tary. That stroke of the pen converted the lady, of so high a character and so much respected, into a veritable tigress so far as the English were concerned. For them, ■^ Report of the Political Agent at Jhansi. I Action of the Conspirators. 33 thereafter, she would have no mercy. There is reason to believe that she, too, had entered into negotiations with the Maulavi and Nana Sahib before the explosion of 1857 took place. Such, then, were the conspirators. The inhabitants of Oudh, directed mainly by the Maulavi and a lady of the royal House known as the Begum, the inhabitants of the North-west Provinces, goaded into bitter hostility by the action of the Thomasonian system, and the Rani of Jhdnsi. The executive council of this conspiracy had arranged, in the beginning of 1857, to act upon the sipahis by means of the greased cartridge, upon the in- habitants of the rural districts by the dissemination of chapatis. This dissemination was intended as a warning that the rising was imminent. It was further decided that the rising of the sipahis should be simultaneous, and more than once the actual day was fixed. Providentially something always happened to prevent the explosion on that day. The splutterings which occurred on such occa- sions served to give timely warning to the Government. The delays which followed the warning were partially utilised. It was not, however, till the rising actually took place at Mirath that the Government realised the real nature, though not the full extent, of the danger. That they never realised it thoroughly until after the massacre of Kanhpur we have the evidence of their own words and their own actions to prove. Indeed I may go so far as to declare that many of the actors in the drama failed to realise to their dying day that the outbreak was not merely a mutiny which they had to combat, but a vast conspiracy, the threads of which were widely spread, and which owed its origin to the conviction that a Govern- ment which had, as the conspirators believed, betrayed its trust was no longer entitled to respect or allegiance, C CHAPTER III. THE FIRST MUTTERINGS OF THE STORM. The effects of the workings of the conspirators on the minds of the population of the North-west Provinces soon made themselves manifest by the change of their usually respectful demeanour. Major Orfeur Cavenagh, an officer of great shrewdness and perspicacity, who filled the im- portant office of Town-Major of Fort William in Calcutta, visited, in October and November 1856, the districts just beyond Agra. He had been struck everywhere by the altered demeanour of the sipahis, and loyal natives had reported to him the great change which had taken place in the feelings of the natives generally towards the English. Disaffection, he was assured, was now the rule in all classes. To the clear vision of this able officer it was evident that, unless precautions were taken, some great disaster would ensue. Feelings so evidenced as to be- come the common talk of the community could not longer be repressed. In the middle of January occurred that incident regarding the greasing of the cartridges to which I have referred in the first chapter. It happened in this wise. A lascar engaged in the factory at Dam-Dam asked a Brahman sipahi to let him have a drink of water from his lotah, or brass pot. The sipahi indignantly re- fused, on the ground that his caste would not permit him to use the lotah afterwards if it should be defiled by the drinking of a man of a lower position in the Hindu hicr- I How the Sipdhis were worked upon. 3 5 archy. The lascar, in reply, laughed at him for talking of defilement, when he said, * You will all soon be biting cartridges smeared with the fat of the ct)w and the pig.' He then told the sipahi the method of the new cartridges. The incident occurred when the minds of the sipahis had been inflamed, in the manner already recounted, to a high state of tension. The story spread like wildfire. Thence- forward the sipahis were as soft clay in the hands of the chief conspirators. Some of these, it cannot be doubted, were to be found amongst the numerous followers of the King of Oudh. The Government of India had permitted that prince, on his removal from the province of which he was still the titular king, to take up his residence in a suburb of Cal- cutta. He had arrived there in April 1856 with a numer- ous following. His quarters had already become notorious as the Alsatia of Calcutta, If, as is probable, he was no party to the intrigues carried on in his name, or on his behalf, there were yet many of those who adhered to him who were less scrupulous. These men were the fellow- countrymen of the majority of the men who served the British, and entirely sympathised with them. Sub- sequent events proved that communications between the sipahis in Fort William and at Barrackpur and some of the King's adherents had been frequent. It was unfor- tunate that, at such a period, at a crisis so momentous so large a number of exiles from Oudh, sharing the indignation generally felt among the natives at the an- nexation of that province, should have been located close to a populous city, dependent for its safety on one weak European regiment. Important consequences speedily followed the dis- covery of the fact regarding the greased cartridges. On the 26th of January the telegraph house at Barrackpur 36 Major Orfeitr Cavenagh. was fired. The same day one ot the sergeants attached to Fort William reported to Cavenagh a remarkable con- versation, between two sipahis, which he had overheard. It was to the effect that the Europeans forming the gar- rison were entirely in the power of the sipahis ; that it would be easy to master the arsenal and the magazines, to slay the Europeans as they slept, then to possess them- selves of the fort. They added that the firing of the telegraph house was the first incident in the far-reaching plot. Cavenagh, who, as Town-Major, was responsible to the Governor-General for the safety of Fort William, took at once measures to baffle the designs of which he had been informed, and then drove straight to Lord Canning to report the circumstance to him. Lord Canning listened to Cavenagh with the deepest interest, and sanctioned the measures he proposed. These were to transfer from Dam-Dam, where one wing of the regiment which was responsible for the safety of the Presidency, the 53d Foot, was located, one company to Fort William. For the moment the outbreak was deferred. Many little circumstances came at this period to in- timate to the few who preferred not to live in a fool's paradise that something strange was impending. At Bar- rackpur,on the left bank of the river Hugh', fifteen miles above Calcutta, were stationed four native regiments — the 2d Grenadiers, the 34th N. I., the 43d Light Infantry, and the 70th N. I. At Barhampur, 120 miles above Cal- cutta and five below Murshidabad, the capital of the Nuwab-Nazims of Bengal, was one native regiment, the 19th N. I. Between Calcutta and Danapur, in Bihar, 344 miles from the capital, there was but one English regiment, the 53d, already referred to, and that was, as I have said, distributed between Dam-Dam and Calcutta. The space Insufficiency of the English Garrison, ^y of 344 miles was thus without European guardianship. For, though there was one regiment, the loth Foot, at Ddnapur, there were also stationed there three regiments of native infantry, the 7th, the 8th, and the 40th. There is reason to suppose that communications had passed at least as early as February between the men of these several regiments, and even of those stationed fur- ther north-westward. Small commands, treasure parties, and the post afforded ample opportunities for such ex- change of ideas. One of these communications gave to the Government the first intimation of the general feeling. On the i8th and 25th of February two small detachments of one of the regiments stationed at Barrackpur, the 34th, a regiment peculiarly tainted, arrived at Barhampur. The men of the 19th N. I., there located, received their com- rades of the 34th with effusion. The evening after the arrival of the second detachment the talk between the two parties was a talk of more than ordinary significance The men of the 34th poured into the willing ears of their hosts all their grievances. They related the antecedent causes, of which I have spoken, which had led them to distrust their foreign masters. They then dwelt on the story of the cartridges, of the alleged mission of Lord Canning to force Christianity upon them, and added their determination, and that of their brethren at Bar- rackpur and elsewhere, to take the first opportunity to rise in revolt. This tale, told with all the fervour of sincerity — for it cannot be too strongly insisted upon that throughout these proceedings, and those which followed, the sipahis were but the dupes of the able men who had planned the conspiracy — produced a remarkable effect on the minds of the men of the 19th- N. I. They brooded over the information all the day following. They had not received 38 The Emeute at Barhdmpur. the new rifle', and the cartridges in their magazine were innocent of the sh'ghtest stain of grease. They were the common paper cartridges to which they had been accus- tomed for years, the only change being that the paper in which they were wrapped was of a different colour. Yet when, in the course of the day, their commanding officer. Colonel Mitchell, ordered a parade with blank cartridges for the following morning, a great perturbation was visible in the lines. The men seriously believed that they were about to be juggled out of their religion by means of cartridges. How, they could not at the moment say. But the suspicion which had fallen on their minds had bred a great fear. Their non-commissioned officers first refused to receive the cartridges. The threat that those who should continue to refuse would be brought to a court-martial had the effect of inducing them to take them. But that night the whole regiment sat in delibera- tion. They dreaded lest by the use of the cartridges they should commit themsv^Ives to an act which might deprive them of their caste. The reader may ask how that was possible, considering that the cartridges were similar to those they had used for a century. The answer is that fanaticism never reasons. The Hindus are fanatics for caste. They had been told that their religion was to be attempted by means of the cartridges, and their minds being, for the reasons already given, in an excited and suspicious condition, they accepted the tale without inquiry. They therefore rose in a tumult, resolved to defy their officers. That same evening the information that the sipahis of his regiment were in a state of great excitement and perturbation, on account of the cartridges, was conveyed to Colonel Mitchell. The officers of the Bengal army, as a body, were distinguished by the trust they reposed in their men. In estimating their conduct, The Emeute at Barkdmptir, 39 it should be remembered that most of them had been associated with the sipahis all their lives ; that they had done their duty by them ; that in Afghanistan, in the Panjab, in the wars in Central India, these men had followed wherever they had led ; that they knew that in the matter of proselytism the sipahis had no real reason for their fears. Oudh had been annexed but little more than a year, and the effect of that annexation on the minds of the sipahis had not then been disclosed to them. Colonel Mitchell was an officer with a good reputation ; he understood the si|rahis as the sipahis had been up to 1857. But he was not more discerning than his fellows ; not more prescient than the Government he served. The news that the sipahis were in a state border- ing on mutiny was a revelation to him. He could not comprehend why they should rise, or why they should even be excited. The cartridges, which he was told formed the pretext for the sudden ebullition, were, he well knew, the cartridges which had been used without a murmur throughout the period of his service. But what was he to do ? His men — the men of the regiment for the good conduct of which he was responsible to the Commander-in-Chief and the Government — were gesticu- lating in front of the lines, and were in a state of incipient mutiny. Mitchell did his duty like the good soldier that he was ; he rode down to the lines, accompanied by his adjutant, and sending for the native officers to the quarter- guard, there addressed them. He told them that there was no reason for the fears expressed by the men ; that the cartridges were similar to those which had been served out and used from time immemorial ; that there was no question of asking the sipahis to bite them or to use them in any other way but in that to which they were accus- tomed. Having thus explained the groundlessness of the 40 The Emeute at Barhdmpiir. fears of the sipdhis, he added that they were by their conduct placing themselves in a position which the Government could not tolerate ; that the men who, after his explanation, should persist in refusing to obey his orders would be brought to a court-martial, and suffer the consequences. He concluded by urging the native officers so to influence the men that the name of the regiment should not be blackened. Colonel Mitchell might as well have spoken to the winds. He told his native officers what Sir John Hearsey at Barrackpur, and what commanding officers all over the country subsequently told theirs, but he told it in vain. There is no terror like a religious terror ; and there can be no doubt that the astute fomentors of the revolt — the men of Oudh, of the North-west Provinces, and of the Bundelkhand — had so saturated the minds of the sipahis at Barrackpur and elsewhere with a real terror, that not all the words of the most gifted men on earth would have sufficed to expel it. The Barrackpur sipdhis had in a moment communicated their fears to those of Bar- hampur. The native officers listened silently, and pro- mised to do all they could to calm the excitement. Mitchell returned to his quarters confident that he had done all he was capable of, but that * all ' was little indeed. However, there was the parade to be held the follow- ing morning. To countermand that now would be an act of weakness of which Mitchell was incapable. But the thought never occurred to him. Scarcely had he reached his home when information reached him that the men had risen and were in open revolt. It was too true. Whether the native officers had correctly interpreted Mitchell's words to their men ; or whether, as is more probable, their minds were under thQ TJu Emeute at Barhdmpur. 41 influence which swayed them, cannot be certainly known The fact remains that before midnight the regiment rose as one man, the sipahis loading their muskets, and shouting violently. There were at Barhampur a detachment of native cavalry and a battery of native artillery. It was pre- sumable, at that early stage of the great revolt, that to these the contagion had not extended. Mitchell then, as soon as he reached his quarters, ordered these to turn out The order had been given but a few moments, when information reached him that his men had risen. Resolved to stop the mischief, he gathered his officers around him, and proceeded, accompanied by the guns, to the parade ground. The cavalry had preceded him thither. There he met his men, excited but not violent, and there he harangued them. He spoke well and to the point, and finally wrung from them a promise that they would return to their duty, provided the artillery and cavalry were first ordered back to their lines. Mitchell's hands were tied. With the 200 men behind him he could not, even if they had been loyal, have coerced his 800 sipdhis. After events proved that, had he resorted to force, the men behind him would have joined the re- volted regiment, and a catastrophe would have been pre- cipitated which might, for the moment, have reduced the English in India to the greatest extremities. With ad- mirable prudence, then, Mitchell sent back the cavalry and artillery. The men of the 19th then submitted, and returned to their lines. The following morning the excitement was apparently forgotten by the sipdhis. They fell in for parade, and obeyed the orders given as in their palmiest days. But their suspicions were not lulled. Every night they slept 42 Blindness of the Government. round the bpUs of arms ^ in which their muskets were lodged instead of in the huts which formed their Hnes. Mitchell meanwhile reported the matter to his superior authorities. A Court of Inquiry was ordered, and after an investigation which, under the circumstances, may be styled prolonged, the Government, missing the point, choosing to shut their eyes to the fact that the conduct of the 19th was a premature movement of a plot which had its roots all over the country, determined to treat it as a local incident, which had attained undue proportions owing to the violent measures taken by Colonel Mitchell.^ The Governor- General in Council, therefore, resolved to disband the 19th, and to make a scapegoat of Colonel Mitchell. Meanwhile events were occurring under the very eyes of the members of the Government which should have convinced them that the Mutiny they were about to punish was not con- fined to the 19th. ^ The brick buildings in which the muskets of the sipahis were stored after parade were called *' bells of arms," they being built in the form of a bell. * Mitchell had committed no violence, nor had he used violent language. But his words were misquoted in order to support the then fashionable theory that there was no general feeling of mistrust among the sipahis. CHAPTER IV. THE SPREAD OF THE EPIDEMIC. The conduct of the men of the 19th N. I. at Barhdmpur was known to the authorities in Calcutta on the 4th of March. To them, I have said, it appeared to be rather the consequence of the blundering of the commanding officer than of a widespread feeling of discontent among the sipahis. But, whatever might be the cause, it was a fact which they had to deal with, and to deal with promptly and with effect. The Commander-in-Chief of the army, General Anson, was in th3 Upper Provinces ; the Adjutant-General was at Mirath ; but the Governor-General, Lord Canning, and all the Secretaries to Government, were in Calcutta. These had, then, all the administrative means at their disposal for dealing promptly and effectively with revolt. Of the terror which the notion of the greased cartridge had spread throughout the minds of the sipahis they had had evidence since the 22d of January, the day on which the conversation of the lascar at the Dam-Dam factory with the Brahman sipdhf had been reported to them. The general commanding at Barrackpur, General Hearsey, an officer who had passed his career in the native army, and who understood the character of the sipahis, their language, and their idiosyncracies, had, when reporting the circumstance, recommended that the difficulty might be met by allowing the sipahis at the depot to grease their 44 Ignorance in High Places, own cartridges. The Government had caught at the idea, and on the 27th January the official sanction had been given to the suggestion. It was ascertained at the same time that, although many cartridges had been greased at Dam-Dam, not one had been issued. The Govern- ment then, whilst according their sanction to General Hearsey's suggestion, transmitted ordeis by telegraph to the Adjutant-General to issue to the several musketry- depots only cartridges free from grease, and to permit the sipahis to do the greasing themselves. But the concession of the Government of India had the effect of bringing into prominence the ignorance of the executive branch of the army. The Adjutant-General, a man who had served the greater part of his career with the sipahis, wired back that the concessions of the Government would rouse the very suspicion they were intended to allay ; that for years past the sipahis had been using greased cartridges, the grease being mutton fat and wax ; and that he begged that the system might be continued. The Government, the Mili- tary Secretary of which was likewise an officer who had served with sipdhis, raised no objection to this proposah but replied that the greased cartridges might be issued, provided the materials were only those mentioned by the Adjutant-General. How the Adjutant-General managed to mislead the Government, and how the Government permitted them- selves to be misled on this occasion, seems extraordinary. The Government had the fact before them that up to that moment no greased cartridges had ever been issued to the native army. That army still used the old * Brown Bess ' musket, and for that weapon unsmeared paper cartridges were invariably employed. It is true that a few regiments had rifle companies, or one company armed with rifles, and that, for fa,cilitatinor the driving home of the bulkt And, consequently^ Defective Action. 45 used with these, patches smeared with wax had been served out. No suspicion had ever attached to these patches. But for the Adjutant-General, the right-hand man of the Commander-in-Chief, seriously to argue that the issue of these patches warranted him in remonstrating with the Government against their order forbidding the issue of greased cartridges, and for the Government to accept his statement that for some years greased cart- ridges had been issued, argued an ignorance and an absence of common sense sufficient to account for the many grave blunders which followed. Such had been the condition of matters at the end of January. There had been sufficient displays of dis- satisfaction to cause grave suspicions, and that was all. In those displays the Government had recognised no sign of wide-spread disaffection. There were but two men holding prominent positions in or near Calcutta who saw in the action of the sipahis something more than a passing wave of discontent, and one of these saw it but dimly. The more prescient of these two men was Major Cavenagh, the Town-Major of Fort William, and the representative in that fortress of the Governor-General. The other was the Commander of the Presidency Division, General Hearsey. I have already recorded the action of the former in January, and I shall have to write of his action in March and April. For the moment I must narrate the proceedings of General Hearsey at Barrackpur. The revelations of the lascar at Dam-Dam, in January, had deeply impressed that officer. He recognised that the minds of the sipahis were in a state of great ex- citement. The real cause, the basis of that excitement, was not apparent to him. His intelligence was limited to the matters which came under his eyes, and it was not in his nature to probe the situation more deeply. 46 General ITearsey at Barrackpitr, He really believed that the whole offence of the Govern- ment had been the greasing of the cartridges for use by the sipahis, and that the latter were under the influence of terror lest their religion should be tampered with. He did not ask how it was that, before a single cartridge had been issued, before one sipahi had been asked to defile himself by applying his teeth to the greased paper, the demeanour of the men of the four native regiments at Barrackpur had displayed unmistak- able signs of the discontent which raged within their minds. Believing that the greased cartridge was the outward sign and inward cause of the evident discontent, he had, with the sanction of Lord Canning, on the 9th of February, paraded his brigade, and addressing the sipahis of the four regiments in their own language, had endeav- oured to dissipate their fears. He had told them that the English were Christians of the Book; that they admitted no proselytes except those whom the reading of that Book had convinced ; that the notion that any other mode of conversion was possible was absurd ; that baptism only followed conviction ; and he implored them to dismiss from their minds the tale told them by design- ing men that the English had any design to convert them by a trick. General Hearsey meant well, and he thought he had succeeded in convincing his men of their delusion. But he had missed the point. The conspirators, who had fomented the ill-feeling of the sipahis all over India, had not told their victims that the English would make them Christians by force. They had rather impressed on their minds that the object of their masters was to deprive them, by the compulsory use of the cartridges, of the caste, to which they adhered with the passionate conviction that it was the one thing necessary for consideration in this He misses the Point, 47 life, and happiness in the life to come ; and that then, scared and miserable by their degradation, they would seek for admission into the ranks of a religion which had established missions throughout the country for the very purpose of converting them. General Hearsey's argument that his religion was a religion of the Book was all very well when addressed to Brahmans and Rajputs, whose position was secure, whose caste was intact. But, when it should be applied to men whose caste had been broken, who had become pariahs and outcasts, deprived of con- sideration in this world, and of all hope in the hereafter it would have a different signification. Then the men who had lost the religion of their forefathers would be glad to read the Book, and to gain renewed hope in the religion of their masters. The answer to General Hearsey's declamation was given by the 19th N. I. at Barhampur. The news from Barrackpur, carried to Barhdmpur by the sipahis of the 34th, had produced the fermentation and partial outbreak described in the last chapter. And this was the news which disturbed the Government of India on the 4th of March. It found that Government in a state of some p'^rplexity. Lord Canning was new to the country, and was perforce on all matters pertaining to the native army, dependent on his military advisers. The capacity of his military advisers may be judged from the fact that they were the very men who had allowed him to be swayed by the shallow reason- ing of the Adjutant-General regarding the issue of greased cartridges. However, many facts had spoken too loudly to be disregarded. There was the one fact that a native regiment in the Presidency Division had mutinied ; an- other fact that the troops at Barrackpur had displayed a suUenness of demeanour difficult to account for ; a third 48 The ^^tk Foot arrives from Burma. fact in the revelations of Major Cavenagh, described in the last chapter ; and a fourth in the fact that between Calcutta and Danapur, a distance of 344 miles from Calcutta, there was but one weak English regiment. The disaffection at Barhampur had, they knew, been produced by the com- munications received by the sipahis of that regiment from the men of a detachment which had marched thither from Barrackpur. Who was to guard the line of 344 miles if the sipahis of Barrackpur should emulate the conduct of the men whom some of their comrades had perverted? These facts, and this consideration, produced the convic- tion that it was necessary to strengthen the central posi- tion. They resolved to strengthen it by ordering the 84th regiment to proceed with all speed from Rangoon to the Presidency. On the 20th of March that regiment arrived in the Hugh'. Orders were then transmitted to Colonel Mitchell to march the 19th N. I. to Barrackpur. But there had been many significant occurrences before the 84th reached the Hugh'. Mdharaja Sindhia had visited Calcutta early in March, and, as a return for the civilities showered upon him, had invited the dite of the society of the Presidency to 2. fete at the Botanical Gardens, situated on the opposite bank of the river Hugh', on the loth of the month. There can be little doubt but that the leaders of the conspiracy had resolved to strike their blow on that day. During the absence of the official English across the river they had planned to seize the fort and to strike terror into the town. A circumstance, slight in itself, frustrated their combinations. Rain, most unusual at that time of the year in India, fell heavily the day before and on the morning of the loth, and the Maharaja, aware that an out- of-door fete could be successful only when the weather was propitious, sent out notices to postpone the entertain- ment. It happened accidentally that no notice of the Mdhdrdjd Sindhid in Calcutta. 49 postponement reached the Town-Major, Major Cavenagh. That ever vigilant officer had quitted the fort to cross the river ; but, on arriving at the ghat, he learned for the first time that no fete would take place that day, so he retraced his steps. His sudden return, and the rumour to which that return gave weight, that ih^ fete had been postponed, roused in the guilty minds of the conspirators the suspicion that their plot had been discovered. Some of them, out- side the fort, had indeed begun the part assigned to them in the general programme, but, under the inysterious cir- cumstances of the return of Cavenagh and the postpone- ment of the garden party, the more astute members of the conspiracy declined to move. They even assisted in the capture of their misled comrades, who were brought at once to trial, and suffered fourteen years of penal servitude for their premature temerity. A week later the 84th entered the Hugh', and landing on the 20th, marched to the quarters assigned them at Ghinsurah, twenty miles north of Calcutta. The Govern- ment immediately transmitted orders to Colonel Mitchell to march his regiment, the 19th N. I., from Barhampur to Barrackpur. In the interval the Court of Inquiry, referred to in the last chapter, had, as already stated, taken evidence, and on its report the Governor-General 'n Council had re- solved to punish the sipahis by disbanding the regiment. Previous experience of that punishment had proved that it was at best but a cluiTiSy device. It was especially ill- adapted to the actual circumstances, for it would dis- tribute over areas already partially infected a thousand men who regarded themselves, and who would be re- garded by others, as martyrs for their religion. But in the Council of Lord Canning there wi^ not one man upon whom had been bestowed the divine gift of imagina- D 50 Disbandment useless as a PunisJunent. tion. No other remedy presented itself to their matter- of-fact minds. So the order for disbandment was issued. It was hoped that the impressive ceremony of disband- ment, carried out in the presence of four native regiments, and supervised by their English comrades, would produce a great effect. But, unhappily for the theories of those in high places, an event took place at Barrackpur, before the arrival of the 19th there, which proved conclusively that the evil, which the disbandment of the 19th was to cure, was far more widely spread and deeply rooted than any official had conceived. CHAPTER V. BARRACKPUR, CALCUTTA, AND THE NORTH-WEST TO THE 9TH OF MAY. Meanwhile, the excitement at Barrackpur was not diminishing. Isolated actions on the part of the sipahis, indicating a very mutinous spirit, were reported to the Governor-General. The incident referred to in the last chapter, which had led to the trial and sentence to four- teen years' penal servitude of several sipdhis, had produced considerable perplexity in the minds of the authorities. But they still refused to believe that there was anything like a general plot. They preferred to think that the dis- affection was confined to some men of one regiment only, or to a few men belonging to two regiments. The sus- picions of the disaffected men were not, it was hoped, so deeply rooted as to be proof against argument. The Government was conscious of its own innocence. It harboured no evil designs against the sipahis. It had no desire to move to the right or to the left out of the path it had undeviatingly followed for exactly a century. If this could be made clear to the men, all would assuredly go well. It was essentially a European argument, an argument which proved the most profound ignorance of the modes of thoughts of a race which was Asiatic, and for the most part Hindu. But it was the argument which naturally presented itself to the European mind. Lord Canning had authorised General Hearsey to try the ex- 52 Hearsey again addresses the Sipdhis. periment once, and General Hearsey believed, as was quite natural he should believe, that his arguments had produced some effect. He was anxious to try once again the powers of his oratory. He therefore persuaded Lord Canning to authorise him to address the men of the four regiments in language and in terms which he had talked over with the Governor-General. The parade took place on the Barrackpur plain, on the 17th of March, three days before the actual arrival of the 84th from Rangoon. General Hearsey spoke eloquently and well. He pointed out to the men the childishness of their fears ; he entered into full details regarding the necessity to use lubricated cartridges with the new muskets ; he told them that the Government were re- solved to maintain discipline, and that they would mete out stern justice to the 19th by disbanding that regiment. He concluded by assuring the sipahis of the brigade that they had nothing to fear, that their caste and religious convictions were safe, and that their officers would listen patiently to any complaint they might make. In the abstract, nothing could be more to the point or more satisfactory than the General's speech. But it failed to touch the inner minds of the sip^his. These were inspired by men who had a great object in view — a political object of vast importance — the detaching of the sipdhi army from the foreign Government. But for these men the question of the greased cartridge would never have arisen. The waxed patches had been used without complaint for years, why should the very rumour regarding greased cartridges, which, be it always re- membered, had not been issued, so excite the sipahi? There could be but one reason. The emissaries of the Maulavi and his comrades had done their work thoroughly. The midnight conferences in the huts of the sipahis, not Reason why He failed. S3 at Barrackpur only but in all the principal stations of the North-western Provinces of India, had gone to but one point — the implanting of a conviction in the mind of the native soldiers that the foreign masters who had annexed Oudh would hesitate at nothing to complete their work of forcing them to become Christians. They had discounted beforehand the arguments of General Hearsey, for they had pointed out that a Government which, in defiance of treaties, had entered Oudh like * a thief in the night,' and deposed the native sovereign at the point of the bayonet, would shrink from no means, however fraudulent, to complete the scheme of which the annexation had been the first move. It was not a logical argument, and the European mind would have found it full of flaws ; but the emissaries knew the men they were addressing. Senti- ment goes much further than logic with Asiatics, and they appealed to the sentiments which touched the sipdhis to the quick. It is not surprising, then, that the logical argu- ments of General Hearsey produced no effect whatever. Evidence of this was very speedily given. On the 29th of March, a Sunday afternoon, it was reported to Lieutenant Baugh, Adjutant of the 34th N. I., that several men of his regiment were in a very excited condition ; that one of them, Manghal Pandi by name, was striding up and down in front of the lines of his regiment, armed with a loaded musket, calling upon the men to rise, and threatening to shoot the first European he should see. Baugh at once buckled on his sword, and putting loaded pistols in his holsters, mounted his horse, and galloped down to the lines. Manghal Pandi heard the sound of the galloping horse, and taking post behind the station gun, which was in front of the quarter-guard of the 34th, took a deliberate aim at Baugh, and fired. He missed Baugh, but the bullet struck his horse in the flank, and 54 Manghal Pdndi and the '^\th N. I, horse and rider were brought to the ground. Baugh quickly disentangled himself, and, seizing one of his pistols, advanced towards the mutinous sipahi and fired. He missed. Before he could draw his sword Manghal Pdndi, armed with a talwar with which he had provided himself, closed with his adjutant, and, being the stronger man, brought him to the ground. He would probably have despatched him but for the timely intervention of a Muhammadan sipahi, Shaikh Paltu by name. The scene I have described had taken place in front of the quarter-guard of the 34th N. I., and but thirty paces from it. The sipahis composing that guard had not made the smallest attempt to interfere between the combatants, although one of them was their own adjutant and the other a mutinous soldier. The sound of the firing had brought other men from the lines, but these, too, remained passive spectators of the scene. At the con- juncture I have described, just, that is, as Shaikh Paltu had warded from Baugh the fatal stroke of the talwar, and as Manghal Pandi, to make assurance doubly sure, was attempting to reload his musket, there arrived on the ground, breathless from running, the English serjeant- major, one of the two English non-commissioned officers attached in those days to each native regiment. The new arrival rushed at the mutineer, but he was, as I have said, breathless, whilst the sipahi was fresh and on the alert. In the conflict between the two men Manghal Pandi had no difficulty in gaining the mastery, and in throwing his adversary. Still the sipdhis of the regiment looked on. Shaikh Paltu, faithful among the faithless, continued to defend the two officers, calling upon the other sipahis to come to his aid. Then these, on the order of the Jamaddr of guard, advanced. Instead, however, of en- deavouring to seize Manghal Pandi, they struck at the Manghal Pdndi and the 3 4//^ N.I. 55 two prostrate officers with the butt-ends of their muskets. They even threatened Shaikh Paltu, and ordered him to let go his hold on Manghal Pandi. That faithful sipahi, however, continued to cling to him until Baugh and the sergeant- major had had time to rise. Meanwhile rumour, as quick as lightning on such occasions, had brought to General Hearsey an account of the proceedings at the lines. That gallant officer, writing hurried notes to the officers commanding at Dam-Dam and Chinsurah, where were a wing of the 53d Foot and the newly arrived 84th, to be despatched should occasion demand it, galloped to the ground, accompanied by his two sons. The scene that met his gaze was unpre- cedented even in his long experience. He saw Manghal Pandi, musket in hand, striding up and down in front of the quarter-guard, calling upon his comrades to follow his example. He saw the sipahis crowding about the guard, waiting apparently for a leader to respond to their comrade's call. He saw the wounded Baugh, and the bruised sergeant-major, the commanding officer of the 34th, who had arrived just before him, and other English officers who had hastened or were hastening to the spot. The moment was a critical one. It depended upon his action whether the Barrackpur sipahf brigade would then and there break out in open mutiny. But Hearsey was equal to the critical conjuncture. Riding straight to the guard, he drew his pistol, and ordered them to do their duty by seizing Manghal Pdndi, theatening to shoot the first man who should display the smallest symptom of disobedience. For a second only was there hesitation- But a glance at Hearsey 's stern face, and at his two sons by his side, dissipated it. The men of the guard fell in, and followed Hearsey in the direction where Manghal Pdndi was still upbraiding them for their cowardice in 56 Hearsey represses the Movement. leaving him unsupported. Then the mutinous sipdhf recognised that with him the game was up. Turning then the muzzle of the musket to his breast, he discharged it by the pressure of his foot, and fell burned and bleeding to the ground. Hearsey . then addressed the men, and reproached them with their passive demeanour. The excuses they made, that Manghal Pdndi was mad, that he was intoxi- cated, that he had a loaded musket, ought to have con- vinced Hearsey that the hearts or the men were no longer with their British officers. He felt, indeed, that the situa- tion was becoming greatly strained. The 19th N. I. were actually marching from Barhampur to be disbanded at Barrackpur, and now the sipahis of the four regiments of the Barrackpur brigade had displayed an indiscipline at least equal to that for which the 19th were to be punished in their presence. Rumours of all kinds filled the air — the rumour that the outbreak of Manghal Pdndi had been preconcerted, but had broken out too soon ; another that the arrival of the 19th would be the signal for a general rising ; a third, a day or two later, that a conference between emissaries from the 34th and the 19th had taken place, on the 30th, at Barsat, one march from Barrackpur. It is probable that these rumours were true. But the mutinous army had no leader at Barrackpur, and for want of a leader, and in the presence of divided counsels, action collapsed. On the 30th of March the Government concentrated in Barrackpur the newly arrived 84th Foot, a wing of the 53d, two batteries of European artillery, and the Governor- General's Bodyguard, which, though composed of natives, was then believed to be loyal. The next morning the 19th N. I. marched into Barrackpur. There, in presence of the English regiments and the English-manned guns, and The igth N. I, disbanded, 57 of the native brigade, the order of the Governor-General, stating their crime, and declaring absurd their fears for their religion, was read out to them. They were then ordered to pile their arms, and to hang their belts upon the piled bayonets. They obeyed without a murmur. They were then marched to a distance from their arms, and the pay due to them was distributed. They were allowed, mis- takenly as it tunled out, to retain their uniforms, and the complaisance of the Government went so far as to provide them with carriage to convey them to their homes. The Government, despite all that had occurred, was still in a fog. They could not see an inch beyond their own hands. One or two circumstances showed the temper of the Government at this conjuncture. The gallant conduct of Shaikh Paltu, on the morning of the 29th of March, had presented so great a contrast to that of his comrades that Hearsey, with a true soldier's instinct, had then and there promoted him to be a Hawaldar, or native sergeant. For this act, which, though ' ultra vires,' was justified by the special circumstances of the case, he was reprimanded by the Government. The general impression prevailed that the disbandment of the 19th would produce so salutary an effect throughout India that it was announced to the whole army in terms which, to say the least, displayed an absolute ignorance of the real feelings of the sipahis. The Government thought that that disbandment had closed the chapter of the Mutiny, when in reality it was only the first page of the preface. The wound of the mutinous sipahi Manghal Pandi had not proved mortal. He recovered, was brought to trial, and hanged. The Jamadar who had incited the sipahis of the quarter-guard to refrain from assisting their officer met the same fate a little later (April 22). Meanwhile, the Government had made a searching inquiry into the con- 58 The 34/'/^ N , I. are disbanded. duct of the men of the 34th N. I. generally, and after much hesitation, moved also by events at Lakhnao, to be presently referred to, Lord Canning came to the deter- mination to disband that regiment also (May 4). Two days later the seven companies of that regiment which were at Barrackpur ' were paraded in the presence of the 84th Foot, a wing of the 53d, and two batteries of Euro- pean artillery, and were disbanded. They were not allowed to keep their uniforms, but were marched out of the station with every show of disgrace. Thus five hundred conspirators, embittered against the Government, were turned loose on the country at a very critical period. The Government had, towards the end of April, been so satisfied that the disturbances were purely local, and that the disaffection displayed in Bengal had not penetrated to the North-west, that they had resolved, as soon as the 34th N. I. should have been dealt with, to send back the 84th Foot to Rangoon, and they had actually engaged transports for that purpose. Nor did the advices they re- ceived from Oudh and the upper provinces, just before the disbandment of the 34th, induce them to reconsider the position and to change their plans. It required the outbreak of the loth of May at Mirath to impress upon them the reality of the danger. The disbandment of the 19th N. I., on the 31st of March, had sent back to Oudh nearly a thousand men to preach disaffection and treason. The seeds of distrust had already been sown there by the chief conspirators. It wanted, then, but practical proof of the determination of the Government to carry out their designs at all costs to apply the spark to the material collected. The presence of the disbanded men of the 19th supplied that spark. No overt action had taken place in Oudh before their arrival ^ The remaining three companies were on duty in Eastern Bengal. Sir Henry Lawrence in Oudh, 59 in that province. After their advent, Oudh became the chief focus of the rebellion. At Lakhnao, the capital of Oudh, ruled the chivalrous and capable Sir Henry Lawrence. No man more than he had lamented the tendencies of the time to introduce a western system of local government among an oriental people. No man had been more desirous to stand on the ancient ways, the ways familiarised to the natives of India by centuries of use : to employ the utmost care and dis- cretion in introducing changes, however meritorious those changes might appear to men of western race and western training. Hence Sir Henry Lawrence was popular with all classes of natives. He possessed a greater influence over them than any man then living ; and, could the rill, then breaking into a torrent, have been stemmed, he was the one man to stem it. But Sir Henry Lawrence had come to Oudh after the evil seeds sown by his immediate pre- decessor had begun to bear fruit — when the native land- owners had been alienated, the supporters of the native rule had begun to conspire, and when the effects of the annexation were being realised by the numerous families which had sent a son or a brother into the sipdhi army, in order that he might procure for them the support of the English Resident in their local Courts. When Sir Henry arrived, then, the mischief had been done, and he had had no power to repair it. The events at Barhampur and Barrackpur had been watched by Sir Henry Lawrence with the deepest interest. Naturally, he had taken particular pains to satisfy himself whether the causes which had produced the outbreaks I have recorded at those stations had affected the three regular native regiments, the 13th, the 48th, and the 71st N. I., which garrisoned Lakhnao. But it was not till the end of April, just about the time when the disbanded men of the 6o Disaffection at Lakhnao. • 19th N. I. were stealing into the province, that he detected or thought he detected, suspicious symptoms in the 48tl N. I. He reported the circumstance to Lord Canning, and at once received permission to write to the Com- mander-in-Chief to have the regiment removed to Mirath. But to Sir Henry's mind the proposed remedy was no remedy at all. He wrote in that sense, on May ist, to the Governor-General. Two days later he discovered that treasonable com- munications were passing between the men of a local regiment and the 48th, that the men of the 7th Irregular Cavalry, stationed seven miles from Lakhnao, had pro- ceeded to overt acts against their officers, and that the greased cartridges were in both cases the alleged cause of the ill-feeling. The act of the 7th Irregulars, in the opinion ot Sir Henry, required prompt repression. Accordingly, he marched that night, with the three native regiments I have enumerated, the 32d Foot, and a bat- tery of eight guns, against the peccant regiment. The men of that regiment, terrified by this demonstration, sub- mitted without a blow. They laid down their arms at the given order, and allowed their ringleaders to be arrested, with every sign of penitence and submission. On the 4th of May the electric wire flashed to Lord Canning an account of this mutiny and its repression. It was the receipt of this news which decided his vacillating council to disband the 34th, a measure which, we have seen, was carried out on the 6th. The effect which the simple disbanding of a mutinous regiment produced on the other native regiments of the same brigade was illus- trated a few days later. A Jamadar of the 70th N. I. was arrested at Barrackpur in the act of urging his men to rise in revolt. Brought to trial before a court com- posed of native officers of his own caste, he was sentenced Oa^ncLe/^ . (be- Effect of the Disbanding of the 34/^. 6t merely to dismissal. Unfortunately this lenient punish- ment for mutiny was approved and confirmed by the Commander-in-Chief. The publication of this approval produced the worst effects. Unfortunately for Lord Canning, himself one of the noblest of men, there was no one about him to tell him that the punishment of disbandment in such times as he was entering upon was no punishment at all. There was not a native regiment in the Bengal Presidency which was not at this period not only ready to disband itself, but to turn with all the fury of men excited by fancied wrongs against the masters they had served. But the truth is there was not a man about him who had penetrated below the surface, who had the wit to see that this disaffection was no ephemeral feeling, to disappear at the bidding of a few hard words. In the language of the Home Secretary, employed when the discontent had become infinitely more pronounced than it was at the be- ginning of May, it was, in the eyes of his councillors, ' a passing and groundless panic ' which required no excep- tional action on the part of the Government. When, then. Lord Canning punished a mutinous regiment by dis- banding it, when the Commander-in-Chief announced to the army that he considered simple dismissal as a fitting punishment for a native officer caught red-handed in preaching mutiny to his own men, and when, finally, the Governor-General, notifying to the army the doom of the 34th N. I., declared to the sipahis that similar conduct on their part would subject them to punishment ' sharp and certain,' the plotters in high places must have smiled contemptuously at the conception of sharp and certain punishment entertained by their rulers. Notwithstanding the belief of the Government that the discontent was local, almost every post brought informa- 62 The First Move at Mirath. tion that it was not confined to Bengal, that it had shown itself in other places than Lakhnao, that regiments, widely separated from one another, were equally infected. In the important station of Mirath, situated nearly midway between the Ganges and the Jamnah, thirty-six miles from the imperial city of Dehli, the sipahis had become impregnated with the idea that the flour sold in the bazaars had been purposely mixed with the bones of bullocks, ground to a fine powder. The conspirators who had fabricated this story were the men who had invented the tale of the greased cartridges, and they had fabricated it with a like object. Nothing tended more to prove the proneness of the minds of the sipahis to accept any story against the masters they had served for a century than the readiness with which they accepted this impossible rumour. They were not to be persuaded that it was untrue. They displayed more than ordinary care in the purchase of the meal for their daily consumption, and, still unsatisfied, vented their discontent by the burning of houses and by the omission of the ordinary salute to their officers. They soon took a very much more decided step in the path of mutiny. A parade of the 3d Native Light Cavalry had been ordered for the morning of the 6th of May. When, on the preceding evening, the ordinary cartridges were issued to the men, eighty-five troopers of that regiment declined to receive them. In vain did their commanding officer ex- postulate ; in vain did the Brigadier attempt to persuade them. Such a breach of discipline could not be passed over. The men were confined, were then brought with all speed to a court-martial, composed entirely of native officers, and were sentenced by the members of that court to periods of imprisonment, with hard labour, vary- ing from six to ten years. Under the orders of the Com- mander-in-Chief, to whom the question had been specially The Mutineers p2inished, 63 referred, the General commanding the Mirath division, General Hewitt, prepared to put into execution the find- ing of the court-martial on the mutineers of the 3d N. L. C. He ordered a general parade for the morning of the 9th. There were present at that parade at daybreak, a regi- ment of Carabineers, the 60th Rifles, the 3d Light Cavalry (native), the nth and 20th regiments N. I., a troop of horse-artillery, and a light field-battery. The condemned mutineers were marched to the ground, were stripped of their accoutrements, then every man was shackled and ironed, and they were all marched to the gaol, a building about two miles distant from the canton- ment, and guarded solely by natives. There were sullen looks among the armed troopers of the 3d, and an acute observer might have detected sympathetic glances from the sipahis. But there was no open demonstration. Like Lord Canning and his advisers after the disarming of the 34th N. L, only three days earlier. General Hewitt and the officers at Mirath congratulated one another on the promptitude and success with which a sharp punishment had been dealt out to men who had defied the authority they had sworn to obey. But the acts of the 19th N. I. at Barhampur, of the 34th at Barrackpur, of the men whom Major Cavenagh was carefully watching in Fort William, of the deluded sipahis near Lakhnao, and of the 7th N. L. C. at Mirath, were but the precursors to a more terrible tragedy. The great movement, of which those acts were only the pre- monitory symptoms, was, on that 9th day of May, on the eve of its outbreak. CHAPTER VI. THE REVOLT AT MIRATH AND THE SEIZURE OF DEHLI The parade at Mfrath, the particulars of which are told in the last chapter, took place on a Saturday morning. The sipdhis who assisted at it had then the remainder of that day, the following night, and the early part of Sunday, in which to mature the plans rising in their minds. In their opinion the eighty-five men who had refused to take the cartridges, and of whose degradation they had been witnesses on that Saturday morning, were simply martyrs for their faith. They had been a little bolder than their comrades : that was all. The idea which had prompted their refusal was common to all the sipahis at Mirath. They, too, had lost faith in their masters, and their minds had been equally ready to believe the stories regarding bone dust and greased cartridges which design- ing men were daily pouring into their ears. They had not been insensible to the reproaches which their ironed and shackled comrades had cast upon them as they marched off, prisoners, to the gaol. They felt that they should deserve these reproaches if they were to con- tinue silent witnesses of their degradation. They knew, though the Government wilfully shut their eyes to the fact, that the feelings under which their comrades had acted were wide-spread among the sipahis of the Bengal army. That night's post would convey to every station in India the story of the punishment of their comrades, and of Preparations for Revolt at Mirath. 65 their own passive acquiescence. Such a disgrace was not to be borne. They must, before the world was forty-eight hours older, atpne for their apparent acquiescence in the punishment of the men whose views they shared by action which should rouse all India. In the consultations of that Saturday afternoon and evening the sipahis of the three regiments called to mind that it was the custom of the English to hold Church parade on Sunday, morning and evening, and that on such occasions the men wore only their side-arms. The evening seemed to them more suitable for their enterprise than the morning, for in India there is no twilight, and the darkness which would rapidly super- vene on the setting of the sun would greatly increase the confusion which the surprise of the sudden rising would produce. But little occurred in Mirath on that eventful Sunday to warn the English of the coming danger. It was re- collected afterwards that the native servants, alike in the barracks and in private houses, had strangely absented themselves from their customary duties ; but no suspicions were aroused. It was the very height of the blasting season which scorches up vegetation, and renders the outer air scarcely endurable until the time of sunset approaches. The Sunday, then, passed like other Sundays, and when the bells began to toll for the evening service nothing had occurred to give any warning of the storm which was ready to burst. But as the residents and the troops marched to the sacred edifice it became evident that some great event was pending. The native nurse of the chaplain had warned him, as he was setting out with his wife, that they would have a fight with the sipahis. On their way the church-. goers heard the unwonted sounds of bugling and musket E 66 The Mir at h Sipdhis rise in Revolt. firing. They saw bodies of armed men hurrying on their way as if to a rendezvous. Then there succeeded columns of smoke, as if many bungalows had been set on fire. In a moment more the whole truth burst upon them. The native troops at Mirath had revolted. Far differently had that day been passed in the lines of the native troops. There the utmost excitement had prevailed. Conspiring makes conspirers suspicious. Conscious of their own meditated treason, the sipdhis attributed to their masters designs not dissimilar to their own. It is very doubtful whether there were at Mirath, at this crisis, any of those who were deep in the conspiracy : who had fostered the movement from its very birth ; who were in the confidence of the Maulavi and his col- leagues. Their place was occupied by the committees they had caused to be formed in each regiment. But the sipdhfs, excited, suspicious, ready to believe the idlest tale as they were, required leading. On this occasion the men of the nth N. I. seemed inclined to hang back. To bring them to the right pitch, and to confirm possible wavering on the part of any of the others, the regi- mental committees took care that the most telling rumours should be circulated. Nowhere in the world does rumour rise so easily or take such exaggerated forms as in India. It appeals to a people singularly simple, and yet singularly superstitious. The fables of their religion teach them to believe in the super- natural, and for them the improbable is an ever-living power. When, then, rumour told them that the Euro- pean troops at the station were preparing for them the fate of their manacled comrades, they believed the rumour. Hence they determined to rise and rescue those comrades whilst the Europeans should be unarmed acs;! unsuspicious, The First Phases of the Revolt. 67 They waited, then, impatiently, how impatiently only those can know who are waiting for a given signal to launch themselves on an enterprise which shall ensure glory or death, until the church bells should give intima- tion that the coast was comparatively clear. Then, when they heard the tolling, their impatience could not be re- strained. Armed with sabre and pistol, the men of the 3d Cavalry galloped to the gaol to rescue their imprisoned comrades, whilst the sipdhis of the nth and 20th hurried from their lines in tumultuous disorder. The troopers, on reaching the gaol, loosened the gratings of the cells in which their comrades were confined, the native guard fraternising with and assisting them. It took but a short time to drag out the manacled prisoners. A smith was handy. In a few minutes the fetters were removed, and the eighty-five rode back, mounted behind their deliverers, to the regimental lines. When they arrived there they found that matters had progressed to a point from which there was no receding. Some of the European officers of the 20th N. I. had been shot, and Colonel Finnis of the nth had been riddled to death by the sipahis of the 20th whilst endeavouring to persuade the men of his own regiment to remain true to their salt. Not for the moment only, but throughout that long night, first the mutinous soldiery, then the scum of the population and the prisoners whom they had released, were absolute masters of the situation. The English authorities, civil and military, taken by surprise, had ap- parently lost their heads. Those in the highest places, the General, the Brigadier, the officers of the staff, were paralysed by the suddenness and tremendous character of the shock. Colonel Custance, commanding the Cara- bineers, on the first sound of the tumult, had ordered out his men, and had sent to ask for instructions. After a 68 The Authorities lose Their Heads. long delay the General sent to order him to proceed, not to the parade grounds of the mutinous regiments, which were close by, but to a gaol at a distance of some miles. The services of this gallant regiment were thus rendered unavailable at the time and at the place when and where they were most required. The night had well set in when General Hewitt, Brigadier Wilson, the 6oth Rifles, the artillery, and the officers of the mutinous regiments reached the general parade ground. Across that ground the troops deployed inco line, and joined by the Cara- bineers, who fortunately had lost their way and had re- turned, marched in the full expectation of meeting the revolted sipahis. But these had disappeared, and no one knew whither they had gone. Believing that they had moved round to attack the quarters of the Europeans, the Brigadier, Archdale Wilson, advised the General to return for the protection of the women, the children, and the barracks. The General assented, and gave the necessary orders. On their way back the soldiers had some evi- dence of the damage already done by the mutineers. Lurid shoots of flame showed that many of the European bungalows were blazing. Some unarmed plunderers were seen, but no sipahis. Where were they ? Captain Rosser of the Carabineers offered, if he were permitted, to lead a squadron of his regiment and some H. A. guns along the Dehli road, to ascertain if they had taken that route. The suggestion was not accepted, and subsequently the authorities denied that it had ever been made. It would seem that the officers in high places were sadly wanting in that spirit of enterprise and audacity which constitute the essential element of a good soldier. They would hazard nothing, not even the lives of a reconnoitring party. Contenting himself with establish- ing a few pickets, the General bivouacked his force Terrors of the Night at Mirath. 69 for the remainder of the night on the European parade ground. For the residents at Mirath, for the women, the children the civil section of the Europeans and Eurasians, that night was full of horror. The scum of the native population and the unchained gaol-birds had the field to themselves. Most thoroughly did they do their congenial work. The Com- missioner, Mr Greathed, warned first by an officer of the 3d Native Cavalry, and afterwards by an Afghan pensioner, had, with his wife and other English women, taken refuge on the terraced roof of his house. Against a foe whose weapon was fire that terrace was no sure hiding-place. But for the fidelity — I am happy to add, the by no means rare fidelity — of his native servants he and those with him must have perished in the flames. One servant in par- ticular distinguished himself. He persuaded the rabble to move off to search for his master in an outhouse some distance off, and during their sudden absence Greathed, his friends and family, had time to descend from their perilous position and crouch in the empty garden. Others were less fortunate. Wives, left without protection during the enforced absence of their husbands, were butchered without mercy, and children were slaughtered under the very eyes of their mothers. Many instances of the devo- tion and presence of mind of English women could be given if space permitted. Those who did escape owed their safety to the possession of these qualities, but the roll of those who suffered was a long one. When day at length dawned, it dawned over a dismantled Mirath. The English men and women who had been saved crept from their hiding-places to see, in the mangled corpses which lay by the wayside, in the blackened ruins of houses, in the furniture of European make thrown out of the dwelling- houses, smashed and destroyed, abundant evidence of the 70 Feebleness of Action at Miratk. thoroughness with which the ' scum ' and the gaol-birds had done their work.^ But of those destroyers not one was to be seen. They had done their deeds in darkness, and had slunk away to their homes when light came. Nor was a single sipahf visible. The quiet prevailing in the places so recently the scenes of terrible outrage and disorder was the quiet of the charnel house. I left the English troops bivouacked on the European parade ground. On that parade ground they slept whilst the enormities, of which I have given an indication, were being perpetrated in the civil lines. Nor, when day broke, did the morning light give greater energy to the councils of their commander. The General, it is true, speedily recognised that the sipahis had quitted Mirath. He presumed, also, that they had made for Dehli, thirty-six miles distant. There was not now time for the most energetic soldier to have followed and caught them, for it was clear that, with a start of eight hours, the 3d Cavalry, at all events, would be there before them. But the idea of pursuit never occurred to anyone. The prevailing idea was how to secure the unthreatened Mirath. There were some good men at Mirath, but on this morning of the nth of May not one of those in high authority was in the full possession of his faculties. The brains of all were paralysed by the blow of the previous evening. The General contented himself, then, with making a recon- naisance to the right of the Dehli road. It was deemed to be too late, and it was then certainly too late to send d warning to the Dehli authorities of the danger awaiting them. But the strangest thing of all was that no effort ^ It deserves to be recorded that all the natives of Mirath did not join in the outrages, an outline of which I have given. For instance, a Muhammadan in the city sheltered two families at great danger to himself. The servants, as a rule, showed the greatest devotion to their foreign masters. Inaction the Order of the Day. 7 1 was made to punish the marauders and murderers of the previous night. ' It is a marvellous thing,' wrote, some time later, the Commissioner, to whom the Government entrusted the drawing up of a report of the proceedings of that terrible night and of that shameful morning, ' that with the dreadful proof of the night's work in every direc- tion, though groups of savages were actually seen gloating over the mangled and mutilated remains of the victims, the column did not take immediate vengeance on the Sadr bazaar and its environs, crowded as the whole place was with wretches hardly concealing their fiendish satis- faction.' But so it was. Inaction was the order of the day. The authorities contented themselves with collecting and placing in the theatre the bodies of the murdered men and women, and left their murderers, unpunished, to the full enjoyment of their ill-gotten gains. Civil and military authorities vied with one another to attain per- fection in the art of * how not to do it' Meanwhile the sipahis, having released their imprisoned comrades, and set on the populace and the gaol-birds to keep their late masters well occupied during the night, had taken the road to Dehli. It is due to some of them to state that they did not quit Mirath before they had seen to a place of safety those officers whom they most respected. This remark applies specially to the men of the nth N. L, who had gone most reluctantly into the movement. Before they left, two sipahis of that regiment had escorted two ladies with their children to the Cara- bineer barracks. They had then rejoined their comrades. Of these the troopers of the 3d Cavalry took the lead, anxious to gain the bridge across the Jamnah before tidings of the outbreak should reach the English authori- ties. Knowing the English as they did, how, when en- gaged with them on service, they had ever displayed a 72 The Mutineers enter Dehli, daring and an energy which had inspired their native comrades, they listened for some time anxiously for the sound of the galloping of the horses of the Carabineers. But when hour succeeded hour, and silence still reigned on all sides, they lost all apprehension, and galloping on with a light heart, caught sight of the minarets of the Jamf Masjid glittering in the morning sun. Spurring their horses, they reached the waters of the Jamnah, crossed by the bridge of boats which spanned it, cut down the toll-keeper on the other side, fired the toll-house, slew a solitary Englishman whom they met ; then hastening to the palace of the King, clamoured for admittance, declaring that they had killed the English at Mirath, and had come to fight for the Faith. We must leave them there whilst we examine the relative positions of the English and the Mughal Court at the Imperial city. The city of Dehli had and has still a circumference of five and a half miles. That of the King's palace, within its walls, is nearly one and a half. The city itself I shall describe when I come to the operations undertaken by the handful of soldiers who laid siege to it. For the moment our attention must be riveted to the palace. The palace, more correctly called the inner fort or citadel, was built by the Emperor Shdh Jahdn (1638-58). It is a magnificent series of structures, reached by a flight of 1 13 steps, and covered on its eastern face by the Jamnah, It contained some magnificent buildings : the Diwdni Am, or public Hall of Audience, built of red sandstone ; the Diwani Khass, or Privy Council Chamber, of white marble, ornamented with gold, and inlaid ; the King's Baths, the Moti Masjid, or Pearl Mosque, a real architectural gem. Above the entrance gate was a turret twenty feet high The Palace — and the King. 73 commanding, to the left, a magnificent view of the Jamf Masjid, of a white Jain temple, and of the town. Straight in front of the entrance gate was the Chandnf Chauk, or Silver Market ; to the right, outside the walls of the city, were the Jamnah, Hindu Rao's house, and the ridge, so famous during the siege, at the moment indicating the direction of the lines of the native infantry regiments which constituted the British garrison. Within the fort were gardens laid out in the formal style of the east, and along the river front were a number of marble pavi- lions, generally octagonal, covered with gilded domes, some of them of great beauty. The principal occupant of this inner citadel was Bahadur Shah, titular King of Dehli, the twentieth suc- cessor of the illustrious Akbar. He was King of Dehlf in name, and in name only. The empire had departed from the feeble hands of his predecessors before the English had become a power in India. The Khor^sani adventurer Nddir Shah had plundered the palace in 1739. Less than ten years later, the Afghan Ahmad Shah Durdni had repeated the infliction. In 1788 the rebel Ghulam Kadir had blinded, within the palace, the reign- ing Emperor Shah Alam. For fifteen years the city had, then, been occupied by the Marathds. The English had made their first acquaintance with it in 1803, when Lord Lake rescued the blinded representative of the Mughals from the tyranny of the Central Indian conquerors. From that date the English had maintained the representative of the Mughal in splendour and comfort in the halls and palace of his ancestors. There, in the citadel within Dehli, his will was supreme. It did not extend an inch beyond it. Wisely, then, the English — when, under the able guidance of Marquess Wellesley, they assumed the responsibilities of empire — did not restore to the Mughal 74 Sentiments of the Ring towards the English the power which he had already lost. Less wisely, per- haps, they had permitted him to enjoy the shadow after he had lost the substance. At the moment, and for some time previously, the feelings of the King and his family had been considerably excited against the English ruler, in consequence of corre- spondence which had taken place with reference to the succession. Bahadur Shah was an old man. A rumour had reached him so far back as 1849-50, that Lord Dalhousie had not been indisposed to deprive the House of Taimur of the shadow of splendour still remaining to it. Rumour had told the truth. The acknowledged heir to Bahadur Shah, Prince Dard Bakht, had died in 1849. The next in the strict line of succession, Prince Fakir-ud- din, had been born a pensioner. Lord Dalhousie was inclined to admit his accession to the chiefship of the family upon less favourable conditions than those which had been recognised in the case of his father. In plain language, Lord Dalhousie believed that the natives of India, the princes as well as the people, had become * entirely indifferent to the condition of the King of Dehli or his position,' and, considering the danger of retaining an ' imperiurn in imperio ' in the very heart of the ancient capital of India, he had desired to take the opportunity of the death of the immediate representative of the House of Taimur to sweep away all the privileges and preroga- tives which had kept alive a pretentious mock royalty in the heart of the empire. The Court of Directors gave Lord Dalhousie full power to act according to the views he had imbibed on this subject, but there was much difference of opinion in the India House, and Lord Dalhousie wisely deferred action. Meanwhile, rumours of the impending change had reached the palace, and had roused the most furious Warranted by Facts. 75 opposition, especially on the part of the favourite wife of the old King. This lady, in the manner of favourite wives generally, desired to secure the succession, with all its privileges, for her son, Jawan Bakht, then (1850) a boy of eleven. There existed at that time a strange ignorance of native feeling and native habits of thought in the Council of the Governor-General, and, notwithstanding the passionate entreaties from Dehlf, Lord Dalhousie and his advisers wrote a despatch to the Home Government recommending them to acknowledge the succession of the eldest surviving son, Fakir-ud-din ; and urging that, on the death of Bahddur Shdh, the opportunity should be taken to utilise the claims of the youngest son by obtaining from the eldest the desired concessions. Prince Fakir-ud-din was induced to consent to this ignoble ar- rangement, though he hated himself for his weakness. But his death, in 1856, threw back matters into the channel in which they were before his consent had been obtained. Lord Canning was then Governor-General, and at that time Lord Canning, could see only with the eyes of the Councillors whom I have described. In reply to the urgent solicitations of the Queen to nominate her son, he determined not only to refuse her request, but to recog- nise as heir-apparent the eldest surviving son of the King. He determined likewise to exhort terms less favourable to native ideas than those which had been wrung from his deceased brother, for, in addition to the renuncia- tions to which that brother had agreed, he stipulated that the succeeding prince should renounce the title of King. It is right that the reader should bear in mind these transactions when recollecting the conduct of the repre- sentatives of the House of Taimur when, on that eventful 76 The Mutmeers demand an Audience, May morning (May ii, 1857) ^^ troopers of the 3d Cavalry stgod under the windows of the King demanding admittance and support. The King was an old man, ruled to a great extent by a favourite wife, whose hopes had been dashed to the ground by the British Govern- ment. He himself, his courtiers, his sons, his depen- dents, knew that the fiat had gone forth from Calcutta which, on his death, would humble to the dust the House of Taimur. We cannot wonder that their feelings should have prompted them to seize any opportunity which might present itself. We cannot wonder that, with the shadow of the despoiler before them, his threats ringing in their ears, they should have decided to strike a blow for the restoration of the family honours : to court death rather than submit to disgrace. Neither in the past nor in the present has a single man of the two hundred and fifty millions of natives of India condemned them for their action on that memorable morning. The reverse was the case. The sympathy of India was with them, and it was the conviction that it would be so which decided them. Attached to the citadel, and representing British interests at the palace, were the Commissioner of Dehli, Mr Fraser, and the Commandant of the Palace Guards, Captain Douglas. No sooner did the aged King hear the voices of the troopers under his windows than he sent to summon Captain Douglas to inquire the mean- ing of their presence. Captain Douglas pleaded ignor- ance, but, confident in the magic of the appearance of a British officer, declared he would go down to speak to them, and send them away. The King, apparently ignor- ant of their purpose, and yet dreading the reason of their presence, begged the young Englishman not to expose his life. The King's physician added his en- The British Residents are Massacred. j) treaties to those of his master. Douglas contented him- self, then, with entering the verandah and ordering the troopers to depart, as their presence was an annoyance to the King. The men scornfully defied him. It hap- pened that the sipahis on duty at the palace belonged to the 38th N. I., the regiment which had successfully defied Lord Dalhousie's order to proceed to Burma but five years before. They were disloyal to the core. When, therefore, the troopers of the 3d Cavalry, maddened by the sight of Douglas, attempted to force an entrance into the palace, they admitted them as comrades. The troopers, once admitted, made short work of every Englishman they found there. They cut down to the death Mr Eraser, Captain Douglas, the chaplain, Mr Jennings, his daughter, and a young lady staying with them. Miss Clifford. The collector, Mr Hutchinson, fell a victim also to their barbarity. They were not alone in their thirst for blood. Not only had the guards of the 38th N. I. fraternised with them, but the orderlies of the King and the rabble vied with them in their savage fury. There is no reason to believe that the King gave any sanction to their proceedings. For the moment the old man was absolutely without authority. The soldiery had forced their way into his splendid Diwanf Am, and had turned it into a barrack. At that crisis they were the masters. Outside the palace, especially in the quarter inhabited by the European residents engaged in mercantile pursuits, the carnage was even greater. The Dehli Bank, supposed to contain treasure, was one of the buildings first attacked. Defended with gallantry by the manager, Mr Beresford, and his family, it was stormed and gutted, and the de- fenders were slain. The Dekli Gazette press and its inmates met the same fate. The English church was 78 The Native Regiments at Dehli stormed and rifled. Every house, in fact, occupied by European or Eurasian was attacked, and every Christian upon whom hands could be laid was killed. There was no mercy and there was no quarter. Meanwhile, in the cantonments, matters were not going much better. The cantonments for the native brigade at Dehli was situated on the famous ridge, about two miles from the city. There were quartered the 38th, the 54th, and the 74th N. I., and a battery of native artillery. The commanding officer was Brigadier Graves. On that event- ful morning Graves had ordered a parade of the native troops, to have read to them the proceedings of the court- martial on Isrf Pdndf, the mutinous Jdmadar of Barrackpur. Some of those who were present thought they detected in the manner of the sipdhfs, whilst the proceedings were being read, signs of sympathy with the condemned man. But there was no overt act, and the sipdhis were dismissed to their lines in the usual manner. It subsequently transpired that sipahis from Mirath had arrived in the lines the previous day, and had communicated to the regiments located there the intentions of the Mirath native brigade But for the moment all was quiet. The officers had re- turned to their quarters, and had eaten their breakfasts, when they were suddenly startled by the intimation that the native troops at Mirath had mutinied, and that the advanced guard of them, the 3d Cavalry, had galloped across the bridge. So great was the faith of the officers in their own men, and in British superiority, that those at Dehli never for a moment believed that the outbreak was aught but an isolated mutiny, which would be speedily quelled. The European force at Mirath must be, they thought, on the heels of the mutinied sipdhfs, and whilst their own native brigade would show them a bold front the Carabineers and 60th Rifles would assail them from Gradually join the Revolt, 79 behind. With a light heart, then, the officers of the 54th N. I., and of the battery of native artillery, accompanied their men, to whom the sacred duty of defence had been committed, towards the city gates. Their dream of confidence was not of long duration. Some men of the 38th, at the main-guard, set the example of revolt. Ordered to fire on the approaching troopers, they replied with insult. The 54th then fired, some in the air, some on their own officers. Colonel Ripley was wounded ; Smith, Burrowes, Edwards, and Waterfield were shot dead. The 74th N. I. was then ordered to the front. Their colonel addressed them, reminded them of their past good conduct, and called upon volunteers to accom- pany him to the Kashmir Gate, adding that now was the time for the regiment to prove its loyalty. The sipdhis stepped forward to a man, and with the same hope which had characterised the officers of the S4th, those of the 74th led on their men. At the main-guard they found some men of the 54th N. I. who had returned from the city. The din within the walls of the city was now overwhelming. The sipahis themselves evidently dreaded lest the strong English force stationed at Mirath should have arrived. As deeply imbued as their comrades with the spirit of revolt, they resolved, then, before they cast their lot with those who had * pronounced,' to wait the turn of events. They remained halted, silent and thoughtful, at the main-guard. They were still there when a terrible explosion within the city shook that building to its foundations. In the heart of the city, at no great distance from the palace, was the great magazine, full of munitions of war On that morning there were in the magazine Lieutenant George Willoughby, in charge of it, Lieutenants Forrest and Raynor, of the Ordnance Commissariat department, Conductors Buckley, Shaw, Scully, and Crow, and Ser- 8o Willoughby and the Dehli Magazine. geants Edwards and Stewart. It would seem that at about eight o'clock the magistrate of Dehli, Sir Theophilus Metcalfe, came down to the magazine with the informa- tion that mutineers were crossing the river, and asking for two guns to defend the bridge. But it was soon realised that the bridge was alread^y in possession of the mutineers. Metcalfe then proceeded with Willoughby to ascertain whether the city gate had been closed to the rebels. When it became known that not only had it not been closed, but that the mutineers had been admitted to .the palace, Willoughby at once realised the situation Confident that his turn would soon come, he set to work with his subordinates to render the magazine as defen- sible as possible. The gates were closed and barricaded, guns were placed at salient points, double charged with grape, and a central position was established, from which the guns could bear upon any point which might be forced. Then came the crucial point. All the subordinate workers in the magazine were natives. Willoughby and his com- rades hoped for a short time that these men, associated with their officers for so many years, would be faithful, and directed that arms should be served out to them. The manner in which these were received revealed to the few Europeans the fact that they would have to de- pend solely on their own energies. The natives, wrote Lieutenant Forrest,^ accepted the arms most reluctantly, 'and appeared to be not only in a state of excitement, but also of insubordination, as they refused to obey any orders issued by the Europeans.' Knowing it to be quite impossible to resist for long a serious attack, and re- solved that so much valuable munitions of war should not, if they could help it, fall into the hands of the Queen's enemies, these gallant Englishmen then caused a train to ^Lieutenant Forrest's Report, dated May 27, 1857. . The Magazine partiaity exploded. St; be laid, communicating with the powder magazine, to bq fired only when every other resource should be exhausted. These arrangements had just been made when sipdhis from the palace came to demand the surrender of the magazine in the name of the King of Dehli. No answer having been returned to this summons, the King, or some- one acting on his behalf, sent down scaling ladders. On these being erected against the wall, the whole of the native establishment, climbing to the top of the wall, deserted by means of them, and joined the rebels. These consisted chiefly of the sipdhis of the nth and 20th N. I. from Mirath. Against these a fire was kept up as long as possible, but the superiority of numbers was overwhelm- ing. Still, a gallant defence was maintained. Nor was it until Forrest and Buckley had been disabled, and defence had become hopeless, that Willoughby gave the order to fire the train. Not one of the garrison expected to escape with his life. But it was otherwise ordered. Scully, who fired the train, and four of his comrades, were never seen again. They certainly perished ; but Willoughby and Forrest succeeded in reaching the Kashmir gate. Raynor and Buckley, too, escaped with their lives. The loss of the assailants was far more severe. It has never, I believe, been mathematically computed, but it may be reckoned by hundreds. Nor were the casualties caused by that explosion the most important consequence of it. It was the first reply to the general revolt ; it was the first warn- ing to the King and to the sipdhis of the nature of the men whose vengeance they had dared ; the first intimation to the; rebels of the stern and resolute character of the Englishman when thoroughly roused. It was the sound of this explosion, occurring about four o'clock in the after- noon, which startled the English officers and sipahis assembled at the main-guard. It was the sign for action F 82 Escape of the Officers of the Native Regiments. to the latter. To them it plainly indicated that the rebels had penetrated to the heart of the city ; that, for the moment, mutiny had triumphed. So, at least, thought the sipdhis of the company of the 38th N. I. which had moved up to the main-guard. Raising their muskets to the shoulder, the men of that company fired a volley into the group of officers near them. Gordon, the field-officer of the day, fell dead from his horse without a groan. Smith and Reveley of the 74th N. I. shared the same fate. There was nothing for it for the survivors but to run. There was a way of escape, perilous indeed, but certain for the time. This was to dash through the embrasure in the bastion skirting the courtyard of the main-guard, to drop thirty feet into the ditch, and ascending the opposite scarp, to gain the glacis, and thence the jungle beyond it. In an instant the conviction took possession of the minds of the yet unwounded officers that this way of escape must be attempted. Suddenly, however, the despairing cries of the women in the upper room of the main-guard reminded them that the escape which was easy to men might be impossible for the other sex. However, there was no other, so, conducting the women to the embrasure, the officers fastened their belts together, and whilst some of them descended first, the others from above helped the women to slide down. The whizzing of a round-shot over their heads hastened their movements, and at last, in a shorter time than had seemed possible, the descent was accomplished. More difficult was the climbing to the glacis; but this came to a fortunate end. Then the fugitives pressed on into the jungle, thence some to the cantonments, others towards the Metcalfe House. But in neither of these places was there safety. The sipahis were by this time thoroughly roused. There was The Flight from Dehli, 83 nothing for it but flight to some less threatened spot. So men, women, and children sallied forth : alike those who had remained and those but just arrived from the main- guard. Their sufferings were terrible. They had to undergo physical tortures, and the still less endurable tortures of the mind. Tearing from their persons every- thing in the shape of glitter or ornament, crouching \i\ by-ways, wading rivers, carrying the children as best they could, hiding in hollows, enduring the maltreatment of villagers, and the abuse of stray parties of wanderers, hungry, thirsty, weary, at times hunted, they at length reached shelter. Some found their way to Mirath, some to Karndl, others to Ambalah. A few perished on the way; some giving up the struggle from fatigue, others succumbing to disease. The behaviour of the women of the party was such as to make the men proud of their companions. When Captain Wood sank exhausted, un- able to proceed, it was his wife, and his wife's friend, Mrs Peile, who supported him to the haven of safety. Nor was this a solitary instance. When it was found, on arriving at the night's bivouac, that one or more were missing, the less fatigued of the party went back to search for and bring them in. Generally the search was fruit- less, for the scum of the population, which would have shrunk from attacking a party, had no mercy for a solitary invalid. It is due, however, to the natives to add that they were not all imbued with the hatred which animated a section of them. There were instances of assistance given by some of them, men of high and low caste alike to the suffering and the wounded. There are those alive now who owed their safety to the compassion felt for them in their terrible straits by the kind-hearted Hind, and the loyal Muhammadan. Meanwhile, in and immediately around the Imperial 84 Rebellion triumphant in Dehli. city, rebellion was triumphant. And in those early days rebellion had absolutely no mercy. Some fifty Christians, Europeans and Eurasians, who lived in the Darya-ganj, the English quarter of the Imperial city, had at the first sound of alarm taken refuge in one of the strongest houses of the quarter, and had there barricaded them- selves. But a handful of men and women, ill-armed and without supplies, was powerless against the roused rabble of the revolted capital. The house was speedily stormed, and the defenders were dragged to the palace, and lodged there in an underground apartment, without windows, and with only one door. After a stay there of five days they were taken out, led to a courtyard, and there massacred. Their bodies were thrown into carts, and were transferred thence to the waters of the Jamnah. One woman, terrified more for her three children than for herself, escaped, with them, the fate of her companions by declaring herself a convert to the faith of Islam. After that i6th of May there remained not in Dehli a single Christian. The King of Dehli, Bahadur Shah, had, meanwhile, assumed the responsibilities of the position which had been forced upon him. It is more than probable that the old man, left to himself, would have shrunk from the posi- tion. Outside of the walls of his citadel he had never wielded power, nor, up to the morning of May nth, had he ever conceived it possible that he should assert himself against the western people who had conquered Hindustan. Though such a question might have been mooted in his harem, he had regarded the conversation as the wild 'chatter of irresponsible frivolity.' Yet, on that memorable morn- ing, the position had been forced upon him. The mutinied sipahis, who had bivouacked in his Hall of Audience, who had expelled the English from the city, who boasted their determination to drive them into the sea, must have a Bahadur Shah is proclaimed, 85 leader. Who so fit for such a post as the representative of the Mughal, the descendant of that illustrious Akbar, who had accomplished the union of India ? From such a position it was impossible that Bahadur Shah should recoil. Had he desired ever so much to hang back, and there is reason to suppose he was by no means eager to assume the foremost post, with its dangers, its responsi- bilities, its humiliations, he had a family the members of which were resolved that he should bind round his head 'the golden round.' There was the ambitious Queen, whose projects two Governors-General had in succession thwarted ; her son, young, handsome, and full of ambi- tion ; her step-sons, the eldest of whom knew that, though in a certain sense the English would allow him to succeed his father, he would be shorn of all that had made succes- sion desirable, even of the royal title. In these, and in the ambitious nobles by whom they were surrounded, and in whose bosoms dwelt the traditions of a past which had not been without glory, the 'irresponsible frivolity' ot which I have spoken loudly asserted its influence. Under the pressure of that influence Bahadur Shah agreed to assume the responsible position forced upon him. The revolted soldiery throughout India were called upon to fight for the restoration of the Mughal. The 'cry' was not altogether a happy cry for the revolters. Though it might conciliate and bind together many Muhammadans, it could scarcely fail to alienate the Marathd princes who had contested empire with the Mughal family. The re- sult proved that the princes of Central India preferred the safe position they held under British suzerainty to aiding mutinied soldiers to restore a dynasty which they had been the first to trample under foot. Such thoughts did not, in those early days, present themselves to the minds of the * irresponsible chatterers.' They believed that the 86 The Beginning of the Strife. expulsion of the English from Dehli, and the proclamation of Bahddur Shah as sovereign of India, was the consum- mation of the movement prematurely set on foot at Mfrath. Unfortunately for their hopes it was only the untimely beginning. CHAPTER VII. THE EFFECT, THROUGHOUT INDIA, OF THE SEIZURE OF DEHLI. The story of the events of the loth of May at Mirath, and of the nth at Dehh', came as a surprise alike to the revolters all over India and to the Government. It came as a surprise to the former because the astute men who had fomented the ill-feeling against the British, which by this time had become pretty general, had laid down as a cardinal principle that there were to be no isolated out- breaks ; that the explosion should take place on the same day all over the Bengal Presidency ; and they had fixed upon Sunday, the 31st of May, as the day of the general rising. But the chief conspirators had to employ a large number of instruments. The rashness or premature action of a single instrument may destroy the best laid plot. The heads of the conspiracy had corrupted the 3d Native Cavalry and the 20th Regiment N. I., and had formed their committees in these regiments. But, at a critical con- juncture, these latter had been unable to restrain the rank and file of the regiments from premature action. Excited to fever pitch, eighty-five men of the 3d L. C. had, with the sympathy of their comrades, refused to receive the proffered cartridges. Brought to trial for the offence, they had been condemned, sentenced, and lodged in gaol. This sentence had been too great a stimulus to the passions of the troopers to allow them to await patiently the day fixed 88 The Revolt at Mirath p^^emature. upon. They saw that the English were unsuspicious, and they believed that the plot, so far as Mirath was concerned, might, by a prompt rising, be brought to a successful issue. In that events proved them to be right. But they had lost sight of the fact that, by acting solely for their own hand, they were imperilling the great principle which had been impressed upon them by their committees, and, with it, the general success aimed at by their chiefs. This premature action proved ultimately as fortunate for the English as disastrous to the cause of revolt. A blow which, struck simultaneously all over India, might have been irresistible lost more than half its power when delivered piecemeal and at intervals.^ On the 1 2th of May a telegram from Agra conveyed to the Government, in Calcutta, the information that the native cavalry at Mirath had risen, had set fire to several officers' houses and to their own lines, and had killed or wounded all the English officers and soldiers they had come across. It is not too much to record that the atti- ^ This is not mere surmise. Mr Cracroft Wilson, of the Civil Service, who was selected by the Government of India, after the repression of the Mutiny, to ascertain who were the guilty and who deserving of reward among the natives of the North-west, has recorded his conviction, derived from oral information, that the 31st of May was the day fixed upon by the conspirators for a general rising. Committees had been formed in each regiment, and to these alone was intrusted the general scheme of the plot. The sipahis were directed to obey only the orders of the regimental com- mittees. It is probable that the very severe punishment dealt out to the eighty-five men of the 3d L. C. so excited the men that they overrode the directions of their committee and insisted upon prompt action. From information I have obtained, in conversation with natives of the Upper Provinces, I am convinced that the theory broached by Mr Cracroft Wilson is true. It is very difficult to induce the natives who lived and took a part in the great uprising of 1857 to open their minds regarding it. But I have heard from some of them suScient to produce conviction in my mind that a day was fixed, and that the premature action of the loth and nth of May was considered to have greatly damaged the chances of success. Lo7^d Canning hears of the Mirath Revolt. 89 tude of the Government on receiving this telegram was one of blank dismay. It was so little expected. Only two . days before, Lord Canning had written a minute strongly supporting disbandment as a severe punishment to a regiment which should mutiny. Mr Dorin, the senior of his colleagues, had recorded an opinion of the same character. The military member of Council, General Low, little realising the nature of the catastrophe he had to face, had suggested that, after all, the conduct of the sipahfs might be due rather to actual dread of injury to their caste than to disaffection. Yet, on the 12th, these rulers were told that disaffection had reached its highest point ; that a whole regiment, far from fearing disbandment, had actually disbanded itself, after slaying its officers. Then, indeed, they must have realised that, in their dealings with the 19th, with the 34th, with the men whose conduct Cavenagh had brought to notice, they had been pitiably weak when they had thought they had been strong ; that from the first they had misjudged and misunderstood the whole business ; that the dis- affection, far from being confined to Bengal proper, was probably general — in a word, that they had been living in a fool's paradise. It is due to Lord Canning to state that, within a short time of his perusal of the terrible news, he had not only recognised the grave character of the crisis, but had taken measures to meet it. On the 12th he did not know the worst. Then it was the mutiny of the 3d Light Cavalry that he had to meet. But two days later he received fuller particulars. On the 14th he heard of the seizure of Dehli. On the 15th and i6th particulars reached him of the massacre of the Europeans, of the flight of the officers, of the rallying round the resuscitated flag of the Mughal. Then he stood forward as the bold, resolute, daring English- 90 Prompt Measures ta/^en by Lord Canning, man he really was. He telegraphed to the Governor of Bombay, Lord Elphinstone, to hasten, as far as he could, the return of the troops due in Bombay from the com- pleted campaign against Persia. He telegraphed to the Commander-in-Chief to 'make short work of DehH.' He transmitted to the Chief Commissioner of the Panjdb, Sir John Lawrence, full powers to act according to the best of his judgment. Not only did he countermand the return of the 84th to Rangoon, but he sent for a second regiment from that place and from Moulmein. He wrote to the Governor of Madras, Lord Harris, to send him two regiments. More than that, recollecting that a combined military and naval expedition was on its way from England to China, to support there, by force of arms, the pretensions of the British, he took upon himself the responsibility of despatching a message to Lord Elgin and General Ashburnham to intercept that expedition, and to beg them to despatch the troops under their orders with all possible speed to India. Having summoned those reinforcements, Lord Canning took a searching glance at the actual situation. The sudden outbreak at Mirath must have brought to his mind the conviction that he might have to meet a general rising of the Bengal army. What resources had he in his hand, not counting the troops he had summoned to his aid, to meet such a general rising? A glance at those resources was not calculated to inspire confidence. Be- tween Calcutta and Dandpur there were no English regiments. At Calcutta and in its vicinity were the 53d and the 84th. At Danapur was the loth Foot. Stretch- ing north-westward from Ddnapur, the eye rested on Bandras, with no English regiment, and but a few English gunners. At Allahdbdd, with its important fortress, the same state of things. The same likewise at Kanhpur, Resources at His Disposal, 91 the next military station beyond it. At Lakhnao, indeed there was one English regiment, but that regiment was wanted to defend the whole province of Oudh. At Agra there was but one English regiment. Beyond Agra and Kdnhpur came Mirath and Dehli. We know, and Lord Canning knew, the condition of both those places. Beyond them were the military stations of Ambalah, and the hill stations between it and Simla, and Firuzpur, and beyond these again, the Panjdb, as the Panjab was then computed. Here the bulk of the British troops was concentrated, but their numbers were none too many for the needs of the province. If the reader, bearing in mind the allotment of British troops I have just given, will study a map of India, he will realise that the prospect immediately before Lord Canning was far from reassuring. He had, as a statesman versed in affairs, to regard the native garrisons in all the stations mentioned, and in the smaller stations in their neighbourhood, as at least untrustworthy. After the events of Mirath and Dehli, he was bound even to class them in the list of probable enemies, and to provide for them accord ingly. There were native troops at Barrackpur, in eastern Bengal, at Dandpur, at Banaras, at Allahdbad, at Kanhpur, scattered all over the province of Oudh, at Agra, at Aligarh, at Bareli, at Muraddbdd, and at other minor stations south- east of Mirath and west of Agra. In the districts in which those native troops were located Lord Canning could at the moment dispose of but four English regiments — the 53d and 84th at or near Calcutta, the loth at Danapur, the 3 2d at Lakhnao, the 3d Europeans at Agra. Every man of these regiments was required for the purposes of the city or cantonment in which he happened to be. Lord Canning could not fail to recognise, then, that between Calcutta and Mirath he was absolutely powerless for ag- 92 The Recovery of Dehli considered easy, gressive purposes ; that it would be marvellous could he succeed in maintaining his position until reinforcements should arrive. On the other hand, he had great faith, and I believe at the time every Englishman south-east of Mirath had great faith, in the power of the Commander-in-Chief to retake the Imperial city. Past history afforded good reason for that belief In September 1803 the troops of Sindhiahad not offered the semblance of a resistance to the small army of General Lake. In the wars of the earlier Mughals with the representatives of the dynasties which they supplanted, Dehli had never offered any but the slightest resistance to the army which had been victorious in the field. Even amongst soldiers who had been stationed at that city the idea that Dehli could present a prolonged resistance was laughed at. The conviction prevalent at Calcutta,^ especi- ally in military circles, was that the mutineers had played the British game by rushing into a walled city, where they would be as rats in a trap. It can easily be understood, then, how it was that the hopes of Lord Canning that the Commander-in-Chief would very soon be able to deal a deadly blow to the mutineers, by capturing their strong- hold, was shared by every Englishman, or by almost every Englishman, at Calcutta. As to the Panjab, though Lord Canning naturally felt anxiety, it was an anxiety tempered by confidence in the resolute man who there represented him, and in that resolute man's subordinates. He had precisely the same feeling regarding Oudh. If Oudh at this crisis could be preserved to the British, Sir Henry Lawrence, who re- presented there the Government of India, was the man to preserve it. He had, and justly, an equal confidence in the * I write from my own knowledge, having at the time been attached to the Government of India, in Calcutta, as Assistant Auditor-General Exterior Policy of Lord Canning admirable. 93 Governors of the minor Presidencies — in Lord Elphin- stone and Lord Harris — a confidence which their splendid conduct in all the phases of the rebellion more than justified. Looking back at the conduct of Lord Canning at this period, I cannot withhold my conviction that in all that related to his exterior policy, that is, in the efforts he made to procure assistance from outside, it was admirable. There was only one little thing, suggested to him by Lord Elphinstone, which he might with advantage have done, but which he did not do. In those days telegraphic com- munication with England had not been established. With the view, then, to secure the prompt arrrival of re- inforcements from England by the overland route. Lord Elphinstone suggested to Lord Canning the despatch to England of a special steamer, ready to his hand, which, steaming at her highest speed, should anticipate the regular mail steamer by some days. For some reason with which I am not acquainted Lord Canning declined the suggestion. Having thus, in the manner I have recorded, en- deavoured to reassure his lieutenants beyond Mirath, and to procure assistance from beyond India, Lord Canning set to work to take the measures which might be necessary to maintain his position within the country until re- inforcements should arrive. In this attempt he was not nearly so successful as he was in his measures of exterior policy. It was unfortunate that, in his measures of internal policy, Lord Canning was compelled, from his previous inexperience of India, to depend for his information on men, for the most part, of the shallowest capacity: men who, although they had served in India during periods of from fifteen to thirty years, and longer, had served with 94 ^^^ Internal Policy miserable. their eyes shut, and with a coil of red tape round their minds. Calcutta and its suburbs contained, in 1857, a native population exceeding half a million. In one of the suburbs lived the deposed King of Oudh, with a large following of retainers, not one of whom was disposed to love the Government which had made them exiles. To guard this large population there was but one weak wing of an English regiment, occupying Fort William. But there was a large body of Englishmen in Calcutta — merchants, lawyers, traders, clerks in public offices — who, apprehending the nature of the crisis far more clearly than the Government had apprehended it, were ready and anxious to place their services at the disposal of the Governor-General for the repression of disorder. There were also others — Frenchmen, Germans, Americans, — who were inspired by a similar sentiment. The feeling which animated these men was as simple as it was disinterested. They said in so many words to the Government : ' The situation is full of peril ; you are short of men, you have to control a large population in Calcutta, and you have within call but two English regiments ; there are three armed native regiments at Barrackpur, ready to emulate the conduct of their comrades at Mirath, why not utilise our services ? We can furnish a regiment of infantry, a regiment of cavalry, and a battery of artillery; our in- terests and your interests are identical : use us.' There was not the smallest approach to panic among these men. They were sincerely anxious to help the Government in the terrible crisis. What panic there was was confined entirely to the higher official classes and the scum of the Eurasian population. It was in the exercise of the purest patriotism, then, that the merchants and traders of Calcutta, English and foreign, offered their services, between the 20th and the 25th of May, to the Mr Beadons Insolent Rebuff. 95 Government. A wise Government would have met these offers with sympathy. The Government of Calcutta met them with language which was tantamount to insult. Whilst the English merchants and traders were told that, if they wished to enrol themselves as special constables, they might apply to the Commissioner of Police, who, it transpired, had been instructed to furnish them with clubs, the French community received from the Home Secretary, Mr Cecil Beadon, a reply which betrayed either infatua- tion or a determined attempt to deceive : * Everything is quiet within six hundred miles of the capital. The mischief caused by a passing and groundless panic has been already arrested ; and there is every reason to hope that in the course of a few days tranquillity and con- fidence will be restored throughout the Presidency.' In point of fact, the mischief had not been arrested ; every- thing was not quiet within 600 miles of the capital ; and, far from there being reason to hope that in the course of a few days tranquillity and confidence would be restored throughout the Presidency, there was the absolute cer- tainty that disorder and insurrection would enormously increase. The reply of the Home Secretary, representing the views of the Government, was alike untrue and impolitic. At a critical moment it alienated the sympathies of the Europeans of Calcutta. And it speaks largely in favour of the patriotism and self-abnegation of the members of that community that, about three weeks later, when the boastings of the Home Secretary had vanished into thin air, and the Government saw almost as clearly as the com- munity had seen, at the time of their first offer, the danger of the situation, they agreed to form volunteer corps of the three arms to aid the Government in their dire necessity. 96 Lord Canning realises the Situation, For the Home Secretary's vaunt had scarcely been made public when the ineptitude, or the wish to deceive which had' prompted it, became apparent. His reply, already quoted, had been written on the 25th of May. Between that date and the 30th the native troops at Firuzpur, at Aligarh, at Bulandshahr, at Itawah, and at Mainpuri rose in revolt. The news from Agra, from Lakhnao, from Kanhpur, from Banaras, was of a most discouraging character. It became evident, even to the Government, that not only had the mischief not been arrested, but that it was yet in its infancy. Under these circumstances. Lord Canning could not but feel very anxious regarding the movement of the Commander-in- Chief against Dehli. The maintenance of the authority left to the English, between the Hugh' and the Indus, depended, he felt, on the promptitude of the action of the gallant soldier who, on the first news of the revolt at Mirath, had hastened to Ambalah to organise a force to march against the rebels. It was in this view that, on the 31st of May, he despatched to that officer a telegram which clearly shows how, since the Home Secretary had triumphantly 'snubbed' the French inhabitants of Calcutta on the 25th, the views of the Government had changed.^ 1 ' I have heard to-df.y that you do not intend to be before Dehli until the 9th. In the meantime Kanhpur and Lakhnao are severely pressed, and the country betv^^een Dehli and Kanhpur is passing into the hands of the rebels. It is of the utmost importance to prevent this, and to relieve Kanhpur, but nothing but rapid action will do it. Your force of artillery will enable you to dispose of Dehli with certainty. I therefore beg that you will detach one European infantry regiment, and a small force of European cavalry, to the south of Dehli, without keeping them for operations there, so that Aligarh may be recovered and Kanhpur relieved immediately. It is impossible to overrate the importance of showing European troops between Dehli and Kanhpur. Lakhnao and Allahabad depend upon it.' The Actual Position of Lord Canning. 97 Nothing reveals more clearly than this telegram that, at the very end of May, Lord Canning had but feebly grasped the situation. He had, it is true, realised the intense danger of the position below Dehli, but no soldier himself, and having at his elbow men who were soldiers only in name, he had realised neither the difficulties which General Anson had to overcome before he could march from xA.mbalah, the strength of Dehli, nor the extent of the disaffection. A more correct forecast would have made it clear to him that he had nothing to hope for from the Commander-in-Chief, that he had to depend solely upon God and his own right arm. There was this advantage in the faultiness of his fore- cast that it made him confident. Those about him assured him that Dehli could not hold out, and that the capture of Dehli would be the turning point of the disturbances ; and he believed them. Could he maintain the weak middle part, the unguarded country between Banaras and Dehli, until succour from the North-west, from Persia, from China, from Burma, should arrive, all must go well. He had done what he could with the small means at his disposal to strengthen that middle part. On the 20th of May he had begun, and on following days he continued to despatch the 84th by driblets, as many as could be accommodated in a series of post-carriages, to Bandras and Kanhpur. On the 23d of May the Madras Fusiliers arrived from Madras, and were promptly despatched in the same direction. The first week of June increased his hopes that the danger might be yet averted. That week witnessed the arrival in Calcutta of the 64th Foot and 78th Highlanders from Persia, of a wing of the 35th Foot from Maulmein, of a wing of the 37th and a company of artillery from Ceylon. These were pushed forward with all possible celerity. It is as certain as can be, judging from his after conduct G 98 The Councillors of Lord Canning. that if Lord Canning, at this crisis, had been left to act upon his own instincts, or even if he had trusted to the ex- perienced advice of the one capable counsellor at his elbow, Mr J. P. Grant, many of the mishaps which occurred during this month and the following would not have happened. But at this period he was under the influence of men whose knowledge of the country in which they had passed their lives was absolutely superficial. It was in deference to the advice of these men that, at a period when a plain and straightforward declaration, followed by plain and straightforward action, would have relieved the situation, he acted towards the sipahis in a manner the reverse of both. Thus whilst he had three native regiments at Barrackpur, in dangerous proximity to Calcutta, he pre- ferred to maintain troops to guard them rather than to disarm them. The case of Danapur was even worse. The garrison of Danapur, consisting of one English and three native regiments, was the guardian of the rich and popul- ous province of Bihar. It was certain that, should the three native regiments break away, as their comrades in other places had broken away, a great danger would be constituted for Bihar itself, and possibly for Calcutta. Common sense urged that the first opportunity should be taken to disarm them. But common sense was a quality conspicuous by its absence among the Hallidays, the Beadons, and the Birches, who had the ear of Lord Canning. These men invented the policy of feigning confidence when confidence had been lost, and of de- clining to disarm men whom they knew to be rebels, lest they should instigate a premature rising. The terrible dangers which persistence in this policy — persistence in spite of warnings and remonstrances — led to will be re- corded in subsequent chapters. CHAPTER VIII. THE PROGRESS OF THE INSURRECTION IN THE NORTH-WEST IN MAY AND JUNE. The news of the insurrection at Mirath reached the station of Firuzpur on the 1 2th of May. Firuzpur lies immediately south of the river Satlaj, on the direct road from Dehli to Lahor. There were stationed the 6ist Foot, the 45th and 57th Regiments N. L, the loth Native Light Cavalry, and about 150 European artillerymen. The Brigadier, Colonel Innes, had only arrived the day before, and had had no opportunity of testing the temper of the native troops. But on receiving, on the morning of the 12th, news of the Mirath catastrophe, he ordered a brigade parade, that he might judge for himself. The impression made by the demeanour of the infantry was not satisfactory, but the commandants of the three regiments reported favourably regarding the disposition of their men. That same afternoon information reached the Brigadier of the startling events at Dehli. He at once directed arrangements for relieving the sipdhis of the 57th N. I of the charge they had held of the magazine and arsenal. But his orders were either misunderstood or carelessly carried out, for the sipdhis, though relieved by a company of the 6 1st and some European gunners, were allowed to remain in the intrenched position in which the magazine was located. At five o'clock of the same day the Brigadier paraded the native troops, with the intention of marching L.ofC. loo Mutiny at Firuzpur. them outside the cantonment. But as they approached the intrenchment they halted, despite the orders and entreaties of their officers, and endeavoured to escalade it. The sipcihis who had been allowed to remain within threw to them scaling ladders, and about 300 of them succeeded in effecting an entrance. The company of the 6 1st held them at bay until two other companies of that regiment arrived. The mutinied sipahis made a last desperate effort, and on the failure of that fled in con- fusion. The Brigadier, instead of pursuing them, allowed them to roam about for a time unmolested. Gaining courage from the supineness of the authorities, the sipahis then burned the church, the Roman Catholic chapel, the 6ist mess-house, two vacated hospitals, and several bungalows. The Brigadier, in sheer panic, then caused the regimental magazines of the two mutinous regiments to be blown up. Hardly had this been accomplished when information reached him that the men of the 45th were about to start for Dehli. Then, for the first time, he acted with vigour. With one party he disarmed the 57th N. I., whilst with another he pursued the 45th, caught and dispersed them. The greater number of them, however, and some of the 57th, found their way to the revolted city. Few affairs were worse managed during the rebellion than the affair of Firuzpur. It almost matched the blundering at Ml rath. At Aligarh the four companies of the native regiment stationed there, the 9th N. I., considered one of the best regiments of the Bengal army, mutinied on the 20th of May. The circumstances were somewhat peculiar. Aligarh lies on the grand trunk road eighty-two miles to the south-east of Dehli, Apparently the events of the loth and 12th of May, at Mirath and Dehli, had not shaken the loyalty of the sipahis. They continued re- Mutinies at AHgarh and Bulandshahr. foi spectful in their demeanour arid assiduous in the perform- ance of their duties. But, on the 20th, a parade had been ordered to witness the infliction of the punishment of death on a man caught in the act of endeavouring to seduce the men from their allegiance. The man had been awarded this sentence by a court-martial composed entirely of native officers. It was carried out in the presence of the sipahis, on that eventful morning, without a murmur or sign of disapproval from them. But as they were march- ing from the ground there arrived a detachment of men of their own regiment, one of whom, on seeing the dangling corpse, exclaimed, pointing to it, * Behold a martyr to our religion.' These few words were sufficient to light a flame which had lain repressed in the bosoms of the sipahis. They broke into open insurrection, and though they in- flicted no injury on their officers, they plundered the treasury, released the prisoners from the gaol, and went off bodily to Dehli. The detachments of the same regiment at Buland- shahr, forty miles from Aligarh ; at Itawah, in the Agra Division, seventy-three miles from the city of that name ; at Mainpuri, seventy-one miles from the same place, followed the example of their comrades at headquarters. The outbreak at Bulandshahr was unaccompanied by vio- lence, though the men plundered the treasury ; that at Mainpuri was chiefly remarkable for the courage, coolness, and presence of mind displayed by the officer second in command of the sipahis. Lieutenant De Kantzow. Information of the revolt of the 20th at Aligarh had reached Mainpuri on the evening of the 22d. The magistrate, Mr Power, at once held a consultation with Mr Arthur Cocks, the Commissioner, as to the course to be pursued. It was resolved to despatch the ladies and children into Agra, and to march the sipdhis to a village I02 Mutiny at Mainpuri, some miles from the station. Early the following morn- ing the ladies and children were duly despatched on their journey, and reached Agra, unmolested, in due course. Meanwhile, the two officers of the 9th N. I., Crawford and De Kantzow, were doing all they could to induce their men to march from the station. The sipahis, how- ever, steadily refused to budge one inch from the extreme end of the parade ground. Finally, they warned their officers that it was well for them to depart, and some of them even discharged their muskets. In the confusion that followed, the two officers got separated from one another. De Kantzow had dismounted, and Crawford, believing that he had been killed, rode back to warn the civilians of the mutiny of the men, and to announce his own intention to ride for Agra. Crawford found assembled Mr Cocks, above referred to, the elder Power, Dr Watson, and a missionary named Kellner. The younger Power, just returned from escorting the ladies on their first stage, joined them. After a brief consultation, Cocks and Crawford decided to make for Agra. The two Powers, Watson, Kellner, three sergeants of the Road and Canal departments, Mitchell, Scott, and Montgomery, and a clerk, Mr Glone, determined to remain. The cousin of the Raja of Mainpuri, Rao Bhowani Singh, with a small following, expressed his intention of standing by them. Meanwhile, De Kantzow, on foot, had been doing all he knew to stem the torrent of mutiny. He had, in turn, implored, upbraided, and menaced the turbulent sipahis. In vain did they level at him their loaded muskets, threatening to kill him ; still did he persevere. At length, casting off' the last bonds of discipline, they rushed to- wards the treasury, carrying their officer with them. Just as they reached the building De Kantzow dashed forward At Itdzuah. 103 to its iron gates, and appealed to the civil guard on duty- there, consisting of thirty men, to be true to their salt, and repel the unauthorised invasion. The men of the guard responded ; they rallied round him. The gaol officials joined them, and, by their united resistance, the torrent of the attack was stemmed. More than that, it was stopped. Forbidding the men of the gaol guard to fire, De Kantzow drew them up facing the sipahis, and for three hours kept them at bay. At the end of that period the Bhowani Singh, above referred to, arrived on the spot, and induced the mutineers to retire. The only condition made by the baffled men was that Bhowani Singh should accompany them. He complied.^ At Itawah the scene was more tragic and more bloody. The force at this station, which lies nearly midway between Agra and Kanhpur, though somewhat nearer to the latter, was a company of the 9th N. I. The chief civil officers were Mr Allan Hume and Mr Daniell. On hearing of the events at Mirath these gentlemen sent patrolling parties to watch the roads, and to intercept, if possible, any stray mutineers. On the night of the i6th of May one of the patrolling parties brought in as prisoners, though without depriving them of their arms, seven troopers of the 3d Native Cavalry, a regiment which had mutinied. The patrols brought the prisoners to the quarter-guard of the 9th N. L, in front of which was drawn up the company of that regiment, with its two officers at its head. Seeing the state of affairs, the seven troopers suddenly levelled their carabines and let fly at the two Englishmen. But 1 On the news of this occurrence reaching Calcutta, Lord Canning wrote to De Kantzow an autograph letter, from which the following is an extract : — * Young in years, and at the outset of your career, you have given to your brother soldiers a noble example of courage, patience, good judgment, and temper, from which many might profit.' 1 04 Mutiny at Itdwah. the men of the 9th N. I. were staunch, and, replying vigor- ously, they killed five of the troopers. The two survivors escaped for the moment Three days later the patrols attempted to lay hands upon and to disarm a larger body of troopers of the same regiment well supplied with fighting material. But in the struggle the men of the patrol were worsted. The rebels, then, probably fearing an attack in force, took up a position in a small Hindu temple, strong in itself, and stronger still in the approaches, v/hich rendered assault difficult and dangerous. Information of this action having been brought to Messrs Hume and Daniell, they resolved, despite the fact that assault was almost impossible, and that the villagers had shown a disposition to aid the troopers, to venture on an attack with the men of their police. But in reply to the summons to follow them but one of that force obeyed. He was promptly killed ; Daniell was shot through the face. Hume, who was then left alone, forthwith retired, supporting Daniell to his carriage, and returned with him to Itawah. That night the troopers evacuated the temple. Four days later, the company of the 9th, which had remained quiet in the interval, suddenly mutinied, looted the treasury, released the prisoners from the gaol, and in- augurated a reign of terror. Fortunately timely warning had enabled the civilians to ensure the safety of the women and children. Two days later there v/as a change A regiment of the Gwdliar contingent, the ist Grenadiers, which was to mutiny in its turn, arrived, and for the moment restored order. But these isolated mutinies, however deplorable in them- selves, counted for comparatively little so long as British authority remained supreme in the great station of Agra. Agra was a very import,^,nt place. Not only was it the Agra, 105 seat of the Government of the North-west Provinces, but, as a royal residence in the times of the early Mughals, it had great traditions, whilst its position, almost touching the territories of GwaHar and of Rdjputana, made it a gate the possession of which by the rebels would constitute an enormous peril to British interests. A great deal, then, de- pended on the personnel of the officials, civil and military. The Lieutenant-Governor was Mr John Colvin, a civilian trained in Bengal proper, but who had been private secretary to Lord Auckland during the troublous times of the first Afghdn war. It is possible that in quiet times Mr Colvin might have gained a great reputation. He had a cultivated mind, and large intellectual faculties. But to guide the State vessel through a storm, to sway the minds of others in dangerous times, there was wanted a man with iron nerves, complete self-confidence, one who could impress his will alike on his friends and his foes. The Great Revolt of 1857