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Dupleix could transmit his orders, but he could not send with them the daring spirit which inspired them. Law had before Trichinopoli 900 French soldiers, of excellent quality, 2000 sipahis trained in the French fas.h.i.+on, and the army of Chanda Sahib. It was a force to attempt anything with in India. If a superior officer on the spot had said to Law 'Attack!' he would have attacked with conspicuous courage. But it was the weakness of his nature that, being in command, he could not say the word himself. Therefore he did nothing.
But to Clive, recognizing all that was possible, ignorant only of the character of the French commander, the situation seemed full of danger. He {62}must strike again, and strike immediately. The successful blow at the middlepiece must be followed up by a blow at the head. That head was Trichinopoli. He prepared therefore, as soon as the recruits expected from England should arrive, to march to that place, and compel the raising of the siege.
Dupleix had divined all this. Once again was this young Englishman to baffle him. As Law would not act he must devise some other means to defeat him. Why, he said to himself, should I not take a leaf from the Englishman's book, reconquer Arcot, possibly attack Madras, and make it evident to the native princes that Pondicherry is still the stronger? The idea pleased him, and he proceeded, in the most secret manner, to act upon it.
Incited by the urgent requests and promises of Dupleix, Raja Sahib, the beaten of Arni, quietly levied troops, and joined by a body of 400 Frenchmen, appeared suddenly before Punamallu on the 17th of January. Punamallu is a town and fort in the Chengalpat district, thirteen miles west-south-west from Madras. The town, but not the fort, fell at once into the hands of the enemy. Had the allies then marched on Madras they might have taken it, for it had but a garrison of 100 men. They preferred, however, to march on Kanchipuram. There they repaired the damages the English had done to the defences of the great paG.o.da, and, leaving 300 sipahis to defend it, marched to Vendalur, twenty-five miles to the south of Madras, and established there a {63}fortified camp, whence they levied contributions on the surrounding country. Their plan was so to coerce northern Arcot as to compel the English to quit Trichinopoli, to save it.
They had succeeded in thoroughly alarming alike the English and the petty chieftains in alliance with them when information of their action reached Fort St. David. There Clive and Saunders were busily engaged in preparing for the new expedition which the former was to lead, as soon as the drafts from England should arrive, to the relief of Trichinopoli. The information changed all their plans. Saunders at once sent a pressing message to Bengal to despatch all available English soldiers to Madras. Thither Clive proceeded; took command of the 100 Englishmen forming its garrison; and ordered from Arcot four-fifths of the troops stationed there. On the 20th of February the troops from Bengal arrived: on the 21st the Arcot garrison was within a march of Madras. On the following morning Clive quitted that fort, and, joined as he marched forth by the men from Arcot, took the direction of Vendalur, having, all told, 380 Englishmen, 1300 sipahis, and six field-pieces. His movements, however, had become known to the enemy. These, therefore, had quitted Vendalur on the night of the 21st; had marched by various routes to Kanchipuram; and, re-uniting there, had pushed with all speed towards Arcot. There they had made arrangements to be received, but their plot had been discovered, and {64}finding their signals unanswered, they had marched to Kaveripak, a town ten miles to the east of Arcot. There, in front of the town, they encamped, in a position previously carefully chosen as the one most likely to invite surprise, for which they proceeded to thoroughly prepare themselves.
Clive, meanwhile, had been marching on Vendalur. He had made some way thither when scouts reached him with the news that the birds had flown, and in different directions. To gain further information he continued his march and reached Vendalur. After staying there five hours certain information reached him that he would find the enemy at Kanchipuram. Thither he proceeded, and there he arrived at four o'clock on the morning of the 23rd, having made a forced march, with a rest of five hours, of forty-five miles. It was then nine o'clock in the morning, and he resolved to rest for the day.
But, after his men had slept a few hours, the anxiety of Clive regarding Arcot impelled him to break their slumbers, and order them forward. They set out accordingly about one o'clock, and about sunset came in sight of Kaveripak, but not of the French hidden in front of it. The French leader, in fact, had laid his plans with the greatest skill. A thick mango-grove, covered along two sides by a ditch and bank, forming almost a redoubt, roughly fortified along the faces by which the English must advance, covered the ground about 250 yards to the left of the road looking eastwards. There the French {65}had placed, concealed from view, their battery of nine guns and a portion of their best men. About a hundred yards to the right of the road, also looking eastwards, was a dry watercourse, along the bed of which troops could march, sheltered, to a great extent, from hostile fire.
In this were ma.s.sed the rest of the infantry, native and European.
The cavalry was in the rear, hidden by the grove, ready to be launched on the enemy when they should reach the ground between the watercourse and the grove. The men were on the alert, expecting Clive.
The s.p.a.ce at my disposal will not permit me to give the details of the remarkable battle[2] which followed. It must suffice to say that no battle that was ever fought brought into greater prominence the character of its commander. In the fight before Kaveripak we see Clive at his best. He had marched straight into the trap, and, humanly speaking, was lost. It was his cool courage, his calmness in danger, his clearness of mind in circ.u.mstances of extraordinary difficulty, his wonderful accuracy of vision, the power he possessed of taking in every point of a position, and of at once utilizing his knowledge, that saved him. He was, I repeat, lost. He had entered the trap, and its doors were fast closing upon him. Bravely did his men fight to extricate him from the danger. Their efforts were unavailing. Soon it came about that the necessity to retreat {66}entered almost every mind but his own. Even the great historian of the period, Mr. Orme, wrote that 'prudence counselled retreat.'
But to the word prudence Clive applied a different meaning. To him prudence was boldness. What was to become of the British prestige, of the British position in Southern India, if he, without cavalry, were to abandon the field to an enemy largely provided with that arm, and who would be urged to extraordinary energy by the fact that the unconquered hero of Arcot had fled before them?
[Footnote 2: The reader who would care to read such a detailed account will find it in the writer's _Decisive Battles of India_, ch.
ii.]
No: he would think only of conquering; and he conquered. After four hours of fighting, all to his disadvantage, he resolved to act, _in petto_, on the principle he had put into action when he first seized Arcot. He would carry the war into the enemy's position. By a very daring experiment he discovered that the rear of the wooded redoubt occupied by the French had been left unguarded. With what men were available he stormed it; took the enemy by surprise, the darkness wonderfully helping him; and threw them into a panic. Of this panic he promptly took advantage; forced the Frenchmen to surrender; then occupied their strong position, and halted, waiting for the day. With the early morn he pushed on and occupied Kaveripak. The enemy had disappeared. The corpses of fifty Frenchmen and the bodies of 300 wounded showed how fierce had been the fight. He had, too, many prisoners. His own losses were heavy: forty English and thirty sipahis. {67}But he had saved Southern India. He had completely baffled the cunningly devised scheme of Dupleix.
The consequences of the battle were immediately apparent. Northern Arcot having been freed from enemies, Clive returned to Fort St.
David, reached that place the 11th of March, halted there for three days, and was about to march to strike a blow at the other extremity, Trichinopoli, when there arrived from England his old and venerated chief, Stringer Lawrence. The latter naturally took command, and two days later the force Clive had raised, and of which he was now second in command, started with a convoy for Trichinopoli. On the 26th it was met eighteen miles from that fortress by an officer sent thence to inform Lawrence that the French had despatched a force to intercept him at Koiladi, close to and commanding his line of advance. By great daring, Lawrence made his way until he had pa.s.sed beyond the reach of the guns of the badly-commanded enemy and the fort, and before daybreak of the following morning was joined by a small detachment of the garrison: another, of greater force, met him a little later. He had, in fact, practically effected a junction with the beleaguered force at the outpost of Elmiseram when he learned that the French were marching against him. They contented themselves, however, with a fierce cannonade: for, as Clive advanced to cover the movement of the rest of the force, they drew back, and Lawrence, with his troops, and the convoy he was escorting, entered {68}Trichinopoli. The French commander was so impressed by this feat of arms, which gave the defenders, now a.s.sisted by Morari Rao and the Dalwai of Mysore, a strength quite equal to his own, that he fell back into the island of Seringham. There he was faced on one side by Lawrence. To cut off his communications with the country on the further side of the river Kolrun, Lawrence despatched Clive[3] with 400 English and some 700 sipahis, accompanied by some Maratha and Tanjore cavalry, to occupy the village of Samiaveram, a village commanding with three others the exit from the island on the only practicable route. Clive set out on the 7th of April, occupied Samiaveram the same day, and, two days later, made his position stronger by storming and occupying the paG.o.da of Mansurpet, and the mud fort of Lalgudi. There still remained Paichanda. The occupation of this would complete the investment of the island on that side.
[Footnote 3: It is a striking testimony to the prestige Clive had already acquired with the native princes that when Muhammad Ali, the Dalwai, and Morari Rao were consulted by Lawrence as to co-operating in the expedition, they consented only on the condition that Clive should command.]
Meanwhile Dupleix, thoroughly disgusted with Law had despatched M.
d'Auteuil with a small force to take command in his place. Whilst Clive was engaged in occupying the two places he had stormed, and was preparing to attack the third, d'Auteuil was approaching the town of Utatur, fifteen miles beyond Samiaveram, the headquarters of Clive.
He arrived {69}there on the 13th of April, and although his force-- 120 Frenchmen, 500 sipahis, and four field-pieces--was far inferior to that of Clive, he resolved to make a flank-march to the river and open communications with Law. He sent messengers to warn that officer of his intention, and to beg him to despatch troops to meet him. But Clive captured one of these messengers, and resolved to foil his plans.
D'Auteuil had set out on the morning of the 14th, but had not proceeded far when he noticed the English force barring the way, and returned promptly to Utatur. Clive then fell back on Samiaveram.
There was a strongly fortified paG.o.da, named Paichanda, on the north bank of the Kolrun, forming the princ.i.p.al gateway into the island of Seringham, which Clive had intended to take, but which, owing to the movements of d'Auteuil, he had not yet attempted. On receiving the message from d'Auteuil of which I have spoken, Law had resolved to debouch by this gateway, and fall on Clive whilst he should be engaged with d'Auteuil. But, when the time for action came, unable to brace himself to an effort which might have succeeded, but which possessed some element of danger, he despatched only eighty Europeans, of whom one-half were English deserters, and 700 sipahis, to march by the portal named, advance in the dark of the night to Samiaveram, and seize that place whilst Clive should be occupied elsewhere. The knowledge of English possessed by {70}the deserters would, he thought, greatly facilitate the task.
His plan very nearly succeeded to an extent he had never contemplated. Clive had returned from his demonstration against d'Auteuil, and, worn out and weary, had laid himself down to sleep in a caravanserai behind the smaller of the two paG.o.das occupied as barracks by his men. They also slept. This was the position within the village when a spy, sent forward by the leader of the surprising party, returned with the information that Clive and his men were there, and were sleeping. This news decided the commander to press on and to seize the great Englishman where he lay. By means of his deserters he deceived the sentries. One of the former, an Irishman, informed the tired watchmen that he had been sent by Lawrence to strengthen Clive. The party was admitted, and one of the garrison was directed to lead its members to their quarters. They marched quietly through the lines of sleeping Marathas and sipahis till they reached the lesser paG.o.da. There they were again challenged. Their reply was a volley through its open doors on the prostrate forms within it.
They went on then to the caravanserai and repeated their action there.
Again was Clive surprised. Once more were the coolness, the clearness of intellect, the self-reliance, of one man pitted against the craft and wiles of his enemies. Once again did the one man triumph. He was, I repeat, as much surprised as the least of his {71}followers. Let the reader picture to himself the situation. To wake up in darkness and find an enemy, whose numbers were unknown, practically in possession of the centre of the town, in the native inn of which he had gone peacefully to sleep but two hours before; his followers being shot down; some of them scared; all just awakening; none of them cognizant of the cause of the uproar; many of the intruders of the same nation, speaking the same language as himself; all this occurring in the sandy plains of India: surely such a situation was sufficient to test the greatest, the most self-reliant, of warriors.
It did not scare Clive. In one second his faculties were as clear as they had ever been in the peaceful council chamber. He recognized, on the instant, that the attackers had missed their mark. They had indeed fired a volley into the caravanserai in which he had lain with his officers, and had shattered the box which lay at his feet and killed the sentry beside him, but they had not stopped to finish their work. Instantly Clive ran into one of the paG.o.das, ordered the men there, some two hundred, to follow him, and formed them alongside of a large body of sipahis who were firing volleys in every direction, whom he believed to be his own men. To them he went, upbraided them for their purposeless firing, and ordered them to cease. But the men were not his men, but French sipahis. Before he had recognized the fact, one of them made a cut at him with his talwar, and wounded him. Still thinking they were {72}his own men, Clive again urged them to cease fire. At the moment there came up six Frenchmen, who summoned him to surrender. Instantly he recognized the situation. Instantly his clear brain a.s.serted itself. Drawing himself up he told the Frenchmen that it was for them and not for him to talk of surrender; bade them look round and they would see how they were surrounded. The men, scared by his bearing, ran off to communicate the information to their commander. Clive then proceeded to the other paG.o.da to rally the men posted there. The French sipahis took advantage of his absence to evacuate the town. The Frenchmen and the European deserters meanwhile had occupied the lesser paG.o.da. They had become by this time more scared than the surprised English. Their leader had recognized that he was in a trap. His mental resources brought to him no consolation in his trouble. He waited quietly till the day broke, and then led his men into the open. But Clive had waited too; and when the Frenchmen emerged, he received them with a volley which shot down twelve of them. They hurried back to their place of shelter, when Clive, wis.h.i.+ng to stop the effusion of blood, me to the front, pointed out to them their hopeless position, and offered them terms. One of them, an Irishman, levelled his musket at Clive, and fired point-blank at him. The ball missed Clive, but traversed the bodies of two sergeants behind him. The French commander showed his disapproval of the act by surrendering with his whole force. Clive had {73}sent the Marathas and the cavalry to pursue the French sipahis. These caught them, and cut them up, it is said, to a man.
Thus ended the affair at Samiaveram. I have been particular in giving the details which ill.u.s.trate the action of Clive, because they bring home to the reader the man as he was: a man not to be daunted, clear and cool-headed under the greatest difficulties; a born leader; resolute in action; merciful as soon as the difficulties had been overcome: a man, as Carlyle wrote of another, not less distinguished in his way, 'who will glare fiercely on an object, and see through it, and conquer it; for he has intellect, he has will, force beyond other men.'
The end was now approaching. On the 15th of May, Clive captured Paichanda. He then marched on Utatur, forced d'Auteuil to retreat on Volkonda, and, following him thither, compelled him (May 29) to surrender. Three days later Law followed his example. The entire French force before Trichinopoli gave itself up to Major Lawrence.
Its native allies did the same. The one regrettable circ.u.mstance in the transaction was the murder of Chanda Sahib at the instance of his rival.
After this, Clive returned to Fort St. David; was employed during the fall of the year in reducing places which still held out against the Nawab. This campaign tried his const.i.tution, already somewhat impaired, very severely, and on its conclusion, in the beginning of October, he proceeded to Madras to rest {74}from his labours. There he married Miss Maskeleyne, the sister of a fellow-writer, with whom, in the earlier days of his Indian life, he had contracted a friends.h.i.+p. But his health continued to deteriorate, and he was forced to apply for leave to visit Europe. This having been granted, he quitted Madras in February, 1753, full of glory. His character had created his career. But for his daring, his prescience, his genius, and his great qualities as a soldier, it is more than probable that Dupleix would have succeeded in establis.h.i.+ng the basis of a French empire in Southern India.
{75}
CHAPTER VIII CLIVE IN ENGLAND; AND IN BENGAL
The visit of Clive to England was scarcely the success hoped for. His fame had preceded him, and the Court of Directors had a.s.sured him, through the Governor of Madras, that they had 'a just sense of his services.' Perhaps the person who had been the most astonished at his brilliant success was his own father. He had remarked, when he first heard of his victories, that 'the b.o.o.by had some sense after all.'
But then it must be recollected that the father had seen but little of the boy during his childhood and growing years, and that his unfavourable impression had been derived probably from the aversion shown by the lad to enter his own profession. But even he, now, was prepared to follow the stream, and give a hearty reception to the defender of Arcot. So, at first, Clive was feted and toasted in a manner which must have convinced him that his services were appreciated. The Court of Directors carried out the promise I have referred to by giving a great banquet in his honour, and by voting him a diamond-hilted sword as a token {76}of their esteem. This honour, however, Clive declined unless a similar decoration were also bestowed upon the chief under whom he had first served, Major Stringer Lawrence.
Clive had earned sufficient money to live with great comfort in England. He did not look forward then to return to India as an absolute certainty. Rather he desired to enter Parliament, and await his opportunity. It happened that the year following his arrival the dissolution of the existing Parliament gave him an opportunity of contesting the borough of St. Michael in Cornwall. He was returned as a supporter of Mr. Fox, but the return was pet.i.tioned against, and although the Committee reported in his favour, the House decided, from a purely party motive, to unseat him. This disappointment decided Clive. He had spent much money, and with this one result--to be thwarted in his ambition. He resolved then to return to the seat of his early triumphs, and applied to the Court for permission to that effect.
The Court not only granted his request, but obtained for him the commission of lieutenant-colonel in the royal army, and named him Governor and Commander of Fort St. David, with succession to the Governors.h.i.+p of Madras.
Clive took with him to India three companies of artillery and 300 infantry. He was instructed to convey them to Bombay, and, joined by all the available troops of the Company and their Maratha allies, to endeavour to wrest the Deccan from French {77}influence. But, just as he was sailing, he discovered that, through royal influence, Colonel Scott of the Engineers, then on the spot, had been nominated to the command, with himself as his second. Not caring to take part in an expedition in which his own voice would not be the decisive voice, Clive was anxious to proceed to take up his government at Fort St.
David, when, on his arrival, he learned the death of Colonel Scott.
This event recalled him to the original plan. But another complication ensued. Very shortly before he had arranged to march there came the information that the French and English on the Coromandel coast had entered into a treaty, binding on the two nations in India, not to interfere in the warlike operations of native princes. The Deccan project, therefore, had to be abandoned.
Another promptly took its place. A small fort built by the great Sivaji on a small island in the harbour of Viziadrug, called by the Muhammadans Gheria, had for many years past been made the headquarters of a hereditary pirate-chief, known to the world as Angria. This man had perpetrated much evil, seizing territories, plundering towns, committing murders, robbing peaceful vessels, and had made his name feared and detested along the entire length of the Malabar coast. The necessity to punish him had long been admitted alike by the Marathas and the English. The year preceding the Bombay Government had despatched Commodore Jones with a squadron to attack Angria's possessions. Jones accomplished {78}something, but on arriving before Dabhol he was recalled on the ground that the season was too late for naval operations on that coast.
In the autumn of the following year Admiral Watson came out to a.s.sume command of the squadron. It had by this time become more than ever necessary to bring the affair to a definite conclusion, and, as Clive and his troops were on the spot, the Bombay Government, acting with the Marathas, resolved to despatch the fleet and army to destroy the piratical stronghold. Of the expedition, which reached its destination in February, it is sufficient to state that in two days it destroyed Gheria. Thence Clive pursued his voyage to the Coromandel coast, and arrived at Fort St. David on the 20th of June.
On that very day there occurred in Calcutta the terrible tragedy of the Black Hole. The Subahdar of Bengal, Bihar, and Orissa, the Nawab Siraj-ud-daula, had, for some fancied grievance, prompted probably by the hope of plunder, seized the English factory at Kasimbazar, near his capital of Murs.h.i.+dabad, plundered it, imprisoned the garrison, and had thence marched against Calcutta. He attacked that settlement on the 15th of June, and after a siege of four days, conducted with great want of leading on the part of the English, obtained possession of it. The English Governor, Mr. Drake, the senior military officer, and many others, had fled for refuge on board the s.h.i.+ps in the river Hugli, which immediately had weighed anchor and stood downwards, leaving about 145 men, some of {79}them high in office, and one lady, Mrs. Carey, a prey to the enemy. These were seized and taken before the Nawab and his commander of the forces, Mir Jafar by name. The Nawab spoke kindly to them, and ordered that they should be guarded for the night, having no intention whatever, there is the strongest reason to believe, that any harm should befall them. But, owing to the natural cruelty or indifference of their guards, they were thrust, after the departure of the Nawab, into a small room, about eighteen feet square, ill ventilated, and just capable of receiving them when packed together so closely as to render death certain to the majority. Vainly did they remonstrate; vainly did they send a message to the Nawab: he was asleep, and no one dared to awaken him.
Into that hole they were locked, and in it they remained until the light of day showed that the pestiferous atmosphere had been fatal to all of them except twenty-three. These were then released and taken before the Nawab. Far from expressing regret for the sufferings of which he had been the involuntary cause, the Nawab questioned them only about the place in which their treasure had been hidden. For, so far, he had been greatly disappointed at the result of his raid.
The story of the capture of Kasimbazar reached Madras on the 15th of July. The Governor immediately despatched a detachment of 230 European troops for the Hugli, under command of Major Kilpatrick, and this detachment reached its position off {80}the village of Falta on the 2nd of August. For the moment we must leave it there.
It was not until three days after the arrival of Kilpatrick at Falta that information of the Black Hole outrage reached Madras. The position there was critical. The Governor was in daily expectation of hearing that war had been declared with France, and he had already parted with a large detachment of his best troops. The question was whether, in the presence of the possible danger likely to arise from France, he should still further denude the Presidency he administered. The discussion was long. Happily it was finally resolved to despatch to the Hugli every available s.h.i.+p and man. The discussion as to the choice of the commander was still more prolonged; but, after others had insisted on their rights, it was finally determined to commit the command of the land-forces to Clive--who had been summoned from Fort St. George to the consultation--in subordination, however, to Admiral Watson, commanding the squadron. It was not until the second week of October that every detail was settled, nor until the 16th of that month that the fleet sailed for the Hugli. The first s.h.i.+p reached the river, off Falta, the 11th of December. But with the exception of two, one laden with stores, the other grounding off Cape Palmyras, but both of which joined at a later period, the others reached their destination at periods between the 17th and 27th of that month.
The land-forces at the disposal of Clive consisted, {81}including the few remnants of Kilpatrick's detachment,[1] which had suffered greatly from disease, of 830 Europeans, 1200 sipahis, and a detail of artillery. One s.h.i.+p, containing over 200, had not arrived, and many were on the sick-list.
[Footnote 1: Orme states that one-half of them had died and that only thirty were fit for duty.]
On the 17th of December Watson had written to the Nawab to demand redress for the losses suffered by the Company, but no answer had been vouchsafed. As soon then as all the s.h.i.+ps, the two spoken of excepted, had a.s.sembled off Falta, Watson wrote again to inform him that they should take the law into their own hands. On the 27th the fleet weighed anchor, and stood upwards. On the 29th it anch.o.r.ed off Maiapur, a village ten miles below the fort of Baj-baj. It was obvious to both commanders that that fort must be taken; but a difference of opinion occurred as to the mode in which it should be a.s.sailed, Clive advocating the proceeding by water, and landing within easy distance of the place, Watson insisting that the troops should land near Maiapur, and march thence. Clive, much against his own opinion, followed this order. Landing, he covered the ten miles, and posted his troops in two villages whence it would be easy to attack the fort on the morrow. The troops, tired with the march, and fearing no enemy, then lay down to sleep. But the Governor of Calcutta, Manikchand, had reached Baj-baj that very morning with a force of 2000 foot and 1500 horse. He had noted, unseen, all {82}the dispositions of Clive, and at nightfall he sallied forth to surprise him. The surprise took effect, in the sense that it placed the English force in very great danger. But it was just one of those situations in which Clive was at his very best. He recognized on the moment that if he were to cause his troops to fall back beyond reach of the enemy's fire, there would be a great danger of a panic. He ordered therefore the line to stand firm where it was, whilst he detached two platoons, from different points, to a.s.sail the enemy.
One of these suffered greatly from the enemy's fire, but the undaunted conduct of the English in pressing on against superior numbers so impressed the native troops that they fell back, despite the very gallant efforts of their officers to rally them. Clive was then able to form his main line in an advantageous position, and a shot from one of his field-pieces grazing the turban of Manikchand, that chief gave the signal to retire. That night the fort of Baj-baj was taken by a drunken sailor, who, scrambling over the parapet, hailed to his comrades to join him. They found the place abandoned.
On the 2nd of January Calcutta surrendered to Clive. A great altercation took place between that officer and Watson as to the appointment of Governor of that town. Watson had actually nominated Major Eyre Coote, but Clive protested so strongly that, eventually, Watson himself took possession, and then handed the keys to Mr.
Drake, the same Drake who had so shamefully abandoned the place at the time of {83}Siraj-ud-daula's attack. Three days later Clive stormed the important town of Hugli, once a Portuguese settlement, afterwards held by the English, but at the time occupied for the Nawab.
Meanwhile that prince, collecting his army, numbering about 40,000 men of sorts, was marching to recover his lost conquest. To observe him Clive took a position at Kasipur, a suburb of Calcutta, now the seat of a gun-factory. As the Nawab approached, the English leader made as though he would attack him, but finding him prepared, he drew back to await a better opportunity. By the 3rd of February the entire army of the Nawab had encamped just beyond the regular line of the Maratha ditch. Thither Clive despatched two envoys to negotiate with the Nawab, but finding that they were received with contumely and insult, he borrowed some sailors from the Admiral, and, obtaining his a.s.sent to the proposal, resolved to attack him before dawn of the next day. Accordingly at three o'clock on the morning of the 4th of February, Clive broke up, and, under cover of one of those dense fogs so common in Bengal about Christmastime, penetrated within the Nawab's camp. Again was he in imminent danger. For when, at six o'clock, the fog lifted for a few seconds, he found the enemy's cavalry ma.s.sed along his flank. They were as surprised at the proximity as was Clive himself, and a sharp volley sent them scampering away. The fog again descended: Clive knew not exactly where he was; his men were becoming confused; and Clive {84}knew that the step from confusion to panic was but a short one. But he never lost his presence of mind. He kept his men together; and when, at eight o'clock, there was a second lifting of the fog, and he recognized that he was in the very centre of the enemy's camp, he marched boldly forward, and not only extricated his troops, but so impressed the Nawab that he drew off his army, and on the 9th signed a treaty, by which he covenanted to grant to the English more than their former privileges, and promised the restoration of the property he had seized at the capture of Calcutta. This accident of the fog and its consequences form, indeed, the keynote to the events that followed. The circ.u.mstances connected with it completely dominated the mind of the Nawab; instilled into his mind so great a fear of the English leader that he came entirely under his influence, and, though often kicking against it, remained under it to the end. This feeling was increased when, some weeks later, Clive, learning that war had been declared between France and England, attacked and conquered the French settlement of Chandranagar (March 23), in spite of the Nawab's prohibition. He displayed it to the world a little later, by dismissing from his court and exiling to a place a hundred miles distant from it a small detachment of French troops which he had there in his pay, commanded by the Law who had so misconducted the siege of Trichinopoli, and by recalling his army from Pla.s.sey, where he had posted it, to a point nearer to his capital.
{85}Of Siraj-ud-daula something must be said. The province which he ruled from his then capital of Murs.h.i.+dabad had been one of the great fiefs which the dissolution of the Mughal Empire had affected. The family which had ruled it in 1739 had had the stamp of approval from Delhi. But when the invasion of Nadir Shah in that year overthrew for the time the authority of the Mughal, an officer named Ali Vardi Khan, who had risen from the position of a menial servant to be Governor of Bihar, rose in revolt, defeated and slew the representative of the family nominated by the Mughals in a battle at Gheria, in January, 1741, and proclaimed himself Subahdar. Ali Vardi Khan was a very able man. Having bribed the shadow sitting on the throne of Akbar and Aurangzeb to recognize him as Subahdar of Bengal, Bihar, and Orissa, he ruled wisely and well. On his death in 1756 he had been succeeded by his youthful grandson, the Siraj-ud-daula, who, as we have seen, had come, so fatally for himself, under the influence of Clive.
For all the actions of Clive at this period prove that he was resolved to place matters in Bengal on such a footing as would render impossible atrocities akin to that of the Black Hole. Were he to quit Bengal, he felt, after accomplis.h.i.+ng the mission on which he had been sent, and that mission only, what security was there that the Subahdar would not return to wreak a vengeance the more bitter from the mortifications he had had to endure? No, there {86}was but one course he could safely pursue. He must place the Company's affairs on a solid and secure footing. Already he had begun to feel that such a footing was impossible so long as Siraj-ud-daula remained ruler of the three provinces. As time went on the idea gathered strength, receiving daily, as it did, fresh vitality from the discovery that among the many n.o.blemen and wealthy merchants who surrounded the Subahdar there were many ready to betray him, to play into his own hand, to combine with himself as against a common foe.
Soon his difficulty was to choose the man with whom he should ally himself. Yar Lutf Khan, a considerable n.o.ble, and a divisional commander of the Siraj-ud-daula's army, made, through Mr. Watts, the English agent at Kasimbazar, the first offer of co-operation, on the sole condition that he should become Subahdar. It was followed by another from a man occupying a still higher position, from the Bakhs.h.i.+, or Commander-in-chief, Mir Jafar Khan. This Clive accepted, receiving at the same time offers of adhesion from Raja Dulab Rao; from other leading n.o.bles, and from the influential bankers and merchants of Murs.h.i.+dabad.
Then began those negotiations one detail of which has done so much to stain the name of the great soldier. The contracting parties employed in their negotiations one Aminchand, a Calcutta merchant of considerable wealth, great address, unbounded cunning, and absolutely without a conscience. When {87}the plot was at its thickest, this man--who was likewise betraying the confidence which Siraj-ud-daula bestowed upon him, when the least word would have rendered it abortive--informed the Calcutta Select Committee, through Mr. Watts, that unless twenty lakhs of rupees were secured to him in the instrument which formed the bond of the confederates, he would at once disclose to the Subahdar the plans of the conspirators. The inevitable result of this disclosure would have been ruin to all the conspirators; death to many of them. To baffle the greed of this blackmailer, Clive caused two copies of the doc.u.ment to be drawn up, from one of which the name of Aminchand was omitted. To disarm his suspicions, the false doc.u.ment was shown him. This latter all the contracting parties had signed, with the exception of Admiral Watson, who demurred, but who, according to the best recollection of Clive in his evidence before the Committee of the House of Commons, did not object to have his name attached thereto by another.[2]