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Memoirs of General Sir Henry Dermot Daly 




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MEMOIRS OF GENERAL 
SIR HENRY DERMOT DALY 

G.C.B., CLE. 




lyerLera-L QJirCjlenry iJ'emiof U alu 



MEMOIRS OF GENERAL 
SIR HENRY DERMOT DALY 

G.C.B., CLE. 

SOMETIME COMMANDER OF CENTRAL INDIA 

HORSE, POLITICAL ASSISTANT FOR WESTERN 

MALWA, Etc., Etc. 

BY MAJOR H. DALY 



LONDON 

JOHN MUEEAY, ALBEMAELE STEEET 

1905 



PREFACE 

The criticisms and strictures upon leading" men a,nd 
current policy, which appear in the extracts from Sir 
Henry Daly's correspondence and diaries, were fre- 
quently modified by him in the light of fuller infor- 
mation or subsequent events. They have been allowed 
to stand as interesting examples of the feeling of the 
hour. 

HUGH DALY. 

The Residency, 
INDORE, August 1905. 



CONTENTS 

CHAPTER I 

EARLY LIFE ( 1 823- 1 848) 

PAGE 

Parentage ; voyage to, and early days in, India; first staff ap- 
pointment ; Kaira ; early friends ; invalided ; return to Sind ; 
Sir Charles Napier ; a sketch of the three Lawrence brothers I 

CHAPTER n 

MULTAN (1848- 1 849) 

Peaceful condition of the Punjab early in 1848 ; Multan affairs ; 
the outbreak ; voyage up the Indus ; the first siege of 
Multan ; general condition of the Punjab ; George Lawrence 
a prisoner ; defection of Sher Singh ; reinforcements from 
Bombay ; storm and capture of Multan ; burial of Agnew and 
Anderson ....... 14 

CHAPTER HI 

GUJERAT AND PESHAWAR 

General course of the campaign ; battle of Gujerat ; pursuit of 
the Sikhs ; their surrender ; pursuit of the Afghans and 
occupation of Peshawar. Appointment of Sir C. Napier as 
Commander-in-Chief ; offers of staff employ in Bombay and 
the Punjab ; decision for the latter . . . -53 

vii 



viii CONTENTS 

CHAPTER IV 

RAISING OF THE 1ST PUNJAB CAVALRY (1849-52) 

PAGE 

Account of the corps ; sketch of some of the Native Officers ; ex- 
pedition through the Kohat Pass under Sir C. Napier; 
praise from the latter ; life at Peshawar ; friendship with Sir 
Colin Campbell ; return to Kohat ; inspection of the regi- 
ment ; visit to Murree ; Colonel Mansfield ; Miranzai Ex- 
pedition ; Frontier affairs ; invalided . . .62 

CHAPTER V 

MARRIAGE, 1852-1856 

Journey to England ; Marriage ; Crimean War and chances of 
employment there ; return to India ; nomination to the 
Oudh Cavalry ....... 95 

CHAPTER VI 

RAISING OF THE 1ST OUDH IRREGULAR CAVALRY 
1856-1857 

Lucknow ; Mrs Daly's journey there ; formation of the Corps ; 
Sekrora ; the Persian War ; Gaieties at Sekrora and retro- 
spect on the fate of some of those present ; the outlaw Fazl 
Ali ; appointment to the Guides ; visit to Sir Henry Lawrence 
at Lucknow ; Agra . . . . . .107 

CHAPTER VII 

THE GUIDES AND DELHI— 1 857 

Journey to join the Guides. Outbreak of the Mutiny. Neville 
Chamberlain. Discussions at Rawal Pindi ; Sir John 
Lawrence ; Herbert Edwardes. March of the Guides. 
Arrival at Delhi ; Battye killed ; Daly severely wounded ; 
reinforcements ; conflicting intelligence ; intended assaults 
postponed ; death of Barnard, Reed succeeds ; Chamberlain 



CONTENTS ix 



PAOB 



wounded ; Reed invalided, Wilson succeeds ; letter from 
Havelock ; arrival of Nicholson ; news of Sir Henry 
Lawrence's death ; Najafgarh ; siege train arrives ; capture 
of Delhi ; loss of Nicholson ; Guides return to Mardan ; 
their casualties ; acknowledgments from Court of Directors 129 



CHAPTER VIII 

LUCKNOW — 1858 

The general position ; summons to Lucknow ; capture of the 
city ; death of Hodson ; appointed to Hodson's Horse ; 
memorandum on the Corps ; Lucknow after the capture ; 
Napier ; operations at Moosabagh ; hopes for Sir John 
Lawrence as Governor-General ; Russell of the Times ; 
Chamberlain and Mansfield ; Hearsay's story . . 186 

CHAPTER IX 

SIR HOPE GRANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH, 1858-1859 

Hope Grant ; action of Nawabgunge ; Sir Colin Campbell's 
peerage ; Outram and Oudh ; Mansfield ; march to Fyzabad ; 
question of army re-organisation and the future of the 
Company's officers ; passage of the Goomtee ; engagement 
on the Khandoo River ; the proclamation and amnesty ; 
Amethi ; passage of the Gogra ; Sekrora ; the Raja of Bul- 
rampur ; the Naval Brigade ; pursuit in the Terai, capture 
of guns ; a scramble in Nepal ; fight near Tiilsipur ; depar- 
ture for England . . . . . .212 

CHAPTER X 

CENTRAL INDIA HORSE AND GWALIOR, 1861-1869 

Return to India ; appointment to the Central India Horse ; 
de^th of Lord Clyde ; Napier's recommendation of Daly for 
the good service pension ; entry into regular political employ 
as Political Agent at Gwalior ; relations with Scindia ; 
Scindia's administration ; Scindia's views on British rule. 
Appointment as Agent to the Governor-General in Central 
India .,...••• 252 



CONTENTS 

CHAPTER XI 

ADMINISTRATION OF CENTRAL INDIA, 1869-1881 



Description of the Province and of its condition before Daly 
assumed charge ; the famine of 1868- 1870 ; relations of 
Political Officers with Native States ; Daly's methods of 
administration and objects ; annual progress as shown by 
Reports; assassination of Lord Mayo; the Rewa Chief; 
the Opium Trade ; Lord Northbrook's tour in Central 
India ; visit to India of the Prince of Wales ; the Imperial 
Assemblage at Delhi ; Daly's review of ten years ; officers 
who served under him ; his departure . . . 278 



CHAPTER XII 

1881-1895 

The Daly College at Indore. Occupations in England. Master 
of Hounds. Twice contests Dundee. Receives the G.C.B. 
Osborne. Second Marriage. Queen Victoria Godmother 
to his youngest son. Illness and death. Character . 332 



Appendix A ...... . 339 

Appendix B ...... . 343 

Appendix C ...... , 350 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 



General Sir Henry Daly, G.C.B., CLE. (photogravure), Frontispiece 
Multan. Struggle in the Streets — Capture of two 

Sikh Standards .... 

The Idgah, where Mr Vans Agnew and Lieutenant 

Anderson were murdered 
The 1st Bombay European Fusiliers Storming 

the Breach at the Khooni Burj, Multan (Jan. 

2nd, 1849, 3 P.M.) .... 

Native Officers of the ist Punjab Cavalry . 
Lucknow ...... 

Ram Singh, as a Dafadar in the ist Punjab Cavalry 
G. Lawrence, Colonel H. Edwardes, and Sir 

Henry Lawrence {photogravure) 
The Guide Burj, Peshawar 
Tooleram, a Gourka in the Guide Corps 
Map— Plan of Delhi 
Lucknow .... 
Entrance to the King's Palace in the City. 

Lucknow, 1856. 
Sir Henry Daly 
Goona, C. I., Residence of Commandant, Central 

India Horse 
The Residency, Indore, 1870 
Maharaja Sir Jayaji Rao Scindia, G.C.B, 
Bhopal, from the Old Fort 

Hindoo Roo's House and Sirmoor Battalion, 1857 
The Daly College at Indore 
Bathing Ghats, Ujjain 
Bust of Sir Henry Daly. (By Bates). Placed in 

the Daly College, Indore, by His Highness 

Maharaja Sir Madho Rao Scindia, G.C.S.I., 

etc. ...... ,,348 

The Lucknow Gates . , , . „ 368 



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SIR HENRY DALY 

CHAPTER I 

EARLY LIFE ( 1 82 3- 1 848) 

Parentage ; voyage to, and early days in, India ; first staflf appoint- 
ment ; Kaira ; early friends ; invalided ; return to Sind ; Sir 
Charles Napier ; a sketch of the three Lawrence brothers. 

Henry Dermot Daly was born at Kirkee, near 

Poona, in the Bombay Presidency, on the 2Sth 

October 1823 ; the second of the two children of 

Francis Dermot Daly by his marriage with Mary, 

only child of Captain Hugh Mcintosh, who served in 

the Peninsular War in the i6th Light Dragoons 

(taking part in the battle of Salamanca, and in the 

actions of Llerna, Castrajon, La Serna, Tudela, and 

Torquemado), and subsequently in the loist Foot. 

The pedigree of the Daly family is traced far back 

into the twilight of Irish history. In the beginning 

of the eighteenth century, the branch from which 

Henry Daly sprang possessed estates in West Meath. 

They were dispossessed in the penal times, and 

settled in Connaught on old family lands at Clan- 

baniffe (now Daly's Grove) ; here Francis Daly was 

born and brought up. As a mere lad. Ensign Francis 

Daly joined Wellington's army in the Peninsula, in 

company with a still younger brother who was killed 

in the storming of San Sebastian. Francis served the 

campaigns of 181 3 and 18 14 in the 84th Foot, being 

wounded in the action near Bayonne on the 13th 

A 



2 EARLY LIFE 

December 1813. In June 18 14, he was transferred 
to the 76th Foot, with which corps he served in the 
American War, and was present at the siege and 
battle oif Plattsburgf. After a short period on half-pay 
he was posted in 1818 to the 4th* Light Dragoons, 
with whom he proceeded to India at the end of 
1821 ; he commanded a wing of the regiment during 
Sir John (afterwards Lord) Keane's operations in 
Afghanistan, including the siege and capture of 
Ghazni in 1839, his services being rewarded by a 
brevet lieutenant-colonelcy. He subsequently held 
command of the regiment, with which he returned to 
England in 1842, until he sold out in January 1846. 
In the absence of their parents in India, Henry 
Daly, who had been sent home as an infant, and his 
brother Francis Hugh, who became a barrister, and 
died unmarried in 1871, were brought up at Newport, 
Isle of Wight, by their maternal grandmother, Mrs 
Mcintosh. In 1840, Henry was given a nomination 
to the East India Company's service, and was posted 
to the ist Bombay European Fusiliers (now the ist 
Dublin Fusiliers). The regiment was then at Aden, 
having formed part in the previous year of the force 
which first occupied the Aden Peninsula ; but Daly 
proceeded direct to India to join his father. Ten 
years later he wrote a brief sketch of his early life : — 

" On looking back I see a confused mass of impres- 
sions, with little worthy of record, less worthy of selec- 
tion. Not but perhaps I have, when reflecting on days 
gone, felt something akin to pride and gratitude. 
Amidst all, my chief desire has been to become what 
some in their love and partiality thought I was, and 
though I may have fallen short of this, I doubt not the 
very thought of climbing has made me shun the ground. 

* Now the 4th Hussars. 



FIEST VOYAGE TO INDIA 3 

" I was out of sight of Eng-land on the 3rd 
September 1 840. The steamer ploughed away until 
we reached Gibraltar, where we landed. Since then 
I have wandered in many lands, have mixed with 
many strange people, but the memory of that first 
evening at Gibraltar is clear and distinct ; the faces 
and costumes betokening every race ; the Turk and 
the Christian, the Jew and the Arab, all mingled 
together in the narrow streets, with grim houses 
towering up on either side. ' The Rock,' the Galleries, 
the hundreds of steps, the tongues of this mass of 
people, the gestures and grimaces to be equalled in a 
French Bourse only. On reaching Malta, we are 
told that Alexandria was in blockade by our fleet ; so 
at Malta we remained four or five days. When 
eventually we arrived at Alexandria, we found one 
noble British ship riding at anchor at the mouth of 
the harbour (a very narrow mouth it is), preventing 
the egress of the splendid Turkish fleet moored 
within. After some communication with the shore it 
was announced that Mehemet AH * would allow us to 
pass through Egypt ; accordingly we landed. In those 
days arrangements for travel were not as they are now 
(1850). Vehicles of every whimsical kind may at this 
time be seen in Cairo. Steamers and tug boats now 
darken the Nile. Then there was but one steamesr, 
which, from its extreme smallness, some wag said was 
of three donkey power. After many delays on the 
mud banks of the Nile we entered Cairo. We wished 
to cross the desert to Suez at once. No horses or 
camels were to be had ; donkeys were brought out to 
be our chargers. These animals are extraordinary 
creatures, not less so than their attendants, the 
'donkey boys.' Without his attendant the pony of 
Jerusalem moves not. The Arab boy shouts and 
shrieks ; at this signal the donkey rushes on his route 
quite independent of his rider. As no change was to 
be had in the desert, two donkeys were assigned to 
each of us. We traversed the distance to Suez, 78 or 
80 miles, in less than twenty-four hours ; there we 
found the steamer. On the 23rd September we went 

* An excellent sketch of Mehemet Ali and his career is given in 
Chapter XVIII. of The Cross and the Crescent, by Eliot Warburton, 
a book to which Daly frequently referred in his earlier letters. 



4 EARLY LIFE 

puffing down the Red Sea, and reached Bombay on 
the loth October. I was driven to Sir Henry 
Roper's house ; he was a great friend of my father s, 
and from him I met with a most kind and warm 
reception. That evening I started for my fathers 
house at Kirkee, about lOO miles from Bombay; the 
following evening I reached the cantonment at dusk. 
I continued with him about a month, when he was 
ordered with his regiment, as was then supposed, on 
service to Afghanistan. 

"My own regiment was at Aden, but to enable 
me to study the language, father got me attached to 
a corps at Poona. I remained at Poona till May 
1 841 ; then I went to Bombay to try my chance 
before the Committee of Examination. When the 
General Orders were published I had the gratification 
of seeing my name. Ensign Daly, first on the list of 
'Qualified Interpreters.' I returned to Poona. Two 
months after this I was directed to join a detachment 
of my regiment at a cantonment 70 miles distant. A 
few months more and my father's regiment was 
ordered home. I galloped down to spend a week ere 
the time of departure drew very near ; then I saw 
him no more* till my return to England. I now 

* It was shortly after this that the first news of the Kabul dis- 
asters were received. In January 1842, Daly wrote to his brother: 
"An order has arrived suspending all movements. The deadly 
outbreak at Cabool has been the cause of this change. Fancy, since 
father sailed from Bombay, 22 officers have been killed and upwards 
of 30 wounded, and amongst these some of the wisest and best — ^Sir 
A. Burnes and Sir W. Macnaghten. I have this instant seen an 
extract from a letter from Cabool, detailing some of the terrible events. 
It is thought that without delay an army will be sent up to clear the 
country of every cut-throat who breathes in it, treacherous villains all. 
The Chief has offered our regiment to Government. I hope and trust 
the offer may be accepted, but I fear not. 

" About three weeks since an express was received by the Brigadier 
here from Mallegaum, about 120 miles hence, saying that a Madras + 
regiment there was in a state of mutiny and calling for aid from here 
as soon as possible. Accordingly, ijo European artillerymen, 4 guns 
and 150 Sepoys were ordered to march the next day. I wrote to the 
Brigadier, volunteering to go ; he accepted and put me in orders to 

i" The 52nd N. I. : see footnote at page 490 in Kayfs Sepoy War, vql, i. 



APPOINTED ADJUTANT 5 

deliberately composed myself to overcome a second 
language; that of the Mahratta. In May 1842, I 
again appeared before the Committee and with suc- 
cess. At that time I knew the Commander-in-Chief, 
Sir T. M'Mahon,* and his family well. Lady 
M'Mahon was kindly interested about my passingf. 
Laughingly, I had obtained a promise from her that, 
if I got through my trial, she would obtain from Sir 
Thomas two months' leave for me to the hills, for my 
health. The day of passing I saw her ; that evening 
I received a note from an A.D.C. directing me to wait 
on the Chief the following morning. I concluded it 
was anent the hills leave ; having been but eighteen 
months in the army, I had not dreamt of an appoint- 
ment. Accordingly, I went to Sir Thomas, who 
congratulated me, and said, ' I have a reward for your 
industry,' and added something kind. I was appointed 
Adjutant of an Irregular Infantry Regiment. I was 
but an ensign at the time ; it changed my pay from 
200 to upwards of 500 rupees a month. Strange 
coincidence, the ' {Provincial f Battalion' to which I 
was appointed way stationed at the very place where 
formerly had been a large cantonment, which had 
been abandoned from its unhealthiness to Europeans ; 
Kaira : there had been the 4th Dragoons ; there too 
was my mother's grave ! So we met. For months 
every day I passed the spot where she lies. My poor 
mother ! I was a child when she died, but so often 
had I read her beautiful letters that her memory was 
a living feeling. 

"There were three European officers in the 
corps, commandant, adjutant, and doctor. The com- 
mandant, a captain of some standing, was rnarried. 
So was the doctor. I have seen no spot in any 

march with the detachments, and away we went, but alas ! our hopes 
of glory ! were doomed to die a sudden death, for, when we had 
arrived within 30 miles of Mallegaum, we received an order to retrace 
our steps as all was quiet." 

* Lieut.-General Sir Thomas M'Mahon, Bart., K.C.B., was Com- 
mander-in-Chief in Bombay from 1840 to 1847. 
■ t The "Guzerat Battalion," which was raised in 1824, and was 
some 1200 strong ; it was chiefly employed on civil and police duties 
in Kaira, Ahmedabad, Broach, and Surat. The Adjutant was also 
Interpreter and Quarter-master. 



6 EAELY LIFE 

country more luxuriantly beautiful than Kaira. 
Verdure and culture on all sides. Trees of great 
magnificence, which had been planted by the 
Muhammadans when the tide of conquest bore them 
there. The society was limited ; two or three 
civilians besides the regiment ; yet was I very happy 
there. Here commenced a friendship between 
Anderson and myself which ended with his death 
at Multan. He belonged to my regiment. I had 
known him before. It so chanced that three of us of 
the same corps had staff appointments far away from 
the regiment but near each other : — Grant, the 
adjutant of a cavalry regiment (like mine), Anderson 
in the quarter-master general's department. These 
two were at a large station 20 miles from mine ; 
we became constant associates and were always at 
each other's houses. Poor Grant, I can scarcely 
write his name without a tear. Noble and high- 
minded, he died young, a year after the time I allude 
to. Of Anderson I knew even more. Being in _ the 
same regiment, possessing many similar inclinations 
and studies, we were much together. We both 
entertained ambitious hopes of rising in the service, 
and for many an hour did we sit of a night at Kaira, 
dreaming dreams of days to come, breathing hopes 
of success, alas how suddenly cut short in his case ; 
at a time too when they were being fast realised. 
Scarce of my own brother's mind and capacity did 
I so well know the workings as of Anderson's. After 
a year near me he joined Sir Charles Napier's staff 
in Sind.* He won the regard and esteem of the 

* In October 1843 Daly wrote home to his brother: — "You will 
have heard of the rebellion in the Punjab ; I should trust now that 
we shall place the country in leading strings ; under our sway the 
Valley of Cashmere would prove. the richest and most productive in the 
world : we are all deeply anxious to know what Lord EUenborough 
will do, but it is not probable he will let slip so favourable an oppor- 
tunity of annexing a gem so precious to our possessions. Should he 
do this, it will require a strong force and some sharp fighting, for the 
Sikhs can bring into the field an army 80,000 strong, composed of 
well-discipUned brave soldiers, and 120 pieces of cannon. All the 
fighting will, I fancy, fall to the good luck of the Bengal Army. Sind 
is not to be occupied by Bombay troops any longer. The order for a 
Bengal Force to march to relieve the Bombay Force is out, but the 



RETURN TO ENGLAND 7 

general, who gave him an appointment of honour. 
Severe fever overtook him in the jungle of Sind, and 
he was obliged to seek home for his health in 
December 1843. Our correspondence had been 
regular, for we were much to each other. 

"About the time he went to England, or a little 
earlier, I was seized with fever. I struggled with it 
for some months, till at last in February 1844, much 
weakened by its repeated attacks, I went to try the 
change and sea breeze of Bombay. _ The first week 
in Bombay revived me and I saw visions of return- 
ing to Kaira, but these were not to remain long. 
The attacks were renewed ; I was recommended to 
proceed home, and sailed on the ist March 1844. _ I 
thus relinquished a good appointment and good in- 
terest, and the latter could not easily be renewed, as 
my father had left India. Many said, 'You'll sorely 
regret this in days to come. At twenty-two resign- 
ing a soldierly appointment worth ^700 a year. 
Try the Cape or Egypt ; your health will be restored 
there.' (By the rules of the service an officer might 
go to the Cape or Egypt without losing his Indian 
pay and Staff appointment, whereas by going home 
both were sacrificed.) However I cared little for 
this sound advice. We underwent quarantine at 
Malta, whence I travelled with a friend through 
Sicily, Naples, Civita Vecchia, Leghorn, and Pisa to 
France. There Anderson and I became again united. 
I spent some weeks amidst his family in Scotland, 
and was treated by them as one of themselves. My 
days passed joyously, and by and by I began to 
realise mentally the prophecies of those who warned 
me against going. I knew I ought not to remain 
the full length (three years) of my leave. It was 
waste iif I thought of climbing. When happily, to 
save me the decision and free me from the responsi- 
bility, came the order in March 1846, during the 
Sutlej campaign, ' Rejoin your regiment ordered on 
service.' In fifteen days I was off. I joined my 
regiment. The adjutancy became vacant ; I was 
offered it. A month later I should have lost it, and 

Punjab row will probably prevent its being carried into execution for 
some time ; I hope so, for it would lose me my present appointment." 



8 EAKLY LIFE 

with it that which has made me what I am, favour- 
able opportunities. I have always liked my noble 
prfoession, and proud was I when Sir Charles Napier 
addressed the regiment in terms that made mv 
cheeks tingle. Anderson, after wandering through 
Persia, joined me at Karachi, and there we lived m 
the same house for many months until he went to 
take up the appointment in which he subsequently 
met his death." 

The speech by Sir Charles ISfapier, to which 
allusion is here made, ran as follows : — 

" Soldiers,' — I have this day the honour to pre- 
sent new colours to the oldest regiment in the service 
of the East India Company. A regiment which can- 
not tread upon any part of our eastern territory whose 
history has not been illustrated by its glory and by 
its blood, either in victory or in defeat. Aye, in 
defeat ; for though defeat has, in the long course of 
ages, fallen at times like a direful vapour on the arms 
of England, and for a moment veiled their brilliancy, 
still has the indomitable courage of the European 
remained unbroken, and, as the sun, shorn of its 
beams, may be traced, though dimly, through a. 
murky mist, so has British valour ever been traced 
through disaster, till other battles and better leading 
gave fresh victories to our arms. 

"To a young corps, unknown to history, I could 
speak largely on the duties of soldiers to their colours ; 
but to you, Fusiliers, whose bayonets gleam with the 
splendour of Indian triumphs, whose standards are 
wreathed with the accumulated laurels of ages, I have 
only to point out past exploits ; to recall to your 
memories the battlefields under Clive, Lawrence, 
CooTE, CoRNWALLis, Smith — from Plassey to 
Beni-Boo-Ali — aye, and long before Plassey ; in- 
cluding innumerable sieges and assaults, unsurpassed 
in number and in daring by any regiment in the 
world. Were I to dwell on all the battles and storm- 
ings, it would keep us till midnight. I will, therefore, 
speak but of two which appear to me among the most 
celebrated — I mean the capture of Ahmedabad and 
of Seringapatam. At Ahmedabad the two intrepid 



SPEECH BY CHARLES NAPIER 9 

men, Ensign Hieme and Serg-eant Hugh Fridge, 
both of your regiment, led the stormers to the walls, 
and, sword in hand, they mounted the breach, and 
won Hieme his lieutenancy and Fridge the honour 
of carrying the colours, for which he had so bravely 
fought. 

"A few years later, the same courageous soldier, 
the same Hugh Fridge (now become Captain Fridge 
of the Bombay Europeans), mounted the immortal 
breach of Seringapatam, close following the more 
young, more active, and more renowned Sergeant 
James Graham, who there fell, not the first bearing 
that honoured name, distinguished by a glorious 
death in the service of the British throne. Soldiers, 
it must rouse the minds of military men to think of 
the exultation of your regiment, as, in a dense 
column, it rushed up the breach following the gallant 
Graham, and beheld the hero waving the colours of 
England on the summit amidst the flashing of 
Mysorean scimitars, the fire, the smoke, and the 
loud cheers of the stormers, as they fiercely won 
their bloody footing aloft. 

"Take your splendid colours, soldiers, refulgent 
with the glories of a hundred battles. Ye are as good 
men, as brave men, and as strong men to do battle as 
the heroes who went before you, and the day will come 
when, in future combats, you shall renovate* your 
fame as you have this day renovated your standards. " 

From his earliest years Daly was a careful student 
of character, and was in the habit of keeping a 
journal, "being assured that the mere paper com- 
mittal of one's ordinary pursuits and feelings tends 
to improve both." He was a great, but discursive 
reader : — 

" I have a horror of the human mind being stuffed 
like a turkey, fed only with diet to fit it for the table. 

* See footnote, pp. 50, 51. The text of the speech was placed at 
the author's disposal through the courtesy of an officer now serving 
with the Dublin Fusiliers. To all readers it will at once occur that 
Sir Charles Napier's closing words were especially prophetic of the 
fame which was to be won by the regiment in South Africa. 



10 EAELY LIFE 

I have ever been a Republican in literature, followingr 
a most desultory course. I never drew up a system 
in my life, never followed that of anyone. I confess I 
have occasionally repented the not having done so. 
I find I have collected a considerable quantity of 
knowledge, for I have read much of general literature 
— History, Travels, Biographies, Reviews. I have 
never attempted to master any scientific subject, 
know nothing of any of the ology family. But I hold 
the information a man gets from books very inferior 
towards educating the mind to that which is obtained 
from observation and reflection. Yet is there no 
more ardent lover of books than I am ; none so lonely 
without them. Biography has ever been a favourite 
branch of reading with me. There is no study so 
ennobling, more instructive, more consolatory ; perse- 
verance and self-culture — no ability can claim im- 
munity from these and still perform its course. 
Touching languages, I can always cover my reputa- 
tion with the mantle of Eastern tongues, which I 
hope will always be to me what the earth is to the 
physician, covering all civilised blunders. German I 
can speak tolerably (read that last word slowly, it is 
not intended to imply vast things) ; three or four 
weeks in Germany would, I think, make me perfectly 
fluent in the language. Not so French ; I have had 
less practice there in conversation." 

At Karachi Daly was first introduced to Sir 
Charles Napier, from whom in later years he received 
much kindness, and whom he ever regarded with the 
deepest respect and affection. In 1847 he recorded 
in his journal : — 

"Sir Charles has quitted 'his own won' country, 
bearing with him .as much afiection and respect from 
all employed under him as ever great man had on 
relinquishing a high command in which, of necessity, 
he had frequently to apply the curb in an autocratic 
government. Even those who at times spoke lightly 
of the hero that's gone, felt deeply at his going ; as 
he placed his foot upon the boat which was to bear 
him away, the hearts of those around were too full to 



IN INDIA AGAIN 11 

cheer; no one spoke, but many instinctively un- 
covered their heads. He too was deeply affected. 
Never did I feel prouder than as he passed down the 
line of troops, where with dropped sword I sat on 
horseback at the end of our formation, he recog-nised 
me and said, ' Ah, Daly, is that you ? ' and turned his 
horse and shook me by the hand with 'Goodbye, 
grood luck to you, my boy.' I bade God bless him, 
and felt at that moment that good must befall me 
after his wish." 

Shortly after this Daly was also much affected by 
the departure of his commanding- officer. Colonel 
Gumming : — 

" We have lost the dear old Golonel. I knew not 
how much we were attached to him until the time of 

Earting-. I have never met such a character. He 
ad mingled much with the world, and from being of 
an inquisitive temper and fond of the study of men, 
had seen and thought much of feelings and dis- 
positions. In some things he had an intuitive know- 
ledge of what a man would think and do. His 
simplicity was wondrous, as pure and high in his own 
ideas and in his appreciation of the ' right ' as on the 
day he left his father's house. He possessed more 
charity than any man I ever knew. He judged more 
kindly of acts perhaps than they at all times deserved ; 
but, by his interpretations of men's motives, he raised 
the standard in the mind of each, and many who 
heeded little of morality before strove to win the 
Colonel's regard. Falsehood he held as the lowest 
and meanest act a man could commit ; without truth, 
rigid truth, no character could prosper, no talents 
could support a man lacking it." 

Daly's health had not been fully restored by his 
sojourn in Europe. It was in opposition to strong 
medical advice that he returned to India in the spring 
of 1846 ; at Malta he was so ill that he was almost 
sent back to England. Soon after his arrival in 
Karachi his regiment was decimated by a terrible 



12 EAELY LIFE 

outbreak of cholera ; the rest of that year was spent 
in tents, and in May of the following year he was 
dangerously ill. He recovered sufficiently to avoid 
being invalided, but his health remained unsatis- 
factory for several years. He was at this time 
exceedingly anxious to obtain employment in the 
Punjab, but was not successful, being then unknown 
to the Lawrences, or to anyone with local influence. 
His friend Anderson, who had been more fortunate, 
kept up a. close correspondence from the Punjab, and 
early in March 1848 wrote the following sketch of the 
famous brothers who then formed the most interesting 
group on the stage of Indian history : — * 

" First for Henry : a thin face ; an expansive, but 
not massive, forehead; widely apart grey eyes, that 
seem to look always on a distant object, even when 
observing you, and which suggest ideas of abstracted- 
ness and contemplation. An expression wonderfully 
benevolent. Let me, however, dwell on the mouth, 
which is perhaps the most sympathetic organ we 
have. The mouth of Colonel Lawrence shows you at 
once that he is desirous to please and to avoid hurting 
a single feeling. The shyness of vanity is unknown 
to him ; but the shyness of modesty, which sits well, 
though not very elegantly, on a great man, is his 
failing, his_ demon. Heis, as of course he must be, 
an entertaining companion ; his voice is the personi- 
fication of entre-nous-ness, if I may be bold enough 
such a word to _ try. Still he shirks literature as 
literature, and sticks to Indian subjects, where no 
immediate personal feeling or taste, beyond what is 
referable to justice and truths and facts, is developed. 
He does not think it advisable or becoming to open 

* Henry Lawrence was at this time Resident at Lahore, with 
control of the Council of Administration, which was formed under the 
treaty of December 1846 ; John was Commissioner of the Jalandar 
Division, which included the territory annexed after the first Sikh 
War ; George was Political Agent on the North-West Frontier, with 
headquarters at Peshawar. 



THE THREE LAWEENCES 13 

his mind upon any personal subject ; but throws 
away all affectation of superior talent or dignity in 
discoursingf on matters where the welfare of India, the 
state of the English world, or anything connected in 
short with the sort of practical knowledge you would 
expect to find in a man in his position is concerned. 
But he avoids soliloquies, and shuns opinions without 
a sound bottom ; and you would say, if you had not 
read his novel,* had not a grain of romance in his 
disposition. He provokes opinions from others, and 
is as sharp as the Spanish Prime Minister in Gil 
Bias in detecting the gold from the dross. He 
surpasses Outramt and all men I have seen as a 
perfect knower of men. 

"One kind of greatness is common to all the 
three brothers — decision of character, unsurpassable 
and dauntless courage. The Major is brisk, jolly, 
less solid than John and the Colonel, but capable of 
great deeds in a crisis by his pluck, talent, honesty, 
and decision. John, whom I did not appreciate till 
I learnt from his acts what a splendid creature he is, 
is original, plain-spoken, playful and even prantic in 
conversation ; is one of the first civil servants in 
India; knows natives like ABC; notes humbug; 
pulls out your most secret wishes by an apparent 
artlessness ; is fond of billiards and cigars ; writes 
splendid reports and letters ;_ does _ immense naukri 
(service), and has a very nice wife. The Colonel 
surpasses the brothers by having all their decision, 
all their experience, but with a refined, sensitive 
nature. I do not doubt that great part of his life 
has been spent in study, in nurturing grand resolves, 
and carrying them out." 

A few weeks after this sketch was written, the 
whole situation in India was changed by the outbreak 
at Multan, and the great events to which it was the 
prelude. 

* Adventures of an Officer in the Service of Ranjeet Singh, by 
Major H. M. Lawrence. 

t Sir James Outran), the "Bayard of India," whose wife was 
Anderson's sister. 



CHAPTER II 

MULT AN (1848- 1 849) 

Peaceful condition of the Punjab early in 1848 ; Multan affairs ; the 
outbreak ; voyage up the Indus ; the first siege of Multan ; 
general condition of the Punjab ; George Lawrence a prisoner ; 
defection of Sher Singh ; reinforcements from Bombay ; storm 
and capture of Multan ; burial of Agnew and Anderson. 

Sir George Lawrence, in his Forty-Three Years 
in India, especially notices (p. 240) the profoundly 
peaceful condition of the entire Punjab at the end of 
January 1848, when he returned from leave and 
resumed his appointment as Political Agent at 
Peshawar. On the 22nd March 1848 the Governor- 
General in Council informed * the Secret Committee 
of the Board of Control that "the perfect tran- 
quillity which prevails in the Punjab is enabling 
the Darbar, with the assistance of the Resident, to 
promote reforms in the administration of the Lahore 
State, calculated to relieve its finances, and to 
ameliorate the condition of the people." Sir Henry 
Lawrence had proceeded to England on sick leave 
in November 1847, handing over charge to his 
brother John, who officiated as Resident at Lahore 
until the arrival of Sir Frederick Currie early in 
March 1848. While John Lawrence was thus 
officiating, he received a visit from Mulraj,t the 

* Despatch No. 25, dated 22nd January 1848 : Parliamentary 
Papers, India, 1849, v°l- ''I'-i P- I04' 

t For details as to Mulraj, see despatch from the Governor-General 
in Council to the Secret Committee, No. 43, dated nth May 1848, at 
page 116 : Parliamentary Papers, India, 1849, vol. xli. 



PEACE IN THE PUNJAB 15 

Dewan of Multan, who expressed his desire to resign 
the government of that province, a desire in which 
he persisted, in spite of Mr Lawrence's endeavours 
to dissuade him from the step. By Mulraj's request, 
the matter was treated as secret, until Sir Frederick 
Currie reached Lahore ; the latter then communicated 
the proposal to the Sikh Darbar, and, after a further 
unsuccessful attempt to induce Mulraj to retain his 
charge, decided to send two British officers to 
accept the Dewan's resignation, and to instal his 
successor. 

The great Multan province, as then constituted, 
may be roughly described as covering, on the east 
of the Indus, the present Multan and Muzaffargarh 
districts, with cis-Indus Dera Ismael Khan and 
portions of the present Bannu, Jhelum, Shahpur, 
Jhang, and Montgomery districts ; on the west of 
the Indus, it included practically the whole of what 
is now the Dera Ghazi Khan district, and a very 
considerable tract of the adjacent tribal country. 
The city of Multan is of remote antiquity, and has 
been the scene of repeated struggles : it fell before 
Alexander the Great ; it was taken by Mahmud of 
Ghazni at the beginning of the eleventh, and by 
Tamerlane at the end of the fourteenth century ; 
it was besieged in 1810 by Ranjit Singh, who was 
then bought off by the Afghan governor,* but 
he stormed it in 1818, and annexed the province 
to the Punjab. Three years later he appointed 
as Governor Dewan or Sawan Mull, a man of 
distinguished ability, who belonged to a banking 
family of Lahore. Sawan Mull ruled the province 
for twenty-three years, during which he amassed 

* Sir H. Lawrence's Adventures of an Officer, etc., vol. i., p. 256. 



16 MULTAN 

great wealth and became almost independent of 
the Darbar. He it was who constructed at Multan 
the fortifications which, improved as they were by 
Mulraj after April 1848, the British were to find so 
formidable. Dying in 1844, from the effects of a 
wound inflicted by one of his own guard, he was 
succeeded by his son, Mulraj, whose appointment 
was confirmed by the Regency on the conclusion of 
the first Sikh war in 1847, and again by the British 
Resident after the downfall of the Regency. 

Vans Agnew, of the Civil Service, and Daly's 
friend, Anderson were selected to accompany the 
new Governor designate, Sardar Khan Singh, to 
Multan. Vans Agnew was described by Sir 
Frederick Currie as "the oldest political officer on 
this frontier, and a man of much ability, energy, 
and judgment " ; Anderson had the benefit of local 
knowledge, as he had travelled through the whole of 
the Multan province, and was "an excellent Oriental 
scholar, who had been employed with credit under 
Sir Charles Napier in Sind." - The escort consisted 
of 1400 Sikh infantry, a Gurkha regiment, 700 
cavalry, and 100 artillerymen with 6 guns. 

In a letter written en route, Anderson said : — 

" I am enjoying, in company with my senior, 
Agnew, the pleasure of a boat on the Ravi. Such a 
bumping voyage I never knew. Sardar Khan Singh, 
the future Governor of Multan, accompanies us in 
another boat. The Sardar is a fine fellow, has been 
through all the wars, and has lots of pluck. We do not 
yet know precisely what our duties are to be ; but I 
fancy I shall be obliged to disband some 3000 or 4000 
irregular troops of Mulraj, the late Ijaradar,* and 

* Ijara signifies lease, and ijaradar leaseholder. The Dewan, or 
Governor, was in fact a farmer of the revenues, paying a fixed annual 
quit-rent to the Darbar. 



rr y 




MOLTAN. 
Struggle in the streets — Capture of two Sikh standards. 



{To Jam p. 14. 



OUTBREAK AT MULTAN 17 

keep on some 2000 for regular regriments, and also to 
superintend the discipline and equipment of two 
Sikh regiments and a battery. My other duties will 
be to help Agnew as much as possible in his revenue 
and magisterial transactions. To say that I am a 
lucky fellow, Daly, is less than the truth. I could 
not in all India have had a better appointment given 
me than the present one. Agnew is a first-rate and 
most distinguished man. "The country we are 
appointed to has neyer been directly governed by 
the Sikhs ; but by Ijara. It is very rich, and it is 
expected that an increase of 6 to 8 lakhs will accrue 
to Government by the new system. 

" We expectin the cold weather to have to use the 
strong arm against the Baluch and Afghan tribes on 
the west of the Indus, and hence the military prepara- 
tions ; but Agnew will not resort to arms without 
great necessity, and he managed so well in Hazara 
that it is to be hoped we shall avoid fighting. 

" I am indebted to John Lawrence for my present 
berth, and to Napier* having given me a good 
character at the right time. The vera causa was 
Outram's letter to Mr Clark. Outram is much more 
known here than in Bombay. There is no one in 
the whole Residency who does not thoroughly support 
him, from Currie to myself" 

The party reached Multan on the i8th April 1848. 
On the 19th, when returning from the fort of which 
they had taken formal charge, the British officers 
were attacked without warning and both wounded, 
Anderson very seriously ; Agnew was actually riding 
at the time by the side of Mulraj, who made no effort 
to help or protect them. They were brought back 
by Khan Singh to the Idgahf where their escort was 
quartered ; but next morning the escort went over to 

* The late Lord Napier of Magdala, then employed as a civil 
engineer in the Punjab. 

+ An Idgah is a place where the Muhammadans worship on 
certain festival days, which are termed Id. This Idgah was a parti- 
ally enclosed building, a short distance outside the walls of Multan, 

B 



18 MtJLTAN 

the rioters and that evening^ the two officers were mur- 
dered by a fanatical mob. Sardar Khan Singh, with 
some eight or ten faithful horsemen, stood by them 
to the last ; he was made prisoner and insultingly 
treated by Mulraj, who now displayed himself as in 
open revolt against the established administration. 

On the 22nd April, Herbert Edwardes,* who was 
engaged on revenue work in the Dera Ismael Khan 
district, some 90 miles from Multan, received a letter 
from Agnew, informing him of the attack made on 
himself and Anderson, and calling for assistance. 
The letter was written before the • mutiny of the 
escort. Edwardes at once made arrangements to 
cross the Indus and proceed towards Multan with 
such forces as he could muster, but it was not long 
before he learnt that the worst had happened. This 
is not the place to recount his brilliant performances. 
It will suffice to say that with the help of local levies, of 
the forces of the Nawab of Bahawalpur, and of some 
loyal Darbar troops, mostly Muhammadans, under 
the command of General Cortlandt,t he not only 
kept the field against Mulraj until the arrival of the 
British troops, but that his operations had the 
successful results which are summed up in the 
following passage from his own book + : — 

" Mulraj rebelled on the 20th April 1848. On the 
20th May, the battle of Dera Ghazi Khan lost him 
all his Trans- Indus dependencies. On the i8th of 
June, the battle of Kineyree deprived him of the 
country between the Indus and the Chenab, and nearly 

* The late Colonel Sir Herbert Edwardes, K.C.S.I., C.B. 

t Cortlandt was an officer of mixed parentage, holding the rank 
of general under the Sikh Darbar. After the annexation he was made 
a Deputy Commissioner in the Punjab. He did excellent service in 
the Mutiny. 

J A Year on the Punjab Frontier, in 1848-49, vol. ii., p. 483. 







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THE PUNITIVE EXPEDITION 19 

all between the Chenab and the Sutlej. On the ist 
July, the battle of Suddoosam shut him up in the 
city and fortress of Multan, whence he never issued 
again except to resist the siege of a British army." 

When the news of the Multan outbreak reached 
Lahore, it was at first determined to despatch a Sikh 
force, with a British brigade, to suppress it. But, 
when intelligence of the deaths of Agnew and 
Anderson had been received, it was considered 
best, in view of the season of the year, to post- 
pone active operations until October. Uneasiness, 
however, soon began to spread through the Punjab, 
manifesting itself first in Hazara, where Chattar 
Singh, an old and influential Sikh chief, was 
governor ; and Edwardes' success at Suddoosam 
decided the acting Resident to move at once 
against Multan, partly in the hope that it might 
now be possible to finish off the rebellion at one 
blow, and partly to check the widespread con- 
spiracy which was known to exist. Accordingly, in 
July 1848, a force under General Whish started in 
two columns from Lahore and Ferozpur and con- 
centrated before Multan soon after the middle of 
August. The force included Her Majesty's loth 
and 32nd Regiments, with three companies of fort 
artillery, 32 pieces of siege ordnance, and 12 horse 
artillery guns. The strength was a little over 200 
British officers and 7800 men. Co-operating with 
them were the irregular forces* under Lieutenant 
Edwardes and General Cortlandt ; the native aids f 
of Bhawal Khan, Nawab of the Bhawalpur State, 
who were commanded by Lieutenant Lake ; and the 

* Cavalry, 770?; infantry, 3ICX); H.A. guns; mortars, 2; camel- 
guns, 25. 

+ Cavalry, 1900 ; infantry, 5700 ; H.A, guns, 14 ; camel-guns, 18. 



20 MtJLTAN 

Sikh force * under Sher Singh, which represented the 
Lahore Darbar ; Sher Singh was the son of the 
Chattar Singh above mentioned. Edwardes esti- 
mated Mulraj's force at the beginning of September 
1848 at 10,000 men, of whom 1200 were cavalry, 
with about 54 guns and 4 mortars. 

News of the Multan outbreak reached Karachi, 
where Daly was serving with the ist Bombay 
Fusiliers, early in June. As soon as General 
Whish's force was organised, Daly obtained per- 
mission to join it as a volunteer. Travelling on the 
Indus was in those days uncertain and difficult. He 
left Karachi on the i6th August, and embarked on 
the steamer Napier at Tatta on the 19th with four 
other officers, including Captain Brown, formerly 
secretary to Sir Charles Napier, and Major Gordon 
of the 60th Rifles. 

"We steamed the next day through some of the 
most beautiful scenery eye ever saw — glorious trees, 
resplendent with foliage and blossom, forming shades 
and knolls which realise what one imagines from 
Percy's Ballads the woods and forests of old England 
must have been — such as Robin Hood would have 
delighted to travel in. Tatta is some 70 miles from 
Hyderabad, which we reached^ about 8. This being 
the headquarters of _ the flotilla, all the prepara- 
tions for the voyage immediately commenced — coal, 
arms, ammunition, spare funnels, sails, tents, pro- 
visions, and a doctor. 

" At 9 the following morning we were again under 
steam ; all day we were running past beauteous 
woods, trees hanging down with yellow blossom. 
The rolling rage of the river during this month 
carries all before it, often from some unaccountable 
freak it turns its -force on a bank where trees have 
risen to beauty and age in security and sweeps all 

* Cavalry, 3400 ; infantry, 900 ; H.A. guns, 10 ; mortars, 2 ; 
camel-guns, 115. 



ON BOAED THE NAPIER 21 

away in one swoop ; a bubble and no more is seen, 
the undercurrent burying all. We had a strange 
example of this while at Tatta Bunder (May) — the 
boatmen had placed a large pile of wood for the 
steamer some lo yards from the bank ; about an 
hour after they had done so, the water began to suck 
in the bank by feet ; the boatmen hurriedly removed 
it farther back — an hour sufficed to carry away the 
ground on which it had been ; this, however, did not 
suffice the hungry current — again they were obliged 
to move the heap, and ere six hours were over, 60 
feet had been swept away. On the 20th we 
anchored 40 miles up the river. In places there is 
naught to divest one of the idea of being in the wide 
seas save that the water is dark and dirty in colour ; 
here and there grand old trees rising with their richly 
covered heads, the trunks being under water. _ It 
reminds me much of my first impressions on coming 
up the Nile in boyhood. 

" I hardly know what expectations I have formed 
for this expedition ; under any circumstances I am 
glad of the opportunity of seeing the Indus ; I have 
an inexpressible feeling to look on the spot where 
he (Anderson) was wounded and where he lay ; it 
may be something for good may arise from it ; I 
cheer myself up with this : such hopes are apt enough 
to creep in, and may be I am too much inclined to 
indulge in high ones for the future and to bask in 
fancies which can never be realised— -at any rate such 
dreamings do one no harm. D' I sraeli says to think the 
heroic make heroes ; sure I am that high thoughts 
and aspirations raise the standard of conduct in 
life, and that alone is fruit. I do_ indeed despair 
when I read the characters and abilities of those who 
have filled prominent places in the world. 

"About 5 P.M., 26th, we came in sight of 
Sukkur, the rise of the river and consequent increased 
strength of the current had delayed us more than we 
had expected. The passage rounding Sukkur Fort 
being somewhat difficult and doubtful, it was joyously 
carried to attempt it at once without stopping at 
Sukkur, so on we went — the view of the fort on one 
side and Roree opposite, with temples and palm trees 
rising high, was more picturesque and 'eastern,' 



22 MULTAN 

according to our ideas than anything I remember. 
The currents run down through two mouths, their 
violence even all that I had heard and the experience 
I had from Tatta did not prepare me for. It was 
indeed the battle of the floods, a strife of currents and 
undercurrents meeting in three different places, and 
roaring and boiling in very whirlpools ; the space 
between which this mass of waters rolls and the scene 
of this contention can scarcely be a width of lOO 
yards. The boat was steamed to full power, she 
slowly but steadily breasted the first embankment, 
on to the second with the same success ; the third 
and last, as we approached, was visibly a bridge of 
eddies : her pace, slow as it had been before, 
slackened ; when she met the full force of the torrent, 
she paused, reeled under it, sheered slightly away, 
one slight effort more would have carried her head 
round and taken us far down the stream, if we had 
escaped contact with the projecting walls of the town 
— but that did not occur — we escaped, and she 
steamed through. 

" 2']th and 2%th. — We have been running on with 
indifferent luck. The first pilot we brought with us 
was not very well informed as to the channels ; but, 
as he truly remarked, this ignorance might be 
accounted for by the fact of his never having been so 
high up before. 

"Yesterday morning we came upon a boat con- 
taining an elderly gentleman and his family : these, 
our pilot told us, had no other place of residence. 
Deeming that such an one would know something of 
the channel and course of the river on which he 
'moved and had his being,' we stopped to take him 
in. The banks of the river, since leaving Sukkur, 
have lost the wooded clothing ; trees do appear, but 
far in the distance, not in masses as before, but 
separately or in small clumps. The inhabitants, 
when there are any, rush to the banks and stare in 
wonderment, yet in fear ; these children of the jungle, 
like rabbits passing out of a warren. 

'' 2(jth to 2>rd. — The past days have been full of 
misfortunes : first, at Mithankot an attempt was 
made to run up a creek and so get into the Panjnad 
by a cut — the adage was verified of the shortest road 



IN THE PANJNAD 23 

being the longest way. We ran hard-and-fast upon 
a sandbank a couple of miles above Chacha, and 
there, though shallow and broad the stream, it was so 
violent that we did not get afloat until the sand had 
drifted completely under the vessel, and so made a 
completely new channel, by forming an embankment 
on the other side. Then through some blundering 
we backed onto the bank the current had formed, 
and the probability appeared of our being left high 
and dry, the river fast falling, and the creek was 
merely a temporary ebullition of the river. However, 
by daylight the next morning she was swinging ; we 
started down the stream and took the long route : 
this was on the ist morning. We were now in the 
Panjnad ;* on the 2nd, by 10 A.M., we came to very 
shallow water. The course recommended by the 
gentleman who represented the pilot, was found at its 
mouth to contain but 4 feet of water ; the stream ran 
down this with such violence that the boat twice 
slewed round and refused to enter ; unhappily, this 
was held a sufficient reason for eschewing that 
channel. The pilot said he didn't know the other 
course, and feared that though deep now, we should 
find not enough of water. Albeit, away we steamed 
for about two hours, when his prophecy became too 
true ; it was discovered that there was ' no ddbouche 
by that course. We were obliged to steam back to 
the old entrance — there, after some difficulty, we were 
successful, the depth gradually greater as we 
advanced ; we passed through a beautiful country 
better cultivated and better populated than any I 
have seen in Sind. 

" sraf September. — Last night we were joking at 
the results of our experiments in attempting channels 
and cuts not recommended by the pilot, yet this 
morning at 6 a.m. we found the same enormity had 
been perpetrated- We were again obliged to turn 
back. No man of sense will say there is a sandbank 
between this and Karachi with which we are not 
intimately acquainted. Here at 2 p.m. on the 3rd we 

* Panjnad (Five Streams) is the name sometimes given to the 
united rivers of the Punjab immediately below the junction of the 
Chenab with the Indus. 



24 MULTAN 

are at the mouth of the Chenab, where we ought_ to 
have been on the 30th or 31st. Most conflictingf 
rumours have reached us, gathered from the different 
villages, respecting Mulraj's fate._ No letters ; so on 
we go in fear and trembling, hoping much, yet I fear 
scarcely trusting that we are in time. 

"We arrived at the Raj Ghat at 6 A.M., 6th. In- 
formation was immediately sent off, and we soon 
discovered that General Whish's camp was some 10 
miles distant, though that of the irregular troops lay 
between us and him. An answer came from Brown's 
friend to the effect that no operations had yet taken 
place, but that a consultation was to be held that 
morning to decide the point of attack, and probably, 
the result would be the removal of the General's 
camp from its present to a nearer position, in which 
case there would be difficulty in procuring carriage 
for our kit. No guns were heard, and this news 
made us somewhat easy in mind. About 7 p.m. three 
elephants and some tattoos [ponies] arrived for our 
conveyance with a guard of sowars, as it appears the 
fort is not completely invested. We resolved to 
remain till 2 the following morning and so reach camp 
at daylight. Accordingly, we started at 2 on the 
7th, and well was it that our journey began so soon. 
We passed through Edwardes' camp, which, with 
that of a native prince adjoining, from the appearance 
of the men with their matchlocks and mottled 
accoutrements and dress resembled an Indian Fair — 
a more ragged lot man never eyed. We did not reach 
the 'position till 7 a.m., just in time to see the 
skirmishers clearing the ground, and driving the 
enemy from the space where the first parallel was to 
run. We went up to the skirmishers at a place which 
since that it has been my lot to become intimately 
acquainted — the ' Ramtirat.' There I stood under 
my first fire of heavy shot. Brown and I had walked 
out in front to look at a battery the Sikhs were busy 
erecting, a sound indescribable was heard just over 
our head, and about 10 feet in our rear a ball, a cross 
between an 18 and 24-pounder, fell slap between the 
horses of an artillery waggon ; the shock floored one, 
but killed none. The distance from which this came 
could not have been less than if miles. It is a gun 



HOT WOEK IN THE TEENCHES 25 

which, from_ his constant visits since, has obtained 
great celebrity in camp under the title of ' Long 
Tom,' ' John Long- ' ; his voice and range are alike 
peculiar : after the Sikh artillerymen had succeeded 
in obtaining the range of the ' Ramtirat,' during the 
whole day he fell about in a manner most unpleasing 
to gfents who love their ease and comfort, some two 
or three seppys being cut to pieces by him ; yet lOO 
shot from him must have fallen within a space of so 
square yards." 

"Siddons, Brown's friend, shortly after my arrival, 
went to Napier,* the Directing Eng-ineer ; on his 
return he said Napier had offered to make me an 
Assistant Field Engineer, if so inclined — assuredly I 
was willing-. By 5 p.m. I was in the trenches, cutting 
out with some 400 Europeans of the 32nd the first 
parallel, and many a salute did we receive during- the 
night from the enemy's ordnance in the fort, and 
their matchlocks and zamburaks (camel-guns) fired 
from under cover of the bushes and irregular ground. 
About I o a rush was made by them on our picket, 
and the firing became so heavy that the men were 
obliged to be withdrawn from the right of the work. 
I was relieved at i A.M., 8th, and did not again go on 
duty till 3 A.M., 9th, when, for the prolongation of this 
parallel, with Captain Longdon, loth Foot, as Acting 
Engineer, I had some native workmen (Native Regi- 
ments I mean). The Perdasees performed their little 
with bad grace and much grumbling, swearing that 
such was not their employment. The fire burst so 
heavily on us at 5, that we were unable to go on, and 
the enemy running up to our very works, the -working 
party was taken out to drive them back ; this they 
succeeded' in doing with three men wounded, but 
sepoys are totally unfit for a night attack. They fire 
at random with or without an object, with or without 
an enemy. 

"This indiscriminate work drew on us the fort's 
heavy fire and prevented further operations. I was 
not relieved till noon — the heat of the trenches who 
shall describe- — a burning sand and a vertical sun. 
The thermometer under a Bengal tent 114°. Up to 

-* Afterwards Lord Napier of Magdala. 



26 MULTAN 

this time we had made no advance from the works 
sketched out on the first day. The General's camp, 
Sooo or 6000 strong-, lies to the E.S.E. side of 
the fort, 2 J miles from Long- Tom, who has occa- 
sionally dropt within the tents, and oft-tirnes the 
ground near the sentries is ploughed up by his 
ravages. We have an 8-inch mortar battery at the 
Ramtirat, the extreme right of our works ; an 18- 
pounder of 3 guns at the white well some 700 yards 
to the left ; Cortlandt's light 9 and 6-pounders are 
again formed about the same distance to the jeft ; 
other temporary batteries have been put in position 
along the parallel and removed again as circum- 
stances have required. 

" The Sikhs are beautiful shots, and scarce a yard 
have we gained unpeppered or a shot have we fired 
which has not been returned with wondrous pre- 
cision. On the gth, evening, it was resolved to attack 
a little village, surrounded, or at any rate protected 
as far as the eye can see, by a hig-h wall. A square 
building is the first thing- that meets the eye. About 
8 a storming party of Europeans, accompanied by 
sorne of the 49th Native Infantry, moved out ; the 
position is about 600 yards in front of ours and en- 
vironed by a jungle of lofty trees and brushwood, of 
which it is at the very edge ; when our party reached 
it, they found the walls high, too much so to climb ; 
the light from the enemy's fire was like the mouth of 
a volcano ; the men, though falling fast, rushed in, 
conceiving the fire and the burning light came from 
the top of the building. No, it was from the loop- 
holes with which the walls were pierced, crowds of 
armed men firing their camel-guns and matchlocks 
on the devoted party. Two light guns were now 
brought up and two more companies of Europeans. 
Three times they rushed to the walls and three times 
were driven back shattered. Once the door was 
burst open by an officer of the 69th (Richardson) 
and a man of the loth ; the former was no sooner 
in than his face and body were covered with sword- 
cuts ; severe wounds he received as he was dragged 
away. Death's hand was so heavy that the place 
could not be held, and the party was obliged to 
etire, taking possession of an old building and demi- 



A LUDICROUS BLUNDER 27 

fort-looking house about 300 yards in rear. Thus 
perished many a gallant fellow. The loth lost 6 
killed, 2 officers and 36 men wounded, 30 of the 
latter severely. I fancy our total casualties killed 
and wounded must have exceeded 150. I was not 
on duty during- this attack, but went to the works 
at 4 A.M., the loth, when by daylight the troops and 
guns were to move again on the same point. Ac- 
cordingly Anderson's troop moved out, with a party 
of the 32nd, under shelter, to advance should the 
guns clear the way ; scaling ladders were provided, 
but no need arose for their employment. Most 
heartily did the Sikhs return our fire, and after three 
hours of cannonade we saw them still rushing up, 
strengthening the building in rear of which they have 
thrown up entrenchments and made stockades, etc. 
About 8 A.M. all idea of assaulting the old place 
was relinquished, and we contented ourselves with 
pushing our troops into an advanced building some 
100 yards ahead of that which we gained the previous 
night. I was present during this, which did not 
take place without some loss on our part : the 
brigadier was wounded, and many besides ; fast and 
heavy the shots fell around. We succeeded in carry- 
ing out a battery which may be of use to-day. Thus, 
up to this time, we have gained nothing but a know- 
ledge of their undaunted, resolute courage and cool- 
ness ; to the very last they were advancing. A 
Gurkha regiment was brought to support, and 
ardently we hoped they purposed an attack on our 
camp. Europeans have been lost and the object for 
which the loss was incurred ungained ! The General 
was down about the works yesterday, but not an 
order did he issue. I made a most ludicrous blunder : 
I had never before seen the General ; during the 
attack I pointed out to Major Napier the enemy 
moving down in strength and completely under our 
fire, if that was opened, which I earnestly suggested 
should be done, and that we should forthwith send 
out skirmishers to take possession of some rough 
ground to the left. An old gent in a white jacket, 
with a plain stafif-surg^on look, came up ; Napier 
turned to him while I was speaking, and the old gent 
addressed some question to me, which deeming ir- 



28 MULTAN 

revelant, or at any rate of no importance compared 
with Napier's attention, I answered curtly_ and 
abruptly. Lo ! Gordon, who was behind and listen- 
ing to me, said to me, ' You treat the General coolly ! 
Lord ! Lord ! I thought he was either an old sapper 
sergeant or a deputy surgeon — the General ! 

"There's the want of a head palpable to the 
meanest observer. The General leaves much to the 
engineers, and yet fails to give them that support 
which such a legacy requires. Yesterday, when our 
affairs were certainly not brilliant to the eye, he stood 
about as though unconcerned as to the issue. Napier 
is cool, and, from all that is said, able. He is 
indefatigable, sparing himself neither exposure nor 
trouble. I had intended keeping a regular journal 
and dotting down events and the impressions as they 
arose ; but the fatigue, the heat and excitement quite 
frustrated such views — after eight hours' duty in 
exposure to shot and sun alike dangerous, one returns 
totally incapacitated for even the light exertion of 
scribbling without thought or care, as I do this. Till 
to-day I have but sixteen hours between my eight 
hours' tour — now for once I have twenty. 

" i\ih, 8 A.M. Nothing has occurred during the 
night ; the enemy quiet, probably holding well in hand 
all their energies to resist our attack, which they may 
have anticipated. 

" 13/4 7 A.M. I came off a hot, well-sunned tour 
from 1 2 till 8 on the 1 1 th, and was yesterday morning 
at 6 A.M. visited by the engineer brigade-major, with 
a paper, which I was to take to the advanced posts, 
containing directions for the sappers who were to 
accompany the advanceand assault, of which, up to this 
hour, no one but the General and Napier were cog- 
nisant. He lent me his horse, and away I galloped. 
My brigade of sappers, with 100 Native Infentry as 
a working party to assist in throwing up works, was 
to accompany the stormers. I went down and found 
all there, except the 100 rank and file, which by some 
mistake were not forthcoming. However, we pro- 
cured an excellent substitute in some sappers of 
Cortlandt's, fine, wiry, bold fellows. " 

" The advance began from two flanks, each headed 
by a company of Europeans — 32nd and loth — 



STOEMING MULTAN 29 

supported by the remaining- portion of their wings 
with Native Infantry. The loth Foot went up to 
the post with admirable steadiness, the 8th Native 
Infantry vying with them in coolness. The 32nd 
were ordered to advance firing, so that their march 
was not so steady to the eye. The reception given 
at the building was most desperate. The place was 
full of loopholes and swings for camel-guns ; but so 
gallant was the foe that on our approach they rushed 
outside to charge us. The 32 nd, on seeing this, 
doubled in with a cheer. Now the struggle began : 
the enemy got back, and every loophole was raging 
death. The first man who ran up the scaling ladder 
was Balfour of the 32nd — he was hacked fearfully 
across the face, and before we could gain a position 
on the top — which was to the best of my recollection 
about 20 feet broad running all round, with a square 
roof of some few feet higher in the centre — many of 
the brave stormers knew the sleep which knows no 
waking. While we were on the top of the building, 
the enemy still were beneath in the central room, 
from which they could command us above through 
loops, and upon this the dying and the dead were 
thickly strewn. Here it was that Colonel Pattoun 
fell amongst many. He was calling for the ladders 
which I was getting to go on to the next, a much 
higher-walled and larger building than that we were 
now in possession of It was about 200 yards in 
advance — so buried in trees that we were not aware 
of its existence from our works. 

"While we were on the top of the first place, 
which was built of mud, the fire which had been 
ignited at the bottom by some of the men, flamed 
forth, and the centre, weakened by the loopholes 
which we had made to command those inside, came 
down with a great shudder. The flame caught their 
ammunition, of which we knew not, and the interior 
trembled fearfully, and the cry_ was raised, ' Mine.' 
A fearful sight ensued, the dying and wounded so 
thickly packed, friends and foes, though comparatively 
few of the former at this place, were engulfed in 
the flame, which burst out with renewed vigour, 
having caught some of the dried grass which had 
been their beds : poor wretches, their clothes were 



30 MULTAN 

on fire, the little they had ! I got almost accustomed 
to this during the day, for many, many did I see burn- 
ing alive, their skins baked. Their matchlock lights, 
burning when they were shot, set their clothes in a 
flame, and their burnt skins were crackling as the 
miserable creatures were weltering in the grilling sun. 
The next place was not so desperately defended, though 
larger. It seems to be a garden pleasure-house, 
beautifully built. Yet, though I say not so desperately 
defended, they resisted to the last, and fifty I suppose 
were shot and bayoneted within it. In this some 
spoil was found, and many carried away much who 
were not there when we entered. Swords, percussion 
pistols, were in a hole in the wall — silks, etc. In a 
little cool place separate from the building, as we ran 
through, I espied a bed which had not been long 
quitted, evidently from its appearance belonging^ to 
one of their chiefs. Peacock's plumes for brushing 
away the flies from the sleeper lay at the head. I 
seized one of these : all my plunder ! The sepoys 
plundered much, and there was none to stay them. 
Napier was everywhere in the thick : if coolness and 
command of his faculties merit anything, assuredly 
does he all that can be bestowed. We took posses- 
sion of a garden and the left front of the building ; 
the wall of this I got some sappers to make loops in 
for the men to fire through ; as your head above was 
the signal that you were near 20 matchlocks and 
zamburaks. 

" Up to this time the fort and city guns had not 
annoyed us, not knowing, I fancy, where to fire; but 
now they began, and only by sticking close to the 
wall could the men remain in safety. The H.A. 
(Mackenzie) came up and took up an exposed position 
to the left, and opened a heavy fire with their 
6-pounders ; but they lost many horses and men. 
The enemy's entrenchments, fearfully deep and thick, 
were scarcely 250 yards from the garden walls ; with 
the naked eye I could distinguish the men leaning 
over to fire their long guns ; of these we could quickly 
have possessed ourselves, but, unless prepared to 
advance and occupy the mound, about 700 yards 
in advance, and bursting with metal, we could not 
have held them. I suggested to put a couple of 



EXCURSIONS AND ALARUMS 31 

6-pounders in the garden, which was acceded to ; 
after this I was employed in throwing- up an entrench- 
ment connecting Mackenzie's guns and the left of the 
garden ; this space was commanded by their heavy 
guns from the parapet and by their zamburaks from 
the trenches. A hot, biting fire was kept up on us 
all day, to the cost of many ; here I remained until 
relieved, 6 p.m. I have no idea of our loss, the 
amount I mean ; it must have been severe. Bodies 
were lying thick, and many I saw taken wounded to 
the rear. A fine young officer, a great favourite, 
Lloyd of the 8th Native Infantry, was cut down by 
some villains whom he would not allow his men to 
fire on. The party that cut him up represented 
themselves as friends, and on approaching the sepoys 
said, ' We have no quarrel with you, it's only with 
the Sahib-log ; leave them and come along, every man 
shall have a gold necklace.' Letters were written to 
the same effect and thrown amongst the sepoys, who 
bayoneted the bearers. 

" Braver men than Mulraj's never went out to 
battle ; they vie with the Europeans. When the 
advance parties were outnumbered and cut up, the 
rear_ were strengthening their works below and 
sniping above from the parapet. ' Long Tom ' has 
been wondrously silent of late ; the sepoys say he 
is 'stiff.' I felt very strongly what poor Willie 
(Anderson) said to me once, 'that it was quite an 
experiment standing under fire.' I have seen this in 
many, many instances — men whose names stand 
higher than their merits. I feel quite grateful for the 
coolness with which I can face a heavy fire without 
dread. ^ We are strange creatures of impulse and 
emulation, and often, doubtless, I exposed myself 
from seeing others hold back. The firing is a thing 
one gets wondrously habituated to, and I can well 
understand young soldiers flinching and unsteady, 
though, perhaps, the old ones are apt to be cunning. 
Europeans properly led will go anywhere — of that, 
from observation, I am convinced. 

" i2,th. — rNothing particular occurred during last 
night or to-day; the enemy affected to make an 
attack on our position, but a volley of musketry from 
the trenches quickly drove them back home. We 



32 MULTAN 

were employed in throwing up batteries and 
strengthening our works, to bear on the mound some 
600 or 650, and the village to our left about 400 yards 
distant. Their zamburaks gave us great annoyance, 
and the heavy metal from the Knooni Burj soon 
found us out. The workmen in the trenches were in 
some cases wounded, and one or two Europeans 
killed by round shot. Major Napier received a 
severe contusion from the graze of a round-shot on 
his knee. I was on duty from noon till 9 p.m. 

" 14^^. — Preparing for duty this morning when 
strange information was in circulation. Conferences 
were being held, and the authorities congregated at 
Major Napier's, the next tent — the General, etc. 
Sher Singh had gone over during the night to the 
enemy, with his guns, howitzers, and force. I know 
not why this should cause great surprise, as his dis- 
affection had been long mooted ; nay more, his 
followers were slain in arms against us on the 12th ; 
day by day reports were received that his men were 
thronging to Mulraj ; further than that even, on the 
gth a man from the enemy's camp, whether an 
escaped prisoner or spy I know not, stated that an 
oath had been sworn on the 8th between the Dewan 
and the Raja! This information came from a 
Political the day following, yet were they not 
'satisfied' of his treachery. He was allowed to 
continue on the left of all with his guns, nearest the 
fort gate and. the point of temptation. Who will 
believe such things? Even the night before (13th) 
he was in Edwardes' camp ; yet with all the suspicions 
attached to his conduct, the certainty of his faithless- 
ness in the mind of every individual in camp except 
the Politicals, he was allowed to take his leave, which 
he did by joining Mulraj forthwith. 

" The strength of his army may be sooo, with 10 
guns and 2 howitzers. From these we had never 
derived the slightest aid ; to us, therefore, there is no 
loss, and it is a question whether such an increase in 
aught save the guns can be a g^ain to Mulraj, 
beleaguered in a small spot. Efficiency and union 
are not promoted by crowds. It may be, nay it must 
be, that this retirement is caused by other information 
of which we are not yet in possession, the state of the 



DEFECTS IN THE AEMY 33 

country alone must have had this effect on the 
Politicals ; yet, if so, all experience tells us, in 
addition to the criminality of having- suffered and 
sacrificed so much for no purpose, the grreatest 
blunder we could commit in policy is allowingf any 
difficulty time to get a head. If the country is inflam- 
matory, much blood will be shed ere the ill-humour 
is eradicated ; the first remedy would have cost many 
lives in our little force, but it would have brought 
honour to ali — the fallen, the survivors, and Govern- 
ment ; it would have crushed the serpent's head. 
Now we have kicked the stone, and it may roll far 
and wide. So much for the want of a leader : the 
force is weak doubtless, too much so for a systematic 
attack and to cope with difficulties which our books 
suggest to us ; but not too weak considering the 
constitution, if led resolutely and wisely. We are 
weak in artillery officers, weak in gnns ; 1 600 or 1 700 
Europeans though, and bolder and braver never seen. 
Nothing can surpass the loth Foot. The saying 
runs in camp, with reference to the small force, the 
train, etc., the means against such a fort: 'A ist 
class siege, a 2nd class train, a 3rd class army.' 
With a general, the army with all its weakness in 
engineers, is strong enough to have been now within 
the fort walls. 

"The 15th was spent in peace till dusk, when 
silently all tents were struck ; the Ramtirat being 
the only position on our old parallel still held. All 
night tents were being lowered and kits packed ; 
much difficulty occurred in collecting carriage ; no 
one exactly knowing much about it. I lay down 
amidst the row and confusion on the ground to get 
as much of a snooze as one could seize. Ritchie 
came up to join us, hoping to procure some slight 
aid in carriage, for none could he get. I was not a 
little amused at observing him_ about midnight put- 
ing on a clean shirt to start with,_ so that, if obliged 
to leave his traps behind, the dirty not the clean 
might remain. About 2 our anxieties were at an 
end, camels arrived : though I had given myself no 
uneasiness about the matter. I travelled with but two 
portmanteaus, and told my servants that under the 
worst they must contrive to remove one with clothes. 

c 



34 MULTAN 

" At 3 A.M., finding that great numbers of camels 
had gone on, ours marched off. We closed up our- 
selves with poor Brown in a dooly, where he had 
been since 7 p.m., to the park : there Napier, Aber- 
crombie, and several more were assembled, packing 
the few camels that remained with shot and sand- 
bags, of which many were still on the ground. I had 
contrived to get a rnount on an awkward brute — dray- 
horse stamp — designated by his owner an ' Arab,' 
and was sent off to the commissariat in search of 
conveyance for the ordnance. No officer was there — 
searching, I came upon an oldish fellow with a staff 
appearance whom I questioned : he told me he was 
not the man I wanted, but, instead of saying any- 
thing with reference to my business, he said — ' By 
the bye, when you see Captain Lloyd (the commis- 
Sctriat officer), tell him the General has gone. I have 
withdrawn the artillery-guns and troop from the post 
held for the commissariat, as I don't consider it 
tenable.' Shortly after I met the commissariat officer, 
who could not give the carriage for the ordnance as 
the camels had not yet returned. I then delivered 
the message I had received from the unknown in- 
dividual whose appearance I described. The officer 
forthwith withdrew from the post, leaving much 
grain and forage, thirty days' supply — thus were 
arrangements made and carried out. No order of 
march was given that I heard of, but parties moved 
off promiscuously as best suited them. Many 18- 
pounder and shot of larger and smaller size were 
carried off by Bhawal Khan's sowars in their hands ! 
Thus we contrived to use our allies. As day broke, 
the enemy were seen in our old trenches, and moving 
out in some strength, horse and foot, to the S.E. 
These musters frightened the chivalrous brigadier 
(who had entrusted me with the order for the com- 
missariat anent its withdrawal) whose force consisted 
of some 2000 cavalry, a European regiment — the 
gallant loth — besides two or more native corps : and 
though aware that shot was still on the ground and 
other inferior supplies, he quickly left them to the 
enemy. Mulraj and Sher Singh were both capering 
in front with their light guns and some 5000 men ; 
they drew within 800 yards of our flank ! The sight 



GENERAL COETLANDT 35 

of this induced Hervey to retire ' rather than risk ! 
a g-eneral action ' ; these were the words of an officer 
commanding- a brigade of British troops. A swoop 
might have been made which would have driven the 
enemy screeching back to their walls. 

"After this I pressed on to the leading brigade, 
and passed through the camp of Cortlandt, Edwardes, 
and Lake, beyond which I found Europeans and 
natives, who had left with the baggage during the 
night, wandering about they knew not whither, 
without a guide or an officer to direct their march! 
Europeans thus singly and in files were moving 
about during the whole of the day. We halted at 
Cortlandt's tent, where we sat in the shade. Tea 
and biscuit were brought, and those who wished got 
a capital breakfast, for all alike were received with 
kindness. General Cortlandt is a fine-looking man, 
tall and stout, about thirty-five years old. His dress, 
like that of all the officers of the irregular troops, is 
loose, resembling the natives'. He is very dark, 
with fine features and dark eyes. The expression of 
his countenance pleasing. His manner particularly 
easy and conciliatory. His language in conversation 
good, and his ideas, as far as I have been able to 
form an opinion during the interviews I have had 
with him, sensible and clear. He is evidently more 
than popular with his men, whom he treats with great 
temper and kindness. His force consists of about 
3000 men with several light guns, 12 perhaps. His 
artillery are remarkably soldierly men — capital shots. 
They are cool and determined fellows, who would 
accompany the guns anywhere, and stand by them to 
the last. Mulraj boasts that some were spared at 
Sobraon, these of Cortlandt's are of the same breed. 

"Edwardes is an intelligent, fair-faced man be- 
tween twenty-five and thirty years_ old. Nothing in 
his appearance to give the impression of daring — or 
remarkable in any way. I suspect he is a greatly over- 
rated man — one who had been made by circum- 
stances, and thrust into a position which he lacks 
ability to fill. Nous verrons* My idea is that he 
has been a dupe throughout. 

* See pages 122, 125-6, 135, 137, 189, and 231. 



36 MULTAN 

" Lake, an engineer ofificer at the head of Bhawal 
Khan's forces, is a different man from Edwardes in 
all respects. Sound without display — one whose 
acts will eventually raise him higher than all the 
others' flights, imaginary or real. He is very young, 
about twenty-five. 

After the fighting of the 1 3th September, Multan 
lay within our grasp ; but the defection of Sher Singh 
caused the siege to be raised on the 14th, and General 
Whish drew off" a few miles to await reinforcements. 
The whole situation was indeed changed. I n August, 
Chattar Singh had openly raised the standard of 
revolt, "devoting his head to God and his arms to 
the Khalsa." In September, with a force of 5000 
infantry, 600 cavalry, and 1 6 guns, he moved towards 
Peshawar ; Sher Singh, soon after rebelling at Mul- 
tan, set off by forced marches to join him. The 
news of Sher Singh's defection was received on the 
2 1 St September at Peshawar, where the Darbar 
troops were already perilously excited. The courage, 
firmness, and energy of Colonel George Lawrence 
enabled him for a time to stave off the worst ; but 
in the latter part of October the inevitable out- 
break occurred, and Colonel Lawrence retired to 
Kohat, whither he had already sent his wife and 
family. There he was received by Sardar Sultan 
Muhammad Khan, Barakzai. Kohat was at that 
time an appendage of Kabul, and Sultan Muhammad 
had been the last Afghan governor of Peshawar 
before Ranjit Singh conquered the province in 1822. 
Chattar Singh entered Peshawar on the 31st October ; 
he promised to make over the province to Sultan 
Muhammad, provided that the latter would sur- 
render Colonel Lawrence, and the other British 
officers who were at Kohat. This Sultan Muham- 



MAJOR NAPIEE'S TRIBUTE 37 

mad faithlessly did, and Colonel Lawrence found 
himself, with several other British officers, a prisoner 
in the hands of the Sikhs. 

Directly the siege was raised, Daly hurried back 
to Karachi to rejoin his regiment, which formed part 
of the reinforcing column from Bombay. This 
column under Colonel the Honourable H. Dundas, 
C.B., 6oth Rifles, had reached General Whish by the 
22nd December, and the siege was resumed on the 
27th December. Sir Henry Lawrence reached 
Multan from England on the 28th. The loss in 
General Whish's force up to this time had been 1 7 
British officers and 238 of other ranks killed and 
wounded. The force at the renewed siege included 
the loth and 32 nd Regiments, the 60th Rifles, 
and 1st Bombay European Fusiliers, with five com- 
panies of European foot artillery : the total was over 
iSiSOO men of all ranks; the irregular forces were, 
however, much weaker. Daly served through the 
final siege as Adjutant of the ist Bombay Fusiliers, 
better known in those days by the soubriquet of the 
"Old Toughs." His work during the earlier period 
had elicited the following letter : — 

"Camp before Multan, lytk September 1848. 

"Sir, — I beg to convey to you this sense of my 
obligation for the zeal shown by you during the last 
few days' operations in the manner wherein you 
observed the enemy's position, and for your indefati- 
gable observation of him, and recommendation of 
measures to counteract his designs. — I have, etc., 
R. Napier, Major, 
Chief Eng-ineer, Multan Field Forced 

Daly's diary is continued : — 

'' Camp Multan, Christmas Day, 1848. — Orders 
were issued this day for the march of the Bombay 



38 MULTAN 

Column from its present position at Suruj-kund to 
Sital-ke-Mari, where the Bengal Column moved this 
morning-. This is the position Whish occupied 
during the previous operations. Our camp was 
accordingly struck on the morning of the 26th, and 
every preparation made for a start ;_ however, what 
with the delay in moving the commissariat, we did 
not quit our ground till near noon. Tents were down, 
and there we lay basking in the sun for the last 
camel to go, as we were to bring up the rear. On 
reaching Sital-ke-Mari I observed the General's tent 
in exactly the same spot as before, though the camp 
on this occasion fronted the fort, whereas formerly it 
showed a rear. We (the Bombay Column) were on 
the left. The first thing which struck me was the 
altered appearance of the face of the country between 
us and the fort. This latter formerly was scarcely 
visible at all ; high as its towers are, these were 
almost screened by the numerous trees, thick and 
dark with foliage. Much of this change has, doubt- 
less, been occasioned by the cold season withering 
the leaves and luxuriance ; more by the hands of the 
Sikhs, who have been hewing and hacking the woods, 
and clearing the jungle of that which was a defence to 
them and the source of much annoyance to us. The 
fort and part of the town even are now clear to view ; 
with the glass this afternoon I could see them work- 
ing and entrenching themselves on the ' Mound,' 
which was to have been our prize on the 14th 
September, and beneath which we lay on the 12 th 
September casting longing, anxious looks at its 
occupants. The orders of to-night are that the 
Bombay Force^will parade in two columns at 1 1 a.m. 
to-morrow in front of the lines. The purpose for 
which this was to be was not known, it being merely 
said 'for service.' 

"On the morning of the 27th, Colonel Dundas 
appeared, and thenttold us that our columns * would 
be under his own immediate command, as he intended 
being with us during^the day, and that the object of 
the combined attack was that one column, composed 
* Two squadrons cavalry, battering guns, two 9-pounder batteries, 
five companies 6oth Rifles, 3rd Regiment Bombay Native Infantry, 
five companies Fusiliers, 4th Bombay Native Infantry (Rifles). 



THE SWI LAL KE BEDE WON 39 

of 6oth, 3rd, and under Colonel Capon, should attack, 
and, if possible, carry the ' Mound ' ; if any great 
resistance should be encountered, then to clear the 
places below. During this the Bengal Column was 
to'attack the ' Idgah,' * and occupy a hill adjacent, and 
the possession of these were the points necessary for 
the effectual carrying on of the siege. Our column 
was to advance making a feint on Sidi Lai ke Bede, 
a high conical hill which the enemy held in some 
strength ; our guns were to batter at this at a great 
pace, and should our attack assume a cheerful and 
successful aspect, the feint was to be made earnest 
and we were to go on. 

"After this explanation of what was intended, we 
moved off: on arriving within about 200 yards of 
the trench made duringlast operations, two companies 
of the 4th Rifles were thrown out as skirmishers, we 
following in support of the Rifles. The enemy Avere 
now seen in some strength, retiring to high positions 
from which they commenced a distant fire. A couple 
of g-pounders were brought up and opened on the 
hill and city walls, from which a few round shot 
began to drop ; during this we took cover under the 
trench for a few moments. Colonel Dundas then 
ordered us to advance in line — this we continued to 
do for some distance, without firing a shot, the 
enemy slowly retiring before us, firing a good deal 
with but little effect up to this time. Thus we con- 
tinued and the Sidi Lai ke Bede was crowned and 
won ; on descending this the ground became broken 
and irregular, intersected with ravines. About 300 
yards to our front and left were some buildings, from 
which a hottish fire was peppered down on us, and 
3 or 4 men wounded, i killed. We cleared the front 
building and took cover under its walls and behind a 
mound as well as we could, the companies being 
formed up as the ground would admit of. During 
this a very annoying fire was opened on us by match- 
lock men, who occupied a row of buildings, houses, 
and gardens which ran along in front, leaving an 
open space of ground between us and them. The 
two supports of the Rifle skirmishers had halted to 

* See page 17. 



40 MULTAN 

our right and rear. Finding many huts and walls 
to our left occupied, a sub-division was sent to clear 
them out ; this was speedily done without loss to us. 

" We had been here but a few minutes when the 
4th skirmishers came clattering back closely and 
fiercely pursued by the enemy, who, with their long, 
sharp sabres were cutting at the riflemen until they 
threw themselves into the midst of us. Emboldened 
by this, the Sikhs began to throng the walls and 
gardens ahead, and many actually rushed up and 
sheltered themseves behind the very building on the 
opposite side of which we were! The wall to the 
left of our cover was low and_ broken ; the rush was 
so sudden that much confusion ensued, and, as at 
this time there was no opportunity or space to form, 
I cried out to No. lo (which was nearest) to ' Charge ' 
— ^_well they responded to the cry — Mules and I, 
Hitchcock, the lance-corporal, between us, and 
Nelson, a private of lo company, were the first 
amongst the foe, who were crouched beneath the 
wall we sprang over ! Up they jumped, and plied 
their bright sabres about their heads in gallant style, 
but the bayonet — that true weapon the bayonet, 
which never yet failed to bring success to the British 
soldier — was more than a match for the sword and 
matchlock. The first Sikh who bit the dust either 
bowed to my sword or Hitchcock's bayonet ; this 
latter was borne through the chest of a tall, dark 
fellow, whose eye was glistening anxiously towards 
Mules, who, in rushing to meet the Sikh, stumbled, 
and so, by the bending of his body, escaped the blow 
aimed at his head. Poor Nelson, on my right hand, 
was fearfully, frightfully mauled and hacked by two 
slashing sword blows from a Sikh who never made 
a third. 

"After this struggle hand-to-hand beneath the 
wall, they rushed back to their cover hotly pursued 
by No. lo, for when space was given, the other sub- 
division with King eagerly came to our aid. We 
charged across, and with our bayonets and cheers 
cleared the houses in front and then rejoined the 
main body. We had been back scarce five minutes 
when the dark faces and long matchlock barrels were 
seen amidst the same buildings from which we had 



NEAR THE CITY WALLS 41 

just driven them. Without allowing- them time to 
reassemble and occupy these places in great number 
(for shots already began to fall hotly), away we 
charged across the_ open space at them with Nos. 9 
and 10, this time in our eagerness we drove them 
right through into the plain beyond, from which the 
city walls, distant perhaps 200 yards, were clear to 
view, nothing being between them and us but the 
Sikhs. This was the first idea we had of our 
position. A round shot or two from the ramparts 
quickly cleared our notions. 

"Once again under shelter of the walls from 
behind which we had driven them, I sounded 'the 
Assembly,' for our little charging band amidst the 
narrow lanes chasing the enemy had become greatly 
scattered ; twice the bugler blew his blast, and then 
we returned to the regiment. We were now able 
to explain our position, none of us being before aware 
that the town walls were so nigh. While debating 
on these points, orders were delivered by a staff 
officer for us to fall back and take cover under a 
garden wall. We imagined that this would not be 
effected without annoyance from the enemy, who had 
twice bearded us in our stronghold. The precau- 
tions we adopted were not called into play. The two 
bayonet charges and the slaughter we had then dealt 
gave them matter for deliberate reflection ; not a 
Sikh pursued or was seen, and scarce was a match- 
lock turned toward us. Colonel Dundas, who was 
here, directed us to move on the right, sheltering 
ourselves under the high ground and irregular walls. 
The enemy soon began to pepper on us with their 
zamburaks and m.atchlocks, and the guns from the 
city walls dropped their messengers somewhat thick 
— the fire from the buildings and suburbs about we 
kept down tolerably well with our musketry, when- 
ever an enemy was to be seen. The artillery from 
the Sidi Lai ke Bede (a high, coning hill about 1 50 
paces to our rear) during this time opened a heavy 
cannonade over our heads on the city and fort, both 
of which were clearly discernible. The city walls 
could scarce have been more distant than 450 yards. 

"Thus we remained till between 3 to 4 p.m., when 
to our surprise Leith marched down with the right 



42 MULTAN 

wing (rather two companies) and took up a sheltered 
position to our left. At 4 a report was sent from the 
battery at Sidi Lai that the enemy were occupymg 
the houses and walls to our right in strength, and 
apprehensions were expressed lest they should out- 
flank us, getting between the 60th left and ourselves. 
The Colonel then directed these places to be cleared, 
if necessary at the point of the_ bayonet, and an 
attempt made to open communication with the right 
of the 60th. Accordingly two companies were 
detached, 9 and 10, Woodward, May, Mules, King, 
Disbrowe, and myself We marched off in sections, 
taking all the advantage the ground afforded, in a 
direct line to the right for about 400 yards, when, 
from some houses about 200 yards on our left, the 
enemy were seen in position in a nulla which ran 
along their front. The sections were wheeled round 
and a sharp fire immediately opened from the Sikhs. 
" We continued to advance, and when within 100 
yards the files were extended, orders given ' No man 
to fire,' but all forward at a steady double, leaving all 
to the bayonet. Many a red-coated Sikh was visible, 
but, after the first volley had been poured on us, the 
shots were irregular ; the matchlock is not quickly 
loaded. Our cheer and double, despite the fall of 
two poor fellows in the leading section, evideritly 
occasioned a sensation. We saw them dodging 
about the streets in numbers, firing, then bolting. 
So on we went ; now a volley succeeded by a cheer 
and a charge. Every place was cleared. The doors 
were broken open, but no injury inflicted on those 
not bearing arms. Thus we went through what was 
almost a town in itself — random shots were fired on 
us from the corners, we 'doubled through,' and, on 
reaching the end of the street, to our amazement, the 
grim, fortified walls with their embrasures were 
gaping down on us ! A clear square spot between us 
and them, a rendezvous it appeared for the townsmen 
in days of peace tp ramble and breathe outside their 
fortification. We quickly withdrew under shelter of 
the building we had quitted, which protected us from 
the sight of the wall tenants. Our appearance 
outside was so sudden and unexpected that we met 
with no hail from their cannon. 



COSTS OF THE VICTOEY 43 

" We pursued our course parallel to the wall, driv- 
ing the Sikhs before us wherever they made a stand, 
still seeking the 6oth left position. It was about here 
that a good many zamburak balls fell amongst us, 
one of which carried off the fleshy part of a man's 
heel in the midst of his section, and then with a 
ricochet struck my horse in the outer side of his chest, 
the ball passing out at the off side. He bled much, 
yet held his head up gallantly. Immediately after 
this escapade we espied some dark objects in a corner 
in our front ; they were under cover of a building. 
We conjectured this must be the 6oth detachment ; 
the bugler sounded our call, which was quickly 
responded to, so our purpose was gained. We halted 
under a wall while with a couple of men I ran across 
to hail them. It was Clapcott of the 6oth with his 
company, in a place not far distant from the ' Khooni 
Burj' Bastion. In the position they occupied they 
were secure from its fire. From him I heard of the 
success which had attended the 6oth advance in the 
morning. They had carried the ' Mundee _Awa ' 
Mound, and Clapcott's post was now between it and 
the city wall. He told me of the gallant Major 
Gordon's fall. He was shot dead. A more chivalrous 
soldier and high-minded gentleman the British army 
never at any time numbered in its ranks. I had a 
peculiar opportunity of seeing his bearing during the 
operations of the 12 th September, when he was here 
as an amateur, and amongst many brave and noble 
officers he was remarkable. Our small party of the 
Napier has lost its chosen ; Brown by disease, 
Gordon in the field. 

" Well — I rejoined my friends, and as darkness was 
drawing on and our object attained, we turned our 
steps back to the column, which we rejoined comfort- 
ably enough. Orders had been received for the 
regiment to fall back and occupy the Sidi Lai, 
protecting the guns and as much of the ground as we 
could between us and the 60th. Accordingly there 
we lay, Fusiliers, 1 9th, and Rifles ; and a cold, raw 
bivouac it was, without coats or dinners. Success, 
however, had wondrously sweetened our tempers, and 
we were proof against all miseries. The behaviour of 
the men during these privations was beautiful, not a 



44 MULTAN 

syllable of discontent was uttered. The contents of 
many haversacks were joyfully proffered _ to the 
officers, who had come unprovided. During the 
night, owing- to the kindly arrangements of the 
commissariat, every man got his dram and his 
biscuit. The 19th and 4th were 9n our left. 
Colonel Dundas, no carpet leader, remained with us. 
We received a few shots, big and little, but no damage 
was done us. 

" Daybreak was anxiously looked for by all. As 
it drew nigh, the cold for lightly clad men became 
piercing. The first order we received was to prepare 
to advance, as the town was to be stormed by 
escalade — another order, more pleasing under the 
circumstances, considering that we had been fighting 
all day previous, and suffering from cold, exposure, 
and hunger during the night, was to march the left 
wing to quarters. The whole of the right, having 
assembled at the hill during the night, was to stand 
fast, while we repaired back to our tents to_ refresh 
ourselves, and in no light estimation was thismove 
held by us — our return of casualties since quitting on 
the previous morning, 3 killed and 29 wounded, being, 
I believe, far heavier than happened to any other 
corps engaged. The officers luckily escaped uninjured, 
Mules had his back scraped and I my hat cut off by 
a sword blow. 

" 2<^th. — Three companies marched down with 
the Major and myself to the mound Mundee Awa. 
These were distributed about, one being near the 
Delhi Gate, and a second near the Khooni Burj : 
in both places the batteries were in hard play at the 
walls, for the breaches were here to be made for the 
storming parties ; during the afternoon the Major 
and I received orders to return to camp, as com- 
manding officers and their staff were not to proceed 
to the works unless ordered to with their whole 
regiments." 

The assault on the city was delivered on the 
afternoon of the 2nd January 1849. The attack on 
the main breach of the "Bloody Btistion" (Khooni 
Burj) was led by the Bombay Fusiliers. 



ASSAULT ON "BLOODY BASTION" 45 
Daly wrote the following- account : — 

"On the morning of the 2nd January I was at 
Colonel Stalker's tent when Tapp galloped down 
with the order that the arrangements which had 
been made on the previous day for the storm of the 
city were to hold good for this day. Accordingly 
plans of the town were issued showing the streets 
the different columns of attack were to follow and 
positions which were to be occupied after the carrying 
and the passage 9f the breach. At i o'clock the 
regiment paraded in front of the camp. Every man 
was burning- with eagerness for the assault, and 
many were seen in the ranks who should have been 
in hospital. Brigadier Stalker here joined us and 
we moved off, the 19th and 4th following us. On 
reaching- the Mundee Awa mound a few round shot 
from the fort fell about us without doing much 
damage ; great indeed was our good fortune in 
reaching the place of formation preparatory to the 
storm without incurring any loss. I had not expected 
this. We were drawn up behind a large mound ; the 
road which led to the Khooni Burj and round the 
city was close to our right hand. The Fusiliers here 
formed in a column of sub-divisions right in front ; 
the 19th Native Infantry next, and the Rifles in rear. 
The eng-ineer at the battery was to give the signal 
for the advance. At a few minutes before 3 a salvo 
was fired from the battery ; ' Forward ' to the 
column was immediately given. The road to the 
breach was a winding one, broad enough for 18 
men to march along. Leith, who commanded the 
right flank company, a fine, noble-looking soldier 
about 6 ft. 4 high, filed out into the highway and 
marched steadily off to the spot. No. 2 followed 
at about twenty paces interval; 3, 4, 5 close on. 
Then again thirty paces and the left wing, with the 
colours of the old regiment flaunting in the wind. 
There was not so much firing down on us as we had 
expected. 

"The breach was to our right of the Burj, a high 
tower and bastion on which formerly they had some 
heavy guns. The tower, though much shattered 
without, from being stockaded with thick timber and 



46 MULTAN 

mud inside, was still a secure place of shelter for the 
enemy, and was occupied in strength. I can give 
you no accurate description of the breach we mounted. 
It was steep, and broken brick and mouldered dust 
gave beneath the feet, reminding me of the ascent of 
Vesuvius. We did not climb this unmolested ; thick 
and hot the balls fell amongst us, but not a man 
was killed and strangely few wounded. When Leith 
crowned the height a volley from below was discharged, 
but they were too eager to fire and it passed overhead. 
Leith doubled down at the charge. On the town 
side of the breach they had dug a deep trench at the 
bottom ; this was stockaded and covered over with 
planks and mattings. From this place they sprang 
up as Leith put his foot down to cross, and dozens of 
bright sabres were in the air. Few shots were fired 
on our side ; both parties relied on the steel. Leith's 
long cavalry sword, such as no one but a stout man 
could wield, was smashed to pieces near the hilt. He 
himself received a couple of terrible sword cuts on 
his left arm and a ball through his right shoulder, 
and was taken to the rear. 

"The regiment was now crowding forward under 
a heavy fire from the houses and Burj. On, on we 
poured, but for a quarter of an hour not 50 yards 
were won. Every narrow street was filkd with 
matchlock men who, having discharged their pieces, 
resorted to the sword. Here many were wounded. 
A 9-pounder was taken in one of these narrow 
passages which was pointed down on us, though 
fortunately its too early discharge saved us from a 
terrible massacre. Here it became a hand-to-hand 
encounter. Tapp, who had come well to the front, 
about this time received wounds which disabled him 
for the day. Two other officers were also wounded 
here. The streets were so narrow and numerous 
and the resistance had been so determined, the 
enemy appearing on all sides, that it was found 
impossible to follow out the roads as detailed on the 
plan. Had the enemy taken the roads we wished, 
all would have been plain ; no such feeling of sympathy 
did they display. I knpw these Sikhs well. I have 
had a good deal of experience of their mode of 
fighting. When they do turn, no breathing space 



HAND-TO-HAND FIGHTING 47 

should be allowed them. Any hesitation or pause 
on our side and again they rally, and forward they 
rush to the attack. The column which had been 
told off for the left was the headquarters of the corps, 
which the left wing and colours followed ; but all the 
companies were so broken up in the medley contest 
which had taken place, that amidst the din and 
smoke scarcely anything was discernible. 

" When we came out to a somewhat clear space 
our party with the colours was indeed small. Joy- 
ful I felt at seeing Mules with a few others burst 
round the corner. I gave a cheer, v/hich was 
gallantly taken up, and forward at the double we 
went, 1 20 men and about 8 officers. Now we pur- 
sued the best course I could remember from the 
plan ; but few of the enemy were to be seen except 
at angles and corners, where they occasionally 
frantically attacked us. The Brigadier was now 
with us. He in no way interfered, merely cheering 
us on by his voice and presence. On arriving at 
the centre of the town, a large square with a lofty 
masjid, the enemy were in strength, apparently re- 
solved to make a stand. We fired a volley — a cheer, 
and our true friend the bayonet carried us triumph- 
antly through. Here we halted for a few minutes, 
for the men were almost exhausted by their exertions. 
I blew the ' Advance ' to deceive the enemy, and all 
of us pulled away at the contents of a few small 
canteens. Our little band then rushed fdrth, cheer- 
ing as we advanced, and from one square building, 
occupied by a strong^ cavalry picquet, we drove them 
at the bayonet's point. I there cut down with my 
sword a couple of handsome standards, which we bore 
away with us. So we advanced towards the end of 
the city, not knowing whither. Our guides had been 
either killed or separated from us during the confusion. 
At last I seized a tall fellow, drew him from a house 
to lead us to the Lahore Gate. To our surprise he 
said, 'You are very near now ; this is the road to it.' 

"A few yards further the rampart and clear 
country beyond opened to our view. A great cheer 
we gave. Mules and I, followed by a few men, rushed 
to the rampart ; between the end of the street and 
the rampart, which circled round the foot wall, was a 



48 MULTAN 

hollow space with nothing; but a few stables in it. 
The rampart was wide, this was the main rampart, 
which ran round the city. Here were at least 500 
with sword and matchlock ; some occupied the build- 
ings to the left of the street's end, but the main body- 
were out towards the fort. At first they began to 
disappear over the walls. Mules and I, thinking to 
secure the gate on the opposite side, were quickly 
brought to a sense of our position. Some of them 
came dashing forward towards us, and two fell on the 
bayonets of men at our side. The fort walls were 
alive with matchlocks, and their heavy guns had but 
to be depressed to command the spot. They were 
not long in observing this. One large-mouthed 
cannon blustered forth, but happily fell between us 
without doing any ill. Mules and I got back under 
cover, a sharp fire of matchlocks opened on us from 
the rampart, but generally too high ; 3 of our little 
party were wounded and i shot dead. 

"After a consultation with the Colonel, it was 
decided to leave 2 officers and 50 men to hold this 
passage, while we, in obedience to instructions, were 
to possess ourselves of the rampart and the Bohur and 
Pak Hurrun Gates. This done, we returned on our 
course, but that road which was so clear on the plan 
we found intricate. Passages and streets so narrow as 
not to admit of more than 3 or 4 men abreast. The 
fire as we approached the ramparts and from walls 
and loopholes was very annoying, and in one spot, 
midway between the Bohur and Lahore Gates, the 
resistance was such that we were obliged to take 
shelter in a temple to allow the men to recruit them- 
selves. When we became a little refreshed, I took 
them out by another door from that we had entered 
and so contrived to outflank them. I seized two guides 
and made them march on, under threat of my sword 
bearing down on doubts of treachery. They led us 
on, but scarcely had we proceeded 200 yards, when 
again from what we afterwards found to be a barrack 
the fire was heavy. Both guides were shot and fell 
in front of me, one I think we left on the spot ; but I 
cried out to charge up the hill ; bravely they answered, 
up we dashed and gained the rampart above the gate. 
A 9-pounder was placed commanding one street by 



"A MOST FEARFUL EVENT" 49 

which they had expected us to appear. We poured 
a volley on them standing by it, and then forward at 
the bayonet, captured and spiked the gun. 

" Further up we observed them in some strength ; 
we poured volleys from under cover of the rising 
ground. • Had they been aware of the weakness of 
our little band, not so easily would they have quitted 
their position'. We at once, as night was drawing 
in, past five and a half, began to look to our position 
for the night, and distributed our little party into 
three bands ; the worst was our ammunition, which 
was almost expended. While making these arrange- 
ments, Colonel Cheyne, the chief engineer, came up 
and expressed great satisfaction on hearing we had 
traversed the city and left a party at the Lahore Gate. 
We learnt from him that the regiment was about the 
city in companies, and now the great point was to 
hold these gates, the Bohur and the Lahore. Major 
Horner, 4th Rifles, with a large body of his men, 
joined about 6 — and glad we were to see them ; they 
had followed us. So strengthened, we sent a guard 
for ammunition, coats, and grog to the breach, about 
a mile distant, but there was no apprehension of any 
enemy between us and that Burj ; we had well cleared 
this interval. Soon after dark the quarter-master 
sergeant, with arrack and coats for the men, appeared 
to our joy. I got a coat. By and by came the 
messman's servant with eatables. The night was 
passing in peace up to midnight and we were con- 
gratulating ourselves on our rest after the day's 
work ; the poor wounded were well covered from the 
cold, but no opportunity occurred to remove them 
before daylight. 

"About I A.M. a most fearful event occurred. 
While we were lying down near the wall, a trembling 
of the earth, followed instantaneously by flames and 
fire all round. Bricks falling, houses tottering, roofs 
off. All was darkness, save where lurid flames were 
rising amongst us. We cried out to the men to stand 
to their arms, and remain as steady as the convulsed 
state of the ground would permit them. Long, 
awfully long, it appeared ere even the worst passed 
away. When it had done so, the cries of many 
sufferers arose on every side. We could not in the 



50 MULTAN 

darkness see the havoc which had been committed, 
but in many places the fire which had cauofht pieces 
of wood still burned, and by its lig-ht a part of the ruin 
could be seen ; 60 Sappers (native) ha.d been em- 
ployed at the time of the outburst in opening the Gate, 
which had been stockaded and closed up with heavy 
timber beneath the archway ; 35 of these were buried 
alive, many others escaped with their lives indeed, 
but with limbs desperately damaged. The 4th Rifles 
also were among the unfortunates ; 10 of these poor 
fellows were killed and some 30 or more wounded. 
A few of the 19th Native Infantry with us were 
also among the victims. Strange that every officer 
escaped with no more serious damage than a blow 
from_ falling stone. _ Much of our ammunition, \yhich 
was in boxes, continued to explode at various times. 
Close by the place, the next house, we knew to be a 
magazine well filled with powder ; and great were our 
apprehensions lest this catch a spark. It did not. 
The cause no one of us to this hour knows, whether 
a mine or powder (much of which was about in all 
places) ignited accidentally by the light and fires 
made by our sepoys. Many fancy a mine. I incline 
to the opinion that it was something of the kind ; 
probably a magazine accidentally fired by us. 

"At 7 A.M. we marched off towards the Lahore 
Gate, and made perambulations through the town, 
which we found to be entirely our own. The coldest 
time I ever spent was in the bastion at the 
Bohur Gate. How our poor fellows so escaped was 
niiraculous. The wounded too were just without its 
influence. The time we passed till daybreak was 
fearful, in momentary expectation of the great maga- 
zine, yet not daring to quit our position. As we 
marched to the Gate in the morning we saw some of 
the wretched sappers with their heads just visible 
above the ruins. We were relieved at 2, and marched 
into our tents. The Brigadier came with us. Before 
breaking off, he said one word of thanks to the men 
for their devoted gallantry,* to which they responded 

* The colours were planted on the breach by Colour-Sergeant J. 
Bennett, of the "Old Toughs" (ist Bombay Fusiliers), who was thus 
iiientioned in despatches by General Whish : " I would also bring to 



END OF A GREAT DAY 51 

with three cheers for the Brigadier, three cheers for 
the_ Commanding Officer, and three cheers for the 
Adjutant [Daly]. So ended the day which Sir 
Charles Napier prophesied would come 'when you 
will renovate your ancient fame.' In all, of the regfi- 

notice the conduct of Colbur-Sergeant J. Bennett, ist Fusiliers, who 
volunteered to accompany the storming party, and, rushing up the 
breach, planted the Union Jack on its crest, standing beside it until 
the whole Brigade had passed. The column and staff are riddled 
with balls." Sergeant Bennett subsequently received the following 
characteristic letter : — 

" Calcutta, 20th May 1849. 
" Sergeant-Major Bennett, 

"When in 1847 I presented the Fusiliers with their 
new colours, I said that the men of our days were as good as 
those of former days. I was right ; and Multan has proved every 
word ! In former times Sergeant-Major Graham (if my memory 
serves me correctly) of the ist Europeans, planted the old colours on 
the breach of Ahmedabad. He did a gallant action, and when you 
planted the British Standard on the breach of Multan, your deed was 
as brave as his, and is as renowned ! 

"The officers, non-commissioned officers, and privates of the ist 
Europeans in both Presidencies have sustained, and even, if possible, 
surpassed by their valour in the present days, the glories of the past. 
Tell your comrades that I rejoiced when I heard the fame which you 
have all gained for those new colours that I had the honour of present- 
ing to the regiment in Scinde. 

" I remain your sincere friend and well-wisher, 

" C. J. Napier, 
" Commander-in-Chief." 

"P.S. — I should have written to you long ago, but delayed till 
,my arrival in India.'' 

In publishing this letter the Bombay Times wrote (i6th August 
1849) ■ — " It w^s the breach at Seringapatam, not Ahmedabad, that 
Sergeant Graham was the first to mount, though it was a Sergeant of 
the ' Old Toughs ' who planted the colours on the walls of Ahmedabad. 
The coincidence is striking enough assuredly, but Sir C. Napier seems 
only aware of one half of it. Major Mignon, who led the Fusiliers up 
the breach at Multan, is the son of Colonel Mignon, who, exactly half 
a century ago, led the flank companies of the Bombay Army at the 
storming of Seringapatam." In January 1850, Sir Charles Napier 
met the regiment on [the march at Pakka Serai, and made them 
ailother stirring speech: — "Soldiers of the ist Bombay European- 
Fusiliers ! When I last addressed you some three years since in pre- 
senting to you these splendid colours at Karachi," etc. 



52 MULTAN 

merit 6 were killed, 66 wounded, many never to rise 
again, and s ofificers, since marching out on the 
previous day." 

The citadel still held out, and was on the point of 
being stormed when, on the 22nd, Mulraj, whose 
force was still from 3000 to 4000 men, surrendered 
unconditionally. The final siege thus lasted twenty- 
seven days; the British loss was 210 killed and 982 
wounded : upwards of 1 3,000 shot and 26,000 shell 
had been fired into the city and fort. Daly was 
mentioned in despatches as "conspicuous for gallan- 
try" both in the fighting of the 27th December and 
in the storm. 

"The besieging army * did not march away to other 
fields without performing its last melancholy duty to 
the memory of Agnew and Anderson. The bodies 
of these officers were carefully — I may say affection- 
ately — removed from the careless grave where they 
lay side by side, and, wrapped in Cashmere shawls 
(with a vain but natural desire to obliterate all traces 
of neglect), were borne by the soldiers of the ist 
Bombay Fusiliers (Anderson's own regiment) to an 
honoured resting-place on the summit of Mulraj's 
citadel. By what way borne? Through the gate 
where they had been first assaulted! Oh, no! 
Through the broad and sloping breach which had 
been made by the British guns in the walls of the 
rebellious fortress of Multan." 

* From A Year on the Punjab Frontier in 1848749, by Herbert 
Edwardes, vol. ii., p. 708. 



CHAPTER III 

GUJERAT AND PESHAWAR 

General course of the campaign ;' battle of Gujarat; pursuit of the 
Sikhs ; their surrender ; pursuit of the Afghans and occupation of 
Peshawar. Appointment of Sir C. Napier as Commander-in- 
Chief ; offers of staff employ in Bombay and the Punjab ; decision 
for the latter. 

In the meantime a great British army had been 
assembled at Ferozpur to put down the insurrection, 
which had now spread to the whole of the Punjab. 
This force entered Lahore shortly before the middle 
of November 1848, and was joined on the 21st 
November by Lord Gough, the Commander-in-Chief. 
On the 22nd November he grained the indecisive 
victory of Ramnug-ger. On the loth January 1849, 
he was joined by Sir Henry Lawrence, who, hurrying 
out from England, had reached Multan just after 
Christmas, and had pressed on to join the main 
army directly after the successful assault of the 2nd 
January. On the 13th January 1849, was fought the 
bloody battle of Chillianwallah, in which Lord 
Gougfh's losses were terribly severe. 

Immediately after Mulraj had surrendered, rein- 
forcements were pushed forward to the field army. 
On the 19th February the 60th Rifles, ist Bombay 

Fusiliers, and the 32nd Bombay Infantry reached 
53 



54 GUJERAT AND PESHAWAR 

Gujerat. In the crowning- victory of the 21st they 
formed the extreme left of our line. On the 22nd 
the Bombay troops accompanied General Gilbert's 
division in his pursuit of the Sikhs and Afghans, and 
marched 25 miles "in appalling heat and with no 
water." On the 28th February they were over the 
Jhelum. On the 8th March George Lawrence, with 
his wife and children, and the other prisoners were 
brought in, safe and sound, to Gilbert's camp. 
Negotiations followed for a general surrender of the 
Sikhs. Daly gives the following account of the 
event : — 

" gth March (1849). — The Sher came himself, but 
Gilbert told him he must go back and make his 
people lay down their arms and deliver up their giins. 
The Sher went back to his camp last night with this 
message. They are close here, so the fighting, I 
fancy, is over. I had a long talk with a fine, soldierly- 
looking old man who had been a colonel in Ranjit 
Singh's time. He was one of the many Sikhs who 
went over to Sher Singh and forsook our people at 
Attock. He was particularly intelligent, very friendly 
and frank ; deplored the state of the country and their 
own impoverished condition, contrasting it with what 
they held in the Maharaja's day. _ He at once 
admitted having joined Sher Singh in the hope of 
restoring the falling time._ Nobody knows (amongst 
us) what our destination is to be. Marching day by 
day is our present occupation. 

" \2th, near Rawal Pindi. — The events of yester- 
day and to-day are bringing the campaign to a close. 
Our march yesterday to this place was through a 
mountainous tract and ravines, which made the 
moving of guns and infantry a work of time and 
difficulty. _ Our ground here is in a lovely valley, 
smiling with green cornfields ; villages are sprinkled 
about by the sides of the hills. In front of our camp 
(we, the Bombay troops, are on the left) is a brawling 
river, now shallow ; from its opposite bank a mountain 
abruptly rises. Shortly after our arrival yesterday. 



THE SHEE SINGH 55 

we observed a number of horsemen on its brow. 
About an hour elapsed when a body of our irregular 
cavalry moved down to the left and mouth of the 
debouckS from the mountain, and in a few minutes 
returned accompanied by several native horsemen. 
These_ were Sher Singh and his father with some of 
the chiefs. Father and son rode side by side. The 
Sher's face is of an oval form ; his eyes dark and 
deep-set ; a black, beard surrounds all. The counte- 
nance is expressive of determination and devilry, for 
there's something peculiarly sinister about it. There's 
but little of dignity in his appearance, nothing of the 
Sikh ; yet there is much about his general look which 
an ordinary man lacks. There's nothing of the ease- 
loving, luxurious Eastern. The father's features are 
fine ; he looks a noble. He appeared sorrowful and 
worn, his head was almost concealed. Not so the 
son, who keenly eyed the soldiers who thronged the 
banks to see them pass. The Sher even tapped his 
forehead and salaamed to them. They were both 
well-mounted. By nightfall 17 guns had been 
brought into camp. Their horse artillery were well 
turned out. Some had as many as eight horses, 
others six in each gun ; every horse a rider. The 
harness appointments bore traces of having- been 
good. The artillerymen were well dressed too, 
although somewhat worn. Two of our guns which 
were lost at Chillianwallah were amongst those given 
up. These surrender days are days of storms. I 
told you of the wetting- we all got when Mulraj 
surrendered. Well, yesterday, during the march the 
rain fell at various times, but towards night a fearful 
storm burst forth. Lightning so vivid that the whole 
camp was enveloped in a sheet of flame ; thunder 
resounded through the mountains, and the rain fell in 
great torrents. I have witnessed some strange 
events during the last two months. Not the least 
seeing two armies lay down their arms, and this last 
came back from a distance to submit. This must be 
a blow to them ; the feeling which brought them to 
such an act is utter helplessness. They say, '_What 
could we do? Dost Muhammad, now that disaster 
has befallen us, would give us up ! ' 

"15//^.— As we marched to this spot, Rawal 



56 GUJEEAT AND PESHAWAE 

Pindi, yesterday, we saw the Sikh guns placed in 
regular order at the top of the pass. _ They were 
32 in number, with 3 mortars and a howitzer. Many 
of the pieces were far larger in calibre than we had 
anticipated, several beautiful brass 1 8-pounders being 
among them. Two of our lost guns paraded with 
them. On our arrival here we found, I should say, 
10,000 Sikh horsemen. They formed up and rode 
by by twos and threes, every man depositing his arms 
as he passed. Before night a mass of matchlocks, 
firelocks, swords, shields, and spears was collected, 
covering 20 square yards, and rising 8 or 10 feet 
high. A similar deposit took place at our yesterday's 
ground. Every fellow after thus laying down his 
arms is allowed to go free ; poor devils, they seem 
starved. I must tell you that we pay every one a 
rupee. They are allowed to carry off their horses. 
These they will sell for anything. Mares, and very 
fine ones, I've seen ; not many good nags for our 
purposes. I think we have made a great mistake in 
allowing this. Doubtless many of these horses were 
stolen from villages and towns. Moreover, we give 
them the rneans of moving off too easily; though 
they are abject and broken even to starvation, still I 
incline to the opinion that dismounting them would 
have been wise. What to do with the cattle would 
puzzle us perhaps. 

" ibth {March 1849). — We marched 14 miles this 
moming, moving parallel with the range of mountains, 
which are only 4 or 5 miles on our right. There was 
snow on their tops a few days since ; they are scarcely 
higher than 1200 or 1300 feet. The climate is 
deliciously fresh and pleasant ; the ground we passed 
over to-day was covered with dandelions and a kind 
of heath, bearing a purple flower, which perfumed the 
air with its sweetness. The flowers and plants are 
European ; the wild geranium I picked ; a few days 
more and we shall be in the land of violets. The 
peach and apple trees at Rawal Pindi were in blossom. 
Many Grecian coins, copper and silver, were in the 
bazaar. Hercules shone on most of them under 
divers representations. We are now but four 
marches from Attcok and some eight from 
Peshawar." 



THE PUNJAB INCOEPORATED 57 

It was on Peshawar that the Afghans* were 
retiring-, and strenuous efforts were made to come up 
with them. Starting again on the night of the i6th, 
the column did 36 miles more without a halt. 
Another forced march of 31 miles brought them to 
the bridge of boats over the Indus. The rear of the 
Afghans was in the act of crossing when Gilbert's 
cavalry arrived. The Afghans at once broke the 
bridge, but sufficient boats were secured to restore 
communication. On the 19th the force crossed the 
Indu?, and on the 21st they marched 28 miles into 
Peshawar, whence the Afghans, two days before, 
had hurriedly withdrawn. This ended the campaign. 
On the 30th March was issued the Proclamation 
which incorporated the Punjab in British India. 

On the 23rd April 1849, Daly wrote from 
Peshawar : — 

"The express announcing the appointment of Sir 
Charles Napier by the nation en masse reached us 
yesterday. Verily the people at home seem panic- 
struck. Some reason, doubtless, for change in the 
Chief there was, but it was as strong before as after 
Chillian. Every battle in which the brave old lord 
has been the leader has been a scene of carnage t 

* 1500 Afghan horse, under Akram Khan, son of the Amir Dost 
Muhammad Khan, had fought against us at Gujerat. 

t Compare what Sir Henry Lawrence wrote in 1847, after the 
first Sikh War, in his esSay on Lord Hardinge's Indian Administra- 
tion : — "Too much has been said of the casuahies during these 
battles, and we have only to look to the returns of the Peninsular 
War, or to those of Assaye, Argaum, Laswari, Delhi, Mehidpur, and 
Maharajpur, to find that the loss in former campaigns averaged at 
least as much as that of the Sikh battles, and generally — indeed in 
India always — from the same cause, the enemy's artillery. It must 
ever be so. Assaults are not to be made on positions bristling with 
heavy guns without loss ; and if more cautious measures, involving 
delay, might, in the first instance save some lives, it must also be 
borne in mind that such delays tend to give confidence to the enemy. 



58 GUJEEAT AND PESHAWAE 

and slaughter from China to India ; read of his 
victories won by his troops in spite of his _ blunders. 
Yet one feels for the sorrow which this act of 
Government will entail upon him. It will carry him 
down with g-rief and shame to his grave. Those 
who left him in such a position as to assemble and 
lead the Grand Army of the Punjab, on them be the 
blood of his confused battles. Sir Charles's arrival 
I hail, you may be assured, with delight. 

" Now I will explain to you the position in which 
I am placed. A few days since I received a short 
note from Major Napier, dated Lahore, to this 
effect : — ' How should you like to be second in 
command of one of the Contingent Corps to be 
raised in the Punjab ? I have mentioned your name 
to the Resident (Sir H. Lawrence), and you are 
nominated to the appointment, which I hope will 
meet your views. The corps will be stationed at 
Peshawar.' Now only once have I seen Napier since 
we left Multan, and that but for a moment as we 
crossed the Jhelum. I never spoke to him of 
appointment or expected such from him, so you may 
be assured such a kindly remembrance was most 
pleasing. I replied thanking him, and, as he evinced 
so much interest in me, I mentioned plainly that I 
accepted the appointment gratefully as an opening 
to some position whereby one might eventually rise. 
That a second in command, though a proud position, 
was not what I looked to as a finale. 

"Well, now comes the puzzle. The day before 
yesterday came the letter from the Adjutant-General, 

who, on the other hand, promptly confronted and well beaten in a 
hand-to-hand fight, seldom renews the conflict, — deeds which at first 
sight may appear brutal and sanguinary, in the end may actually save 
life. 

Our tale is that of the Governor-General, and our narrative must 
constantly keep him in sight ; but we should not for a moment imply 
that the Commander-in-Chief did not throughout the day (Ferozeshah) 
do all that a soldier could do. 

Never, indeed, on India's fertile field of glory fought a braver 
spirit than Lord Gough, and we believe that no British general in 
the East ever won so many battles." (Page 298 of Assays, Military 
and Political, by Sir H. M. Lawrence.) 



OFFER OF PROMOTION 59 

of _ which I send a copy. Now the advantages of 
this latter are these. Young- in the service and 
placed on the door of the Adjutant-General's depart- 
rnent unsolicited for service, so that one's rise in the 
line would be certain, and in time to come I might 
aspire to be Adjutant-General. Honours always 
await him. Conferred on me in the manner the 
appointment is, it would almost ensure active em- 
ployment should an opportunity occur. Service is, 
however, not likely to occur for many a year, so far 
as one can judge. 

'_' Now for the other ; this morning I called on 
Major George Lawrence (the brother of Sir Henry) 
who had been prepared for an interview on the subject 
by my friend Major Blood, an old schoolfellow and 
Kabul ally of his. The Major said, ' I know what 
you are come about. Speak freely your views and 
wishes.' I did most plainly. I told him that the 
advantages of both were so thoroughly appreciated 
by me that the difficulties were rendered heavier by 
this feeling — that I was choosing my way in life. 
Orice here, I must turn my soul to the one grand 
object 'Advancement.' After a most kind discussion 
of the pros and cons, he said, ' My brother knows no 
such thing as interest. He has carte blanche from 
the Governor-General to fill up the appointments, 
military and civil, from the three Presidencies. He 
asked Major Napier, a man in whom he has much 
confidence, if he knew of any efficient men (Bombay). 
Napier mentioned you in flattering terms. I hardly 
remember for which you were marked off, whether 
cavalry or infantry ; but there was some talk between 
them, Napier observing that he hardly thought you 
would accept infantry. On that point be satisfied, 
if that be any inducement. I guarantee you cavalry, 
and you may be assured this is a field not lightly to 
be estimated.' 

"After much more in this way, I showed him 
Hancock's letter. He said, ' I'll take a copy of this ; 
it's handsome indeed, and does and ought to give 
you a high appreciation of the Bombay appointment.' 
I laughingly said, ' Why, you see, with that in hand, 
I would not dive empty-handed into the water with- 
out knowing the prizes at the bottom.' He replied, 



60 GUJERAT AND PESHAWAR 

' Yes. You are in a position to drive a bargain. I'll 
write to my brother John, who will have more leisure 
to attend to it than Henry, and ask what he can hold 
out to you.' So I quitted his house. The answer 
cannot be here for fourteen days. It makes no differ- 
ence. I am in orders for the Brigade Majority. These 
are tempting- things. In Bombay the best opening 
from a professional point of view in the army. Youth 
and service ; near the Chief and Governor ; at a good 
station ; for the pleasurabilities, Poona has weight. 
Here, what but a few months since I would have 
given my right hand for, second in command of 
an irregular cavalry regiment, the favour of the 
Lawrences, and the door of preferment open. Many 
would cry out ' cavalry ' ; enough for the day is the 
good thereof. The command would in the course of 
a few years assuredly be mine, but I think I may 
look high ; at any rate, we are told lofty aspirations 
raise the standard of the mind. Well, there is an 
honest pride mingling with the feelings raised by the 
position in which I now stand, which is, that it is won 
solely and entirely by my own exertions. I feel that 
much of this is owing to circumstances of favour 
which perhaps always accompany and aid fortune's 
children, yet none of it is to be attributed to outdoor 
interest. That is more_ than satisfactory. Vanity I 
have not about such things. Pride I may too much 
coax perhaps." 

The Adjutant-General's demi-official letter to the 
officer commanding the ist Bombay Fusiliers ran as 
follows : — 

"zrd April [184.9). — 'The Commander-in-Chief 
has instructed me to acquaint you, that he has nomi- 
nated Lieutenant Daly of the Fusiliers to the appoint- 
ment of Brigade Major on the Establishment in 
succession to Captain Stiles, appointed a Deputy 
Assistant Adjutant-General, and that it has afforded 
His Excellency_ much gratification thus to mark his ap- 
probation of Lieutenant Daly's conspicuous gallantry 
at Multan, both on 27th December and on the 2nd 
January last, as specially reported by you and Bri- 



A CAVALRY COMMAND 61 

gadier Stalker, which the Commander-in-Chief begs 
that you will do him the favour to communicate to 
Lieutenant Daly.'" 

Unofficially also came the information that he 
would be posted to Poona, and at this period he 
wrote home : — 

" Probably after all I shall decide for Poona, 
though not until I see Lawrence's letter shall I make 
up my decision. In griving up the Punjab, I resign 
the political line into which I could easily get, and 
once there, as Lawrence said, 'AH India is open to 
you.' However, 'annexed Punjab' differs from 'pro- 
tected Punjab' materially." 

The matter was decided at the end of May, when 
Daly received his first communication from Sir 
Henry Lawrence : — 

" My dear Sir, — You are nominated to the com- 
mand of the 1st Cavalry Regiment, to be raised at 
Peshawar. — Yours truly, H. M. Lawrence. Simla, 
24th May." 

At the same time he received a similar intimation 
from the Board of Administration at Lahore, with 
instructions to join and assume command of the 
regiment at his earliest convenience. The other 
officers were Lieutenant H. R. Nuttall, Madras In- 
fantry, second in command, and Cornet H. Forbes, 
1st Bengal Cavalry, adjutant. 



CHAPTER IV 

RAISING OF THE 1ST PUNJAB CAVALRY. ( 1 849-52.) 

Account of the Corps ; sketch of some of the Native Officers ; ex- 
pedition through the Kohat Pass under Sir C. Napier; praise 
from the latter ; life at Peshawar ; friendship with Sir Colin 
Campbell ; return to Kohat ; inspection of the regiment ; visit to 
Murree ; Colonel Mansfield ; Miranzai Expedition ; Frontier 
aifairs ; invalided. 

"The 1st Regiment of Cavalry* was raised at 
Peshawar, under the direction of Colonel George 
Lawrence, by Lieutenant Daly, a distinguished and 
excellent officer of the Bombay service. The 
men mostly belong to the fine race of Eusafzai 
Pathans and several of the native officers are men 
of good family. Within a year the corps was brought 
to a high state of discipline. It was employed against 
the Afridis, the Swatis in Ranizai, and in the Kohat 
Pass, where its discipline and appearance attracted 
Sir Charles Napier's favourable notice. It is now 
stationed at Kohat, with a detachment at Bahadur 
Khel. The regiment is armed, dressed, and equipped 
in a style equal to the best irregular cavalry ; all 
have carbines ; the horses are strong and hardy, 
they are purchased from a subscription fund." Thus 
ran the first Administration Report of the Punjab. 

* Now styled "21st Prince Albert Victor's Own Cavalry (Frontier 
Force), Daly's Horse." 



THE 1st regiment OF CAVALRY 63 

The regiment was to consist of 588 natives of all 
ranks, with 4 British officers ; the cost was Rs. 
16,059 a month; the troopers received Rs. 20 a 
month. In July 1850, Daly himself sent home the 
following sketch : — 

" My regiment consists of 4 British officers and 
6 troops, each with its complement of native officers 
nearly 100 men, so that the corps is almost 600 
strong. In India there are three distinct armies^ — 
Bengal, Madras, Bombay — each presidency has its 
separate military as well as civil government, but all 
under one Governor-General. In the Bengal army 
are 18 regiments of irregular cavalry, which have 
been raised from time to time during the wars as 
our dominions have extended. In Bombay there 
are 4 of these regiments ; officered in each presidency 
from the line, either jfrom a cavalry or infantry regi- 
ment as merit or interest may prevail. After the last 
campaign, on the annexation of the Punjab, the 
Governor-General decided, on the advice of Sir 
Henry Lawrence, to raise S regiments of cavalry and 
5 of infantry. The Punjab having been conquered 
by a united force from the Bengal and Bombay 
armies, the Governor-General in handing over the 
patronage of these new regiments to Sir Henry 
Lawrence (who was appointed President of a Board 
for the Government of Punjab affairs) authorised 
him to select officers indiscriminately from Bengal, 
Madras, or Bombay, as he might see fit. The desig- 
nations of the European officers are, commandant, 
2nd in command, adjutant, and assistant surgeon. 
In my regiment each presidency has furnished an 
officer. A strange combination. A lieutenant, 
Bombay Army, commandant ; a captain, Madras 
Army, 2nd in command; and a cornet of Bengal 
Cavalry, adjutant. 

"In years past these regiments were embodied 
with a view to induce men of birth and position, too 
proud to enter the ordinary service, to embrace our 
employment. The system pursued was altogether 
different from that in the regular cavalry. Here a 
native of good birth and character was to command 



64 RAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALRY 

his troop, in which, of course, a number of his own 
dependents and followers would be. His pay is 
nearly ;^300. He is allowed to mount a certain 
number of his friends and followers on his own horses, 
otherwise the horse must be the property of the 
rider, who draws pay from Government for the 
service and support of himself and horse. The men 
arm, dress, and_ mount themselves, under the orders 
and responsibility of their commandants. _ Govern- 
ment provide nothing'^ but pay and ammunition. _ 

"The drill and discipline are the same as in the 
line. In almost every one of these corps are men of 
noble birth, whose fathers in former times were 
chiefs and rulers. I have several, and more gallant 
soldiers no army contains. They embrace the service 
with great delight, and the conduct of these regiments 
during the late wars was so excellent as to cause 
much desire among European officers to enter them. 
A native gentleman of birth and position can scarcely 
be excelled in the dignity of his deportment. 
Personally he is devotedly brave, and, as a body, with 
a British officer or two at their head in whom they 
have confidence, no troops could be finer. _ You 
may be assured that the ist Punjab Cavalry, in the 
opinion of its commandant, lacks none of the 
qualifications which a gallant regiment should 
possess ! The raising of a regiment gives one a 
great advantage in this respect ; I know every man 
personally, who_ he is, and whence he came. Seeing 
that I have enlisted the corps, they look to me and 
not beyond, and so invest their commandant with all 
power. The pay of each officer is consolidated (lucky 
for the race of subalterns !)^ — commandant, Rs. 1080, 
or about 4^108 a month ; second in command, 
Rs. 500; adjutant, Rs. 500; doctor, Rs. 530." 

A more detailed account is embodied in the 
regimental records, taken from a memorandum which 
Daly drew up for his successor, immediately before 
his departure on sick leave in April 1852 : — 

" I received my appointment to the command of 
the ist Punjab Cavalry, 'to be raised at Peshawar,' 



THE PATHANS 65 

on the 28th May 18^9, with direction to place myself 
in communication with Major Lawrence, the deputy 
commissioner. With him I found Forbes, the 
adjutant, who had been sent with instructions to 
commence work." 

"As these regiments were to be designated 
' Punjab Regiments,' I deemed it highly desirable to 
enrol a considerable number of the Pathans of 
Eusafzai and of the hills around, Sikhs and the 
so-called Multanis, men of the Derajat. To bring 
up Hindustanis from below was not to raise a Punjab 
corps. I meant the proportion to be — Pathans, 1 50 ; 
Sings (Sikhs), 100; the remainder Hindustanis. I 
quite failed in my efforts to gain the Multanis. ' I 
attribute their unwillingness to very natural and 
simple causes. They were invited to enter a service 
in which the pay was no more than they then 
received, and in which they considered discipline and 
duty alike severe, for rumour had invested our 
regulations with great severity ; in addition, they 
were to prpvide themselves with arms, clothing, and 
good horses. These were not great inducements for 
them to quit employment about Kohat and Bannu, 
where their pay was the same, though the Multani 
owned only a 20-rupee pony and a family matchlock. 
I regretted this failure, for they are gallant soldiers, 
well used to roughing it. With the Eusafz9,i Pathans 
for a considerable period I had scarcely any success. 
They had imbibed strong notions prejudicial to our 
service. They came by single files at first ; gradually, 
however, this dislike was overcome, and now a 
regiment might be raised in a month. In the ranks 
at this present (March 1852) there are 5 Pathan 
officers, 6 non-commissioned officers, and some 160 
sowars. I have not known an instance among those 
reluctant to enter the service from fears of its drill 
and discipline express a desire to quit on experience 
of its reality ; on the contrary they are quick to 
appreciate the benefit of order, and, being good 
horsemen, soon master every detail of drill. This ac- 
complished, they are proud of their aieen (regulations). 
There are some 100 Sikhs on the strength; these I 
would increase ; orderly and obedient at all times, 
quiet in quarter^, ready for any duty on any notice, 

E 



66 EAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALRY 

most careful of their horses ; some of the best horse- 
men in the regiment are Sikhs. Of the Hindustanis 
it is needless to say anything- ; their points are well 
known ; there are some 280 horsemen in the corps. 
There can be no better horseman (irregular) than a 
good Hindustani. Their ancestors probably emi- 
grated from Eusafzai. However, a good Hindustani 
sowar has no fancy for service trans- Indus, when he 
can find a livelihood in the provinces. There are no 
inducements, nothing to compensate for the banish- 
ment. 

The regiment was raised unshackled by a bank, 
unaided by a Government advance. From the first 
issue of pay I commenced the stoppages. These I 
regularly continued until the whole amount was 
received from the sowars. It was well and often 
explained for what purposes these stoppages were 
made, and, although it was long before they saw the 
result, I never heard a murmur at their continuance, 
A sowar, with his carbine, accoutrements, alkalik, 
and sound horse-gear, stands to pay Rs. 63. Westley 
Richards supplied the carbines and Ridgeway the 
accoutrements." 

The account would not be complete without the 
notes which Daly left on his leading native officers. 
Apart from their intrinsic interest the notes give some 
indication of Daly's close attention to the characters 
of those around him, and of his knowledge of and 
sympathy with the native of India. 

" Resaldar Sundil Khan, the senior resaldar* in 
the regiment, was introduced to me by a respectable 
native of Peshawar in 1849. He produced several 
strong testimonials of conduct and gallantry. After 
I had read these, he said : ' You have seen I was a 
resaldar in the 14th Irregular Cavalry. I must tell 
you I have lost that position. I was tried by a court- 
martial, convicted, and ruined. If you like, I will 

* The relative ranks of the native ofiicers may be taken as, Jemadar 
equivalent to Lieutenant, Resaidar to Captain, Resaldar to Major, 
Resaldar-Major to Lieutenant-Colonel. The native Adjutant is 
styled Wordi Major. 



SUNDIL KHAN 67 

abide by your decision after you have heard the 
circumstances, or learnt them elsewhere,' I thought 
the latter the better course, so heard no more from 
hirn at that time. It happened that Hqdson* of the 
Guides was living at the Residency with me when 
this occurred. Hodson was well acquainted with 
Sundil Khan, had seen him on service, was aware of 
his former position. From him I heard all. Hodson 
is not a man to form a wrong estimate of character. 
His testimony was stout in Sundil Khan's favour ; 
from this and other enquiries, I came to the con- 
clusion that although the offence against discipline 
required his dismissal from the 14th Irregular 
Cavalry, it was not of such a nature as to stain the 
good character to which so many had testified, nor 
to prevent his restoration to the service. 

" I appointed him a resaidar ; he expressed 
himself very properly and very gratefully ; most 
amply has he redeemed his promises. He raised a 
good troop in his own district ; his father is a man of 
wealth and position, Tahsildart of Bahadurgarh, 
Rohtak. In August 1849, he was promoted to 
resaidar, 

" Sundil Khan possesses excellent temper and 
sound judgment ; his men bear him in much respect. 
On the parade, in the field, he is equally good : his 
earnest, collected manner imparts confidence to all 
around him ; he is now stretched upon his bed 
suffering from a sword-cut wound, received in a 
gallant charge he headed at Bahadur Khel in 
February last. His conduct on that occasion was 
an instance of soldierly spirit which deserves being 
recorded. In February, Sundil Khan was in com- 
mand at the salt mine of Bahadur Khel, under 
Wilde.+ The position of the encarnpment does not 
^fFord much scope for cavalry ; save in two directions, 
where the space is somewhat level and open, the 
valley is narrow, traversed with ridges and lofty hills. 
There had been many rumours of attacks, and 
occasionally the piquets had been annoyed by the 

* Subsequently better known as Hodson of Hodson's Horse. 
t A Tahsildar is the (native^) revenue officer of a tahsil, or portion 
of a district. 

I The late Lieut.-General Sir Alfred Wilde, K.C.B., K.C.S.L 



68 RAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALRY 

enemy ; although we had not suffered much loss on 
these occasions, still we had failed to inflict any. On 
the night of the loth, just as the moon was peeping 
out, information was receiyed in the camp that a body 
of marauders was prowling about. Sundil Khan 
volunteered to sweep round the front. Wilde directed 
him to do so. Some 300 or 400 yards from home, 
Sundil Khan perceived the party he was in search of, 
consisting of 40 or 50 foot men. Sundil Khan had 
with him 10 sowars. He quietly gave the forward 
word, and with his little band plunged into the midst 
of the enemy. The latter, perhaps observing the 
attackers to be few, turned and made a struggle ; in 
this two of the enemy were killed and several 
wounded ; the party then broke away and fled to the 
hills, leaving the two dead bodies. In this contest 
the resaldar received a severe cut in the palm of his 
hand. Karim Khan, one of the ten, threw himself 
from his horse the more easily to close with his 
assailant, who had wounded him ; three other sowars 
met with sword cuts. Karim Khan has since been 
promoted. I gave him the first vacant dafadari* 

''Resaldar Jai Singh. — When I received my 
appointment to the command of the corps, 28th 
May 1849, I found Jai Singh at the Residency, 
Peshawar, with Nehal Singh and Mahtab Singh, 
Colonel Lawrence had brougfht these three men from 
Lahore the previous month with a view to their 
enrolment in the ist P.C., then to be raised. Jai 
Singh at Chillian served as adjutant of Khan Singh 
Rosa's Musulman regiment. He was at Peshawar in 
the days of Allard and Avitabile,"!" in the dragoons of 

* A dafadar is a sergeant. 

t AUard was a Frenchman who had served with distinction in the 
armies of Napoleon. In company with an Italian named Ventura, 
who was another of Napoleon's officers, he went first to Egypt and 
then to Persia, seeking employment ; they were subsequently enter- 
tained, not without hesitation, by Ranjit Singh, and did much towards 
the training of the iSikh army. Avitabile, who was a Neapolitan, came 
to the Punjab later ; he was chiefly employed in administrative work, 
and his name is still remembered on the frontier as the iron-handed 
Governor of Peshawar under the Sikh regime. For a sketch of 
Avitabile, see vol. i., pages 43-46 of Sir H. Lawrence's Life of an 
Adventurer, etc. 



COLONEL LAWEENCE A CAPTIVE 69 

the former; first embraced service in 1824, and was 
some twenty years a jemadar. This rank he retained 
under the Darbar, and was at Peshawar as such in 
the dragoons of which Khan Singh Rosa was colonel 
during the rebellion 1848-9. \Vhen Colonel Lawrence 
was treacherously delivered over to the Sikhs at 
Peshawar, Mrs Lawrence was at Kohat, under the 
charge of Khojah Muhammad, a son of Sultan 
Muhammad. Colonel Lawrence, finding himself a 
prisoner in the Sikh camp, urged Chattar Singh to 
send for Mrs Lawrence, that she might be with him. 
This step was opposed by Sultan Muhammad, then 
at Peshawar; but he was over-ruled. Khan Singh 
Rosa — who, dtaring our Protectorate, had never 
expressed himself favourable to us ; who, while at 
Peshawar with his regiment under Major Lawrence, 
had never affected to conceal his dislike at our rule — 
now that Lawrence was a captive, became markedly 
respectful and courteous.* Chattar Singh directed 
Khan Singh Rosa to detach a trustworthy officer to 
Kohat to escort Mrs Lawrence to the Sikh camp with- 
out delay. Jai Singh was selected ; he went straight to 
Kohat. Khojah Muhammad, on receiving Jai Singh, 
affirmed he would not allow her to be removed. Jai 
Singh hereupon told him at his peril to attempt to 
keep her. Khojah Muhammad at last acceded to her 
departure, but wished to detain her baggage, some 
portion of which was very valuable. This also the 
Sikh resisted : ' his orders were to bring her away, 
with all she possessed.' So Mrs Lawrence was 
escorted to Peshawar to the Sikh camp. Colonel 
Lawrence then solicited from Chattar Singh that Jai 
Singh might be attached to Mrs Lawrence's escort. 
This step was refused ; his services as a soldier were 
too valuable to be spared from his regiment. Khan 
Singh Rosa, however, assured Colonel Lawrence that 
he would place such men in attendance on her that he 
might be free from apprehension. The men so placed 
were Nehal Singh, now k6t dafadar [troop sergeant- 
major] in this regiment, and Mahtab Singh, my orderly, 

* He said to Lawrence, " I have served you as governor for the 
last two years as a duty, now I serve you as a pleasure, and you shall 
judge how I can acquit myself!"— From Forty-three Years in India, by 
Sir G. Lawrence, p. 261. 



70 RAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALRY 

the darogha of the 3rd (Jai Singh's) troop. Major 
Lawrence was strongly impressed with Jai Singh's 
good and respectful behaviour to Mrs Lawrence, and, 
at Pakka Serai, when the Sikh power was shivered, 
he desired him to present himself at Lahore. This 
Jai Singh did, and so found his way back to his old 
field at Peshawar. I heard this from Colonel Law- 
rence. I appointed Jai Singh a jemadar from the 
date of his quitting Lahore ; Nehal Singh a dafadar, 
and Mahtab Singh a sowar in the regiment. Jai 
Singh's knowledge and experience were most useful to 
me in organising the regiment. For rnany years he 
acted as wordi major, and in this capacity he did more 
than well. In November I made him a naib resal- 
dar; in May 1850 a resaldar, his present position. 
He deserves of me the best character I can give. A 
stern, strict officer, he is held in much regard and 
respect by those under him. In his troop are many 
Pathans of the Peshawar valley and hills around ; 
with them the Sikh resaldar's justice is proverbial. 
During his long service of twenty-nine years he has 
seen warfare in all its hues, and many a tale can he 
unfold of glories departed, of the skill and valour of 
Hurree Singh,* whose death he witnessed at Jum- 
rood. He has profited much by this experience, has 
excellent notions of discipline, and is, therefore, a 
most valuable officer in the field. The resaldar is a 
good accountant, and on several occasions has had 
charge of the Treasury accounts. He may be 
thoroughly relied on. I have never had the slightest 
reason to doubt his truth. 

" Resaldar Peru Khan was introduced to me by 
Major Lawrence at Peshawar. He is the eldest son 
of Rahmit Khan Orakzai, who during the Sikh rule 
in the valley held a jagir [land grant] of Rs. 6000 a 
year. Peru almost from childhood has been in the 
♦ For details regarding Hurree (Hari) Singh Nalwa, " the Murat 
of the Khalsa," see Ranjit Singh, by Sir Lepel Griffin, in the Rulers of 
India Series. Hari Singh was the most dashing, famous, and skilful 
of Ranjit Singh's fighting chiefs, and was adored by the Sikh army. 
He was chiefly instrumental in the capture of Multan by Ranjit Singh. 
He was killed at Jamrud, near Peshawar, in battle with the Afghans 
in 1836. It was his son, Jowahir Singh, who led the splendid charge 
of irregular Sikh cavalry upon our troops at Chillianwallah, 



PEEU KHAN 71 

saddle ; his present asfe may be twenty-four or twenty- 
five ; yet he was gfalToping about in the Khyber with 
Mackeson in 1841-42. After our evacuation of 
Kabul, he remained a time in Tirah ; subsequently, 
not being: able to squeeze the father to the extent he 
craved, the boy bolted to Kabul and there obtained 
some favour with the Dost. However, this did not 
suit Peru long and he returned to his home. There, 
amidst the Sikh Sardars, being- a shrewd, clever lad, 
a keen sportsman and a bold rider, ready with his 
spear for a tilt, or his sword for a foray, he was petted 
and his society courted. He had a place in all the 
riotous dissipations. Major Lawrence assiired me 
there was good in him ; of his activity and smartness 
there could be no doubt. I appointed him a naib 
resaldar, and have never repented the act. I have 
mentioned the circumstances of his early life because, 
to command this man properly, they cannot be lost 
sight of It is due to him they should be known. 
He has been brought up amidst strife and dissipation. 
I promoted him to resaidar, February 1850; to re- 
saldar, March 1851. On the parade, in the field, he 
is excellent. His ready mind quickly mastered all 
parade duties ; no English officer could handle a 
troop _ better. He is proud of his position, and 
attentive to his duties. The horses of his troop are 
always well cared for, for he is popular with his men, 
and there are some of every class in his troop : Hindu- 
stanis, Pathans, and Sikhs. He is flighty and dis- 
sipated in quarters, and requires a good deal of 
supervision. The more his officers see of him the 
better. I encourage him to visit me ; friendship 
cannot be carried too far unless it broaches on 
familiarity. This is the kind of supervision I allude 
to. Talk with him, laugh with him ; but never joke 
about his dissipations or duty. Keep him as much 
with the regiment as possible. Give him leave for a 
week or a fortnight occasionally, but do not heed 
his pretences for going to Peshawar. His word I do 
not hold to be worth muchi, In the regiment there 
are not more than eight or ten of his kinsmen. In the 
field, on service, he will pay back all the care and 
trouble he may cost in quarters. Ever vigilant, 
energetic, a soldier from his birth, possessed of much 



72 RAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALRY 

influence amongr the hill tribes, and conversant with 
the ways and customs of all. When inclined to look 
at him with the articles of war, I would strongly urge 
a glance being thrown at his past life. Watch hiin 
now, and in a few years habits will be established 
which I can now observe being engendered. Durmg 
the last twelve months he has behaved steadily and 
well. He is a true Pathan about money ; spends all 
he can lay his hands on. Make no advances to him, 
but make him pay his debts. In a scrimmage, Peru s 
face by one's side would be a pleasant sig^ht." 

By the middle of October 1849, Daly was able 
to write : — 

" The corps is now nearly complete in strength. 
We have some very good horses ; everything is 
settling into order, the men being regularly clothed, 
horses, etc., uniformly appointed. ' In this letter he 
added:— ^" Sir Colin Campbell, who commands at 
Rawal Pindi, is here in the house. He has come up 
to inspect the 60th Rifles. The Horse Guards don't 
like this being done by their own colonel, Sir H. 
Dundas. He is a fine, soldierly, frank, active, old 
fellow, who evidently considers himself one of a trio, of 
which the Duke and Charley [Sir C. Napier] form 
two. He is gallant fo a degree, and an excellent 
officer in all detail matters ; but whatever he may say 
(and he talks well), at Chillian he committed a 
frightful blunder. He commanded the division in 
which poor Pennycuick's brigade was. He it was 
who advanced caring so little for his artillery. 
Further, he it was (so it is reported) who suggested 
to Lord Gough to fall back after the action, and thus 
sacrificed wounded, dying, guns, honour, and victory. 
The ground on which they were was everything that 
was bad — marshy, and covered with trees and low 
brushwood, and no water. But had they encountered 
the distress this latter would have occasioned, the 
result would have been termed a great victory, 
though gained by blood and blunders." 

Early in February 1850, — after being inspected 
and well reported on by Colonel Lawrence, who was 




Jai Singh. Abed Ali Khan. 

Native Officers of the ist Punjab Cavalry. 



yiojacep. 72. 



INSPECTION OF THE REGIMENT 73 

accompanied by Sir Colin Campbell, now command- 
ing at Peshawar, — the regiment formed part of the 
force which was employed under the direct command 
of Sir Charles Napier against the Afridis in the 
Kohat Pass. On his return. Sir Charles addressed 
the following letter to Colonel Lawrence, on the 23rd 
February 1850: — 

"As Daly's and Coke's corps* are not my 
children, I am perhaps not called on to state my 
opinion of them ; but, as I reviewed them both, I 
have much pleasure in saying that they are two 
excellent regiments. I really have seen none better ; 
we all know that it takes more time to form a cavalry 
than an infantry regiment, and Daly has got his wild 
horsemen into excellent order. This regiment is 
perfectly pliable and handy ; he has made wonderful 
progress. Indeed, I was quite delighted with the 
headlong charge they made, and it is a better style 
of charge than one held too much in hand, as our 
cavalry generally is, I think. In short I am more 
pleased with these two young commanders than I 
can well express." 

That the regiment continued to merit this early 
approval, is shown by the following extract of the 
despatch, 17 th September 1851, from the Court of 
Directors : — 

"This record of the sentiments of the late Com- 
mander-in-Chief as to the great and rapid success 
which had attended the exertions of Captain Coke t 
and Lieutenant Daly to get their respective corps 
into a state of discipline, is highly creditable to those 
officers." 

Kohat + was described in the first Administration 
Report of the Punjab as " an expensive encumbrance, 

* 1st Punjab Infantry, now 55th Coke's Rifles (Frontier Force), 
t The late General Sir John Coke, K.C.B. 

I The best account then extant of Kohat was contained in Mount- 
stuart Elphinstone's Kingdom of Caubul. 



74 RAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALEY 

but politically indispensable, as connecting Peshawar 
with the trans-Indus possessions." At about this 
period it was made a separate civil charg^e, and was 
placed under Captain Coke, who, with his own regi- 
ment and a small mixed force, remained at Kohat 
when the column under Sir Charles Napier returned 
to Peshawar, after what Sir Charles described as 
"our five days' campaign." The ist Punjab Cavalry 
also remained for a time at Kohat. " Coke, who is 
with us here and commands the infantry," wrote 
Daly in April 1850, "is a particularly fine, high- 
minded fellow ; a man of good family and sound 
notions. A gallant soldier, with reading and infor- 
mation not often met with. A more agreeable com- 
panion I could hardly have selected. I know no man 
of so logical a mind, or who can equal him in stating 
a case, or in submitting his views and opinions in 
conversation." 

Daly's regiment shortly afterwards returned to 
Peshawar. 

"We arrived here yesterday morning," wrote 
Daly on the 26th April 1850, "having made two 
marches from Kohat. The valley we passed through 
was smiling brightly with verdure and cultivation ; 
the cold, brown, rocky hills rising almost perpen- 
dicularly. I am in the midst of civilised life again. 
In a large camp, much sounding of bugles, much play- 
ing of bands. Ladies galloping and driving about. 
Of course there is a pleasure in mixing in such society 
again, yet I look back with much tenderness to my 
residence in the beautiful valley of Kohat. So fresh 
was the life, and the weather had been like fairyland." 

In a letter written at this period to his brother, 
he said : — 

" I have ever had a kind of swimming notion that 
a man rarely fails or falls much short of an object (I 



SIR COLIN CAMPBELL 75 

presume the object a prize for somebody) who places 
it steadily before him, who in every path conforms 
his steps and tends his energies to the one end. A 
soldier and young, perhaps in all India, would wish for 
no better position than mine. Fortune has antici- 
pated the usual rules and placed me, in defiance of 
gradation, where a man may gain much, even if 
ambitious, while young — i.e., if service occurred. I 
am just now somewhat at sea. Now I ought to form 
some fixed plan for the future. I will tell you by and 
bj[ my prospects, hopes, and dreams. If my health 
fail not, I could do well. I could rise high, provided 
I resolved to work on for aye and ever in this 
country---at anyrate, as long as energy and activity 
remained. I might, by putting this before me, gain 
honours worth having. This would require fixedness 
of purpose." 

The remainder of the year passed busily and 
pleasantly at Peshawar, where Daly established a 
friendship with Sir Colin Campbell. 

" I was in the habit of discussing all sorts of 
events, telling and listening to anecdotes, every 
morning with my old friend the brigadier." 

In July 1850, Daly wrote : — 

" Peshawar has undergone wondrous changes 
since I first saw it. From Attock to this the country 
is almost level. When we marched up in March last 
year, nothing could surpass the rich beauty of all 
around. It was like a flower-garden ; the flowers of 
home, which we had not seen save in pots since 
leaving that home. The honeysuckle and the 
bramble, the daisy and the cowslip ; the men quite 
shouted with delight as their eyes feasted on these 
old friends. The Khyber Pass is about 13 miles 
hence. The range of mountains had been long 
visible to us, their peaks being above 5000 feet ; the 
snow covered the sides at that season. On our 
arrival at the first hill we had encountered for many 
a day (my tower, whence I write, is within 200 yards 



76 RAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALRY 

of it), we caught a glimpse of the mouth of the famed 
Pass of Khyber. But no enemy. The valley had 
nothing but a few wretched, straggling cattle. Dost 
Muhammad had rushed through with his army two 
days before. All about looked desolate and sad. 
The old Sikh barracks and every place within reach 
had been laid low by fire. The Afghans had spared 
nothing which they had time to destroy ; they had 
little doubt the British army would retain possession 
of the valley. These ruins have been replaced by 
goodly houses and barracks. Buildings here spring 
Up as if by magic. Of the army which marched up 
as conquerors of the province none now remain save 
a troop of horse artillery, two officers on the staff, 
and myself A general relief has taken place. 

"There is no grander scenery in the world than 
that which the eye can compass here. The Kashmir 
range, towering in grandeur equalled by the Andes 
only, circles east and west ; in many places its peaks 
are so lofty that the eye cannot trace where they 
end ; these mingle with the Himalayas at one end, 
and are crossed at the other by what becomes the 
Khyber range, running north and south. From the 
Kashmir tops the snow never fades. The Khyber, 
less lofty though glorious to view in its thousand 
hues and deep ridges, loses its white covering in 
April, though a few of the peaks towards Jalalabad 
glisten all the year round. During winter snow falls 
on the nearest range, and thick ice almost tempts 
one to a cold bath by sliding and skating. The 
valley is never so green and beautiful as now in the 
summer. It is everywhere irrigated by canals and 
rivers which issue from the mountains ; these are 
fed by the melting of the snow ; the water is so cold 
as almost to benumb those who wade across. In 
the days of Muhammadan pride, for miles around 
Peshawar were gardens rich in fruit trees and shady 
streams ; the peach and nectarine, the grape and the 
pomegranate, the fig and the mulberry, all hang 
clustering and ripening together ; nor must I forget 
the apple and the quinces It is customary in the 
East to take early morning rides ; during these I 
generally find myself in some old gentleman's peach 
garden, and never without receiving a most courteous 



A KHYBER EOB EOY 77 

welcome, and that too without money and without 
price. By and by, as they know us better, I fear 
this freedom will die away. 

" For many fruits Kabul surpasses Peshawar ; the 
climate there is more equable. Heat is unkriown at 
Kabul ; but I grieve to say our terms with its ruler 
are not such as to admit of an Englishman moving 
ten paces into the Khyber without a salute of match- 
locks. In Kashmir also the climate is very joyous. 
No sun, no heat on the hills or in the tableland to 
strike the European as here in India during the 
summer. Several officers have gone up to Kashmir 
from here on a month's trip, and speak in raptures of 
all they have seen. With the Raja of Kashmir we 
are on the most affectionate terms. But even Afridis 
are sometimes quiet, and an existence at the gates of 
British dominion may be commonplace, nothing 
more interesting than cattle-lifting or horse-stealing 
going on. I was living with Colonel Lawrence when 
there was brought before him an old Khyber chief, 
taken at Peshawar stealing in a true Rob Roy way. 
Lawrence at once recognised him as a man of very 
considerable importance, and said, 'Ah! what 
brought you so far from home and on such an 
errand ? ' ' You may well ask,' was the reply, ' I have 
been questioning myself all the morning ; but I'll tell 
you : — I have for the last six months heard men 
speaking of the wealth to be had in your camp, and 
no risk (for I never heard of a man having been 
caught). I resisted the temptation and remained 
away. Well, my fate willed that I should be 
entrapped. A friend of mine came straight from 
your camp to nie, bringing a gun, a double-barrel, 
and a brace of pistols ; he described Peshawar as full 
of such spoil. I said, " I'll go down and get a gun" 
(for your guns are good). I came last night. You 
know the rest.' He was caught entering a tent. He 
evidently considered the question like going to the 
diggings." 

In August 1850: — 

"Sir Charles Napier leaves India in November 
never to return : in him I lose such a warm friend as 



78 RAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALRY 

youngf officers rarely have in one so lofty by position 
and ability. I know him so well and he has been so 
kind, more than kind, that I could say anything 
to him. 

"26th November 1850. — This is one of those 
exhilarating days when all nature seems bent on 
enjoyment ; the birds sing- and chatter ; the very 
leaves of the trees flutter joyously. The clouds had 
been gathering heavily for days, the mountains had 
been concealed from view by the mists which hungf 
about ; at last came the long pent-up thunder, the 
flood-gates opened. Torrents of rain, such as you 
wot not of in England, fell ; and when morning broke 
it disclosed the clear blue sky, with a few light fleecy 
clouds, and the mountains, yesterday invisible, 
apparently within stone's throw of the window ; the 
ravines, peaks, and ridges distinctly marked, the tops 
and sides far down covered with snow. Now all 
around the snow is beautiful. On some of the loftiest 
mountains the naked eye cannot trace the crest, so 
purely white. You in England do not thoroughly 
enjoy the blessings of life ; they are too get-at-able, 
too common. I remember Fanny Kemble, in the 
Year of Consolation, alludes to this, after having 
travelled three nights without rest! Now in India, 
after the heats of summer, and possibly the lassitude 
induced by fever, one of these joyous mornings 
produces a grateful feeling, which hallows the enjoy- 
ment. Did you ever read Fanny Kemble's A Year 
of Consolation ? I journeyed the same route, over 
the same mountains, perhaps in the same rickety 
diligence, from Chalons to Nevers, actually in the 
same steamer that brought her to Civita Vecchia : 
poor dear Fanny ; I have a love for her, though for 
one so piquant she is somewhat fastidious ; over 
anxious to parade her ' ablutions ' before the reader ; 
we could have taken something' for granted! The 
book would have lost half its raciness, though. I 
know every stone which jolted her." 

In January 1851, came the order to return to 
Kohat, where the regiment was to be cantoned with 
the I St and 4th Punjab Infantry and a field battery. 



RETURN TO KOHAT 79 

This move was part of the scheme of frontier defence, 
in accordance with which a number of regiments were 
sent across the Indus. 

" Preventive measures to secure our newly acquired 
territory from the maraudings of the hill tribes. 
Kohat is as quiet as Carisbrooke at present ; the 
mountains about are inhabited by a race little used 
and less disposed to rigid rules of any right save that 
of the strong- arm. Nevertheless, they are wise in 
their generation, and rarely strike where they incur a 
chance of being struck. Cattle-lifters they are, like 
the Highlanders of old ; beyond that they have no 
combination, no enterprise. Jealous of their inde- 
pendence, and tenacious of the reputation of which no 
conqueror has ever attempted to deprive them, of 
possessing homes and strongholds in the mountains 
never subdued, probably never seen by any but them- 
selves." 

"We marched the first day i8 miles over a 
beautiful road, the same which I had traversed last 
February with Sir Charles in all the bristling of 
expected service. The following morning at 9 we 
were again away, the distance to Kohat from our 
starting-place being some 22 miles. The first 7 or 
8 are over a road as good as any of the down roads 
in the Isle of Wight, then the Pass commences, now 
narrow and rugged with precipitous, broken, con- 
vulsed rocks overhanging on either side, now opening 
out for a mile or two with a basin in which cultiva- 
tion is carried to its utmost from the Afridi village 
and hamlet by the mountain side. All was as quiet 
as an Eftglish churchyard. We got over the 
mountainjwithout any incident occurring, and reached 
Kohat about a p.m. As yet we are in tents ; in the 
cold weather this is pleasant enough. Yet was our 
residence here last February and March widely 
different from now. Then scarce a day elapsed 
without hearing firing in the hills ; scarce a day with- 
out our being in the saddle giving chase to some 
marauder, or protecting some party or place from 
incursion or attack. Sir Charles had just gone out 
of the Pass, and all was in fermentation. I had a 



80 RAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALEY 

horse always saddled ; 50 men ready at a moment's 
warning. Now we stroll about delighting in the 
scenery and the air." 

In the middle of March, Kohat was visited by 
Brigadier Hodgson, commanding the Punjab Irregu- 
lar Force. Of this visit Daly wrote : — 

"The Brigadier came in yesterday. I have been 
somewhat agreeably disappointed in him. He has, 
by reputation, the character of a gallant soldier, but 
a disagreeable, uncertain, domineering man ; anxious 
to find fault and cautious of praise. I shall be sorry 
at being found fault with, yet not greatly annoyed, 
for I am vain enough to think my regiment can bear 
scrutiny ; so I am quite prepared not to suffer uneasi- 
ness at his comments. He is a peculiar man this 
Brigadier, by no means of an ordinary mould. He 
dined with us last night ; he is stately and cold, with 
dignity of manner enough for any station. Noble 
and soldierly in appearance ; able and clear in con- 
versation ; teeming with anecdote and observation. 
He has been drawing up a report on the defence of 
the frontier, and rarely, very rarely, have I read a 
more masteily paper. Men in India generally write 
discursively and redundantly ; subject to little criti- 
cism, this naturally arises. His report is terse and 
felicitous. I have been greatly struck by the keen- 
ness of his remarks. He tells his story well, and often 
illustrates his meaning by some well-applied and 
neatly-turned anecdote. We are to be reviewed this 
evening. 

" igth March. — My philosophy was not called into 
play. However he might have found fault with 
others, however stately and cold, he was in none of 
this humour on the parade. When the parade was 
oyer, he cantered up to me, and warmly expressed 
himself in praise ; that he should be proud to bring 
to the Governor-General's notice the state and 
appearance of the regiment, etc. He addressed the 
natiye officers to this effect. The next day he wrote 
me, through his Brigade Major, an official letter to 
the same effect, at the same time saying that as these 



AT LORD DALHOUSIE'S CAMP 81 

letters were laid before Government, he deemed it 
better to write his opinion. That evening my old 
friend Colonel Napier* of the Engineers came to 
Kohat to inspect some of the works. He remained 
the following day, and rode back on the 17th. He 
wished me to accompany him. I had been reviewed, 
and was not sorry to come into Peshawar for a few 
days to meet my old associates, and to see the 
Governor-General's camp. So in I rode with him. 
The day was beautiful ; the country, hills, and valleys 
around green and luxurious. We rode through the 
Pass at a walk, talking over all the old scenes at 
Multan. I know no more lovable, upright, highly- 
principled man than the Colonel. He joined the 
Governor-General's camp here. Great falls of rain 
have retarded the hot weather, and made such things 
as fires comfortable. On the day I arrived there was 
a great ball to the Governor-General, to which I went, 
of course ; splendid-looking enough and dull enough, 
though dancing was kept up long and late. The 
Governor-General and Lady Dalhousie marched 
away yesterday." 

Of his return ride he wrote : — 

" I cantered back here after breakfast on the 29th, 
by the overhanging rocks, every one of which seems 
to nod to me, their best European acquaintance. A 
beautiful ride it was ; the Pass rich in beauty ; the air 
perfumed with the shrubs and flowers which bedeck 
its steep mountain sides. A few months ago nothing 
could be harsher and rougher than this same spot ; 
now green, sprigs and bright blossoms encircle the 
crags ; the glen was green with rising crops, every 
inch has its corn blade. I came through the dreaded 
Pass with a couple of horsemen. The chief of the 
great clan of these mountains has a son holding an 
appointment of rank and emoluments in my regiment. 
The chief himself is the proprietor of considerable 
estates _ in the Peshawar valley. As matters now 
stand, in my opinion the Pass is the safest spot in 
the Punjab ; daily goods and stores are being sent 

* The late Lord Napier of Magdala ; at that time Chief Engineer 
in the Punjab. 

F 



82 EAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALRY 

through ; yet, though robberies are common and 
tolerably certain where no guard accompanies over 
the plain, never has the slightest trifle been touched 
within the Pass." 

Early next month Daly was grieved at the 
departure of Forbes, the adjutant, with whom he 
had formed a close friendship, and who was not 
expected to return : — 

" I saw him well on his journey. The Indus, in a 
direct eastern route, is 36 miles from Kohat ; the 
ferry there is at a place called Khushalgarh. The 
road to this latter runs, after 25 miles of plain, 
through some hills and ridges for S or 6 miles ; their 
sides presented as beautiful a prospect as the eye 
could rest on. Flowers and shrubs of all colours ; 
the air was laden with their perfume. One little 
fellow something resembling the cowslip, with three 
dark spots in its bowl, called the 'Prophet's flower,' 
covered miles of rocky ground. 1 1 possesses a wonder- 
fully sweet fragrance, occasioned, the Muhammadans 
tell you, by Muhammad having blessed it for the 
refreshing odour it gave him. Dr Ross,* Forbes, 
and I galloped away from this at sunrise on the 
morning of the 7th April. We had a couple of 
sowars with us, and two others where we changed 
our horses. After a delightful ride through this vale 
and by these mountains, so variegated, we reached 
Khushalgarh about 9 a.m. The Indus is a noble sight 
there. The village contains but a few houses and 
huts perched up on banks 400 feet above the river. 
Some years ago the waters came down in a great 
flood, covering the face of the land for many a mile ; 
then the old town of Khushalgarh was swept away. 
We had sent on servants, who had breakfast for us ; 
there, under a smith's shed, overhanging the river, 
we lounged away the day, chatting and musing. In 
the afternoon at 4 we crossed and cantered on 
10 miles to a village inland, where we had forwarded 

* The late Surgeon-General T. R. C. Ross, CLE., who joined the 
1st P.C. as Assistant Surgeon shortly after its formation, and was a 
life-long friend of Daly's. 



NEWS OF AKRAM KHAN 83 

a small tent. Across the river we were in the 
Punjab, out of Afghanistan ; we had quitted the land 
of turbulence, rocks, and mountains ; we passed 
through a sweet country. On this side of the Indus 
eyery man you meet, whether in his fields or driving 
his cattle, has his sword by his side ; there, no one 
had arms. The spot where we stopped for the night 
was exquisitely pretty. At daybreak we were up ; 
Forbes to hie on his journey to Rawal Pindi, and 
thence by palanquin dak to the Himalayas ; Ross 
and I to return here. Not without some choking 
sensation did we shake hands." 

In June 1851, some excitement was caused by 
the news that Dost Muhammad's son, Akram Khan, 
had come down from his post on the Peiwar Kotal 
to within a march of the border near Kohat. The 
hot weather, however, passed off uneventfully. In 
September Daly paid a visit to Murree : — 

"We mounted our horses at Kohat before peep 
of dawn on the 3rd; the 'we' being Dr Ross and 
myself and a couple of orderlies. After a merry 
canter we found ourselves in the Indus ferry-boat at 
Khushalgarh about 7 a.m. The sun was somewhat 
glarish ; so much so that I had the prudence to take 
a portion of a sowar's turban to bind round my cap 
before we hied away. On the other bank of the 
river we had horses awaiting us. No escort was here 
requisite, and after clearing the broken banks, which 
had been swept by the torrents of the Indus, the road 
was excellent, no longer rocks and broken stones. 
We cantered on to a village some 20 miles inland. 
It was now near 10; there was scarcely any air 
stirring. The sun was looking down fiercely froni 
his broad blue domain, not a cloud intervening to 
soften his rays. We had accomplished some 56 
miles without a halt, a considerable porfion over 
rough and broken ground, with a river to cross, all 
in less than seven hours. We resolved to abide the 
heat of the day under shelter, resuming our journey 
in the afternoon. We selected a spot a few hundred 



84 RAISING OF Ist PUNJAB CAVALRY 

yards from the village ; a clump of trees round a well, 
at which an old bullock was working a Persian wheel 
to irrigate the fields of rice around. The people at 
the well, who had rarely seen Europeans, you may 
be sure, treated us with great civility. Fresh horses 
had come on to this place for us the day previous. 
The sowar in attendance on the nags had brought 
biscuits, and thus, with many a draught of the 
delicious, cool water, we spent the day. 

" At half-past 4 we were again in the saddle ; the 
road was but a sheep track, often winding through a 
wild, low brushwood, with many a deep and rugged 
ravine, plainly testifying the ravages which the Indus, 
in its violence, has often worked far and near ; then 
for a mile or two would be patches of vegetation, for 
there are numerous villages and hamlets dotted about. 
We had fixed on a large town called ' Fattehganj ' 
as our halting-place for the night; this is but 33 
miles from Rawal Pindi, a pleasant ride for the 
following morning. The moon lighted us comfortably 
into Fattehganj at half-past 7 p.m. So our day's 
work of 90 miles was done; everything had gone 
well with us ;' horses ready at the appointed spots, 
and, despite the nunierous tracks and pathways, we 
had found our way without one mistake. The head- 
man of the town came out to us with much courtesy 
to ascertain our wants. These were not numerous ; 
a bowl of milk and two charpais, literally ' four legs ' 
or ' sticks ' ; extraordinary want, you may think ; not 
so, they are the common bedsteads on which the 
people of the country sit and lay under trees and in 
their houses. A draught, and a long draught, of 
milk, and soon we were asleep in the open air. A 
long, hot gallop does not induce hunger, and, after the 
experience of many a ride, I consider milk the most 
refreshing of beverages. 

" We were up with the day the following morning. 
The road thence to Rawal Pindi had been lately made 
for the Governor-General. It was a noble, broad one. 
Rawal Pindi was soon in sight, with its houses, 
barracks, and buildings, and by 7 we were walking 
our horses up the cantonment highway. 

"At this place I saw the last of the Sikhs, in 
March 1 849, lay down their arms, I had not visited 



THE SIKHS AND THEIR SWORDS &5 

the spot since, and where I found a British canton- 
ment, quietly dotted with pretty gardens, walls, and 
hedges, I had seen a mighty Sikh host, covering 
many a mile, with their long, tapering spears, bright 
arms, and prancing steeds ; for, when we approached 
where this force thronged, nobody felt assured that a 
peaceable end was nigh. I have before told you of 
that eventful morning when each Sikh approached 
the rendezvous, laid down his sword, his shield, and 
his matchlock, and received a rupee from a British 
officer standing by ; for utter starvation was amongst 
them ; — thus they passed on for hours, till at last the 
heap of arms, some of great value, jewelled and 
decorated, was as large as Carisbrooke Church! 
Many an old Sikh did I see with his long, white 
beard, betokening in his soldierly bearing and 
carriage the pride won in the days of Runjeet, lay his 
sword on the heap with as much tenderness as a 
mother would lay her child in its cradle, and then 
stepping back with tearful eyes bow his head in 
reverence, and pay it a last farewell. It was a sight 
which those who saw will never forget. There now 
stands a cantonment for a large force of every arm, 
though the country requires not a single soldier for 
its maintenance. This force is a support for that 
trans- Indus. 

"Our servants, who had marched from Kohat 
four or five days before us, reached Pindi at the same 
time with us. We gave them a couple of days' rest 
before starting them off for the mountain. We 
remained until Walker * joined us from Peshawar, and 
had cricket every evening. They are to have a great 
match for us on our return. We left Rawal Pindi 
about 4 or 5 in the evening, and cantered away 
towards the hills. The first 1 2 miles a bowling-green ; 
then you enter the hills; for 25 miles, however, the 
road, lately made by the Pioneers, is good and 
canterable. Here we pulled up for the night, having 
sent on a tent to sleep in, for no sooner had we 
entered amongst the mountains than the change of 
temperature became very marked. When we moved 

* The late General H. Walker, C.S.I., sometime Surveyor-General 
of India. 



86 RAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALRY 

off the next morning' the road was indeed mountain- 
ous ; here no Pioneer had been ; the path was narrow, 
now climbing over some rocky hill, then descending 
into some deep glen to run along the mountain side. 
With a clever horse or pony there was little diffi- 
culty ; when the streams and springs are swollen 
from the mountains their passage is not easy. The 
scenery was very grand, mountain behind mountain 
towering up, their sides and dells rich with every 
verdure and every foliage ; then you would turn 
suddenly, and find in front a range of hills with their 
slopes turfy and soft like the downs of England. 

" No description could give a clear idea of these 
mountains. The idea I had of the place was as 
different from the reality as well could be. At first I 
was rather disappointed, but a further acquaintance 
has changed that impression. I had fancied there 
was more tableland ; that it would break more 
suddenly on the sight, whereas the ascent is gradual 
over so many mountains that one embraces not the 
grandeur at once. There are some fourteen cottages 
and houses built about, some peeping forth amidst 
the forest, others perched up on the loftiest summit. 
Then barracks have been built for the European 
invalids. Roads have been cut with wondrous cun- 
ning through the_ forest, along the steep sides of 
mountains up which pines in every direction raise 
their heads, some not less that loo feet high; then 
all about them are trees, shrubs, and brushwood, so 
thickly mingled that naught of the deep, deep dell 
beneath is to be seen. It is indeed delightful to walk 
and scramble along with no sound to break on the 
ear save the echo of the woodman's axe as it rings 
through the forest. People are building about ; the 
houses so interspersed make the whole very pictu- 
resque. Then behind all, rising up like a ship on the 
ocean, the mighty Pir Panjal range, with its never 
melting snows ; for they lay on a height of 20,000 
feet above the sea : we now are some 8000. There 
are many ladies here. The climate is delicious ; the 
air would be appreciated on the Cheviot Hills." 

Daly returned to Kohat at the end of September ; 
from Rawal Pindi he wrote : — 



COLONEL MANSFIELD 87 

" The last few days of our stay there was rendered 
pleasant by the companionship of a friend of mine, 
Colonel Mansfield* of the ssrd Foot, stationed here. 
He has a small cottage at Murree. He is a great 
ally of Sir Colin Campbell's, and as his guest at 
Peshawar I had often seen him, and from circum- 
stances was well acquainted with him before I had 
seen him. I must tell you of him, for he is a rare 
character. In promotion he is the luckiest man in 
the Queen's army; thirty-four or thirty-five, and a 
lieutenant-colonel; versatile in talent and accom- 

* Afterwards Lord Sandhurst. Daly's papers include a copy 
in his own writing of the following letter from Sir Charles 
Napier : — 

"Simla, 25M April 1850. 

" My dear Major Mansfield, 

" I have received with great pleasure the account 
which you have given to Major Kennedy of the good conduct 
exhibited by the S3rd Regiment. It goes with my long fixed opinion 
that British soldiers are as worthy and good as they are daring in 
battle. All our conduct in every rank of life depends upon our 
education. I do not mean reading and writing, I mean the education 
of the minds of men ; those who have books and can read them, 
educate their own minds ; those who have not books or cannot read 
them, educate their minds by observation and reflection on the conduct 
of their neighbours, and more especially of those superior to them in 
rank, whether in civil or in military life ; and this at once brings us, if 
my opinion be correct, to the British regiment. The commanding 
officer influences the mess, and the mess influences the whole 
regiment. A well-conducted regiment implies a well-conducted mess 
of officers, and a commander who appeals to the good sense and 
feelings of his men, who demands their obedience to reason, and who 
reserves punishment for those perverse characters who defy all law, 
whether of God or of man. These are found in all ranks of society, 
but their number is few and contemptible, and it is therefore with 
unfeigned gratification that I have heard of the excellent conduct of 
the Ssrd Regiment. 

" I consider this good conduct as reflecting no less honour upon 
the officer than it does upon the private soldier ; and I beg of you to 
say from me to all, that, if anything can add to the pride I feel in the 
British soldier, and in being one myself, it is to see such sound sense 
and high feeling in those who command, and such responsive good 
conduct in those who obey." 



88 EAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALEY 

plished. He will travesty Hamlet, or write you an 
essay on Military Defence ; talk an essay, or discuss 
the last quarterly ; turn over the leaves of Montaigne, 
or play an active part in a joke. Each and all of 
these he will enter into with so much zest that one 
would think nothing- else ever occupied his attention. 
He came down with us on the 24th ; I have been 
living with him since. There is a wondrous fund of 
life and humour about him. Then he is an excellent 
officer, and commands his regiment right nobly, 
holding the respect and regard of all. His regiment 
goes to Peshawar to be cantoned, so that, when 
inclined and able to get away for a change, to him I 
shall gallop to rub up my intellect." 

Almost immediately after his return from Murree, 
Daly accompanied Coke on an expedition into 
Miranzai. Sardar Muhammad Azim, the Amir's 
son, had sent cavalry to occupy Buland Khel, 
Thai, and Torawari. The Miranzai people then 
petitioned to be included in British territory. Coke 
issued a proclamation in August 185 1, declaring 
Miranzai to be part of Kohat, and requested the 
Sardar to withdraw. The Sardar was rude, and 
attempted to create trouble. Coke accordingly 
marched to the scene with his own and Daly's 
regiments, the ist Punjab Light Field Battery, and 
half a company of sappers. The force proceeded to 
Thai, crossed the Kurram River, and entered the 
tribal country about Buland Khel. The expedition, 
in Daly's opinion, was "as impolitic and rash a move 
as could have been indulged in. I thought, if we 
crossed the Kurram, nobody could say or suppose 
what the result would be ; nothing was known of the 
country, but the tribes were avowedly our bitter, 
bitter foes. Lucky, therefore, in my judgment, 
was the revocation of the proposition for a position 
on the banks of the Kurram. The papers to this 



TROUBLE WITH MOHMANDS 89 

day know nothing of where we went or what 
occurred." In spite of Daly's forebodings, there were 
no immediately bad results from the expedition ; and 
the Kohat frontier remained quiet. The Mohmands 
were, however, at this time somewhat troublesome, 
and operations for the defence of the frontier to the 
north of Peshawar were undertaken by Sir Colin 
Campbell. Daly received from Mansfield the follow- 
ing account of the proceedings, dated Dubri, the 
13th December 1851 : — 

"Here everything appears to be finished with the 
Mohmands as a hostile gathering. Jackson, at Mutta 
on the 8th, had a successful skirmish and drove them 
without loss to himself, killing some ten or twelve 
and wounding more. An attack was really expected 
somewhere the next day. Jackson looked for the 
enemy in force at Mutta : ditto, ditto the General at 
his camp. I was marching from Palhee on the morn- 
ing of the 8th, when I received orders to move on 
the bridge of boats, with Walker's troop of horse 
artillery, after the men had dined. When I got there, 
notes poured in thick and fast by sowars in hot haste 
from Jackson at Mutta, Hughes at Shabkadr, Sir 
Colin at Mitchni. The enemy was numbered in 
thousands and tens of thousands. The hope arose 
in my martial breast of doing a bit of l^elson the 
next day, and having a gazette of my own. So I 
marched after a bivouac of a few hours to Shabkadr. 
Nothing could be more bellicose than my intentions. 
Information despatched at once ; orders for the col- 
lection of troops ; Bellona breathed flames ! 

"Shortly after a despatch from Sir Colin that 
the fight would really come off on this day at his 
camp, and I was to march with infantry and guns 
as soon as I had given my men meat and (as they 
are Englishmen) drink. Jackson in dismay at 
Mutta ! ! I calmed him with the sedative of two 
companies of British infantry, and marched in battle 
array. The sense of hearing became painfully acute 
in listening for the sound of firing, as I was to come 



90 RAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALEY 

on Saadat Khan's flank with 500 of my regiment, 6 
guns, and 1 50 sowars. But alas ! there was no rever- 
beration in the hills. Echo still answered 'where 'to 
my mental enquiries, and I finally shook hands with 
the General, unbegrimed with smoke and with neither 
whisker damaged. The fact is that mv presence at 
the bridge had been felt along the whole line the 
night before, as anticipated and planned by Sir 
Colin, and Saadat Khan went off bag and baggage 
instead of coming on, his preparations for breaking 
up having been reported by the spies as the prepara- 
tions for an onset. The whole gathering has, for the 
moment, dissolved like snow in the sun, and the 
campaign, unless things should again alter very 
much, will be bloodless on our side. 

"You will be pleased to hear for my sake that the 
5 3rd marched 42 miles in thirty hours without a 
straggler, and excited admiration for their general 
appearance after this long trudge. The General was 
particularly pleased with the spirit of the men. Our 
occupation is now to finish the post as soon as 
practicable, to put in the garrison, and then, I pre- 
sume, to take up a more central position at Shabkadr, 
till it may be safe to leave the villages to protect 
themselves, with the assistance of the garrisons in 
the two posts. The General acted very thought- 
fully and wisely in showing more strength, as the 
mountaineers were evidently quite aware that the 
previous force could not protect so long a line as 
that necessarily taken up for the protection of the 
Doaba; and he is, I think, much pleased at the 
result having been obtained without more skirmishing 
and loss of men. 

" I have a few good stories which will make you 
laugh for a long hour by Shrewsbury clock, but re- 
serve them till we meet at Kohat, where I shall come 
and see you as soon as I am disengaged. Although 
I had not an opportunity of 'blooding' the young 
ones, the whole thing has been a capital bit of instruc- 
tion for the regiment, which is at least half composed 
of babies, officers and men, as far as field service is 
concerned. The forced marching and keeping their 
eyes open have been the ne plus ultra of good drill 
for them, and will stand them in good stead in future." 



A FRONTIEE TOXJE 91 

Daly's health, as already mentioned, had never 
been good since his return to India; he underwent 
considerable exposure in the Miranzai expedition, and 
at the end of 1851 he succumbed to an exceedingly 
serious attack of fever in its worst form. Towards 
the end of January he was sufficiently recovered to 
be able to conduct his regiment at the inspection, 
when it again won high praise, as shown in the 
subjoined letter : — 

From the Brigade Major, Punjab Irregular 
Force, Kohat, No. 87, 22nd January 1852 : — 

"I am desired by the Brigadier commanding the 
Punjab Irregular Force to express to you his 
extreme satisfaction with the appearance of your 
regiment at review inspection last evening, and the 
excellent and steady precision with which the 
different field movements were performed. The 
state of discipline, the appearance of the horses, the 
steadiness of the men, and the well-appointed 
efficiency of the whole regiment justify the Brigadier 
in informing you that a better organised corps of 
irregular cavalry does not exist in the service, and 
that he most warmly appreciates the successful 
results achieved by your untiring zeal and ability," 

In February 1852, Daly took part in a short 
frontier tour which Sir Henry Lawrence organised 
for Lord Stanley,* the party including Lord Stanley, 
Sir Henry Lawrence, Colonel Napier, Reynell Taylor, 
Coke, and Daly. "The little tour," wrote Daly, 
"was one of enjoyment; our party were like school- 
boys, revelling in the delightful air and glorious 
scenery." At this time there was prospect of con- 
siderable trouble with the Swat tribes, and Daly 

* Lord Stanley became President of the Board of Control (India) 
in June 1858, in the Earl of Derby's second administration. 



92 EAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALKY 

received an interesting letter from Mansfield, con- 
veying- his observations on the policy which appeared 
to be in vogue : — 

"Peshawar, 22nd March 1852. — As to you so to 
us the attack on the Guide picket was at first 
incomprehensible. It has had the effect of getting 
up what is very like a frontier war. Mackesqn 
immediately invoked Sir Colin to assist him in 
punishing Ranizai, the valley whence the assailants 
proceeded. Through Ranizai runs the principal road 
to Swat, whence, if it comes to a fight, thousands of 
matchlockmen with several hundreds of sowars will 
move to help. Sir Colin took with him hence one 
troop Royal Horse Artillery and two 8 -inch 
howitzers ; isth Irregulars, 600 rank and file H.M.'s 
32, 500 Gurkhas, a wing- 29th Native Infantry. He 
was to be joined to-day by Henderson's regiment of 
Punjab Infantry, so that he now has a very g-ood 
force of about 2800 infantry, including the Guides. 

"The Ranizai people were called upon to pay 
Rs. 5000 as fine, in default of which their villages 
are to be laid waste. At first they seemed willing- to 
make reparation ; but on hearing of the fine, which 
we know they cannot pay, they drew back I 
presume Sir Colin will advance on them to-morrow 
. or the next day, and it remains to be seen what the 
actual pressure of the force will effect towards staying 
off a fight and destruction. Mackeson * went out to 
camp on Saturday. I think there will be a fight, if 
the Swatis come down in good heart. It is the old 
story, forcing on war while we have peace in our 
mouths, and it is a departure from the principle of 
'the defensive,' for which alone there are sufficient 
troops under present arrangements. I have not a 
doubt that the attack originated in personal feud 
between Ajun Khan and Futteh Khan, the former 
being an i?:r-Thanadar, and having had two sons in 
the Guide Corps who were turned out when Ajun 
Khan sought refuge in Swat about a year ago. This 
is between ourselves. But when we consider that 
the party of hostile sowars passed all the rich, 

* See pages 371-373 in Appendix C. 



LETTER FROM MANSFIELD 93 

unguarded villages of Eusafzai, coming- 25 miles in 
the plain, it is impossible in my mind to arrive at 
any other conclusion. 

" Instead of burning Ranizai, it would be much 
better to blockade Swat, which would not be difficult, 
keeping every soul belonging to those mountains 
from trading with Peshawar until the demand made 
by the commissioner was fully met. I am also held 
in readiness to move out to Shabkadr, should the 
Mqhmands take advantage of Sir Colin being 
seriously engaged on the other side of the Swat to 
molest the Doaba. 

" I cannot get over my old English notion that, as 
Wilkes * said, the worst use you can put a man to is to 
hang him, so the worst employment of a village is to 
commit wholesale arson on it. It appears to me that, 
by following the rude policy of our predecessors and 
of hostile Afghan tribes, we are putting off sine die 
the commencement of education towards a better 
state of things. I make every allowance for the 
difficulty of frontier management, and I give an 
opinion with the greatest diffidence ; but of one thing 
I am convinced, that we do not give our neighbours 
a chance, as we are constantly violating what 
would be called international right in Europe. I 
consider there is an absolute want of mental, con- 
stitutional preparation among our highest authorities, 
who seem to me to consult a vulgar expediency, 
which is sure to turn out costly in the end, instead of 
adhering to strict principles, which our home rulers 
are compelled to observe by the strength of their 
neighbours. Now the population we are among, 
though its leaders may not be able to express their 
feelings in comprehensible terms, thoroughly appreci- 
ates these rights, however troublesome they may be 
to maintain, and invariably shows a proper resistance 
to the invasion of them. 

" Who can say that the Mohmands have not been 
absolutely in the right ? Their conduct has been 
what we could not sufficiently applaud, had it been 
that of English instead of untaught Afghan hillmen. 

" I hope, my dear Daly, that now you are going 
home, we shall keep up the correspondence so 

* The author of the aphorism was Sir Henry Wotton (1568-1639). 



94 RAISING OF 1st PUNJAB CAVALRY 

auspiciously commenced. I shall be delighted ta 
have your views of men and things, and in return will 
not fail to keep you au courant with what is going on 
in this region. Lebe wohl." 

It had been Daly's wish to remain until the 
following year, because he was not entitled to ordinary 
furlough before 1853, and departure to Europe would, 
under the existing regulations, entail loss of his 
regiment. The medical verdict was, however, that 
he must on no account risk another hot weather, and 
he decided to depart in April 1852, being cheered by 
promises of help and support from Sir Henry 
Lawrence and other friends, while "even the 
Governor-General went out of his way to be gracious." 
Sir Henry Lawrence wrote : — 

" I had hoped better than that you should be 
obliged to leave us. I regret this very much, publicly 
and privately. All hands acknowledge that you 
have made a right good corps, and that you have done 
your duty well. We therefore owe you our best 
thanks, and, for myself, I shall always be glad to the 
best of my power to assist your return to the Punjab." 

Subsequently Sir Henry wrote that Hughes* 
would succeed Daly, and added :— • 

"I give you the Governor-General's words — 'I 
should be glad if it could be managed that Daly 
should return to the corps when he recovers.' " 

* The late General Sir William Hughes, K.C.B. 



CHAPTER V 

MARRIAGE, 1852-1856 

Journey to England ; Marriage ; Crimean War and chances of employ- 
ment there; return to India; nomination to the Oudh Cavalry. 

The wisdom of the decision to go home was soon 
apparent, for, at the end of March 1852, Daly was 
again down with a serious bout of fever ; indeed 
his health was at this time so shattered that his 
Kohat friends were very anxious as to how he would 
stand the journey. He left Khushalgarh on the Indus 
by country boat on the 14th April. Once started, 
his spirits, always buoyant, were soon high, and he 
sent back cheery accounts of his progress and occupa- 
tions. " I have had much pleasure with the Duke (qf 
Wellington) and his correspondence. After the 
Bible, I believe that volume the iDest a man can 
carry with him. Then a laugh I have screwed out 
of Boswell." At Dera Ismail Khan he saw Reynell 
Taylor,* then Deputy Commissioner of Bannu, who 
was to accompany him home, and who joined him at 
Karachi. Hyderabad was reached on the 30th April. 
— " Had I pushed on I might have caught the 
(Karachi) boat of the 3rd, and so have arrived in 
Bombay in twenty-one days from Kohat." This 

* The late General Reynell Taylor, C.B., C.S.I., known as "the 

Bayard of the Punjab." 
95 



96 MARRIAGE 

would evidently have been a record. The journey 
down was described as "twenty-four days of quiet 
Indus yacht- work, now between high banks with an 
adverse wind, likely to upset my craft if an effort were 
made to combat it, then again high and dry for six 
hours on a sand-bank : — occasionally compassing 8 
miles in twenty- four hours, occasionally 6." He 
reached Bombay, with Taylor, about the middle of 
May. They put up in Rampart Row, at the house of 
Daly's old friend Howard, the barrister, who was 
absent, " retained " by a native nobleman " on a paltry 
pittance of 200 per diem. I have not seen him. He 
has been suffering the 200 penalty nearly three 
months." Daly's few days in Bombay were congeni- 
ally occupied in the Arab stables executing com- 
missions for horses from friends at Kohat. His 
calculation of time required to send them up was : 
" Hyderabad from Karachi, four or five days ; Sukkur 
from the former, twelve days ; Multan fifteen days ; — 
equal, say, thirty-five days. If all goes well, they 
should be at Multan by the loth July." Seven weeks 
from Bombay, and this with friends at Karachi and 
Hyderabad ready and duly warned to assist ! The 
instructions added were : " Detach somebody to drop 
down the river from Kalabagh to Dera Ghazi Khan 
—four or five days' work only now — and thence to go 
across to Multan, distant from Ghazi Khan 48 miles — 
then the horses will be safe and under proper care ; 
they can march across to Ghazi Khan, and so up ; — no 
guard, is required on the left of the Indus." 

It took twelve days from Bombay to reach Aden, 
where a delay occurred which was not appreciated : — 
" What a cursed bowl is this ! Nothing green — rock 
and rock, and then rock again — sun and glare, glare 



VISIT TO ITALY 97 

and sun, and then more sun. Water all brackish — 
soda-water all dead — tea not drinkable — grapes not 
ripe — African boys peeping- in at every corner craving 
and whining." 

Daly wrote a sketch of the journey to a friend in 
1855:— 

" Memoranda for the assistance of a Punjabi 
invalid, carrying a shattered frame homewards over 
the Alps,_down the Rhine, and by Cologne, Malines, 
and Calais, seeking- rest and restoration of health in 
England. 

" The invalid is in Bombay : here he has to pro- 
vide himself with other coinage than rupees. In the 
first place he may pay down to Alexandria, even to 
Trieste — the first I think certainly advisable — it 
saves carrying gold, or circular notes to be exchang-ed 
by extortioners. Pay then to Alexandria ; if the 
invalid shall have resolved to follow the Trieste route, 
he might pay even thus far in Bombay. The fare 
from Alexandria to Trieste by the Austrian Lloyds 
is ^16. 

"A day will suffice for Trieste. Steamers run 
across to Venice three or four times weekly. The 
passage occupies about six hours. The approach to 
Venice cannot be described. Rogers in his Italy 
beautifully depicts the g-olden glistening beams 
thrown afar by the glorious St Marks. A London 
tailor who was with us exclaimed, as the steamer 
shot into the lagoon, ' For all the world like Batter- 
sea Reach.' Yet the tailor had not seen the Battersea 
view for three years. Not even the Himalayas had 
so much surprised him. 

"At Venice the invalid must halt. _ Venice, 
wonderful Venice, Child of the Sea, nothing need 
be said of you! From Venice by rail to Verona. 
There was an interval here of rail, which, I think, 
has since been completed and now runs to Milan. 
At Milan the invalid must repose — its curious 
picture galleries, its heavenly cathedral, which spoils 
the eye of its pleasures in viewing- afterwards the 
Gothic structures en route. Wait for a clear day to 



98 MARRIAGE 

ascend the tower of the cathedral : the view thence 
cannot be surpassed. Italy at your feet — beautiful 
cities, rich plains, and minature cathedrals right up 
to the Alps ; then Monte Rosa, with its never- melt- 
ing snows ; and, if the atmosphere be clear, the 
chamois may be distinguished by the sportsman ! 

" From Milan the invalid seeks Como by rail. We 
slept the night at the little town, and the next day 
took the steamer to Bellagio, where we landed, ran 
and climbed up mountains with convents and vine- 
yards hanging on their sides — returned across the 
lake, were nearly upset in a storm_ in the passage-^- 
sat down to an epicurean dinner in the comfortable 
inn. After our feast, got into the steamer returning 
from the head of the lake, were overtaken by a storm 
and landed drenched with rain. The weather cleared 
towards evening, and we (who had engaged a carriage 
at Milan to carry us to Lucerne) started for St 
Gothard. 

" Now this is a difficulty — Lucerne with Lugano, 
St Gothard, and the Devil's Bridge — or Lago 
Maggiore, the Spliigen, and Geneva. We chose the 
former, being the quicker, I think. Lugano differed 
essentially from Como. I \yas more struck with its 
grandeur than with anything I had seen before. 
Stop at St Gothard. It is sorely cold. Taylor and 
I ran up a considerable part of the last stage playing 
at snowballs. We drank some sulphurous wine from 
the Hospice, and being hungry ate some black bread 
and mouldy cheese — visited some honoured and 
revered bones inside, saintly bones of men and 
dogs-;-saw two or three living canines, large and 
sagacious. The descent is steep and rapid — arrived 
at the stage below the Hospice, very frozen, we were 
treated with great kindness — well-fed and little 
charged. On again the following morning to 
Albergo, and this was the first time I realised the 
glory of the Alps. Ascending, I was disappointed-™ 
looking back from Albergo and the Devil's Bridge 
the mighty Alps appear. Across by steam to 
Lucerne. The lake will describe itself. Guide 
books will tell you every stone on its banks. From 
this we travelled by dilig;ence to Basle. Here your 
Murray is of use. It points out battle-fields of old 



SUSAN KIRKPATRICK 99 

time. Fields of ancient fame whose stories have 
been sung by Schiller. 

_ " From Basle routes are various. We went by 
rail to Strasburg- — the cathedral and a large French 
army were seen — thence down the Rhine to Cologne ; 
above Strasburg the Rhine banks are dull and dreary 
— flat and uninteresting. Even within the beautiful 
spots, there is much that requires a pleasant fancy 
and a happy temperament. From Cologne even an 
invalid may run by rail to Calais, although a pause 
about Malines would well repay. I mention Malines, 
but I would rest a day among the old Belgian cities." 

After visiting the Isle of Wight, Daly crossed 
over to Ireland, where his father had established him- 
self at the old family place of Daly's Grove, 9 
miles from Ballinasloe, "a big house dropped down 
on the edge of a marsh." He found his father "right 
well and merry ; devoted to gunnery — surrounded 
by colts and horses — knows the character of every 
horse within a circuit of 20 miles round." Here 
Daly received with great interest accounts of the 
Ranizai expedition, and his "heart ached to have 
been absent." He wrote to one of his closest friends 
at Kohat : — 

_ " Well, even in the little I have seen of England, 
bright and beautiful as it is — and nothing one can 
conceive or remember of beauty can equal the reality 
of its hedgerows, fields, and forests — I rejoice that 
fortune le*d me to follow an energetic profession in a 
land of trial. Sorrow not that fate has made you a 
labourer in the world — rejoice rather." 

Returning to the Isle of Wight, he was married in 
October 1852, to Susan Kirkpatrick, whom he had 
known from boyhood ; she belonged to that branch * 

* Of another branch of this family came Colonel William Kirk- 
patrick, who was the first British envoy to Nepal (1793), and was also 
Resident at the court of Scindia and at Hyderabad ; a most distin- 



100 MAERIAGE 

of the Kirkpatricks of Closeburn, whose ancestor 
(a son of the first baronet) left Scotland and settled 
in the Isle of Wight towards the end of the 17th 
century; her mother, a Miss Hughes, came of an old 
Welsh family. 

Shortly after his marriage, Daly settled down at 
Shanklin, and devoted himself to hunting. During 
trips to town he constantly went to hear debates in 
the House of Commons, and was "enchanted with 
Dizzie's ready wit and humour — his aptitude for 
repartee. I heard him shake Cobden's jacket most 
effectually in a rejoinder ; his retort was so ready, so 
pliant, so plausible. Cobden possesses so much 
vulgarity of manner, such an arrogant tone, that 
nothing but the sterling talent of the man could bear 
him up." 

On the news of Sir Henry Lawrence's withdrawal 
from the Punjab, Daly wrote to India : " My 
sympathy is with you all in the departure of Sir 
Henry from the land of his own winning. He 
deserves and has the love and respect of all who have 
served under him." 

Daly was deeply stirred by the outbreak of war 
with Russia. In March 1854, he saw "the glorious 
fleet sail for the Baltic. We were on board a 
steamer, and had a clear view of the glorious scene 
which thousands had congregated from every part to 
witness. The weather suited the event — bright and 
hopeful. The Queen received the old Admiral and his 

guished officer — see Introduction to Vol. III. of the Wellesley 
Despatches, p. lo. His brother James, who succeeded him at 
Hyderabad, was also very highly commended by Lord Wellesley. 
Yet a third brother, Achilles, was also President at Hyderabad, where 
he contracted a romantic marriage with the daughter of one of the 
Hyderabad nobles. From this marriage sprang the Kitty Kirkpatrick 
who is mentioned in Carlyle's Reminiscences. 



A NAVAL REVIEW 101 

captains on board the Fairy, and when they had paid 
their duty, signal was made by the Admiral, ' Sail ' — 
so in her presence the canvas was unfurled, and ship 
by ship they moved off. The Fairy remained 
stationary near the Nab, and each noble vessel, as 
she marched past the Sovereign, manned her yards 
and sent forth a royal cheer, which was given back 
from every boat crowding the water. The last to 
pass was the Wellington, that stupendous ship — her 
rigging was darkened with 1200 men, whose voices 
resounded far and wide. The Queen thus sent forth 
her fleet. Worthy of us all, was it not ? " 

In May 1854, Daly went to Woolwich to witness 
the launch of the Royal Albert, and there met many 
friends with whom the chances of service in the 
Crimea were eagerly discussed. Taylor had applied 
some time previously to Lord Hardinge for employ- 
ment ; the answer was that it did not lie in Lord 
Hardinge's power to employ him. Since that, 
however, Beatson, formerly of the Nizam's army, had 
been employed with Greene, of the Sind Horse, under 
him, but as yet no rank in the Queen's service had 
been assigned to them. Daly had already en- 
deavoured, without success, to ascertain whether or 
not the Government had intentions of employing 
officers from India. At the India House, Melvill,* 
the secretary, said that the Company had no view of 
sending forces, nor did they contemplate employing 
officers as reported : — " If you wish to go to Turkey, 
your course is to lay your services before Lord 
Clarendon. I should think your experience is what 
is required. Lord Clarendon will probably apply to 

* Afterwards Sir James C. Melvill, K.C.B. ; he was secretary from 
1836 to 1858. 



102 MAREIAGE 

us for ybur services, which will be readily accorded." 
Daly replied : " I should be happy to go if I could be 
sent in an authorised manner. I have no wish to be 
an amateur." There matters rested, and his thoughts 
were soon turned back to India. Amongst others 
who stayed with him at this period, and on whose 
advice he much relied, was Colonel Mansfield, who 
was expecting to return to India unless he could 
obtain employment in Turkey. Under the rules then 
in force, Daly had lost his staff appointment on taking 
leave, and he was anxious as to his future. In 
September, however, he received reassuring letters 
from Henry and John Lawrence. Sir Henry offered 
to receive his wife on their arrival in India until Daly 
was settled ; and sent him an extract from a letter in 
which Lord Dalhousie said he would be glad to put 
Daly back in the Punjab Frontier Force. Uncertain 
though Daly's destination was, his wife accom.panied 
him to India. They journeyed by Trieste; were 
delayed a week in Egypt waiting for the mail steamer 
from Southampton ; and their own steamer then took 
ten days on the journey from Suez to Aden, and 
twelve days from Aden to Bombay. 

Arriving in Bombay at Christmas, 1854, Daly 
was met with the news that proposals were before 
Government for the formation of an irregular force, 
to be styled "The Jehazpur Legion," in Rajputana, 
and that Sir Henry Lawrence had recommended him 
for the command as "one of the fittest men in India." 
Disappointment was, however, in store. The scheme 
for the " Legion " hung fire, and the rule as to the 
number of absentees from the Company's European 
regiments was in future to be rigidly enforced. The 
maximum admissible number of absentees was 



Hopes of Crimean employment 103 

twelve per battalion. The Bombay Fusiliers had 
already thirteen absentees, of whom twelve held sub- 
stantive extra-regimental appointments. Sir Henry 
Lawrence 6ent on to Daly a letter from Lord Dal- 
housie — " Final orders have not yet been passed as 
regards the Jehazpur proposal, and I doubt whether 
it can be done without reference to the Court. As 
regards Captain Daly, I need not repeat the assurance 
of my good opinion of him and my wish to serve him. 
But I fear that at present the number of absentees 
from his corps makes him ineligible for detached 
employment." To Sir John Lawrence also Lord 
Dalhousie wrote, on 22nd November 1854: "I have 
received your letter. Your brother is well aware of 
my willingness to serve Captain Daly, for I agreed 
to put him back in the Punjab Force some time ago. 
But Captain Daly did not return. According to the 
last Bombay Army List he is not returned yet, and 
at any rate there are thirteen officers absent from his 
regiment ; so that for the present it is wholly im- 
possible to appoint him to the Jehazpur Legion, even 
if that force should be embodied." With a sad heart, 
therefore, and regrets at not having delayed his return, 
Daly established himself at Colaba, in a bungalow 
"almost washed by the waves," and resumed regi- 
mental duty. 

His thoughts and hopes were now again turned 
towards the Crimea, with the expectation that Indian 
officers and perhaps Indian troops might yet be sent. 
He wrote to Ross, who was still in the ist Punjab 
Cavalry : — 

" Lord Derby, you see, urges the employment^ of 
irregular cavalry from India. My deliberate opinion 
is that the irregular cavalry are in every way capaci- 



104 MAERIAGE 

tated for such employment. With some exceptions 
they possess the physique and morale to bear them 
up, and I, for one, would proudly and gladly throw 
in my fate with an irregular cavalry regiment in a 
campaign against the Russians. I pray this may 
befall me, and that, should the Government decide 
on accepting volunteer regiments, I may be sent to 
our old corps with an announcement that, if they 
volunteer, we shall go. They would volunteer to a 
man. A little selection would be required, and then 
we could go with a regiment which would make one's 
blood glow. Neville Chamberlain * to command the 
brigade ! Does not the unequal strife in the Crimea 
stir our hearts and make us long to stand by them, 
overburdened, overborne by toil and numbers." 

To another friend he said : — 

" To be doing nothing in these days is an affliction. 
I question whether a good appointment in India 
would satisfy me, and certainly no employment has 
not a soothing effect. When I left England, 
Company's officers were discouraged from going — 
now immediate promotion and the prospect of further 
is painted up to tickle their fancy. It is possible 
Lord Panmure, in his desire to do that something 
which the people so shout loudly for, may ask Lord 
Dalhousie to detach officers from India. I resolved 
to meet the possibility, and on the arrival of the last 
mail I wrote to Courtenay, the Private Secretary, 
begging him in such an event to name me as ready 
and proud to serve either with or without Indian 
troops." 

The reply from Courtenay was that Lord Dal- 
housie had as yet received no requisition, but would 
bear in mind that Daly was a volunteer for the 
Crimea. To his old friend. General Vivian, Daly 
also wrote that he was ready to join him at the 
shortest notice, and had some hopes of success. " I 

* The late Field-Marshal Sir Neville Chamberlain, G.C.B., etc. 
— afterwards a close friend of Daly's. 



"LOTS OF LITTLE EMPLOYMENT" 105 

would rather go there for service than fill the best 
appointment here now." 

In April 1855, the Fusiliers moved to Karachi. 
In May Sir Henry Lawrence wrote to Daly : — 

"As far back as August last, I wrote to Lord 
Hardinge recommending a Turkish contingent, and 
mentioned your, Taylor, and Lumsden's names. 
Some months ago I told him and Lord Dalhousie 
too to consider me a volunteer ! " 

In August, on seeing Colonel Mansfield's appoint- 
ment to the mission at Constantinople, Daly sought 
his advice : — 

" I long: and long to be where men are 
working and where work is followed by honour." 
"Mansfield," Daly gratefully tells, "wrote to me on 
the day my letter reached him — kindly and fully — 
counselling my remaining in India — he thinks the field 
was great had I come at first, and writes kindly touch- 
ing his h§lp should I pitch his advice over and cast 
my bread on the waters — and very tempted did I feel 
to do this. Had I been alone, there would have been 
no hesitation, no delay." 

This was in early January 1856. He was in better 
spirits. The acting appointment of Brigade-Major at 
Karachi had given him "lots of little employment" 
for a couple of months ; and he felt " the tide was 
swelling towards him," and should reach him before 
Lord Dalhousie's departure. As to absentees from 
his corps the ground was at last clear, and he wrote 
this to Sir Henry Lawrence. " His reply came by 
return of post — kind and curt as usual : ' By this 
day's ddk I have written sending extracts of your 
note, and shall be as glad as ever to get the legion 
and you too.' " The answer to Sir Henry was, " He 
is provided for." Meanwhile Daly had received -two 



106 MAREIAGE 

telegrams from the Viceroy's Private Secretary ; "Go 
to Agra " ; and, " You are to command Oudh Cavalry." 
The quickest route to Agra was by sea to Calcutta, 
and Daly set out at once, leaving his wife at Karachi, 
where a ,few days later was born her second son, to 
whom Sir Henry Lawrence was godfather. 



CHAPTER VI 

RAISING OF THE I St OUDH IRREGULAR CAVALRY, 

1856-1857 

Lucknow ; Mrs Daly's journey there ; formation of the Corps ; Sek- 
rora ; the Persian War ; Gaieties at Sekrora and retrospect on 
the fate of some of those present ; the outlaw Fazl Ali ; appoint- 
ment to the Guides ; visit to Sir Henry Lawrence at Lucknow ; 
Agra. 

It was at the beginning of February 1856 that the 
Proclamation was issued which declared that Oudh 
was henceforth to be incorporated in British India. 
Sir James Outram, who was at the time the Resident* 
at the Court of the King of Oudh, thereupon became 
Chief Commissioner of the new Province, and among 
the measures ordered for the administration was the 
enrolment of an Irregular Force. It was to share in 
the raising of this Force that Daly had been 
summoned from Karachi. He reached Lucknow 
just as the Annexation was announced, and was very 
kindly received by Outram, who told him his was the 
first name that Lord Dalhousie had put down for the 
Force, and that, when Outram asked for a Brigadier 
of Cavalry, Lord Dalhousie said, "No, I mean Daly 
to have the organisation and command of three regi- 
ments with his own." This intention was not carried 
out, as Lord Dalhousie laid down the Governor- 
Generalship on the last day of February 1856, and 

* He succeeded Colonel Sleeman in the appointment in 1854. 

107 



108 1st OUDH irregular CAVALRY 

unforeseen difificulties * arose on the score of Daly's 
want of seniority. He was, therefore, left with the 
command of the ist Regiment only. He had with 
him as second in command Captain W. T. Johnson, 
who had served in the Crimea with the 20th Regi- 
ment, and had fought at the Alma and Inkerman ; and 
as Adjutant Lieutenant Hope- Johnstone, who, how- 
ever, was invalided in May ; Surgeon Greenhow, from 
the Mhairwarra Battalion, was the medical officer. 

Mrs Daly left Karachi on the i8th February 
1856, made a short stay with friends at Bombay, 
sailed thence on the sth March, and arrived at Cal- 
cutta on the 18th. On the 21st she left Howrah by 
train, reaching the terminus, Raneegunge, the next 
morning. The onward journey, which was by dik 
carriage, she thus described : — 

"A dik ghari is a long wooden carriage, with 
Venetians all round for windows and awnings, which 
stretch out beyond them. A small trunk and hamper 
of necessaries are packed on the roof; there too the 
khitmatgar or butler travels. Inside, two people lay 
at length on the bed, which is put on the board seats ; 
propped up by pillows, one can be very comfortable ; 
there is a well beneath, and a cupboard with shelves 
at one's feet, and a net from the top in which one 
stows away all one's things. From the first, such 
battles with the horses took place, that had I not been 
pretty well drilled to a quiet sort of faith that ' it will 
all come right ' with a vicious horse at last, I know 
not what I should have done. One horse at a time is 
put in the ghari ; he goes 4 miles, then is changed. 
Every fresh horse resists to the uttermost making 

* As soon as Daly had obtained his Captaincy (1854), he was 
recommended for a Brevet Majority on account of his services at 
Multan, and Lord Dalhousie specially interested himself in the case. 
Some technical difficulty arose, and the step was not granted. A 
further reference home was then made on the subject, and the matter 
was still undecided when the Mutiny broke out. 



MRS DALY'S JOUENEY 109 

a start. The coachman whips and swears (I have 
no doubt) in his language ; _ men seize the horse 
by the head calling him every imaginable bad name ; 
others bind ropes round his legs to pull ; half a dozen 
seize the wheels to force the carriage on. At last, 
after a long battle, the horse almost always yields and 
canters off at a good pace for 4 miles. Then the same 
scene occurs again. It is tiresome to people who 
want to sleep, and every stoppage brings a crowd of 
applicants for bakhshish. Then every night there is 
an hour or two lost in stopping to grease the wheels ; 
the coachman never will manage to get this done at 
the place where one stops for the day. I usually 
travelled from s_ o'clock in the evening to 9 or 10 the 
following morning. There was always great diffi- 
culty in persuading the horses to go up hill; to make 
amends, they galloped down the steep roads, with no 
protection to prevent our going over the steep banks 
into the ravines below, at a pace that would astonish 
people at home. 

"Some time in the second night we passed a 
river, then a shallow stream, but which in the rainy 
season becomes a powerful flood ; the horse was 
taken out and the ghari dragged through by men. 
It was a picturesque scene, two round mud towers 
stood on the banks of the river, one on each side. A 
number of natives were collected at the ford, bullock 
carts, ekkas, and men on horseback ; the hills were 
dimly visible, closing in the scene ; a young moon 
scarcely gave a light, though she cast a long line of 
silver on the water ; on the opposite bank a fire was 
burning, with natives grouped around it. Towards 
morning we reached the Saone ; the horse was taken 
out, and the carriage dragged through the dry sandy 
banks and bed of the river and across the bridge of 
boats by bullocks. A long, wearisome business this. 
The sun was high when we reached Sasseram. 

" The next night brought us to Benares ; we 
reached the holy city so very early that it was too 
dark to see anything. We left on a hot, dusty 
afternoon about s o'clock ; reached the shores of 
Jumna before daybreak ; dawn came on as we 
laboured over the bridge of boats. The aspect of 
Allahabad in the early, hazy dawn was very pleasing ; 



110 1st oudh ieregulae cavalry 

the mud walls looked quite imposing ; the little 
temples by the water's edge, the groups of cattle on 
their way to the jungle, and the boats floating lazily 
out for their day's work were very picturesque. We 
drove to a large, good, European hotel, intending to 
have an early breakfast and then go on for a stage or 
two. While at the hotel, I sketched frorn the balcony 
a view of the Jumna, with a distant glimpse of the 
Ganges at the junction of the two rivers ; the fort, 
grey with the morning fog, and some of the curious 
boats, which I sketched carefully — little houses with 
thatched roofs built in them, with the most extra- 
ordinary arrangement of masts and poles — made a 
good subject. We started again soon, and stopped 
for the day at a bungalow in a grove of beautiful 
acacia trees, which looked most green and pleasant 
through the sultry day. In the evening we were off 
again ; by starting early and staying out late, we 
managed to reach Cawnpore about ii on the 29th." 

Daly met his wife at Cawnpore, whence one more 
stage of dlk ghari brought them to Lucknow. She 
thus concluded her description of the journey : — 

" We reached Luckno^Y early, passing innumerable 
mosques and temples with tall minarets, crowded 
bazaars, etc. As we drove out of the city into the 
open country I was charmed with the aspect of the 
Dilkusha Park through which we passed ; the road, 
wide and good, ran through beautiful trees ; we 
passed the Dilkusha Palace, a handsome house 
resembling a French chateau, approached by long 
flights of steps with pillars and balustrades and 
strange looking little pepper-box turrets and grotesque 
statues ; a very favourite resort of the king, whose 
private property it has still continued. About a 
quarter of a mile further on we passed througla a 
handsome but dilapidated gateway, with a broken 
statue of a man and a stag on the top of great iron 
gates well rusted on their hinges, into the Bebiapur 
Park. Here the park was more like a forest. 
Magnificent mango trees, pipul, acacia, banian, 
many of which I knew not the names, grew here in 
strength and beauty. We soon reached the encamp- 



m OUDH 111 

ment, for as yet the men have no huts — their tents 
pitched about under the trees, horses picqueted near, 
the sowars in white with scarlet turbans and cummer- 
bunds (sashes), the camp followers with coats and 
scarves of every hue, the little fires onthe ground 
with women cooking chupatties, naked children rolling 
and playing beside them. All this had a wonderfully 
bright and pleasant effect. We passed another gate- 
way, where the guard house is, and drove up a slight 
hill to the Bebiapur Kothi or house, I was charmed 
with the aspect of the large, comfortable mansion. 

"From the flat roof of the house there is a very 
extensive view* for miles around in every direction 
over the flat but beautifully wooded scenery. The 
domes and minarets of Lucknow rise above the 
waves of foliage formed by the trees of the Dilkusha 
Park, Dilkusha Palace, nearer to us, is distinctly 
visible, so are the Martiniere (a college founded by 
General Claude Martine, a French soldier of fortune 
who rose to be a general in the late King of Oudh's 
service), and a garden called the Vilaiti Bagh (foreign 
garden), a very favourite place of resort with the 
king. The Goomti winds away into the distant 
plains, sometimes spreading out into wide sheets, 
where it flows close by Bebiapur, a narrow but deep 
stream. Little villages with flat-roofed mud hovels 
are dotted about among the mango topes (clumps), 
herds of cattle graze on the plains, whilst already the 
patches of cultivation show where the harvest will be." 

It was in Oudh as it had been in the Punjab : 
commandants had to make their own arrangements 
for arms, uniforms, and accoutrements, Daly had 
his previous experience to guide him. He wrote off 
at once to Ross, his great ally in the ist Punjab 
Cavalry, who was then at home :■- — 

" Now you must help in a business matter. First 
the leathern accoutrements. Ridgeway shall supply 
them as before, and I want them begun without 

* This description is of interest as the Bebiapur House was Sir 
Colin Campbell's headquarters during the final attack on Lucknow 
exactly two years later : see page 19J. 



112 1st OUDH irregular CAVALRY 

delay. Will you see whether patent leather would 
not be better. The pouches were too large before; 
we had to cut them down. Put this afloat at once. 
About carbines I will write more fully next mail._ I 
incline to think Sam Browne's method of sling-jng 
preferable. There are two great advantages arising 
therefrom : the barrel up and the length increased 
without inconvenience in carrying, and with much 
advantage to the weapon. I would go to Westley 
Richards. He has a wider repute, and can afford to 
turn them out cheaper than Greener." In July he 
sent another letter: — "I wrote you a line about 
carbines in March. Subsequently Outram told me 
to wait until the matter had been referred to the 
Government as to whether they would provide them. 
Of course the Government expressed astonishment, 
and now I have drawn up a paper for you which I 
think will enable you to form an opinion what you 
should do, as \ leave all with yourself! This Pritcbett 
rifle-carbine is a beautiful weapon, and would enable 
us to go anywhere and hold any post ; lo a troop, 
the best shots in the corps. Look at the belts ; there 
must be a small cap bag, which I have not ordered, 
and which before we were obliged to get from Cawn- 
pore. " Lengthy was the correspondence with England 
on this and similar details. 

Concerning the enlistment, Mrs Daly wrote : — 

" Every morning men and horses come to be 
selected for the regiment ; they assemble on the open 
space before our house. The horses, wild-looking 
creatures, neighing and prancing, covered with all 
sorts of bright-coloured saddle-cloths and scarves 
from their noses to their saddle-girths ; men from all 
parts of India : Afghans and Pathans, with their 
large loose trousers, loose white linen coats, and 
curious erections and scarves on their heads : fine- 
looking Sikhs : Hindus and Muhammadans. Many 
of the men of Henry's old regiment have come down 
seeking service. He would like to raise his regiment 
of north country men, but the order is to enlist men 
of the King of Oudh's regiments. An hour or two is 
occupied by Henry in inspecting these candidates, 




o 

a 
o 

B 



THE NEW REGIMENT 113 

making them put their horses through all manner of 
evolutions to prove that they can ride ; listening to 
their tales, reading their papers, etc." 

As to the progress made, Daly wrote to Ross on 
the 31st May 1856: — 

" When first I came here, Outram restricted us 
to_ men of the old cavalry of the Government ; a 
miserable lot. At my intercession he opened the 
door a little to allow half a dozen non-commissioned 
officers to be brought from other cavalry. I have 
Ghulam Mohi-ud-din, Ram Singh,* and two or three 
old friends now on their journey. Sundil Khanf 
wishes much to come, and I will gladly take him, if he 
can get leave. I have about 300 men now ; some 
very fine : they move tolerably well even now. I 
have parade every morning at daybreak, drilling and 
parading them en masse directly they have learnt 
right from left. Burnett is selecting Sikhs for me. I 
will have a troop of them. 

" i6th July i8s6.-y-The regiment is now nearly 
full. Sundil Khan is to be transferred ; Ghulam 
Mohi-ud-din + and three'»or four others are here. I have 
made our old friend Ghulam Mohi-ud-din a jemadar, 
Salar Bakhsh,§ from the Guide Corps, comes as 
2nd resaldar. I tried to get him in 1849 with 
Sobhan Ali, but Lumsden would not let him go. He 
is a fine, handsome-looking, soldierly fellow, up to his 
work. All the native officers I have here command 
troops well. The regiment begins to move in 
excellent order ; 3 strong squadrons. I shall make a 
good corps. I have the same uniform as before. 
Scarcely any alterations worthy of remark. The 
clothing is now being made up in Bombay ; it will be 
shipped to Calcutta for about Rs. 30, and in addition 
to being superior in quality will be cheaper than 
anything I could get here. 

"The climate of Oudh is very much that of 

* See page ii8 (note). t See pages 66 and iji. 

X Mrs Daly noted in 1859, " This man was faithful when all around 
were false, and died of wounds, fighting on our side, at Lucknow." See 
also page 175 (7th Sept.). 

§ See page 241. 

H 



114 1st oudh ireegulae cavaley 

Bengal, I should think. Moist, very moist. It 
must be salubrious : the race of people one sees about 
look so stout and robust ; so different from the fever- 
smitten inhabitants of the Punjab during August and 
September. The rains have not been violent hitherto ; 
ever longer than twenty-four hours at a bout." 

" 22,rd September 1856. — The regiment will be 
first-rate : it is finer as a whole than the ist Punjab 
Cavalry. The men I have taken by single files, and 
all have passed the ordeal. Horses good. I mean 
it to be the finest irregular cavalry in India, and so 
it will be." 

In the autumn the regiment was sent to an out- 
station. Daly was offered the choice of Sekrora or 
Pertabgarh, and chose the former, which is about 
SO miles from Lucknow. He relieved the Sth 
Irregular Cavalry, under Macdonald, who had built 
good lines, for which Government gave funds. The 
73rd Native Infantry had just left, and the garrison was 
for the future to consist of a regiment of cavalry, one 
of infantry, and a battery, all from the Oudh Irregular 
Force. The march was made early in October 
1856:— 

"The roads are but tracks," wrote Daly, "and 
these have been carried away by the heavy rains. 
We remained encamped in a pretty spot on the banks 
of the Gogra three days while the regiment passed 
over in boats ; this was a slow process, as at the Gh&t 
the river is a couple of miles in width. From the 
Gogra to Sekrora is but 16 miles, but a meandering 
river, the Surjoo, runs between ; this and the Gogra 
would delight the heart of any fisherman ; fish of 
every kind and of all sizes. Shortly before leaving 
Lucknow there was an inspection of my regiment. 
A thunderstorm came on just as we were mounting. 
When that had cleared off, there was not much 
daylight left. Ho^yever, the Brigadier and his staff 
had come, also a friend of mine, a cavalry Brigadier, 
who had courteously ridden over 10 or 12 miles to 



PEOGEESS OF MANSFIELD 115 

be present. All went off very successfully; the 
regiment g-ave great satisfaction, even to me! The 
old Brigadier expressed much surprise and many- 
congratulations, and concluded by saying he would 
make a special report to Government of the manner in 
which I had brought the corps into an effective state." 

In November 1856, Daly wrote : — 

" I am in an incipient trepidation about this 
Persian affair. I have written to the Lawrences to 
keep me informed should there be aught to move 
from the north-west. I should strive hard to find a 
place should any force move up to Kabul ; and, if it 
be intended to afford the Dost the help of arms, there 
it will be applied ; but I cannot see how such things 
can be, and peace reign in Europe with Russia. 
Persia must have Russia's aid or shewill not move 
her smallest puppet. I see Mansfield in the Gazette, 
rank of Major-General while employed on particular 
service in Poland. What means this ? " 

" Tth December 1856. — I see Mansfield is widening 
his footing at home ; Consul-General at Warsaw. 
He has ability for any position, and that which is of 
more use in many cases than even talent itself (though 
in fact it is one of the greatest of talents), tact. 
Whether his ambition is for soldiership or diplomacy 
I know not ; possibly he has chosen the latter. He 
is an excellent linguist, familiar with German and 
French, and I rather fancy has some knowledge of 
Italian. His mind is quickly applied to any point ; 
then he has cultivated penmanship, and can express 
his ideas (and those of others too) clearly and 
pointedly. Mansfield may choose his course now ; 
rise he certainly will. 

"We have war on our handshere without being 
aware of it. Dost Muhammad is now at Peshawar 
at a conference with John Lawrence. John, George 
writes me, is as much opposed as the other two 
brothers to the aid of money and supplies which has 
been sent to Kabul. Lakhs of everything — rupees, 
muskets, ammunition — have been forwarded, and 
by and by, if actual warfare with Persia be the 
result, a force will go to the shoulders of our ally. 
Should that be, may I be there to see. 



116 1st OUDH IEEEGULAR CAVALRY 

" 2zrd January 1857. — Since last writing, Johnson 
the second in command, has started for Bombay. 
He telegraphed Outram for employment, and got it, 
' under Jacob with Arab levies.' I would have offered 
to join Outram, and I have reason to believe that 
my offer would have been accepted, but I could not 
do so without knowing the result of my Punjab 
attempt. At first, in common with everyone in 
India, I thought the Bushire attempt must end there, 
or, as before in '38, at Kharak.* Now it is evidently 
otherwise. The work will be there, but still I am 
inclined to believe that the Dost is to be supplied 
with officers as well as money wherewith to play our 
game. In such event my chances are good. My 
corps is a very fine one, and should no card turn up 
trumps to get me away, I shall volunteer with the 
regiment and plead hard. Here I cannot abide while 
the great game is played out almost within hearing. 

" 'jth February. — Lumsden tells me the resolution, 
after endless darbars, is that neither officers nor 
troops are to advance, merely money and a mission 
to Kandahar, with a vakil at Kabul. He and his 
brother, with Cox the doctor, compose the mission, 
and their duty will be to see that the Dost keeps up 
an effective force with the 1 2 lakhs which he is to get 
annually while the war lasts ; rather than that should 
cease, the old fellow and his adherents could afford to 
pay Persia half A few days since came a letter from 
George Lawrence to the effect that Sir Henry, 
instead of starting for England according to his 
leave, had, at Lord Canning's urgent request, laid 
his dak for Lucknow, where he will be in a few days. 
Sir Henry's advent is, of course, a matter of rejoicing ; 
for me, however well inclined, he can do nothing in 
Oudh, and in Oudh I want nothing except to be 
helped out of it, and that help I shall ask of him. 
Since my last we have had the kind, gentlemanly, old 
Brigadier here reviewing us _; he was very warm in his 
admiration of the corps, which is indeed a fine one." 

* Kharak Island was occupied by an Anglo-Indian force in June 
1838, evacuated in March 1842, reoccupied in December 1856, and 
again evacuated in March 1857, on the conclusion of hostilities with 
Persia. See Lord Curzon's Persia, vol. ii., p. 405. 



LAUGHTEE AND DEATH 117 

On the lOth January 1857, Mrs Daly wrote:— 

"Mr Jackson, the acting Chief Commissioner, is 
coming here in a few days with his two pretty nieces ; 
there are five ladies in this station and two at Gonda, 
15 miles off; it is decided that there are enough to 
get up a dance, and we are all highly busy now 
planning how it shall be." Two years later, after her 
return to England, she noted : — " I remember well 
how gay and merry we were preparing for that party ! 
The kutcherry, or court-room, which was to be the 
ball-room, being whitewashed and decorated ; the 
stands of arms, banners, and garlands of flowers that 
adorned the walls, the tents to be pitched, , and the 
supper devised and cooked. Before many months 
were over how many of that little party had died a 
violent and dreadful death. The two fair girls for 
whom it was got up, encountered a fate * one shudders 
to think of. The bright, joyous Madeline indeed 
was spared after months of intolerable captivity and 
hardship _; but Georgina, the gentle, lovely, elder 
sister, it is believed was murdered, together with poor 
Mrs Greene, after escaping from Sitapur. _ Mr 
Charles Boileau, the clever, agreeable, yoiing civilian, 
who was believed to be the favoured lover of poor 
Georgina, murdered in a few weeks only by Fazl Ali ; 
the first of the awful scenes of horror of that dreadful 
year. _ Mr Longueville Clark,! Mr Bax, both dancing 
so gaily that night, soon to meet a bloody death, with 
many others then present. But then we knew nothing 
of coming horrors. All was gay and everyone 
cheerful, and the little ball, got up in a rude out- 
station, gave more pleasure than many a grand 
entertainrhent. 

" Next night we were all asked to dine with the 
Chief Commissioner in his tents : then came the first 
shock. News was brought that Fazl Ali, a noted 
outlaw, had plundered some Government thanas 
(police posts), murdered some villagers, etc. I was 
puzzled at the consultations of the gentlemen. Next 
morning I learnt that a 'daur,' or chase, had been 

* See p. 209. 

t Killed at Byram Ghat in June 1857, when endeavouring to 
escape. 



118 IsT OUDH IREEGULAK CAVALRY 

decided on, and that Henry was going with a party 
of thirty or forty sowars to join a detachment of 
Captain Miles's regiment which had inarched from 
Gonda. Next day was spent in selecting men and 
making arrangements ; in the night he started off in 
pursuit." 

On his return, Daly wrote the following account of 
his proceedings : — 

"qM March 1857. — I rode in from Nanparah, 
about 70 miles distant, by moonlight on the night of 
the 5th. The pursuit was vain to effect capture ; it 
proved to the people, a quiet race beaten by fever, 
that troops were never far from them ; their awe of 
Fazl Ali is such that no one would reveal a word of 
his movements, though he is as well known through- 
out the district as was Rob Roy on his heather. 

" \oth March.-^Thus far I wrote yesterday. A 
tragedy most grievous this desperado has now 
effected. Boileau the civilian (Deputy Commissioner 
of the District), with whom I went to Tulsipur, was 
murdered on the 7th or 8th ; the particulars of the 
occurrence have not yet reached us. Yesterday I 
received a note from Boileau, dated 6th, telling me 
that the outlaw had again evaded the pursuit, and 
had made his escape into Nepal. Boileau left a body 
of men, and with an escort of six and a jemadar 
moved along the forest side to Tulsipur. What took 
place I have not yet ascertained.* Boileau was not 
thirty years of age, of a sweet and engaging disposi- 
tion, of a most kindly, generous temperament, 

* On the 19th March Mrs Daly wrote : — "Every day brings fresh 
accounts of the terrible affair. Poor fellow, he was brave and rash, 
and rushed on his death as it were. He came suddenly on Fazl All's 
party ; he had but half a dozen men with him, these he separated and 
placed as sentries round the little village in which Fazl Ali was. 
Ram Singh, whose portrait hangs at home, alone remained with him. 
Whether he meant to wait till Lieutenant Clarke, known to be near, 
came up with his party, or what, none knew. He was discovered ; 
suddenly a volley was fired from behind some buildings. Mr Boileau 
fell from his mare exclaiming, ' Oh Ram Singh ! I am killed.' Another 
Sikh, Bhugwan Singh, came up ; together they lifted the Sahib's body 
on to his horse ; it fell off. Bhugwan Singh appears to have gone 



FAZL ALI THE OUTLAW 119 

possessed of excellent talents and of great persever- 
ance. _ He was active and gallant, confiding- and 
unsuspicious. Such was the fine English gentleman 
cut off by this fellow. Many a tale of bold, reckless 
ruffianism is told of Fazl Ali. His headquarters for 
years have been along the Tulsipur and Nandparah 
forest, and when pressed he has taken to Nepal. 
The Rani of Nandparah was constantly at war with 
the Raja of Tulsipur. Fazl Ali was occasionally on 
one side, occasionally on the other ; but, wherever he 
was, that side had the prestige of success. After the 
annexation he went into Nepal, but of late has 
returned to our territory, and some horridly bloody 
murders have been committed by him. 

" On our arrival at the scene of his depredations 
scarcely a Avord of information could we procure. 
However, with some sixty sowars I made a forced 
march to the end of the first ridge of hills where the 
Raptee jerks round the Valley of Nepal to flow into 
our territory. Here the hills sink into the plain, 
which is a dense forest. Goolerie, marked in the 
map, is a small space cut in the woods where the 
cow-herds bring their cattle to graze ; here we found 
clear and recent traces of the fugitive, but the same 
silence amongst the people ; not from disaffection to 
me, but from the awe of him and the fear of his 
revenge. This was his old haunt ; here there was no 
food for man or beast, but what we had brought with 
us. I attempted to cut him off. I dismounted thirty 
Sikhs and Hillmen, and sent them up the pass which 
leads us into Nepal. These men took with them their 
swords and carbines, and a little flour ; their trio was 
vain. We marched to the Nepal border, and had a 

away. Ram Singh went in search of the other sowars to endeavour 
to persuade them to bring off poor Boileau's body ; he could not 
induce them to venture. The firing was close and heavy, the Sahib 
dead, and they had but their swords. Still Henry is angry, and says 
they shall leave the regiment for deserting the body. Ram Singh 
returned alone and stood by the Sahib's body till he had four bullets 
in himself and his clothes ; one in the wrist disabled him, but he made 
his escape. He went to Ghulam Mohi-ud-din, a resaldar who was at 
a village with a detachment not far off ; they returned, but could not 
find the body, and Fazl Ali had gone off. Afterwards the body was 
found and sent into Lucknow for burial." 



120 1st oudh ireegulae cavaley 

communication with their posts, very friendly. We 
have since this captured one of his followers, who tells 
us that, at Goolerie, we were within bowshot of Fazl 
Ali, who, until our arrival, did not know of the pursuit. 
The forests are so dense that I soon saw cavalry was 
useless, no good till dismounted. I represented this 
to the Chief Commissioner, and suggested some 
movable parties of infantry, each of thirty or forty 
volunteers without baggage or uniform, being dotted 
about, with spies attached and ready to move any- 
where. This has been acceded to." 

On his return Daly found a telegram from Sir 
John Lawrence offering him the command of the 
Guides during Lumsden's absence with the Kandahar 
Mission. This he gladly accepted. Sir Henry 
Lawrence wrote to him on his way to Calcutta, from 
Calcutta, and again from Agra on the roth March 
1857, the last letter running as follows : — 

" I received your note this evening, and am send- 
ing on to the Private Secretary what you say about 
Forbes,* with a request that he may get the corps. 
I am glad you are to get the Guides, but am sorry to 
lose you. I am to be at Lucknow on the 20th, 
Cawnpore 19th, Mynpoorie i8th. Don't pass me. 
I propose, after a week's stay at Lucknow, to look 
round the Province, and looked forward to having you 
a good deal with me, and to Mrs Daly taking care of 
my niece, whom I hope soon to get down from the 
Punjab; but you will be better beyond the Indus, 
and far be it from me to stay you. 

" Your picture of Oudh politics is not pleasant. I 
am not wise to go there ; but I suppose I am right to 
go as my whole heart was bent on going home, and I 
have ^ve medical certificates. Come to Lucknow 
about the 22 nd, if you can without inconvenience. 

* Forbes had been Daly's adjutant in the ist Punjab Cavalry, and 
was at this time serving with one of the new corps of Gudh Irregular 
Infantry. He succeeded Daly in command of the ist Oudh Irregular 
Cavalry, and rendered excellent service during the defence of 
Lucknow. 







B-J""^' 



Ram Singh, as a Dafadar in the ist Punjab Cavalry. 



[To face p. U8. 



SIR HENRY LAWRENCE 121 

At anyrate, don't pass me on the road. I want to 
make Mrs Daly and my godchild's acquaintance." 

In response to this invitation, Daly met Sir Henry 
on the 20th March at Lucknow, where Mrs Daly and 
her child arrived three days later, and were cordially 
welcomed by Sir Henry, whose guests they were in 
the Residency. Mrs Daly's account of the visit may 
be quoted : — 

'' i\th March. — We came in here last night. 
There are no other visitors, so we have the whole 
suite_ to ourselves. Four good-sized private rooms 
opening into a large but scantily furnished sitting- 
room ; beyond that the billiard-room, from which the 
staircase descends. Sir Henry Lawrence is a most 
charming person ; his manner so kind, so cheerful, so 
affable, it sets everyone at his ease ; he is full of life 
and animation, ready to talk on every subject grave 
or gay, and so sympathisitig with all. He is worked 
hard from morning to night and often looks sadly 
weary, but he is hospitable and sociable in disposi- 
tion, and likes to collect people around him. I have 
just had a visit from our old friends Colonel* and 
Mrs Case, whom we knew at Karachi ; his regiment, 
the 32nd, is here ; they marched right across country, 
Mrs Case and her sister. Miss Dickson, riding the 
whole way on horseback. I do regret leaving Oudh 
just as Sir Henry has come. 

" \st April. — We are still here, urged by Sir Henry 
to remain till Captain Forbes arrives. We have 
everything- to make the visit pleasant. Gay dinner 
parties every evening. It is my business to write the 
invitations ; Sir Henry sends up the cards of all the 
people who call upon him, and desires that all may be 
asked to dinner. I have to arrange them as well as I 
can. Sir Henry has a habit of leaving all the minor 
details of his household to anyone about him who 
will take the trouble to attend to them. Now Henry 
manages for him ; has bought the furniture, carriage, 
horses, arranged the servants. The Khansamah 

* Killed at Chinhat on 30th June 1857. 



122 IsT OUDH IREEGULAR CAVALRY 

(head servant) comes to him every day for orders for 
dinner. I don't consider housekeeping- his forte ; we 
have very bad dinners often, but Sir Henry cares 
nothing about this, and the servants soon find it out. 
Then there is never any knowing- how many guests 
will be present. One day I had sent out cards for a 
small dinner of fifteen ; about two hours before dinner 
George Lawrence came up to tell me his uncle had 
forgotten to mention that he had invited about twenty 
others in addition. 

" Henry is evidently a great favourite with Sir 
Henry, and this is very gratifying to know. He 
sends his bearer to call him at daybreak to go out 
riding. Sir Henry is most carefully inspecting the 
city and making various alterations and arrange- 
ments. When they come in, Sir Henry has his easy 
chair, books, and a cup of tea in the verandah, into 
which our rooms open. Our little one has already 
grown quite familiar with his godfather. Always 
good-natured and kind to children. Sir Henry takes a 
great deal of notice of him ; the child runs up to him 
without hesitation, pulling his coat, touching his 
book; I rush out to fetch him in and apologise; but 
Sir Henry laughs, and says, ' I have had little children 
of my own.' In the afternoon we usually drive out 
with Sir Henry, and return to dress in a scramble for 
dinner. 

"6th April. — Colonel Edwardes* is here. I am 
rather disappointed in him, having always looked 
upon him as a great hero. He may have been hand- 
some once, but is stout and rather coarse now with a 
very Jewish cast of countenance ; but I do not per- 
ceive what other people complain of — great vanity 
and contempt of other people's opinion. I was at 
church, and stopped with Sir Henry and Colonel 
Edwardes for the Sacrament. It is a long time since 
I had the comfort of receiving that, or of being at 
church at all. When we came in, I found Henry had 
returned from Sekrora, where he had gone for a day 
or two. 

"Mr and Mrs Christian f are here; he is very 

* The Commissioner of Peshawar, afterwards Sir Herbert 
Edwardes. 

t Both killed at Sitapur, 3rd June 1857. 



, FESTIVITIES AT LUCKNOW 123 

cleyer, his conversation very interesting-. She is a 
delicate, gentle, young woman, pretty and pleasing, 
and beautifully dressed. Dr Ogilvie and his wife are 
also here. The breakfast is the agreeable party 
here ; a meal that lasts from lo till 1 2 o'clock. Gentle- 
men constantly dropping in ; the conversation animated 
and pleasant, a great contrast to the usually vapid 
discourse one hears. Sir Henry himself so spirited, 
so agreeable in discourse ; Colonel Edwardes, Mr 
Christian, Dr Ogilvie, my Henry, all clever men 
and quick in conversation. Major Banks * is often 
here. Colonel Goldney,t the Commissioner, is stay- 
ing here; Captain Hayes+ and many others con- 
stantly coming. 

"One night there was a performance of amateur 
theatricals, with a ball afterwards, at the Residency 
in cantonments. Soon afterwards Sir Henry gave a 
fete to the men, women, and children of the 32 nd 
Regiment. Henry had all the arrangements to make 
with Colonel Inglis. The entertainment was given 
in the Dilkusha Park, near the Martinlfere. There 
was dinner for the men and their wives, and a 
collation, iced champagne, etc., for the 4lite, who 
were all invited to be present ; afterwards games, 
races, feats of horsemanship exhibited by the men of 
Major Gale's § regiment. In the evening a dance by 
moonlight out of doors. One evening Sir Henry 
drove us out to see the dear old house at Bebiapur. 
Another evening we went to the Martini^re. Each 
day was fully occupied. Sir Henry hates state, and 
does not even like driving with four horses and being 
attended by horsemen and flags ; but this is necessary 
for the Chief Commissioner's dignity. I had no time 
for fresh sketches of the picturesque city. The view 
from the top of the Residency is more beautiful than 
I can describe. Countless mosques and minarets on 
all sides ; the bright green trees which intersperse 
them ; the winding- Goomtee ; the vast expanse of 

* Killed in Lucknow, 21st July 1857. 

t Killed on the Gogra below Fyzabad, 9th June 1857 : see Kaye's 
Sepoy War, vol. iii., pp. 460-467. 

\ Killed on the Mynpoorie Road, 31st May 1857. 
§ Killed at Rai Bareilly early in June 1857. 



Missing Page 



126 1st OUDH IEEEGULAE CAVALRY 

to me, yet I do not warm to him. He is somewhat 
diplomatic, and less straightforward than is pleasant. 
Unlike our noble, high-minded host, whose heart 
is full of true religion, whose mind is cultivated and 
generous ; who is conversant with the history of the 
world, and the nature of men ; keen in observation ; 
quick in temper ; a rare creature, made for love and 
honour." 

On leaving Lucknow, Daly and his wife proceeded 
by Cawnpore and Mynpoorie to Agra. On the i6th 
April Mrs Daly wrote : — 

" This evening we drove out to see the Taj, with 
which we were indeed delighted ; well worth the 
detour of 70 miles to see it. Grand and solemn the 
vast fabric of white marble looks rising up amidst the 
dark foliage. Our first glimpse from the road as we 
approached Agra did not give one an idea of half its 
beauties, its solemnity. Seen by twilight the grand, 
pure, massive structure impresses one with awe as 
well as with admiration. All seems so chaste, so 
pure, and so mighty ; so separate from the dust and 
turmoil of the busy world around. Two hundred 
years have passed over this unequalled monument 
raised by love, and still the tomb of Shah Jehan and 
his beloved wife rises in unsullied splendour with a 
grandeur and solemnity all its own. 

"We reached the outer gate just as twilight was 
coming on, the moon shining above the dome. The 
view up the long avenue of yews, with the marble 
tank and marble paths on either side, to the Taj 
itself was impressive to the utmost. We walked up 
these marble roads ; on either side marble paths 
branch off, and one has glimpses of gardens and 
bright flowers carefully kept beneath tne shade of 
the mango groves. At the end of the avenue we 
ascended a flight of such steep steps and came on the 
spacious marble platform on which the Taj itself 
stands. From each corner of this platform rises a 
marble minaret. It is all marble; marble every- 
where ; the purest and whitest being reserved for the 
tomb, with its smooth, vast dome. I cannot tell you 
how this uniform, grand simplicity of material adds 



DELHI 127 

to the solemnity of the whole. Opposite the avenue 
by which we approach, the platform rises from the 
river. On either side of it, at some little distance, are 
handsome buildings iri red stone, with white_ domes ; 
but one's attention is riveted on the pure white tomb 
itself We enter it ; a vast domed apartment, with the 
most wonderful musical echo in it I ever heard. All 
beautiful white marble above, around, and under one's 
feet, except where chapters of the Koran, in Arabic, are 
inlaid in letters of black, and the ornamental inlaying 
of gold and jewels and precious stones on the tombs 
themselves and the screen which encloses them. The 
tomb of the Empress occupies the centre; that of 
Shah Jehan is by her side. The screen around the 
tombs is the most wonderful specimen of open-work 
carving in marble that I ever beheld. After all, the 
real tombs are in a vault exactly beneath those one 
sees on entering, and exact facsimiles of them, inlaid 
jewel-flowers and all. 

_" x^th. — Early this morning we were up to pay the 
Taj a second visit. Beautiful as it is by daylight, I 
think one does not feel the same awe and reverence 
as by moonlight. Afterwards we visited the fort, a 
place of great strength, and the famous Moti Musjid 
(Pearl Mosque), also built by Shah Jehan ; very 
beautiful, but not comparable to the Taj. In the 
fort we saw the ' Gates of Somnauth ' ; old worm- 
eaten things, not worth the fuss made about them." 

Delhi was reached on the i8th April. Here they 
halted but a day, meeting an old home acquaint- 
ance who "talked a good deal of the disaffection of 
the troops, etc.," though it does not appear that the 
matter was regarded as of immediate importance. 
The 20th saw the little party at Umballa, whence, on 
the 2 1st, Daly started for Lahore. His wife and 
child left the same evening for Simla ; by mid-day on 
the 22nd they reached Kasauli, of which Mrs Daly 
wrote : — 

"We stopped to dine at the d4k bungalow, 
where I took a sketch of the Lawrence Asylum, about 



128 1st OUDH IRREGULAE CAVALRY 

a mile distant. This institution, as you know, was 
founded by Sir Henry Lawrence for the benefit of 
the children of the European soldiers. It gives life, 
health, and a good education to hundreds of poor 
little creatures, who, but for this refuge, would die or 
grow up in sickness and all kinds of evil. Sir Henry, 
besides founding it, gives 10,000 rupees annually for 
its support ; 5000 rupees to another branch at Mount 
Abu. His brothers all subscribe nobly, and nearly 
every officer in the army subscribes according to his 
means. When we were at Lucknow, Sir Henry 
showed Harry a statement of his accounts, saying 
many accused him of reckless indifference about 
money. During the last four years he has subscribed 
to this asylum and different charitable institutions 
;^ 1 0,400 (ten thousand four hundred pounds)." 



CHAPTER VII 

THE GUIDES AND DELHI — l8S7 

Journey to join the Guides. Outbreak of the Mutiny. Neville 
Chamberlain. Discussions at Rawal Pindi ; Sir John Lawrence ; 
Herbert Edwardes. March of the Guides. Arrival at Delhi ; 
Battye killed ; Daly severely wounded ; reinforcements ; con- 
flicting intelligence ; intended assaults postponed ; death of 
Barnard, Reed succeeds ; Chamberlain wounded ; Reed invalided, 
Wilson succeeds ; letter from Havelock ; arrival of Nicholson ; 
news of Sir Henry Lawrence's death ; Najafgarh ; siege train 
arrives ; capture of Delhi ; loss of Nicholson ; Guides return 
to Mardan ; their casualties ; acknowledgments from Court of 
Directors. 

Daly's journey from Umballa to Lahore, 212 miles, 
was done in twenty-one hours by mail-cart, stoppages 
for post offices and changes of horses included : — 

"Grand going-, wondrous whipping; desperate 
driving in the darkness of a dark night across narrow 
bridges of boats, through long and dreary tracts of 
land laid waste by the torrents of the mighty rivers 
which tear through the Punjab — bumping, twisting, 
plunging, rearing, tearing — on, on through the night. 

" 22nd ApHl. — ^^Reached Lahore about 10.30 a.m. ; 
went to call on Sir John Lawrence, found him in 
his office without coat, shirt sleeves tucked, burly- 
looking, amidst a heap of papers. He was very 
cordial and frank, pressed me to come to his house, 
and later came and fetched me in his buggy. 

" 2Zrd April. — Had many familiar chats with my 
host : his mind had much of the same bearing at 
Sir Henry's : he is prompter and harder, less sucil- 



130 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

^ated, has not that generous delicacy, the great char- 
acteristic of his brother. Sir John is doubtless an 
excellent Government servant — energetic, bold, and 
vigilant — with his command is none of the love and 
reverence which bear so much sway in Sir Henry's 
case. 

"24^^ April. — Edwardes arrived. He is more 
familiar with Sir John than with Sir Henry — he 
seems to suit his manners and his affection to the 
distinct characters. His influence with both is great. 
Great with Sir Henry, because Sir Henry believes 
him a man of great ability, ruled by the highest and 
purest principles ; whereas with Sir John it is the 
energy and adaptability of Edwardes which win 
their way — the common-sense, active commission 
John works to. 

" 2Sth. — Started for Jhelum at noon ; crossed the 
Chenab with two very intelligent men 'on the 
Telegraph,' who had come down from Lahore to see 
the cause of a stoppage in the communication. I 
was much struck with these grammar-indifferent but 
clear-headed fellows, possessed of a knowledge and 
wielding it with an ease most enviable. Road bone- 
breaking. Crossed the bridge of boats at a rattling 
pace, recognised the Field of Gujerat and refreshed 
my memory. Jhelum 106 miles ; entered the 
melancholy Doon about midnight. 

"26th. — Reach Pindi, about 60 miles, at 8 p.m. 
Kindly welcomed by Miller. 

" 2'jth. — Remained chatting with Miller and his 
pleasant, cheerful wife till 6 p.m. Started on a horse 
of his and rode the sixteen miles, and then to my 
doolie den. 

" 2%th. — Reached Attock at 8 a.m. ; morning air 
cool, atmosphere clear ; felt quite touched at crossing 
the old river and saluting again the old familiar hills, 
with the light so clear on them that every fissure was 
bare to view ; reached Nowshera in two hours ; 
found Holmes-Scott,* boisterously pleased to see me 
— had long chats. Reached Mardan about sunset." 

* Of the 5Sth Native Infantry, which relieved the Guides at 
Mardan on 13th May, and mutinied just afterwards ; all the officers 
were saved except the colonel, who committed suicide. 




if.,^^Z.aMrrence-' 



■.^'WaUu^SPit.tf^ 



(yo/cneL^JL.. CbdwardeJ cDtr Z/lenru ^Juiurrence 



NEWS OF THE MUTINY 131 

The officers present with the Guides were Battye, 
second in command ; Kennedy, Commandant of 
Cavalry; Hawes, Adjutant; and Stewart, Assistant 
Surgeon. 

The news of trouble at Meerut reached Edwardes 
at Peshawar on the night of the nth May; next 
morn he heard of the Delhi outbreak. He telegraphed 
to John Lawrence proposing to form a movable 
column of Her Majesty's 24th and 27th, the Guides 
and some irregular cavalry. On the morning of 
the 13th, a bare fortnight after he first joined the 
corps, Daly received the news of the mutiny. He 
wrote in his diary for that day : — 

" Heard at 8 this morning that the 55th Native 
Infantry had marched from Nowshera at gunfire to 
relieve the Guides at Mardan. About an hour after- 
wards received an order from Colonel Edwardes to 
move without delay with the corps into Nowshera. 
A private note * explained : open mutiny at Meerut 

* "Private. — From Edwardes. 

"Peshawar, 12th May 1857. 

" That you may better know how to act on the enclosed instruc- 
tions to move to Nowshera, I write privately to tell you that 
telegraphic news of open mutiny among the native troops at Meerut 
having reached us here to-day, we think a movable column should 
be assembled in the Punjab to get between the stations that have 
gone wrong and those that have not; and put down further dis- 
affection by force. It is obviously necessary to constitute such a 
column of reliable troops, and therefore it has been proposed to get 
the Guides and Her Majesty's 27th together without delay as a part 
of the scheme, and, if these plans be matured, you will probably have 
to close upon Her Majesty's 24th and the Kumaon Battalion at 
Pindi, and there be joined by an irregular regiment from Kohat or 
Bannu, and perhaps more of that good quality. The 5Sth Native 
Infantry have therefore orders to receive charge of Mardan from you. 

" If these arrangements take effect, you will have the most 
important service before you, and though painful, one that you will, 
I feel sure, find usefulness and honour in. The disaffection seems 
to have gone too far to be talked down ; and Government must look 
now to men who can and will/«^ it down." 



132 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

and elsewhere ; reliable troops to be collected and 
moved off towards Jhelum. No more scotching the 
snake. No more concessions and sympathetic 
speeches, drawing tears and fanning the flame, but 
treason and mutiny to be met by sternness and force. 
Handed over the fort, and marched at 6 p.m. with 
about ISO cavalry and 350 infantry. Reached 
Nowshera at midnight. Two hours after received 
an ' urgent ' to proceed forthwith to Attock to relieve 
the three line companies in charge of the fort, and 
hold it until the arrival of a detachment from Kohat. 
Marched accordingly at daybreak. The men had 
had nothing to eat (theRamzan) during the previous 
day, and were much distressed during this burning 
march : ere we reached Attock the heat was trying. 
We crossed the Indus soon after 10 a. m. 

"iSth. — Chamberlain cantered into Attock this 
morning. The General of the division was passing 
through, and it was settled that we should move on 
without assuming charge of the fort at all. I 
was pleasantly disappointed in Chamberlain ; found 
him neither punctilious nor pedantic ; a resolute, 
thoughtful soldier; neither brilliant nor cultivated, 
but sensible, grave, and solid, much impressed with 
the state of affairs, but looking at them manfully. 
The General, whom we went to see, a poor, weak, 
old gentleman in H.M.S., of a very different temper 
and style ; frivolous in all points, petty, with no grasp, 
no knowledge; writing little notes to subordinates 
with much care and little grammar. Swam the Indus 
last night and again to-night ; the current was strong, 
and I found I had no spare strength on my return. 

" i6^y^.-;— Boran, 32 miles from Attock. Marched 
at 2 A.M. in the midst of a sweeping, violent dust- 
storm, after which the air grew cool. Many of the 
men very sore-footed from that hot, long march from 
Mardan to Attock, but all cheerful and making light 
of their work. The Punjab is paying back to India 
all she cost her by sending troops stout and firm to 
her aid. Bugle at midnight, move off at i a.m. 

" 17^!^. — Jani-ki-Sang, 32 miles ; a pleasant march, 
reaching our ground about 8 a.m. My own opinion 
of the present state of affairs is this. Many fine 
fellows may fall victims ; but, without some terrible 



AN URGENT MILITARY COUNCIL 133 

blow, Government would never set about the radical 
reform necessary. But for the belief that revolution 
was impendinff, no Reform Bill would have been 
carried in England ; but for Lord Howe, the Mutiny 
of the Nore would have destroyed our fleet ; but for 
Sir Charles Napier, England, in the north at least, 
would have seen a bloody civil war in 1839. Now 
the danger is faced and, however much it may spread, 
it will be put down, to the benefit of the army, in 
this way that it is well, even at the expense of pain 
and suffering-, to eradicate a spreading ulcer. This 
is our case in India, and has been for many a long 
day. The day has come when we have strength, 
and peace without. 

" \%th. — Started at i a.m. Overtaken within 4 
or 5 miles of Pindi by Edwardes, travelling down in 
a buggy to consult Sir John. I jumped into the 
buggy and went with him to Sir John's — reached at 
5 A.M. Chamberlain in bed at the door. Sir John, 
in bed within, called us and began conversing on 
affairs with his old frankness and cordiality. Affairs 
are bad. The Punjab Ruler full of pluck and energy, 
and but little different in demeanour. The telegraphic 
messages from all quarters were detailed. Those 
from the Chief read the worst. He is evidently 
embarrassed and not buckling to with the mighty 
emergency. Destruction at Delhi most ruthless, 
most horrible. Meerut, strong in British troops, 
shows the worst front. If a cantonment with English 
infantry, dragoons, and artillerymen — in all at 
least 1 600 strong — is unable to make play and break 
through the contemptible network, what can be 
expected where no English troops are ? India holds 
not 28,000 of our countrymen in all, 

"Sir John Lawrence made me stay with them — 
the two rooms in common — Sir John, Edwardes, 
Chamberlain, James, and myself Heard the 
arrangement at Peshawar by which General Reed 
was impounded to the chief command in the Punjab. 
Edwardes and Nicholson, feeling they could best 
guide in the storm, and that the military disposition 
could not be theirs without a plan, resolved on calling 
a council — the General, Brigadier Cotton, and 
Chamberlain (in the secret). When they were 



134 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

assembled at the old General's table, Edwardes stated 
the case : the broad mutiny, the necessity for 
immediate action, and the cordial co-operation of all 
in authority : that to give this authority a points- 
proposed that the General should assume the_ chief 
command in the Punjab. The old General, in his 
sleeping drawers and slippers, looked puzzled and, 
almost before he knew what had taken place, the 
proceedings were on paper ; orders out for the 
movement and collection of troops at various 
positions. Native troops suspected of disaffection 
at Peshawar were then and there directed to proceed 
to hold forts underneath the hills ; the Guides to 
start forthwith, the European corps to be in hand. 
Even at the last, the old General looked bewildered 
and puzzled, with a doubting pride, which, however, 
found no vent in language. The Chief sat presiding 
in silence while these efforts to save India were 
manfully and nobly made. 

"Sir John Lawrence's messages to the Com- 
mander-in-Chief pass beyond frank advice or even 
entreaty — 'Act at once, march with any body of 
European troops to the spot, and the danger will 
disappear. Give it time, and it will flame through 
the land.' The Chief is in a strange land — ignorant 
of the troops, unaccustomed to military action in 
times of emergency, and consequently he hangs fire. 
Hence troops not disloyal become sulky and ready 
to burst forth and join their for the nonce companions 
triumphing in mutiny.- No news from below Delhi for 
days ; but five corps of European troops between 
Meerut and Calcutta. The strength in the Punjab 
is with us ; a large body, some 1 2,000 British 
soldiers ; no finger will be raised, no shot fired while 
their shadow is on the land ; the disaffection which 
influences the native soldiery here is but the echo from 
below — the smoke of the fire below. It is on this 
ground where we are strong that we must be careful 
of throwing away our strength, or of so using it as 
to show our weakness where no British troops are. 
Hence I strongly counsel that no native troops in 
the Punjab should be disarmed unless an overt act 
of treason has been committed ; to disband a whole 
corps on suspicion of bad faith, or even on conviction 



" THE DICTATOR " 135 

of its existence thoug-h not displayed, would be to 
turn the whole army agfainst us. Many there must 
be jTroni various causes and failings who are wishing 
to join in the outburst — to disband would thrust these 
into the flames and, when no controlling European 
power is in the Cantonment, the native powers will 
act in open sedition, seeing the fate those in our 
power have met with. Chamberlain felt this, and 
remarked that we must act in our strong places for our 
comrades in weak positions. We should not, unless 
compelled, do where we are strong what they can't 
do — for us to put out our strength may and would 
bring vengeance and destruction on them. 

"All these matters were freely discussed, and 
perhaps this feeling at last influenced us in not 
seizing the artillery (native troops) guns this evening 
as it was intended I should do with the Guides. The 
Guides to go on as fast as possible towards the scene, 
preceding the columns. The Chief informed of our 
advance. Even amidst all the grave affairs 
Edwardes' wit and humour sparkle. He has named 
the old General 'the Dictator.' In the sort of 
Council of Discussion at Sir John's, the line of 
operations was fixed on, papers actually written by 
Edwardes, and then the remark — ' Now let us send 
for the Dictator.' Thus, cut-and-dried affairs are 
put affirmatively to the General. Dreary these look 
to-day. Disaffection threatening among the troops 
in the districts. Sulky obedience at" Sialkot ; open 
insurrection at Ferozpur. Communications cut off 
from Meierut — no posts or telegraph from below — the 
Commander-in-Chief hesitating and nervous, with- 
out plan, or purpose. All will go right by and by. 
The struggle will not swamp us, but open our eyes. 

" igth. — Matters are brighter to-day. Nicholson 
with two squadrons arrived. Chamberlain to com- 
mand the Movable Column over several seniors ; he 
did not covet the appointment, which was, in fact, 
Edwardes' suggestion to 'the Dictator.' Sir John 
saw the corps this morning; most kind about all 
matters connected with the march and comfort of the 
men ; even the smallest things were thought of ; spoke 
very kindly on all matters. The Guides to be 
augmented should I retain the command ; it will 



136 THE GUIDES AND DELHI . 

now become one of the finest in the country. 
Migfhty must be the changes after this in the 
organisation of the force. God see Sir Henry 
throug-h, then my hopes for India and for us all 
will run high. 

" News less gloomy from below, though increasing 
anxiety over the Indus ; the troops there are power- 
less for ill ; they without their officers would be cut 
up on an announcement being made that the hill 
tribes were at liberty to plunder them. Agra safe — 
this is a mighty matter. I could not hope this. The 
fort was in the hands of native troops and the only 
European corps distant from it. However, the 
saviour of India, the telegraph, brought us word, 
'Agra safe,' ' Moradabad safe,' ' Bareilly safe.' Now 
my anxiety is for Lucknow-^there the burden of 
trouble and woe may be great. Sir John, full 
of pluck, fearing no responsibility; without com- 
munication or means of communication with the 
Governor - General, he has raised and is raising 
large bodies of troops, passing all the best corps 
of the Punjab Irregular Force towards India, 
urging and entreating the Commander-in-Chief to 
move. Affairs are brightening. All the old Sikh 
Sardars have come forward proffering their swords 
for us-— not one noble, not one cultivator of the land 
has joined the rebels. There is no feeling in the 
country as yet, nor will any be roused, provided a 
single blow be struck and quickly struck. Matters 
may be bad for us, but with good European trooos 
and noble artillery, even if all the native army fell off, 
we could hold our own till succour should reach from 
home. _ Nothing but a disaster could effect that 
reform in our army which is so urgent — which has 
been so often and often forced on Government. The 
letters and messages which come in to Sir John 
prove how many are the gallant and noble sons 
England has in this grand land. Weakness and 
folly are abundant, but it makes one's heart gladden 
to feel how stout and high the minds of many. 

"I am much struck with Chamberlain ; lofty, 
high-minded, bold as a lion, no fire-eater, but with 
calm, resolute views, knowing the occasion and the 
trial. 



EDWARDES AND CHAMBERLAIN 137 

"Great is Edwardes tact, great his ability, power- 
ful in langfuagfe, fertile in resource, willing and 
humorous, able to throw fun and give life to the 
heaviest and darkest matter. He is very witty in 
his observations about the Commander-in-Chief 
(General Anson) — 'John, send a message thus: — 
"From Chief Commissioner, Punjab, to the Com- 
mander - in - Chief, wherever he may be hiding. 
Major A. See Rule i6.* When in doubt play a 
trump. Carry out your, principles. We, the council, 
headed by the Dictator, do hereby depose General A. 
from command of the army, and place in his position 
Lieutenant MacAndrew (who went near Delhi to 
reconnoitre), with the rank of Archbishop." ' 

" Edwardes is very plucky, clever with temper ; 
bending people to his views without appearing to 
care about it ; very lively ; different in every respect 
almost from the man we saw at Lucknow. Now he 
is natural. 

" I see Sir John, though throwing himself aside in 
a hundred trivial points, leaving their decision alto- 
gether when Edwardes and Chamberlain, yet fixes 
himself on certain points with a manly and gallant 
heart, most kind, most cordial, courting debate, open 
to conviction, and willing to concede or change, when 
this latter weakens not the whole ; rather than risk 
this, he would stick to a small error. 

" 20tk. — Reached Mandra, 20 miles, at 5 A.M., 
having marched at 10 p.m. last night. Great diffi- 
culty in keeping awake ; obliged to get off and walk, 
that succeeded in making me hot ; mounted again, 
nearly off, eyes closed of themselves. Halt for ten 
minutes, Bp.ttye and Hawes on the ground (rocks) 
asleep before stretched out. We shall get over this 
in a day or two. Night marching is less trying to 
the cattle. Men very cheerful and ready to go any- 
where ; none admit themselves too knocked up or too 
stiff to proceed. 

"21st. — Sohawah, 24 miles, crossing the Bakrialla ; 
ravines and roads broken and intricate ; spent a burn- 
ing day : marched at 8 p.m., wind scalding. 

* A treatise on whist by " Major A." was popularly ascribed to 
General Anson. 



138 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

"22nd. — Jhelum at 5 a.m. ; encamping ground by 
the river, delightfully fresh after 28 miles. First 
trumpet at dark; crossed the river at 9. Great 
storm of dust and rain made the road difficult to 
follow. 

" 23^^?'. — Koria, 15 miles from the Chenab and 10 
from Gujerat ; 2 1 miles from Jhelum. Roads heavy 
from the storm, air delicious and fresh ; so tired all 
night that I was compelled to walk to keep myself 
awake ; even that remedy failed, constantly found 
myself abreast of a sowar's horse. Some of the 
sowars in the rear troop, asleep, kept passing right 
up through the column : found excellent quarters. 
Resolved to take advantage of the cool day and push 
off to the Chenab. Cavalry first, infantry in evening. 
Marched cavalry at 3 p.m., reached the Chenab at 8 
and commenced the crossing. All safe at Wazirabad 
at 7 A.M., 24th. 

" 2Sth. — Marched to Kamokee this morning by 
7 A.M., 32 miles. Started for Lahore at 5 p.m., 
distance 30 miles. 

" 26th. — Reached Lahore at 6 a.m. Was met by 
the Commissioner and military secretary — difficulty 
about selecting recruits. 

" 2'jtk. — Recruiting; but terribly overcome with 
the report of the sufferings and exposure at Simla. 

" 28^^ — Overtook the corps at Powindiah at 
7 a.m. 

" 2gth. — Reached the banks of the Sutlej close to 
Sobraon battlefield by 6 A.M., commenced the 
crossing at once. Here it was that the river ran 
red with Sikh blood. Determined to follow the 
Umballa road. 

" 2>oth. — Reached Mihna, 32 miles, about 7 a.m. 
The cross-country road sent many straggling ; some 
did not reach till dark ; there was baggage still miss- 
ing and 3 men when four o'clock struck. Resolved 
on a short march and to leave at the usual time, so 
as to enable them to make a night's rest. Marched 
at 6 P.M. to Ingraon, 14 miles; reached before 
midnight. 

"3i.y^. — Had a delightful sleep. Men much 
refreshed. Letter from Commissioner at Ludhiana, 
inviting us all to him. Marched at 7 p.m. 



ON THE MARCH 139 

" \st June. — Reached Ludhiana, 24 miles, at 
3 A.M., and at once composed ourselves to sleep till 
daybreak at the foot of the Kutcherry steps, the 
lowest step serving as a pillow. Awoke by Nicolas 
standing over us and announcing Ricketts' house was 
a mile distant. Greatly comforted, we went to 
Ricketts' ; a thoroughly warm and hearty welcome ; 
splendid quarters, large grand house, books, reviews, 
rods, guns, all strewed about ; the temperature 
enjoyable, tatties, cold water, iced ginger-beer, cold 
sheets to lie on ; it was like the first day on the hills 
to a man who has galloped through the sun from the 
plains. Ricketts,* a pleasant, bold fellow, looking 
the difficulties of the times in the face like a man. 
Ludhiana would explode if a spark were to go up 
elsewhere ; small chance for Ricketts and _ his few 
friends, with their jagirdar horse, should this be the 
case. Marched on Alawi-ke-Serai at 7.30 p.m., 
distance 28 miles. 

"2nd. — Got a sight of the Serai soon after 
daybreak. Had two hours' sleep off the reel, and was 
much refreshed. The men very cheery. The plan of 
getting a cup of tea at our halt at midnight is a great 
break. Officers and men fall to sleep on the ground 
for an hour, and the difficulty is, who shall remain 
awake to sound the trumpet. Off to Rajpoora, 
distance 28 miles, at 7 this evening. 

" Z'>'d. — Reached the old Serai with the cavalry at 
dawn, just as the light was breaking ; to sleep at once 
under a wall so as to prevent the sun's early inter- 
ference. He rises full of fire and heat now. Com- 
fortable quarters in the old Serai. The men sleeping 
and eating about. Started for Umballa at 6 p.m. ; 
marched through the Cantonment at i A.M., every 
house deserted — chowkidar alert in each compound. 
Patrols of the Patiala Raja's sowars going ' rounds ' 
with lighted matches — a large encampment of these 
fellows about. Our guide took us down to the 
' Boobial Tope.' Magnificent trees, under which a 
score of horses can stand free from the sun, and a 
large tank ; altogether a beautiful spot. We all laid 

* For an account of Ricketts' gallant and resourceful proceedings, 
see Kaye's Sepoy War, vol. ii., p. 506 et seq. He received the C.B. 



140 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

down to rest by the trunk of an old banyan tree. A 
few weeks ago how hard and strange we should have 
thought thus sleeping in the open without any other 
pillow than a stone; now our great object is to get 
down, sleep is never far from us. When daylight 
came, we saw houses around us outside the park. 
Soon I was disturbed by a gentleman on horseback 
come to give help in moving the corps and carriages 
for the men. 

'' \tk — Marched to Pipli, 26 miles, by 4.30 this 
morning. Road very heavy. Heard last evening 
from Barnes, the Commissioner, of the affair with the 
Meerut Force. The last attack made on them was 
as much as they could manage to beat off. Succour 
needed by them, as they could not and would 
not give an inch, though pressed by numbers, in 
want of ammunition, and exhausted by fatigue and 
heat. 

" ^th. — Piplj. Arrived at dawn. Road heavy. 
Spent the day in the tahsil, and marched for Karnal, 
24 miles, at sunset. Joined by Khan Singh Rosa.*' 

"6th. — Reached Karnal at 3 a.m. Cholera 
appeared amongst us this evening and attacked three 
Gurkhas ; i cook died, 7 or 8 men under its pressure by 
sunset ; obliged to leave 5 men behind. A requisition 
from the magistrate to burn and destroy three 
villages by way of keeping the road open ; told him I 
would engage that the doing so vyould close it 
to-morrow, unless troops should remain ; they would 
be irritated and desperate. The magistrate, however, 
pressing, and, as I learnt that open outrages had been 
committed by one village, I moved off with less 
compunction." 

The requisition of the magistrate, Mr Le Bas, was 
strongly backed by Sir Theophilus Metcalfe. A day 
was occupied in punishing the villages ; the Guides 
had I man killed and 3 wounded. The delay 
made the Guides miss the action of Badli-ki-Serai. 
On the morning of the 8th June, they had reached 

* Khan Singh Rosa had fought against us at Chillianwalla in 
command of a cavahy regiment, see pages 69 and 146. 



A FINE ACHIEVEMENT 141 

Larsauli, 32 miles; "cholera lighter." Edwardes, 
writing on that day, said : — 

"We are all delighted at the march the Guides 
have been making. It is the talk of the border. I 
hope the men will fill their pockets in the sack of 
Delhi. Herewith some more chits from Kandahar. 
We are reorganising the native army [ The Supreme 
Government seems to have disappeared. Bring back 
some standards from the palace — especially Bahadur 
Shah's trousers." 

On the (^th June the Guides joined the Delhi 
Force. "Their stately height and martial bearing* 
made all who saw them proud to have such aid. 
They came in as firm and light as if they had 
marched but a mile." The orders of the day by 
Major-General Sir H. Barnard, in announcing the 
arrival of the Guides, said that the corps had 
"marched from Marden to Delhi, a distance of 
580 miles, in twenty-two days — a march to which 
Sir H. Barnard believes there is no parallel on 
record." The march, which was made at the hottest 
time of the year, has, in fact, always been regarded 
as one of the most notable achievements of the war. 

As the Guides approached the Ridge after a march 
of 30 miles, a staff officer galloped up — " How soon 
can you be ready to go into action?" "In half an 
hour." Edwardes wrote : — 

"The Guides made surprising efforts. They 
started six hours after the receipt of orders, fully 
equipped for service, and marched 580 miles, fifty 
marches, in twenty-two days with three halts made 
by order. Three hours after their arrival at Delhi 
they were engaged hand-to-hand with the enemy, 
and every single British officer was more or less 
wounded." 

* From The Siege of Delhi, by One who Served There, p. 89. 



142 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

Daly wrote to his wife : — 

" qM June. — Camp before Delhi. We marched 
in this morning', getting a hearty welcome from the 
camp. The fire of the enemy is very light ; very 
different from Multan. The affair yesterday was 
brilliant enough ; we should have been in time for it 
but for the village campaign ! The men are in great 
spirits." 

His diary entry for the day was : "The regiment 
hotly engaged. Battye* mortally wounded — noble 
Battye, ever in front ; Khan Singh Rosa hard hit ; 
Hawes dipt across the face with a sword, and many 
good men down. Men behaved heroically, impetu- 
ously." Daly had his horse killed under him, and was 
struck in the leg by a spent bullet. Kennedy also was 
slightly hurt. In a letter to Daly, Edwardes said : — 

" Amidst all our joy at the march and brave deeds 
of the Guides, we are greatly grieved to hear of poor 
young Battye's death. He was full of hope and 
promise, and is indeed a flower fallen from the chaplet 
of our Indian Army." 

"Poor gallant Battye!" wrote Daly to his wife. 
"There was some slight hope on the morning of the 
loth, though none on the evening, of his wound. I 
never saw a bolder or truer soldier. He was shot by 
a fellow within a couple of yards of him, right through 
the lower part of the stomach. I believe he had two 
or three wounds. I did not see it occur ; he was on 
my right. The last time I saw him in the fight I 
shouted to him, 'Gallant Battye, well done, brave 
Battye.' He was buried the day after our arrival, 
and at about the time we marched past the burial 
ground the day before." 

The general facts connected with the "siege" of 
Delhi are well known. On the death of the Com- 
mander-in-Chief, General Anson, at Kurnal on the 
* See p. 366. 




#^ 



TOOLERAM. A GOURKA IN THE GUIDE CORPS. 



ITo face p. 142. 



BEFOEE DELHI 143 

27th May 1857, General Sir H. Barnard succeeded 
to the command. He continued the advance on 
Delhi ; was joined at Alipore on the 7th June by the 
Meerut Force under Brigadier Wilson ; fought the 
successful action of Badli-ki-Serai on the 8th, and 
on the same day took up his position on the 
celebrated "Ridge" before Delhi. His force con- 
sisted of about 3000 European troops, Reid's 
Gurkhas (the Sirmoor battalion), the Guides (who 
joined on the Qth), and a few other native troops. 
The first considerable reinforcement to arrive was a 
contingent sent by the Maharaja of Jaipur ; then 
followed a small column from the Punjab of 850 men, 
chiefly natives, with 4 European horse artillery guns, 
on the 23rd June. Four days later came the first 
substantial aid from the Punjab, 2 700 men, of whom 
about half Europeans. The total of effectives before 
Delhi on the 8th July was returned as 6600 men. 

On the 5th July Sir H. Barnard died, and was 
succeeded by General Reed, who, however, was 
invalided on the 17th July, the command then 
passing to Brigadier-General Archdale Wilson. 

During a considerable portion of June and July 
the condition of the British force more nearly 
resembled that of a besieged than of a besieging 
army. Of the numbers of the enemy it is impossible 
to form any reliable estimate, but they were continue 
ally receiving additions to their strength, and from 
first to last the total of trained sepoys who 
entered Delhi must have been at least 40,000 men. 
Throughout the early weeks of the siege the diffi- 
culties and anxieties of the British were greatly 
enhanced by the absence of any reliable intelligence 
as to what was proceeding down country, and by the 



144 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

terrible tales of the outrages committed at Cawnpore 
and elsewhere. The tide turned in the middle of 
August with the arrival of the Punjab Column under 
Nicholson, who, on the 26th August, achieved a 
brilliant success at Najafgarh. The heavy siege 
guns reached the Ridge on the 4th September ; the 
last troops from Meerut on the 6th ; the Kashmir 
contingent on the 8th. The assault was delivered on 
the 1 3th September, and the Palace was in our hands 
and resistance at an end on the 20th September. 

Throughout these months, mainly owing to the 
loyal and active assistance of the Sikh chiefs of 
Pataila, Nabha, and Jhind, there was practically no 
interruption in communications between the Delhi 
Force and Upper India. To and from Simla the 
post plied with great irregularity, and the subjoined 
comments on the progress of events are mainly 
taken from Daly's letters * to his wife. 

The Guides were posted on the right of the 
Ridge, where, besides taking their share in the 
general operations, they held with the Gurkhas the 
position and outposts in and round Hindu Rao's 
house. During the siege the enemy delivered twenty- 
six separate attacks on this part of our line. One 
attack on the ist-2nd August lasted the whole night 
and day. From the 6th to the 1 3th August there 
was "constant worrying night and day." 

On hearing of the fighting on the 9th June, Sir 
John Lawrence at once wrote to Daly : — 

_ " I was glad to get your letter of the lOth, and 
rejoiced to hear how admirably the Guides have 

* Daly's letters and diaries were placed at the disposal of Kaye, 
when writing his History of the Sepoy War, which contains many 
quotations from Daly's writings. 



LETTER FROM JOHN LAWRENCE 145 

behaved. Poor Battye, we all grieve for him greatly. 
We are sending you every man we can muster — 
Rothney's Sikhs, Coke's regiment, and some Punjab 
cavalry — also a regiment and a half of Europeans 
and some 200 artillerymen. We are getting Hughes' 
cavalry also up, and will push it on also, I hope. I 
have seen from the first that native tfoops would 
be greatly wanted at Delhi : but for General 
Johnstone's * folly, Rothney's Sikhs and Nicholson's! 
cavalry would have been with you by this. I have 
offered to send either Chamberlain or Nicholson to 
headquarters, whichever General Reed likes. The 
one who remains to command the Movable Column. 
Both are first-rate soldiers, good in council, and 
strong in fight. I wish we had a few others like 
them. 

" Pray tell the Guides how delighted I am with 
their good conduct. If I can do anything for you in 
any way, pray command me. 

"We are all quiet here, but Peshawar has given 
us, and must give us, great anxiety. We are obliged 
to place troops there, which would be of the highest 
value down below. We have three European regi- 
ments, 24 guns, Wilde's and Vaughan's regiments of 
infantry; — not one of the native infantry or Hindu- 
stani corps of cavalry are to be trusted. 

"You will have heard of the Jullundhur mutiny. 
The rebels started for Loodhianah, a distance of but 
25 miles, General Johnstone in pursuit and a river in 
front of the mutineers. He allowed every man to 
escape across, though they were more than thirty 
hours doing this. And this is the man whom you 
will probably see commanding a division at Delhi 
before long. 

"On hearing of this, I sent off an express to dis- 
arm the 62nd and 69th at Multan, who had been 
giving signs of being about to show their teeth. It 
was effected by Crawford Chamberlain with his own 
corps. Green's, and Hughes', without the aid of a 
European soldier. These are the kind of men we 
want in command of our troops. When I see some 

* See Kaye's Sepoy War, vol', ii., p. 507. 

t Charles Nicholson, brother of John, to whom is the reference 
immediately below. 

K 



146 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

of the men we entrust with our troops, I almost think 
that a curse from the Almighty is on us." 

The following day (i6th June) Lawrence wrote : — 

" Many thanks for your notes. You are a capital 
correspondent. We are all greatly grieved to hear of 
poor Quintin Battye's death ; but from the moment 
we found he was shot in the stomach, we feared he 
was gone. I enclose a letter from Sirdar Nehal 
Singh to Khan Singh Rosa. I wrote yesterday to 
Khan Singh myself, praising him for his good con- 
duct, and promising to provide for his family in the 
event of his death. I also have given him looo 
rupees for his expenses. What pay does he get? or 
does he get any ? Let me know how this is managed. 
We are sending all the reinforcements we can muster. 
They should be fully equal to lOOO European in- 
fantry, 200 artillery, 1000 native infantry, and 400 
or soo horse. And all ought to be at Delhi in a 
fortnight, say by the i st of July, and some earlier. The 
Punjab Infantry is so tied by having to look after the 
frontier, including Peshawar and all the Poorbeah 
regiments, that it is not easy to send many more. 

" I shall recommend to Government that Kennedy 
succeed Battye ; get him put in orders. Look out for 
some smart young fellow to join the corps and act as 
adjutant. If there be any one in camp you fancy, 
General Reed will let you have him, I expect. If he 
is elsewhere, let me know. 

"We are all well on the Peshawar frontier, and 
indeed elsewhere. But we have to look sharp, and 
rule with an iron hand. 

"About 50 Guides, horse and foot, start from this 
for Delhi this evening." 

By the mid-day post on the igth June, Daly wrote 
to his wife : — 

" We are making advances and have batteries in 
an advanced position nearly ready to open. I hope 
much from these. The walls are brittle, so are the 
hearts of the defenders. If our reinforcements would 



DALY SEVEEELY WOUNDED 147 

appear, the blow would not, could not, be distant. I 
feel sure that the defence will be poor. I have just 
been with Sir Harry Barnard, who sent for me to 
consult about cutting off the Jullundhur mutineers, of 
which I_ fear there is but a slight chance. We are 
very quiet, nothing but the occasional boom of an 1 8- 
pounder or the smash of a shell. We have consider- 
able reinforcements from a native prince, the Raja of 
Jaipur. They are Rajputs, adepts in looting, but I 
suspect not favourably inclined to close fighting. 
There are 3000 infantry and a large body of 
cavalry ; this will help us in investing the place at 
any rate." 

The same evening Daly was very severely 
wounded. It was at Nawabgunge, and there was 
not during the siege a more perilous hour. Daly 
himself afterwards gave this description of the 
action : — 

"At a time when every available British bayonet 
was engaged in the front, the enemy, under cover of 
the thick foliage, a large body of all arms, moved 
round to our right and rear. The move was a 
surprise which almost overwhelmed us. We had 
nothing at first but a portion of the gth Lancers, the 
Guide Cavalry, and 4 guns, wherewith to meet and 
repel the attack. Sir Hope Grant, who was in com- 
mand, divided his small body (for the ground was 
broken and thick with gardens and trees) and 
detached me to the left with 2 of Major Tombs' 
guns under Lieutenant Hills, a troop gth Lancers, 
and the Guides Cavalry. I quickly found myself in 
the presence of a powerful force, with 6 or 8 guns 
in position immediately to my front, and a mass of 
infantry and cavalry. Knowing that there was 
nothing to fall back on, I directed Lieutenant Hills 
at once to get his guns into action, and detached all 
but a handful of Guides, which I left with the guns, to 
clear the left flank already threatened by the enemy's 
cavalry. We were thus barely holding our own, Sir 
Hope hotly engaged on my right, when Major 
Tombs came up with the remainder of his guns. 



148 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

The enemy, observing our weakness and the absence 
of infantry, were now closing on us in such numbers 
that Major Tombs said to me, ' I fear I must ask you 
to charge to save my guns.' I was the only British 
officer with the cavalry, a few Guides only; with 
these I broke through the infantry and reached the 
enemy's guns. This diversion cleared our front, and 
gave time for the arrival of reinforcements." 

Daly received a bullet through his left shoulder, 
and that arm was crippled for life, though he retained 
the use of the hand. As he lay on the ground in the 
rapidly gathering dusk, his men at first failed to find 
him, but his whereabouts was pointed out to them by 
one of the enemy who who had served in the ist 
Oudh Irregular Cavalry.* He was thus more for- 
tunate than Yule, commanding the gth Lancers, of 
whom Daly observed a few days later — "Poor Yule! 
I knew him well ; he came up after I was down ; 
He trotted by me as I lay on the ground. It was 
quite dusk. He ought not to have been killed. The 
darkness did it. I fear he was left but wounded. 
The enemy prowled about the field during the night 
and found him there." About the same time Becher, 
the Quarter-Master-General, was wounded, and Sir 
Hope Grant escaped only by holding on to the tail of 
his orderly's horse. The guns served against us 

* This was a man of whom Mrs Daly, had written in November 
1856:— "There is a young Shahzadah (prince) in this regiment (the 
1st Oudh I.e.) a grandson or nephew of Shuja-ul-MuIk. A hand- 
some, elegant boy of eighteen, pale and delicate, with beautiful eyes, 
a very interesting-looking lad. Henry took him from great poverty. 
The grandson of a king, he is thankful to be a jemadar (cornet) in a 
regiment with £i,o a year. Henry has taken quite a fancy to him, has 
him into the house to talk to him, gives him quinine, etc." In 1859, 
she added a marginal note in her diary—" This poor boy had a sad 
fate ; he joined the rebels, almost from compulsion. At Delhi when 
Henry was wounded, he told some of the Guides where the Sahib lay. 
He was afterwards hanged, I fear on the taking of Delhi." 



THE V.C. EARNED 149 

included those of Abbott's battery, which had formed 
part of the "illustrious garrison" of Jalalabad, and 
which bore the mural crown. Daly wrote : " It was 
pitch dark when we retired from the field ; otherwise 
we should have taken every gun they brought out. 
One gun and two carriages were taken the following 
morning, when, at my suggestion, the General sent 
out a party to sweep the ground." 

It was generally felt that Daly had fully earned the 
V.C, and that same evening General Barnard, when 
visiting him, personally expressed regret that the 
V.C. was not open to officers in the East India 
Company's Service. Early in 1859, when the V.C. 
had been thrown open to the Company's officers, 
Sir Hope Grant strongly recommended Daly to 
Lord Clyde for the decoration. Tombs wrote to 
Daly :— 

" I have a very vivid remembrance of the 
occurrences of the 19th June 1857, in which you 
were severely wounded. Two of my guns were in 
action on the road leading through the Sabzi Mandi, 
and were supported by the late Major Yule's troops 
of 9th Lancers and some of your men. The enemy 
had possession of the ground to our right front, 
gardens and high mud-banks ; and taking advantage 
of these latter, gradually crept closer and closer to 
the guns — so close, indeed, as to be able to pick off 
my gunners as they worked the guns, and rendering 
it almost impossible to serve them. I recollect 
perfectly asking you to charge, and at the time I felt 
the guns must be lost unless you did so, for it was 
impossible for me to retire without compromising 
our troops, who were, as I supposed, advancing on 
my right on the other side of the Ochterlony Garden. 
I did not actually witness your charge, but I saw 
you brought back severely wounded a few minutes 
afterwards, and I have no hesitation in saying that in 
all human probability that charge saved the guns 



150 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

frpm falling into the hands of the enemy for the time ; 
I had so many casualties that I could not have 
moved my guns without assistance." 

Hills wrote : — 

"We were in a very nasty position, and the 
enemy were very close to the guns and doing us great 
damage with their sharpshooters. Daly's charge 
was a desperate one, right up to the enemy's guns. 
It was a most perilous and bold movement, but 
necessary to save the guns." 

Sir Hope Grant wrote to Daly : — 

" I trust the Victoria Cross may be bestowed 
upon you. No one has deserved it better. The 
charge you made on the 19th June was of the most 
serious importance, as there was no time during the 
whole siege that we had such difficulties to contend 
with, or were so nearly annihilated." 

The reply to Sir Hope was : — 

"His Excellency has been obliged to decline for- 
warding claims of this sort made so long after the 
occurrence for which the claim is preferred." 

Hope Grant then informed Daly privately : — 

"I know Lord Clyde thinks an officer who is 
eligible for the Bath — which you have got — ought 
not to get the Victoria Cross. He thinks it ought 
not to be given to a higher rank than captain." * 

When Daly was disabled, the active command of 
the Guides was at first entrusted to Hodson, who had 
previously served with the corps and was known to 
the men. Hodson held the acting command for about 
five weeks, and was then succeeded by Shebbearne. 
Daly, though unable to move, still regulated all regi- 
* In 1859, when this was written, Daly was a brevet lieut.-colonel. 



THE ENEMY DEMOEALIZED 151 

mental matters and was able to maintain a regular 
correspondence. He wrote to his wife : — 

" 2Ath June. — The Sikh corps which arrived 
yesterday have already given the enemy a taste of 
their quality. Yesterday, firing continued throughout 
the day ; the enemy came out in great force, sniping 
and occupying gardens and suburbs ; their loss was 
immense. The consequence is not a shot has been 
fired to-day as yet. They get a sickener of fighting 
if they attack, and take to looting till the arrival of 
fresh troops. It is the mighty arsenal and the 

Erestige of the place which gives them strength. I 
ave a native officer in the city now. He was in 
for four days and came out. He gives a lamentable 
account of the state of the city. Dissension and 
mutiny among themselves ; robbing and fighting, and 
everything that is bad. Sundil Knan was on leave, 
and came to join me here. 

" 2 5^^-;— Chamberlain* arrived yesterday with 
my old friend Walker. 

" The Raja of J hind's men do well ; they had little 
fighting where I was, though. 

" 2%th June. — We had our first fall of rain 
yesterday ; a heavy storm ushering in the rains ; 
to-day it is cloudy, with the sun beaming throug;h 
upon us. More reinforcements marched in this 
morning — guns and Europeans. A meeting of the 
engineers and leaders has been held, and I have no 
doubt soon we shall strike our blow. Coke must be 
within a day or two. He is 700 strong ; men inured 
to fighting, and better up to this work than most 
Europeans, who are beaten by the sun, and who 
expose themselves in their white shirt sleeves in a 
cruel way. 

" \st July. — Good news from below. An officer 
rode in from Agra to-day. All well there. General 
Wheeler marching with European corps to its aid ; 
from this we infer that all must be well at Lucknow, 
as he would not otherwise leave Cawnpore." 

Daly's wound, of which he endeavoured to make 

* Colonel (afterwards Sir Neville) Chamberlain joined as Adjutant- 
General. 



152 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

light, had called forth many anxious inquiries, and 
about this time he received the two following- 
letters : — 

From Edwardes, Peshawar, 30th June 1857 : — 

" We all hope you are getting — or got — ;well. 

"These are not times in which (with Lord 
Brougham's dedication to the Marquess of Wellesley) 
we can apostrophise — 'The rare felicity of England ; 
so rich in talent and capacity for affairs that she can 
spare from her service such men as' — you. 

"Is that 'Lieutenant Chalmers of the Guides' 
who got wounded on 27th June, young Chalmers of 
51st Native Infantry? If so, he is a good fellow. I 
only sent him to Pindi, and didn't expect he would 
turn up so soon at Delhi." 

From Sir John Lawrence, 4th July 1857 : — 

"Ever since I heard you were not in danger I 
have been entirely satisfied. I am much afraid that 
the poor Guides have suffered greatly. What with 
the enemy and cholera their ranks must have been 
fearfully thinned. I have sent you down some 200 
picked Punjabis, mounted on horses of the 6th and 
8th Cavalry, under Lieutenant Bayley. This will be 
a grand reinforcement for your cavalry. 

"We are keeping all quiet in the Punjab, and 
exerting ourselves to get up a decent force by the 
cold weather. But I do not like to overdo the thing. 
For we have barely 5000 Europeans in the Punjab ; 
and it is just possible that we may have the Punjabis 
even against us, if this style of thing goes on much 
longer. We have not heard a word from below, I 
mean from Calcutta, kter than the gth of June. 
There should, by this time, be ten European 
regiments below Meerut. This is a goodly array, 
and had we got them at the beginning of the affair, 
it would have altered its present aspect most con- 
siderably. I hope that in another fifteen days we 
shall hear of the arrival of the China troops. If you 
cannot write, get some one to do so for you, and 
let us know what force the Guides muster. Upwards 



AWAITING REINFOECEMENTS 153 

of a hundred furlough men must have joined since 
you marched. Try and get the Guides to keep 
themselves clean and dry. These precautions are 
great safeguards against cholera." 

In the latter part of June the difficulties of the 
force before Delhi were at their height, and it was 
decided to attempt no offensive move until rein- 
forcements arrived. Edwardes wrote to Lawrence 
on the 26th June: "The Empire's reconquest hangs 
on the Punjab." On the 28th June, General Barnard 
wrote to Sir John Lawrence: "So far, we have not 
silenced a single gun, and they return us to this day 
at least four to one." Lawrence was then seriously 
considering a withdrawal from Peshawar in order 
to free for the field the troops which were in garrison 
there. The decision was, however, to retain Peshawar, 
and this was fully endorsed by the first message 
which came through from Lord Canning (isth July) : 
" Hold on to Peshawar to the last." 

With the commencement of July a more confident 
spirit prevailed at Delhi, as is shown by Daly's letters 
and diary : — 

" 3^^ /ufy. — Our force here is now a splendid 
one. Delhi should have been ours this morning! 
Everything was arranged ; plans drawn ; regiments 
told off (they did not know it) ; when information 
was brought that the Bareilly F9rce, which is 
encamped outside, would do their initiative fighting * 
this morning, and this upset the scheme ! 

" Rain fell last night ; it was cloudy and would 
have enabled our troops to approach all unseen, and 

* Elsewhere Daly explained : " The fights which occur outside 
are with new arrivals of mutineers ; they are not allowed to enter the 
city till they have shown their pluck. It is said that out of the large 
body we met on the night of the 19th, not one hundred found their 
way in ; they were so beaten and dispersed." 



154 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

there was dissension amongst the mutineers.^ No 
attack has been made on us, though Delhi was 
spared (!) to enable them to do so. 

"The attack would have been made just before 
daylig-ht. Now the moon and the day meet, so the 
difficulty of creeping up is increased. 

" Few in camp know what was intended. 

" ^th July. — Last night late, we got information 
that a large party, 4000 or 5000 cavalry and infantry 
with some guns, had marched out in the direction 
of Alipore, 8 miles on the Karnal road, with a 
view to cutting up a little post of ours there. Well, 
they went : they had not the pluck so to attack the 
small detachment there as to get at them. Coke, with 
his own corps, 350 Europeans, and Charlie Blunt's 
troop, marched off at 3 this morning to endeavour 
to cut them off returning. The cowardly loons would 
not stand for a moment. Coke opened his guns on 
them, but, despite their strength, no sooner did he 
get within 500 or 600 yards of them than they bolted, 
pitching away shoes, belts, etc. They were in red. 
Little honour do they do us in fighting. They never 
stand. 

"The new engineer. Colonel Baird Smith, has 
arrived, very tired. Until he has made himself 
acquainted with the place nothing will be done. He 
is said to be a very able man. Rest assured of this, 
whenever the assault shall occur, the enemy will not 
stand. 

" 5th July. — -General Barnard has an attack of 
cholera from which it is feared the brave, kindly, old 
man cannot rally ; this will be a general grief, for, 
however wavering and undecided as an officer, there 
never was a man so made to win people's hearts by 
kindness and unselfishness. 

" 6th July. — Poor General Barnard died yester- 
day. No doubt, on him, like General Anson, worry 
and anxiety laid the seeds of the destroyer. He was 
the very gamest, kindest, and kindliest gentleman I 
ever met. He had no mind, no resolution save what 
he got from others. General Reed assumes the 
command himself nominally. He has no health, no 
anything, to enable him to do of himself Poor 
General Barnard's advisers were all who spoke to 



THE KING OF DELHI'S TEEMS 155 

him. I think Chamberlain is likely to lead and to be 
trusted by General Reed. So far, it may be a great 
improvement. 

"There was a terrific storm which lasted nearly 
throughout the night. The sun is now shining, and 
lights up the camp picturesquely ; it is a pretty sight 
to see the soldiers of the various corps in front of 
their tents amusing themselves, chatting in groups, 
jumping, and throwing round-shot, as though nothing 
serious was going on, nor has it ever occurred to 
them that there was anything doubtful in the conflict. 
Scarcely a shot has been fired to-day. There was a 
good deal of disturbance in the city, rowing amongst 
themselves. You must not allude to it, but the king 
is trying to make terms, and has asked, 'would his 
pension be guaranteed, etc' Him away, the prestige 
of the matter is smashed ; still I would grant him 
never a promise till his submission shall be full. 

"7/^. — Three engineers concocted the scheme* 
which was to have come off on the 12th June, the first 
of which I told you, a few days after my arrival. 
Greathed was the prime mover in what was as 
desperate and wild a plan as was ever concocted ; 
the other engineer, a very clever fellow, although he 
signed the paper, said afterwards he could not 
possibly see his way through it. 

" The plan concocted the other night will eventually 
be adopted. It is by Taylor and Walker. The 
moon is the great obstacle now. From all we can 
gather, the country is certainly quieter, and my 
own belief is that the fall of Delhi would soon smash 

* This refers to the proposal for a coup-de-main immediately after 
the force arrix^ed before Delhi. A copy of the scheme, in what appears 
to be rough draft form, is among Daly's papers. It is headed 
" Project of attack on the City of Delhi, prepared for submission to 
Major-General Sir H. Barnard, K.C.B.," and is dated " Camp Delhi 
Cantonment, i ith June 1857." The scheme is quoted, almost in extenso, 
at pages 526-7 of the History of the Sepoy War, vol. ii., where Kaye 
tells that it was signed by four subalterns — Wilberforce Greathed, 
Maunsell and Chesney of the Engineers, and Hodson. Barnard 
accepted the scheme. The troops were warned and the attempt was 
to be made. But when the selected force was assembling soon after 
midnight on the nth, it was found that some of the troops had not 
arrived and the venture was necessarily postponed. 



156 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

the whole outbreak. The arsenal has been their 
stronghold; without it they are little powerful, for 
they would never stand, even at lo to i, against our 
troops in the field. 

''(^th July. — We have had a lively morning.* 
About lo this morning, just as the rain had 
commenced to drizzle, a party of cavalry was seen 
near our out battery. The cavalry was not fired at, 
though the artilleryman had a lighted portfire; he 
deemed them our own ; they moved round to our 
rear and there again were thought to be ours, and 
unmolested. At last fifteen or twenty rushed over 
the Canal Bridge into our camp and shouted to 
some native artillerymen then horsing their guns to 
join them. The cavalry men began to cut away at 
the horses' ropes in the lines. Our _ men rushed out 
of their tents, but had a difficulty in firing because 
our native horse artillery (who had been snouted to 
by these fellows) were between our fire. The 
artillerymen called out to our men, ' Never mind us, 
don't spare them, fire away.' They were soon 
polished off. A large force of cavalry was out, but a 
small portion only made the rush. 

" They have beenjquiet for days and we were quite 
prepared for a row to-day, and but for the rain, 
doubtless they would have come out, for they were 
outside the gate in the morning with guns and 
elephants. I had quite calculated on seizing some of 
their guns to-day, though they are ' mighty ' careful 
of 'em, as old Pepys would have written, and keep 
them at a great distance from us. 

"I had a letter from Sir Colin (Campbell) 
yesterday ; he says ten European corps are below 
Agra, viz. : loth, 43rd, 35th, 84th, Madras Fusiliers, 
64th, 78th, one Ceylon regiment, 53rd, 32nd; in 
another fifteen days we should hear of the China 
troops, ;which, with marines, ought to give us 5000 
men more. 

" \oth July. — The affair of yesterday was much 
more serious and much more successful than I 
anticipated. The loss of the enemy, killed and 

* It was in the scrimmage of the 9th July that Tombs and Hills 
won the Victoria Cross. — Kaye's Sepoy War, vol. ii., p. 575 etseq. 



FEESH TROOPS ON THE WAY 157 

wounded, could not be less than looo; this estimate, 
from what we can gather, is far from exag-gerated. 
Outside one little post, held by a company of the 
Guides, between 80 and 90 of the enemy's bodies were 
counted. I have no doubt this has been a heavy 
lesson to them. Still Chamberlain is a queer fellow, 
and very likely will make no assault till he learns of 
troops closing- up from below. He argues that their 
dissensions increase and their strength fades away ; 
that except in the vicinity of Delhi things are quieting 
down, and that by delay we shall have less loss. 

" nth July. — We are looking out to hear some- 
thing certain of movements below. There must now 
be several corps in the vicinity of Cawnpore, and may 
be we shall hear of a couple of them at least marching 
up to make a diversion for us. Whether they will 
find us outside or inside is a problem. My own 
opinion, which is that of every engineer officer, is 
that the assault should have taken place, as was 
arrang^ed, on the morning following the arrival of 
Coke and the fresh troops (the 6ist and 8th). 
Numbers are of no service in a city ; 500 disciplined 
men are more likely to do good work in a street 
than sooo. ' Them's my sentiments,' and they are 
not singular in the camp. We have lots of good 
men and true, though heaps and heaps of muffs and 
old women, and not a few of these unfortunately in 
places of responsibility. Scarcely a shot has been 
fired to-day. The enemy were employed for hours 
in carrying off their dead and wounded, yet many, 
many of the former remained on the field. 

" \6j.hjuly. — A Sikh of my Oudh corps came in 
yesterday bearing letters from Agra. He confirrns 
the report of corps having reached Cawnpore. It is 
said six regiments have arrived there. At any rate 
the Delhi people, who know the news down to 
Calcutta, have it that ' the British have re-established 
their rule at Cawnpore and Futtehgarh, and that 
troops are moving up.' Chamberlain has resolved on 
making no assault till troops arrive, and no doubt 
troops will be here soon. He is in capital spirits, and 
convinced that he is adopting the wisest course. It 
may be wise now, but it was a gross blunder deferring 
the assault after the arrival of Coke, 6ist, and 8th. 



158 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

It is not merely this place but it would have smashed 
Rebellion. The fall of this place, if not too longf 
deferred, will effect wonders. Ferozepore, Phillour, 
Agra, Allahabad, and Delhi are our magazines; 
three of these have strong forts ; these magazines 
and Loqdianah contain all our reserve artillery, 
ammunition, and arms. At first our fears were 
strong that Agra, Phillour, and Allahabad had fallen 
into their hands. All these places would stand 
sieges, and we should be without the means of firing 
a round at them! We found that by wondrous 
fortune these forts were saved to us ; yet the 
mutineers had attempted all of them! Phillour,* 
whence our supplies for this siege are brought, was 
saved by an hour and a night's march ; Agra by 
stratagem ; Allahabad in the presence of the rebels. 
Fortune and Providence befriended us, not our own 
foresight or wisdom. When news of their safety 
reached us, I felt the worst was over. Without these 
arsenals we should have been in sore difficulties. 
Cantonments are destroyed — no great matter. The 
treacherous brutal murders, the lives of gallant and 
good men, of women fair and dear — these are terrible 
things ; but the light is visible through the darkness. 
There is little beyond Delhi which will cause us 
trouble and loss. Delhi is discomforted with the news 
of the fights and defeats at Cawnpore, and at the 
utter failure of their own thousands against our 
tens. 

"iSthJuly. — Yesterday I told you firing was 
going on. Well, the enemy having expended 
thousands of cartridges, at 3 p.m. our loss was three 
or four wounded ; the enemy began retreating. A 
force went out and, in the rush in driving the enemy 
in, got under the fire of the city walls. Chamberlain, 
who remained in camp till 4 p.m., now went out. He 
is a heroic, dashing fellow; he pursued. He was 
hit; arm broken. Walker, my friend, got a flesh 
wound through the thigh, and is not much damaged ; 
not so Chamberlain, but his arm will be saved, we 
hope. Tell Mrs Norman her husband t possesses 

* See Kaye's Sepoy War, vol. ii., p. 445. 

+ The late Field-Marshal Sir Henry Norman, G.C.B., etc. ; 
Viceroy-designate of India in 1839. 



CAMP PRICES 159 

the respect and goodwill, hearty goodwill, of every 
man in the camp, and the camp holds no better or 
more cheery soldier. He always does what is best 
at the time, and does it with a cheerful soldier's heart. 

" \TthJuly. — Poor General Reed leaves to-night. 
He never ought to have come here. Brigadier 
Wilson gets the command with the rank oi Brigadier- 
General. He is an artillery officer ; just a stout, 
gallant_ Englishman. I should not expect anything 
very distinguished from him, but always firmness 
and gallantry. He is decidedly the best we have. 
Chamberlain's tent is next to mine, and I see him 
often ; he is of heroic mould, gallant, and forward to a 
fault ; he is doing capitally ; he has always been a 
most temperate man. He has a fine, gallant-looking 
person ; tall, with a soldierly gait ; head well put on ; 
fine principles, and an honest heart ; most con- 
scientious. His education and reading had been 
narrow ; his views are more limited than they should 
be, and adhered to_ with an obstinate tenacity which 
neither reason nor justice can change. 

" \%thjuly. — All well with Sir Henry (Lawrence) 
on the 2nd at Lucknow. A portion of the 84th Foot 
was with him in addition to the 32 nd, and he was 
well able to hold out. I have just had a visit from Jai 
Singh, 1st P. C, who marched in this evening; not a 
little pleased he was. The Sikhs have been thoroughly 
staunch and firm throughout the country. At Jhelum 
they severed {themselves from their comrades in the 
14th, joined us, and attacked them. Men of the Oudh 
Cavalry on leave in the Punjab come in by single files. 

There are several buggies * about the camp, which 
may be seen every night in display up the main 
street, one palki ghari also. A buggy was sold the 
other day by auction, but a pot of jam nearly fetched 
as much. Some epicures bought tins of bacon at the 
rate of 4 rupees a mouthful, I believe. With all 
ordinary things we are well supplied; at one time 
fowls were unknown, but lately they have appeared. 
Grain is very cheap. When I want books I send to 
the lines and tell the men. Various descriptions turn 
up; amongst others, I have Scott's Poetry and the 
third volume of Macaulay's History. The health of 

* A sort of covered dogcart. 



160 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

the troops is excellent, much better than in quarters. 
All well at Agra a few days ago. 

"22>rd July. — We have had a fight in a new 
direction to-day, opposite the Cashmere Gate and 
towards Metcalfe's house. The enemy brought out 
guns and infantry, and opened a heavy fire on our 
battery. A detachment from Metcalfe's house made 
an attempt to get round to their rear, while engaged 
with firing on us, and so cut off their guns ;_ the 
detachment reached within 300 yards unperceived, 
and a column which moved down in front got within 
a lesser distance, but to no purpose. Pandy ho 
sooner saw that he was to be closed with than he put 
to his horses and fled helter-skelter across the glacis. 
I fancy our troops were too easy in the pursuit ; 
however, luckily our loss was slight ; killed and 
wounded estimated about twenty. Two officers who 
should not have been there, were hit ; one ari excellent 
officer, whose services are most valuable, is hors de 
combat for some time. Colonel Seaton. 

" The weather is cool and pleasant ; we have had 
two or three light showers ; extraordinary weather 
for the rains. Gulab Singh* has lent Sir John 10 
lakhs, money being scarce ; this is good, and shows 
how well the cunning old fox sees the game. 

" 2/^th July. — Tell Mrs Norman that it has been 
g-enerally resolved (by the General, too) that her hus- 
band's life is too valuable to the army to be subject to 
chance shots, and therefore it has been ordered, and 
he too has been ordered, that he is not to go to the 
advanced posts during operations. The other head- 
quarter people take care of themselves without orders ! " 

" 2Sth July. — The Punjab will send a large con- 

* Gulab Singh, " the Talleyrand of the East," was a Dogra 
Rajput ; he was raised to high office by Ranjit Singh, who conferred 
on him the Principality of Jamu. In the stormy times which followed 
Ranjit Singh^s death, Gulab Singh took a leading part in Punjab 
politics, and, in connection with the arrangements made under the 
Treaty of Lahore in 1846 (after our defeat of the Sikhs at Sobraon), 
Kashmir was made over to him by the British for a payment of a 
crore and a half of rupees (one and a half millions sterling), and he 
was recognised as a Ruling Chief. He died in the latter part of 
1857, and was succeeded by his son, Ranbir Singh. See also vol. ii., 
pp. 75-76, of Sir H. Lawrence's Adventures of an Officer, etc. 




It^aUi^r i^ ^aiualtsc. 



Plan of Delhi. 



ITofacep. 160. 



SYMPTOMS OF COMING SUCCESS 161 

tribution to us, a force larger than our present. 
Nicholson is already on the march. These troops 
may reach before those from below, and these latter 
may have to act elsewhere. 

" 2'jth July. — jThere is no doubt we have won a 
great victory at Fattehpur, just below Cawnpore, in 
beating the representative (adopted son) of the 
Peshwa ; we took 12 guns and 7 lakhs of treasure. 
This has come with authority from Agra, and 
Scindia, the Ruler of Gwalior, has sent his congratu- 
lations. I feared more from him than from anybody, 
but he is behaving nobly. He has kept his mutinous 
troops {our Contingent ! which we gave him to have 
drilled and disciplined !) in check. All the Independent 
States have behaved well towards us. Light is break- 
ing everywhere. 

" 2%th July. — I had a long cheery letter from Sir 
John last evening. All is well with Sir Henry ; his 
front was so stout and his preparations so vigorous, 
that I doubt if he was ever pressed. Reinforcements 
have gone to him. 

" 2(^th July. — The dark days are gone. I can 
scarce give you a better illustration of the change 
which is influencing the country than in the supplies 
which reach our camp ; on our first arrival the feeling 
that our rule was doomed and at an end was so 
widespread and so thoroughly believed that nobody 
brought in anything for sale ; sheep, poor and thin, 
could be had only at the commissariat, and at rupees 
5 each ! Grain 10 seers the rupee ! Fowls unknown. 
Now sheep are as common as were jackals at 
Sekrora ; grain is 4 s to 50 seers ; poultry of all kinds 
abundant ; boots, shoes, even macassar oil ! These 
are strong symptoms. The servants in camp have 
behaved marvellously well. I never knew them 
better. The mutineers are at loggerheads, and 
much dispirited at their failures so oft incurred in 
attack, and at the knowledge of our troops advancing 
from below. We know for certain that Lord Elgin 
has consented to the coming of the China troops. 
The steamers were off the coast of Malabar in the 
first week in June. They would be turned from 
Singapore, and I should think might be looked for 
in Calcutta about the last week in June. 



162 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

" -ifOth July. — You see with this mutiny how long 
it has been working- up. What warnings we have 
had. Remember our conversations at Lucknow : Sir 
Henry's opinion : my opinion of General Hearsay's * 
proceedings (vaunted and praised at home) : — our 
belief then that the whole army was rotten ; that no 
efforts were being- made to stem it. Remember Sir 
Henry's views the last day or two at Lucknow." 

About this time Daly received the following 
letters : — 

From Edwardes, Peshawar, 21st July : — 

" Yes. I daresay the assault would have suc- 
ceeded when your reinforcements first reached ; but 
like Sevastopol, it is possible that we may find that 
the protracted struggle and delay have been in our 
favour. The mutineers, instead of scattering over 
the country, have concentrated there and thrown 
themselves, in fight after fight, upon their fate. 
Depend upon it your army, though not taking Delhi, 
is performing no ignoble duty in destroying the 
battalions which possessed our discipline and betrayed 
it ! The mischief, which delay would cause, has been 
caused. There seems less necessity for a coup-de- 
main every week. I should be inclined now to take 
the other line, and spend the rains in killing mutineers 
— leaving the fortress for the opening of the winter 
campaign. 

"Here we have been most providentially quiet. 
When the Sepoy army mutinies, the frontier seems 
to take to peace. We have our little troubles, 
rumours, anxieties, and even fights, but as a mass 
the tribes seem to stand aloof and gape. 

"James and Vaughan are this morning attacking 
Narinji.f 

■*■ See Kaye's Sepoy War, vol. i., p. 524 et seg. 

t A good deal of trouble was at this time caused by the Hindustani 
fanatics under Maulavi Inayat Ali Khan. This culminated in a 
punitive expedition in April 1858, under the command of Sir Sydney 
Cotton. For an account of the Hindustani fanatics, see page 80 
et seg. of the Record of Expeditions against the North- West Frontier 
Tribes of India, by Paget and Mason (1885). 



HELP FKOM THE PUNJAB 163 

" I hope by your writing- you are nearly recovered. 
I _ do all I can for your men's families here. I have 
given severe wiggings to two or three fellows of yours 
who have come down lately from Kabul and Tirah, 
and they have gone off hot foot to Delhi swearing 
they are 'murids' (disciples : i.e., eagerly loyal)." 

From Sir John Lawrence, 25th July 1857 :^ — 

"You will see that we are sending down upwards 
of 4000 good and reliable troops, and not a Poorbeah 
among them. We hope that 1200 or 1300 will be 
Europeans. We have no more Europeans to give 
you unless we evacuate Peshawar. We have not 
more than 2200 this side of the Indus, of whom 
many are weakly men, and 300 of them not even 
arrived from Karachi. 

"We may gradually send you more natives, but 
no Europeans. I should hope, however, that these 
reinforcements will , suffice until troops arrive from 
below. We hear that Cawnpore has been reoccupied 
and Lucknow probably relieved. This should enable 
our troops to move on to Agra. From thence it ia 
but a short spell to Aligarh and Shahdarrah. _We 
might and should send some guns to effect a junction, 
and then advance and batter the Palace and river- 
side of Delhi, and effect a diversion at the moment of 
assault. A few heavy guns would soon make the 
Palace too hot for His Imperial Majesty, and create 
a great sensation. 

" If things go wrong at Delhi, and it be a question 
of more Europeans from this or a retreat, I am for 
evacuating Peshawar and Kohat, and sending the 
whole down. If we are beaten at Delhi and have to 
retreat, our army will be destroyed. Neither Pesha- 
war nor even the Punjab will then be of much good — 
both will go. Whereas the Peshawar and Kohat 
Force would give Europeans 3000, Punjab Regi- 
ments 5000, Multani Horse 1000 — 9000 — besides 
some 30, guns. Now in my mind such a force, 
brought into the field in time, will turn the tide, or at 
anyrate stem it until the cold weather. But such a 
force when _ the army before Delhi is gone, and the 
Punjab in insurrection will be swallowed up in the 



184 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

general whirlwind. I hope and expect that there will 
be no occasion for this sacrifice. But no man can 
say what is in store for us. And it is necessary that 
we take a statesmanlike view of the subject, apd 
decide on the line of policy to be followed ; otherwise 
when the time comes we shall be unable to act. 

" Read this to Chamberlain, and let me know his 
views. _ I am for holding- Lahore and Multan to 
extremity and no more, sending the women and 
children down to Karachi, if things go wrong at 
Delhi. Nicholson with H.M.'s S2nd must be across 
the Beas to-day." 

From Edwardes, 27th July 1857 : — 

" So Sir P. G. [Patrick Grant] has 'hove in sight ' 
at last ; and announced himself at Cawnpore on nth 
July with six European regiments for Delhi ! And 
our Fancy Man, Nicholson, has gone down from this 
side with his shirt sleeves up ; and so I hope this is 
the beginning of the end, and Delhi will be sur- 
rounded at last, and assailed and squashed. Let me 
know if you wish me to do anything in the recruiting 
line for you." 

From Edwardes, Peshawar, 29th July 1857 : — 

''Are you getting any ceriazn news of any rein- 
forcements from below, or not ? 

" We have heard publicly that Sir Patrick Grant 
with six European regiments was at Cawnpore 
directed 'to Delhi — with care,' on nth July. 
Privately we hear it is a false report. Truth probably 
midway. 

" Vaughan and James are again invited by Molvee 
Inayat Ali to keep the Eed at Narinji with him on 
Saturday— and we have sent out knives and forks 
and cold soiree. The Akhund * of Swat turns up his 
nose at these Hindustani Ghazis, and behaves himself 
like a gentleman. 

* The Badshah (King) of Swat, who had been set by the Akhund 
(religious leader), had died the very day (nth May) of the mutiny at 
Meerut, and the Swatis were too much occupied with their own 
affairs to give trouble. (See also footnote at p. 80.) 



NO NEWS FROM CAWNPOEE 165 

"We are intensely anxious about your force, and 
hope there really are succours coming to you from 
below, for we can do little more ; unless we abandon 
the frontier — which I believe would be fatal. 

"All well at Kandahar on 13th July. 

"Your soldiers never write to their fathers, 
mothers, or sweethearts — and a precious row I have 
at my house about it. If you would only send up 
some captured trophy you would do good." 

From Sir John Lawrence, 2nd August 1857 : — 

" I see the Kumaonis joined you this morning, 
and if you can only keep well, our other reinforce- 
ments will soon be up. _ Nicholson, with the 5 2nd 
and 6 1 st and Green's regiment and the new Punjab 
levy, will bring up more than 2000 men. He is now 
moving towards Umballa from Loodhiana. It has 
struck me that if you were to write to one of our 
Punjabis he might be raising men for the Guides. 
I see by the last return from Norman that you are 
very weak in infantry, though pretty well off in 
cavalry. By the way, did 50 sowars whom Lake 
sent down ever join you ? It was intended that they 
should do so. You will have heard of the flight of 
the greater part of the 26th from Meean Meer. 
They marched straight away in the middle of the 
day, and no one made any effort in cantonments to 
stop them. The C9untry people and police, however, 
intercepted and killed many of them ; some were 
drowned, and the rest taken and executed. Not 
above 100 can have escaped. 

"It is very odd our hearing no authentic intelli- 
gence from Cawnpore. By this time Havelock 
should be at Aligarh. I am afraid that Lucknow 
affairs have claimed his presence. The mail is in ; 
but on the 26th June the good folks in England do 
not seem to have realised our danger, or to have 
stirred their stumps to aid us effectually." 

The extracts from Daly's letters are resumed : — 

"2nd Aug'ust. — We have been employed lately 
in making the defences perfect, so that our men may 



166 THE GUIDES ANB DELHI 

hold them unexposed, yet well able to open on the 
meney a she approaches. The result of it was shown 
last nig-ht._ The fire was continued without interrup- 
tion, and is in fact still going- on in a mild way ; but 
during the night the peals of musketry were very 
heavy ; the enemy must have fired tens of thousands 
of rounds, besides round shot from the wall. Bugles 
were sounding all night in the city, and outside 
voices and shouting for the advance, but Pandy (this 
is the universal liame for the mutineers : Mangal 
Pandy was the first man tried and executed for 
mutiny) — Pandy has not increased his courage as 
the moon fell. I have not heard that we lost any 
one during the night, and since their firing has com- 
menced our killed and wounded does not exceed a 
dozen. We have had one sad loss; Travers* was 
peeping over a work and got shot in the forehead. 
He is not dead, but there is no hope of recovery. 
During the last twenty-four hours, despite the rounds 
and rounds by thousands which have been expended, 
but two others besides him have been mortally hit. 
I consider this the most successful and scientific 
drubbing we have shown Pandy. His loss has been 
great; his ammunition has been expended by cart- 
loads ; he has never seen our men. These are the 
lessons we should teach when acting on the defensive. 
Pursuing brings us loss when we have to return. 

" a^tk August. — Yesterday the Sikh Jewan Singh 
and Jowahir Singh (whom I had sent to Cawnpore 
to ascertain matters and carry letters) arrived. They 
left this on i6th July, reached Cawnpore 22nd. 
They found General flavelock there with the 78th 
Highlanders, ist Madras Fusiliers, and Sikh corps 
with guns. Havelock's letter was as follows : ' I 
regret to say Sir Hugh Wheeler was basely betrayed 
and destroyed, 27th ultimo, by Nana Sahib. Thank 
God, I have met with great and complete success. 
I have encountered the rebels in three engagements, 
and on each occasion took every gun from them, and 
defeated them with great slaughter. I have destroyed 
Bitore (the residence of the Nana, who headed the 
rebels), and am now marching to Lucknow, which 
holds out stoutly and well. My orders are strict to 
* Of the 1st Punjab Infantry. He had served with Daly at Kohat. 



DEATH OF HENEY LAWRENCE 167 

relieve Lucknow. I have sent a copy of your letter 
to Sir Patrick Grant. Reinforcements are on the 
march in strength, including the China Force, and 
Sir Patrick Grant himself will soon be here.' 

"Jewan Singh said notes were passing to and 
fro between Havelock and Lucknow. While they 
were seated with General Havelock, a messenger 
came with a note from the ' Bara Sahib ' (Chief 
Authority). Jowahir Singh questioned him about 
the Sahib Log (English) ; he said the ladies and 
children were all comfortable in the Taikhana (under- 
ground rooms), and the Sahibs safe and unassailable ; 
that all was well with them. This gave us comfort ; 
the letter was dated from that bridge where toll is 
levied between Cawnpore and Lucknow, one march 
from the former, 2Sth July. Well, an hour after the 
receipt of the above, a note was brought from Agra, 
in which was given a copy of a letter from Havelock, 
dated Cawnpore, i8th July, and sent from Agra, 31st. 
In this he writes : ' Sir Henry Lawrence was wounded 
on the and July, and died 4th July.' This caused 
great consternation and grief I questioned Jewan 
Singh long as to whether he had heard any talk of 
Sir Henry's having been wounded, or sick ; he persists 
that Sir Henry is well, that the messenger said he — 
Sir Henry — had given him the letter. Moreover, 
when I explained what was the report, the Sikh and 
Jowahir Singh both exclaimed : ' People go to and 
fro from Lucknow ; all talk of Sir Henry's stoutness, 
and speak of him just as we speak of you in the 
regiment' (meaning men were familiar wtth his 
name); they said everybody speaks of Sir H. 
Wheeler's murder, therefore it is not likely such a 
death as Sir Henry's would be unknown. I am corn- 
forted by this. Havelock does not allude to it in 
his letter, 26th, and on arrival at Cawnpore reports, 
etc., may have reached him not to be relied on. I 
have been sorely upset about this. Better have lost 
Lucknow than Sir Henry. Lucknow can be retaken, 
but he cannot_ be replaced ; at this season there is 
no man in India whose character and peculiar know- 
ledge would be so useful to the Government. God 
grant it may not be true ! 

"5^^ August. — Colonel Nicholson is here, but 



168 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

gfoes back to meet his column ; there is doubtless a 
good deal of jealousy about the supercession, but 
put all the Queen's colonels together who are in camp 
(Greathed inclusive), and you could not extract a 
man who would be willing even to incur the responsi- 
bility of commanding this force. All here rejoiced 
at Chamberlain's arrival, and not one would have 
attempted to urge a word which would throw the 
command on himself Colonel Campbell is, I believe, 
an excellent regimental officer, but there is a vast 
difference between such a man and one who is able 
to head and manage a force in the field. Moreover, 
Colonel Campbell had no experience of actual service, 
good as he is— and there is no doubt there is no 
commanding officer here half as good. 

" I thought at one time that there would be a 
sudden and a great fall in Government Paper (India), 
and wrote to Bombay to buy a lot in such event. It 
has fallen but i and \\ per cent, in Bombay. 

"bth August. — The news of Cawnpore was 
flitting about the camp early last month, but without 
confirmation ; one could not credit such brutality. 
Even now, what puzzles us all is that so resolute and 
experienced a soldier as Wheeler should have dreamt 
of terms, or of faith. We shall hear more by and by 
of the cause which led him to this, but of the massacre 
there is no doubt. 

" gth August. — The news in the Lahore Chronicle 
about poor Sir Henry is from the same source I 
mentioned. I have yet hope, and God grant there 
may be ground for it. Calamity, indeed, for India 
it would be. 

"nth August. — I fear the report of Sir Henry. 
We now learn a round shot struck his shoulder ; if 
so — and there are details, sad details — death would 
follow ; few, few survive the shock of a round shot. 
I seemed to have some close tie to him. He rests in 
peace and would not be sorry, personally, to quit 
the world his loved wife no longer held a place in. 

" i2th August. — You will have learnt of Sir 
Henry. I clung to hope for many a day, in fact 
until yesterday. In these days of battle and death 
there is so much to_ excite the mind that one is not 
long by possibility in one vein of thought ; but I felt 



A CAPITAL COUP 169 

beaten down when this sad tale reached nie. Reflec- 
tion brings home to one the great public loss which 
his death occasions. At any time India would mourn 
his fall, but now, when she so much needed his 
guidance and his wisdom, the death of the soldier 
statesman fills all with grief The public calamity 
overpowers the consideration and thought of private 
and personal bereavement. I do indeed feel that I 
have lost a prop in the world. He was a rare 
specimen of God's handiwork. 

"This morning we made a capital cotip. The 
enemy has been bringing his guns out into the open 
and has annoyed our picquets. We have somewhat 
tempted him to this by making no rush to get them. 
Yesterday it was resolved to seize those in the vicinity 
of the Metcalfe picquet, and accordingly a force was 
told off to attack this morning. It was kept a 
profound secret. I was one of the half-dozen who 
were aware of it. As the bugles announced the dawn 
I anxiously awaited the sound of musketry ; quickly 
it fell on the ear, and, as I wished to hear, in one clear 
volley at first, and that before the light would enable 
the enemy to discern from the walls what was going 
on ; no desultory fire, but a quick, sharp volley. This 
denoted success, that our column had been able to 
approach near without detection. All the guns (4, 
including a howitzer) were captured, and the enemy 
sorely mauled, for he was completely surprised. The 
very horses were taken with the guns. Our loss was 
not heavy considering ; one officer only mortally 
wounded. The Brigadier (Showers) was hit twice, 
— on the top of his finger, and by a bullet glancing 
round underneath his arm. Coke got a flesh wound, 
nothing bad, just as he seized the leading horses by 
the head. The troops were in high glee, and this has 
given delight to every one. We had taken no heavy 
guns since the night I was wounded." 

On the same date he wrote to England : — 

"We are well here, though still without the walls 
of Delhi ; our position has much strengthened ; we 
await but reinforcements to stake the blow. The 
enemy is cowed, and makes not the ventures he 



170 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

formerly did. Colonel Nicholson's column comes in 
to-morrow or the 14th ; 3000 — 1000 being Europeans. 
Then I hope nothing will delay the capture of Delhi, 
unless we should hear of the advance of troops from 
below. 

"The country, wherever our troops approach, 
relapses into its old habits, and scarcely can a 
spectator believe in the bloody revolution which has 
torn up the old associations. Deserters from Delhi 
are numerous ; they are not allowed to bear away 
arms, so the deserting mutineers are plundered by 
the villagers. It is estimated that there have been 
35, 000 or 40,000 fighting men within the walls ; 
perhaps now 15,000 could not be mustered. They 
may have had 10,000 killed and wounded. There are 
always in every camp croakers, but I have never 
observed anything but the most cheerful spirit 
amongst the soldiery. The Europeans near my tent, 
whenever the evening is cool and Pandy quiet, play 
away at their games as though there was no more 
serious occupation. Of an evening till Tattoo they 
walk up and down the road (my tent is at the corner) 
neatly dressed, laughing and chatting in merry style. 
I have never heard amongst them at any time, even 
when we were weak in numbers, and the work was 
even more harassing than now, I have never heard a 
desponding word ; of the result they never doubted. 
The same with the Guides and Ghurkhas. The 
Europeans have sometimes fought badly, but they 
have never talked despondingly ; now all look cheerful 
and hopeful. Pandy, we know, is in much distress ; 
he knows not what to do ; to fly home, there he will 
be followed ; to remain here, he will be slain. The 
60th Rifles are beyond value; the old men of the 
corps. I consider, and I expect it is the g'eneral 
opinion, _ that 100 Riflemen equal 200 of any of the 
British infantry we have. I wish you could see the 
spirit which actuates the Guides ; how cheerful they 
are amidst wounds and death ; with what heroic 
devotion they rush forward. 

'' }Zth August- — Good news from Lucknow last 
evening. General Havelock had encountered all the 
Oudh force, a few miles the Cawnpore side of 
Lucknow ; the fight lasted long ; he utterly defeated 



GOOD NEWS FROM HAVELOCK 171 

them, and took 20 guns. No mention of Sir Henry, 
and my hope died three days ago. 

"14^^ August. — The Punjab column came in this 
evening-. The siege train is far behind. I don't 
think that would delay us, but with it are two corps, 
and a. portion of one will relieve the 60th Rifles at 
Meerut — nearly 400 good soldiers, who will then join 
us. We are strong enough for the assault now, I 
have no doubt, but probably jt will not be made. 

" i6th August. — The siege train will be at 
Umballa about 19th or 20th. This was not 
required under the circumstances of the first pro- 
positions for attack; blowing in the gates and 
escalading were the ideas then. Now a breach will 
be made ; probably breaches in two places. 

" i2>th August. — Nothing certain of an advance 
from Cawnpore, though certain troops in numbers 
are gathering. I put no faith in the paper reports 
because I can always trace their origin. We know 
all that is known and can be known. The informa- 
tion respecting Sir Henry's wound was from two 
quarters, both native ; but I have no hope — none. 

" \qth August. — News from General Havelock 
that, having received reinforcements, he was about 
to march (next morning) on Lucknow ; that he had 
thoroughly discomfited the enemy, and had taken 
between 40 and 50 guns ; after settling Lucknow he 
should proceed to Agra, and thence to Delhi. All 
this is well, and, what I believe is better, there is no 
intention of awaiting his advent. The camp looks 
very picturesque ; the sun shining on the tents, which 
are pitched about in all directions, and are on every 
hillock. One of the bands plays within the Staff 
Square every evening, and people ride round, laugh, 
chat, and gather together as though nothing of 
unusual importance was going on. 

" 26th August. — The large siege train from 
Ferozpur is now near at hand, escorted by a Punjab 
corps, and 3500 Dogras (a hill tribe), a contingent 
offered by Gulab Singh before his death, and subse- 
quently despatched by his son and successor, are 
at Umballa en route. The day of reckoning is near. 
Two days ago we received information that the 
enemy had moved out of the city with 5000 or 6000 



172 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

men and 1 8 guns, attempting to get by a circuitous 
route to our rear. General Cortlandt, of Edwardes' 
renown, is at Hansi, holding that country with a body 
of newly raised irregulars. A force marched from 
this yesterday at 6 a.m. to cut off the enemy. Rain 
fell in torrents at midday, and greatly did we fear that 
it would impede and prevent the passage of our guns 
across the heavy ground. Happily, however, thanks 
to the good pluck of the men and the energy of the 
commander — a fine fellow, an old Punjab friend of 
mine, Colonel Nicholson — the force crossed the 
swampy ground. They marched on i8 miles, 
attacked and thoroughly routed the enemy, taking 
12 guns — all that had crossed the canal. Our loss 
was slight in number, but it included young Lumsden 
of Coke's corps, brother of Major Lumsden,* and 
well worthy to be so ; a fine, gallant young soldier, 
shot through the heart : but two other officers were 
touched ; one, a doctor, killed, and one wounded." 

To England Daly wrote at this time : — 

" There is one difficulty which was known to no 
one perhaps, save the engineer of the place — the walls 
have been lately repaired and rebuilt t ; the ditch out- 
side is so deep, and the counterscarp of the glacis so 
raised, that unless guns are on the very counterscarp 
it would be impossible to rase the wall. A breach 
bringing down the upper portion and leaving perhaps 
8 feet pr i_o of the thick, can be made at 400 yards, 
and this will be done immediately the train arrives. 

"In the assault T think the flight and rush will be 
great. Some buildings and places will, I fear, be 
held with tenacity, and loss, heavy loss, will be ours. 
Nevertheless it must be undertaken, and the sooner 
the better ; while Delhi remains with them, India is 
said, amidst a nation of liars, to be in the possession 
of the mutineers. With Delhi will pass the great 
struggle, and the guerilla war which will ensue will be 
more of punishment than opposition. 

* Major Lumsden was the substantive Commandant of the Guides. 
He was at this time employed with the Kandahar Mission. 

+ By Lieut. Robert Napier (afterwards Field-Marshal Lord Napier 
of Magdala) : see Forty-One Years in India, by Field-Marshal Lord 
Roberts, vol. i., pp. 162-3. 



SIE COLIN CAMPBELL 173 

" Death and misery have run wild in many a 
happy home,_many a noble, many a cherished spirit 
has fled ; but it is evident that the blow was to fall some 
time. It is no mere mutiny, but the struggle, the 
revolt, of the army we have disciplined and trained. 
My opinion for the future in India is that the native 
regular army will cease ; it will not be re-established 
in Bengal. The regular army should consist entirely 
of Europeans ; railways pushed on ; the Europeans 
garrisoned in the best climates;* 60,000 European 
troops for the Punjab, North- West, and Bengal. 

" India should be the nursery of the British army ; 
they would be available for service in any part of the 
world — the bulk of them trained troops. John Bull 
does not relish being behindhand when a war breaks 
forth ; yet it must be so, as the profession of arms 
is unpopular at home, and John loves not the sight of 
'idling Red Coats.' God help them, poor fellows! 
they have little idling here ; we have had upwards of 
120 officers killed and wounded, and at least 1500 
men ; in proportion to strength engaged, Sevastopol 
casualties were not so high ! To hark back to the 
army. The native portion to be reduced half at 
least, and kept in the irregular form : i.e., 4 officers to 
each corps, and officers of selection ; then the 3rd 
body of the army to be police for general duty. 
Never again would there be an army in the land to 
contest the supremacy with its rulers. 

" 2gth August. — I forgot to mention yesterday 
about Sir Colin Campbell. General Anson's death 
was telegraphed, and reached London on the 12 th 
July. Sir Colin was offered, and more I suppose in 
these days, the command of the army, and started the 
next day and overtook the mails. He sent a tele- 
gram to Mansfield at Warsaw, offering him ' the chief 
of the staff' ; accepted, and Mansfield will be out by 
the next steamer. You know my opinion of Sir Colin. 

* Sir H. LawrencBj in his Adventures of an Officer, etc. (1845), had 
written : — " Considerations of finance, as well as of humanity, might 
open the eyes of those in authority to the advantages of locating the 
European troops in the hill stations, with such facilities for communi- 
cation as might enable the men to be brought down speedily on any 
emergency." 



174 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

I know he has not capacity sufficient for the position 
and work such as now there will be. Mansfield, on 
whom he leans entirely, has the capacity, but his intel- 
lect is subtle, and his character inspires no man with 
confidence._ I like him, but I question whether any- 
body else in camp does ; but even with my feelings 
towards him and knowledge of his ability, I cannot 
bring myself to say that I should confide in him. Both 
have no affection for the Company's service ; in fact I 
have no doubt it will cease to exist. H ow the army will 
be reconstituted it is hard to say, but I lean very much 
to a letter published in the Times, and signed 'M.P.' 
India will be in future the garrison for British troops : 
hill stations, good roads (rail), rapid communication. 

" 2>otk August. — News from Cawnpore, 13th and 
17th. Havelock had gone out again to Bhitoor, and 
had punished and mauled the mutinous 42 nd, which 
was marching across from Saugor. This is the last 
of the mutinous corps on foot. 

"All well at Lucknow. Reinforcements will soon 
be with Havelock in strength ; there is no mention 
from Cawnpore of Lucknow being in trouble. 

" i.f^ September. — Everything is in readiness to 
commence close operations immediately on the siege 
train's appearance. The Rifles and artillery at 
Meerut have moved. 'General' Nicholson is in the 
tent talking. The siege train will be here on the 5th. 
Captain Wilde's Punjab Corps has passed Umballa, 
so have the Dogras ; therefore our strength is being 
collected at Najatgarh. Nicholson accomplished 
what I believe no other man here would have done, 
and this is the impression of every man with whom 
I have spoken. So many guns were not taken even 
on the 8th June. Nicholson is able, vigorous, and 
brave as a lion. You remember dear Sir Henry's 
kindly, affectionate feeling towards him ; it was not 
without sound cause. 

"General Havelock's force was but 1400 or 15-00, 
without cavalry ; heaps of guns, but few gunners. 

" /^th September. — The siege train is in, and in 
a few days everything will be ready for work. Sir T. 
Metcalfe was in here just now, and gave me an 
account of his miraculous escape (from Delhi). 

" 6th September. — The following is the plan of 



SIEGE TRAIN AT WOEK 175 

operations. It is known to none but the engineers 
and three others. We shall erect two batteries to- 
morrow night, and hope to have them in readiness for 
breaching the. following' morning. They will pound 
the whole of the 8th, during the early morning of 
which another battery will be prepared at a spot 
which affords shelter, and is within 200 or 250 yards 
of the Cashmere Gate. The breaching batteries with 
the heavy guns will be 600 yards from the walls ; on the 
Qth, should all be ready, the assault will be made. 
Should matters go well, should the fire of our batteries 
be as successful as anticipated, the assault will come 
off in two places ; the Guides will not assault. _ Should 
the fire not be so effective, we must delay a little. 

" "jtk September. — lo-gun battery commenced 
within 600 yards, after heavy firing from the Moree 
(grape) and musketry on the working party, about 

9 P.M. Happily the enemy's fire was diverted to the 
ridge, and the work at 1 1 p.m. was proceeding satis- 
factorily. Jowahir Singh returned from Cawnpore 

10 P.M. — good account. General Havelock awaits 
but the arrival of the sth and 90th — God willing 
— to relieve Lucknow. Jowahir Singh affirms that 
he saw Forbes, the doctor, Hardinge, etc., all well 
at Lucknow. Ghulam Mohi-ud-din killed in a sally 
from the Muchee Bhawan, which we had been obliged 
to relinquish, with stores. 

" Saw my father's death, isth July, in the Extra : 
re-read all the letters in which his state was men- 
tioned. — God rest him. 

"8tA. — Battery (divided in two at 150 yards disr 
tant) completed before daylight — 3 guns in position. 
The enemy apparently astonished when morning dis- 
closed the battery so close to the walls. Bugles 
sounded the 'Assembly,' and great was the cry to go 
forth to the attack ; however, no great advance took 
place ; some cavalry galloped as though meaning the 
battery, but a shower of grape quelled them ; our loss, 
2 officers, and about 20 men killed and wounded. The 
erection of the battery cost us no life. Parties at work 
at nightfall to make mortar batteries in the Kudsia 
Bagh and prepare the breaching battery. Went up 
to the Mosque battery with the Brigadier at evening 
to observe the fire ; the Moree (bastion) still alive. 



176 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

"^th. — The breaching- battery worked up to the 
embrasures during the night. Mortar batteries 
finished : lo heavy guns well at work tearing down 
the defences. Baird Smith full of life, but the spirit 
and energy of Taylor * are on the ground and do the 
work; Baird Smith fitfully wanders about; heavy 
complaints of the General's vacillation and want of 
reliance. Pandy did little damage during the nig;ht ; 
his guns from Kishengunge do most and heaviest 
damage. Our loss severe : evening 7th, 2 officers and 
18 men killed, 57 wounded. 

" 10th September. — The operations are progres- 
sing satisfactorily and successfully, though, from the 
nature of the ground, the works have been slower 
than was anticipated. Heavy firing last night on the 
working- parties. However, it is now but a question 
of hours. In all sieges the last operations cannot be 
looked to within a few hours of certainty ; at Multan 
we paraded three times for the storm. Went to the 
Ridge with Chamberlain. 

"nth September. — Taylor called, telling- us all his 
work was over. All the batteries needed have been 
erected ; one will not open fire till to-morrow morning 
or at midnight, otherwise all is in readiness. To- 
morrow should suffice for the pounding- of the works, 
but it is not possible to say until the effect of the fire 
has been seen for some hours. We have one battery 
which has got to open 160 yards from the wall; this 
will astonish our friend Pandy. 

"12th September. — Meeting at the General's to 
hear plan of assault — 3 columns, Nicholson ist, 
Campbell 3rd, Jones 2nd. Campbell's for the Jama 
Masjid — the most trying work in my mind, but he is 
resolute and good. Nicholson leads, no lesser man 
could lead. Longfield reserve, Denny camp and con- 
valescents. Reid to attack Paharipur with Guides 
and Gurkhas, and contingent. Fagan, an officer 
who has universal respect — whose name was in 
everyone's mouth, so cheerful, so hardy, so heroic, 
was shot deador nearly so, as he sat on the trail of 
his gun watching the effect of the shot for which he 
had just laid. Great regret throughout the camp. 
Storm to-morrow ! " 

* Afterwards General Sir Alexander Taylor, G.C.B. 



BREACH MADE AND CAEEIED 177 

Daly's wound still incapacitated him from active 
duty ; with Chamberlain, he watched the assault from 
the top of Hindu Rao's house, "able neither to ride 
nor run," though he descended, and took charge of 
the picquet when things looked black through the 
check to Reid's column.* 

Next day he wrote : — 

" \/\ih September. — The assault came off at day- 
break. I was not near the breach and therefore 
cannot describe the sight, which must have been 
glorious ; our troops there behaved with all their right- 
ful valour. The troops had to escalade ; the Gate 
(Cashmere) was blown in ; but few survived who 
performed the deed. We hold the walls and bastions 
which formerly so worried us, and have established 
ourselves well in the city. The enemy fought stoutly 
in several places. They have bolted in numbers, and 
have rushed out of the city. 

" The attack from here (Hindu Rao's house) on a 
party outside in great strength and numbers, in 
which Guides, Ghurkhas, and some Europeans, with 
the contingent from Cashmere, suffered heavy loss, 
failed in capturing the guns on which they made the 
assault; however, everybody is as well as we could 
expect. Colonel Campbell has a slight wound ; he 
has done, and is doing, his work heroically. I came 
up here last night thinking I might be of use, and I 
found it was so. 

" x^th September. — Loss we encountered, but the 
success was great. But for this failure on the right 
in an outside attack, all would have been glorious. 
We are now shelling the Palace and battering old 
Selim Ghar. Hundreds have quitted Delhi. Animals 
laden with all sorts of spoil we can observe moving 
away. There was not much resistance at the breach, 
but the firing on our advancing column was heavy, 
and our loss was heavy. Afterwards the troops 

* The check was mainly ascribed to Reid receiving a severe and 
disabling wound just as he was completing his dispositions for the 
attack. The position after the check was one of great danger. (See 
Kaye's Sepoy War, vol. iii., p. 6li.) 

M 



178 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

advanced along the ramparts at a great pace, captur- 
ing gxins and driving- the mutineers away without 
difficulty, until we came to a halt at one bastion for 
supports and ammunition. Here for the first time 
the opposition became stiff; lo officers, I think, of 
the Fusiliers were killed and wounded. Nicholson, 
exhorting the men to make a manful rush, got his bad 
wound. Welby Greathed wounded ; arm broken, 
but not badly. It looks so singular to observe our 
people quietly moving along the front of the walls 
where death was so busy but a few days ago. Pandy 
is sorely disheartened, but still holds out desperately 
in some places. Nearly every heavy gun has been 
captured. 

" itth September. — We have been doing well and 
making progress since yesterday. Kishengunge has 
been evacuated ; they have left guns and have 
evaporated. The Magazine was assaulted at dawn, 
after having been breached; 125 guns, with muni- 
tions of war, etc. We lost nothing; 3 or 4 men 
wounded. To-day matters are going very well; the 
roads full of bolters. Nicholson, the General, and a 
great officer he will be if saved, is but a trifle better. 

" I 'jth September. — Our operations are doingwell ; 
no lives, or few, lost yesterday. I have not been in the 
city, but am in command of this position (Hindu 
Rao's house, etc.), which I can manage though un- 
able to run a stride, and I am glad to be of any use. 
I have the Guide Infantry, Gnurkhas,_ and some of 
the 6 1st Foot, Bengal Fusiliers, and artillery. I have 
had no sleep for two nights. 

"18^^ September. — The blow has been a heavy 
one, and Delhi will long carry with it many tearful 
memories. We are progressing. Chamberlain is in 
the city and doing all he can. From poor Nicholson 
we may not look for aid again : I fear he is very bad. 
All feeling about supersession had passed. I think 
his valour and perception were such that all felt he 
was born for command. 

" igth September. — General Nicholson is danger- 
ously ill ; I fear much for him ; he will be a heavy loss 
indeed. Murray of the Guides : he was wounded a 
bit on the 2Sth June, and again in July, never seri- 
ously, but his health was bad, and he was sent to 



DEATH OF NICHOLSON 179 

Kasauli and recovered, and returned lookingf strong 
and well about the 6th of this month. I had got him, 
a month ago, an adjutancy of one of the new regi- 
ments. As I mentioned, the Guides were not in the 
assault of the city, but in the action on the right. 
The Guide officers, with a few nien and a few 
Europeans, made a rush across a terrible fire attempt- 
ing to gain a breast cover. Murray, one of the fore- 
most, brave lad, was shot through the chest and fell 
dead. Captain M'Barnett fell at the same moment, 
or nearly so. The loss was heavy amongst 6oth, 
Fusiliers, 6ist, Guides, and Ghurkhas. 

" We lost nobody yesterday. It would be possible 
to clear the place with a rush, but to save life we are 
adopting the plan of steady advance. 

"22nd. — The old king is in our hands, and had 
our information been worth anything, his sons* 
also would be prisoners. Some Sikh sowars of 
Hodson's came on them ; not knowing who they were, 
plundered the sons, and took no heed of their capture. 
We shall get them yet, I hope ; that Mirza Mogul 
Beg must be hanged as high as possible. Our 
terrible loss is Nicholson ; his services we have no 
longer, and I fear his life can hardly be looked for. 
He is so ill and worn. Everybody else among the 
wounded is doing well." 

It was to Daly's tent that Nicholson was borne 
when wounded. After his death, which occurred on 
the 23rd September, Chamberlain and Daly formed 
the committee of adjustment on his affairs. Daly 
now heard from Sir John Lawrence, dated igth 
September :— 

" I have to thank you for your letter giving an 
account of the assault ; almost the only one any of 
my friends have sent me. It strikes me very forcibly 
that, as you say, it was a mistake attacking 
Kishengunge at all. It could hardly fail to fall, if 
we were successful in the town. And the men 
expended in this erratic attack would have done good 

* Afterwards captured and shot by Hodson. 



180 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

service elsewhere. But it was unreasonable to 
suppose that the Cashmere troops could face 
1 8-pounders. I would have been for leaving 400 
or 500 of these well posted to mask Kishengfunge. 

"It seems to me, moreover, that we made a 
mistake in attempting too much on the morning of 
the 14th, and perhaps might have done better had 
we been less ambitious. I did not get any plan of 
the attack, but I hear that it embraced the expulsion 
of the mutineers from the whole of the city. If this 
was true, surely it was too great a task for the means 
at our disposal. Perhaps I may be wrong in my 
criticisms, but I do not make them after the affair. 
This I thought from the time that matters assumed 
their present gravity. 

" I feel very much vexed that I have no reinforce- 
ments to send to Delhi ; we are barely holding the 
country and no more. And had I not some good 
men about me, we should not do this. At Murree 
we had a petty affair which showed we were not over- 
secure. At Peshawar the slightest spark would cause 
a general conflagration. Even while I write we have 
a disaffection among the wild tribes in the jungles, 
half-way between this and Multan, which may give 
us trouble. They have intercepted the post, and 
seem bent on mischief 

" This delay in sending troops from England, or 
rather in not sending some of them inland, may 
breed great misfortunes. God grant us success. It 
is very terrible to think how much will depend on the 
next few days. I trust that the troops will be kept 
well in hand, and full time taken in mastering each 
point. We cannot afford to lose many men. We 
nave no reserve to give you. I am hunting up all the 
officers I can lay hands on. General Cotton is sending 
some 19, and some more will go down from this 
division. I trust, therefore, that full 40 will be 
available after clearing out Simla and Mussooree. I 
hope the Guides did not suffer much. How is Khan 
Singh Rosa ? " 

On the 27th, Daly wrote from the Jama Masjid : — 

"I have come down here to pay Major Coke a 
visit. He is quartered in this magnificent pile with 



DELHI AFTER THE SIEGE 181 

his corps. The city is a wondrous sight ; doors and 
windows broken open, here and there a cat peering-. 
Bottles, boxes, bedding-, furniture, and articles 
beggaring description cast about. Men of all colours 
(soldiers) searching- and plundering. The inhabitants 
roaming- about helpless and hungry in every direc- 
tion. Nobles and delicate women, still carrying 
jewels and wealth, without food and almost without 
covering. The desolation no language can paint.' 
The retribution will be palpable. The Guides will 
march back as soon as English troops arrive. Had 
we to depend on home succour, what would our hold 
on India have been worth? The fall of Delhi has 
been the fall of the rebel cause. Walking about the 
streets of Delhi one could only wonder how we had 
acquired it. The rebels in some places were ready 
for a stiff resistance. Sand bags in piles, guns loaded 
to the muzzle and placed in position, all betokened 
that which they had no leadership or heart to carry 
out. We have struggled and reeled through our 
trials." 

At the beginning of October Daly, who was still 
crippled with his wound, was granted a few weeks' 
leiave to Simla, whence he wrote on the 12th October 
to England : — 

" The relief of Lucknow has taken place. I grieve 
for the death of General Neill. We had many rolled 
pieces of paper from him during- our struggle at Delhi. 
His heart and courage were always high ; he seemed 
to be the Nicholson of that force. Our column, which 
has marched by Aligarh to Agra, is pursuing its 
course with little molestation or opposition. The 
mutineers evacuate each place and throw away their 
arms as we approach. We have sustained terrible 
blows in the fall of our best men. Colonel Greathed, 
who commands that force, was sent, not on account 
of his capacity, but because the men of capacity were 
either killed or wounded. It was to have been 
Nicholson's post, and there neither is nor was any 
man who could so thoroughly have filled it. One can 
feel the blunders of the Crimean War, for truly few 



182 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

of the Queen's officers have had any experience of any 
service beyond mess manag-ement, and their views are 
narrow and regimental. They are altogfether ignorant 
of the broader duties, and knoiv not Amg- of the interests 
at stake. 

" Lord Canning- has to answer for the delay at 
Lucknow. Had Sir John Lawrence pursued the 
same policy, we should have been overwhelmed at 
Delhi, and the north-west would have been swamped. 
Lord Canning seems to have had thought and care 
for nothing but Calcutta and Bengal, whereas the 
latter (for Calcutta had ships and sailors, citizens 
and volunteers) did but faintly through the Sepoy 
corps, and they were few, reflect the tone above. 
Lord Canning at first was plucky ; as the troubles 
gained strength he lost it. It is melancholy to read 
the debates on our affairs ; the ' weighing of sug- 
gestions ' by Lord Palmerston as to the passage of 
troops through Egypt. De Lacy Evans dwells on 
this in a great deal of twaddle, 20th August, and 
Lord Palmerston replies with thanks. We who 
looked for aid in July learn that in August and 
September the near road was thought worthy of 
consideration. Had Government but sent 500 men 
to Bombay, the effect would have been substantial ; 
it was heartrending to read the flummery that was 
spoken about the strong arm of England, and to 
learn that steamers were leaving every fortnight, 
which might each time have brought 500 soldiers, 
with nothing but debates and promises. 

" I know not just at present whether my connection 
with the Guides will continue or not. I wrote to ask 
Sir John ; he replied : ' Something satisfactory will 
assuredly turn up ; how I cannot say, for I do not 
know. Lumsden will not return till December, 
therefore^ all that will be necessary is to provide for 
you or him then.' I should have liked, what Susie 
so much wished, to be military secretary to Sir 
Henry. He would have been pleased also, I think 
and feel. Now I have no fancy for the appointment. 
Sir John is most kind, most cordial, we have kept 
up an intimate correspondence during the war, and 
it has happened in several instances that I have 
asked for appointments for those who have distin- 



HONOURS OF WAR 183 

gfuished themselves and for men of whom I have 
thought well. In no case has he ever replied by 
letter, but the Gazette has at once announced the 
appointment, and this even to commands of corps. 
Nevertheless he is not to me what Sir Henry was. 
I had a love for him exceeding- even the admiration 
and reverence in which I held his lofty character, 
his great attainments ; as Lumsden said, in writing 
of his death from Candahar, 'it is much, Daly, to 
have known one such man.' I have a sort of 
melancholy satisfaction in the knowledge that Susan 
saw him and learnt to appreciate him." 

The Guides left Delhi to return to Mardan on 
the 1 8th December 1857. They first marched to 
Peshawar, where they arrived on the 2nd February 
1858, and were given a great reception. A division 
order of that date by Major-General Sir Sydney 
Cotton, commanding the Peshawar Division, 
began : — 

" Major-General Cotton makes known throughout 
the division under his orders that the troops of the 
Peshawar cantonment were paraded under his 
personal command to-day to receive and welcome 
the corps of Guides on its arrival in cantonment from 
the siege of Delhi. A royal salute was fired in 
honour of the Guides on their approaching the 
parade-ground, and the troops saluted when the 
General delivered addresses to the troops and to 
the Peshawar force." 

Four combatant British officers marched to Delhi 
with the Guides : i s others were attached to the 
corps for various periods during the siege. Of these 
1 9, 3 were killed, i died, and 8 were wounded ; 
one of the latter was wounded six times, one four 
times, at least two others were wounded more than 
once. Edwardes said in a speech at a banquet : 
"There was not one officer of the Guides who was 



184 THE GUIDES AND DELHI 

on their return to Peshawar not wounded at least 
once. Sometimes every officer was laid up with 
wounds, and an entirely new set of officers had to be 
appointed." Of native ranks the strength on reaching 
Delhi was 218 cavalry and 423 infantry, the reinforce- 
ments subsequently received at various times were 
205 cavalry and 241 infantry, making a grand total 
of 1 107. The losses were, in the cavalry, 28 killed 
and 49 wounded, or over 1 8 per cent. ; and in the 
infantry, 99 killed and 173 wounded, or nearly 41 
per cent. Even these percentages do not give an 
adequate idea of the loss,* because a considerable 
proportion of the reinforcements did not arrive till 
the struggle was virtually over. 

Twenty-five native officers and men of the 
Guides received the Order of Merit for distinguished 
conduct before Delhi. Fifty-four men were specially 
mentioned in regimental orders, and promoted on 

* These figures are taken from the regimental history of the 
corps of Guides ; they do not tally, as regards initial strength, with 
those given by Norman, the Assistant Adjutant-General of the Army, 
who was on the spot and in a position to obtain accurate returns. 
In his Narrative of the Campaign of the Delhi Army, dated 28th 
October 1857, he writes thus (p. 47): "All behaved nobly, but it 
may be permitted to allude somewhat to those corps most constantly 
engaged from the beginning, the 60th Rifles, Sirmoor Battalion, and 
Guides. Probably not one day throughout the siege passed without 
a casualty in one of these corps ; placed in the very front of our 
position," they were ever under fire. Their courage, their high 
qualifications as skirmishers, their cheerfulness, their steadiness, were 
beyond commendation. Their losses in action show the nature of 
the service. 

"The Rifles commenced with.440 of all ranks ; a few days before 
the storm they received a reinforcement of nearly 200 men : their 
total casualties were 389. 

"The Sirmoor Battalion commenced 450 strong, and once was 
joined by a draft of 90 men. Its total casualties amounted to 319. 

"The Guides commenced with about 550 (cavalry and infantry), 
and the casualties were 313." 



PRAISE FROM JOHN COMPANY 185 

the spot to the commissioned or non-commissioned 
ranks "for gallantry in the field." 

The Court of Directors, in one of the last letters 
which they wrote (No. 50, dated the 30th August 
1858), thus addressed the Government of India : — 

"We cannot too strongly express our entire con- 
currence in the sentiments expressed by Major- 
General Cotton in his Division Order on the occasion 
of the return of the Guides to the Frontier. 

"That corps, by the extraordinary alacrity with 
which they proceeded to Delhi, marching 580 miles 
in twenty-one days, and having during those twenty- 
one days turned off the road 1 2 miles one night to 
attack mutineers ; by their remarkable service? before 
Delhi, where, for nearly four months, both officers 
and men were constantly in action, sometimes twice 
a day; by their singular fidelity, as shown by the 
fact that of 800 men not one man deserted to the 
enemy, whilst 350 of them were killed and wounded ; 
and by their heroic gallantry, having established for 
themselves the strongest claim to our approbation 
and favour. We desire that these our sentiments 
may be conveyed to them through their gallant com- 
mander. Major Daly." 



CHAPTER VIII 

LUCKNOW 1858 

The general position ; summons to Lucknow ; capture of the city ; 
death of Hodson ; appointed to Hodson's Horse ; memorandum 
on the Corps ; Lucknow after the capture ; Napier ; operations 
at Moosabagh ; hopes for Sir John Lawrence as Governor- 
General ; Russell of the Times j Chamberlain and Mansfield ; 
Hearsay's story. 

After the fall of Delhi, Daly spent his few weeks' 
leave with his wife at Simla. She had been in Simla 
throughout the anxious time at the commencement 
of the mutiny, when the station was entirely without 
defence or defenders and the rising of the Ghurkha 
regiment at Jutogh was for some days hourly 
expected. Daly returned to Delhi at the end of 
November, and immediately after this the Guides 
were ordered back to Mardan. Mrs Daly joined her 
husband at Umballa and marched with the corps to 
Lahore, whence he took his wife and children to 
Multan en route for England. They arrived at 
Multan on the nth January 1858, after seven days' 
march. Mrs Daly wrote : — 

"We accomplished the journey without danger 
or difficulty. The country looks deserted and bare ; 
the rebels of the Gogaira* district are thoroughly 

* A rising of the wild and wandering tribesmen of this tract 
occurred in September, the news reaching Sir John Lawrence the very 
day (14th September) that Delhi was assaulted. The disaffection at 
first seemed likely to spread, but was suppressed by Sir John's prompt 
and vigorous measures. 

186 



THE GENEEAL POSITION 187 

dispersed, it is said. Sowars are posted along the 
road, and they give you a guard from chauki to 
chauki, if you wish it. We usually had a few sowars 
if we were out late at night, but all appeared perfectly 
quiet, and Europeans are marching up the road 
constantly. There are ' Serais ' about 1 2 miles apart 
along the road. These Serais, large walled enclosures 
for the protection of travellers, have each of them a 
room or two where one can sleep. There are four or 
five ddk bungalows on the road, but these have been 
plundered and all the furniture stolen. We had no 
adventures beyond an occasional break-down of 
luggage carts, or a pair of bullocks that would not 
stir." 

After seeing his family on board a boat on the 
Indus, Daly returned by mail-cart to Lahore. The 
210 miles occupied twenty-six hours : — 

"The roads, broken up by constant traffic which 
has lately set in, are in a state indescribable." After 
a day at Lahore, he proceeded to Jhelum : " Here the 
road was better, and we did the 100 miles in nine 
hours. I often wish my head was towards the army 
and the camp for service. I must try to get down ; 
but just now, as the Guides have returned, this will 
not be easy. The infantry are almost annihilated : 
killed, wounded, and sick are so numerous that the 
corps must be renovated. Good men in the field are 
scarce. Great man there has not been since Henry 
Lawrence and Nicholson's spirits. They were of a 
separate class." 

"The work in Gudh must now be going on. Sir 
Colin has a large force to wield ; how different from 
our advance on Delhi, 1500 infantry. He is strong 
in artillery, efficient in cavalry, and with the prestige 
of success in every struggle ; for, amidst the thousand 
fights, often with incapable leaders and insufficient 
parties, defeat has never dimmed us. The people of 
Gudh, i.e., the soldiery, know full well the approach 
of the end ; whereas, in all the early days they fought 
not merely for victory, — -they deemed that secure with 
such a handful of competitors as we were, — they fought 



188 LUCKNOW 

for extermination. Now this tables are turned. I 
have little doubt hundreds would accept any terms 
they could get ; thousands will bolt into the forests 
and deserts of Oudh. Nevertheless there must be a 
struggle under the great gateways, in the courtyards 
and palaces which Susan has painted ; but as I have 
said, all things chime well for the attack, whereas, 
nobody at a distance can describe the feeling of dismay 
which smote us at Delhi in July and August, when, 
instead of the armed men who, in our fancy, were walk- 
ing the decks of the steamers, we received debates, long 
heroic speeches of standing by us to the last, but an 
ijitimation that ships were quicker than steamers, 
that the Overland Route, which two dragoon corps, 
with all their paraphernalia, had taken the previous 
year for India, was tedious and impracticable. Yet 
the Bombay Government in May telegraphed to 
Calcutta for permission to despatch, steamers and 
ships, which they had in abundance in the harbour 
(just returned from the Persian campaign) to Suez. 
So great was the need felt, that to my knowledge in 
May it was suggested to Lord Elphinstone to request 
the Governor of Malta to despatch two corps from 
Malta without awaiting the sanction from home, and 
Lord Elphinstone aU but did it. Oh how we cheered 
the few allies we had by telling them of the speed 
with which English troops would quit England. 
Many of us, all of us, fancied that Lord Palmerston, 
with his Civis Romanus sum notions and with the 
experience of the Crirnea at hand, would have met 
the moment. How bitter was our disappointment ; 
how sad the day in camp when these things became 
known ! Sir John wrote to me, ' the Government at 
home have a mind to leave us alone.' Had the 
Mauritius and Cape governors taken the same view, 
the Bombay army would have gone in numbers : one 
corps sufficed to stay it, and that corps landed from 
the Mauritius! 200 or 400 men from England in 
Bombay In July would have been the preservation 
of Central India. The villains ^/a<:«^^^^ about, 'So 
many months and not a boasted Englishman has 
come to the rescue ; they cannot come, for that 
good Muhammadan the Sultan has stopped the 
road. 



"AT PESHAWAE, EEADY FOR ORDERS" 189 

The reception g-iven to the Guides at Peshawar 
has already been related. Daly himself stayed some 
little time with Edwardes, of whom he wrote to his 
wife : — 

" Edwardes is a charming companion ; he has a 
rich mind, his knowledge is well in hand, and the 
method and style of expression are very happy ; he 
speaks with great self-possession and readiness, is as 
apt in speaking as in conversation ; his system is to 
put his whole strength into everything he does. You 
know my love for him_ was not thoroug-h ; that 
interview at Rawal Pindi, on our downward route 
warmed me somewhat to him, and certainly increased 
my admiration and respect for his capacity and 
courage. He is warm and cordial to me." 

Daly was now offered the appointment of Deputy 
Commissioner of Kohat. He declined, remarking', 
" The pay and position are good, but it is in a corner, 
and I would rather be in the world in these days." 
The Guides reached Mardan on the nth February 
1858, when a great deal of work had to be done in 
settling accounts, returns, etc. 

Daly's old friend Mansfield was now chief of the 
staff to Sir Colin Campbell, and while Daly was at 
Peshawar, Edwardes had received a telegram, "The 
Chief of the Staff enquires where is Captain Daly ? " 
The reply was, "At Peshawar, ready for orders." 
Hearing nothing more, Daly wrote to Mansfield that 
he had for some days expected orders to start, but 
now imagined that there was no immediate opening, 
and that he regretted this, as he would like to have 
seen the Lucknow struggle. On the 23rd February, 
by the advice of the medical authorities at Peshawar, 
he underwent a painful operation in the hope that it 
would result in his recovering power in the left 
shoulder, which was stiff and the arm useless from 



190 LUCKNOW 

the effects of his wound. Two days later came 
another telegram to Edwardes from Mansfield at 
Lucknow : — 

"Will you kindly send an express to Captain Daly 
of the Guides to ask him to come down and live here 
with me. The Commander-in-Chief has given me 
leave to make this offer. For the present I can do 
nothing more, but he will understand it all as an 
answer to his note. I do not see why he should not 
be in time for the struggle, if he makes haste." 

Sir John Lawrence readily accorded the necessary 
permission, and Daly, with his crippled shoulder, set 
off at once. 

After arrival at Lucknow he wrote : — 

" I reached Bebiapur on the gth. The head- 
quarters were in our old quarters. The Commander- 
in-Chief Mansfield, and all the swells were, on my 
arrival, at the Martiniere, which had been attacked 
from the Dilkusha. I rode across, and met a most 
hearty reception ; Sir Colin markedly cordial and 
jolly ; Hope- Johnstone and many an old friend's face ; 
Delhi companions and Oudh allies. I left Mardan at 
7 A.M. on the ist, in a cold, misty rain, the ground 
slippery and heavy. Kennedy drove me to Now- 
shera. I rode on and reached Rawal Pindi before 8 
P.M. ; lOO miles over. I was obliged to stop the night 
at Pindi, and to start off my bag for Jhelum, which I 
reached the following morning. I got into the mail- 
cart for Lahore about noon on the 3rd, and reached 
that night at 12 ; started again for Umballa at 7 A.M., 
4th ; stopped at Ludhiana for half an hour, very 
hungry and somewhat tired with shoulder pains, 
however a glass of beer and some cold meat refreshed 
me and on I went ; entered Umballa about 7 a.m., sth, 
breakfast and off again ; got to Karnal at 7 p.m., was 
hospitably received and fed by the civilian ; off again, 
and into Delhi about 7 a.m. on the 6th. I drove to 
Sir John's ; he was in tents, most hearty and most 
kind : it was arranged that I should spend the day 
there, and off again in the evening. Chamberlain- 



DEATH OF HODSON 191 

was written to of my arrival ; he came down ; about 
an hour after a visitor called and told of my honours 
(Brevet- Major and C.B.). Sir John was delighted. 

" I travelled from Delhi by palki ghari ; delightful 
rest after the mail-cart. I continued without a pause 
till I reached Cawnpqre, 4 p.m., 8th. 'Major-General 
Sir John Inglis ' was in command ; he put me up for 
the night. I sent a telegram to Lucknow announcing 
my arrival, and received an order to be passed on, 
riding irregular cavalry horses. It was my intention 
to leave at daybreak, but Inglis had much to tell me 
of the garrison and Lucknow and dear Sir Henry. 
I remained chattering with him till 9 a.m. I passed 
Charlie Blunt, now in command of a battery, had a 
chat, rode his horse 30 miles, and made the gates of 
Bebiapur at 3 p.m. I rode from Cawnpore to Luck- 
now without an escort. Troops and people were 
passing to and fro. I found a large encampment at 
Alumbagh. Bebiapur House is unaltered. Dilkusha 
was occupied by our troops, and our guns from there 
had pounded the Martiniere, which had been wantonly 
destroyed, i.e., the interior. Yesterday morning we 
commenced the interior and real operations. Major 
Banks' house is in our possession. Sir Colin, 
Mansfield, and I were there all day. This is a 
pleasant sort of warfare after Delhi; a large force 
with all appliances. You will learn all particulars 
from Russell of the Times, who has just been in this 
tent. 

"12M March. — You will have heard ere this of 
the complete success of the operations of yesterday. 
The cordon is closing in on every side ; the loss we 
sustained yesterday was slight : poor Hodson was 
badly wounded in the city, whither he had gone to 
speak to Colonel Napier during the operations. 
Mansfield wishes me to assume command of his 
corps, which is stronger than any here. I havp told 
you how well and more than well disposed to me are 
the Chief and Mansfield ; the latter treats me alto- 
gether in the olden familiar style. 

" i']th March. — I have been busy and absent on a 
raid ; we returned yesterday. Poor Hodson died the 
day after his wound. He was brought in in a 
dhoolie, from which he was not removed until after 



192 LUCKNOW 

death. It chanced I was at Banks' house when he 
was brought in. I spoke to him, fetched a doctor for 
him, and helped to attend on him : poor fellow, we 
had strong- hopes for his life, but internal bleeding- 
came on and soon swept him away ; he was wounded 
about s P.M., and died the following day at noon. 
During the night he rallied much, and until lo a.m. 
there was no immediate danger and much ground for 
hope. He was very calm. He was, as I_ always 
thought, a wondrous compound ; ability high and 
strong ; great capacity of mind ; power and energy, 
physical and mental. His ability had received more 
culture than falls to the lot of most of us. He did 
not quit England till twenty-three years of age, when 
he was a B. A. and somewhat distinguished at Cam- 
bridge. He is a great loss to the service, for doubt- 
less he had done great soldiership. He was attended 
during that evening- by Dr Clifford, and afterwards 
by Dr Anderson, who remained with him till the end. 
We buried him on the evening of the 12 th March, at 
the Martiniere. Sir Colin and Mansfield were at his 
funeral. 

"The corps is some 1200 strong, and will be the 
nucleus of two or three regiments, I believe. The 
kindness of Sir Colin and Mansfield makes my posi- 
tion here very pleasant. Mansfield is wise and wary ; 
as cool and gentlemanly now that he manages the 
affairs of this army as when picking stra-wberries at 
Gatcombe. The deference and respect shown to him 
are great ; with me he is as of old, and when we are 
alone asks and adopts my suggestions." 

Daly left for his successor the following "Rough 
Notes and Memoranda respecting Hodson's Horse." 
Hodson, mortally wounded at the Begam Kothi on 
the evening of the i ith March 1858, died in the back 
room on the ground floor of Banks' house on the 
following morning. 

" I assumed command of the corps at the 
Alumbagh on the following day. It numbered 
present about 750 sabres. The officers were the 
two Goughs (Hugh on his back wounded), Wise, 



CONDITION OF CORPS' ACCOUNTS 103 

Mecham, Baker, Trench, and Anderson the assis- 
tant surgfeon. The reg-iment, so much of it as was 
then present, had been paid by advances to 31st 
January 1858. In the treasure chest, which was 
counted by Captain Gough, was Rs. 16,000. No 
English muster roll or pay abstract had been framed. 
No English paper of any sort, record, receipt, account, 
or statement, was forthcoming. The only English 
paper known was the registry of a few names in 
Hugh Gough's handwriting, which is now, as then, 
in the muster roll book. 

"The enrolment of men for the corps had begun 
in June 1857. Rs. 119,557/10/4 had been taken up, 
and all save the 16,000 had been disbursed. It was 
alarming to know that for the account * of this one 
was entirely in the hands of the munshis : the times 
were pressing ; work and movement the lot of all, and 
in this vocation no man had been more active or 
more zealous that poor Hodson. He possessed a 
rarely clear head and keen memory, and on these 
and the munshis was his sole reliance. No European 
officer knew anything' of the affairs of the regiment. 
Everything was done by himself. I made Mecham 
officiating second in command, and gave him charge 
of the treasure chest, with directions to take down 
from Dumichand and Gurdial, the two munshis, 
without delay a statement of the expenditure. 
Dumichand had been a khazanchi (treasurer) at 
Lahore ; on him, on the faithfulness of his accounts, 
we were entirely dependent ; though without experi- 
ence of the pay rules, he is well versed in accounts. 
Speaking now on an intimate knowledge of Dumi- 

* The elucidation and settlement of the corps' accounts proved 
a work of the utmost difficulty ; but was eventually completed, early 
in 1859, to the entire satisfaction of Government, mainly through the 
zeal, energy, and application of Lieutenant R. B. Anderson, ist 
Bombay Fusiliers, who was attached to the force, by Daly's request, 
as Brigade Major. This very promising young officer, a brother of 
Daly's old friend slain at Multan, met his death during the China 
campaign in distressing circumstances. Serving as Adjutant of 
Fane's Horse, he was taken prisoner, with his escort, on the i8th 
September i860, when carrying a flag of truce, and succumbed about 
the end of that month to the barbarous treatment of his captors. 

N 



194 LUCKNOW 

chand's conduct, I bear grateful testimony to his zeal 
and honesty ; had he played false, I cannot picture 
the result. Gurdial is more conversant with the 
rules of the service, for he had served as a pay 
munshi in the Guides : he is clever and quick at 
figures, but, being much addicted to opium, cannot 
be relied on. 

" Never before was corps raised as this has been 
raised ; troop by troop, detachment by detachment, 
the Punjab supplied them and down they marched to 
Delhi, not only without drill, but there were few 
among them who had crossed even a khazi tat (a 
common pony). They were now mounted on what- 
ever horses could be procured ; these were chiefly 
stud, received from the dismounted cavalry corps : 
thus they began to share in operations in the field, in 
which they have been engaged without interruption 
from that date to the present. Mr Montgomery, 
then Judicial Commissioner at Lahore, liberally 
aided the enrolment. One troop, Man Singh's, was 
raised and inspected by him ; Raja Tej Sin^h 
embodied Bhal Singh's troop, and Sheikh Imamuddin 
Atta-ullah Khan's. These three marched to Delhi 
and there joined poor Hodson about the middle of 
July 1857. Previous to their arrival, Hodson had 
begun the regiment, taking as a nucleus a few of the 
Raja of J hind's men ; these, however, were eventu- 
ally resumed, and the first of the corps at Delhi were 
the three troops just named. 

" Macdowell, 2nd European Regiment, now joined 
as second in command, and remained with the corps 
till he was killed at Shamanow, 27th July 1858. 
Hugh Gough came shortly afterwards, and acted as 
adjutant till 26th February 1858, when a severe wound, 
received in charging a battery near the Alumbagh, so 
disabled him that he was compelled to go away. 
Many of the men, hastily collected, caught at the 
plough tail, cut a ludicrous figure mounted on the 
big, obstinate stud horses, with English saddles, 
bumping through the Delhi camp ; the regiment then 
acquired a nickname which it long retained, 'the 
Plungers.' Jai Singh's and Sharif Ali Khan's troops 
joined in August ; the former raised by Shamshere 
Singh, Sardar, and the latter by Sheikh Imamuddin ; 



MUHAMMAD RA2A 195 

later came Muhammad Raza * with the troop raised 
by himself and his brother. Fatah Ali Shah, who 
had formerly served with me in the Oudh Cavalry, 
raised a troop in a few days ; being a son of the 
Afghan chief, Jan Fishan Khan, he had the command 
of money. This was perhaps the worst troop the 
corps had seen. Some 40 or 50 were his own 
Bargheers, the scum of Meerut and the Delhi camp 
in September 1857. Hugh Gough, with Baker and 
about 230 sowars (Jai Singh and Bhal Singh), 
formed part of -Colonel Greathed's column, which 
marched from Delhi 27th September. Baker, with 
about 30 or 40 men, was dropped at Koel. Gough 
came on with the remainder, and, joining the Chiefs 
corps, was of the Bailie Guard reserve force. After 
the relief, Hugh Gough and his squadron were at the 
Alumbagh with General Outram, until the Chief's 
return for the final smash. Halket, who joined the 
squadron at Agra, was mortally wounded at the 
Secundra Bagh. 

" Hodson, with the headquarters of the regiment, 
paraded with the column of Brigadier-General 
Showers through the Jaggar district, and on his 
return, after the interval of a few weeks during which 
the regiment was at Meerut, he again took the field 
with Brigadier Seaton's column, which marched from 
Delhi about the 7th December. The regiment took 
its full share in the operations of that march, and 



* Muhammad Raza's son has recently forwarded to me a copy of 
a certificate granted to his father by my father, and bearing date 
Camp, Bhinga, nth February 1859. It runs: — "Muhammad Raza 
Khan joined the Irregular Horse of the late Major Hodson at Delhi 
a day or two before the storm (14th September 1857). He has served 
throughout the warj and on ail occasions has been conspicuous for 
chivalric valour. Now that peace is restored, it is his wish to return 
to his home at Lahore, whence he came to raise and command a 
troop, chiefly of his own retainers, for service. 

" Muhammad Raza's gallantry has won for him the first class of 
the Order of Merit, [and a representation has been submitted to 
Government soliciting that the pension (Rs. 200), which he enjoys on 
account of former services, may be increased. I commend Muhammad 
Raza Khan to the kindly, courteous consideration of all British 
officers. A braver soldier never took the field. — H. D." 



196 LUCKNOW 

subsequently joining the Commander-in-Chief, came 
on to Lucknow. 

"I have now run down to the period when I 
assumed command. I lost no time in submitting- to 
the Commander-in-Chief that there were no English 
records or accounts of any kind to be found, and 
earnestly entreated that an officer might be specially 
deputed to the clearing up of the past : there was a 
disposition to accede to this suggestion, but at the 
time there was no officer of business habits available 
for the duty ; the service was going on, and one 
drifted on from day to day without the possibility of 
pulling up ; at this period there were some 400 men 
dismounted at Meerut, and about 100 at headquarters 
in the same condition ; upwards of 1 000 of those 
with horses had no saddles. Plunder and the tales 
of golden floods had enticed many of the relatives 
and friends of the sowars from the Punjab ; the lines 
of the regiment were full of these amateurs ; they 
wore the uniform and have sometimes, in the absence 
of the sowars, actually attended parades and taken 
duty. 

" In a skirmish I was at first surprised to see the 
great array at the commencement ; their occupation, 
however, quickly thinned the gathering. I had much 
difficulty in breaking through this combination. The 
duties which fell to the corps during the siege were 
harassing, but of fighting there was little. After the 
evacuation of Lucknow, the regiment had little rest : 
sometimes at Muhammad Bagh with constant gallops, 
sometimes at the Chinhat Road. This state of 
things continued till the strength and display of the 
rebels at Nawabgunge forced us, for the preservation 
of Lucknow, to march out and attack them. This 
was done by Sir Hope Grant on the morning of the 
1 3th June. Russell, in one of his letters, wrote : ' I 
am told Hodson's Horse refused to charge at 
Nawabgunge.' This was not so. On us fell the 
brunt of that day's fight. A squadron of the 7th 
Hussars charged the body of fanatics which severed 
from the main gathering; but, with this exception, 
all the _ cavalry work of the day fell to us, and our 
casualties equalled, or very nearly so, those of the 
whole force engaged ; 2 officers and 30 men killed 



THREE REGIMENTS FORMED 197 

or wounded and about 15 or 16 horses. The tale 
of misbehaviour arose from the presence of a 
detachment of Bruce's Police Sowars, dressed in 
khaki like the Horse, formed up in line with them ; 
this detachment had never seen _ its officer till a 
day or two before — Lieutenant Hill, a very gallant 
and dashing- fellow, who, full of excitement and 
disappointment, was sorely upset that the men 
did not follow him in the charge : they knew 
him not and heeded him not ; yet many were 
good soldiers, and I have no doubt have since 
proved so. 

" Baker, the adjutant, particularly distinguished 
himself, and by his conduct won my confidence. 
Mecham, with Fraser, led a squadron round to bear 
down on the flank of the rebels, while I charged 
their front. Mecham's conduct of the troops was 
admirable, and, though badly wounded, he did not 
quit his post till the day's work was over. Man 
Singh, Resaldar,_ received four wounds; Fatteh Ali 
Shah behaved right well ; there was much single 
combat fighting. 

"Just prior to marching for Nawabgunge, I 
had received authority to organise the mass 
into two corps of irregular cavalry, agreeably 
with a suggestion I made on assuming command. 
Finding, however, the numbers on the rolls in 
excess of two corps, and that, although there 
were scores unfit for the service (men who 
had been attracted by the hope of plunder) in 
the ranks, even after their discharge the troop 
officers would remain for 16 troops, I submitted 
for consideration to enrol a Pathan squadron 
for each corps, and so form three regiments 
instead of two. The Sikh and Punjabi- Musulman 
element was too strong. This proposition was 
acceded to, and three regiments have arisen. It 
was my wish that each regiment should possess 
a Pathan squadron, and with this view I de- 
tached an officer to recruit, and placed the matter 
in Lumsden's hands. Thus about 300 Pathans 
would have been entertained to complete the 
complement. All this was cut short by Sir John 
Lawrence, who felt that the Punjab and frontier had 



198 LUCKNOW 

given enough to India* : loo men or thereabouts came 
down, and these are chiefly with the third regiment. 
Amongst those sent by Edwardes is Ishmael Khan, 
son of Darria Khan, the outlaw of the border. 
Darria Khan's crumbling old fort is close under the 
Khyber Hills, and in this stronghold he bade defiance 
to the Sikhs. He came down and fought against 
us at Gujerat, and subsequently committed many a 
border raid ; is still an outlaw. 

" It was the intention of the Commander-in-Chief 
that, at any rate for organisation and during the 
war, the three corps should be formed on the model 
of the Sind Horse in its early days : one commandant 
for the whole, _ and each corps with a second in 
command. This was the recommendation made to 
Government. Since Jacob became a Brigadier- 
General, the Sind Horse has changed its formation, 
and each corps has its separate commander, with 
Jacob commandant of the body. The Government 
have placed the corps of Hodson's Horse on the 
last footing. In each corps I have placed a Sikh 
Sardar of weight and character. They are men of 
the old regime. Bhal Singh and Jai Singh fought 
against us in the Punjab war, and none have been 
stouter for us in this struggle. 

" The first regiment sorely needs rest and refitting. 
The troops of that corps have not yet been in 
quarters. After the action of Nawabgunge, the 
main body, first and second regiments, marched with 
General Grant to Daliabad and Fyzabad ; near the 
former place Palliser joined. From Fyzabad the first 
regiment marched with Brigadier Horsford to 
Sultanpur ; after its occupation much patrolling fell 
to the men. In September and October a strong 
detachment marched with General Grant to clear the 

* On the 3rd August 1858 Lieutenant L. F. Wells, who had been 
in command of the depot of Hodson's Horse at Meerut since the 
24th December 1857, reported : — "Since that period I have received 
from the Punjab nearly 700 recruits ; out of this number I have 
forwarded to Lucknow nearly 400 men and officers (natives), having 
first drilled them to the best of my ability during the short time I 
was allowed for that purpose. I have been the only officer with the 
depot since its formation," 



STATE OF THE CORPS 199 

Doab between the Gogra and the Goomtee to the 
eastwards. Returning to Sultanpur the whole force 
marched by the Khandoo Nadi, Jagdespur, Rampur, 
Kussiole, to Amethi, and thence back through 
Beiswallah again by Sultanpur to Fyzabad to cross 
the Gogra 2Sth November 1858. At the Khandoo 
Nadi Palliser was severely wounded ; the rebels were 
here jn strength. Gee, who had joined the 
corps in August, caught fever ; Palliser and he were 
both so ill and weak in November that it was 
necessary to send them to Lucknow ; there poor Gee, 
a man of great accomplishments and high character 
in his profession, died, and Palliser was obliged to 
quit for Europe. Sarel joined the second regiment at 
Fyzabad in September 1858; that corps was less 
harassed by patrols and quickly benefited by Sarel's 
kindly and skilful handling ; his excellent temper and 
tact worked well. This corps joined the first and 
crossed the Gogra on the 2Sth November. The two 
remained together, engaged in the trans-Gogra 
service, till ist February 1859, when the second 
marched for Lucknow, leaving the first at Bhingoh. 
The third regiment has been formed from the depot 
at Meerut ; all of them had reached Lucknow by 
October 1858, about 80 per 100 still dismounted. 
Mecham, who was in command of the second regiment 
till Sarel's arrival, now proceeded to Lucknow to the 
third. This corps is well up in foot drill and mindful 
of discipline ; they had been ten or twelve months 
daily at drill — the main body Sikhs. 

"To meet the liabilities of the regimental chest I 
have put in all proceeds of captured property, bullocks, 
or elephants, for which Government rewards have 
been received ; plunder found on the men or in the 
lines. The first benefit which thus arises clears the 
Government ; after that it is with the regiment ; for 
whatever balance there may be on adjustment should 
be paid to the Chanda or clothing funds of the first 
and second regiments. It is not desirable that the 
individual who plunders should derive any benefit 
from an action through which he has probably 
thrown his duty on others. 

"A knowledge of the irregular cavalry system 
can only be attained by daily intimacy with its 



200 LUCKNOW 

working : yet there are a few general principles which 
should be impressed on all. Much rough work falls 
to the irregular cavalry ; long patrols ; hard gallops ; 
difficult reconnaissances ; work which can only be 
accomplished by men satisfied with thernselves, their 
condition, and their comrades. My experience of them 
leads me to say they will bear any hammering pro- 
vided that they meet with kind treatment ; that which 
has the most weight with them is personal knowledge ; 
strive above all things to know the individual; the 
stroll through the lines should lead to a chat about 
the sowar and his nag; thus an influence is estab- 
lished, and the Sikh or Pathan bound to serve his 
officer. Cold formality and abuse as certainly bring 
discontent and carelessness in their train. I take it, 
where one officer has obtained more success with 
irregulars than another, it may be traced to his 
knowledge of his men ; that he has not disregarded 
their little tales." 

Immediately after the final occupation of Lucknow, 
Daly wrote to his wife, dating his letter " Martiniere 
Park, where the 32nd banquet was held* :" — 

" Lucknow is now as Delhi was — full of desola- 
tion. About that open court within the Roumi 
Darwaza is a troop of artillery encamped. In the 
Emambarah are the 79th Highlanders. The streets, 
courts, and narrow ways hold nothing but our camp 
followers plundering. Bodies of flying soldiers, shot 
in all sorts of grotesque attitudes, burning and putrid, 
carcasses of every animal clog and stop the passages ; 
but the half million of inhabitants, where are they ? 

"The preparations' for resistance were made with 
a skill and perseverance which no words can 
adequately describe : there is not a corner, an angle, 
a street, or a building without its defence : — either a 
buttress looped with holes or an abattis of timber 
and mud : — batteries and trenches intersecting each 
other : not a garden in the vicinity on which labour 
had not been spent. The one business of Secundra 
Bagh, where 2000 and odd were slain, and not one 

* See p. 123, supra. 



DESOLATION AT LUCKNOW 201 

permitted to escape, settled the defence of all isolated 
gardens and works, however skilfully prepared. They 
have held none since.* 

"The Residency is a heap of ruins ; the walls are 
either defaced or knocked down ; the pillars broken 
and on the ground ; the rooms half choked with the 
debris of the roof. The Kaisar Bagh and the 
gateways you sketched are immense mounds of earth ; 
batteries fitted with guns. I went to the graveyard, 
to the spot where Sir Henry was laid. I sat for a 
long time under a tree in the old garden, looking at 
the wreck and allowing memory and fancy full play. 
The church is down to its very foundation ; the marks 
of the buttresses alone remain. Of the verandah in 
the Residency, where we were wont to lounge with 
Sir Henry, and where he and I used to have our chats, 
scarce a sign remains. The once tall pillars, now 
none of them above two or three feet high, lean about. 
Destruction and desolation fill the place ; the stairs 
by which we used to ascend returning from church 
have one or two steps remaining. One tall palm tree 
appears undamaged, and that is all that remains as in 
aforetirne. Fayrer's house was less touched than 
any. The utter and complete annihilation took place 
during the rebel tenure, after Sir Colin relieved and 
withdrew the garrison. 

" I have seen a good deal of my old friend Colonel 
Napier ; he was the chief engineer here, and displayed 
the same chivalrous qualities I knew of old. His 
character is rare ; pure and noble, with great ability ; 
boy-like courage ; a most lovable fellow ; he and I are 
very cordial. I believe he has a tenderness for me, 
and I am so proud of his regard. I think I had an 
opportunity of paying him back some of the early debt 
of kindness by the way I could speak to Mansfield 

* The Secundra Bagh was stormed on the i6th November 1857, 
when Sir Colin Campbell relieved Lucknow. At the end of November 
Sir Colin, with a large convoy of ladies, children, sick, and wounded, 
withdrew to Cawnpore. Sir James Outram, whose headquarters 
were at the Alumbagh about 2 miles from Lucknow, was left to 
threaten the city and hold the enemy. Lucknow was finally captured 
in March 1858, when the resistance offered by the mutineers was, for 
the most part, comparatively feeble 



202 LUCKNOW 

and Sir Colin of him. The testimony to him in the 
despatch is handsome, but I shall not be satisfied 
unless it results in his being K.C.B. What he is 
anxious for is a Major-Generalship. He wants to 
soldier ; he is all a soldier and Chief 

"An officer of the 13th Native Infantry was 
actually left in. the Residency when Sir Colin evacu- 
ated the place. Before quitting, people went about 
from room to room shouting out. The 13th man 
had fallen asleep in a dark corner, and heard nothing 
of the exodus ; when he awoke, several hours after 
his companions had left, he was struck by the deep 
silence ; finding out his loneliness, he jumped up and 
ran down the streets and through the palaces and 
courtyards, without encountering a person, till he 
reached the Secundra Bagh, where he found the 
rear guard of the Highlanders! 

" 2Sth March.- — We had a pursuit the other day, 
and cut up a considerable number ; less damage done 
though than should have been. The country was 
alive with armed men. Every field we entered, 
fellows started out of the long grass in which they 
had attempted to conceal themselves. Mansfield has 
lent me a tent ; I have a carpet-bag, so am not 
much embarrassed with baggage. My difficulty is 
for a horse. Nothing good under ^150; nothing 
rideable under ^50. 

" 27M March.- — Moosabagh. Our force was so 
much on the move for some days that I had no 
opportunity of writing. We marched from Alumbagh 
to get round between Bareilly and Lucknow. The 
object was to effect a surprise ; that we should be 
in a position to cut the enemy off in their retreat 
on Rohilkhand after Outram had attacked the 
Moosabagh Palace. We marched away at 3 A.M., 
pitch dark. The ground was luckily clear during 
the early part, but about 7 a.m. we reached the 
ravines. The country is all alike ; belts of trees and 
thick underwood ; at this season, when the foliage 
is dense and dark and fields thick and high, it is 
almost impossible to move cavalry at all. We 
marched through a strong village, well looped with 
holes, and in every respect ready for us ; luckily but 
a few shots were fired, and the infantry got through 



FIGHTING AT MOOSABAGH 203 

with but little opposition ; outside, the gardens were 
close to the walls, and the country all around strewed 
and streaming- with people. Inhabitants who had 
fled from us, many sepoys who had taken refuge 
there; many, too, were pouring- out of Lucknow lo 
miles distant. Here we had a little skirmishing and 
lost valuable time. 

" The intention was that cavalry and infantry 
should also pass through the village, but the Brigadier, 
finding it narrow and intricate, took fright and ordered 
them to attempt to pass the canal and move round. 
The order was in a manner misunderstood, and the 
arms were severed till near i o'clock, by which time 
we ought to have been in full chase from Moosabagh. 
The heat at midday was trying : the infantry had 
been afoot since 3 A.M., and now had to go on. We 
moved along skirmishing in the corn and jungle 
with desperadoes, who got out of the ravines and 
deep ground like quail. After a time we reached 
within 2 miles of Moosabagh or less : here the 
country was thickly wooded, with villages and 
gardens. We gave the men a rest under the 
trees, and sent forward to know the result of the 
attack under General Outram. No messenger could 
reach ; armed men were all around. From one little 
fort, near a tank where our horses were being 
watered, a sharp fire was opened ; some men were 
wounded, and 2 or 3 horses actually captured. We 
moved up a couple of guns to shell the. inmates. 
After two or three rounds some 50 or 60 fellows 
moved out quietly, and without noise or confusion 
steered straight to attack the guns. Some 30 of the 
7th Hussars chanced to be on duty there ; they 
charged in amongst these fanatics, but, being men 
of war, they did not charge through, but pulled up 
and entered into single combats with the footmen, 
who were scarcely visible in the long grass and thick 
corn. Two officers were knocked down and one fine, 
gallant boy was actually hacked and cut before their 
eyes. Nobody could rescue him. Some of my men 
came up and went dashing in gallantly ; two of these 
(Sikhs), finding the ground not good for horses, 
dismounted and closed with sword and spear. At 
last every man was killed ; we had 3 or 4 officers 



204 LUCKNOW 

wounded, but the British soldiers escaped with 2 
or 3 wounded. 

" We bivouacked for the night ; the next morning- 
we learnt that Outram's attack had been successful. 
We believed that the enemy had eluded us, for 
though we had cut up a considerable number, the 
bulk we had never seen ; they had passed up near 
the_ banks of the river and amidst the woods and 
ravines, and would not have been visible even had 
we been nearer. The following morning about 10 
I received a note from the Brigadier : ' Come up as 
quick as you can and order a squadron of your 
regiment to follow ; the rebels are streaming out of 
the fort.' I galloped off, and from the top of the 
palace saw a large number of infantry and an elephant 
or two and some horsemen. The look-out reported 
that a large body had already passed across the 
open space, and were concealed behind the wood. 
My advice was asked and given thus * : ' Push the 
1st Sikh Cavalry (close to us) and a squadron of 
the 7th Hussars along the trail, right on their rear ; 
follow yourself with the remainder of the cavalry 
with infantry, and do what may be required.' The 
Brigadier meant to follow this, but funked and did 
it in part only;' he ordered the ist Sikh Cavalry to 
make a sweep, and followed himself with the remainder 
of the troops. Luckily for the success of the pursuit, 
the officer commanding the ist Sikh Cavalry (Wale), 
a fine, gallant, cheery officer, pushed on and cut up 
a large number, throwing the whole of the rebels into 
confusion ; in effecting this, however, the noble fellow 
lost his life ; he was shot dead ; nearly all the officers 
of the corps were slightly wounded. We chased for 
6 miles, but the effect of the whole was lost by the 
Brigadier's hesitation at first. 

"On our arrival at the Moosabagh (20th March), 
the fields had been deserted in the middle of the 
harvest, the sheaves of corn were on the ground ; 
the bullocks were actually yoked to the well to revolve 

* In a despatch dated the 26th March 1858, Sir Colin Campbell 
wrote of Daly ; " This oflScer by his activity and zeal, added to his 
knowledge of Indian warfare, has been of great service to the Brigadier 
he served under." 



"TEEASONABLE IGNOEANCE" 205 

the wheel to irrigate the soil. For months the sound 
of cannon had not ceased, and during- the few previ- 
ous days the fighting of all kinds, the movements in 
.retreat from the city, had caused as much confusion 
as it was possible to excite. Yet the husbandman, 
uninterested as to who conquered, sowed his cucumber 
seed, and went on gathering up the corn which our 
camp followers and oxen quickly possessed them- 
selves of. 

"You will hear by this mail of the explosion at 
Gwalior. I hope the telegraph may also announce 
that Rose* was on the spot. Had this, or anything 
like it, occurred while our little force was before Delhi, 
what result could have happened? It was not willed 
that we should be destroyed. These disturbances in 
Central India I place on the shoulders of the late 
Ministry ; they wantonly and insolently left us to die, 
and gave over Central India to revolution and civil 
war. I think, with our great steam power, the Cape 
must always be the grand high road for the relief and 
support of our troops ; but for an emergency such as 
that which arose it was cruel to leave Bombay and 
Central India to hap-hazard. I go as far as Sir 
John Lawrence, who termed the neglect ' treasonable 
ignorance.' 

"John Lawrence as Governor-General f would be 
better for India than 10,000 British troops. He 
would strengthen Sir Colin in every way. Sir John's 
experience in a military point is considerable, and for 
the desiderata nowadays his views are more practi- 
cal than the Chief's. There is a disposition to run a 
tilt against Sir Colin — most unjustly in my opinion. 
No doubt small errors he may have, he must have, 
committed ; he has been hampered by Government, 
by the prosecution of many and distant operations ; 

* Sir Hugh Rose, afterwards Lord Strathnairn. 

t In April 1858 Neville Chamberlain wrote to Daly:— "If Lord 
Canning goes, and that quickly, I certainly hope that Sir John Law- 
rence may be his successor. India under his rule for two years 
would rise like a giant refreshed. We should have a re-organised 
army, re-organised systems of civil administrations, and all depart- 
ments brought under control, which is far from being the case at 
present." 



206 LUCKNOW 

and, above all, he has to guard against a single or 
chance failure ; and to do this he is obliged to send 
larger bodies of troops for operations than perhaps 
they need. Many of his lieutenants are untried ; all 
or nearly all the colonels of corps from home are, 
despite Crimean experience, ignorant of their profes- 
sion, and incapable of taking care of themselves ; then, 
too, the regiments are boys, hastily collected without 
discipline. 

" Tth April. — I believe there is no part of our old 
provinces wherein our rule will be received with so 
much satisfaction as this troubled province. The 
small and even considerable landholders and cultiva- 
tors look to us for Peace ; one district has been so 
much and so long in contention with its neighbours 
that there is not one ready or willing to continue the 
struggle. A column will move from this to operate 
in Rohilkhand, the last province in which Rebel Rule 
is known. Matters are now in the course of settle- 
ment. No city of name or fame, when Bareilly shall 
have fallen, will remain : nearly all our own guns 
have been recaptured. The people are being every- 
where disarmed. Sir Colin will not continue out here 
longer than he can help, and Lord Canning must 
resign ; he cannot serve with Lord Derby. I incline 
to think the latter, with a view of hitting the public, 
may appoint John Lawrence Governor-General ; 
then Edwardes would rule in the Punjab. Lord 
Canning wrote Sir Colin that he had wished to send 
him to Oudh, but that his presence was necessary in 
the Punjab ; unless Edwardes can see the Govern- 
ment of the Punjab before him, he will not like being 
made a necessity against his own advancement. 

"Mansfield has made Russell (the Times cor- 
respondent) a portion of the army — a department. 
He is supplied with full information on all points, 
bound only neither to discuss nor reveal purposes and 
intentions in this country : by the time such matters 
can be published in England, the danger which might 
result from our object being known is past. Russell is 
full of humour, a keen, quick-eyed Irishman. He 
is a great pen-painter. Mansfield has not so much 
respect for the tact and knack of language as many 
of the uninitiated. 



NEVILLE CHAMBEELAIN 207 

" 30M April. — I spoke to Mansfield of Chamber- 
lain. I mentioned his great qualifications as a soldier, 
and pointed out somewhat earnestly the loss Sir 
Colin was inflicting- on himself, and on the service at 
large, by not placing him in a prominent command. 
I reiterated this on hearing of Walpole's horrid 
disaster. I was moved to this, not merely by friend- 
ship for Chamberlain, but because I amjealousof the 
character of our service, and often pained to see men 
playing at war who are totally ignorant of the prin- 
ciples on which it should be conducted. 

"Chamberlain looks WnaX he truly is, a high and 
noble soldier. I have always held that he did wrongto 
resign the Adjutant-Generalship at the time he did, 
and on the ground he did so. The appointment is not 
in his line. He is not fond of penmanship and hates 
office work, but he could have rendered g'reat service to 
us all. Mansfield is improved too ; he is a broader man 
for his European experience : — I have endeavoured 
to wipe out the feeling Chamberlain had of him." 

Daly was in constant communication with 
Mansfield, who wrote to him on the loth May 1858, 
from Fatteh Singh : — 

" I have received your two notes. For the first I 
am very much obliged to you. I can assure you 
without affectation that to feel that our labours are 
appreciated by men, who, like yourself, know what 
work and responsibility mean, is a recompense 
greater than almost any other. I have communi- 
cated your letter recommending Nawabgunge as a 
station for a brigade during the summer to Sir Colin, 
and I support it strongly, not only because of the 
necessity of averting menace and panic from the city, 
but also because it is indispensable to keep a certain 
radius from Lucknow free from molestation to ensure 
the incoming of supplies. When Grant moved to the 
northward, it was my desire that the column to which 
you belong should have gone to the south-east — in 
short, have made the march in which Grant is now 
engaged. .Thus it would have formed part of the 
general dissemination of columns, viz. : Walpole, 



208 LUCKNOW 

Grant, and Lugard, instead of being isolated, as it 
now is, and therefore pro tanto ineffective, although 
a few forts may be destroyed. However, it was 
deemed dangerous to denude the city so much, and 
you encamped at Dilkusha instead. I think an 
opportunity was then lost, and it appears the same 
thing has occurred to you. 

"The ubiquitous Moulvi* is in person at 
Mohumdee, where he has been ever since our entry 
into Rohilkhand. Jones (6oth) relieved Shah- 
jehanpur on the nth instant from the state of siege 
in which it was held by the Moulvi. The latter 
returned to the scratch, and attacked Jones with a 
great force of cavalry yesterday. The sowars 
galloped up to the guns and suffered a good deal, 
our loss being next to nothing. But this shows with 
what spirit the insurrection throughout the two 
provinces is animated, and how thoroughly we are 
put on the defensive in consequence of the govern- 
ment determination to' operate over an extent which 
is out of all proportion with the means at our 
disposal. 

_" Our disposition in Rohilkhand is as follows: — 
Bijnour is held by a movable column ; ultimately, 
after the Mohumdee gathering is dispersed, Morada- 
bad by one Punjab infantry, one irregular cayalry 
regiment, wing of British infantry, and guns a discre- 
tion ; Bareilly, by a strong brigade of all the arms ; 
Shahjehanpur, etc., and Budaon by a regiment of 
Punjab infantry and irregular cavalry. The Terai 
cannot be touched during the present season, there- 
fore, beyond Pitabad, the collector will not amass any 
revenue just now. All the Rohilkhand swells, the 
Nana, and the Moulvi are, it is said, together at 
Mohumdee. John Jones of the 6oth has done remark- 
ably well, whether by advice of his subordinates or 
by his own promptings, of course, I don't know. His 
march has been spirited and successful, while military 
precaution has not been forgotten. We hope to be 
with him at Shahjehanpur the day after to-morrow, 

* This man proclaimed the restoration of the rule of the Emperor 
of Delhi, and succeeded, for a time, in establishing a sort of provi- 
sional government. See Kaye's Sepoy War, vol. ii., p. 261. 



SUFFEEINGS OF ENGLISH 209 

and then go to Fattehg-hur, where I hope I have 
induced the Chief to put up for two or three months. 
" I intend to oppose any more movement in Oudh 
till we are prepared to move six or eight columns at 
the same time, and to drop garrisons sufficient for 
self-protection as we go along. What is now being 
done is of no use for permanent occupation ; advan- 
tageous perhaps from a certain political point of view, 
but otherwise of little avail. I have got the whole 
scheme in my head of what should and eventually 
must be done, but in the meantime we must rest on 
our oars, give repose to the over- worked troops, and 
get a herd of native levies, police or military, to help 
us hold the country after our advances have been 
pushed. Pray write to me frequently. Your obser- 
vations and experience are very valuable to Sir Colin, 
and I need not tell you he thoroughly appreciates the 
value of your information and your suggestions." 

On the 9th June, Daly recorded the following 
melancholy tale * : — 

" I have had Captain Hearsay here this morning. 
I had the opportunity to do him a service; on my 
representation of his usefulness and knowledge of 
Oudh and native character, the Chief took him with 
him to Bareilly ; he has now returned. Hearsay had 
just reached Sitapur from wandering about the 
forests of Oudh at the beginning of the Mutiny. He 
was ignorant of the scenes at Meerut and Delhi, and 
quite unprepared for what almost immediately took 
place. When the horrors commenced at Sitapur, 
those of our country-fellows who escaped, did so in 
two small bodies. Burnes — poor, gallant, high- 
hearted boy — went across the river ; the younger 
Miss Jackson t was with her brother and Burnes. 
Hearsay and his party, eleven I think, took, in the 

* A more detailed story by Hearsay is given at p. 96 et seq. of the 
Narrative of the Mutinies in Oudh, by Captain G. Hutchinson, 
Military Secretary to the Chief Commissioner. 

+ The younger Miss Jackson was carried into Lucknow by the 
mutineers, and after enduring dreadful privations, was rescued in 
March 1858. Kaye's Sepoy War, vol. iii., p. 492. 

O 



210 LUCKNOW 

confusion, another route. With the latter were Mrs 
Greene and Miss Jackson, and a sergeant-major's 
wife. They were for two days without any food save 
what they could scrape out of the villages, all empty 
and deserted, towards the Terai. Mrs Greene 
believed her husband to be murdered, her baby was 
with the wet-nurse ! she had got off alone ! She was 
broken and nervous ; God knows there had been 
enough to try better strung nerves than hers. Miss 
Jackson — that fragile, delicate girl — bore hunger, 
distress, fatigue, and all the anguish of the situation, 
with a rare and beautiful fortitude. Hearsay thought 
to get them out of the country down to Goruckpore 
by decking them as a marriage procession. He is 
half a native, is familiar with every twig and footpath 
in Oudh. He obtained two palanquins and some 
bearers whom he could trust, and on they went, with 
success, through several considerable villages. The 
plan failed ; how, I know not, but I imagine through 
treachery. Hearsay knew the Raja of Khyreeghur 
well and sent to him. The response was true and 
kind ; however, after wandering about for some time, 
600 sepoys were detached to bring them into 
Lucknow. This body came to them and treated 
them respectfully, and marched them off. After two 
or three days of this escort, the little party held a 
council ; it was decided to attempt an escape. The 
ladies fully concurred. It was better to die there in 
the forest than to be reserved for a worse fate in 
Lucknow. I have said these sepoys were respectful 
and chatty. The fugitives contrived to get the main 
body, 600, to start on the march ; a guard went with 
the tent, and 16 sepoys only remained. The plan 
was to put the ladies on the elephant, and for the 
gentlemen to ride. A drizzling rain favoured the 
project ; they got off After penetrating the forest 
for some distance the hue and cry commenced ; the 
country was up. On the elephant were the two 
ladies, the sergeant's wife, and Mr Carthew of Shah- 
jehanpore ; the sergeant-major's son was on foot ; in 
this raid they were severed from the gentlemen, and 
no reliable information has been obtained of them 
since! Some say they were brought to Lucknow. 
Some, that they are even yet alive. 



HEARSAY'S ESCAPE 211 

" The gentlemen rode on to the banks of a river. 
The wild, coarse grass of the forest was high and 
dense ; here they tried to conceal themselves, and 
remained for two days, hoping to hear of the ladies 
(my heart shudders even now for them). During 
this the sepoys came up and opened a fire on the 
grass where they believed them to be concealed. 
There was but one boat, and it was on the other 
side and not procurable ; had they got this in time, 
all might have passed in safety. At last the 
gentlemen, leaving their horses tied to trees, swam 
across, and there they wandered without food or 
clothing for some days, until the same friendly Raja 
heard of them, and had them conveyed to a small 
hamlet in a distant valley. By and by, as time went 
on, he arranged a place of shelter for them in the 
first range of the Nepal Hills, and thither they went, 
and were wanderers for four months. Several died of 
the jungle fever ; they had to conceal themselves to 
preserve their lives. At last Hearsay, with one 
companion, I think, about December reached Mus- 
soorie ! Once he dressed himself as a Muhammadan, 
and taking sword and shield from his friend the Raja, 
and a couple of coolies from a neighbouring village 
(the coolies did not know he was aught but what he 
appeared), he attempted to get through to Goruck- 
pore ; en route on one occasion he was met by a party 
of sowars, some of whom he knew! He sat down 
with them, smoked a pipe, etc., heard their news, and 
told a tale of himself. They said, ' There is not an 
Englishman left in the country except the few at the 
Bailie Guard,* and very likely they have been killed 
ere this ' ; they spoke of the times as being great for 
them ; they considered themselves as rulers, the only 
subjects were the cultivators and Bunniahs ! It was 
a Rule! no obedience. Hearsay was asked what he 
was seeking : — ' Service as a sowar, he had been 
formerly in the Raja of Bulrampore's service.' " 

* i.e., the beleaguered garrison in Lucknow. 



CHAPTER IX 

SIR HOPE grant's OPERATIONS IN OUDH, 1858-1859 

Hope Grant ; action of Nawabgunge ; Sir Colin Campbell's peerage ; 
Outram and Oudh ; Mansfield ; march to Fyzabad ; question of 
army re-organisation and the future of the Company's officers ; 
passage of the Goomtee ; engagement on the Khandoo River ; 
the proclamation and amnesty ; Amethi ; passage of the Gogra ; 
Sekrora ; the Raja of Bulrampur ; the -Naval Brigade ; pursuit in 
the Terai, capture of guns ; a scramble in Nepal ; fight near 
Tulsipur ; departure for England. 

" On the nth June I received an intimation from my 
old Delhi friend, _ General Grant, that I was to 
accompany him with all the men I could collect in an 
attack he was about to make on a great gathering of 
rebel Rajas, Zamindars, and sepoys at Nawa|Dgunge. 
The fact is, we had so long delayed doing anything 
towards driving the rebels out of this, that they began 
to dream dreams of conquest and recovery, and many 
thousands were collected here ; for miles around in 
every Tope (grove) was some Raja with his followers. 
Men who are for us were compelled to join against 
us, or submit to have their estates plundered and 
themselves driven out. There had been a good deal 
of correspondence between Sir Colin and Sir Hope 
Grant, who commands in Oudh. The latter, not 
knowing all the points, wished to make the site of 
our column for the rains Chinhat, and this Sir Colin 
was inclined to accede to. For all purposes desired, 
the brigade would have been useless. I felt that if I 
could see and talk with Hope Grant all would be 
well : he did not know whence Mansfield got his 
notions, nor would it suit his character that he should 
do so. Yet he is the kindest, the noblest of soldiers, 

312 



SIR HOPE GRANT 213 

so generous in his estimation of others, so self- 
sacrificing; aWays in the thick of the fight, always at 
work, very pious, very cheerful and jolly : nothing 
daunts him, for somehow he does not see the heavy 
matters, and perhaps, if he did, he would not under- 
stand them. I am fond of him. He was my daily 
visitor at Delhi when I was on my back. 

" We marched to Chinhat on the morning of the 
1 2th: 7th Hussars, a squadron of the Bays; 6ob 
irregular horsemen under me ; guns, two batteries 
and a troop ; two battalions Rifle Brigade, 1 200, 
chiefly boys ; and Major Vaughan's Punjab corps. 
A force capable of going anywhere. Nawabgunge 
was known to hold 1 2,000 of the enemy of sorts, with 
10 or 12 guns. At Chinhat it was ordered that we 
should march at 11 p.m., so as to reach the vicinity of 
Nawabgunge about daybreak. Grant sent for me in 
the evening at Chinhat to talk matters over. I 
suggested ' Strike and pack your camp now by 
daylight. Everybody sleeps in the open, and by thus 
doing, when we move five or six hours hence, the 
men will only have to jump up and shake themselves ; 
and, above all, do not attempt to carry our baggage ; 
the night will be dark ; we are not going to follow the 
main road, and, if the baggage animals accompany 
us, they will stray all over the country ; our troops 
will be embarrassed and occupied guarding them ; the 
rebels with their numbers can afford to play a game 
they understand well, cutting up baggage.' After 
some discussion he concurred ; the baggage to remain 
on the ground packed, with a guard, until sent for 
by us ; fortunate, indeed, it was that this was done. 
We had on arrival to fight at all points at once; 
having no impediment, this we could do without 
difficulty. The enemy was all around us, and his 
first and only cavalry move was to get at our baggage 
which he found not. The fight began at about 4 a.m. 
on Sunday, 13th June, and was over at 8 a.m. The 
General said, ' But for your suggestions, Daly, we 
should not have met with this great success.' Not 
many men would so speak. I must attempt to 
describe the fight. 

"We moved along the high road till within 3 
miles of Nawabgunge, when we struck off to the left 



214 GRANT'S OPEEATIONS IN OUDH 

so as to sweep round. It was desired to reach a 
village I i miles distant about daybreak. No accident 
occurred ; all came as intended ; the halt sounded. 
The men had a tot of grog given out, and chewed 
whatever they had with them. Daylight now met 
us. The march had been a very hot one ; very 
fatiguing despite the slowness of the pace ; the wind 
was in our backs, and hot, driving the thick dust all 
over us. We had half an hour's rest for this grog 
process — up and off The advance guard had 
scarcely gone 300 yards when a challenge was given, 
' Who kum dar ? ' repeated, and then the pattering of 
muskets and matchlocks on us. I was 500 yards 
behind with the cavalry. On the firing I trotted 
forward alone, for the General had desired me to 
come to the front. As I moved along, the round shot 
began to fall unpleasantly about, and on a narrow 
bridge which we were compelled to cross, the range 
had evidently been carefully measured, for the 
practice was good. However, a few rounds from our 
artillery soon made them clear off, and we crossed 
with the loss of but one poor artilleryman. 

"When I got over, I received an order to come 
forward with all the cavalry ; just at this time I saw 
a body of rebel cavalry, 200 or 300, the only body 
seen during the morning, trotting round to our left 
and rear. I therefore halted my regiment and galloped 
forward to report. It was lucky that I did so, for, 
though I did nothing against them, the delay made 
me available to move in another direction where the 
fight eventually occurred. I was ordered to the 
right. The plain was beautifully open ; a deep ravine 
or two and some trees near the village about three- 
quarter mile distant. The rebels were on our rear 
and on our right in force, with guns, but few cavalry. 
The sight was really picturesque. We had'but two 
companies of infantry near, and I was not pleased. 
I chanced to see Major Carleton with his battery ; 
I directed him to gallop round and bring his guns 
into action, and that I would support him ; he com- 
plied. To make a handsome demonstration, I got 
into line; I had with me 200 police, so we had 600 
cavalry deployed. My intention was to charge in 
line to the right as soofi as they appeared shaken 



ACTION OF NAWABGUNGE 215 

by our artillery. Their fire on us was good ; the 
shot and shell fell thick among- us, and the musketry 
reached us. As usual, we suffered much less than 
could have been expected. Grant came down and 
joined in two or three charges. We took* all the 

* Daly furnished the following report : — 

" To the Brigade Major, Camp near Nawabgunge, 

" Cavalry Brigade. ia,th June 1858. 

" Sir, — Agreeably with the orders of Brigadier Hagart, I have the 
honour to report the operations of the regiment under my command, 
while not under his immediate observation yesterday. 

"2. About 5 A.M. I received instructions from Major Hamilton, 
the Assistant Adjutant-General, to move with my corps and the 
squadron of Police under Lieut. Hill to a plain to the right, to meet 
the enemy who was showing in strength and threatening our right 
and rear. The enemy had 2 guns in position to our right rear, 
distant about looo yards ; round them the rebels mustered in force, 
and, though severely handled by 4 guns of Major Carlton's battery, 
they still held very tenaciously. The length of their line, though 
broken in spots, was upwards of a mile circling round Nawabgunge, 
on the flanks of which at the commencement of the day were 2 guns 
and a large body of infantry. 

" 3. The ground between us and the enemy on the right is well 
adapted for cavalry, for, although there was a ravine within a few 
yards of their front, it was not suflScient to stop a horse ; as I deployed 
prior to making the charge, I detached Lieut. Mecham with Lieut, 
the Hon. J. Fraser and 100 sabres to cross the ravine (which was 
deep higher up), and to bear down on their left flank. Finding the 
enemy in greater strength than could be observed from the front, 
this officer judiciously delayed the movement till the advance on 
the left took place. I much regret to state that in gallantly making 
this charge over broken ground Lieut. Mecham was severely wounded, 
his horse received a couple of bullets and two sword cuts. Lieut. 
Fraser was also slightly wounded, but the rebels were driven back 
in confusion. 

"4. We made two charges on the enemy's line ; the first, although 
we broke through, was but partially successful since we failed -to 
capture the guns ; the dust created by the advance was so thick and 
heavy that it was not until our return, when I rode with a handful 
of men close to the guns, that I was aware the bulk of the regiment 
had borne away too far to the left. 

" 5. In a subsequent charge by a portion of the regiment the guns 
were captured ; many of the enemy stood to the last and received 
the charge with musket and sword ; they were sabred or shot. 



216 GRANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

guns we saw but two, which from the extent of the 
fight they got away. They were broken and so 
dispersed that there was no possibility of pursuit, 
and further, our troops were tired by the heat. The 
sun and fatigue took off many a fine lad ; upwards 
of 30 died of sunstroke. I think many might have 
laeen spared, but officers just out from home are 
ignorant and sinfully careless of the effects of the 
direful sun. I had 4 men killed, 21 wounded, and 
a good many horses killed. This is the only successful 
coup we have made in Gudh since Lucknow fell, and 
the effect will be good. General Grant, now that he 
has been here, sees as clearly as I do the necessity 
of fixing a strong brigade here, to give security and 
to show that we mean to AoM the Province. 

" 26M June. — Everything is on the mend. We 
want now a few men to lead divisions not bound 
down and cramped by the ancient laws and principles 
of war, which were in vogue in the Middle Ages 
and in defiance of which Napoleon, to the disgust 
of the old Austrian Generals in Italy, marched and 
moved without reference to seasons and camps, to lick 
them ! We are beginning to find this out, and after 
a few more absurdities and considerable losses, no 
doubt we shall right ourselves. I am not saying this 
with reference to dear old Sir Colin. To my mind, 
knowing how terribly he is enveloped in ancient 

Erejudices, it is wonderful to contemplate what he 
as done ; and, further, the Chief of this army should 
run no risk or possibility of failure. Sir Colin would 

In this charge Lieut, and Adjutant Baker and Resaldar Man Singh 
particularly distinguished themselves ; they rode straight on the 
guns and closed with the desperate men defending them. The 
Resaldar had his horse cut in three places across the chest. Jamadar 
Hussain Ali, seeing Lieut. Baker hard pressed, dismounted and threw 
himself on the gunner. 

" 6. I would desire to bring to the notice of the Major-General 
the zealous and efficient services rendered on this and previous 
occasions by the Medical Officer, Dr Anderson. He was in the field 
sharing in every movement, and was thus enabled to render immediate 
aid to those requiring it. It is not too much to say that more than 
one owes limb and perhaps life to his ready attention. 

"7. During the later period the Major-General came up, and 
the subsequent movements were made under his supervision." 



SIE COLIN CAMPBELL'S PEERAGE 217 

have been happier in command of a brigade, and I 
think there is no man in the army who would command 
a brigade in difficulties with greater spirit. All in 
all, he has done well and more than well. He has 
had a hard game with many of his lieutenants, with 
Horse Guards and parliamentary interests, but utterly 
incapable ; yet even the Commander-in-Chief dare 
not put them aside. The peerage will bring with it 
no satisfaction : he said to me one day very mourn- 
fully, ' I am wifeless and childless — a lone man. The 
rank and wealth and honours, which would have 
gladdened those dear to me, come to me when all 
who loved me in my youth are gone. Ah, Daly, I 
have suffered poverty and hardship. For years, for 
the want of a few hundred pounds, I was compelled 
to live in the West Indies, unable to purchase the 
promotion I craved^ for, and which younger men 
about me were getting as they wished : those were 
bitter days.' Did I tell you of the pretty letter* 
which the Queen wrote Sir Colin ? Womanly praise, 
touching in expression, with this finale : ' The Queen, 
however, has one reproof to make. Sir Colin 
Campbell too much exposes a life very precious to 
the nation.' Was not this beautiful? Such things 
make loyal and heroic soldiers. 

"Sir James Outram, in his usual style, praises 
everybody, and not less than 200 officers possess 
notes (private) testifying to their heroism! some 
chance to be otherwise regarded amongst their 
comrades! You know I, in common with all the 
world, like Sir James Outram, and to me he is kinder 
and heartier even than to others ; but I look on him 
as a thorough Jblunderer in war and politics ; chival- 
rously brave, physically brave and stout-hearted. 
' Go ahead — I lead ' is his style of fighting ; no con- 
struction, no order. In politics, unless when vastly 
excited, I have always seen him too indolent to be 
interested in-anything ; there is no man living in my 
estimation so answerable for all the mistakes in the 
annexation of Oudh as Outram. Sir Henry was 
first offered the _ appointment : seeing it was with a 
view to annexation, he, in his noble way, lucidly laid 

* The full text of this letter is given in Shadwell's Life of Lord 
Clyde; the quotation is not quite exact. 



218 GRANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

before the Governor-General his opinions opposing 
the swoop. After that Lord Dalhousie got Outram, 
the non-annexation ist, the friend of the Amirs, to do 
his will. Had Sir Henry Lawrence come to Gudh 
in those early days, it is useless to speculate on what 
changes it would have made. There would have 
been no heroic garrison at the Residency, with parapet 
and ditches that a baby of three could pass. The 
mutiny would have worked its way, and Oudh would 
have been affected ; but it is more than doubtful if 
the Talukdars, the Dukes of Bedford of Oudh, would 
have joined against us. Sir Henry foresaw the 
mutiny. Neither he nor any man on earth foresaw 
the extent ; but I can remember in those days when 
the news of the Barrackpore and Dinapore disaffec- 
tion s used to reach us, how fully his mind was 
imbued with the depth and breadth of the crisis. 

"Sir William Mansfield, K.C.B.! this is but the 
first link in his tether ; that man will rise. He has 
nerve to bear any responsibility, the great bugbear in 
public life. He has a keen, cultivated intellect, a 
sharp temper well in hand and ready for use; his 
education is European, his knowledge European ; and 
therefore, I think he will end as Ambassador at Con- 
stantinople or St Petersburg, or as England's 
General, should need be. He has the powers of com- 
bination ; whether he is a General actually in the 
field I know not ; I have had no opportunity of judg- 
ing ; but it is more than probable he is capable of 
anything!" 

"22nd July. — I am with a gallant force en route 
for Fyzabad, which we are to occupy, and thence will 
be the base of operations for the cold weather move 
trans-Gogra. Usually at this season it would be 
impossible to move artillery and carts across the 
country, for the roads are mere tracks, with many 
deep water-courses and streams intersecting them. 
But during this year no rain has fallen in the ordinary 
course. The marshy ground is slightly wet, and the 
streams a little swollen, nothing more. The appear- 
ance of everything exquisitely fresh and green, for 
the showers have been sufficiently frequent to keep 
nature verdant. Our column consists of one troop 
R.A., one battery R.A. with 4 heavy guns and their 



ON THE EOAD TO FYZABAD 219 

complement of ammunition, 7th Hussars, 400 sabres 
of mine, one squadron ist Sikh Cavalry, one battalion 
Rifle Brigade, Madras European Fusiliers, and sth 
Punjab Infantry. Had poor Havelock had such a 
complete force his march would have been one of 
triumph. _ General Grant is with us ; he is always 
ready, seizes every opportunity of work. Brigadier 
Horsford, C.B., will command at Fyzabad ; the little 
I know of him I like ; a straightforward man ; but, as 
I have often said, all these new Queen's officers have 
to be taught their profession in the field. Whatever 
they may know of drills and dress, they know nothing 
of actual service. There is no doubt this move should 
have taken place long ago ; that had we moved on 
Fyzabad after our victory of the 1 3th ultimo, it would 
have been a triumphal march and attended with great 
Mat. Now we are enabled to go by a fluke of 
weather, the like of which is unknown and unremem- 
bered by the oldest inhabitant. It is all right though, 
and therefore seems almost captious to complain. 
Matters are looking well, and, if good sense guides 
our civil and district rulers, India will do well, despite 
the many obstacles that oppose us, the greatest of 
which is the faction fight at home. With Sir John 
Lawrence Governor-General, many a sword might be 
hung up. 

"Camp, Durriabad, 2 sth July. — We marched 
through the old city yesterday, and encamped on the 
site of our former cantonment. The streets were 
totally deserted and the doors of the houses barred ; 
here and there on the roofs were seen a few figures. 
The rebels, many of them true Pandies, had been 
here for some time, but all levanted two days prior to 
our coming ; the people cultivate their fields, guide 
their ploughs, and look up as we move along ; now 
and then the headmen of the village come out with 
their offerings to welcome us, and declaim in great 
anguish against the tyranny and plunder they have 
undergone. No doubt this class will rejoice in the 
restoration of our Government, in a power to protect 
them. They speak of the year of annexation as their 
time of comfort, and probably never before had they 
known a season of such freedom and ease. 

"Fyzabad, Z'^stjuly. — On the 29th, on approach- 



220 GRANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

ing the city, the force halted, and cavalry and artillery 
formed up with the intention of trotting- doiyn to the 
ferry, leaving infantry and heavy guns behind. We 
passed through the main streets of Fyzabad ; the 
beauty of those avenues of tamarind must be seen 
to be appreciated ; I have never seen tree or 
verdure such as Fyzabad presents. You remember 
Macaulay's description of Fyzabad in his Warren 
Hastings, when he speaks of the pressure put upon 
the princes to make them supply our wants. The 
city, from its position on the Gogra, and the extreme 
fertility of the district, has always been highly 
favoured by the Muhammadans, who once esteemed 
it the capital of the province. To the Hindus its 
temples are considered hardly less sacred than those 
of Agra and Benares. The temples of Ajudhya are 
some 4 or 5 miles beyond Fyzabad, rich by endow- 
ment, and by the pilgrimages from all parts of India. 
The sacred images are hung about with gold, 
jewellery, and precious stones of every denomination. 
The Priesthood are by thousands. We trotted 
through the midst of these temples, the steps studded 
over with the Fakirs. The people of the city seemed 
friendly and even pleased to see u^ ; their shops open. 
This place will eventually become a very favourite 
station. The Gogra is more easily navigable than 
any river in India at this season. 

" sih- August. — The campaign is being trodden 
out fast ; the difficulties of Oudh will disappear ; little 
affairs there will be, but not many of these. A few 
months, and order will rule." 

The future of the officers of the East India Com- 
pany's service was a question which was beginning 
to trouble Daly's mind. He had received from 
Mansfield the following letter, dated Allahabad, the 
1 2th July 1858: — 

" I should have answered your last letter long ago, 
but you will excuse me for not writing notes of cere- 
mony when I have nothing to tell and nothing to ask 
about. I read your account of the action at Nawab- 
gunge with the greatest interest, and I should much 



AEMY RE-OEGANIZATION 221 

like to have been an actor in the scene. We have 
started from here a small brigfade of 1200 infantry, 
with light and heavy guns, to reduce the nest of forts 
at the south-east corner of Oudh. I expect that the 
first of these will be attacked in a day or two. It 
has been long- necessary, but the troops to do it 
have only just been got Here with infinite labour and 
paring in other quarters. _ In Behar we are very 
active, and I hope you will hear little more from 
that quarter. A small reinforcement has gone to 
Goruckpur, which, though not sufficient for any 
pfifensive movement will, I hope, suffice for the local 
wants of that district. 

" I am turning my thoughts very seriously to the 
question of the reconstitution of the army, and I want 
your opinion on one point. It appears to me that we 
should learn an important lesson from the picture of 
loyalty afforded by the Bombay and Madras armies. 
It is idle to attribute that fact to a little improved 
system or discipline as compared with the army of 
Bengal. The loyalty of this or that section of the 
native troops, during the tremendous ordeal through 
which they have lately passed, is simply an affair of 
circumstance. In the two southern arrnies the fact 
of their being two separate bodies, with a strong 
jealousy and esprit de corps running through them, 
preserved them in the fiery trial. It seems to me, 
therefore, that we should enlarge on the idea therein 
conveyed, and have three or four distinct armies for 
this Presidency : say one for the Punjab, one for the 
North- West, and one for Bengal. While the troops 
would be thus localised in a great measure for 
ordinary, times, I would entertain them on first enlist- 
ment for ^general service in case of war either beyond 
the frontier or in any part of the empire, precisely as 
before. But this foreign service should never be 
protracted, and it should not occur except for real 
war or active purposes. There should be a differ- 
ence in uniform between the different armies, and 
only local enlistment should be permitted. Let 
me hear what you think of these notions. As yet 
they are quite crude in my head, and I should 
like to have a practical opinion from you on their 
feasibility." 



222 GEANT'S OPEEATIONS IN OUDH 

In his reply Daly wrote : — 

" I quite concur with you that we must look to 
other causes than the mere difference of drill and 
discipline for the staunchness of the armies of Madras 
and Bombay. It is ridiculous to impute their steadi- 
ness to more or less of supervision. No doubt, it is 
to be found, as in the Sikh, Pathan, and Gurkha, in 
the distinction of race. Observe in Bombay this was 
so strong that the Pandy element in each corps 
exploded without touching- the Mahrattas and others 
in the same company; for instance, in the 12th 
Bombay Infantry, and in the Bombay Lancers at 
Mhow. 

" The corps which have been disbanded in Bom- 
bay, the 2 1 St and 27th, were composed of men of 
Hindustan ; the former was filled with those grand- 
looking fellows of Oudh, and considered to be in the 
highest state of efficiency. This settles the question. 
Bombay and Madras may enrol their distinct armies, 
but with Bengal and the North- West it will not be 
easy to maintain the distinctions. Bombay has its 
Mahrattas, Bhils, Kulis, also men of the lower Con- 
can, not legitimate Mahrattas, but a race much 
attracted to our service, which holds large numbers of 
them. The Revolution has occurred in time to save 
the Sikhs and us. But a few years, a short genera- 
tion, and under the principles we had established the 
race would have disappeared. Subject to Brahminical 
influence in corps in which their numbers and posi- 
tion failed to make them independent, it was the 
opinion of the best of them, which I have often heard 
expressed with a mournful shake of the head, that the 
days of the Guru's followers were few. Had the 
Mutiny overtaken us at such a time, and after the 
Sikh had forgotten his war-calling and his contempt 
for Pandy, it is hard to say what amount of British 
troops could have reconquered India for us. 

" I would not have every corps of a separate race. 
I would have a considerable proportion formed, as 
are the Guides and many of the Punjab corps : — the 
Pathan, the Dogra, the Gurkha, Sikh, and Punjabi. 
The company should be complete of its kind. The 
greatest harmony prevailed in the Guides, though 



LETTEE TO LORD STANLEY 223 

the Gurkhas could not communicate with the Afridis. 
The Pathan advanced with more than his usual dash 
after he had learnt to know the stout, unflinching 
support which he would meet with under any circum- 
stances from the Gurkha ; and the Gurkha always 
speaks admiringly of the fiery Pathan. 

" I should hope the bearing- of the Punjabi corps 
during this war has fairly and fully established the 
advantages of the irregular system in an army like 
ours, when men in the usual course get a command 
about the age Sir Colin gets his peerage. No 
regiments have ever fought for us as the Guides, the 
Gurkhas, and the Punjab corps engaged in the war. 
Death and disease have changed their officers, but 
the gallantry and discipline of the corps remained." 

Daly's views on the future of the Company's 
officers are expressed in a letter written from Fyzabad 
to Lord Stanley,* on the 19th August 1858 : — 

"My Lord, 

"The tour of 1852 along our rugged 
frontier through Eusafzai by Peshawar, Kohat, and 
the Indus Border, and the associations connected 
with Sir Henry Lawrence, may recall to your lord- 
ship's memory the writer of this : remembering the 
frankness of your lordship in those days, I venture 
thus to write now. 

" I have seen much of the troubles and trials from 
which we are now emerging.^ Within twelve hours 
of the Delhi massacre the _' Lightning Wire ' had put 
me in motion ; I was marching with the Guides bound 
for Delhi, 600 miles distant. I saw the first gun 
planted against its walls, was throughout the struggle 
and present at its conquest. I was in command of a 
large body of horse at the fall of Lucknow, since 
when I have been constantly in the field. 

"On the annexation of Oudh, I came to the 
province to enrol irregular cavalry, and remained till 
within a few weeks of the Mutiny. During that year 
of annexation I was thrown much with the people ; 

* Lord Stanley had become President of the Board of Control 
(India) in Lord Derby's Administration. 



224 GRANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

the deed may have been a blunder ; certainly the 
time and mode of execution were ill-chosen ; but 
setting all such opinions aside, no impartial man 
could fail to observe that the result was highly 
popular with the cultivators and small proprietors, in 

Eroof of which tracts of land, miles in extent, which 
ad been for years deserted and thrown out of 
cultivation, came again under the plough. An in- 
vestigation will show, I suspect, that it was not the 
loss of territory which Talukdars, the Feudal Barons, 
the Warwicks, grieved over, but the loss of influence, 
the power over life and limb exercised in a way too 
wanton to bear description or obtain belief in England. 
General Sleeman, a non-annexationist, in his notes 
throws a light on the state of the country. 

"It is probable, however, that by no line of 
conduct towards Gudh could the Mutiny have been 
staved off: the mighty army of India had felt its own 
power : from the day we were rolled back from 
Afghanistan, they viewed us in a new light; they 
saw we could submit to failure. In the terrible 
battles of the Sutlej and the Punjab, they learnt their 
strength and boastfully spoke of it. For years it has 
been the custom to concede everything asked or 
suggested to the sepoy, who was hedged with so 
much punctilio and respect that he rebuked his officer. 
We have gone on extending our territory over 
hundreds of square miles, till "the red line" is every- 
where, without adding a British soldier ; his presence 
was so rare that men journeyed for days without 
seeing one. Sepoys wrote to one another of the 
prevalence of black grain, and black cattle, and the 
rarity of white ! So inflammable, so combustible was 
the mass, that a spark at any moment for years past 
would have exploded the whole, and that too without 
any particular conspiracy or combination. 

"There are many at home to whom the future 
presents no difficulties, and who regard the past 
chiefly for the display of their powers and musings. 
They comfortably relieve themselves of all responsi- 
bility by thrusting the burden upon us. Mr Roebuck, 
for instance, evidently is convinced that the English 
mind is incapable of development out of Sheffield or 
the City ; that Indian Englishmen are worth nothing 




[Photo Hughes & MuUins. 



Sir Henry Daly. 



[To face p. 224. 



LESSONS OF THE MUTINY 225 

better than a sneer. Debates exhibiting every 
capacity ; commissions of the most ac ute and 
thoughtful men in England, may go on ; but after all, 
India must be held by an army of British soldiers. 
It was not so held, hence the Mutiny. The sepoy 
was cheaper than the Englishman in the monthly 
balance sheet, and, as we acquired territory and 
desired economy, he was taken, and in such numbers, 
that at last he thought he was big. 

" The horror of the Mutiny no man could foresee ; 
but all who have associated with Sir Henry Lawrence 
know how deeply he was impressed with the dangerous 
strength of the native army ; how much he depre- 
ciated extension of territory, without an adequate in- 
crease of European troops. He arrived at Lucknow 
20th March 1857 : from the first day of his arrival he 
accepted the situation ; he predicted the st9rm. I 
was by his side from 20th March to 14th April, when 
I quitted for the Punjab. His labours were incessant ; 
every place was visited with a view to defence ; pre- 
parations of every kind were initiated, quietly but 
earnestly; none but those in his confidence could 
suppose under his quiet tones lurked the suspicions, 
nay convictions, of danger, which he entertained. 
Darbars were held, and all the court nobles invited : 
his conciliatory influence, his great character, did 
stay the evil. Gudh did not rise till the North- West 
was gone, and our little force at Delhi was almost in 
its death throes. The storage of grain, ammunition, 
etc., was ridiculed by those about him, ir> whose eyes 
no change was near, for the sepoy still did his guards 
and observed his duties ; but for Henry Lawrence, 
not one man of that garrison would have lived to tell 
the tale of glory. I have been tedious, but your 
lordship will be interested in the last accounts of that 
noble man. 

"Mr Russell describes very beautifully the 
advance of our army in Rohilkhand : ' It moves on, 
but takes no hold of the country.' Take the facts — 
Rohilkhand is quiet ; the revenue regularly paid ; and 
scarcely a shot has been fired there for months. 
Again, our advance on Fyzabad — no doubt there 
was a great gathering of rebels of sorts here; our 
force was not above 1 500 infantry, 800 cavalry, with 



226 GEANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

guns ; yet the gathering dispersed without firing a 
shot : between Fyzabad and Lucknow, 90 miles, we 
have two weak posts and two only; supplies and 
travellers move to and fro without hindrance. Had 
the people been hostile, this could be hardly so. 
There is much about Fyzabad to excite the enthu- 
siasm of Muhammadans and Hindus. It is the 
ancient capital and many stately tombs and lofty 
minars tell the Muhammadan of the burial places of 
his early Nawabs. Here are the temples of Ajudhya, 
probably the most wealthy in India, and to the 
Hindus scarcely less sacred than those of Benares. 

" I would not have it inferred that the people are 
particularly well inclined towards us ; they are now, 
as in the Duke's days at the beginning of the century, 
' Philosophers about their Rulers,' bending to the 
storm, plundering the weak. When we were in 
jeopardy, anarchy ensued ; attacks were made on all 
who could not defend themselves. The sepoys, rich 
with the plunder of Delhi, feared to pass through 
the country in small parties because they were 
stripped by the villagers. The difficulties attending 
the settlement of Gudh have been enhanced by the 
hungry lawyers and fortune hunters who hang about 
the Oudh courtiers in London ; every word which has 
a favourable sound is freely translated. A few weeks 
ago a man of wealth and position in Lucknovv told a 
native officer of mine, ' We hear from London that 
matters are progressing most favourably for us. 
England is growing sick of the war. If we can keep 
up the game a little longer, your troops will be with- 
drawn and Oudh restored!' The result is that 
hundreds craving for order fear to cast in their lot 
with us, believing our rule to be temporary. 

"Now, my Lord, let me ask what is to become 
of the Company's officers? Merely to change our 
name and leave us in other respects as before, less 
the privileges and honours of the service, thrown 
'open' to our brothers of Her Majesty's army, who 
have superseded and are superseding us in rank and 
promotion, and must therefore do so in influence and 
position, will be, as Mr Gladstone observed, 'to deal 
hardly with us.' To say to us : — You belong to the 
army of the Queen ; you are no longer the army of a 



THE COMPANY'S OFFICERS 227 

Company in Leadenhall Street, you retain all your 
privileges of pension (for which, by the way, you 
subscribe) and service, and are in no way to inter- 
mingle with the army of the Horse Guards. Your 
rank will be regulated as heretofore ; no interference 
with your becoming Captains after fifteen or twenty 
years service and Lieut.-Colonels after thirty-five, 
your commissions in your respective grades will be 
allowed still ! ! to give you standing- according to date 
with those officers of the Horse Guards who become 
Lieut. -Colonels before you have passed through the 
Lieutenants and Captains ere you have headed the 
list of ensigns. It is true we have thrown 'open' to 
the sister service the appointments and comniands 
which have made so many of your officers eminent 
and distinguished, and which have been compensation 
to you for painful exile and slow promotion. The 
school which has brought forth Munro, Malcolm 
(the Duke wanted to get the.latter * to Spain, and said 
he would give any two for him), Lawrence, Edwardes, 
Chamberlain, Lumsden, and a host of ready soldiers, 
who have preserved for the army of India a prestige 
and tone which almost every officer has individually 
enhanced during the present struggle. The inevitable 
result of this ' throwing open ' all our advantages to 
those who come and go as they list, and' leaving us 
but our banishment and gradation, must be to sink 
the service. How can officers, bound to India, 
contend with officers of the Horse Guards, who so 
readily attain promotion in such various ways : by 
passing for a month or two to the West Indies, by 
the Augmentation Battalion, by the 'substantive' 
rank, by the 'unattached,' and by God knows how 
many means and appliances? These must bear 

* The Duke of Wellington, then Colonel Wellesley, first met Sir 
John (then Captain) Malcolm on the march to Seringapatam. Kaye 
states (Preface to his Life of Sir John Malcolm), "There was no 
one to whom the Duke wrote more unreservedly than to Sir John 
Malcolm." Kaye also mentions (vol. ii. of the Life, page 90, footnote) 
the desire of the Duke to have Malcolm and Munro with him in 
Spain, and the Duke's strong opinion that the officers of the East 
India Company's army should be made available for service in 
Europe. 



228 GRANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

away all the higfher appointments, and leave but a 
few Police Adjutancies for the veteran subalterns of 
India, who are thought to be so thankful for their 
transfer to the Crown (Lord Ellen borough) that they 
will pass their days in comfortable g-ratitude. If the 
army of India is to preserve its character, it must not 
be clipped of its only attractions and rewards. Few 
men of education would come to India for service in 
the army had they nothing to look to beyond a ;^200 
pension after a quarter of a century residence and 
constant supercession by officers flitting to and fro 
frorn England: either these privileges must be 
retained, or the army incorporated with the army 
of England. It is for statesmen to weigh this linking 
of England and India. Personally, I have but little 
interest in the result. I have been fortunate, and 
hold a position which is not likely to be affected by 
any change ; moreover, I am not bound to India for a 
livelihood. Should I outlive this struggle, which is 
now being fast trampled out, the probability is that my 
residence in India will be short. 

" I offer no apology for thus trespassing on your 
lordship, for, should an apology be deemed necessary, 
I could urge nothing." 

To this Lord Stanley replied, thanking Daly for 
his "most interesting letter," and adding a hope that 
the Company's officers would in no way suffer from 
the change of system. 

The diary continues : — 

" 26th August, Right bank of the Goomtee, Sultan- 
pur. — The passage of this river has been an interest- 
ing scene. Rafts placed across cranky dinghies 
which require constant baling to prevent them Irom 
sinking ; charpoys (native bedsteads) on ghurrahs 
(earthen pots), which bear our saddles, and every 
contrivance to compel the obstinate horses to face 
the stream, which runs with depth for about go 
yards and with a strong current. We had got over 
about 200 by 7 p.m. The General wished all to 
cross, so as to make way for the 7th Hussars, so the 
process went on all night with noise and clamour. 



PASSAGE OF THE GOOMTEE 229 

We have come over in light trim. Tents to protect 
the Europeans ; no other baggage ; the fooci ready 
cooked. They got over very well on the rafts, and 
last evening the Madras Fusiliers and Vaughan's 
Punjabis moved up to clear out a village and some 
broken ground some 900 yards beyond the river. 
The rebels bolted without firing a musket. They 
threw a few round shot into our camp, without, 
however, doing any injury. 

" ioth August — After the passage we found our 
selves on a neck of land, which the twisting, winding 
Goomtee flowed round, making us impregnable and 
unassailable. We niight and ought to have advanced 
to the attack on the 29th, There is a rule in India 
which admits not of exception — ' Whenever British 
troops confront an enemy, they must attack and 
without delay.' But the General was embarrassed 
by letters from headquarters, which led him to think 
that Colonel Berkeley's brigade at Soraon would 
move up simultaneously and therefore it was..\yell 
not to hurry the attack. The rebels grew bold, seeing 
that we were cautious, and every evening their 
cavalry paraded in a vaunting way towards our 
camp ; there was a good display of horsemen, who 
preserved some formation ; they trotted along and 
formed line, and their leaders advanced some 300 
or 400 yards beyond their picket, which held a 
mound with a deep nullah running round it, about 
1200 yards from our post. It was not possible for 
us to make a dash straight down, on account of the 
intervening ravines. These parades took place 26th, 
27th ; on the 28th the General made up his mind 
to go at tjiem on the following day. Everything 
was settled to advance on the morning of the 29th, 
3 A.M. On the afternoon of 28th, about 4 p.m., the 
usual parade of rebels began, but with the addition 
of infantry and a gun. Sir William Russell sent 
word to the General that the enemy were about to 
attack us in force. The order for all to be in readiness 
was given, and shortly we all turned out. It was a 
very pretty sight when we got to the front. _ The 
Madras Fusiliers had rushed forward in skirmishing 
order, and were driving the rebels from every ravine ; 
the firing was quick and wild ; I galloped out with 



230 GEANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

my cavalry, but there was nothing for cavalry to do. 
I joined the General, who, as usual, was forward, 
almost amidst the skirmishers. I am on very familiar 
terms with him; I said, 'Now that you have come 
out, although there is but little of daylight left, don't 
stop. The enemy is on the move, the cantonments 
can now be gained without even a shot ; on, on.' 
The General saw there was truth in this and, late 
as it was, was almost giving the order ; but a cautious 
old fellow near him turned the tables against me, 
and there we stood. The rebels, finding we did not 
advance, began to gather courage to stand and 
throw in a good deal of wild firing, without, however, 
doing us any damage, as we had but 3 or 4 men 
wounded. A few shells from our guns checked their 
ardour, and darkness almost overtook us on the 
ground. I feared that in our retirement we should 
suffer loss. However, whether damaged by our fire 
or panic-stricken by the display of troops we made, 
the rebels fell back. We were up by 3 a.m. yesterday 
morning, and moved off by the moon, which was high 
and clear. Our advance was picturesque ; a long 
line of skirmishers ; 4 guns on each side of the road, 
with a troop of hussars and a troop of mine ; then 
the remainder of infantry and cavalry, etc. A force 
which, well-handled, nothing in Oudh could resist. 
Our march was bloodless. Every rebel had bolted 
during the night, taking with them their guns. 

" Sultanpur, zpth September. — We have had the 
rain of Oudh during the last few days. The season 
which has not hitherto received its quantity is now 
being paid up in full. We have had nothing to do 
here, but we have had two or three little affairs, 
affairs which plainly indicate the state of Pandy's 
mind. Losses to him of hundreds without 20 casu- 
alties on our side ; his fighting is reduced _ to the 
worst. After all, Delhi was the field which in more 
ways than one decided the fate of India. The rebels 
fought there in all their pride of power and numbers, 
and the failure has tainted their arms ever since. 
Had the enemy won confidence in those struggles, 
not all the troops England has sent forth would have 
sufficed to win back half of Bengal even. 

I \th "October.- — We made our first march this 



POSSIBILITIES FOR THE ARMY 231 

morning. Fresh and pleasant is the country through 
which we passed, rich in foliage and beauty. Our 
force is not large; 200 hussars, too of mine, the 
Rifle Brigade, 2 H.A. guns, with a considerable 
portion of that weighty and grievous siege train. 
The object of our coming is to aid Colonel Kelly, 
who is moving with a column from Azimgarh to 
Atrowlea ; there are some two or three forts on the 
right bank of the Gogra, which it will be necessary 
to reduce should there be any attempt to hold them. 
Colonel Kelly has reached Atrowlea, and in two days 
we may hear that the country along the bank is 
deserted. We then return to Sultanpur. 

" I cannot understand Edwardes going, as it is 
said he will do soon. True it is that he has been 
harassed by work and responsibility, and that his 
exertions have not been duly acknowledged, and not 
at all rewarded. Sir John Lawrence's departure 
would have put him in a foremost place. He would 
have been sent to Oudh as Chief Commissioner, but 
that John Lawrence said the frontier could not spare 
him. I cannot think Edwardes huffed : he is too 
high-minded for that : I suspect his domesticities 
bear down his ambition ; to nothing else can I 
attribute his policy ; he is ambitious, vastly ambitious ; 
it may be that ambition tempts him home ; but he 
is too high in India, too successful, too young and 
too old to do very well at home. 

"We shall know something _ ere long of the 
destination of the army. My notion is that though 
the officers of the Army of India will, of course, suffer 
in the transaction, that the tone and character of the 
Army of England — a great matter — will vastly 
improve. In India, men of H.M.'s corps are without 
occupation ; they become mess presidents, tiffin 
eaters, grumblers, and billiard players ; the field which 
yields so much honour, develops so much character, 
is closed to them. Hence it is that a Queen's corps in 
India is usually a narrow, ignorant circle. Now should 
India be thrown open to the Army of England ^i.e., 
all made the army), all in turn pass through India, as 
the corps pass through the West Indies, very great 
will be the improvement in soldiership and education. 
If, on the other hand, the E.I.C. army is simply 



232 GRANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

transferred to the Crown, and kept up as an Indian 
army, the men composing it will still keep the loaves 
and fishes, for a time at any rate, but will eventually 
sink into an inferior service, whereas this is not now 
felt. The army of the country is distinct : its officers 
fill all the positions of the ruling power ; they win 
distinction as diplomatists, surveyors, engineers, 
captains. Amongst them are men like Edwardes, 
Chamberlain, Outram, and in looking back the train 
of heroes and statesmen is so long the eye can hardly 
reach it : from Clive to Henry Lawrence, what 
wondrous men has not India produced and brought 
out! 

" zoth October. — We marched back to Sultanpur 
on the 23rd, and marched again on the 25th. On the 
27th we marched to Doalpur, so as to be within a 
morning's distance of the Khandoo, a small river 
which runs into the Goomtee. The banks of this are 
steep and dry; ravines and nullahs intersect the 
ground about ; dense forests and topes of trees every- 
where abound; It was there the troops of rebels who 
quitted Sultanpur pulled up, and better cover could 
not have been chosen. Across the Khandoo is a 
strong stone bridge ; a bridge of olden days ; this 
was the only spot at which to cross. Beyond and 
behind the rebels had thrown up earthworks with 
embrasures for 4 guns, prettily revetted, and finished 
in the most artistic style. The batteries beyond 
swept the road di approach — the battery behind 
covered the bridge. 

"My advance guard of 10 sowars, about 600 yards 
in front of the column, carefully reconnoitred ; a few 
figures were seen about the first battery, which was 
empty ; I doubt if a gun had ever been in it. The 
General and I went forward and reconnoitred, and 
saw that the second battery was also empty. The 
ground now became raviny and wild. I cantered on 
a few_ hundred yards to see the state of things, 
believing all to have gone. I observed a line of men 
moving in broken order through the jungle ; here 
and there were open patches through which could be 
seen the long, tall sepoys in white clothing with their 
sloped muskets. It was now decided to gallop 
forward with a troop of mine, a troop of the hussars, 



GUEEILLA WARFAKE 233 

and 2 guns. _ On we went ; we could observe dust of 
moving bodies in many directions. It was difficult 
work for cavalry: trees of size; ravines, patches of 
woods ; everywhere impossible ground for cavalry. 
Had the rebels quietly held their own, we should 
never have driven them out, and we must have 
suffered ; but they were harassed and without metal. 
Why they remained so long- to fall back at last is a 
problem never to be solved. They do things 
beyond computation. 

" In my mind there is no work so unsatisfactory 
for cavalry, so dangerous to Kfe, as a pursuit of this 
kind — following up on broken ground sullen, sulky, 
desperate rnen, w;ho walk with a bent gait, here and 
there doubling, till the horsemen are on them, then 
turn and discharge their muskets, sometimes wildly, 
more frequently right on the attacker, and then stand 
and die like heroes. The same men who have left 
works and positions admirably adapted for defence, 
when they think death has come, meet it in a manner 
to win admiration. A few sepoys had got into a bit 
of close ground, surrounded and encased with thick 
prickly-pear hedges ; we were looking for a place 
to penetrate when a sepoy took a shot at me, 
missed within 3 yards, but hit the sowar who was 
following in the breast. Palliser was riding up on 
the other side, near the corner, when he was shot, and 
toppled off his horse ; a gallant Pathan sprang from 
his horse right down on the fellow who had fired at 
Palliser ; a desperate struggle ensued for a few 
minutes, and then the Pathan cleft the sepoy to 
pieces. Palliser, who is a truly gallant, fine fellow, is 
doing well. After this I turned and pursued a gun 
track to the river 7 miles ; it had not crossed, but I 
never saw it. 

" On the 29th a portion of the forcq under 
Brigadier Horsford moved out to attack a fort about 
7 miles distant. We found it deserted, but the wheel 
tracks of the guns were so recent that it was resolved 
to pursue. Brigadier Horsford made over to me 
4 guns, the 7th Hussars, and 100 of my men for the 
purpose ; an exciting gallop it was ; each mile seemed 
to strengthen our hopes of closing on the fugitives, 
4 guns and a great rebel, ' Mendee Hussan.' We had 



234 GRANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

no made roads, but went across fields, through woods, 
following the wheels. After about 8 miles we saw 
a few footmen and horsemen scattered about, and 
the villagers told us the guns were not far ahead. 
We increased the pace, so much so that with my 
men and a troop of the hussars I had outridden the 
others. There was nothing, however, for it but speed, 
so I pressed on fancying the tracks ensured success. 
We ran to the bank of the Goomtee, and as we reached 
the bank about loo rebels sprang into the water and 
swam to the other side : they had been taken com- 
pletely by surprise. To this spot the guns were 
clearly tracked ; the fact we found to be that the guns 
were brought down with a view to being crossed 
over, but finding that delay would ensue in preparing 
the platform to cross them from the boats, they were 
taken back on the morning of our arrival. They 
had gone to the west, to a small fort owned by 
Mendee Hussan, some 1 2 or 14 miles up the Goomtee. 
Thus our attempt failed. I got one small gun which 
they had left, and we had to return to our encamp- 
ment 1 7 miles distant. 

" We have reached the destination assigned to us, 
10 miles north-west of Amethi, while the fort is to 
be attacked from the south. My belief is that it will 
be relinquished. I cannot think that the Raja, with 
3000 men, will attempt a defence. However, one 
can reason on none of their acts. 

" The Proclamation and Amnesty will be published 
this afternoon. The former the people and troops 
will have difficulty in comprehending. In their eyes 
and in the eyes of their fathers before them, the 
government was ' Koompanie Bahadoor ' (the East 
India Company), and what Badhshaie (Queen) can 
be greater will be a puzzle. The Amnesty I rejoice 
at : without it I can see no end. Many will take 
exception to its broadness, and many will regret that 
so much villainy should get away unpunished. 
Probably the greatest scoundrels will do so ; but to 
drag on the guerilla warfare is to throw good and 
valuable lives, and our very supremacy, order, and 
power into jeopardy. I have just heard from Neville 
Chamberlain, who wrote on the 3rd November from 
Dera Ismael Khan — 'We proclaimed Her Majesty 



AMETHI 235 

here this morning. Lots of gunpowder fired on the 
occasion. I am glad we had Europeans on the 
ground, though few in numbers. They are the first 
in these parts since Alexander's days. I watch your 
progress on the map, and shall be glad when you 
have all cleared up to the left bank of the Gogra.' 

" Jagdespur, igtk November. — The force I am 
with separates to-morrow morning. All the infantry, 
7th Hussars, and artillery go Lucknow- wards. I 
with 300 of my horse trot to Sultanpur, where we 
cross the Gogra by bridge; a large force will be 
assembled there, and we shall sweep up by Gonda, 
Sekrora, and Baraitch. 

" We gathered in great strength around the jungle 
fort of Amethi — three armies, with guns enough to 
carry Oudh at a sweep. The Raja at the last 
rnoment sent in his submission, but during the night 
his followers, sepoys, and matchlock men, broke 
through, as it was easy for them to do in such a 
country, and bolted. Thus we got possession of an 
empty fort, and 13 instead of, at least, 25 or 30 guns ; 
the remainder we suppose have been buried. We 
marched away with the view of cutting off the fugi- 
tives and closing round the great fort of Beni Madhu 
at Sharkipur. We found Amethi like all the forts 
we have seen in this part of Oudh. The outer ditch 
is 4 or 5 miles in circumference, deep and narrow ; 
the enclosure a deep jungle through which roads have 
been cut. The corundah bush, bearing a prickly 
thorn which covers the ground like the bramble, fills 
the space ; even an elephant could scarcely penetrate. 
There are two ditches and two walls within the outer 
circumference : at points are bastions of mud, with 
embrasures commanding the approaches. At one 
corner is a village, within which the immediate 
followers of the Raja live. Within the interior wall 
are the house and courtyards for the Zenanah and 
the Raja, and in all these places more space is 
required for the lady portion than for aught else. 
There were two mines sunk near the gate, but 
altogether the strength of the place was in its posi- 
tion. Such was its extent, and so concealed among 
the trees and bushes, that shells might fall for six 
months without reaching the point desired. 



236 (GRANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

"So much for Amethi. We moved on and on 
until we came to the fort of Beni Madhu on the i6th. 
The fort is some 14 miles from Delama, and 10 miles 
from Rai Bareilly. We moved round to the north' 
east side ; the Chief and his force within 3 miles of 
us to the south-west. As we approached we observed 
small bodies of cavalry moving- about, footmen with 
bundles, etc., and amongst them doubtless some 
sepoys. We encircled the place as fast as we could 
in such a jungle; an investment with even 40,000 
men would be quite impossible. There are four 
ghurras, or forts, and villages within one ditch or 
wall, 8 miles in circumference. Terms had been 
offered to Beni Madhu, and he had sent to know what 
his reception would be. Therefore there was no 
doubt about holding out. I felt sure the bolting had 
been going on for days. So it proved ; the following 
morning, alth9ugh our pickets and vedettes had been 
placed according to military principles, the forts were 
deserted. I have a strong- conviction that nobody 
was left on our arrival but the few cavalry for display 
whom, we saw caracoling. 

" The order to march came : Rai Bareilly for us. 
We had moved out but a few miles, when cheery old 
Sir Colin, with General Mansfield, came galloping to 
our front. There was a wild report that the enemy 
were in strength before us. This soon subsided, and 
the Chief went back to his troops. Biswarrah, as 
this province is called, is the heart of the sepoy 
kingdom. You will observe the actual war is at an 
end. They fly everywhere and fight nowhere, even 
about their own homesteads. Insurrection will gradu- 
ally die out; there will be no grand smash. Rai 
Bareilly is a powerful place, and has been of great 
importance. A large and ancient fort of brick and 
stone with lofty walls frowning over the city; and 
there is many a mark of strife and shot about it ; it 
was here poor Major Gale was killed. We moved to 
Nolan Gange, and so to this place (Jagdespur) 
yesterday afternoon. To-morrow the General and 
his staff and I trot away for Fyzabad, and there the 
last chapter of the Gudh War will be worked. My 
old 1st Punjab Cavalry will be brigaded with me. 

" 28/^ November, opposite Fyzabad. — We galloped 



PASSAGE OF THE GOGRA 237 

Into Sultanpur, about 30 miles ; waited there a day, 
then pn in two marches to Fyzabad. The bridge for 
crossing was in readiness : the brigade of infantry, 
1st Punjab Cavalry, wing 9th Lancers, one and a 
half troops H.A., a battery of guns of size, were 
assembled. The rebels had small batteries along the 
banks, from which occasionally light ^uns fired ; a few 
matchlocks and muskets were visible lining the 
bank ; instead of the width of waters we had left in 
August there was a good mile of sand or bog. The 
General resolved to cross on the night of 24th and 
early morning 2 sth. We had already a battery at the 
head of the bridge trans-Gogra. A regiment of Sikh 
infantry was thrown over the river in boats higher up. 
They were to remain quiet and concealed until ' our 
battery opened, and this was to be with the first 
streak of dawn. The infantry and guns began the 
passage of the bridge at 3 a.m. The moon was bright 
and clear, and, as no baggage was to go, no confusion 
occurred. Over the bridgeway was strewed a thick 
layer of sand ; all sound was deadened. 

" By 5 A.M. the cavalry were over the bridge, and 
formed in line on the side. With the first faint light 
of day our guns opened. The Sikh regiment on our 
left gave a shrieking shout, and moved up the right 
flank of the rebel works ; there was a good deal of 
wild firing as the enemy forsook their batteries. The 
bed of the Gogra is very wide : the cavalry followed 
the infantry, and by daylight we were close to the 
bank ; here, for about 40 or 50 paces wide, was the 
remnant of the river. The soil was dark and 
quaggy ; to our right was a gun with its horses sunk 
deep, and in the vicinity all was commotion. The 
bog was heaving with every effort of the horses, rising 
arid falling with every tramp. In the leading troop of 
the 9th Lancers some of the horses sunk to the saddle 
flaps. I sought a place higher up and got over very 
well with 300 or 400 men, but those who followed 
found this ground like a jelly. Thus we had a great 
delay; had 50 women remained, our passage would 
have been a work of great loss. Once over, we 
pressed on the cavalry and guns, leaving- the infantry. 
We pursued some 12 or 14 miles; the country was 
open, and admirably adapted for the movement of 



238 GRANTS OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

cavalry, the only ground I have seen in Gudh which 
is so. After going s miles we picked up 2 guns and a 
carriage. Fugitives were seen running in all direc- 
tions. The fields were high with dhall, like riding 
through a shrubbery. Subsequently, we captured 
other 3 guns, among them an English 24-lb. howitzer. 
We charged in amongst them and cut up a number. 
The rout was complete and thorough, and all iri all 
it was perhaps the most successful affair in a little 
way that I have seen. The Raja of Gonda was the 
leader of the force here ; a cowardly loon he is ; 'tis 
said he mounted his elephant and bolted at the first 
discharge of our guns. Some sepoys of Captain 
Boileau's regiment \yere amongst the rabble. 

" The Gonda Raja has sent to know what terms 
will be granted him ; he will be liberally treated, so I 
hope he will come in. The answer to one and all now 
in arms against us should be, * If you are out in arms 
on January ist, restoration of property will be impos- 
sible. Everything you have ever held will be confis- 
cated, and you will be an outlaw.' We blunder in 
discussion. Our vacillation towards the Amethi 
man, the manner in which he was allowed to play 
with and alter our ultimatum, has done us no good. 
The only chance of anything good happening to them 
should be instant submission. The sepoys even now 
cannot believe in the Amnesty. A man who came in 
the other day said, ' We enlisted under the Articles of 
War. What has the Proclamation to do with us ? ' 

" Bunkassia, ^th December. — Here we are at the 
Gonda Raja's fort. We marched through a dense 
jungle. On our approaching the place, the sowars, 
who were 500 yards in advance, sent back to say that 
armed men had broken away from the villages near, 
and that horsemen had been seen ; by the General's 
desire I cantered forward, and took a sweep round. 
I observed a good many running in a sort of broken 
line, and a gathering near the edge of the forest, 
which is thick along the banks of the Biswah, a small 
river. I came round to Sir Hope, reporting that I had 
seen some fugitives ; I did not think their number 
serious, but one of the captured said there were 2 guns 
in the wood. The country was very close, many 
clumps of trees scattered about, but the line of un- 



SEKEORA 239 

broken wood ran along the banks of the stream. The 
main column of infantry had not yet arrived, but the 
encamping ground was being marked out. The 
pickets had been ordered out, ^yhen a sowar galloped 
in saying, ' The enemy is moving in large numbers 
along the wood ; cavalry, infantry, and elephant.' On 
looking, a body was visible on the very road I had 
just passed. The truth was that some 4000 men of 
sorts — 700 or 800 regular infantry, and about 300 
cavalry of various corps, together with the Gonda 
Raja's own followers — occupied the side of the wood, 
and were encamped in the neighbouring topes. When 
I came up they were cooking ; our arrival was totally 
unexpected ; g, surprise on both sides. I passed one 
body ; they must have been all at food. 

" Immediately on my moving round they got 
under arms, and those whom we now observed had 
formed a kind of line. One swell bedecked with red 
was conspicuous marshalling the ranks. We had 
with us 200 infantry and 2 guns, 40 of my men, and 
100 gth Lancers. Behind them was the wood. We 
trotted down our guns, threw out the infantry to 
cover our left, and opened within 400 yards of them. 
We fired the first shot, but quickly their shots replied. 
Our guns rattled in and advanced farther. The 
enemy at this time were moving off in numbers, 
skirting the forest. At last, on the arrival of our 
infantry, we closed on the wood ; 2 guns fell into our 
hands ; their round shot smashed a fine fellow, an 
artilleryman, in the leg and killed a horse ; we had no 
other casualties beyond a scratch or two. We 
advanced to the fort to find it empty. Gonda is 
about 10 or 12 miles distant. 

" The Chief is, or will be in a day or two, at Bairam 
Ghit waiting for boats. He wishes to cross to give 
the final swoop. Probably before he can get over with 
his great array all will be broken up. However, 
despatches will be written and marches made in a 
delightful climate, so it doesn't much matter, provided 
that the rebels fail in getting away. M y fear is lest they 
should get away now, and turn up again in the hot 
weather. Nothing can surpass the beauty and purity 
of the atmosphere now with those snowy peaks of the 
grand Nepal mountains sparkling in the sun. 



240 GRANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

" Sekrora, 12th December. — We arrived here 
yesterday. Our old house is a heap of ruins, the 
road which ran in front of it has been ploughed up 
and sown with barley. The houses were destroyed 
by Bala Rao, a brother of the Nana. The people of 
Sekrora came out in numbers to bring- their supplies 
with more readiness than we have observed elsewhere. 
Our course is to Tulsipur, and thence to sweep up the 
left bank of the Raptee. My trip of 1857 after Fazl 
Ali now stands me in good stead." 

There was no loss of life at Sekrora. Almost all 
the troops mutinied, but they treated their officers 
with respect, and permitted them to depart uninjured. 
Daly received the following account from his old 
corps : — 

" The way in which we left Sekrora was, in short, 
this. After our ist squadron mutinied (together with 
Major Gale's) on the road between Cawnpore and 
Mynpooree, and murdered 3 out of the 4 officers with 
them, viz., Captain Hayes, Mr Barbor, and young 
Mr Fayrer, we began to feel very shaky at Sekrora. 
Rumours had long been about among the men that 
Europeans were coming to take the guns of Mr 
Bonham's battery, etc., etc. We tried to reassure the 
men, of course, and they seemed satisfied. Two fires 
occurred in the lines of Captain Boileau's regiment, 
and great uneasiness was evidently going on. Captain 
Forbes had gone to Cawnpore ; Mr Bax to visit his 
brother at Ghazipur; Captain Tulloch to the hills. 
We had but few of our men left ; for all but about 
130 or 140 had gone into Lucknow, etc. We talked 
of sending the ladies away, but Captain Boileau had 
it represented to him that it would not be safe to do 
so, as the men might mutiny. They therefore 
remained till the 7th June 1857, when, early in the 
mprning. Captain Forbes arrived with 25 of our Sikhs 
with him, and orders from Sir Henry Lawrence to 
take the ladies to Lucknow." 

Daly had written to his wife on the loth June 
1857, from before Delhi : — 



SALAil BAKHSH 241 

"You will be sorry to hear that a squadron of my 
Oudh regiment went wrong- : — One squadron of 
mine and a squadron of Gale's under poor Hayes ; 
the worst man they could have selected, inasmuch as 
the old Oudh soldiers of the corps consider him the 
cause of all their trouble. I have not heard of them 
since. I think the regiment would not have broken 
hurriedly had I been present, and I have no doubt 
that many are firm yet." 

Of the native officers, Sundil Khan, as already 
mentioned, joined Daly at Delhi, and Mohi-ud-din 
was killed fighting on our side in Lucknow. There 
were 75 Sikhs and Pathans in the regiment, and all 
these, or nearly all, remained staunch. Sir Henry 
Lawrence, writing on the 1 2th June 1 857 to Mr Colvin, 
Lieutenant-Governor of the North-West, said — 
"All our irregular cavalry, except about 60 Sikhs of 
Daly's corps, are either very shaky or have deserted." 

Of Salar Bakhsh, Daly wrote in 1857 : — 

"There are a few pleasing traits of fidelity, and 
his is one of the best I know. He ought to have 
gone wrong, and there would be little blame attach- 
able to him had he done so. He came to our officers 
after the outbreak — I mean officers at another 
station; — and asked them what he should do ; they 
gave him cold comfort ; sent him off and told him to 
go down and join his regiment!! _ He went, was 
stripped and plundered by some mutineers of the 7th 
Cavalry ; still he went on, and, I believe, joined Sir 
Henry in Lucknow." 

In July 1858 Daly submitted the following 
official report regarding charges connected with 
carbines for the ist Oudh Irregular Cavalry : — 

"On the annexation of Oudh I was appointed to 
command the ist Oudh Cavalry. Sir James Outram, 
the Chief Commissioner, through his military secre- 
tary, the late Captain Hayes, issued instructions to the 

Q 



242 GEANT'S OPEEATIONS IN OUDH 

commandants of cavalry that they should immedi- 
ately make arrangements for arming their men with 
percussion carbines and appropriate appointments. 
This could only be done from Europe, as arms were 
not supplied by the State, nor were those carbines 
which were made available for purchase from the 
arsenal at all within the means of the sowar." 

" Just prior to my departure from Oudh in April 
1 8s 7, a portion of the carbines and belts which I had 
ordered from Europe had arrived and had been 
distributed to the regiment. The carbines for which 
compensation is now sought were, I am informed, 
taken within the Residency defences, and were used 
by the volunteers and others requiring arms. Since 
the second siege I myself have seen some of them in 
the hands of the volunteer cavalry." 

To his wife he wrote on the 14th December 1858, 
from a camp near Bulrampur :- — 

" You remember my talking of the little Raja of 
Bulrampur. He has behaved with most steadfast 
loyalty to us throughout the struggle. His elephants 
were sent to Sekrora for the transport of the ladies 
and children to Lucknow, and with him took refuge 
all the officers and civilians who were saved. His 
position has been difficult during the past six months ; 
beset by rebels in all directions ; nevertheless he has 
maintained his ground. His chief town was plundered 
a few days ago by a host of fugitives. I wrote to him 
congratulating him on his loyalty and gallantry, 
reminding him of our previous intercourse, and saying 
what pleasure it will give me to introduce him to the 
General. I received a delighted reply. We shall 
meet hirn to-morrow. The fighting across the Raptee 
will be slight. I question our firing a shot. All the 
small Rajas creep to Bulrampur and seek the influence 
which he is proud to use in their behalf. 

"31^^^^ December {Camp Puchpurwa, 14 miles 
North-East of Tulsipur). — We have made a detour 
by Heer towards Bansee, thence by the north along 
the borders of Nepal, concluding yesterday with a 
passage of the forest under the hills. The General 
took down a force without baggage of any kind to 



JACK TAR AS ATKINS 243 

work the forest ; he took me to command the cavalry 
which accompanied him ; four troops gth Lancers, 
and my own men, 13th Infantry (Sikhs), artillery, 
etc. We had nothing: to do ; a long march into the 
forest, skirting- its edges, and then round the camp, 
which we reached just after sunset. _ Bala Rao, the 
N ana's brother, is in the forest within a few miles of 
us, There he cannot stay, for food is only procurable 
through plunder, and then it is mere rice and dhall. 
With him are many sepoys and ruffians whose deeds 
have put them out of the Proclamation. However, 
the great difficulty is in getting the Proclamation 
made known. The Nana, Bala Rao, and others, 
upon whose persons are rewards, prevent the publica- 
tion of the Government Notification, and alter it for 
their own purposes. 

"2nd January 1859 {Camp near Tulsipur). — I 
have just been down to the Naval Brigade to say 
farewell to Captain Sotheby ; they go shipwards 
to-morrow; to Allahabad, thence to Calcutta, I 
could tell many laughable anecdotes of the sailors. 
They have small howitzers, drawn by small ponies, 
which the sailors ride horse-artillery fashion. On the 
march, if they encounter any obstacle, such as. a 
ravine or a mound, they are off in a moment, and 
with one great pull altogether, out or over go gun- 
carriage and steeds. We rode down to see them 
march to join our camp the other day : Jacks, dressed 
in their straw hats and blue shirts and pants just as 
they would be at Portsmouth, astride the ponies. A 
halt is sounded ; the leading tar near turned round to 
his near comrade in the saddle, ' I say, Bill, it's Heave 
to,' on which they shot off. A parade is required : 
shrilly sounds the boatswain's whistle and a gruff 
voice 'all hands,' on which they roll up. Colonel 
Payne of the 53rd told me that at the Tulsipur fight 
the other day he saw the sailors with their pony 
artillery skirmishing side by side with his men, 
dragging the guns and ' slewing ' them about, as they 
call it, as though on deck. 

"The rebels are confined to the forest ; they must 
either pass through the first range into the broken 
valley which I entered in _ pursuit of Fazl Ali, or 
starve and disperse in the jungle. Life could not be 



244 GRANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

sustained there after the first fall of rain by people 
unacclimatised. I fear we shall not now get the 
Nana or his brother. Individuals can so easily- 
escape ; and somehow war made formally and accord- 
ing to system against rebels beaten and discouraged 
does not bring telling results : they escape ; they are 
driven now to the uttermost parts, and, if we can 
deprive them of their guns, our police are sufficiently 
numerous and organised to prevent their gathering 
for plunder during the hot season. 

" Chunderpur, left bank of the Raptee, wth 
January 1859. — I believe I may confirm what you 
already have read — that the campaign is at an end. 
The Chief, who was with an army 30 miles north- 
west of this, has hied away to Lucknow to meet 
Lord Canning. Thousands of the rebels have taken 
refuge in Nepal ; within the same range of hills, and 
by the same routes as I chased Fazl Ali. Neither 
horses nor guns could pass over or through the 
mountains, so that lots of both have been left to their 
fate. On the 4th we made a grand haul of guns. 
We made a long march along the Terai on the 3rd. 
I had spies (herdsmen with cattle in the forest) on 
the qui vive; about 4 p.m. on the 3rd, as we were on 
the move, a good spy came running up, ' The rebels, 
with 1 8 guns, are within 4 miles of us, not expecting 
you, and such is the plundered state of the villages 
that no one will whisper your arrival.' I asked the 
man, pointing to the sun, whether he would be above 
or below the horizon when we reached the rebel 
camp; he replied, 'just dipping.' This fixed us for 
the night. We moved off at early dawn. About 3 
miles further on, at the very edge of the forest, we 
espied a body of about 100 or 200 men, and 2 or 3 
horsemen. We prepared for work ; that morning we 
caijtured 15 guns in the forest, and that without 
losing a man ; so broken in spirit, starving, and 
hopeless were they. The brother of the Nana 
(Bala Rao) was the chief, but he was not present at the 
so-called fight. Many of his followers knew nothing 
of the Amnesty. He and those like him, murderers 
and outlaws, conceal all they can from those about 
them. Jung Bahadur will have a difficult part to 
plav/ he has issued a proclamation refusing shelter 



MR POLEHAMPTON 245 

to the rebels within the Nepalese territory. Many 
have given themselves up, and, unless implicated in 
deeds of murder, they are allowed to gfo free. The 
whole thing- is gone. Central India still holds Tantia 
Topee ; a few weeks and this will end. 

''Camp Bhinga, I'jth January 1859. — I have a 
good many officers here now ; Sir Henry Havelock * 
amongst them ; a fine young fellow, chivalric, 
frank, and dashing, about thirty years old ; devoted 
to his profession, in which by his resolution and 
daring he has already won much distinction ; his 
fathers son in many respects. 

" I have received the Life of Mr Polehampton. 
He was indeed of a healthy temperament, a man 
blessed in youth, with those near him to love and 
foster, a happy home, a sound education, training at 
old Eton and Cambridge. Brothers about the same 
age, of similar tastes, his friends and companions. 
Everything around him in his career calculated to 
strengthen and expand the good. I like the man, 
and I like his own view of his character. He was in 
the world and of the world. There was, till a few 
days ago, in the camp one of very much the same 
mould : a Scotch clergyman : a simple character with 
much less cultivation than the child of Eton ; but I 
suspect not less endowed, or less good. He was 
attached to the 79th Highlanders ; a Presbyterian, 
yet in the midday he read prayers and a sermon at 
the General's tent, and in the evening he read again 
to the soldiers (a parade) of the Church of England, 
and gave an extempore discourse. His accent is 
broad and uncouth ; his language nervous and clear ; 
fluency is natural to him, yet it never degenerated to 
verbosity. I have rarely listened to smoother 
eloquence. He was much liked by all, for he lived 
amongst us to talk, walk, work, and do good. He 
too, like poor Polehanlpton, is physically gifted, a 
handsome man of pleasant address, beaming with 
life and health. 

" I remain out here in command some time longer. 
I shall have one regiment Hodson's Horse, Colonel 
Gordon's Sikhs, some Engineers, and Major Middle- 

* The late Sir Henry Havelock-AUen, shot in the Khyber Pass, 
30th December 1897. 



246 GRANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

ton's troop R.H. A. A nice command; but there is 
'nothing in it,' work is over. You ask about Nor- 
man.* On the day of his captaincy he will be Major, 
Lieut. -Colonel, C.B., perhaps full Colonel. He 
deserves it all and more. His services and knowledge 
have been of the highest value. My regiment, the 
1st Punjab Cavalry, has made many reputations in 
this war, and stands avowedly the first in character. 

^^ Camp Tulsipur, iitk March. — Two days ago 
Brigadier Horsford and I, with two or three officers 
and a few men, had a scramble to look into Nepal. 
The path runs for the first 3 miles through a forest ; 
then you follow the bed of a mountain stream in 
which there is but little water now, though wild and 
grand are the ravages of the torrent which sweeps 
down during the monsoon. Trees of stupendous size 
lie about, huge boulders tossed fantastically here and 
there, fanciful caves with lichens and creepers, chines, 
and scarped rocks, over which hang lofty trees and 
pines. We had to follow this course for 10 miles, then 
began the ascent, which was about 3 miles, ere the 
crown was reached. Suddenly the valley of the 
Raptee appeared. It was about 6 miles in width, 
forests and swamps, the river tortuous ; from this 
ridge the other five ridges were visible which stand 
between us and the eternal snows. The ascent was 
so steep and rugged that a pony could with difficulty 
be led up. My little Pegu alone accomplished it, and 
he had to be picked up several times. Yet there were 
signs of an elephant having passed over, and the 
remains of a dead horse or two told us of the attempt 
of the rebels to move by that route. 

"Camp 12 miles north of Tulsipur, under the 
Nepal Hills, ist April 1859. — I little thought to see 
any more fighting, yet we have had a fight. It came 
about thus : the rebels, driven from Bootwal at the 
foot of the Nepalese mountains, marched up in 
strength by the forest to within 1 5 or 20 miles of this. 
Their object is to break away from the forest, where 
starvation and disease await its denizens. We were 
aware of their movements ; on the evening of the 
30th March, Brigadier Horsford and I concocted an 
advanced post at this place. The ist Sikh Infantry 

* The late Field-Marshal Sir Henry Norman. 



A SCRAMBLE IN NEPAL 247 

marched some 8 miles from us with 30 sowars, to 
intercept stragglers and prevent the passage. The 
Sikh infantry reached the ground about 8 a.m. 
About 9 A.M. the pickets came galloping in, 'The 
rebels are advancing in strength.' A camel sowar of 
mine came back with the announcement that the 
enemy were in great strength, and that the Sikhs 
were beset and hard pressed. I ordered 'boots and 
saddles' and every man to be in readiness, and 
mounting my pony galloped to the Brigadier's tent, 
told him the news and what I had done. We chatted 
the matter over, and in less than five minutes I was 
back in the artillery lines with orders for them to turn 
out sharp, and carry as many of the ssrd on the gun 
carriages as possible. In twenty minutes we were on 
the road ; a squadron was left to escort the guns, 
while the Brigadier accompanied me with some 200 
sowars. We trotted and cantered the 7 or 8 miles, for 
as we approached the forest the musketry came quick 
on our ears. 

"Soon our eyes fell on a wondrous gathering. 
The enemy all around. My advance guard, about 
30 sowars under M'Gregor, a very gallant young 
officer, was already in the thick of it ; passing the 
infantry, who were a good deal broken and fatigued, 
he dashed into the midst of the fight ; the smash with 
them was great ; on all sides they gave way, and see- 
ing the dust I suppose they fancied a large army was 
at hand, Gordon's Sikhs suffered much. The 
second in command, a fine young fellow named 
Grant, was killed ; a fresh English boy shot through 
the body ; some 7 native officers and men killed, and 
40 wounded. Out of my little party we had i killed 
and 9 wounded, i horse killed and 7 wounded. Had 
the Sikhs not been there, the rebels would have 
passed; indeed, a wing would have been over- 
whelmed, great as is the cowardice of the rebels as a 
body. I mean that 10,000 do not avail to overcome 
a single 1000 of Sikhs led by British officers ; yet 
individually, when they know death is at hand, they 
struggle with a resolution and daring unknown to the 
European. Several times it occurred yesterday that 
a sepoy, finding himself alone and no escape, would, 
after discharging his musket at his pursuer, throw 



248 GEANT'S OPEEATIONS IN OUDH 

down his musket, draw his sword and stand at bay. 
No single horseman is a match for an active swords- 
man on foot. I have seen five British dragoons around 
one of these, and he defending himself and taunting 
them. Yesterday Anderson had something of this 
kind with a fanatic, in which Anderson behaved with 
great coolness and courage, and slew his opponent 
without any injury to himself. The rebels killed 
yesterday were all sepoys." 

'' 2nd April. — This morning 150 sowars came in 
and delivered up their arms to me, amongst others 
Aman Beg and Amir Beg. Their condition is utterly 
wretched ; rice, uncertain hours, have begun their 
work ; scarcely could 100 of these sowars walk at 
noon! It is evident from their statements that the 
Pandies hold the Terai in greater horror than we do, 
and coUte que coMe they have resolved to quit the 
forest, and this, I hold, will be the beginning of the 
end ; if pressed by us at all points, succumb they 
must. Fever in the afternoon. 

"4^^ April. — Rode through the forest with the 
Brigadier this morning; the felled trees across the 
paths had effectually closed the paths for animals and 
baggage travelling. There are still parties hanging 
about ; we heard dropping shots. The main body 
has doubtless gone on. Fever attacked me about 
II A.M., and I was under the blankets till 3 or 4 p.m. ; 
very much knocked up by this bout; resolved to 
start for Lucknow to-morrow. 

" Sih April. — Homeward bound! Left Lerwah 
at 4 A.M. Just as I entered the dhooly, the Brigadier 
sent an express from Ramsay of the Kumaon 
battalion imploring immediate aid ; that he was 
surrounded. Ramsay evidently panic-stricken. The 
Brigadier asked my advice, which was, ' The swell is 
westwards ; move yourself with wing of the ssrd, 2 
or 4 guns, a wing of the Sikhs, and 200 horse.' I 
got into Tulsipur about 8 a.m. Hughes followed me ; 
the Brigadier had ordered him to take 200 horse and 
2 guns westward, but begged Hughes to see me. I 
wrote to the Brigadier enforcing my opinion ; this 
had its effect, and about 4 p.m. he came up and 
marched away. We discussed all the probabilities. 
I warned him to take heed ; that the rebels had no 



ON THE WAY HOME 249 

settled plan, but would bolt in any direction which 
appeared open. Came in to Bulrampur ; could hardly 
sit on my pony. 

"6th April. — No news at Bulrampur, but as the 
country is unsettled, and the rebels may cross the 
Rapti at any point, I \vould not allow two Rifle 
Brigade officers to go straight to Baraitch. I quitted 
Bulrampur at 2 a.m. and marched to within 8 miles of 
Gonda, Hot wind, but a noble grove sheltered me 
from the sun. Started again at 5 p.m. ; when within 
a few miles of Gonda, heard that the rebels had 
cfossed and were but a few miles from our line ; 
reached Gonda at 7 p.m. Sent a telegram to General 
Grant, suggesting that a wing 20th Foot, 2 guns, and 
200 horse, should start at onee along the Bulrampur 
road to prevent the rebels from breaking. Left 
Gonda at 8 p.m., passed through Sekrora during the 
night, reached Byram Ghdt at 6 a.m. 7th April, very 
tired and feverish ; sat under the trees. By and by 
a troop 3rd Horse Artillery came up from Durriabad, 
and very "well they looked and moved. Mules brought 
up my tent 36 miles since evening ; the old tent pole 
broke on this the last occasion required ; got a native 
officer's pell (small tent), and was comfortable enough ; 
quitted Byram Gh4t at 6 p.m. ; met Mecham with 3rd 
Regiment, the Bays, and artillery, bound for Byram 
Ghdt. Colonel Walker, a fresh man, in command. 

"%th April. — Made Lucknow at 7 a.m. ; found 
Sarel, and the General came up to talk over events ; 
while here, we drew up and despatched an order for 
Walker to move straight on Sekrora and to direct 
Mecham on Gonda. I got the map and pointed out 
to the General the necessity for pressing troops, 
horse, and guns to the east of the Gonda and 
Bulrampur road, and suggested that a wing of 3rd 
Hodson's Horse should move without delay from 
Gonda. The General looked harassed and fagged ; 
he seemed more cheery after our chat and arrange- 
ments ; kindly wanted me to go to his house. 

"(jth April — Went before the Committee; the 
superintending surgeon recommended me to see 
Ferguson and Symes at home about my arm ; very 
kind about my going ; thought it was well for me to 
start without delay as I am a good deal shaken. 



250 GRANT'S OPERATIONS IN OUDH 

Sarel and I dined with the General ; while at dinner 
a telegram from the Chief directing- the General to go 
to Fyzabad to be near the operations. The General 
a good deal cut up at affairs ; his heart is bent on 
going home 30th April, and this will probably prevent 
him. 

" iZth April. — Spent a gossiping day with 
Wingfield, Chief Commissioner ; frank and free as 
usual, not in the smallest degree touched by his 
elevation. We discussed the characters of all the 
military leaders during the War, and compared our 
various experiences." 

The 3rd Regiment of Hodson's Horse was shortly 
afterwards engaged in the Gonda district, and on the 
20th April Daly heard from one of the officers : — 

" I was in a little affair with the enemy the other 
day at a place called Koel ka Jungal. The men of 
the 3rd Regiment behaved very well under fire and in 
action. Wade's Horse and ourselves polished off 
about 300 of the enemy tpgether, all Pandies. My 
casualties were 8 men wounded, 5 horses wounded, 
and I horse killed. We had a tremendous daur 
(chase) in dense jungle yesterday, and captured the 
colours of a native infantry regiment, sky-blue 
facings; I suppose the isth Native Infantry. Also 
the Queen's colour, a good beginning for the 3rd 
Regiment." 

At the end of the month Daly handed over the 
command to Hughes, his old successor in the ist 
Punjab Cavalry, who, on his suggestion, had been 
selected to succeed him in Hodson's Horse. Early in 
May Daly sailed from Calcutta for England. He 
observed, "I think I was the first commanding 
officer of the Punjab Force in motion during the 
war, and certainly I was the last." 

Shortly before his departure, which was on sick 
certificate, he received the following letter from 
Mansfield :— 



OFFICERS FOE EMPLOYMENT 251 

" I am grieved to hear of the cause of your return 
to Eng-land, although I am not by any means taken 
by surprise. I gather from your letter that you are 
not in a position to retain your appointment, though 
it is not stated positively. Supposing such to be the 
case, I cannot say what may be the ultimate con- 
struction of the corps you have brought into order, 
whether to keep it as it is now in the _ form of a 
brigade, or to have three separate regiments. I 
believe the latter to be the more convenient now, 
whereas it was impossible when the Augean task of 
reducing order into it was undertaken by you. 

" I will have a note taken of the officers you 
recommend, but I must tell you candidly we have 
many claimants for irregular commands who cannot 
be put aside. Lieut. Mecham has a very strong 
claim. But there is immense inconvenience in 
appointing lieutenants to command irregular corps 
in these days when there are hundreds of captains 
afloat who, whatever their antecedents, must be 
employed somehow." 



CHAPTER X 

CENTRAL INDIA HORSE AND GWALIOR, 1861-1869 

Return to India ; appointment to the Central India Horse ; death of 
Lord Clyde ; Napier's recommendation of Daly for the good 
service pension ; entry into regular political employ as Political 
Agent at Gwalior ; relations with Scindia ; Scindia's administra- 
tion ; Scindia's views on British rule. Appointment as Agent, to 
the Governor-General in Central India. 

At the beginning of i860, under medical advice, 
Daly applied for an extension of his leave. In reply, 
he was informed that the appointment of com- 
mandant of Hodson's Horse had been abolished from 
the 1 2th December 1859, the three regiments* being 
placed on the same footing as other regiments of 
irregular cavalry. Shortly after this he heard from 
the Viceroy's private secretary : — 

"Lord Canning wishes me to tell you that the 
abolition of your appointment was not in any way 
connected with your compulsory absence from India. 
The jmeasure was one out of many reductions made 
by Government for State reasons, and would not 
have been otherwise had you remained on the spot." 

Coupled with this was an assurance that his 
"services and claims would never be forgotten by 
Lord Canning." 

* Two are now the 9th Hodson's Horse and the loth Duke of 
Cambridge's Own Lancers (Hodson's Horse); the third was dis- 
banded about 1 86 1, 

362 




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THE CENTRAL INDIA HORSE 253 

In these circumstances Daly remained at home 
until the latter part of 1861, when, on his return to 
India, he was appointed to the command of the 
Central India Horse,* with whom he served for the 
next five years. The corps, which consisted of two 
regiments, each about 500 strong, was thus described 
in the first Administration Report of the Central 
India Agency (that for 1865-1866) : — 

"The Central India Horse is a most useful and 
valuable force ; and it is not too much to say that the 
general security of the trunk road is chiefly owing to 
its services. It has further done much towards 
suppressing crime, generally of a predatory character, 
throug'hout western Malwa, and in the states and 
districts araund and to the south of Goona. The 
force is well-mounted, and admirably equipped and 
drilled, and is in every respect in a thoroughly 
efficient condition ; and its able commandant. Colonel 
Daly, C. B., and his officers may be justly proud of it." 

On his arrival in India, Daly was at first some- 
what disposed to return to purely military duty on 
the Punjab frontier, but was strongly dissuaded by 
Mansfield, who wrote early in December 1861 : — 

"The wild soldiering success of the last twenty 
years is, I believe, pretty nearly over for a long time 

* Now the 38th Central India Horse and 39th Central India 
Horse. The former was raised in 1858, by Captain H. O. Mayne, on 
a nucleus of the faithful remains of the cavalry of the Gwalior, Bhopal, 
and Malwa contingents, and was originally styled " Mayne's Horse." 
The force was augmented in i860 to a corps of three regiments 
(Beatson's Horse being incorporated), and the first of these became, 
the same year, the ist Regiment of Central India Horse. Received 
the present designation in 1903. 

The 39th Central India Horse was raised at Hyderabad in 1858 
by Colonel W. F. Beatson, as the ist Regiment of Beatson's Horse; 
became the and Regiment of Mayne's Horse i860 ; the 2nd Regiment 
Central India Horse the same year ; received the present designation 
in 1903. 



254 CENTRAL INDIA HOESE, ETC. 

to come ; and the toga, or at least the Windsor 
uniform of the Political Agency, will henceforth bringf 
a man more distinction than the sword, if, as I 
believe, we have fairly entered on a peace cycle in 
this country ; the war cycle which commenced with 
the invasion of Afghanistan in the days of Lord 
Auckland, and_ the breaking up the foundation of our 
old Policy, having come to an end with the conclusive 
blow given to the native reaction in 1858-1859." 

With these views Daly, in part at least, agreed, 
for a couple of months later he wrote home from 
Goona :— 

" India at any rate, I think, has entered on a cycle 
of peace. The military service here is in a state of 
convulsion. The retirement scheme is now taking 
effect. The Gazette has already published the names 
of the field officers who have availed themselves of 
the bonus, and in a few days we shall know the 
captains who have sent in their decision. More field 
officers would have gone had they been able to go ; 
but many of those of the period (twenty-five years 
army rank) had not, through furlough and sick 
certificate, served in India the pension time, and were 
thus precluded from availing themselves of the offer. 
The anxiety to go is great among the body. Sir C. 
Wood proposed to include in his scheme 300 ; 240 
odd have accepted. It is said he will now bid lower ; 
i.e., twenty-two years or twenty ; I doubt this. Some 
part of the retirement scheme may effect my promo- 
tion, therefore I look with interest to the finale of the 
plan. 

" Goona is not tempting in appearance ; it is but a 
wretched village, which supplies the very poorest of 
native produce. Mine is the only house in the 
cantonment ; the sheds in which the officers live are 
coverings of bamboo and mud, under which tents 
were originally pitched. My house is of great 
prettiness ; quaint it is ; more like a musjid, or rather 
a temple, than the residence of an Englishman. 
There is a beautiful garden attached, immensely 
large, with wells and water-courses. All this was the 



GOONA 255 

work of an officer (English) in Scindia's service, who 
resided here alone for many years prior to the Mutiny. 
An officer of the Engineers told me the other day 
that, in olden times, he had sat in the garden porch 
of the Scindia officer and shot panthers. There are 
some handsome trees just about the house, and here 
alone; elsewhere the wild coarse grass, 2 or 3 feet 
high, rank and yellow, extends far and wide, for the 
inhabitants are few and cultivation limited ; standing 
up like sentinels at intervals are tg.ll cocoa trees. The 
country has very much the appearance of that in 
which Mark Tapley's virtue of jollity was tried. It 
is a great place for sport. Tigers have been killed, 
even last year, within a mile of my house. In May 
last, a party from Goona during a month bagged 
sixteen tigers and as many bears. Despite the wild, 
desolate appearance of this place, it is esteemed 
healthy, and is certainlya pleasant climate for India ; 
now fires are very enjoyable. It was great good 
luck falling so quickly on good pay and employment ; 
there is attached to the command a duty I value,^ the 
political charge of the district ; it belongs ex officio Xa 
the commandant ; it brings one into association with 
ail the Rajas and nobles around, and gives one an 
interest. I hope by and by it niay lead to my getting 
into the political line altogether." 

For this appointment he was, so he believed, 
largely indebted to the spontaneous intervention of 
his old friend Napier, who had held a command 
during the final repression of the rebels in Central 
India, In the following May, Napier wrote : — 

"I will not wait to write you on all the Central 
Indian points that I feel interest in, and which your 
note has freshened up, as I might find it, like my last 
letter, one of the stones of the eternal pavement — not 
of paradise. But I write a line in reply at once 
because I fear you may have thought me unkind or 
lukewarm about your appointment, as I never wrote 
to you then. It was the only application I ever made 
to Lord Canning for an officer not having served im- 
mediately under my command. I, however, made my 



256 CENTRAL INDIA HORSE, ETC. 

application for you on the ground of public service 
entirely, and I believe the representation of your 
fitness for political employ carried the day against a 
dangerous competitor. In this, however, _ I acted 
entirely on public grounds, and Lord Canning knew 
well I neither did nor would ask any private favour. 
Bowie was a very valuable ally, and very warm in 
your favour, but you owe your appointment entirely 
to your own public character, and to no solicitation of 
your friends. 

" I found the work in Central India best done by 
small parties under such men as Bradford,* Blair, 
Roome, honest old Rice (of the ' Tigers '), and con- 
stantly sent them against parties that my neighbours 
pushed in vain with brigades. I felt inclined to 
despair when I thought of Central India and its 
remote prospect of civilisation, and— I speak with 
deference now to a political — its political system. It 
is the object of politicals to keep matters smooth, but 
it was remarked to me happily by one of your native 
councillors, the completion of the railways will do more 
to civilise India than a thousand schools. 

" I entirely agree with you as to the chiefs. I never 
found them difficult, nor forgetful of any kindness. 
I have the deepest regard for the natives generally, in 
spite of the Mutiny, and should rejoice in the oppor- 
tunity of influencing the chiefs in the direction of 
civilisation. My first advice to all the Rajput chiefs 
was to educate their sons. There is a great virtue in 
the Rajputs — inconvenient to us — no price can induce 
them to betray a fugitive guest." 

The Commandant of the Central India Horse 
then held political charge of the Western Malwa 
Agency, which included the States of Jaora, Ratlam, 
Sitamau, and Sailana, with the Malwa districts of 
Gwalior, Indore, Jhalawar, Dewas, and Tonk. The 
years which followed were a period of some anxiety ; 
for, throughout Central India, the crops were gener- 
ally below the average from 1861-1862 to 1864-1865, 

* Now Colonel Sir Edward Bradford, Bart, G.C.B., G.C.V.O., 
K.C.S.I. 




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DEATH OF LORD CLYDE 257 

stocks in Malwa had been depleted by the extra- 
ordinary demands received from Bombay, and at the 
commencement of the monsoon of 1865, a scarcity 
of food, amounting to actual famine in the western 
division, prevailed throughout Malwa. A peculiarly 
fatal type of fever, known as the "Guzerati sickness," 
was also prevalent. The conditions were therefore 
such as to call forth all Daly's energy and activity. 
At that period railways were unknown in Central 
India : the main line of communication through the 
Agency was the Grand Trunk Road from Agra to 
Bombay ; the black cotton soil through which it 
passed cut up terribly during the rains, but experi- 
ments in metalling had only just been commenced,, 
while the opening out of new roads had scarcely been 
attempted. The zeal which Daly devoted in later 
years to opening up the land-locked areas of Central 
India may doubtless be in part ascribed to the diffi- 
culties with which he had to contend in Malwa. 

In 1863 Daly was much moved by the death of 
Lord Clyde, regarding which he received the follow- 
ing letter from Mansfield : — 

"POONA, I1/10/63. 

"My dear Daly, 

" I am always glad to hear fr(5in you, 
but more especially on such a theme as that forming 
the subject of your last letter. In this world of 
graves and tombstones, it in general makes but little 
impression on us when one more is added to the 
latter, when one more familiar form subsides into the 
ever open mouth of the former. But I can truly say 
that the loss of our poor friend Sir Colin — he would 
never allow me to call him Clyde — has caused me a 
feeling of sadness of which I hardly deemed myself 
capable except in the case of the nearest blood rela- 
tions. I suppose this strong feeling is not merely one 
of friendship and recollection of old kindness, but that 

R 



258 CENTEAL INDIA HOESE, ETC. 

it comes also from the strong- bond which unites men 
who have carried out not inconsiderable work to- 
gether, who were perfectly loyal to one another after 
their own fashion and disposition, notwithstandingf 
the passing- clouds and differences incidental to all 
human connections. As you say, I knew Sir Colin in 
his strength and in his weakness. I think your 
appreciation of his character very accurate. He was 
the incarnation of the idea of military duty, and he 
rose to high command too late to be able to temper 
the severity and one-sidedness of that idea by a con- 
templation of the responsibilities of command and 
initiative in administration as apart from the notion 
of subordination. 

"This defect, strange to say, grew rather than 
decreased with age, and it was never so apparent as 
in the last six months of his stay in India, when he 
was marching about with Lord 'Canning. I then 
almost quarrelled about it. 

" As a military man, I mean as respects command 
of troops, he was perfectly admirable ; quite unrivalled 
in his knowledge of the British soldier, and the 
manner in which he should be now driven, now led in 
the way he should go. And this sprang from a cause 
far too little appreciated by the generality of generals 
and commanding officers, viz., from an invincible love 
of equity, from his power of putting himself in the 
position of the soldier when he was deciding- on the 
lot of the latter. Thus the soldier was in the first 
place above all a man in his eyes. By appeal to the 
manhood he formed the soldier, and maintained him 
as such. The truth and the simplicity of the means 
are very obvious, but how few understand them, and 
how still fewer are able to apply them in practice. 
Hence the frequency of military crime, and the sight 
of misconduct often in the field. Coke is not just to 
him as a commander of troops in the field. He was 
not slow to seize the fruits of victory ; but he was so 
greedy of the lives of his men that he would not risk 
the sacrifice of one, unless he could see a really com- 
pensating effect. Such was his sagacity in action 
that he could discern the value of forward movements, 
after a point had been won, better than any man I 
ever came across. In these matters he had something 



CLYDE AS COMMANDER 259 

like the certainty of science as distinguished from the 
brilliant venture of a gambler. I do not think his 
genius extended to far g-rasping of military affairs, 
but he was almost perfect in the command of a battle 
and campaign which might come within his ken — 
such, for instance, as the relief of Lucknow. 

"On several occasions when I have been in the 
field with him during the last fourteen years, it has 
been mine to draft his correspondence, and to advise 
in the midst of diplomatic difficulties, and I cannot call 
to mind an instance in which his conduct and views 
were not ultimately justified in the face of the hasty 
criticisms of the passing hour in and out of camp. 
Yet it often happened that the immediate military 
action was much Jess speedy than outsiders fancied. 
His notions of completeness made him dislike putting 
out a hand after an enemy, unless he could assure 
himself that his plans and means were such that he 
would not have to draw it in again. He would 
always meet the desire for distinction, and the appeals 
for bolder movements by the question cui bono ? But, 
if you could convince him that there was a real 
advantage to be gained,^ no man could be more 
persevering or more audacious in attack, advance, and 

Eursuit, actually spurring those wJio had fancied they 
ad been urging him forward ; I have seen him thus 
many times, and I have more than once been reluc- 
tantly but truthfully compelled to admit that the cui 
bono had properly set aside my own view of an opera- 
tion, when that question has been put at a time that 
he was actually writhing under the pain of public 
criticism, to which as you know he was so painfully 
sensitive. This circumstance causes us to look with 
still greatei" admiration at the moral power of resist- 
ance, seeing that no man I ever knew felt the goad of 
the public voice so keenly as he did. To such a pitch 
did the pain of public attack reach in his case, that I 
could with regard to it only compare him to a man 
whose epidermis had been burnt off, leaving all the 
sensitive nerves scorched and exposed. 

"There is a fact in his character which is little 
known, viz., the wonderful tenderness in deed while 
his temper was so bitter. He was less prone to 
punishment than any commander of my acquaint- 



260 CENTKAL INDIA HORSE, ETC. 

ance. He really could not turn people out ; in short, in 
this he sometimes failed. But he scolded much, and 
had a biting sarcasm. This procured him many- 
enemies which a colder but dangerous severity would 
have saved hini, while the latter would or might 
have ruined the individuals he always spared. I used 
to tell him his 'bark was worse than his bite,' and I 
have often made him bite. 

" I sum up the whole, as you apparently do, that 
he was the beau id^al of a lieutenant who might 
command a Corps d'Arm^e, of which the initiative 
should come from such a Chief as Napoleon or the 
Duke. He was of the highest class of military 
executive, and there masterful. Such, I think, was his 
own view of his abilities, though there was such a 
modesty about the man that it was impossible to 
draw him with a view of self-appreciation. — Ever 
yours very sincerely, 

"W. Mansfield." 

In August 1864 Daly was promoted to full 
Colonel, and two years later Sir Robert Napier, now 
Commander-in-Chief, Bombay, recommended him for 
the good service pension (which was duly granted) in 
the following terms : — 

" Commander-in-Chief's Office, 
"Headquarters, Bombay, zoth April 1866. 

" Sir, 

"I have the honour to submit, for the con- 
sideration of His Excellency the Honourable the 
Governor, a statement of the services of Colonel Daly, 
C. B., Bombay Staff Corps, commanding the Central 
India Horse, an officer most distinguished in the 
field, whom I would earnestly recommend to His 
Excellency as specially deserving of the good service 
pension. 

"Colonel Daly's commissions are dated Ensign, 
1840; Lieutenant, 1843; Captain, 1854; Brevet- 
Major, 1858 ; Brevet - Lieutenant - Colonel, 1858 ; 
Colonel, 1864. And his field services are as 
follows : — 

" Served as a Volunteer during the first siege of 



DALY'S EECOKD 261 

Multan as Assistant Engineer ; was Adjutant of the 
1st Bombay Fusiliers at the final siege, and was 
engaged in the storming of the suburbs, 27th De- 
cember 1848 (especially mentioned in the despatch). 
Storm of the city on the 2nd January 1849, and 
named in the despatch 'conspicuous for gallantry.' 

" Battle of Gujerat and the pursuit to the Khyber 
Pass. 

"Raised the ist Punjab Cavalry, and commanded 
the corps in the passage of the Kohat Pass under Sir 
C. Napier. 

"In command of the ist Punjab Cavalry in the 
first Miranzai expedition, and in several affairs on the 
frontier during 1850, 1851, 1852. 

"Raised the ist Oudh Cavalry in 1856. 

" In command of the Guides in 1857, and marched 
them to Delhi : one of the most remarkable military 
marches on record. 

" Was present throughout the siege of Delhi, and 
slightly wounded on the gth June (horse killed), and 
dangerously wounded 19th June, in charging the 
enemy's guns (horse wounded) ; commanded the 
Guides, etc., on the 14th September. 

" Siege of Lucknow, March 1858, and commanded 
' Hodson's Horse,' on Major Hodson's death, during 
the siege. 

" Formed Hodson's Horse into a brigade of three 
regiments, and commanded the whole throughout the 
operations in Oudh, 1858-1859, under Sir Hope 
Grant, including the action of Nawabgunge, passage 
of the Gumti, Pandu Nadi, etc. ; passage of the 
Gogra, affairs in the Terai, Jewrah Pass, etc. 

" The intelligence and zeal displayed by Lieutenant 
Daly as a Volunteer Assistant Field Engineer at the 
siege of Multan led to my recommending him to the 
late Sir Henry Lawrence for command of one of the 
new regiments raised for the Punjab service in 1 848, 
and I have been familiar with the uniformly high 
character which Colonel Daly has since maintained 
in every duty, whether civil or military, in which he has 
been engaged, and the very high estimation in which 
his services have been held by the ruling authorities 
in India. 

"As Colonel Daly has not been serving in the 



262 CENTRAL INDIA HORSE, ETC. 

Bombay Presidency, I have thought it necessary to 
detail his services, though, I fear, imperfectly, but I 
have little doubt that his merits are known to His 
Excellency in Council, and that niy solicitation for 
the good service pension for him will be fully 
supported by the Government of his own proper 
Presidency. — I have, etc., 

" R. Napier, Lieut.-General, 
" Commander-in-Chief." 

At this time also, Napier made enquiry from Daly 
as to his views regarding a brigade command in the 
Bombay Presidency, Aden being specially suggested ; 
but Daly decided, not without some misgivings, to 
decline the offer and to fix his hopes on the political 
line. Shortly before this. Colonel Meade, the Agent 
to the Governor-General in Central India, had 
contemplated long furlough, and Daly, knowing that 
he could rely on Meade's support, had hopes of 
obtaining the acting vacancy. He wrote to a 
friend : — 

"Touching my prospects in the event of Meade's 
going home — these are certainly not weakened by 
the personality of those in a position to be 'pushed 
up.' There are three possible competitors in the 
Agency, and in Rajputana there is nobody with any 
spring : — but as you say, success in this matter will 
rest on other grounds. I know Sir John* well, and 
he has known me with considerable intimacy for 
years, and, though this was chiefly due to his brothers. 
Sir Henry and George (both my true friends), he has 
a kindly feeling towards me. Sir Henry nominated 
me when quite a young subaltern (after the seige of 
Multan) to raise the ist Punjab Cavalry, a frontier 
regiment, and my success won his cordial friendship. 
During my service on the Peshawar frontier I became 
associated with Nicholson, Edwardes, Lumsden, etc. ; 
and then sprang up an acquaintance, and more, with 

* Sir John Lawrence, who had now become Viceroy and Governor- 
General. 



PAST EXPERIENCES 263 

Colonel Mansfield* and Sir Colin Campbell. I was 
for years in intimate correspondence with Sir Henry — 
up to within a few days of his end ; and at his instance 
Sir John (then ruling in the Punjab) appointed me 
(on Lumsden's Candahar expedition) to command 
Henry's own corps, the Guides, which I marched to 
Delhi and led there. That march from Mardan to 
Delhi, 590 miles in twenty-two days in the heats of 
May and June, with cavalry and infantry, has never 
been equalled in India. I have said that the Viceroy's 
knowledge of me was chiefly through his brothers ; 
but it became confidential during the mutiny, and his 
letters to me during the Delhi struggle were numerous 
and full of his mind. Our position and the possible 
eventualities were discussed with the utmost freedom. 
Sir John's views were higher than the world is now 
inclined to believe, and he never in the darkest moment 
lost sight of the public service. He knew that 
Nicholson disliked him personally and evinced his 
feeling in contemptuous speech, or still more con- 
temptuous silence, towards his chief; but this had not 
the slightest effect on Sir John's desire to put the best 
man of the situation in authority. (By the way, who 
is to write the article on Nicholsonf in the Calcutta 
Review ? He was a grander and more Plutarchian 
man than Kaye painted and rouged.) After Delhi 
and Hodson's death, I formed the body of horse 
which bore his name into three corps and commanded 
this brigade till the end of the war ; and, but for_ this 
command and my desire to see the last of the military 
service, I should have passed into political employ- 
ment in Rajputana, for which Sir John had com- 
mended me to Lord Canning. 

" I have given these particulars of my own career 

* At this time Lieutenant-General Sir William Mansfield, Com- 
mander-in-Chief in Bombay. 

t On this subject, Daly subsequently wrote to the same corre- 
spondent : — " I will write to Major Malleson. I know him by name 
and character ; he is brother-in-law to Quentin Battye of the Guides, 
the Knight of the White Plume who fell in his ' first fight ' under my 
command at Delhi. I have often heard him allude to Malleson j 
M. will handle the grander points of Nicholson's character : Kaye 
cushions all his heroes in velvet." 



264 CENTEAL INDIA HORSE, ETC. 

that you may understand how I stand with the 
Governor-General. He has forgotten none of these 
things, though I believe his memory is much affected 
by his eyes and ears. He is warm to old allies near 
him, somewhat careless of those at a distance. I am 
sure the more you know of the Governor-General the 
more you will appreciate his rare common sense, 
always at hand : the grit too is palpable." 

Of the political service generally, Daly had not at 
this time a high opinion. He wrote to the same 
friend : — 

" With the exception of a few of the highest in the 
calling, the British Political Agents who spent their 
days and nights at native courts, cut off from associa- 
tion of their countrymen, have not been types of 
which we can be proud ; nowadays something more 
is looked for than mere subserviency to the Chief; 
some familiarity with the public opinion of our own 
country and a general knowledge of the people of 
India are requisite in the representative of the 
Government of India. My charge in Western Malwa 
(Malcolm's own country) with the scores of thakurs 
and Chiefs receiving stipends from Holkar, Scindia, 
etc., under our guarantee — without which their incomes 
would be worth only what their swords and spears could 
plunder — includes Jaora, Ratlam, Sailana, besides 
provinces subject to Gwalior, Indore, Dewas, and 
Patan, and extends to Neemuch. So you see there 
are few Agencies with more varied interests." 

In the end Meade postponed his leave, and it was 
not till early in 1867 that Daly obtained his first 
substantial advancement in the political service, when 
he was appointed to officiate as Political Agent at 
Gwalior. The Gwalior appointment was the most 
important of the seven political charges forming the 
Central India Agency, over which presided the 
Agent to the Governor-General in Central India, 
with headquarters at Indore. 



DINKAR RAO 265 

Daly's old friend Crawford Chamberlain almost 
immediately afterwards took up the command of the 
troops at Gwalior, where the two worked in close 
accord. The situation at Gwalior was difficult, and 
the character and influence of the Maharaja Jayaji 
Rao Scindia made the political duties of special 
interest and delicacy. Daly had been for several 
years personally known to the Maharaja, and his 
work in Western Malwa had brought him into 
constant communication with the officials of the 
Gwalior Darbar. He had also learnt to appreciate 
the work and character of that great statesman 
Dinkar Rao (Raja Sir Dinkar Rao, K. C.S.I. ), 
who had been Scindia's minister during the mutiny. 
"Dinkar Rao," wrote Daly, "is the one native 
whose purity nobody of any creed or colour ques- 
tions : all mention his name with deference, even 
reverence." 

There was thus nothing new to Daly in associa- 
tions with Gwalior, and in March 1867 he wrote : — 

"There is a great deal that is good in Scindia, 
and I think, had he been fairly handled in youth, 
the man would now be worthy his position ; his 
ability developed wonderfully between 1854 and 
1858, showing that the stuff was in him. It was Sir 
Dinkar Rao's calm wisdom which saved Gwalior, 
but undoubtedly Scindia deserves much for being 
capable of being saved by one man, when «// else 
were for rebellion. He retains every string of office 
in his own hands ; there is not a man about him 
with authority to_ spend a rupee, as he is entirely his 
own minister ; without doubt there is nobody now in 
Scindia's court with anything like the Chiefs ability ; 
he knows this, and believes himself capable of any- 
thing. The prosperity of his State is due entirely to 
the settlements made by Dinkar Rao. It was he 
who carved out the paths, which, though now 



266 CENTRAL INDIA HORSE, ETC. 

covered with briars, are still paths for use. Nobody 
knows all this better than the Maharaja himself. In 
conversation, though without education^ but that 
attained since manhood, he is intelligent and 
pleasant ; seizes on points readily, and now can 
command the temper which years ago used to break 
forth in horrible violence; he is thoroughly alive to 
his status towards Government — no glamour there : 
' I take wishes to be orders, tell me what is wanted 
and I will do it.' " 

Within a few weeks of Daly's arrival at Gwalior a 
serious matter had to be dealt with — the dispersal of 
Scindia's police force and the distribution of his 
regular troops, hitherto massed at the capital. In 
a letter to the Maharaja the Viceroy had advised 
His Highness "to distribute from a half to a third" 
of his army in different parts of his territories, urging 
"that large bodies of troops, collected for long periods 
with little to occupy their minds, become difificult of 
control and dangerous to their own rulers." 

The Agent to the Governor-General in Central 
India, Colonel Meade, visited Gwalior, and the views 
of Government were conveyed to Scindia orally and 
privately by Meade and Daly. Daly wrote : — 

"The decision of the Government that the police 
should be disembodied was received by Scindia 
calmly, and apparently without much interest ; 
whereas, despite the niost painful efforts, his emotion 
respecting the dispersion of the regular troops could 
not be suppressed, though with a distinct admission 
that the wishes of the Viceroy were law to him, and 
that, whatever the sacrifice to himself, there would be 
no hesitation in obedience. Within a few days it was 
arranged that orders for the disembodiment of the 
police should be issued forthwith ; with the sanction 
of the Viceroy, the distribution of the regular troops 
should be deferred till after the celebration of the 
Dasehra at Gwalior. Colonel Meade quitted Gwalior 



RELATIONS WITH SCINDIA 267 

a few days after this arrangement had been come to, 
leaving Scindia grievously depressed : for weeks 
foUowingf he almost abstained from business, and, as 
in his own person he represents the Darbar and all 
authority, the deadlock was serious. I sought an 
opiDortunity of discussing with him alone the position 
which he had assumed ; the conversation was long 
and painful; yet it seemed to give him relief; he 
promised to renew attention to general work, and 
very cordially invited me at any time to talk frankly 
with him on any subject. Since that conversation 
there has been no reserve between us, and frequently 
he has alluded to his 'grief,' which still oppresses him, 
though less visibly than formerly. I have never 
avoided the subject, believing that the ventilation of 
it with me is calculated to work some good on one 
whose associates dare but echo his voice. The army 
was his idol ; its discipline his constant occupation ; 
the only books with which he has any acquaintance 
are those connected with drill and military pursuits. 
Therefore it was he pleaded sorely that his toy might 
he spared. With all this was the tone of direct sub- 
jugation to the will of Government, that he is 'as 
clay in the potter's hands.' Every effort was made 
to spare his feelings ; not a line in the vernacular was 
penned to the Darbar on the subject. Scindia gave 
his own orders, and, at the time appointed by himself 
after the Dasehra, effect was quietly given to the 
Viceroy's advice. 

" It is pleasant to turn to Scindia's personal bearing 
in his intercourse with the Political Agent. He is 
accessible at any time, and, even when brooding oyer 
the fancies which affect him most, he is never wanting 
in kindly couftesy. He will listen to anything urged ; 
bear his part fairly in discussion and face to face in a 
pleasant way ; not shrink from pressure for a decision. 
During these discussions and since, I have attempted 
to impress on Scindia the advisability of changing 
the matdriel of his force ; that he should no longer 
enlist men who have served in our army, or entertain 
recruits from British territory. Oudh and the 
neighbourhood of Cawnpore have hitherto been 
common recruiting fields, supplying not only our 
own regular contingents, but the need of Chiefs who 



268 CENTEAL INDIA HORSE, ETC. 

maintain disciplined corps. Members of the same 
family serve the Queen at Morar, Scindia at the 
Lashkar, the Nizam at Hyderabad, and the Gaekwar 
at Baroda. Scindia's force should be entirely 
recruited from his own territories, and thus distinct 
from that of the Government of India. The change 
will not be easy, but the step is important and should 
be steadily kept in view." 

In the same report Daly discussed the peculiar 
difficulties in the way of improving the administration 
in Gwalior : — 

"There is an entire absence of individual responsi- 
bility in the heads of departments. There is neither 
council nor councillor : the Maharaja rules everything. 
He alone is the Government. In capacity and 
administrative ability there is no one about him to 
compare with him, but many things are hid from 
him. Information trickles to him through crooked 
and narrow channels, not likely to bear many truths 
of current life. The Court Newsman culls from the 
Native Press remarks upon Gwalior and its Chief. 
Several of his officials have a good knowledge of 
English, and similarly work the English papers 
(published in India), of which many are taken in. 
Thus the Maharaja is pretty sure to learn in one way 
or another what is written about him, and he is keen 
on this point. It was thus His Highness became 
acquainted with the publication of my confidential 
report on Gwalior * through the press quite as soon as 
I did. It is no light tribute to his good feeling to 
say that he did not allow this to mar the freedom of 
our intercourse. He was conscious of the truth of 
what was written, and that nothing was set down in 
malice. 

" Scindia is desirous of improving his Government, 
but the question is beset with difficulties. In Native 
Governments the salaries of officials of all grades are 
inadequate to their position without illicit gains. 
They are not fixed high, in the expectation that men 
will resist temptation, but low, from the knowledge 

* See Appendix A. 



THE ADMINISTRATION IN GWALIOE 269 

that they will yield to it. Dustoories (presents) and 
nazarana (fees), attach to every proceeding, and 
every step in each proceeding- ; without such accom- 
paniments, few officials would do anything, and no 
suitor would expect anything to be done. To 
compensate for these, a public servant must not only 
be well paid, and so removed from the need of other 
emoluments than the salary of his office, but he must 
be hedged about by laws and a fixed procedure, 
which have no existence in Native States. Scindia, 
with the prestige of his name and undoubted power — 
with his capacity and aptitude to master business — 
might so remodel his Government as to make it a 
blessing to the people ; for no man more thoroughly 
knows the weak points of the present system than 
he does, and he is not without ambition to win fame 
as an administrator ; but the apparent increase in the 
cost of administration, which the fair payment of 
State servants would entail, will, I fear, deter him 
from such a sustained effort as the circumstances 
demand. 

"At this time, when public attention is attracted 
to the bearing in India of the British Government as 
a Paramount Power, special interest attaches to the 
expressed views of, perhaps, the richest and most 
powerful Chief in the country. I will, therefore, give 
the substance of conversations I have held with him. 
He invariably speaks of himself as the special ally of 
the British Government, as being, in fact, part of it, 
and considers that his unflinching fidelity places him 
in a nearer position to it than any other Chief. 
Scindia said : — ' I fully appreciate the value of the 
British Government to us, the Chiefs of India. The 
feeling of order and security which pervades all classes 
is a substance — a silent working power never attained 
under any previous rule ; and, as natives of India still 
are, it would be impossible for any Native Govern- 
ment to attain it. I have watched it and thought of 
it long. It springs from causes, many of which are 
hidden from us, but to me the most striking is the 
careful way in which you husband your experience. 
Your records are so preserved, that in almost all the 
positions filled by your officers, the current of business 
is little affected by the men themselves. With a Native 



270 CENTRAL INDIA HORSE, ETC. 

Government it is entirely otherwise ; its servants pay 
no deference to the records of their predecessors to 
follow them, rather the reverse. There are no such 
links of responsibility as you maintain ; nor with 
natives would it be possible to bring- about the unity 
of feeling and loyalty to one another which exists 
amongst you. 

" ' Your prestige fills men's minds to an extent 
which, to men who know how things were carried on 
scarce fifty years ago, seems beyond belief. Within 
that period when Mahrattas went from time to time 
from Gwalior to the Deccan, small parties were not 
safe. The departure was an epoch in the year. 
Their friends parted from them knowing that they 
had set out on a journey of danger — perils through 
thugs, robbers, spoliation, and black-mail levied on 
them by the States through which they must pass ; 
these things men, not old, still speak of Npw, all 
pass to and fro without danger and without hindrance 
— the poorest traveller feels as safe as the richest — 
for you make as much effort to protect the poor as 
the rich. I never put myself upon the mail-cart, 
unattended and perhaps unknown, without appreciat- 
ing the strength of your rule. It is a substance — 
I leave Gwalior without apprehension, and my absence 
occasions no distrust. Then again, there is no doubt 
a, general faith in your justice. Your Government, 
though often hard, curt, and inconsiderate in its 
treatment of the prejudices, or, if you like, weaknesses 
of the Chiefs, yet, on the whole, treats them with a 
liberality which they never show tp one another. 
And, now that annexation is at an end, we breathe 
freely even when our failings are probed and oi:»r 
shortcomings discussed. Notwithstanding that your 
subjects are perhaps richer and more prosperous than 
the same classes in Native States, you are not popular. 
I speak as a friend. I travel a good deal about your 
territory, and hear much which never reaches your 
ears. The people are bewildered by your legislation ; 
you coil "Act" upon "Act," "Code" upon "Code," 
with sections innumerable. You never leave them 
alone. I am told that your district officers have less 
intercourse with their ryots than formerly; there is 
more of system and less sympathy nowadays. 



REFOEMS GOOD AND OTHERWISE 271 

'"In your desire to press on improvements, you 
overlook the vast difference between us and you. 
Some of your reforms have been excellent, such as 
the abolition of sati, child-murder, and many others. 
Thefe are others again which seem meddlesome. 
Take, for instance, your attempt to interfere with and 
curtail marriage expenses. The people do not under- 
stand this, and there are not wanting many who 
point to these acts as showing your purpose to upset 
caste and custoni. What good have you done? 
Such interference is vain, and gets you into bad odour. 
Now there is a circular canvassing the opinions of 
Chiefs with a view to decreasing pilgrimages and 
fairs at shrines during the hot season, on the ground 
that such gatherings cause and diffuse cholera, etc. 
Well, this may be so; but very few of the Chiefs 
whose advice you have asked will believe that your 
object is as set forth ; and pilgrims and others, whose 
very existence depends upon their going at certain 
seasons to shrines, etc., will be troubled, and throng 
more and more, thinking that the end is at hand. 
Why raise the question ? You might have contented 
yourselves with adopting on the spot every measure 
which seemed requisite for sanitation. This would 
have been gradually understood.' 

"The wisdom of these remarks commands atten- 
tion. Such criticisms from such a quarter are not 
only valuable in themselves, but mark a state of mind 
in Scindia which shows that the cause of progress is 
gathering strength by example. I break no confi- 
dence in thus dwelling on these conversations. It will 
cheer His Highness to know that the Government 
attaches value to the sentiments he has expressed, 
and gathers from them a renewed assurance of im- 
proving rule in Gwalior. 

"On my arrival at Gwalior in February 1867, I 
found cases and references which had been dragging 
for years, important or unimportant. The transmis- 
sion gave occupation and writing to men who had no 
power to dispose of them. I had many discussions 
with Scindia, whose accessibility and good humour 
admit of these being carried on with the utmost 
freedom. He acknowledged the waste of time caused 
by the many paper references, and expressed hi§ 



272 CENTEAL INDIA HORSE, ETC. 

willingness to meet my views. His Highness has 
thoroughly acted in this spirit, and the business rela- 
tions between the Agency and the Darbar are now 
on a pleasant and satisfactory footing. There are no 
arrears, correspondence has decreased, and questions 
are discussed orally with the Maharaja and Dewan." 

In acknowledging the above, which was embodied 
in the Administration Report for 1867-68, the Foreign 
Secretary wrote to Colonel Meade : — 

"The confidential remarks of His Highness as to 
the relative merits of native and British rule, con- 
veyed in the report of Colonel Daly as gathered from 
familiar conyersations with the Maharaja, are such 
as every British official who is called on either to 
administer executive government directly, or to inter- 
pose with suggestions and advice to native rulers, 
would do well to bear in mind. The feeling of per- 
sonal confidence and attachment to the British 
Government and its officers displayed by the Maha- 
raja is a subject of real satisfaction, and it is one that 
reflects credit on the tact and good management of 
Colonel Daly and of General Chamberlain, command- 
ing the Gwalior district, by whom, at a particular 
crisis, this result has been attained. His Excellency 
concurs with you in thinking, as already intimated, 
that Colonel Daly is especially entitled to the acknow- 
ledgments of the Government of India for the services 
rendered by him at the Gwalior Agency." 

In England, at about this time, an unusual degree 
of attention was being directed towards the affairs of 
Native States in connection with the restoration of 
Mysore to native rule. Some extracts may be given 
from Daly's private letters of the period : — 

"Rawlinson speaks of the stir in Native States 
by the quickening influence of European civilisation. 
He has never been in a Native State ; his experience 
is of Afghanistan and Persia ; neither he nor one of the 
Home agitators, except Hamilton, ever saw a Native 




Maharaja Sir Jayaji Rao Scindia, G.C.B. 



[To face p. 274. 



NATIVE STATES 273 

State. Here (Gwalior) such is the ' stir of civilisation ' 
that not a rupee can be got for a road or work of 
utility, beyond the sum Scindia is squeezed into slving; 
no interior road or work is ever carried on. Fakirs are 
feasted, thousands spent on them and astrologers, in 
the Holi drunkenness ; but nothing on the quickenings 
of progress, such as Europeans designate progress. 

"You invite me to discuss Native States and 
their government. The theme is tempting at the 
first glance, and that only. I began it indeed, but to 
make the sketches of any value it would be necessary * 
to describe the government as now conducted. I 
could not do this without giving offence, for the truth 
is ten times worse than anything which fancy could 
devise. Scindia's State is practically one of the best 
as far as we know, but that knowledge is very slight ; 
no servant or subject of his is allowed to visit or speak 
to British officers ; if one of his nobles were to pay me 
a visit without having obtained permission, he would 
be a marked man ; tyranny and oppression in many 
matters baffle belief, but no sign is made by us. If it 
were known that our aid would be given in any case 
of oppression, the road would be thronged with 
shrieking petitioners, but this sort of intercession 
would never become us : it should be prophylactic to 
be of use, and in the large States the opportunity 
for this is past. 

" Lord Cranborne says Sir George Gierke told him 
that he had never known of a migration from a Native 
State to the British ; but, bad taste though it was, 
the reverse is not uncommon. What twaddle is this ? 
George Gierke of CJmballa's experience of Native 
States is aged thirty or forty years. What are the 
facts ? In Esagarh, a large and rich province, 
villages are depopulated, lands waste ; in Scindia's 
and Holkar's districts in Malwa, it is the same. 
These tracts are now as Gudh was in 1855, as 
described by Sleeman and Outram. What is the 
condition in Oudh now ? Where in British territory 
does land lie waste ? Do you not remember in your 
passage from Indore to Gwalior, the bleak deserted 
vista which everywhere greeted you? Soil of the 
richest untouched : that is the conditibn of great 
States. 



274 CENTRAL INDIA HORSE, ETC. 

"It is a pretty thing to talk of 'a well-governed 
Native State.' Where is this to be found ? In those 
States, small and dependent, which, but for our 
support, would be swallowed up. With them is much 
that suits the native tastes. British ideas worked 
by themselves. Wherever this is the case you will 
find prosperity and population. This should have 
been the case here with Scindia ; but we wrecked 
ourselves and Dinkar Rao, and so left Scindia with 
his own fickle temper to guide him. Seeing all this 
I could not write the truth ; harm would follow. It 
must be our rule to work out better things by winning 
the Chiefs to ourselves. Scindia is good in many 
points ; sensitively desirous to win our approbation, 
and in this way we may find a way of winning him 
to good purposes. He is like a trout and wants 
tickling. Speak kindly of him and be careful to 
eschew satire of him. He should be dealt with 
tenderly and gently ; praised for his good acts and so 
won over. I have written you this to give you a 
notion of the moody nature of one who ought to be 
better than he is. Yet, as he is, the difference 
between him and others is great. Of late years we 
have in no way helped him. Still I do not despair. 
I am sure with all these semi-educated Chiefs, we do 
not well to be angry ; we must treat them with 
forbearance. Good is to be attained by personal 
influence only ; for few indeed are they who value 
principles. There is but one Dinkar Rao. If it 
should happen that he be restored to position here, 
and stranger things have happened, Scindia would 
find immense relief and happiness, the country would 
rise in glee ; even now, despite the knowledge that to 
name Dinkar Rao is disgrace, as he passes through 
towns and hamlets, all run out with clasped hands to 
bless him for his settlement, and that it is to which 
Scindia owes the order now existing despite the 
laches. The more I see of Dinkar Rao the more I 
esteem his rare purity. What a Governor of a 
province he would make! Calmly wise, honestly 
good. That man should be an Indian Councillor 
nobly paid. So should we recognise ability and 
service. We are beginning at the wrong end of the 
stick." 



A CONFIDENTIAL MEMORANDUM 275 

In one of the above quotations from his annual 
report, Daly refers to the publication of a con- 
fidential memorandum* in which he had dealt with 
the affairs of Gwalior. The memorandum was 
written in response to a circular which was issued 
by the Government of India, in consequence of some 
remarks made in the House of Commons by Lord 
Cranborne (the late Marquess of Salisbury), who, in 
the debate on the Mysore question, expressed a doubt 
whether, in the estimation of the natives, the British 
system of administration was superior to that in 
force in the Native States. The publication of his 
remarks took Daly entirely by surprise and greatly 
vexed him. He wrote privately to a friend : — 

"An essay on British or Native rule might be as 
well cooked up in Oxford as Calcutta, in the way 
that recent travels in Abyssiniaf are_ now under 
process at the British Museum. But it requires a 
man to be on the premises to know how sausages 
are made. I was asked confidentially for information 
on the working of the Government machinery in the 
State to which I am accredited. I drew up the 
curtain on the system, and in so doing, made personal 
allusions which I would have omitted had I known 
that publication was at hand. Mark the difference 
of tone of those who wrote for themselves in print ! 
they paint Oliver without moles ! I said as little as I 
could through fear of writing too much ; but to have 
left out the personal bearing would have been striking 
out Hamlet. Moreover, had I contemplated publica- 
tion, I would have told Scindia, so that the blow 
should not fall from an outsider. He is an extra- 
ordinary compound and can bare frankness. There 
is much to like about him. There is nothing in what 
I wrote about Central India (Malwa) which I have 

* See also Appendix A. 

+ The allusion is to the Abyssinian Expedition of 1867-68, in which, 
but for his employment at Gwalior, Daly would have commanded a 
brigade. 



276 CENTEAL INDIA HORSE, ETC. 

not told him again and again in the endeavour to 
make him take a real interest in his rich possessions 
there. His revenues are some 30 lakhs froni MaWa : 
with liberal nursing in a few years they will spring 
to so. 

" * is a philosopher. He has called upon 

me and discussed the general question. He says 
he is as honest as his position admits : that while 
at Rome he is obliged to do as the Romans do. 

"It has been said of the Infidel, where does he 
get his notion of the God he denies? So of the 
comparative systems (!) of government in this 
country. What would happen without the security 
we give ? What did happen in olden time ? Pindaries, 
Dacoits, Largesse — a man's means being the measure 
oi his contribution I It is our security which makes 
natives to think of these things. The happiest rule 
for the people, that gives contentment without fear, 
is that administered by one of themselves under our 
general supervision and protection. Jaora is an 
instance in point. Our slavery to system frequently 
works harshly and inflicts suffering, but it is the 
reliance on our truth and intention to do justice which 
redeems us. In Native States, faith in the English- 
man is still strong. 

"We have distributed Dinkar Rao's rules of 
government as much as possible amongst the States 
of Central India and with excellent effect. Our 
system, carried out by a well-trained Chief or a minister 
like Dinkar Rao, would realise Edwardes' notion of a 
perfect government in a new country — that Sir Henry 
Lawrence should go through the land amongst the 
people saying what was to be done, and leave Sir 
John to do it." 

Daly had spoken so freely of the Maharaja Scindia 
that the Government of India imagined that his 
personal relations with the Chief could not stand the 
strain, and orders were actually issued for Daly's 
transfer to another appointment. " I quit this posi- 
tion with rftgret," wrote Daly to a friend, " I have got 

* A leading native o£Scial at Gwalior. 



RETAINED AS POLITICAL OFFICER 277 

on well with Scindia and was gradually acquiring a 
working influence over him, and despite the unwise 
publication of my paper, I should, in time, recover any 
ground that may be lost. Scindia has borne the 
matter well and honestly. He is too sensible to 
compare his administrators with ours. He has his 
grievances, and feels, not without bitterness, that we 
neglected him in days past, and paid no attention to 
his education and training. He thinks us harsh and 
comments on our adherence to form at the expense 
of sympathy." 

In point of fact, Scindia, with a large-heartedness 
that Daly was the first to acknowledge, was at pains 
to show that he had taken no offence at Daly's free 
speaking and that he abated not a jot from the 
confidence which he had learnt to repose in him. 
The order for transfer was cancelled on a special 
representation from the Agent to the Governor- 
General, and Scindia congratulated himself on retain- 
ing Daly as his political officer. 

Daly went home on sick leave in May 1 868 ; he 
returned to Gwalior in September, and proceeded to 
Indore in the following March to officiate for Meade 
as Agent to the Governor-General. Meade resumed 
charge at the end of 1869, but was transferred to 
Hyderabad early in 1870, when Daly again took up 
the appointment of Agent to the Governor-General, 
which he held until his final departure from India 
eleven years later. 



CHAPTER XI 

ADMINISTRATION OF CENTRAL INDIA, 1 869- 1 88 1 

Description of the Province and of its condition before Daly assumed 
charge ; th,e famine of 1 868- 1870 ; relations of Political Officers 
with Native States ; Daly's methods of administration and objects ; 
annual progress as shown by Reports ; assassination of Lord 
Mayo ; the Rewa Chief ; the Opium Trade ; Lord Northbrook's 
tour in Central India ; visit to India of the Prince of Wales ; the 
Imperial Assemblage at Delhi ; Daly's review of ten years ; 
officers who served under him ; his departure. 

The Native States which constitute the province of 
Central' India cover an area of about 84,000 square 
miles, or approximately that of England, Scotland, 
and Wales. The chief administrative authority is 
ofificially styled, "the Ag-ent to the Governor-General 
in Central India," and his charge is ofificially desig- 
nated "the Central India Agency".; it may be 
roughly described as extending from the confines of 
Bengal on the east to the Bombay Presidency of the 
west, and as bounded on the north by the United 
Provinces and Rajputana, and on the south by the 
Central Provinces. When Daly assumed charge. 
Central India was divided for administrative purposes 
into seven subordinate Agencies, each controlled by 
a Political Officer, who acted directly under the orders 
of the Agent to the Governor-General. The province 
contained four cantonments, Mhow, Morar, Neemuch, 
and Nowgong, which were supervised by the Agent 

278 



EEPOET OF THE PEOVINCE 279 

to the Governor-General, who also exercised military 
control over the local corps in Central India, consist- 
ing- of the two reg-iments of the Central India Horse, 
the Bhopal Battalion, and the Malwa Bhil Corps. 
The opium revenue of Malwa, which in 1868 
amounted to two million pounds sterling, was collected 
at Indore under the direction of the Agent to the 
Governor. 

The first Administration Report of the Central 
India Agency was submitted in 1866 by Daly's 
predecessor. Colonel (afterwards Sir Richard) Meade, 
who held the post of Agent to the Governor-General 
for eig-ht years. Meade classified the Chiefships as 
follows ; — Principal States, 4, viz., Gwalior, Indore, 
Bhopal, Rewa; Secondary States, 23, whereof 2 
Mahratta, 2 Muhammadan, 6 Bundela, 12 Rajput, 
and I Gujar ; minor and petty States, 44. He 
estimated the population at over 7^ millions, and the 
revenues of the Chiefships at rather over 2^ crores 
of rupees. " Many of the Chiefs," observed Daly a 
few years later, "wield an influence in the country 
worthy of all consideration, and far beyond that 
which income would imply." 

No regular census* of Central India was taken 
until 1 88 1, when the population was returned as 
9,261,907; ten years later the census figure was 
10,318,812,. while at the last census (1901) the 
enumerated total was 8,628,781. The decrease in 
1 90 1 is to be ascribed in larg^e measure to the effects 
of the famine of 1899-1900; at the same time it is 
well known that the returns of the two previous 

* " Sir John Malcolm in 1823 estimated 98 to the square mile ' as 
a scale for the present reducedipopulation of Central India.' " Memoir 
of Central India, including Malwa, vol. ii., p. 222. 



280 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

decades were very unreliable, especially as regards 
the numbers of the Bhils and other semi-wild tribes. 

" The character of the country and of the people 
inhabiting- it," wrote Meade,_ in 1866, "naturally 
varies greatly throughout this extensive territory. 
Nothing can be a greater contrast than the desolate 
wilds and jungles of the Western Satpuras, and the 
country extending from them to the Vindhyas — with 
their savage inhabitants the Bhil tribes, who abhor 
field, or indeed any manual, labour — and the adjoin- 
ing richly cultivated plains of Malwa, populated 
by a thrifty, agricultural people. A great part of 
Bundelkhand is hilly and unproductive, especially the 
southern and eastern districts, forming the northern 
slope of the tableland of the Vindhyas, which throw 
off offshoots in the form of lower ranges or detached 
hills, some of the latter of great height, as those 
surmounted by the celebrated Forts of Kalingar and 
Ajaigarh. The scenery here is strikingly grand and 
picturesque, the ghclts being bold and abrupt, and 
clothed with luxuriant foliage. The greater part of 
the Rewa has been, till recently, untraversed by 
Europeans, but the Topographical Survey now in 
progress will furnish full information." 

Malwa stretches from the highlands of the 
Vindhya Range in a north-easterly direction for 
nearly 300 miles as far as the river Chambal. This 
district has long been famous for its equable climate, 
good crops, and rich soil. It contains the whole of 
the poppy-growing land from which Malwa opium is 
exported. It is thickly populated and well-cultivated. 
Sugar-cane, cotton, wheat, jowari, and the smaller 
millets are all successfully grown in this favoured 
district ; numbers of rivers and streams, which have 
their sources in the Vindhyas, run through this area 
to join various affluents of the Jumna and the Ganges, 
while lakes, tanks, and numerous wells add greatly 
to the prosperity and security of the cultivating 



DESCEIPTION 281 

classes. It has often been said that Malwa is secure 
from drought. This is a theory advanced by Sir 
John Malcolm * in his volumes on Central India, and 
reiterated by his successors. And it was not until 
1899 that Malwa lost her fair fame, and fell a victim 
to the devastating scourge of famine. 

The northern districts of Central India are 
remarkable chiefly on account of the vicissitudes in 
their conditions. The heat of Gwalior is proverbial ; 
while famine and scarcity have frequently played a 
disastrous part in the history of the State. Though 
well populated by as patient and long-suffering a 
class of cultivators as can be found in any part of 
India, Gwalior has an unenviable reputation for 
prolonged droughts ; and many years of prosperity 
are needed to balance the effects of such famines as 
were experienced in 1868, 1880, 1886, 1897, and 
1900. 

In Bundelkhand and Rewa the character of the 
country is hilly ; large forests and heavy jungles 
cover a great portion of this area, and there is a 
considerable sprinkling of the aboriginal tribes of 
Bhils and Gonds. In 1871, after a visit to Orchha, 
during which he composed certain differences between 
the Chief and his nobles, Daly wrote : " I could not 
fail to observe that this country of rocks, passes, and 
forts is populated by thousands who, but for British 
prestige, would make the old hills ring again, with 
their war cries." 

In the Central India of 1868, there was an entire 
lack of railway communication. The Great Indian 
Peninsula Railway extended only as far as Khandwa, 
while the terminus on the northern side of the 

* Metnoir of Central India, including Malwa, vol ii., p. 42. 



282 CENTEAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

province was Agra. In roads also Central India 
was remarkably deficient. With the exception of 
the g-rand trunk road from Bombay to Agra, which 
passes through Indore, Goona, Sipri, and Gwalior, 
there was practically not a yard of metalled road in 
the Agency. Merchandise and goods for export 
were carried, by devious routes, on the backs of 
Banjara bullocks ; and all journeys were performed 
on horseback or in carts. Education was almost 
unknown ; the few schools that existed at the large 
towns, such as Gwalior, Indore, Dhar, and Ratlam, 
were neglected by the Chiefs, and can hardly be said 
to have been popular among the people. The 
administration of justice was marked chiefly by 
corruption, while the collection of revenue was in 
many States merely a system of over-assessment 
and rack-renting, tempered by an occasional remis- 
sion of uncollected balances. Throughout Bundel- 
khand, and in many parts of Malwa and Gwalior, 
gangs of dakoits, emboldened by the supine conduct 
of native rulers, terrorised the country and collected 
heavy toll from the villagers, and from such merchants 
as were bold enough to send their goods through 
those parts of the country. 

In August 1867, when Police Agent at Gwalior, 
Daly wrote : — 

"Colonel Sutherland, Resident at Gwalior, in 1837 
described Esaghar, Bhilsa, and Malwa as desolate 
and miserable. Thirty years have brought no change 
for the better. Travellers still go armed to the teeth, 
and in many places the man at the plough has a 
sword by his side. Traders going from village to 
village are not safe without an armed Bhil or Sondia. 
To men accustomed to see districts under- British 
rule such a statement must seem fabulous. It is 



PAST CONDITION OF MALWA 283 

necessary to live and move in Native States to know 
the nature of the system under which they exist. 
The comparison between their method of administra- 
tion and our own is as St Giles' to St James'." 

In reviewing the past condition of Malwa, Daly 
wrote : — 

"Mountstuart Elphinstone, in his report to the 
supreme Government, 1819-20, on the territory 
conquered from the Peshwa, describes districts which 
had once been populous with handsome cities, 
yielding large revenues to the Muhammadans, now 
lying desolate and uninhabited through the rapacity 
of the Mahratta soldiery and the misgovernment of 
the Peshwa's officers. Men are apt in these days to 
speak of Elphinstone, but few remember what he 
wrote of the misery which prevailed, and the 
dissimulation, mendacity, and fraud taught by 
extortion, and the sense of oppression and insecurity. 
Old men still talk of that time, though none can now 
recognise, in the busy towns now once more spread 
about the provinces, the picture painted by Elphin- 
stone fifty years ago. If we pass on to Malwa, and 
take the picture by Malcolm of the same period, the 
contrast is hardly less remarkable, though under 
different conditions. In 181 7 Holkar's territory was 
one scene of anarchy from which all government had 
disappeared. The produce of the country was given 
over to plunder. Rajput Chiefs and thakurs were 
consumed by the mercenary bands which they 
employed to protect them against the Mahrattas. 
Holkar, Amir Khan (Pindari),* and the Rani of Dhar 

* "Amir Khan was a Pathan adventurer, who commenced his 
career as a private horseman in 1788. After serving first one Chief 
and then another, he adhered pretty steadily to the family of Jeswaht 
Rao Holkar until 1818, just before the battle of Mehidpur, when he 
was gained over by the British, under guarantee of holding unmolested 
his possessions, the value of which was about ;£20o,ooo per annum. 
After this arrangement, he retired into private life and was virtually 
a prince in his own territory." Sir H. Lawrence's Adventures of an 
Officer, etc., vol. i., p. 10. For a complete account of the Pindaris, see 
vol. i., chap. X., of Malcolm's Memoir of Central India, etc. For the 
condition of Dhar, see Malcolm, vol. ii., chap. xv. 



284 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

had 70,000 horse and foot, besides Sibhandis, and 
no less than 300 field-guns — dependent, or subsistent, 
on plunder. The revenues of Holkar were less than 
4i lakhs. The Malwa possessions of Daulat Rao 
Scindia, thoug-h free from anarchy, were much 
disturbed ; and Rajput Chiefs were alert to escape 
from the Mahratta pressure. He had an army of 
26,000 regular infantry, 13,000 cavalry, and 400 
pieces of cannon, besides Pindaris, ready for the 
field. 

"This was the state of Malwa when the British 
troops entered Central India in 181 7, and, on the 
2 1st December, in the battle of Mehidpur utterly 
shattered Holkar's army. The victory was so 
complete th3,t, from that moment, order took root. 
The distress produced by successive revolutions had 
become so acute that Chiefs, thakurs, and people 
alike yearned for peace and the close of the reign of 
terror. British supremacy was nowhere resisted. 
Holkar, by the treaty of Mandisor, became one of 
the independent allies of the British Government. 
To him, as also to Dhar and Dewas, many estates 
which had been lost were restored. Malcolm 
proclaimed every district to be the right of the 
proprietor in possession, provided he proved himself 
the friend of peace. The Mahratta Chiefs were thus 
secured in conquests which, without our protection; 
they were powerless to hold, and from that date have 
been accepted as sovereign rulefs by Rajput thakurs. 

"Malcolm, in writing of these events three years 
afterwards, says : ' No contrast can be stronger than 
that which is now presented. The people of Malwa are 
probably at this moment happier and more contented 
than they will be hereafter.' 

" Fifty years have elapsed since this was written. 
Malcolm is still remembered with gratitude by the 
people ; who still look to us as the rulers of the 
country, and pray for our intercession as much as 
they did in 1818." 

In 1868 Central India and Rajputana were 
visited by a disastrous famine, which grew intense 
in 1869, and did not disappear until 1870. Daly 



FAMINE 285 

assumed charge as Agent to the Governor- General, 
from Meade, in March 1869; it consequently fell to 
him to record the history of the past year, and he 
wrote : — 

"The exodus from Rajputana, through Malwa, 
began early in August ; families, with their herds and 
household property, \yent streaming on for weeks 
and months in succession ; they paused for rest and 
refreshment only, and then passed on in search of 
fodder and cheap food. This class, the cultivators of 
the province, went out to tide over the drought time, 
and then to return to their homes ; overtures were 
made by States through which they passed to induce 
them to settle, but hardly one was accepted ; when 
they returned some months afterwards their plight 
was changed — numbers thinned, means exhausted, 
the surviving cattle lank and dying, for the rain which 
was due had not fallen. With that large class below 
the cultivators and well-to-do inhabitants of villages, 
which fled from the famine, destitution was normal 
from the outset. They were without means to travel 
or strength to labour ; they clung about the States of 
Malwa like locusts ; much charity was shown to 
them. The Public Works Department on the im- 
perial roads was open to all-comers capable in any 
way of contributing to their own maintenance ; thus 
the lives and self-respect of thousands were saved. 
The numbers which perished from starvation and 
exhaustion are not to be computed ; there are no 
statistics to give a clue to this ; dead bodies and 
human bones were found in all directions; parties 
were constantly moving up and down the roads to 
bury and burn those who had died by the wayside ; 
in many instances the corpses were left to the jackals 
and vultures. 

"In September the Gwalior Darbar, in view to 
allay the panic, issued a proclamation urging the 
village communities to remain in their homes, promis- 
ing that the first revenue instalment would be post- 
poned, and that assistance, either through the State 
or through Banias, would be given. This proclama- 
tion had a ringing sound, nothing more; moreover, 



286 CENTKAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

the distress was soon beyond such treatment ; to 
remain in the villag-es was to meet certain death ; 
wells were dry and water everywhere scarce, fodder 
was exhausted, and there was no food for man or 
beast, save that which the jungle gums, roots, and 
berries supplied. 

"In December the highways about Gwalior and 
the palace gates were crowded with cultivators : whole 
communities pressed in to appeal against the demand 
for revenue collections ; for the officials had begun to 
exact payment of the instalment the postponement of 
which had been promised by proclamation. Up to 
this time Maharaja Scindia had scarcely realised how 
terrible was the issue. For several months he had 
not been able to give his usual attention to public 
affairs. A dangerous illness prostrated him in August, 
and he was absent from Gwalior in search of health 
for upwards of a couple of months afterwards. His 
opinions soon underwent change ; and he directed his 
Dewan to make a hasty tour through the affected 
districts. The Dewan quickly returned, bringing with 
him a harrowing account of what he had witnessed. 
The Maharaja was now roused : he mounted his 
horse, and with a handful of followers, for the country 
was bare, rode from tahsil to tahsil to see the face of 
things. What he saw was narrated under his own 
hand in graphic and striking language. 

" I had many long and anxious consultations with 
Scindia and his Dewan on the measures to be adopted 
to meet the calamity. The Maharaja was appalled 
at its extent, and often exclaimed, ' How can I feed a 
people?' His plan was to put down half a lakh of 
rupees for distribution amongst the twelve Subhas 
(divisions), for the purchase of supplies, for deepening 
wells and tanks, and for relief works. The Sardars 
and chief men of Gwalior were called upon to feed the 
thousands thronging the streets in hunger and want. 
The appeal was liberally responded to by the wealthy 
community. 

"In Bundelkhand distress became visible in Sep- 
tember, between which and 31st March last nearly 
two lakhs were spent by twenty-two States in works 
of utility and relief Panna, which was early con- 
spicuous in practical benevolence, Charkhari, Chhat- 



DALY'S REPORT 287 

tarpur staggered under the burden of relief cheerfully- 
sustained, and the smaller States were not wanting. 
Rewa, though perhaps slower in taking the field as 
the darkness gathered, outshone all in bounty. This 
State is rich, and its riches were nobly used. But the 
mainstay of the province during this visitation has 
been the public works of the Government of India. 
Lakhs of rupees were spent in saving life in Native 
States, and it was the example of this wakeful muni- 
ficence before their eyes which roused the Chiefs to a 
sense of their responsibilities." 

Daly's report of the following year (1869-70) was 
in the same gloomy strain : — 

"Within the States of Central India the past year 
has been marked by all the terrors of famine and 
disease ; thousands perished from sheer starvation, and 
thousands from cholera and sunstroke. Villages, and 
even districts, were depopulated, and there were none 
left to tell how many of the inhabitants had sunk 
under the miseries which oppressed them. Scindia 
computes the casualties in the neighbourhood of 
Gwalior at 92,987. In Bundelkhand the drought, 
which began later, lasted longer and was perhaps even 
rnore disastrous, for the people are poorer than those 
of Gwalior ; but the Chiefs of the States, great and 
small, seem to have given themselves earnestly to 
relief and measures of precaution. With the excep- 
tion of a few places on the western border, Malwa 
suffered not at all from drought, but the streaming 
crowds from Rajputana and Gwalior brought in their 
train disease and death. Of the mortality among 
these wanderers it is impossible to form an opinion. 
Marwaris, lank and emaciated, came pouring down 
through every outlet into Western Malwa ; there are 
no data of their numbers ; bodies and bones were 
found in nalas, and on the plains, under trees, and 
upon the wayside ; and this over a vast space. Even 
so late as February 1870, an English gentleman, 
marching through Rajputana to Indore, encountered 
human beings, living and dead, in every form of 
misery ; and witnessed scenes too horrible to be 
described. With the rains of this year (1870) 



288 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

thousands of survivors have found their way back ; 
and even now there may be seen little camps of way- 
farers returning to their villages, out of which they 
came in hundreds. The love of home was strikingly 
illustrated amongst these people, driven out by 
drought and famine, pursued by cholera and death : 
the survivors, in the depth of their misery, thought 
only of the time of return. No temptations to settle 
where they found food and kindliness turned them. 
Scarcely a settler was found. They struggled back, 
by tens and twenties, along the routes down which 
they hurried, a few months before, in crowds with 
their herds. It is pleasant to note the warm and 
abiding charity of the States in Western Malwa ; for 
months in succession food was distributed at Jaora 
and Ratlam to thousands, the wealthy opium traders 
and bankers subscribed liberally, and relief was 
systematically disbursed under the orders of Hazrut 
Nur Khan, the Kamdar of Jaora, and Mir Shahamat 
Ali, the Superintendent of Ratlam. The Maharaja 
Holkar was also liberal and compassionate. During 
this year of misery, the dispensaries of Central India 
have been green spots diffusing food and comfort to 
the weary. 

" Native States are still quivering under the strain ; 
for where famine was heaviest there were no means of 
alleviating it, neither roads nor approaches. The rail 
saved Bundelkhand from utter destitution ; but Raj- 
putana had no such refuge, hence it was that the 
population rushed out in panic to starve and die. 
Salar Jung told Maharaja Holkar that it was the 
saving power of the rail which had induced him to 
invite the Government of India to introduce it within 
the Nizam's territory. He gave an instance which 
had occurred to himself. Anticipating a dearth of 
food, he made a large purchase of grain for transport ; 
but before this could be effected the country had 
become impassable, and the store rotted, and those 
for whom it had been provided starved. Salar Jung 
resolved that, if money could supply an iron way, such 
a calamity should not recur." 

Anyone who compares the arrangements made by 
the Native States of Central India during the famines 



COMPAEISONS 289 

of 1896-97 and 1 899- 1 900 with what occurred in 
1868-70, cannot fail to be struck with the advance 
made in the thirty years. In the famines of 1896-97 
and 1899-1900, Maharaja Sir Madho Rao Scindia 
spent upwards of 38 lakhs of rupees (over ;^2 50,000) 
in direct relief, besides placing- 24 lakhs of rupees at 
the disposal of the Agent to the Governor-General 
for loans on easy terms to neighbouring- States, 
which found it difficult to bear the strain of a liberal 
relief policy. In the year 1896-97 the Maharaja also 
remitted arrears of revenue amounting to over 74 
lakhs of rupees, of which 60 lakhs were remitted in 
commemoration of the Diamond Jubilee, and the 
balance on account of famine. In 1869 the States 
of Bundelkhand were largely dependent for relief 
upon famine works in British India. In 1900 they 
spent more than 20 lakhs on famine labour ; through- 
out Central India the famine relief code of the 
Government of India was not only accepted, but 
honestly worked up to by the Darbars. 

In 1 87 1, prefacing his annual report for the past 
year, Daly said : — 

"The Administration Reports of Native States 
must of necessity widely differ from those which 
tell of the workings of British rule. Lieutenant- 
Governors and Chief Commissioners lay bare the 
state of a province. Defects of law, acts of officials, 
high and low, are discussed with a freedom all our 
own, and utterly foreign to the comprehension of 
chiefs and Darbar officials. A British Political Agent, 
save in the special case of a State under temporary 
management, has no administrative power. He can 
only report a description of life and rule in States in 
which he has no executive charge, and in few of 
which is there any other law than custom — and that 
subject to the caprice of the Chief The Political 
Agent's control is founded on his own personal influ- 



290 CENTEAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

ence, and the traditional sway of the British Govern- 
ment : except, of course, where marked oppression or 
disturbance call for the intervention of the Imperial 
Government. It is only within the last few years that 
Government, by publishing the annual reports of 
Political Agents, has kept the public abreast of the 
current. On the whole the effect has been un- 
doubtedly good. In Scindia's words, 'a lifting up of 
the purdah (veil) with which Government has hitherto 
shrouded Native States may startle the public, and 
disclose things little contemplated ' ; but it has let in 
wholesome light and air. While there are rulers who 
almost resent discussion about their affairs, and 
affirm that we are bound to be deaf to any wails 
which arise, there is not one who does not in a 
measure temper his acts accordingly ; and some there 
are who yearn for honest fame with the public. The 
unreserved publication of all that a Political Agent to 
a native court may write of a despotic rule, alien in 
principle and practice to our own theories, would be 
as unwarranted and injurious to society as the pub- 
lication of private correspondence by the Post 
Office : but frank discussion, in good faith, qf things 
as they are will win and hold its way in the East 
as well as elsewhere. When Chiefs understand 
that we have no ulterior motive to serve, that 
we seek neither land nor subjects, the free ventila- 
tion which publicity gives will not fail of benefidal 
results." 

As to the position of the Chiefs, Daly wrote : — 

"The ruler himself makes, and at pleasure 
administers, the law, of which there is no written 
code, and which is wholly undefined, though in 
practice justice is ordinarily meted out according to 
the Shastras, or custom and precedent." This he 
qualified on another occasion by observing: — 
"Written laws are of less importance in Native 
States than the outside world would suppose ; their 
mere absence is no cause of confusion, and their 
existence is no check upon a despotic Chief whose 
fiat in all matters is the very essence of his rule. 
With the most conservative people in the world. 



SCINDIA AND HOLKAR 291 

usages and traditions form a code from which 
deviation is rare." 

Of the two Mahratta Houses of Scindia and 
Holkar, he gave this brief summary : — 

" The most_ important in the Agency, in wealth, 
power, and subjects, the States of Gwalior and Indore 
have grown strong under British protection since 
Malcolm's settlement of 1818. Scindia rules over 
territory in area about the size of Ireland, with a 
population of 2f millions and a revenue of upwards 
of I million. He is free from debt, and has a large 
cash reserve which is swelling : for his expenditure 
falls short of his income by probably 30 per cent. 
His revenue is elastic : for in Dinkar Rao's great 
settlement of Malwa, which Scindia maintains, the 
ryots are prosperous ; and in this respect contrast 
markedly with Holkar 's, who are tottering and 
starving under pressure. 

" Scindia's possessions in Malwa form the largest 
and richest portion of the province, and yield him a 
revenue of 40 lakhs. But this does not represent 
half their capacity. There is want of population, and 
scores of miles are still waste. It is pleasant to note 
a growing^ tendency in Scindia to treat his Rajput 
subjects in Malwa with forbearance. Holkar's 
example of the reverse has had, at any rate, this 
effect. Scindia took alarm at the disquietude excited 
by Holkar's demands for title-deeds from thakurs 
and zamindars, whose forefathers gave their names 
to villages before a Mahratta lance was seen above 
the Vindhyas, and has ordered that no new demands 
shall be made on thakurs. ' I will have no such cry 
against me as the country is ringing with against 
Holkar.'" 

These extracts from his first annual reports 
will suffice to show the spirit in which Daly buckled 
to his work in Central India. He possessed an 
extensive knowledge of the history of India generally, 
and of the States of Malwa in particular. He had a 
clear and precise conception of Indian character ; and. 



292 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

above all, he possessed a perfect temper, a buoyant 
good nature, and the faculty of impressing his own 
high spirits and bonhomie upon those with whom he 
was brought into contact. Personal influence was 
the keynote of his success ; and he avoided most 
sedulously the system of official correspondence so 
irksome to native Darbars. If anything serious had 
to be said, or if any transaction of importance had to 
be conducted, he would not hesitate to undertake at 
any season of the year a journey of 400 miles to 
Gwalior, travelling in the mail-cart, which was the 
only means of conveyance. There he would discuss 
matters personally with the Maharaja Scindia, who, 
under Daly's genial influence, soon cast off the 
reticence and isolation which for many years had 
marked his relations with political officers. It is not 
too much to say that Daly not only succeeded in 
gaining Scindia's confidence, but, by bringing him 
out of himself and stimulating his better nature, 
recovered for him many friendships which he had lost, 
and restored him to good terms with the officers of 
the British army serving near his capital. In like 
manner, by frequent visits to different parts of the 
Agency, Daly made personal friendships with rulers 
of various capacities and different characters ; and 
was thus enabled to persuade them to undertake 
reforms, and to promote the benefits of their people, 
without resorting to official correspondence or poli- 
tical pressure. To the Rajput thakurs of Central 
India, Daly always extended especial consideration. 
"Amongst them," he wrote, "are men of the bluest 
blood of the Rajputs, relatives of the Rana* (of 

* "The Princes of Mewar are styled Ranas, and are the elder 
branch of the Souryavansi, or Children of the Sun. . . . The Hindu 
tribes yield unanimous suffrage to the Prince of Mewar as the 



CHIEFS WHO WERE LOYAL 293 

Udaipur), whose lands have been in the undisputed 
possession of their families for many centuries, 
althougfh the district was often the shuttlecock of_ 
conquest" 

Daly's great test in estimating the value and the 
character of every ruler within his political charge 
was the conduct of the Chief during the trying time 
of the Mutiny. Throughout his career in Central 
India he missed no opportunity of drawing attention 
to loyalty and good services rendered during 1857-58. 
He made it his habitual practice to bring to favour- 
ah(le notice those Chiefs, or their descendants, who 
had stood firm at a time when the whole country was 
ablaze. It was on these grounds, more than for any 
other reason, that he specially respected Maharaja 
Jayaji Rao Scindia. He recalled to mind the fact 
that, when the Gwalior Contingent mutinied, when 
his own troops had broken out and were joined by 
the mutineers, and when the Rani of Jhansi was 
actually knocking at his gates and demanding his 
assistance in fighting the British, Scindia, with a 
bare handful of followers, left his capital, rode 
from Gwalior to Agra, placed himself at the dis- 
posal of the officer commanding the Fort, - and 
remained with our troops until Sir Hugh Rose's 
forces recaptured the Gwalior fortress and restored 
order in Scindia's capital. In the Maharaja and his 
able Dewan, Raja Sir Dinkar Rao, Daly always 
showed the greatest confidence. It is well-known 

legitimate heir to the throne of Rama, and style him ' Hinduar 
Sooraj,' or ' Sun of the Hindus.' He is universally allowed to be the 
first of the thirty-six royal tribes, nor has a doubt ever been raised 
respecting the purity of his descent." From Annals and Antiquities 
of Rajasfhan, by Lieut.-Col. James Tod (original edition of 1829), vol. 
i., p. 214. 



294 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

that on one occasion, at the festival of Sankarant, 
Scindia, in recognition of Daly's warm friendship, 
went through the form of exchanging head-dresses 
and binding the wrist thread, in order to prove that 
he had accepted him into the bonds of brotherhood. 
And from that date, throughout the years of his 
residence in Central India, Daly never failed to 
address the Maharaja Scindia in terms of brotherly 
affection, and invariably signed himself, in corre- 
spondence with him, as "your friend and brother." 

Among the Chiefs in Bundelkhand, Daly, acting 
on the same principle, always upheld the Maharajas 
of Panna,* Chirkhari,t and Orchha, on account of 
their loyal and praiseworthy conduct during the 
Mutiny. In 1869, when he was first acting as Agent 
to the Governor-General, it fell to his lot to record 
the death in the previous October of the Secunder 
Begam of Bhopal. This he did in the following 
terms : — 

" Perhaps in no Native State have the relations 
with the Government of India been accepted so 

* Of Panna he wrote in 1871 : "This is a model State, and was 
made so by the late Maharaja Nirpat Singh, whose death last year 
called forth the regrets of his people and of the Government of India. 
When Nirpat Singh succeeded in 1849, Panna was in utter darkness 
and misrule ; his first step was to abolish sati. After ruling twenty- 
one years he left Panna not only free from disorder and discontent- 
ment, but conspicuous for the reverse. There was no eye-wash about 
what he did ; his State in the wilds of Bundelkhand was rarely visited 
by Englishmen and little known. Aided by an honest minister, he 
worked out reforms in every part of the Administration, Bundela 
thakurs and zamindars (landholders), unaccustomed to such a rule, 
held their Chief in much reverence." 

t " The bearing of this State during the Mutiny will long secure 
that warm sympathy from Englishmen, which Lord Canning in the 
Cawnpore Darbar proclaimed its due." (From Daly's annual report 
for 1870-71.) 



NEED FOB IMPROVEMENTS 295 

cordially and firmly as in Bhopal. In the darkest 
hours of mutiny, with disaffection at her side, nothing 
turned the Secunder Begam from her fidelity and 
allegiance. She possessed rare energfy of character 
and capacity for government, and with all her energy 
and capacity she was true to the British rule. It was 
her pride to be known as the faithful feudatory of the 
Queen of England ; and almost her last breath was 
in prayer for the happiness of Her Majesty, her 
family, and Government. Her Highness's only 
daughter and successor, the Shah Jehan Begam, has 
inherited her mother's spirit of loyalty, and has an 
ardent desire to emulate her fame as a ruler." 

The terrible experiences of 1868-69, following 
as they did on similar experience in Western Malwa, 
brought closely home to Daly the urgent need for 
improved communications in Central India. Of the 
condition in which he found things, a few extracts 
from his reports will tell. In 1868 he wrote from 
Gwalior : — 

" I arn not aware of any work which can be called 
public being in hand at the cost of the Darbar, nor 
of there being a mile of metalled road throughout the 
interior. The fair-weather tracks are of the rudest. 
There are no roads in Malwa or Esaghar, and the 
Maharaja is aware that Ujjain, once so rich and 
prosperous, is daily crumbling away from being cut 
off from other cities and the main road ; and that 
Esaghar is very desolate. It is quite on the cards 
that, with one of Scindia's capacity and temperament, 
Gwalior may one day be as conspicuous in the 
prosecution of public works as it is now for the 
absence of them." 

In 1869, reviewing the state of the province as 
Agent to the Governor-General, he wrote: — 

"Malwa is without roads; except on the 'gun 
road,' as the natives call the trunk road, now under 



296 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTEATION 

construction between Mhow and Nasirabad, and a 
few bits in Jaora and Ratlam, there is not a yard of 
metal laid. This province, which yields an annual 
revenue of three millions sterling- (two of which are 
received by the Government of India on account of 
opium exports), is without a mile of communication 
which can be used in the rainy season. Malwa, as 
regards the extend of cultivation, is still in a backward 
state ; population is scanty, lands which wouH bear 
cotton and corn lie waste. With roads and a line of 
rail, Malwa would be to Central India what Bengal 
is to the North- West Provinces." * 

In the same year he recorded that Bhopal also was 
without roads, and in 1870 he noted, "there is no 
road of any sort in Indore territory." 

The sufferings of 1868-69 had also brought 
home to the Chiefs the advantages which would 
accrue from railway extention into Central India. 
In 1869 Daly reported, "The Maharaja Holkar is 
keenly anxious to see the rail at Indore and through 
Malwa." In his report for the succeeding year, he 
was able to record the completion of the negotiations 
under which His Highness loaned a crore of rupees 
to the Government of India to link Indore with the 
Great Indian Peninsula Railway. In 1871-72 he 
wrote : — 

"The progress of the railway towards Indore, 
with the prospect of its extension through Malwa 
by Ujjain, Ratlam, and Mandisor to Neemuch, is a 
work of interest to India at large. With the inter- 
course which must follow, we have the best guarantee 
for light in dark places. Public opinion will tell, for 
it will speak. But this must come from without. 
Chiefs will thus come to a sense of the responsibility 
of government, and not treat it as a mere milch cow. 
What a rule is ours in India! As I move through 
the country with its scores of Chiefs, heads of clans, 

* Now the United Provinces. 



RAILWAYS IN SCINDIA 297 

brawny people, it occurs to me how much our tenure 
and strength depend upon personality. Knowledge 
of India, like knowledge of anatomy, makes one think 
of the wonders of the frame which works so quietly." 

In 1874 he was able to report the completion of 
the arrangements with Scindia for the prosecution of 
railway works in his territory : — 

"To Maharaja Holkar belongs the honour of 
being the first Chief to break ground in this direction 
by offering a contribution for a line from Khundwa to 
Indore. His Highness placed a special value on this 
loan, being the first of his house who had invested 
money with the Government of India. Scindia, when 
he had made up his mind to offer a loan to Govern- 
ment for railways, did so in a manner that was satis- 
factory to all. ' I want a rail to link Gwalior with 
Agra, and will contribute three-fourths of a million for 
the purpose. Give me and my descendants your own 
rate of interest, 4 per cent,, and I shall be content. I 
want no share of the profits, for that might give cause 
of disagreement hereafter. ' Subsequently His High- 
ness, seeing the benefits his territory in Malwa will 
derive from a railway, proffered three-fourths of a 
million on similar terms for the extension from Indore 
to Neemuch, with a link to Ujjain, in all 164 miles. 
Railways in Native States, and especially through 
Malwa, will have a marvellous effect on Chiefs and 
people. The people will learn the_ value_ of labour, 
and rulers, who now look upon their subjects in the 
light of a patrimony, will learn that the true source of 
wealth is in the prosperous industry of their people." 

The report for 1874-75 said : — 

"In Bhopal too the tide has set in. Hitherto 
Bhopal has been isolated, without roads or means of 
communication with the rail or trunk road, for there 
was not a metalled mile in the State outside the city. 
Shah Jehan Begam has put her hand to remove this 
reproach, and a road is under construction, which, 
crossing the Vindhyas, will place the Begam's capital 



298 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

within a day's drive of the Great Indian Peninsula 
Railway. Her Highness has also promised to com- 
plete a road to the west, which will link her grain- 
producing districts with the rail at Ujjain and Indore. 
The effect of railways on the comfort of the people in 
Malwa is not to be computed." 

In 1878 Daly was able to report that there were 
1 400 miles of road completed, or under construction 
by the Public Works Department in Central India, of 
which only 160 were still unmetalled. In short, he 
was the first to promote railways in Native States, 
and to induce Chiefs to expend large sums on lines 
running through their territories. The Government 
of India, in addressing the Secretary of State in 1878, 
said : — 

"The system of constructing Imperial Public 
Works in Native States under the Central India 
Agency with funds supplied in whole or in part by the 
Chiefs themselves, without interest during the period 
of construction, was mainly inaugurated by General 
Daly." 

During 1870 and 1^71 the affairs of Central India 
proceeded quietly and without much that is worthy 
of mark. The annual reports for those years record 
a general recovery from the famine, and steady pro- 
gress in the administration of several States. In 
February 1872, the assassination of Lord Mayo 
thrilled India with indignation and sorrow. 

"His prestige with the Chiefs and Princes of 
India," wrote Daly, "stood romantically high. He 
had made their position and personal interests his 
special study. Hardly any predecessor had seen so 
much of India, and so carefully marked the character- 
istics of its native rulers. There was that in his 
presence and manner which touched Asiatics, and 



ASSASSINATION OF LORD MAYO 299 

charmed those who came in contact with him, while 
his character for earnestness commended itself to all. 
The Chiefs of India mourned for Lord Mayo as for a 
friend. ' I have made a friend and lost him,' was 
Scindia's speech." 

Scindia's official Gazette of the i8th February 
contained the following announcement (translated 
verbatim from the vernacular): — 

" With the greatest grief and sorrow we announce 
a heart-rending catastrophe, alas ! how lamentable ! 
His Excellency Earl Mayo, K.T., G.M.S.I., Viceroy 
and Governor-General of India, has suddenly left this 
transitory scene for the eternal abode, and we his 
humble admirers are fettered with the chain of grief 
and desolation. On hearing of this dreadful occur- 
rence His Highness the Maharaja was thrown into 
grief and sorrow immeasurable. On the 15th and 
1 6th all public offices and bazaars were closed. The 
striking of gongs, the ringing of bells, and all sounds 
of joy were stopped : and on each day 49 minute gfuns 
were fired by the Dar bar artillery. In truth the 
mourning caused at Gwalior by this life-gnawing 
occurrence, and the scar of grief and sorrow left on the 
heart, defy the powers of description. The pen itself 
weeps bitterly, alas! how unfortunate! With fOnd 
expectation iHis Highness was making arrangements 
for a camp of exercise to be held near Gwalior ; all 
supplies had been collected there ; and from 50 to 60 
thousand rupees had been spent : with a stroke of the 
pen all this has been stopped in consequence of the 
shock, the great grief, and the sorrow caused to His 
Highness by the appalling intelligence." 

Scindia's grief was reflected in every State in 
Central India; and Daly received many proofs of 
the sympathy and sorrow of the ruling Chiefs. 

It was in this year (1872) that the affairs of the 
Rewa State forced themselves into notice. For a 
long time the Maharaja Raghuraj Singh had failed 



300 CENTEAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

to pay due attention to his administration. The 
thakurs, who should have been subordinate to their 
Chief, held an independent sway, collected excise and 
other revenue for their own benefit, harboured 
offenders, and frequently broke out into open revolt. 
There was no form of government ; and the resources 
of the State were being- gradually dissipated. With 
all his weaknesses and shortcomings the Maharaja 
of Rewa was a delightful personage. Of enormous 
frame and great personal courage, he delighted in 
field-sports, and was perhaps the greatest tiger-slayer 
of his age. He had a slight smattering of English 
which he was always anxious to parade ; and he was 
of that cheerful and happy disposition which sets at 
naught all cares and troubles, and heeds nothing but 
the pleasures of the present moment. He wasted his 
money as much in appeasing the wrath of the 
Brahmans as in providing for his own special delights 
and absurdities. It is said that during his lifetime 
the Maharaja was weighed twice against gold, and 
five times against silver for the benefit of the priests 
at Allahabad, to whom he also presented such 
elephants belonging to his State as had shown the 
white feather during his shooting excursions. His 
ideas of morality were crude, and he generally referred 
to any breach of moral discipline by saying : " This, I 
think, is against your ten orders" the (Command- 
ments). 

Daly took special pleasure in the Maharaja, and 
was always willing to meet him more than half-way 
in the discussion of his quaint ideas regarding morals, 
religion, and the best means of administering his State 
for the benefit of his people. But occasionally it 
became necessary to speak seriously to His Highness. 



"A VERY SAD CASE OF FORGERY" 301 

In one particular instance Daly was compelled to 
show the Maharaja some very incriminatingf papers 
which bore his signature. The Maharaja affected 
to be unable to read his own handwriting, and sent 
for various pairs of spectacles, one after another, 
with the obvious intention of gaining- time. At 
length, after satisfying" himself in this respect, 
he read the papers out aloud before the Governor- 
General's Agent ; then put them solemnly aside, and 
said, "This is a very sad case of forgery. I will 
issue warrant : the man's hand must be cut off." 

During each of his tours in this part of the Agency, 
Daly spent many days in the Rewa State, where he 
wrote : — 

'' I was always received by the Maharaja with 
a display of barbaric splendour hardly to be seen 
in any other State in Rajputana or Central India. 
His Highness's Darbar represented a scene of 
brocade, kinkhab, gold, and jewels, which would re- 
quire the flowery language of Persia and a Persian 
pen to describe. His palace was worthy of the scene ; 
for its walls and roofs were heavy with ornamentations 
reflected in scores of mirrors ; no less than 200 
feudatory barons of Rewa were gathered round their 
Chief, each clothed in a costly costume, or in ancient 
armour with breast-plate and buckler, and all 
adorned with jewels and gold and silver ornaments. 
The whole scene was one of magnificent Eastern 
splendour ;— and the 'town of Rewa, in the midst of 
which the palace stands, and where this collection of 
feudatories assembled, is a miserable collection of 
hovels." 

Eventually the Maharaja represented his inability 
to manage his affairs himself, and requested that a 
political agent might be appointed to conduct the 
administration. This change was introduced in 1873, 
and was attended with the best results. The 



302 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

Maharaja died in 1880,* having devoted the last few- 
years of his life to the enjoymerrt of a life in the 
jungle and the destruction of many tigers. 

"Whatever were his failings as a ruler," wrote 
Daly, " the late Maharaja's benevolent character, his 
charitable tendencies, and his love of display and 
hospitality, will long be remembered among his people, 
by whom he was beloved and reverenced. During a 
long minority there is every hope that the prosperity 
of Rewa will be re-established, and that by careful 
management the resources of the State will be 
developed." 

The young Maharaja was a child of four at his 
father's death. When he became ruler of the State in 
1 894, the administration had, for over twenty years, 
been under the careful control of a succession of able 
political officers, with results fully commensurate with 
the hopes that Daly had expressed. 

The condition of the Malwa opium trade was a 
matter that received Daly's early attention. Owing 
largely to the uncertainty of delivery consequent on 

* After the death of the Maharaja, one of the State officials dis- 
closed to the Political Agent the existence of a secret walled-up vault, 
in which were found two brass vessels containing gold pieces. Among 
these were fifteen or twenty coins which appeared to be curious, and 
which were submitted for examination to the late General Sir Alex- 
ander Cunningham, then Head of the Archaeological Department of 
the Government of India. He reported that most of the coins were 
Indo-Scythic, of a more or less familar type, but that one was very 
rare, being the only specimen which he had ever come across. (The 
coins were subsequently valued, and General Cunningham was per- 
mitted to purchase the rare one for his private collection. It is 
believed to have been lost in the wreck of the P. and O. s.s. Tasmania 
in 1887). Among the other coins were one of Pertinax, Emperor of 
Rome from the 31st December 192 to the 28th March 193, and one of 
Elagabalus, Emperor of Rome from 218 to 222. The latter bore on 
the obverse the stamped head of an Emperor, with the words /mf. 
Antoninus Pius Aug. ("for he had assumed and polluted that respect- 
able title," Gibbon) ; and on the reverse the words Adventus Augusti. 



OPIUM 303 

the absence of roads, there was much speculation, and 
the trade was in an unhealthy state. The general 
position was thus summed up in one of his first 
reports ; — 

" The standard weight of a chest of opium is 141^ 
lbs., on which an export duty is levied on behalf of the 
Government of India at the scales. No other opium 
than that which is intended for export pays duty to 
Government, or is brought for weighment. We 
have no concern with its growth, sale, or transport. 
Our connection with opium grown in Native States 
begins and ends at the scales : the ryot (peasant) sells 
as suits his own interest to the China merchant or 
in his own market ; so far it is a free trade. After 
weighment the trader receives a pass for his chests, 
and is then free to despatch them to Bombay, how and 
when he likes." 

Up to this time there had been a single Agency, 
at Indore, for the grant of passes and the collection of 
revenue; Daly established sub-agencies at Ratlam, 
Dhar, Bhopal, Mandesor, and also at Udaipur in 
Rajputana. 

" States much covet the presence of Government 
scales," he wrote; "wherever the opium trade 
flourishes, there must be merchants of capital, and, 
as the natives of Malwa say, opium imparts the 
fragrance of prosperity wherever it has a recognised 
mart. 

"The habit of opium-eating in Rajputana and 
Central India is now almost universal. It is the 
stirrup-cup of the Rajput,* and no visitor comes or 
goes without a draught of the ' Kossumbah ' : — opium 

• See, for instance, in chap, xxix., vol. i., of Tod's Annals 
and Antiquities of Rajasfkan, the account of how the chivalry of 
Marwar drank opium together for the last time before their final 
desperate charge at Mairta upon Scindia's troops under De Boigne. 
[The notes in the same chapter contain interesting references to De 
Boigne's career.] 



304 CENTEAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

in a liquid form, spiced. Taken moderately, it can 
hardly be detrimental to health." 

In 1874 he reported : — 

"A belief is prevalent that the opium revenue is 
something very precarious ; a sort of will-o'-the-wisp, 
not to be handled and not to be depended upon. A 
review of its course will show how fallacious this idea 
is. Variations there are from year to year.dueto 
the peculiarities of the season ; but side by side with 
wheat, hop, and indigo, this variation is slight. 
Before the repeal of the Corn Laws in England, the 
price of bread was niuch more dependent on the 
weather than opium is in Malwa. Sir John Malcolm 
remarked, fifty years ago, that though crops in Malwa 
have been damaged by too much or too little rain, 
that though they have suffered from biting winds and 
frosts, the climate is generally so mild and the soil 
always so rich, with water at command from the 
many rivers and streams, that there is no record of a 
complete failure : pressure for food, except from the 
consequences of war and plunder, was unknown. 

"Since 1863 the export duty per chest fixed by 
the Government of India has not varied, consequently 
the returns during that period afford complete infor- 
mation on the fluctuations of the trade. These show 
that this trade, like every other, depends for success 
on the facilities it enjoys. Within the last thirty 
years the exports have trebled. In 1850 there was 
but one place in Malwa to which the merchant could 
bring his opium for weighment if he desired to export 
it. There was no made road to Bombay, and thence 
to China sailing-ships from time to time were irregular 
in departure. Later, things improved. Roads were 
growing towards Bombay, monthly steamers had 
taken the place of the China clippers, and other 
facilities in like manner had opened. During the 
last ten years the progress in communications has 
been marked. The Great Indian Peninsula Railway, 
step by step, has made its way, and now passes 
within 80 rniles of Indore. The telegraph wire is 
at every business mart in Malwa, bringing cultivators 
knowledge which twenty years ago was confined to 



■^ t,**- 




I^liJ>ki 



THE OPIUM REVENUE 306 

merchants and exporters. Steamships sail from 
Bombay on fixed dates throughout the year. These 
are the things which have led to the development 
— the steady development — of the opium trade, on 
which Chiefs and people in Central India depend for 
their prosperity. 

" Prices have been so steadily falling for some 
years that the great merchants have lost heavily ; and 
though they recoup themselves to a considerable 
extent in the exchange, many a big firm has been 
shaken. Time bargains occupy as much attention 
as bona fide trade. It is calculated that these trans- 
actions reach two millions sterling in the year. 

"The flavour and delicacy of opium excite as 
much attention in the East as do these qualities in 
the wines of France and Spain in Europe. A con- 
noisseur will tell at a glance whether the drug, in its 
earthen vessel, is the produce of the poppy grown at 
Mandesor or Ratlam. The flavour of the poppy juice, 
like that of the grape, depends on the soil. Its manu- 
facture into cakes for packing takes place at a few 
cities which are more or less famous on that account. 
It is only opium of the best quality which is fit for the 
China market. The high duty prevents the export of 
any inferior drug, and so preserves the prestige of 
Malwa in the market. China takes the new and 
fresh opium, which is used in a liquid form. In India, 
amongst the wealthy, old opium is valued as much 
as old port at home, and for the same qualities — 
mellowness and softness. Opium of a good season 
and vintage, twenty or twenty-five years old, com- 
mands a fabulous price, and is only to be had in the 
houses of the rich. 

"Many a bisah* of the best land is sub-let at 
prices from Rs. 40 to Rs. 60. Malcolm estimated the 

* "The quantity contained in a bigak," Daly noted, "was a 
matter of enquiry before the Committee of the House of Commons 
on Indian affairs. A bigah consists of a jarib of loo hands, but 
a hand has nothing definite in length. The length of the hand in 
the olden days was somewhat significant of the relative strength of 
Chief and ryot ; where the people held their own it was large, and 
where the reverse was the case it was small. In the North- Western 
Provinces, in common parlance, three bigahs go to an acre.'' 

U 



306 CENTEAL INDIAN ADMINISTEATION 

land-tax or rental of opium lands in Malwa in his day 
at Rs. 520,000. It is now treble that sum. 

" The land-tax of Malwa is unequalled in India, 
and _ it is felt that this mainly depends upon the 
continuance of the opium trade. However this may 
be, the resources of Malwa are but very partially 
developed : the people have never recovered altogether 
from the anarchy which preceded the British supre- 
macy ; cities which were once populous and prosperous 
are still little more than hamlets ; and much land is 
waste. The introduction of railways, now at hand, 
will, in a few years, work greater changes than those 
which have been chronicled since Malcolm's time." 

All the lines indicated by Daly have been carried 
out, and the chief towns of Malwa are now in direct 
railway communication with each other, and with the 
railway systems to the north and south of Central 
India. 

The autumn of 1875 was famous in Central India 
on account of the visit of Lord Northbrook, who, 
accompanied by the Foreign Secretary (Sir Charles, 
then Mr, Aitchison) and a small staff, passed through 
Malwa to Rajputana in November. 

"His Excellency," wrote Daly, "was the first 
Viceroy to visit Indore and Malwa. His reception by 
the Chiefs was most cordial, and the difficulties of the 
journey and the roughness of the roads only added to 
the gratification which all felt at seeing a Viceroy who 
had taken so much trouble to visit them." The Maha- 
raja Holkar gave a grand banquet and illuminated 
Indore. Lord Northbrook passed on through Dhar, 
Ratlam, Jaora, and the old city of Mandesor to 
Neemuch." 

This journey was not performed without consider- 
able difficulty, as between Mhow and Dhar — a dis- 
tance of 40 miles — and again between Dhar and 
Ratlam — another stage of 50 miles — there were at 



EDUCATION 307 

that time no made roads. The Viceroy was con- 
veyed in a small carriage drawn by troop-horses of the 
Royal Horse Artillery from Mhow. The Agent to 
the Governor-General and his staff rode the whole 
distance, and acted as a volunteer escort to His 
Excellency ; and at each place visited by Lord North- 
brook he was met by the political officer of the 
district, and escorted by a detachment of the Centra 
India Horse. 

" His Excellency was entertained," continued 
Daly's report, "by the Rajas of Dhar and Ratlam, 
and by the Nawab of Jaora, at their capitals, in a 
spirit of the greatest hospitality. Each Chief was 
anxious that the schools and places of note should be 
visited by the Viceroy. Ratlam and Jaora have 
schools which would do credit to any city in British 
India. _ And Lord Northbrook gave the cause of 
education a firm position in Malwa by the interest he 
everywhere evinced in it. Every Chief and every 
Thakur pressed forward to pay his duty to the 
Viceroy." 

In education Daly had from the first manifested 
a most active interest. He instituted the Residency 
College at Indore, and paid close attention to its work 
and progress. He took a leading part in the discus- 
sion which resulted in the foundation of the Mayo 
College at Ajmer ; it was upon his representations that 
the Government of India gave their support to the 
movement of the Chiefs of Bundelkhand who sub- 
scribed to found a Rajkumar College at Nowgong in 
memory of Lord Mayo ; and there is hardly a State in 
Central India which does not point with pride to 
schools and colleges that owe their origin to his 
initiative. After his tour in Central India, Lord 
Northbrook acknowledged in the most handsome 



308 CENTKAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

manner the efiforts which Daly had made and the 
success which had attended them, and His Excellency 
gave effect to an undertaking which he had passed 
while in Central India, whereby the appointment of a 
British educational officer as Principal of the Resi- 
dency College at Indore was sanctioned at the expense 
of Government. This post was first held by Mr 
Aberigh Mackay, afterwards so well known under his 
nom deplume of Ali Baba, in whose hands the institu- 
tion made very satisfactory progress. The Maharaja 
Holkar's sons, Scindia's son Bulwant Rao, the 
Chiefs of Dewas, Ratlam, Jaora, and Sailana, and 
the Thakur of Bagli, all attended, and many of the 
smaller Thakurs sent their relatives. 

In 1875-76 the Chiefs of Central India took part in 
the ceremonials consequent on the visit of His Royal 
Highness the Prince of Wales. Several, including the 
Maharaja Scijadia, went to Calcutta to assist at the 
reception of His Royal Highness. The Prince 
visited Gwalior at the end of January 1876, and spent 
three days in Scindia's capital. 

The Phul Bagh Palace was assigned for the 
accommodation of the Prince. It stands in an exten- 
sive pleasure-ground almost under the south-east 
bastion of the fortress of Gwalior, and on the site of 
the building which was erected in 1832 for the recep- 
tion and entertainment of Lord William Bentinck, 
then Governor-General of India. It is a handsome 
double-storied structure in the Italian style of archi- 
tecture, built of stone on massive arches and but- 
tresses, and enclosing a quadrangle 107 yards square, 
which is prettily laid out as an English flower-garden, 
with handsome fountains, statues, and pillars, and 
English annuals in full bloom. It cost the Maharaja 



THE PEINCE OF WALES IN SCINDIA 309 

Scindia not less than i8 lakhs of rupees. When His 
Highness decided on placing this palace at the disposal 
of his Royal guest, the building was in the hands of the 
workmen : it was covered with scaffolding, and the 
ground strewed with building material. It was feared 
at one time that it would be impossible to have the 
palace ready before His Royal Highness's arrival. 
But the patient energy of the architect. Major Sir 
Michael Filose, and the unremitting labour of 7000 
workmen triumphed, and the palace and its grounds 
were available on the date fixed. 

His Royal Highness drove from Agra, 76 miles ; 
the road was watered for the entire distance. Daly 
sent the following description of the visit to the 
Viceroy (Lord Northbrook) : — 

"The journey was accomplished pleasantly. The 
Prince and a suite of twenty-eight left Agra at 8.30 : 
breakfast at Dholpur, thirty-four miles. I had ar- 
ranged with the Prince and with General Browne* 
that Scindia, attended by his Dewan only, with the 
Political Agent and General commanding the district, 
should be in waiting at the old Residency about five 
miles from Gwalior. Scindia thus met us at 5 p.m. 
The Prince took His Highness into his own carriage, 
in which also were the Duke of Sutherland and 
myself. 

"The Maharaja's regular troops lined the road 
for a couple of miles, placed at intervals, after which 
came the Mahratta Horsemen, etc. At Dowlat Rao 
Scindia's palace, the elephants were in waiting to 
carry the suite and Sardars in processipn. The 
Prince and Scindia sat on the same golden howdah, 
with all the emblems of royalty ; I sat or stood 
behind to interpret. 

"The passage through the streets to the new 
palace was magnificent ; a mass of people everywhere ; 

* The late General Sir Samuel Browne, V.C, G.C.B., K.C.S.I. 



310 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTEATION 

windows, verandahs, housetops, crammed. A column 
of Scindia's State followers headed the elephants, 
occupying half-a-mile in length, behind came the 
Sardars and English guests and officers. Elephants 
two abreast, one bearing Sardars, the other English- 
men. The palace was brilliant with illuminations. I 
will not attempt any description of the finest building 
in India. Scindia conducted the Prince to the hall, 
and after the royal suite were introduced to His 
Highness by the Prince, Scindia presented his 
Sardars (ten or so). Itr and Pan followed, and 
Scindia took His Royal Highness to the apartments 
prepared for him, and thus that day's ceremonies 
concluded. 

" On the morning of the ist, at eight, the Prince 
rode to witness Scindia handle troops. Scindia 
received His Royal Highness with a royal salute. 
Scindia then marched past at the head of his troops, 
saluting the_ Prince. The force on parade consisted 
of about six thousand cavalry and infantry, two 
bullock, and two horse batteries. All looked clean 
and well, and moved steadily. The appearance of 
the troops has wonderfully improved within the last 
few years. After the march past, Scindia divided his 
forces, putting half to defend a village which he 
attackedin person. The Prince was so pleased that 
he remained on the ground till Scindia pronounced 
the action over — at noon ! 

"At 6 P.M. the Prince paid the return visit. The 
streets were crammed; there was scarcely standing 
room ; everybody striving to catch sight of the Prince ; 
all joyous and orderly. Scindia received His Royal 
Highness at the carriage. The Darbar hall was 
full ; about forty Sardars were presented by Scindia 
himself, after _ which the Maharaja made a short 
speech, prefacing it by saying to me, ' I will say a 
few words. Translate sentence by sentence that all 
may be understood.' . . . ' No language can express 
the gratitude I feel for the honour the Prince has 
conferred upon me in thus visiting Gwalior. What 
can I say ? The fame of this day will never die out. 
I have nothing to offer worthy of the Prince's notice, 
or of the occasion. I know that it was consideration 
for me which induced His Royal Highness, despite 



SPEECHES AND PRESENTS 3ll 

dust and heat, to remain watching- my parade * this 
morning-. I am an uneducated man, knowing little of 
books, and nothing of the English langiiage. What 
I did with my troops this morning is an instance, and 
nothing more, of what may be learnt by observation 
and labour. When the Prince sees the Queen, beg 
him to tell her that with hands clasped I am her 
faithful servant for ever.' 

"The foregoing is pretty nearly a translation of 
the words uttered with strong emotion and glistening- 
eyes. His Royal Highness replied admirably both 
in manner and language. After this, stepping down 
from the little dais on which the chairs of the Prince 
and himself were placed, Scindia gave His Royal 
Highness Itr and Pan. Scindia, desirous of doing 
special honour to his English guests on this occasion, 
had our chairs in horse-shoe shape on either side of 
the Prince and himself. The Sardars occupying the 
whole of the hall below._ Major Bannerman and 
Hope were on the spot with Scindia arranging seats 
before the Prince arrived. 

" The presents were now shown. Arms — match- 
lock, sword, shield, etc., with two suits of clothing as 
worn by himself. 

"Then came a splendid necklace for the Princess. 
Pearls 2070, emeralds 3, diamonds (flat) 306, with 
many small rubies. It can hardly be called a neck- 
lace. It is as larg^e as a 'Har' (long garland) of 
flowers. The pearls are not large but sized, and the 
diamonds with enamel form knots at an interval of 
six or eight inches. As a whole, it is the most 
elegant 'piece of jewellry conceivable. The Prince 
was charmed with the offering. Then followed a 
necklace, presented for the Queen ; this was smaller 
in quantity, pearls large, diamonds large, flat. The 

■* The Maharaja issued the following general order to his army : — 
" The march past and the movements on the ist instant were 
approved of by Field-Marshal His Royal Highness the Prince of 
■Wales, who highly commended the commanding ofKcers. His High- 
ness the Maharaja has much pleasure in communicating this to com- 
manding officers, in order that they may keep it in joyful recollection, 
and may continuelo discharge their duties in an efficient manner, that 
the same may redound to their credit and to that of the force." 



312 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTEATION 

number, etc., I cannot just now put my hands upon. 
In money value, Scindia said, there was little difference 
between them. I fancy that for the Princess may be 
worth ;^6ooo. The Duke of Sutherland put it 
higher. 

"At the banquet that evening Scindia came in 
after dinner, as at Bombay, with ten of his Sardars. 
His Highness proposed the Queen's health, and then 
that of the Prince, reiterating much that he had said 
in the Darbar. His Royal Highness replied, and 
very prettily proposed Scindia's health. Thus the 
ceremonies of that day closed. 

"The Prince's departure was fixed for 10.30 the 
following morning (2nd February). Scindia came to 
the palace at nine to sit for his sketch. The Prince at 
10.15 came into the room in which Hall was sketch- 
ing him. Scindia brightened up and went to the 
Prince, and taking his hand walked with him to the 
carriage. As the Prince took leave, ' I am sorry to 
see you go, and to think I shall see your face no 
more. I can hardly expect this. When at home, 
sometimes think of Scindia, and that all he has, his 
State and everything in it, is yours.' 

" So the Prince's visit terminated. The return 
journey was easily accomplished. Luncheon at 
Dholpur, Agra at 6 p.m. Everything connected 
with the visit was a triumph. Scindia spared nothing ; 
every arrangement was rnade by himself; his cordial 
desire was to treat the Prince in a princely way." 

The Prince visited Indore in March 1876, just 
before leaving Bombay on return to England. 
Holkar, in the cordiality of his reception, was not 
behind his great Mahratta brother. Indore was 
illuminated ; the streets were thronged ; and the 
Maharaja was devoted to the comfort of his guest. 
His Royal Highness's attention to Holkar 's sons 
much touched the Maharaja, who expressed an 
intention of sending one or both by and by to 
England to renew their expressions of duty and 
devotion. 



"THE EVENT OF THE YEAR TO INDIA" 313 

Daly thus referred to the subject in his annual 
report :— 



"The event of the year to India — the visit of His 
Royal Highness the Prince of Wales — specially stirred 
the hearts of the rulers and princes. Scindia in his 
palace standing before the Prince speaking- burning 
words with an emotion which touched all who heard 
him ; Holkar proffering to take ship to Aden to bid 
His Royal Highness welcome. Chiefs of all ranks 
evinced the same feeling; thakurs and men of all 
degrees and classes praying for standing ground that 
they might see and bow to the Queen's son, as he 
passed, 

"The feeling displayed towards the Prince of 
Wales by the Chiefs and people of India is some- 
thing which cannot be gauged by an Englishman, 
however broad his experience and thorough his 
knowledge of the East. 

" Before the Prince's arrival in India I consulted 
with one of the greatest Chiefs as to the course to be 
adopted in respect of presents and offerings to His 
Royal Highness : whether it would be wise actually 
to interdict all offerings, seeing that it would be 
impossible for the Prince to make returns in any 
instance of commensurate value. We talked the 
matter oyer in all its bearings. My friend in this 
conversation — who is unsurpassed for astuteness, who 
is no spendthrift, who is something of a scholar and 
very much of a financier, not wholly given _ to 
sensational sentiments — was decided in his opinion. 
He said : ' This is an event without precedent. Do 
not attempt to shape it by anything which has gone 
before. For the first time during your rule in India, 
India is to be visited by the Sovereign; for in the 
Queen's heir all will see their Sovereign. We, the 
Chiefs of India, owe it to ourselves to receive the 
Prince in a manner becoming to us, I could not 
meet His Royal Highness without an offering : and 
I cannot present a small offering. Advise Chiefs to 
present something in their possession — heirlooms, or 
curios ; and leave the rest to us. ' 

"This was the spirit which possessed the Chiefs 



314 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

when laying- their ofiFerings before the Prince of Wales. 
The great rulers gave things of value either from 
antiquity, tradition, or rarity. No one was content 
who had not an opportunity to offer some treasured 
possession. 

" Scindia showed me a sash or belt studded with 
2070 pearls, and knotted with diamonds and rubies, 
and asked whether I thought 'that would be a fit 
offering to the Princess of Wales ' ; and then pointed 
to a necklace of large pearls, and said, "and that for 
the Queen ? Her Majesty must not be forgotten.' " 

A Chapter of the Star of India was held at 
Calcutta by His Royal Highness, and was attended 
by the Maharajas Scindia, Holkar, Rewa, and by the 
Begam of Bhopal — all of them Knights Grand Com- 
manders 6f the Order. The Maharaja of Panna, 
Kashi Rao Dada (brother of Maharaja Holkar), 
and Ganpat Rao Khark^ (Minister of Gwalior), 
were invested by His Royal Highness with the 
insignia of Knight Commander of the Star of India. 
The splendour of that assemblage has been fully 
described. It was the first occasion when Chiefs of 
Central India were gathered with their brother Chiefs 
of other provinces for such a function ; they were 
deeply impressed by the ceremonial, and gfratified 
by the gracious reception accorded to all alike by 
the Prince. 

In the following cold weather occurred another 
event of great public interest — the Imperial 
Assemblage. 

"The year 1876-77," wrote Daly, "will long be 
remembered in connection with the event round which 
the interests of so many were centred. For months 
before and after the ist January the great Assemblage 
and the Proclamation of the assumption by Her 
Majesty the Queen of England of the title of Empress 



KAISER-I-HIND 315 

of India, Kaiser^i-Hind, were subjects for discussion 
of never-failing interest in the home of every Chief 
and every thakur throughout Malwa and Bundel- 
khand. The anxiety of all to be present on the 
occasion was real ; and it was not without special 
reason that a single native ruler, great or small, was 
absent from Delhi. The attendance, indeed, of some 
of the Chiefs was not effected without a straining of 
resources, but sacrifices were cheerfully made in the 
desire which stimulated all to do full honour to the 
proclamation which they were summoned to celebrate. 
From the seventy-one Native States comprising 
Central India, twenty-two Chiefs were present at the 
Imperial Assemblage, and thirty-six attended the 
local Darbars held at Indore, Sehore, Dhar, and 
Agar. 

" The meeting of Chiefs and Princes from all parts 
of Hindustan gave rise to a cordiality in their 
relations which will long remain an important feature 
in the results of the Imperial Assemblage. There 
was an entire abandonment of those scruples regardr 
ing rank and precedence which have for so many 
years been the stumbling-block to intercourse. This 
barrier once broken,_ Chiefs who had known each 
other only by reputation, and whose associations were 
generally those of jealousy and distrust, conversed 
with friendliness^ and good humour. The feeling 
among all was satisfaction and pleasure at the arrange- 
ments made for their reception and comfort ; and 
gratitude for the marks of Her Majesty's consideration 
and grace which all received. 

" The honours bestowed were such as would most 
readily stir the hearts of those upon whom they were 
conferred. ' In each case the wish nearest to the 
heart of the Chief was considered, and, where possible, 
met. Maharaja Scindia received the distinguished 
honour of enrolment in the Order of Knights Grand 
Commander of the Bath, and was at the same time 
created a General in Her Majesty's Army — an 
appointment which his love of the army and know- 
ledge of military matters taught him thoroughly to 
appreciate. He also received an additional salute of 
2 guns. Maharaja Holkar received a similar 
addition to his salute, and must have felt that the 



316 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

desire of his heart had been sought for and fulfilled, 
when he learnt that, as an act of grace on the part of 
Her Majesty the Empress of India, the Government 
of India were prepared to reconsider the adjustment 
of the boundary between his territory and Khandesh. 
Scindia and Holkar were appointed Councillors to 
the Empress. 

"The Begam of Bhopal was charmed with the 
recognition accorded to her husband, the Nawab 
Sadik Hussain, and the grant to him of a personal 
salute of 17 guns. The Maharajas of Rewa and 
Tehri — Chiefs respectively of the Baghel and Bundela 
clans — each received an increase of 2 guns to his 
salute. The Raja of Dhar was enrolled a Knight 
Commander of the Star of India. The services of 
the Minister of Jaora, Hazrut Nur Khan, were 
recognised by the bestowal on him of the C.S.I. 
Additions of 2 guns were made to the salutes of the 
Maharaja of Panna, and the Raja of Ratlam ; and 
various tokens of recognition were bestowed upon 
other Chiefs who attended the Assemblage." 

We have recently seen a gathering on more 
magnificent lines than those attempted at the 
Imperial Assemblage of 1877. In both cases Delhi 
was chosen for the ceremonial, and the Coronation 
Darbar of the ist January 1903 was held on the 
same ground as the function of 1877. The arrange- 
ments in 1877 were not so complete as those of 1903, 
nor was the attendance, large as it was, anything like 
that of the later year. But the Imperial Assemblage 
was the first pageant of its kind : a new departure for 
a special and magnificent purpose, which was hailed 
by all the Chiefs of India as appropriate to the 
occasion, and as giving them an opportunity, 
separately and collectively, of testifying their loyalty 
to the Crown and welcoming their newly created 
Empress. 

It is curious to note that in 1875 Dr J. P. Strat- 



THE HISTOEY OF AN INCIDENT ai7 

ton, Political Agent in Bundelkhand,' mentioned in 
his annual report the remarks of a native Chief on the 
subject of the title which Her Majesty the Queen, two 
years later, assumed. It was doubtless some news- 
paper article or extract of a democratic tendency 
which led the Chief, who knew English moderately 
well, to start this subject as he did. In the midst of 
general conversation he suddenly broke off and said : 
" There will never be a Republic in England. Will 
there? That will not be good." A half-laughing 
reply that "there was not much chance of that," 
seemed satisfactory to him. And then he went on to 
say: "Why does not the Queen take the title of 
Empress of India ? " The answer naturally was that 
Her Majesty was in reality Empress already, whether 
she formally assumed the title or not. To which the 
Chief rejoined: "But why not? Why not take the 
title? It will be good. It will be good specially for 
the Chiefs of India." Dr Stratton adds, that it had 
not previously occurred to him to think of native 
Chiefs wishing for Her Majesty's assumption of that 
title, or even of their considering it at all : yet when 
the subject is entered into, the grounds for such views 
are not far to seek nor difficult to. understand. 

In his report for the year 1877-78, Daly writes : — 

" There is an increasing tendency in the adminis- 
tration of Native States to conform to the general 
principles of Government in force in British India. 
The Native States of which Todd and Malcolm wrote 
exist no longer ; the days of strife have passed away, 
and with them the tyranny and oppression which made 
life insecure and property the prize of the strong. All 
the great States are penetrated and swayed to some 
extent by public opinion ; and even where this finds 
more expression on paper than in acts, the feeling is 
not less real. The people in Native States- do not 



318 CENTEAL INDIAN ADMINISTEATION 

hesitate to speak of their grievances when pressure is 
severe. This sign of life is sure evidence of progress. 
It is well that we should bear in mind that the Native 
States of this period are in many respects what we 
make them, and by the continuance of the friendly 
support which the Government of India now liberally 
gives to all, they will strengthen in their foundations 
for good, and in feelings of allegiance to the Empire. 

" Dr Stratton remarks on the difficulty of obtain- 
ing other than scanty information from which to 
frame annual reports of the progress made in Native 
States, and notes that it is only on one or two points 
of general interest that a Political officer is able to 
write with assurance. This is very true as regards 
each year's report: yet the retrospect which the 
Political Agent makes shows changes which can be 
wrought in a few years of careful supervision by the 
exercise of personal influence. When Dr Stratton 
assumed charge of the Bundelkhand Agency in 1861, 
the conditions of the Native States were far behind 
that of the present day. Public works were unknown, 
communications were few and rough, lawlessness and 
violence were everywhere rampant, while in many 
States, owing to bad management, revenue had 
diminished, and debts increased. There is no State 
in Bundelkhand which cannot show advantages 
gained by the friendly advice and support of the 
Political Agent. Living for nearly twenty years in 
their midst, and intimately acquainted with the wants 
and peculiarities of each of the States under his super- 
vision, Dr Stratton has madethe best use of his 
opportunities of working for their good. His efforts 
have been specially directed towards the improvement 
of communications and the freedom of traffic. With 
a valuable practical knowledge of engineering he has 
given advice in the construction of roads which are 
already of immense advantage to the Native States ; 
and he has further promoted the cause of prosperity 
by persuading Chiefs to abolish duties on articles of 
trade : as a consequence, all the States of Bundelkhand 
are now as free and accessible to traders as many 
parts of British territory. In all the States, public 
buildings, jails, schools,, and hospitals have been con- 
structed a,nd maintained ; lawlessness has been re- 



THE ANNUAL REPOETS 319 

pressed, and security established. Much remains to 
be done ; but Dr Stratton may congratulate himself 
on the good which he has broug-ht about, the effects 
of which will be_ lasting, and will give a stimulus to 
those States which are still behindhand to follow the 
example which they see in others. 

"Change to eager eyes, viewing it from day to 
day, often appears slow amongst a people bound to 
caste and custom. It is only by looking back that we 
bring home to ourselves how far away the past is, 
and how steady has been progress in comfort and 
security." 

The foregoing sketch of Central India under 
Daly's administration is, perhaps, sufficient to give 
some idea of the work then devolving upon the Agent 
to the Governor-General and of the manner in which 
Daly discharged it. It would be tedious to write in 
detail of each State. That the objects which Daly 
placed before himself when he took up his appointment 
in 1868 were sedulously kept in view, is shown by the 
following extract from his annual report for 1878-79, 
which was written when he expected to retire almost 
immediately. As a matter of fact, owing to the 
Afghan War, Daly remained in Central India, by the 
express wish of Lord Lytton, for eighteen months 
after that report was written, but he did not subse- 
quently refer in direct terms to his general administra- 
tion of the prpvince. 

"As this," he wrote in 1879, "is probably the last 
annual report that I shall have the honour to submit 
of the Central India Agency Administration, I pro- 
pose to make a brief review of the changes that the 
past ten years, during which I have held the post of 
Agent to the Governor-General, have worked among 
the Native States under my charge. With regard to 
the interior economy of each State it is not necessary 
that I should write much. The Government of India 



320 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

is fully informed of such political events as have froni 
time to time occurred, and it is sufficient to note that 
the relations between the Government and the Chiefs 
of Central India have been maintained in conformity 
with treaty and agreement, and that the integrity and 
independence of each State has been preserved. 

"The chief incidents of each year have been 
touched upon in successive annual reports : — the 
drought and distress of 1 868-69, when I first assumed 
charge of the Agency, followed by famine, disease, and 
death in the following year ; the efforts made by the 
Chiefs of Malwa and Bundelkhand to relieve suffering 
in their States ; then the sorrow which the assassina- 
tion of Lord Mayo awakened among all classes ; the 
sympathy that watched the dangerous illness of His 
Royal Highness the Prince of Wales ; next, the visit 
of the Duke of Edinburgh ; the Darbars held at 
Calcutta, Agra, Jubbulpore, Bombay, and Barwai j 
Lord Northbrook's tour through Malwa ; afterwards, 
the arrival of the Prince of Wales in Calcutta, where 
Chiefs who had never seen each other's faces, and 
whose ancestors had never met except in battle, 
pressed in a friendly crowd to bid him welcome; and 
his visits to Gwalior and Indore ; the Imperial 
Assemblage at Delhi, the honours and rewards there 
bestowed ; the Chapters of the Star of India, and the 
investiture of the Maharaja Scindia with the dignity 
of a G.C.B., of the Begam Bhopal with the Orders of 
G. C.S.I, and of the Imperial Crown. These are 
passages in the history of Central India during the 
past ten years. 

"I recall, too, with pleasure my annual tours. 
Visiting Bundelkhand and Malwa alternately, I have 
had opportunities, such as fall to the lot of few, of 
making myself acquainted with the people, the 
country, the traditions, and the customs of each State 
in Central India. There is not a district or capital I 
have not visited, not a fortress or stronghold I 
have not seen ; the rugged passes, the lakes and hills 
of Bundelkhand ; the alternate jungle and poppy-field 
of Malwa — are all familiar to me, and I take with me 
the pleasa.nt remembrance of friendship formed by 
years of intercourse and personal knowledge with 
many a Chief, and with nobles and gentlemen. 



WANT OF EOADS 321 

members of their Darbars ; and with subjects of their 
States. But I wish to allude more particularly to the 
progress which the past decade has brought abput in 
two special matters — I mean with regard to the 
opening' up of the country, and education. 

" Ten years ago, the only road worthy of the name 
in Central India was the Agra and Bombay road, 
which passes through Gwalior, Goona, and Biaura 
to Indore, thence by Mhow and Manpur down the 
southern slopes of the Vindhyas, with a ferry across 
the Narbudda, and so on by Scindwa and Khargaon 
into Khandesh. This road bore the traffic which 
passed through Malwa between Northern and South- 
ern India, and was then, as it always will be, an impor- 
tant military road ; but of internal communication 
there was nothing. The black cotton soil of Malwa 
was crossed only by country-tracks, rough and difficult 
at all times, and impassable in the rains. Grain, which 
sold at Bhilsa and about Bhopal at 50 seers for the 
rupee, was, from the impossibility of carriage, selling 
at 8 or 10 seers at Indore, distant barely 100 miles. 
Opium, which is the trade and wealth of Malwa, with 
difficulty found its way over the heavy country roads 
to Indore. In Bundelkhand, things were almost 
worse: the want of roads and communications was 
hampering the prospects of the country and prevent- 
ing trade. There was no passage across the ghdts, 
no means of communication between the East India 
Railway at Sutna and the garrison of Nowgong, 
100 miles away. The railway had not been opened 
beyond Khandwa, on the Great Indian Peninsula line, 
and the break between Khandwa and Jubbulpore 
made it necessary for passengers and traffic passing up 
country either to travel from Nagpore across country 
to Jubbiilpore, or to go up by the Bombay and Agra 
road through Indore, leaving the rail at Khandwa. 

" My efforts were directed from the first to remedy 
these defects, and it is due to the liberality and 
confidence with which the views of Government were 
met by the Chiefs of Central India that we can now 
point to the improvements that have taken place. 
Maharaja Holkar was the first to tender a loan for 
railway construction through his territory. The 
million of money he placed at disposal, at 4! per cent., 

X 



322 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

is now represented by the Holkar State Railway, which 
connects Indore with the Great Indian Peninsula Rail 
at Khandwa. This line was difficult of C9nstruction, 
owing- to the heavy work in alternately climbing- and 
piercing- the Vindhya range and in bridg-ing- the great 
Narbudda near Barwai ; but, the work completed, 
the line is now answering all purposes, and both 
bridge and ghat are monuments of engineering skill. 
Maharaja Scindia was not slow to follow the example 
set him. He placed at the disposal of Government 
altogether a million and a half of money for railways 
in his territory ; the broad-gauge line, connecting 
Gwalior with Agra, is now nearing completion, while 
the Scindia Neemuch State Railway carries goods 
and passengers daily from Indore to the banks of the 
Sipra, and awaits but a bridge to penetrate Scindia's 
Malwa capital (Ujjain) and give forth its increase, 
and through Fatehabad and Barnagar to Rutlam. 
The extension of the line to Neemuch is being rapidly 
pushed on, and in a few months it will be ready for 
traffic. The opening of the line from Ajmer and 
Nasirabad to Neemuch will complete a chain of 
railway communication encircling the States of Central 
India and communicating with every part of Hindu- 
stan. Her Highness the Begam of Bhopal, an 
enlightened ruler, al-vyays anxious for the advance- 
ment of her State, seeing the advantages of the rail in 
her neighbours' territories, has been for the last three 
years in negotiation for the construction of a line to 
connect her capital with the system of railways. She 
has now concluded an agreement for a loan of 50 
lakhs, and the survey of the line between I tarsi and 
Bhopal, crossing the Narbudda at Hoshangabad, is 
being rapidly pushed forward. If, as Her Highness 
urgently desires, the rail is continued from Bhopal to 
join _ the State railway at Ujjain, or, far better, is 
carried through the grain-producing districts of 
Bhilsa and, skirting Bundelkhand, to Gwalior, the 
railway communication of Central India will be 
complete and trade will have every opening. In 
Bundelkhand also, though railways are still wanting, 
much improvement in communications has been 
effected. The trunk road from Gwalior to Jhansi 
has been extended to Nowgong, and communication 



EDUCATION 328 

with the East India Railway at Sutna has been 
opened by a road passing- by Panna and Nagode. 
The Bisramgfhat road, made by the Panna Chief 
under Dr Stratton's guidance, is an example of the 
grood work which Native States can accomplish. 
From Sutna a road has been made for 30 miles to Bela, 
connecting- Rewa, the capital of Baghelkhand, with 
the rail, and joining- the trunk road which passes to 
Mirzapur. Of roads in Malwa the principal con- 
structed during the last ten years are the Mhow and 
Neemuch road, passing through Jaora and Ratlam, 
a branch from Ujjain to Dewas, made with a view to 
helping the opium trade prior to the opening of the 
railway, and an extension through Dewas, on the 
Agra and Bombay road, to Sonkutch, and thence via 
Ashta to Sehore and Bhopal. The Maharaja of 
Dhar has made an excellent road of 30 miles, 
connecting his capital with the Mhow and Neemuch 
road at Ghata Bilode, where the Chambal is crossed 
by a good iron bridge, and to this point Maharaja 
Holkar has marked, though not completed, a road 
25 miles from Indore. The road from Indore to 
Khandwa, and the whole length of the Bombay and 
Agra trunk road, are kept up, and prove useful 
feeders to the railway.'' 

" Turning to education, I would draw attention to 
the work done under the supervision of Mr Mackay. 
In 1868, with the exception of the Maharaja's school 
in the Indore City, and the Sehore High School, 
there were hardly any institutions worthy of the name 
in Central India. Year by year the interest of Chiefs 
and Darbars in this good work has increased, and the 
States have vied with each other in the establishment 
of schools where the children of the country receive 
cheap and useful education. The Rajkumar School 
at the Indore Residency has proved of immense 
benefit to the sons of Chiefs and thakurs. The want 
of education among the rulers of the country has in 
past times been a crying evil ; the reproach has, to 
some extent at least, been removed from Central 
India. It is not alone the advance of education as 
demonstrated by the establishment of schools in 
places where the light of knowledge had never before 
penetrated, to which I would call attention ; the 



324 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

collateral advantages of learning have been equally 
marked. Ten years ago it was the exception to find 
in a Native State any person, young or old, \Yho 
could converse with intelligence on general topics, 
their ideas of things and places were limited to the 
narrow circle of immediate surroundings ; indolence 
and opium had taken firm hold on the youths of 
Native States who could afford to be idle, and 
endeavours to cure this were foiled by the apathy 
and self-contentment of the people. Learning was a 
new thing, and, as such, not to be desired, and it was 
not without trouble and pleading that the cause of 
education has been advanced. The tide has now 
fairly turned : a spirit of emulation has now prompted 
the boys who attend our schools to take the good 
held out to them, and the results of their training are 
evidenced by the intelligent interest which all evince 
in the topics of the day, and by the desire which many 
have shown to improve themselves by travelling and 
by seeing places and people their forefathers knew 
nothing of. 

" I would add a few words about the trade in 
Malwa opium, the revenue from which forms so 
important a factor in imperial receipts. 

" For the ten years ending 31st March 1869, the 
total number of chests passing the scales was 341,412, 
the duty realised being Rs. 20,11,04,500. For the 
ten years ending 31st March 1879, the books show a 
total export from Malwa of 405,094 chests, represent- 
ing in duty paid to Government Rs. 24,57,82,725. 
The improvement, therefore, over the previous decade 
is 63,682 chests, and a revenue of Rs. 4,46,78,225 — 
in other words, the increase in export is more, on an 
average, than 500 chests a month, and the yearly 
revenue to Government has improved by upwards of 
44 lakhs of rupees. 

"Among the causes of improvement in this 
important trade I would mention the security of the 
country and a decrease in highway robbery and 
violence ; inducements held out by Chiefs, to whom 
land under opium is the chief source of income ; 
improvements in communication, and particularly 
the facilities which the railway from Indore and 
Ujjain affords. The establishment of scales at 



OPIUM 325 

Ujjain, Jaora, and Udaipur has been the means of 
drawing the produce of each district to pay export 
duty to the Government of India without being 
harassed by the levy of dues by each State through 
which the opium passed, as was the case when 
Indore was the only place in Malwa where Govern- 
ment duty could be paid. 

"The importance of opium cultivation to the 
Chiefs of Malwa can hardly be over-estimated ; it 
giyes a value to land which no other crop can 
aftbrd. Wheat and other cereals in the best soil pay 
from annas 1 2 to Rs. 3 per bigah ; opium yields 
Rs. 10, Rs. 20, and Rs. 40 for the same measure of 
land, and in some districts where the advantage of 
soil and water are great and the opium crop heavy, 
as much as Rs. 60 per bigah is paid for land under 
the poppy. 

"The principal gainers by the growth of opium 
are the Maharajas Scindia and Holkar. In Indore 
territory especially, advantage had been taken of the 
profits which the trade in opium holds out to increase 
the assessment on irrigated lands, and Holkar's 
revenue has, chiefly by this means, steadily increased. 
Enhanced collections may fairly be estimated at 40 
per cent, over those of 1868." 

Many are the points of interest and importance 
which must necessarily receive scant notice in a brief 
epitome such as the present. Attention was paid to 
the preservation of objects of archaeological interest, 
in connection with which an indication of the changed 
conditions now existing is afforded by reading that in 
1 868 there existed "no local means of photographing * 

* The want was specially felt in connection with the splendid ruins 
at, and near Mandu, to the care and restoration of which, under the 
direction of Lord Curzon, due attention is now at length being paid. 
"Yesterday," wrote Daly to a friend in the autumn of 1867, "we were 
at Nalcha, pitched near the old palace which Malcolm fitted up as a 
residence, dispossessing in the occupation a tigress which had made 
a den of one of the rooms. To-day we are in the midst of the ruins 
of Mandu — broken arches, mosques, palaces, strew the hills for some 



326 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

such works as may be considered fit objects for the 
art." Efforts were directed towards persuading 
Rajput families to curtail the extravagant expendi- 
ture upon marriage ceremonies, and the quotation of 
the prophetic remark made to Daly by a trusted 
native friend,* who " expressed the hope that British 
influence will gradually break down the barriers 
with which Hindu law and custom have blocked 
the way to alliances in Indian high life." Endea- 
vours were coutinuous to secure the introduction 
of simple measures for improving the public health, 
and of vaccination to protect the population against 
the devastating scourge of small-pox. In these latter 
aims Daly was supported by an able and devoted 
body of medical officers, and in particular by 
Surgeon - Major T. Beaumont, and Lieutenant- 
Colonels D. Keegan and R. Caldecott, who suc- 
cessively held the appointment of Residency Surgeon 
at Indore and Administrative Medical Officer in 
Central India, and through whose efforts great 
progress was made in the establishment of hospitals 
and dispensaries throughout the Province. 

Among the officers who served under Daly during 
his tenure as Agent to the Governor-General may 
be mentioned General the Right Honourable Sir 

twenty miles ; granite slabs, cunningly carved, ruthlessly cast about, 
mark the grandeur of the Muhammadans and the destroying hand of 
the Mahrattas ; for the Mahrattas it was who, but a little more than 
a century ago, thrice gutted the still rich, though fallen Mandu." 
The palace at Nalcha, to which Daly refers, was originaily built in 
1441 by Muhammad Khilji, King of Mandu ; it was occupied by Sir 
John Malcolm, while engaged in the settlement of Malwa, during 
1819-20. 

* Khan Bahadur Mir Shahamat Ali : " His experience," said 
Daly, " is varied and deep ; it is a well which will always bear 
dipping into." 



OFFICEE-COMEADES 327 

Dighton Probyn, G.C.B., G.C.V.O., etc., who com- 
manded the Central India Horse, and held charge of 
the Malwa Political Agency duringf 1868-70; his 
successor in that appointment, General Sir John 
Watson, V.C., G.C.B., who had joined the ist Punjab 
Cavalry as Adjutant in 1852 ; Colonel Martin, C.B., 
one of Daly's intimate friends, who served with him 
in the Central India Horse, and succeeded Watson 
in the command; Colonel Sir Edward Bradford, 
Bart., G.C.B., G.C.V.O., K.C.S.I., who served in 
the Central India Horse and as Political Assistant 
at Goona; Colonel Willoughby Osborne, C.B., who 
was for many years Political Agent at Bhopal, and 
who died while holding the similar post at Gwalior ; 
Colonel P. W. Bannerman, one of Daly's most 
trusted Political officers, who did conspicuously good 
service in Rewa and elsewhere ; Dr J. P. Stratton, 
the erudite and energetic Political Agent in Bundel- 
khand ; Colonels A. R. Hutchinson, and E. Impey, 
CLE., who were each Political Agent at Gwalior; 
General Sir Montagu Gerard, K.C.B., K. C.S.I. , who 
afterwards commanded the Central India Horse. 
Among his Assistants, or Secretaries, at Indore were 
Captain Berkeley, now General and CLE.; Captain 
West Ridgeway, now the Right Honourable Sir 
West Ridgeway, K.C.B., K.C.S.I., lately Governor 
of Ceylon ; Captain F. H. Maitland, now Earl of 
Lauderdale ; Lieutenant Barr, now Colonel Sir David 
Barr, K.C.S.I., who was Agent to the Governor- 
General in Central India from 1894 to 1900, and 
subsequently Resident at Hyderabad. Daly's Chief 
Engineers and Secretaries for Public Works were 
Colonels A. Cadell, L. Russel, and C Thomason, all 
of the Royal Engineers, and Colonel W. S. Trevor, 



328 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

of the Bengal Engineers — of the latter he wrote in 
1875 to Sir George Lawrence : — 

" I was about to close this without telling you that 
W. S. Trevor is here, my P. W. Secretary in place of 
Cadell. He was with you at Kabul, and remembers 
every incident there and in the retreat.* He read 
your book here, and told me that the scenes you 
described are as clear to him as those around him now. 
He was eleven years old then, I think. I like him — 
he is clever and full of soldier-pluck." 

With all the officers who served under his orders 
Daly maintained the most cordial relations of personal 
friendship. He knew — none better — how trying and 
anxious were the duties of Political officers in remote 
places such as Sardarpur, Rewa, and Nowgong ; the 
strain that fell upon all who worked throughout the 
hot weather in Gwalior, Bundelkhand, and Malwa ; 
and he was ever ready to give them the sympathy, 
support, and commendation which they needed, and 
to cheer them with his genial good nature, and kindly 
spirit. Having an intimate acquaintance with every 
Chief and thakur, being familiar with the traditions, 
the customs, and the peculiarities of every State — big 
or little — it was comparatively easy for Daly, when 
any doubt or difficulty arose, to grasp at once, 
correctly and firmly, the salient points of the case, and 
to give his instructions briefly, concisely, and to the 
point. But his usual course, when a difficulty arose 
in any State under his charge, was to go to the 
spot at once, as fast as trains, or horses, could carry 
him, meet the Political officer and discuss matters 
with him, and then take such measures as were 
necessary to bring about a prompt and satisfactory 

* The disastrous retreat of January 1842, fully described in Sir 
George Lawrence's Forty-three Years' Service in India. 



DALY'S CHAEACTER 329 

settlement. There was no beating about the bush : 
no protracted enquiry, no demand for long official 
reports — he believed, and the officers who served 
under him learned to believe also, in personal 
enquiry, frank and friendly advice, a patient hearing 
of both sides of the case, and a decision on the 
merits — precise, definite, and clear-cut. In the 
majority of cases — and they were many^ — in which 
dispute or difference arose, the Chiefs and their 
officials accepted Daly's decision without demur — 
placing confidence in his judgment, and being assured 
that he would suggest nothing that was prejudicial 
to their feelings or honour. In this way many 
important matters were quietly settled without 
unnecessarily causing friction or raising discontent. 
Daly was a man of action himself, and required 
that all officers serving under him should be as active 
and alert as he was : it was one of his well-known 
sayings that "a Political officer who couldn't jump 
on to a horse and ride so miles when duty called him, 
wasn't worth keeping." He hated all pomp and 
show; and ridiculed the idea of maintaining dignity 
by the outward and visible signs or ceremonials, pro- 
cessions, formal Darbars, and all functions of a like 
nature. Guards of honour, escorts of cavalry, salutes 
of guns, he counted as nothing, and he discouraged in 
his Political officers and assistants any tendencies 
towards that type of mannerism which Ali Babi in. his 
Twenty-one Days in India alludes to as "paralytic 
swagger "and " thirteen-gun tall-talk" — the peculiar 
attributes, according to popular view, of Politicals. 
"Go, and talk to him" was Daly's standing advice 
when a Political officer complained of the difficulty of 
getting things done by any Chief: and he gave 



330 CENTRAL INDIAN ADMINISTRATION 

practical effect to this theory himself, by chatting, 
confidentially and freely, with any personage who 
showed disinclination to follow advice or to learn 
wisdom. Daly was not a profound Oriental scholar ; 
but he knew the vernacular sufficiently well to bring 
home his views in the most forcible manner, and 
withal with so much humour, wit, and common-sense, 
as to appeal as readily to the most sullen as to the 
most amenable disposition. 

Daly was promoted to Major-General in January 
1 8 70, and to Lieutenant-General seven years later. H e 
was made a K.C.B. in 1875, but the honour, as he 
wrote to his old friend Sir George Lawrence, "came 
with a deep shadow. The three to whom it would have 
been joy and pride knew it not. " His only brother had 
died in 1871 ; his wife's mother, to whom he was as a 
son, followed in 1873; finally, after a short illness at 
Indore, his wife died in October 1874, at Bombay, 
whither she had been moved in the hope of regaining- 
health from a sea voyage. " My life in India," he 
said to Sir George, "seems a thing of yesterday, and 
when I call up the incidents and time, it is passing 
strange, for, until this dark blow came,* I felt 

* On this sad occasion Maharaja Sir Jayaji Rao Scindia gave a 
touching proof of the reality of his feeUng towards his " brother." He 
had never met Maharaja Sir Tukoji Rao Holkar of Indore or entered 
his territorities ; proposals for a meeting between the two Chiefs had 
been frequently made, but had always broken down upon some point 
of!ceremony. But nothing could prevent Sir Jayaji Rao from proceed- 
ing to Indore to pay to Daly the visit of sympathy and condolence 
(Matampursi), which is prescribed by the highest Hindu etiquette. 
Scindia marched from Khandwa to Indore. He declined to halt at 
Indore, as he did not consider this seemly in the circumstances ; but 
remained only a couple of hours, which enabled him to discharge his 
mournful, though kindly errand. At the first stage from Khandwa, 
on'the.banks of Narbada, he and Sir Tukoji Rao Holkar met for the 
first time in their lives. It is pleasant to add that their relations were 



FINALLY LEAVES INDIA 331 

no older or colder than when I landed a boy of 
seventeen." 

Of his private life at Indore it is not necessary to 
say much. He made it his home, and was never so 
happy as when the house was overflowing with 
visitors ; the memory of his hospitality and of the 
cheery welcome which was extended to all, is still alive 
in Central India. With natives his popularity was 
great, owing- to his accessibility to men of every class, 
and to the sympathetic hearing which he accorded 
to all. 

It was in February 1881 that Daly finally left 
India, after handing over charge to Mr (now Sir 
Lepel) Griffin. The Government of India sped his 
parting with the following notification : — 

"His Excellency the Viceroy and Governor- 
General in Council desires to place on record his 
high appreciation of the long and distinguished 
service rendered by Lieutenant-General Sir Henry 
Daly, K.C.B., CLE.,* who vacated on the loth 
February his appointment as Agent to the Governor- 
General in Central India. 

" His Excellency the Viceroy is confident that Sir 
Henry Daly's relinquishment of the important duties 
which he has for twelve years discharged in Central 
India will be generally regretted, and by none more 
than by the Chiefs and pepple, toward the promotion 
of whose welfare his exertions have throughout been 
directed with remarkable energy and success." 

thereafter of a^riendly character. Twelve years later, when each was 
in his last illness, they exchanged kindly messages, and it is a curious 
fact that these two Chiefs, who were by far the most conspicuous 
figures in Central India, and had both succeeded to the gadi in the 
decade before the Mutiny, died within three days of each other in 
June 1886. 

* Daly was one of the original members of this Order, which was 
instituted at the Delhi Assemblage on the ist January 1877, and at 
first consisted of Companions only. 



CHAPTER XII 

1881-1895 

The Daly College at Indore. Occupations in England. Master 
of Hounds. Twice contests Dundee. Receives the G.C.B. 
Osborne. Second Marriage. Queen Victoria Godmother to 
his youngest son. Illness and Death. Character. 

After Daly's departure, a movement was set on foot 
by the Chiefs of Central India to commemorate in 
some visible and substantial manner the services 
which he had rendered to the Province. The 
Residency College at Indore, which owed its success 
to Daly, was conducted in somewhat meagre and 
inadequate buildings, and it was felt that the provision 
of better accommodation would be an appropriate 
tribute to the memory of one who had been the 
pioneer of education in Central India. Subscriptions 
flowed in, and in due course a handsome building, 
bearing the nanie "The Daly College," and con- 
taining a full suite of class-rooms, was erected in a good 
position about half a mile from the Residency. The 
Hall was opened in November 1885 by the Viceroy, 
Lord Dufferin, who concluded his address with the 
following words : — 

"All Englishmen must be very grateful for the 
generous thought which induced the Princes and 
Chiefs of Central India, who subscribed for this 
institution, to name it after their old friend, Sir 







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THE DALY COLLEGE 333 

Henry Daty. I am well aware that Sir Henry Daly 
was one of the most accomplished and hig-h-minded 
public servants that ever pursued a career of useful- 
ness in India. He was, from first to last, the champion 
and friend of the Native Princes and the Native States, 
and I assure you it is very gratifying to us, whose aim 
and desire is to follow in the footsteps of those who 
have been most distinguished by their earnest 
endeavours to do their duty by the people of India, 
to have such a proof that we are serving a nation who 
is generous to preserve after their departure such an 
enduring record of their name and fame as that which 
you have erected in honour of Sir Henry Daly." 

Ten years later, after Daly's death, the present 
Maharaja Scindia conceived the graceful idea of 
placing a bust of his father's old friend in the Colleg'e 
hall. The work was entrusted to Mr Charles Bates, 
and, at his untimely death, was in so forward a condi- 
tion that completion by one of his friends was a matter 
of no difficulty. From various causes the ceremony 
of unveiling the bust at Indore was delayed, but it 
was finally performed in April 1902, when eloquent 
tributes* to Sir Henry Daly's memory were paid by 
his old friend and disciple, Colonel Sir David Barr, as 
well as by the Agent to the Governor- General, Mr 
C. S. Bayley, and by the Maharaja Scindia. 

On his return to England in 1881, Daly divided 
his time between London and the Isle of Wight. He 
became Master of the Isle of Wight Foxhounds, and 
held that post for nearly nine years, during which he 
was among the hardest riders in the hunting field. 
He took an active part in local politics and business, 
and did his full share of magisterial work. He 
was a member of several Indian Railway Boards, 
and rendered special aid in the conduct of the affairs 

* For the speeches delivered upon this occasion, see Appendix B. 



334 1881-1895 

of the Indian Midland Railway. His interest in 
Indian questions was fully maintained ; he kept up a 
wide correspondence with old friends, both English 
and native; in 1884 he delivered an interesting- 
lecture* on "The Punjab Frontier Force," at 
the United Service Institution ; he was consulted 
not infrequently by authorities at the Indian Office 
on leading matters of Indian policy ; and he gave 
much assistance in connection with the celebration of 
Queen Victoria's Jubilee ih 1887. 

In politics Daly, like so many Anglo- Indians, had 
no Strong party leanings, but he was a follower and 
great admirer of Gladstone until the Home Rule 
question arose. He then became a Liberal- Unionist, 
and in 1886, and again in 1888, he unsuccessfully 
contested, in that interest, the Gladstonian stronghold 
of Dundee. Here, though an entire stranger when 
he arrived a few days before the commencement of 
the polling in 1886, he soon won warm friends, and, 
at the second contest, the improvement of his posi- 
tion elicited the following letter from the Liberal- 
Unionist Whip : — 

"Liberal-Unionist Association, 
"Great George Street, 

"Westminster, Feb. i\th, 1888. 

"Dear Sir Henry Daly, 

" I have been hoping to see you 
here ; but as I have not had that good fortune yet, 
I must ask to be allowed to congratulate you most 
heartily on your most plucky fight at Dundee. I 
assure you our spirits were buoyed up amidst the 
disaster at Southwark and the bad luck at Edinburgh 

* Reproduced as Appendix C. Portions of this lecture have been 
incorporated in Lumsden of the Guides, by Sir P. S.. Lumsden and 
G. R. Elmslie, pp. 64 et seq. and 255 et seq. 



HONOURS 335 

by the thought of the great breach which you made 
in the Gladstonian fortress at Dundee. 

" Now your example has helped to storm effectu- 
ally the weaker fort at Doncaster. — Believe me, Yours 
very truly, Wolmer." 

The Liberal-Unionists of Dundee presented Daly 
with a very handsome service of plate to commemorate 
his connection with them. 

Daly became a full General in 1888, and was 
created a G.C.B. in 1889. From Queen Victoria 
and King Edward (then Prince of Wales) he 
received many marks of kindness and favour. When 
the Queen was at Osborne he was frequently invited 
there, and in August 1889 he wrote the following 
description of a banquet : — 

" I was at dinner at Osborne the day before 
yesterday. We dined in a splendid tent, I should think 
seventy or eighty. The Emperor, a strong, jolly 
fellow, in capital spirits. I was presented to him by 
the Prince of Wales ; he talked famously, with an 
accent, but freely and with a thprough understanding. 
The Queen spoke to me of the Island and the 
Assembly. The Princess of Wales and the Princess 
Beatrice also did me the honour of chatting. The 
scene was an extraordinary gay one : the Germans 
covered with gold Orders and medals ; H. Bismarck, 
a strong, thick fellow, speaking much ; all the notables 
of Germany there. The Queen after dinner proposed 
'the health of the Emperor of Germany.' The 
Emperor rose and proposed 'the Queen.' Nothing 
more said. Then the Assembly rose, and moved 
back to the drawing-room ; talking and introducing 
went on there till 1 1.30, and, as old Pepys would say, 
^then home.'" 

Shortly after his final return to England, Daly 
married again. His second wife, n^e Coape, was 
the widow of Mr Stirling Dunlop. His only child by 



336 1881-1895 

his second marriage was born in December 1889; 
Queen Victoria proposed herself as godmother, and 
was present at the christening in Daly's house, 
holding and naming the child. Towards the end of 
1889 Daly met with a severe fall when hunting, being 
thrown on his left shoulder, which had never recovered 
from his Delhi wound. He made light of the injury, 
and unfortunately refused to lie up ; the next few 
days happened to involve exceptional physical strain, 
and there followed a paralytic stroke. He rallied 
from this, and preserved fair health, though greatly 
crippled, for some three years ; thereafter he sank 
gradually, until the end came at Ryde on the 21st 
July 1895. 

The foregoing pages will have given a tolerably 
clear idea of Daly's character. He was of an eager, 
bright, joyous, sympathetic disposition. He "warmed 
both hands before the fire of life," and loved to make 
others enjoy themselves around him. He was over- 
flowing with activity ; a grand horseman, and a lover 
of horses ; in his youth a keen cricketer, and at all 
times a supporter and encourager of every manly 
sport. He had a rich fund of Irish humour, delighted 
in telling and hearing anecdotes, and was an 
admirable raconteur, being plentifully furnished with 
memories of active service and stirring g.dventure, 
and with tales drawn from the lore of Native States. 
He was exceptionally well read in historical subjects 
and in the lives of great men ; he had a strong 
memory, and a great aptitude in quotation and in 
applying the results of reading and experience; in 
writing, he possessed a clear, terse, graphic style, 
which was illuminated by his wit and spirits. No 
close observer of religious forms, he was deeply 



APPRECIATION OF FRIENDS 337 

religious at heart; and, as one of his oldest friends 
observed, his most conspicuous trait was a wide and 
active, but unostentatious, charity. Upon this sub- 
ject he wrote to his wife early in 1859 : "There is 
nothing you can lay up for ' my boys ' so valuable as 
a kindly feeling for, and sympathy in, the wants of 
others : one cannot estimate the good influence on 
character which such things beget. To my mind, 
there is no religion so holy as that of helping and 
comfofting our fellow-creatures. I do not mean 
mere money aid — it is not all of us who can bestow 
that — but let those who are blessed with the ' talents ' 
use them freely. It is not by storing them for a 
possible need which may never arise, nor for a time 
that we may not live to see, that good can come — let 
us be content to live and do good in our own day." 

He was a great favourite in all society, and 
immensely popular in India with all ranks, creeds, and 
races. "It was his frank, honest, impartial mind 
and acts and words," wrote the late Sir Neville 
Chamberlain, " that won for him the confidence and 
respect of all he associated with, European or Native. 
By instinct he fathomed the mind of all classes of 
Natives ; and they at once felt that he judged them 
rightly. They, on their part, were at once led to 
trust him ; and they accepted him as a just judge, and 
as a friend who would do his best to see that their 
rights were respected by the State." 

Daly's old regiment, the 2nd Munster Fusiliers 
(late the Bombay Fusiliers), were quartered at 
Portsmouth when he died. They sent over a funeral 
party, and he was borne to his grave by men of the 
corps which he had joined nearly fifty-five years 
previously, 6000 miles away. 



APPENDIX A. 

The Confidential Report to which allusion is made in 
Chapter X. was published in a small compilatidn entitled 
"Correspondence regarding the compararive merits of 
British and Native Administration in India." A few 
extracts from Daly's observations may be of interest, 
especially to those who are aware how vastly affairs in 
Native States have since changed for the better. 

"What is understood by Government in civilised 
countries," wrote Daly, " has no place in any Native State 
unconnected with us, so far as my experience and know- 
ledge go. In Europe it is said that happy accidents occur 
in despotisms. Such accidents are unknown in the East ; 
there is security neither of person nor property. Men are 
seized at the instance of any man in power, imprisoned 
without charge, discharged without trial. There is no 
record of mortality. Death by foul means would only 
excite inquiry in the event of money being forthcoming to 
prosecute it ; more money, and the question is stifled. 
These things are well known. Petitions have often 
reached me setting forth false imprisonment ; murder 
unnoticed. A Political Agent has no authority to institute 
inquiries into such matters ; probably the State makes no 
returns to him of crime or casualty. If in a friendly 
manner he moved in a case laid before him, every effort 
would be used to stifle his purpose. 

" I may here remark that Scindia himself views his 
own administration as infinitely superior to that of any 
other Native State; as he does everything himself, he 
considers everything done well. The fulness of his treasury 
is his test of successful administration, and no official 



340 APPENDIX A 

changes or receives a post without paying nazarana, and 
no doubt the amount of this has great weight in settling 
the candidate's suitability. 



"As to the comparative estimation by the people at 
large, and whether their prosperity and contentment are 
best promoted under British or native rule, what, let me 
ask, would cause greater dismay in districts which for 
years have been under us than the announcement that 
they were about to be transferred to a Native State — 
Scindia or Holkar, for instance? Political officers who 
have lived amongst Chiefs and thakurs under our 
guarantee know well the effect of such a threat ; but I 
have never known an instance of discontent on the part of 
a ryot transferred by the Darbar. He has got a fixed 
lease or settlement in lieu of fixed uncertainty. 



" I have already made these observations longer than I 
ought to have done, but the subject bursts with fulness. 
Let me cast a glance at Malwa. What has caused 
Scindia's cities of Ujjain and Mandisor year by year to 
lose wealth, importance, and population ? Mandisor is in 
the very heart of the poppy-fields, on the banks of a noble 
river ; yet many of its streets are in ruins, and its name is 
declining. Ujjain, that ancient city, venerated by all 
Hindus, with the Sipra flowing by its walls and rich land 
around, is crumbling to the ground, and being yearly 
deserted by merchants and men of business. On the 
other hand, why are Ratlam and Jaora, comparatively 
insignificant States, increasing in wealth and prosperity? 
Because it has chanced to them to fall under British protec- 
tion. Within the last forty years, through the heirs of 
both States being infants on accession, the supervision 
was assumed by Major Borthwick, one of Sir John 
Malcolm's assistants. Borthwick delivered over his charge 
when the time came — Ratlam a busy, handsome city, filled 
with merchants and traders, prosperity everywhere. After 
the lapse of a few years, Ratlam again passed into the 
hands of a child of two or three years old. During the 
interval dissension and dissipation had destroyed much 
that Borthwick had built up ; but, under British guardian- 
ship, more than the old prosperity is reviving. Jaora, 




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APPENDIX A 841 

forty years ago, was little more than a village. Under 
Borthwick's fostering care it became a city, with a rich and 
well-supplied mart. About two years ago, the Nawab 
died ; his heir is a minor, and thus the State has again 
fallen under British protection. 



" The Agent to the Governor-General knows better 
than I do the utter want of confidence among the natives 
at large in the promises of any Chief, great or small. I 
will, however, give an instance in point. About Goona, 
where I was for many years, scores of square miles of rich 
land belonging to petty Rajas are lying waste. The 
Raja of Bhadaura invited my assistance in obtaining 
cultivators. I spoke to Sikh pensioners of the Central 
India Horse, and others about to take pension — men 
always greedy for land — and suggested that they should 
settle and form villages. The idea thoroughly chimed in 
with their inclinations, on one condition, that I should 
countersign the engagement between them and the Raja. 
Without this, despite his liberal offers of years of free 
tenure and a sanad, not a man would risk his savings or 
discuss the question. Scindia has long felt the same in 
many parts." 



APPENDIX B. 

Speeches delivered on the 2nd April 1902, on the occa- 
sion of the unveiling', in the Daly College at 
Indore, of the bust of Sir Henry Daly, pre- 
sented by His Highness Maharaja Madho Rao 
Scindia of Gwalior. 

SPEECH by the Honourable Mr C. S. Bayley, Agent to 
the Governor-General. 

Your Highnesses, Ladies and Gentlemen, — It is 
with the very greatest pleasure that I welcome you here 
to-day, for I know nothing more gratifying than to see a 
large number of persons representative of all classes of our 
Central Indian community. Chiefs and subjects, Europeans 
and Indians, officials and non-officials, assembled together 
to honour the memory of a truly great and good man. 
That Sir Henry Daly's character and devotion to duty 
were appreciated by those among whom he moved, the 
building in which we are met, erected as it was by public 
subscriptions immediately after his retirement from the 
service of Government, bears ample and enduring testimony. 
That the recollection of him remains green among those 
who had the privilege of knowing him, and that his name 
is revered by those who, like myself, can judge him only 
by the fruits which his work has borne, and by the tradi- 
tions handed down to us by others, is shown by our presence 
here ; and if further evidence be needed, it is at hand in the 
bust which has been generously presented to this College 

848 



APPENDIX B 343 

by His Highness the Maharaja Madho Rao Scindia of 
Gwalior, in honour of his father's greatest friend. 

It would be impossible for me, within the limits of a 
short speech, to enumerate Sir Henry Daly's claims to the 
gratitude of the people of Central India, This much, 
however, I can say with absolute certainty, that no one 
who has occupied the post which I have the honour to 
hold, can fail to be aware of the fact that there is no 
department of the Administration on which Sir Henry 
Daly has not left the impress of his clear intellect, his 
decision and integrity of character, and his excellent 
judgment of men and things. No one can be much thrown 
with the Chiefs and people of Central India without observ- 
ing that the names to which reference in all cases of 
difficulty is most frequently made, are those of Sir John 
Malcolm and Sir Henry Daly. To Sir John Malcolm is 
due the political system of Central India as it exists to- 
day ; but no sooner does any question arise as to the 
working of that system than an appeal is made to the 
views held by Sir Henry Daly as the most cogent argument 
which it is possible to adduce. To us Political officers Sir 
Henry Daly is a model of all that a Political officer should 
be : but to all of us alike, whatever our vocation in life may 
be, he stands forth as a conspicuous example of upright- 
ness, fearlessness, capacity, and kindliness of heart. One 
can imagine no more appropriate gift to the younger 
generation of Chiefs and nobles of Central India than the 
marble image of one whom all must revere, and whose 
qualities all should strive to imitate. 

I esteem it a peculiar privilege that the duty of pre- 
siding at the unveiling of this bust should devolve upon 
me, and I rejoice heartily that the ceremony should be 
performed by the munificent donor, Maharaja Scindia, in 
the presence of so many who knew and loved Sir Henry 
Daly well. It is a matter for regret that His Highness the 
Maharaja Holkar, who in his younger days knew Sir 
Henry, and who studied for a while in this College, has 
been prevented by family bereavement from attending. I 
am also exceedingly sorry that pressure of official duties 



344 APPENDIX B 

has caused the absence of one whom all would have 
welcomed, and without whom the day's proceedings seem 
sadly incomplete. I refer to Sir Henry Daly's son, Major 
Hugh Daly, who served for a while in his father's old 
regiment, the Central India Horse, and who has in the 
important position which he has so long held, of Deputy 
Secretary to the Government of India in the Foreign 
Department, shown in a conspicuous degree that Sir Henry 
Daly's talents and political instinct have been handed 
down unimpaired to his offspring. 

I have no wish to take up your time with personal 
matters, but I cannot avoid a feeling that my own share in 
this ceremony needs some explanation, I had almost said 
apology. Many of you are aware that this bust was 
ordered long ago, at a time when there was every reason 
to hope that one of the aptest of Sir Henry Daly's pupils 
and certainly one of the most ardent of his admirers, the 
one who had the best opportunities for appreciating his 
merits, my predecessor, Lieut.- Colonel David Barr, would 
be here to preside over the ceremony of the unveiling. 
Before, however, the bust arrived from England, Colonel 
Barr had been selected to fill the arduous and important 
office of Resident at Hyderabad, and this has necessitated 
my attempting, I will not say to fill his place, for on an 
occasion of this kind that is impossible, but to preside 
over a ceremony which would have been more appropriately 
conducted by him. Although he cannot be with us in 
body to-day, he is, I am sure, with us in mind, and he has 
in answer to a request from me sent the following message, 
which, with your permission, I will now read to you. 

SIR DAVID BARR'S NOTE 

I shall be much obliged if you will kindly express to all 
present my deep regret that I am unable to attend the 
ceremony of unveiling the bust of my revered friend and 
master, the late General Sir Henry Daly, G.C.B. 

My duties at Hyderabad preclude the possibility of my 
attendance, and even were it otherwise, I should feel that 
as I have severed my long connection with Central India, 



APPENDIX B 345 

the ceremony is more fittingly conducted by you as the 
Agent to the Governor-General. 

Still, as one of the least of the disciples of the great 
and good man, whose memory this bust will perpetuate in 
the College which bears his name and in the place where 
for twelve years he was the able representative of the 
Government of India, I hope you will allow me to say how 
cordially I sympathise with your proceedings, and how 
entirely my heart is with you on this occasion. 

There are still living many of Sir Henry Daly's 
Political Agents and Assistants. Some of them have 
risen to high office, and have won honoured names for 
themselves. I would mention Sir Dighton Probyn, Sir 
John Watson, Sir Edward Bradford, Sir West Ridgeway, 
the Earl of Lauderdale, General A. Cadell, General J. C. 
Berkeley, Colonel Cunliiife Martin, Colonel P. Bannerman, 
Colonel T. Cadell, Colonel E. A. Eraser, Colonel F. Wilson, 
Lieutenant-Colonel M. J. Meade — all of whom had the 
highest regard, esteem, and affection for him, who was 
their Chief: but I claim the personal distinction of being 
the only one of Sir Henry Daly's Assistants who served, 
almost uninterruptedly, under him from his first appoint- 
ment as Agent to the Governor-General in 1869, to the 
day when, with a few others, among whom were his dear 
son George Daly of the Central India Horse, and Dr 
Caldecott (whose name will, I trust, never be forgotten in 
Central India), I bade him farewell in February 1881, on 
board the P. and O. s.s. Siam, when he left India for 
good. For nearly nine years I was Sir Henry's First 
Assistant, and everything I know of political work, and 
every success I have attained in my political service, I 
ascribe to the training and education I received from him, 
as well as to his never-failing sympathy, kindness, and 
forbearance towards me personally. As he was to me so 
he was to all with whom he was brought in touch — bright, 
genial, considerate. To work under him was a pleasure, 
for he was not only quick-witted and clever, but had the 
faculty of grasping his subject, and of arriving at once at 
a correct judgment Yet there was no one more apprecia- 
tive of the efforts of those who worked under his orders, 
and no one more ready to overlook the blunders of men 
who had not his constructive genius. 

He left his mark on Central India in many directions, 
but perhaps his efforts in the causes of railway com- 



346 APPENDIX B 

munications and education were those to which he devoted 
more especially his great energies. 

When Sir Henry Daly came to Central India there 
was not a mile of railway in the Agency ; the nearest 
approaches were the Great Indian Peninsula Railway at 
Khandwa, and the East India Railway at Agra. Before 
he left, he had the satisfaction of seeing the Rajputana- 
Malwa line completed from Khandwa through Indore to 
Neemuch and Ajmer ; as also the railway from Agra to 
Gwalior; and from Itarsi to Bhopal: the great bridges 
over the Narbada at Barwaha and Hoshangabad, and 
over the Chambal near Dholpur, were commenced at his 
initiative, and opened for traffic in his presence. 

Central India was thus brought, by Sir Henry Daly, 
into railway communication with the rest of India, and 
the extensions which have since taken place, by the con- 
struction of the lines from Gwalior to Bhopal, from Bhopal 
to Ujjain and Ratlam, from Ratlam to Anand, and from 
Bina to Goona, are expansions of the policy which he 
inaugurated. 

Similarly, the stimulus to education throughout the 
States of Central India was given by his personal interest 
and power of persuasion. In 1869 the number of schools 
and colleges in Central India could be counted on the 
fingers of one hand ; before Sir Henry Daly left in 1881 
there was hardly a State that could not boast of an 
educational department, while the colleges and schools at 
Gwalior, Indore, Bhopal, Ratlam, Jaora, Rewa, and in 
many of the States in Bundelkhand, are now flourishing 
institutions, which have turned out hundreds of well- 
educated men, subjects of these States, and are still 
maintaining an annually increasing reputation for useful- 
ness and progress. The Daly College at Indore, where 
Sir Henry Daly's bust is now to be unveiled, was built by 
public subscription as a testimony from Chiefs and people 
of their appreciation of his efforts in the cause of education 
in Central India. 

Sir Henry Daly's chief claims on the States of this 
Agency were his charming personality, his intimate 
acquaintance with every Chief and thakur, his knowledge 
of the country and people, and his thorough grasp of the 
various and frequently conflicting relations of the States 
with the Government of India, as well as between them- 
selves. There is not a corner of any of the States of 



APPENDIX B 347 

Central India to which he did not penetrate ; there is not a 
town, hardly a village, where he was not known, and his 
bright, cheery manner, his quick, decisive judgment, and 
his hearty desire to do good to all were known and 
appreciated by all alike, from the greatest Chiefs to the 
humblest of petitioners. 

I recall, as the memories of the happiest years of my 
life, my recollections of my service as Sir Henry Daly's 
assistant. His early tours in Malwa, Bundelkhand, and 
Rewa ; the visit of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales to Gwalior 
and Indore; the Imperial Assemblage at Delhi; the 
Darbars at Agra, Barwaha, and Indore ; numerous journeys 
with him to Calcutta, Bombay, and Simla ; and visits to 
Gwalior, Bhopal, and Rewa on special occasions. And 
throughout the years, the genial hospitality of the 
Residency, and the gathering of friends at the gardens, 
at the river side, at dinners and dances, concerts and 
theatricals. 

It is sad to think how few remain of those who shared 
with me the privilege of knowing Sir Henry Daly while 
he was Agent to the Governor-General in Central India. 
There is a new generation of Chiefs, and most of those who 
knew Sir Henry best have gone with him to their long 
homes. Maharaja Jayaji Rao Scindia, Maharaja Tukoji 
Rao Holkar, Shah Jehan Begam of Bhopal, Maharaja 
Raghuraj Singh of Rewa, Maharaja Anand Rao Puar of 
Dhar, Raja Krishnaji Rao Puar of Dewas, the Nawab 
Muhammad Ismail Khan of Jaora, Raja Ranjit Singh of 
Ratlam, Raja Dooley Singh of Sailana, and many others 
have died since Sir Henry left Central India ; but their 
reverence and esteem for him, who was their personal 
friend and their sympathetic adviser, lives in their sons 
and representatives of the present day. 

May I ask you to congratulate most heartily on my 
behalf my dear friend the Maharaja Madho Rao Scindia on 
carrying out his long-cherished project of perpetuating Sir 
Henry Daly's memory in Central India by placing this 
bust of him in the Daly College at Indore. His Highness 
nobly fulfills the obligations of that great Chief his father, 
the late Maharaja Jayaji Rao Scindia, to the memory of 
him who, for more than fifteen years was Scindia's friend 
and brother. 

I hope some of my old friends. Pundit Suroop Narain, 
Yar Muhammad Khan of Jaora, Mr Khory, Bakhshi 



348 APPENDIX B 

Khuman Singh, Rai Nanak Chand, Mr Krishna Rao 
Muley, Mr Madge, and a few of the old residents, office 
clerks, and merchants of Indore, who knew and esteemed 
Sir Henry Daly, are present with you on this occasion. 
To one and all I send my greeting and good wishes. 
With me they share the memory of the soldier-politician 
whose bust you unveil to-day. With me they recall the 
services rendered to Central India by him, and his many 
favours to us all ; and though we shall never see again his 
bright smile, or hear his cheery voice, or admire his lithe, 
active figure as he rode with the courage and dash of a 
man of thirty, over any sort of country, and at any sort of 
pace, yet the marble provided by Maharaja Scindia will 
bring to our minds the features of one who was our friend 
and our master — Daly of the Bombay Fusiliers, Daly of the 
Guides, Daly of Hodson's Horse, Daly of the Central 
India Horse, and Daly of Central India. 

Gentlemen, anything that I could add to the words 
which I have read would but weaken their effect. I leave 
them with you as a message from a friend whose love for 
Central India was not less than that of his revered master, 
and whose memory will, I venture to think, long occupy a 
place in the minds of the Central Indian Chiefs worthy of 
one who studied at Sir Henry Daly's feet. I now request 
Your Highness to unveil the bust. 

MAHARAJA SCINDIA'S SPEECH 

Mr Bayley, Ladies and Gentlemen, — I esteem it 
a great privilege to be present on this occasion to unveil 
the bust of Sir Henry Daly. I hoped that the Honourable 
the Agent to the Governor-General would perform the 
ceremony, but I was asked quite unexpectedly to undertake 
this honourable task in such a manner that I could not 
refuse. 

My sentiments towards Sir Henry Daly have been 
exactly expressed by Mr Bayley, and I am sure that all 
present here who either knew him personally, or are 
acquainted with his career, will echo them. 

The memory of that great and good man, as he has 
been most appropriately described by Mr Bayley and 



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Bust of Sir Henry Daly. (By Bates.) 



THIS BUST IS ERECTED BY MAHARAJA MADHO RAO SCINDIA, G.C.S.I. 
IN HONOUR OF 

GENERAL SIE HENRY DALY, G.C.B., CLE. 

AGENT TO THE GOVERNOR-GENERAL IN CENTRAL INDIA FROM 1869 TO 18S1 

BORN 25TH OCTOBER 1824; DIED 2IST JULY 1895 

AND IS PLACED IN THE DALY COLLEGE AS A MONUMENT OF THE AFFECTION AND ESTEEM 

IN WHICH TIE WAS HELD BY ALL THE CHIEFS AND PEOPLE OF CENTRAL INDIA, AND 

IN REMEMBRANCE OF THE FRIENDSHIP, ONLY SEVERED BY DEATH, WHICH 

SUBSISTED FOR MORE THAN TWENTY YEARS BETWEEN HIM AND 

THE LATE MAHARAJA JAYAJI RAO SCINDIA, G.C.B., G.C.S.I. 



\To face p. 848. 



APPENDIX B 349 

Colonel Barr, remains green in the minds of the Chiefs and 
people of Central India, because so large a part of his 
service was passed in this part of India, and because he 
was not only the chief representative of the Imperial 
Government, but always endeavoured to cultivate the 
friendship and gain the confidence of those with whom his 
duties brought him in contact, and by his cordial manner 
inspired them with love and reverence. 

Sir Henry Daly was Political Agent at Gwalior from 
1867 to 1870, with intervals during which he was on leave 
or officiating as Agent to the Governor-General. The 
period of his service as Agent to the Governor-General is 
even longer, extending continuously from 1870 to 1881, 
and he is a conspicuous example of the good effects of a 
long tenure of office by a man of sympathetic nature. 
Though I have not met all the Political officers mentioned 
by Colonel Barr as having served under Sir Henry Daly, 
still from those whom I have met I have gathered that one 
and all have entertained the same feelings of affection and 
regard for his memory as are so eloquently expressed by 
Colonel Barr. 

As to Sir Henry Daly's special connection with Gwalior, 
I had not, of course, the good fortune to be personally 
acquainted with him — yet he might have seen me in my 
childhood ; he was my father's greatest friend, and they 
looked upon each other as brothers. 

For myself, since I had the pleasure of making the 
acquaintance of Major Hugh Daly, whose absence to-day 
I, in common with Mr Bayley, greatly regret, I have 
regarded him as my brother. 

I trust that though I cannot claim, on account of my 
youth, the same relationship towards Sir Henry Daly's 
successors, yet I consider that I have a claim to be looked 
upon by them in the light of a son. 

It has just struck me, ladies and gentlemen, that the 
proper person to unveil the bust is not my humble self, but 
Mrs Bayley, and, therefore, as I have not succeeded in 
inducing Mr Bayley to do it, I beg her to favour me by 
consenting to my request. 



APPENDIX C. 

Friday, 27 tk June 1884. 

Lieutenant-General Sir SAMUEL J. Browne, V.C, K.C.B., 
K.C.S.I., late Bengal Staff Corps, in the Chair. 

THE PUNJAB FRONTIER FORCE. 

By Lieutenant-General Sir Henry D. Daly, K.C.B., C.I.E., 
Bombay Staflf Corps. 

The Council of the Royal United Service Institution has 
done me the honour to request that I would supply a 
paper on " The Punjab Frontier Force." The subject is 
vast ; embracing a period of thirty years, during which the 
Indian Empire was convulsed : — the grand Native Army, of 
which all were so proud, rich with the glories and con- 
quests of a hundred years — triumphs in all climates, 
Egypt, Afghanistan, China, and Burma — under Clive, 
Wellesley, Foote, Pollock, Napier, Gough, and many a 
good commander — between the dawn and dusk of a May- 
day in 1857, broke away from their allegiance, rose in arms 
against us, carrying with them many arsenals and war 
maUriel of every description. 

The mere recital of the records of the Punjab Force, 
from the Kohat expedition under Sir Charles Napier, in 
February 1850, to the glorious defence and glorious death 
of young Hamilton and Cavagnari's guard of Guides at 
Kabul, in 1879, would, however compressed, occupy more 
time than is allotted for such a paper as this. No amount 
of hard writing could make the catalogue easy reading. 

850 



APPENDIX C 351 

We have the carefully compiled chronicles of Paget, of 
the exploits of the Force on the North- West Frontier, filling 
upwards of 450 pages, records of daring service, done with 
devotion and discipline, under the prestige and leading of 
Englishmen, by Pathans, Muhammadans of the wildest 
class and clan — men steeped in blood feuds, traditionally 
careless of life, hating every dynasty but their own; by 
Sikhs, descendants of the soldiers of Ranjit Singh, who 
had wrested Peshawar from the very Pathans by whose 
side they had been fighting shoulder to shoulder in our 
ranks. 

These chronicles are to us what the chronicles of 
Froissart were to the soldiers of his time ; they bring a 
glow of pride, testifying to the wondrous power of order and 
discipline effected by the nerve and brains of a handful of 
Englishmen. True it is that many a noble spirit passed 
away, hallowed in the going ; but many remain, pressing 
to do whatever devotion and duty may. 

After I had accepted the invitation to prepare this 
paper, and began to read the records, reports, and lives of 
the men who made the history of the time, I felt over- 
whelmed at the task, and shrank from attempting more 
than to dot down personal reminiscences, with here and 
there sketches and anecdotes illustrative of the men and 
the times — of the deeds done, and the doers. My own 
reminiscences have this merit — they carry us back to the 
earliest stages of the Punjab Force ; for I believe Sir John 
Coke, that rare leader of Pathans, and myself, are the only 
survival of the original commandants. 

Captain Coke and Lieutenant Daly raised the ist 
Punjab Infantry and the ist Punjab Cavalry; and within 
seven months of their embodiment both corps were 
reviewed by Sir Charles Napier, and served in the field 
under his command. As to Coke's, wrote that heroic 
soldier to George Lawrence : " I have seen nothing 
superior to it in drill— it is admirable ; and both you and I , 
saw how this brave corps fought under its excellent leader 
in our five days' campaign." And in the General Order 
detailing the fighting, he writes : " As Captain Coke and 



352 APPENDIX C 

the 1st Punjab Regiment of Infantry sustained the brunt 
of this skirmishing, the Commander-in-Chief thinks it due 
to this admirable young corps, and its excellent leader, to 
say that their conduct called forth the applause of the 
whole column." 

The stately proclamation of Lord Dalhousie, dated 
29th March 1849, recounts how the Punjab became part of 
the British Empire. The treacherous murder of two 
British officers at Multan, Vans Agnew and Anderson, in 
April 1848, was followed within twelve months by the 
destruction of the Sikh army, the capture of Multan, the 
battle of Gujerat, and the expulsion of the Afghans across 
the Indus to the mouth of the Khyber Pass. 

Sir Henry Lawrence was placed at the head of the 
new Government, with unlimited power of selecting 
the civil and military officers under him ; Lord Dalhousie 
stipulating only for his Agent in the war, Colonel 
Mackeson. 

The defence of the frontier from Hazara to Mithankot, 
at the junction of the five rivers, was a heavy task to face. 
It meant the control of lawless tribes, whose trade was 
warfare and plunder, numbering in all not less than 100,000 
fighting men, levying blackmail on travellers and mer- 
chants, never combining save against Ranjit Singh or 
Kabul. 

For a thousand years and more the valley of the Indus 
under the Suleiman range had been studded with a line of 
forts and towers — ruins of which still remain — as positions 
and outposts against the ceaseless raids of mountain 
marauders. 

In times not long past, in a country so difficult for 
military operations — with narrow defiles, mere fissures in 
the rocks — marauders assembled from long distances, well 
armed and well mounted, and carrying their food on their 
backs. They sacked towns, exacted ransoms, murdered 
Sikh Governor and people, getting back to their fastnesses 
with impunity. 

The first duty which fell on Sir Henry Lawrence was 
the defence of this trans-Indus frontier, and ten regiments, 



APPENDIX C 353 

five of cavalry and five of infantry, were organised for 
employment. 

Before proceeding further, it will be well to turn to the 
small body of Guides, which owed its origin to Sir Henry 
Lawrence in December 1846; their organisation must 
have been in his mind when he conceived the idea of a 
Frontier Force. 

Sir Henry, during the first Afghan War, had seen the 
difficulties our army, British and native, encountered in 
the passes, amongst the hill tribes and northern nations, in 
the absence of guides and interpreters; and he resolved 
that in the future, within our own ranks, there should be 
hardy men accustomed to every region and accident of 
service, and familiar with every village dialect. 

The Guides, originally one troop of cavalry and two 
companies of infantry, were raised by Major-General Sir 
Harry Burnett Lumsden, then a Lieutenant. Lumsden 
possessed characteristics for the task in a rare degree : a 
daring sportsman, full of endurance, hardy and strong of 
frariie, with an instinctive knowledge of men which gave him 
a power which none under him ever questioned. Life in 
the Punjab in those times Was full of incidents, and few 
were the days which did not test self-dependence and 
soldierly intelligence. Henry Lawrence quickly gauged 
Lumsden's genius. In addition to the strength begotten by 
the stirring scenes in which he moved, Lumsden breathed 
among giants — the Lawrences, Edwardes, Nicholson, were 
his associates. 

It is hardly enough to say that on the enrolment of 
the Guides each man's personal history was known to 
Lumsden ; men from every wild and warlike tribe were 
represented in its ranks, men habituated to war and sport, 
the dangers and vicissitudes of border life. Afridis and 
Gurkhas, Sikhs and Hazaras, Waziris, Pathans of every 
class, and even Kaffirs, speaking all the tongues of the 
border, Persian, Pooshtoo, etc., dialects unknown to the 
men of the plains ; in many cases the Guides had a camp 
language or patois of their own. Lumsden sought out the 
men notorious for desperate deeds, leaders in forays, who 

Z 



354 APPENDIX C 

kept the passes into the hills, and lived amid inaccessible 
rocks. He made Guides of them : tempted by regular 
pay and enterprise, many joined the corps and became 
conspicuous for daring and fidelity. On the border, and 
in the ranks of the Guides, tales, abundant in humour, 
were told of Lumden's interviews with men who had 
defied all authority, and had never been seen in the plains 
but for murder and plunder. 

A sketch of Dilawar Khan, who died on the path of 
duty, a Subadar of the Guides, whose name is familiar 
in every village between the Khyber and Kashmir, will 
illustrate this. 

When Lumsden first visited Eusafzai in search of 
recruits — in his own words — " of men accustomed to look 
after themselves, and not easily taken aback by any 
sudden emergency," Dilawar Khan was notorious. He 
had been brought up by Muhammadan priests, and was 
intended for the priesthood ; but kidnapping bankers and 
rich traders, carrying them across the Indus into Eusafzai, 
was too attractive in adventure and remuneration, and he 
forsook the sacred calling. 

Dilawar's capital consisted of his sword, a piece of 
rope, and a huge bullock's skin, which he could inflate at 
pleasure, and so carry himself and his guests across the 
sacred river ; once there, a message was sent to settle the 
sum the firm or family would give as ransom for his 
guest. This was Dilawar's occupation. Lumsden, think- 
ing that Dilawar must have rare local knowledge and 
pluck to carry on such a trade successfully, sent him an 
invitation to his camp, promising him a safe return to the 
hills. The very novelty of the invitation took Dilawar's 
fancy, and to the astonishment of the chiefs of the 
district he appeared in camp. Lumsden received him 
with all courtesy, pointed out that in a short time posts 
would be so established throughout the country that his 
calling would be impossible, and the risk of hanging great, 
and ended his moral by proposing to make him a Guide. 
Dilawar fairly burst into a fit of laughter at the proposal, 
and took his departure across the border. Six weeks 



APPENDIX C 355 

afterwards he voluntarily turned up at Lumsden's tent, 
saying he had come to join the Guides, but pleaded hard 
to be excused the degradation of the " goose step " ; but 
Lumsden held out stoutly for the absolute necessity of his 
being taught the complete art of war, and finally had the 
satisfaction of seeing the most dreaded man on the frontier 
patiently balancing on one leg at his bidding. 

Such is Lumsden's own account, and he adds : " About 
half my first recruits were of this stamp, while the other 
half were sons or nephews of the chiefs of the district," who 
sought the Englishmen as representatives of their family, 
and eventually rose to the higher ranks. So popular 
became enlistment under Lumsden that thirty or forty 
young Afridis, or Pathans, fed and clothed by their 
relatives in the ranks, passed through their drill, awaited 
vacancies. Great was the excitement at the rifle butts 
when a vacancy, as a prize, was shot for by these aspirants. 

The headquarters of the corps were fixed at Mardan, in 
the midst of Eusafzai ; a rude fort was constructed, and 
there in a rich valley, bounded on the north and east by 
the Swat Mountains, with the Indus and the Kabul Rivers 
south and west, Lumsden held civil and military sway over 
a people the Sikhs had failed to subdue, and who had 
withstood an army with guns led by Ranjit Singh in 
person. 

I have described Lumsden's mode of selecting Afridis 
and Pathans, to be associated and brought under discipline 
with Sikhs and other Hindus, and must now give an anec- 
dote of the feeling of this body to Lumsden himself Sir 
John Lawrence, as ruler of the Punjab, was wont from time 
to time to make tours through all parts of the country. On 
one of his early visits to Mardan, the Chiefs from the hills 
with their followers, and every village baron, gathered at 
Mardan to pay the great man obeisance. Revenue assess- 
ments and cases were discussed, and appeals received^ 
Lumsden, from early ties, was probably easy in criminal 
and civil matters with a people whom he found cultivating 
their fields with sword and matchlock by their side, and 
who had never paid revenue except by force of arms, and 



356 APPENDIX C 

who had no law but tradition and the will of the Kazis. 
Sir John, though cordially relying on Lumsden's judgment, 
spent two or three days in cultivating a personal knowledge, 
as was his habit, with all that came before him, and thus it 
seemed to the men of the Guides that their leader was 
harassed by discussions and explanations instead of being 
with them as usual in the field or at sports. 

The night before Sir John was to march with his 
retinue from Mardan, Lumsden, after Sir John had gone 
to bed, went outside, and sat on the parapet of the fort. 
After a while, an Afridi orderly, who always attended 
Lumsden in sport or fight, crept up to him and said, in a 
low tone : " Since the great Lawrence came you have been 
worried and depressed ; many have observed this, and that 
he is always looking at papers, asking questions, and over- 
hauling your accounts. Has he said anything to pain you ? 
is he interfering with you? He starts for Peshawar to- 
morrow morning ; there is no reason why he should reach 
it." The incident tells its own tale. 

To return to our story. All these men were so welded 
togethef by Lumsden that they quailed before no danger, 
shrank from no raid, however desperate, and bore themselves 
to their leader against any odds with a fidelity unsurpassed 
by the Crusaders. In the valley of Peshawar, in 1847, 
Lumsden's prestige became a proverb, and with his native 
officers, men of mark and name, the Guides became famous. 
In the following year Lieutenant Hodson joined the 
Guides as Adjutant. This was the famous partisan 
soldier who, after being conspicuous in many a stirring 
scene, fell at Lucknow in 1858. 

During 1848, the year of the rebellion in the Punjab, 
the Guides under Lumsden and Hodson were repeatedly 
engaged; their ranks repeatedly thinned, and again and 
again filled ; their pay was above the ordinary scale for 
native officers and men, and to meet the exposure, and the 
leading which constant service entailed, the proportion of 
native and non-commissioned officers was double that of 
the Line. The corps was self-dependent ; they had no 
carriage save that which was carried by their own mules 



APPENDIX C 357 

and ponies ; their pay supplied everything ; extras for 
foreign service, or any cause, there were none. 

It may be thought that I have been too careful in 
sketching the life and deeds of the Guides through the 
throes of the Sikhs, on their transition from an independent 
nation in 1846, to their incorporation with the British 
Etnpire in 1849; but this handful of soldiers became the 
nucleus of the Punjab Force, which, modelled on the 
Guides, and associated with them in scores of struggles on 
the hills and in the passes, along a frontier of some 600 
miles, became, in May 1857, not only the foundation of the 
present Bengal army, but, with the exception of the sturdy, 
heroic Gurkhas, was the only available native force where- 
with to stem the tide of sedition which, at a swoop, carried 
the Sepoy army of Bengal, from Peshawar to Calcutta, into 
rebellion. 

I will now touch upon the constitution of the first 
regiments of the Punjab Force, five of cavalry and five of 
infantry, and the organisation is on the same principle to 
this day. A cavalry corps was composed of a com- 
mandant and 3 British officers, 18 native officers, and 588 
sabres ; an infantry regiment, with the same proportion of 
officers and 896 bayonets. 

The native officers were the sons or brothers of chiefs 
and nobles, on or outside the frontier, or Sikhs who had 
held rank and power in the old army ; men of the family 
of the ex-Amir of Kabul, the son of the Governor of 
Jalalabad, who stood by our cause in Sale's defence, were 
of these. The non-commissioned officers were mostly of 
the same stamp, serving on to await their promotion to 
the commissioned rank. 

Each corps maintained its own carriage of mules and 
ponies, and was thus ready at all times to take the field at 
the shortest notice. 

Within a year, each regiment had settled down to 
guard their portion of the frontier of 5CXD miles, from Kohat 
to Mithankot. 

Three horse field-batteries, each with five 9-pounders 
and a 24-pounder howitzer, were attached to the Force. 



358 APPENDIX C 

The batteries were commanded by Bengal Artillery officers 
who had made their mark during the war. The gunners 
were Sikhs who had remained faithful. There were also 
two companies for garrison duty, veterans of the Sikh 
army. With these batteries were some remarkable Sikh 
officers, who had served under Avitabile and Van Cortlandt 
in Ranjit Singh's army, bearing French orders of rank ; 
noble old soldiers they were, with a holy faith in their 
guns — to them objects of devotion. 

The cavalry and infantry force, of necessity hastily 
organised, was composed in several regiments mostly of 
men of Hindustan. Life beyond the Indus, away from 
their families, with harassing duties, and exposure in a 
climate very different from their own, had no abiding 
temptation for them : health and spirits gave way ; they 
longed to return to the plains of India, and be with their 
own people. Their vacancies were filled on the type of 
the Guides — the ist Punjab Cavalry and ist Punjab 
Infantry were so from the beginning — and thus it came 
about that the security of that troubled border was main- 
tained by the descendants of the restless marauders who 
had roamed and plundered for generations ; and by their 
side fought Sikhs, their hereditary enemies, still conspicu- 
ous for the discipline and daring with which Ranjit Singh 
had imbued their fathers. 

The Punjab Frontier Force in 1852 numbered 11,000 
men of all ranks, and 64 guns — including old metal in 
position on the walls of the forts at Bunnoo and Kohat. 

The Bengal army of 1857 was almost entirely drawn 
from Oudh ; light cavalry, in discipline and horsemanship 
all that could be desired ; infantry, splendid in physique 
and perfect in movements, described by no mean judge 
the gallant old Nott, "noble soldiers whose backs no 
Afghan had ever seen." Each regiment had some 24 
British and from 16 to 20 native officers ; but the native 
officers, under the system which prevailed, owed their 
position to length of service only. In the infantry the 
result was specially conspicuous. Subadars of companies, 
aged and often toothless, mounted on scraggy ponies. 



APPENDIX C 359 

jogged along the line of march. Gallantry in action could 
hardly win for the Sepoy the badge of a non-commissioned 
rank. It was with this mass, fresh in discipline, armed to 
the teeth, steeped in fanaticism, that the Punjab Frontier 
Force had suddenly to deal. 

Mark the contrast in the constitution of the present 
native army, modelled on the Guides and Punjab Force. 
Regiments of cavalry and infantry have each a selected 
commandant and seven British officers. Native officers, 
numerically as before, often men of birth and position, 
always men of education ; every soldier feels that he bears 
with him his own fate on the field — that promotion is the 
sure heritage of skill and valour. 

In the majority of regiments, instead of one race, there 
is an admixture of races — sometimes by troops and com- 
panies, sometimes by men antagonistic in religion and 
caste. 

In this commingling of tribes the army has a bond of 
strength which no temptation has yet shaken. 

Sir Hugh Rose bore striking testimony to this as 
Commander-in-Chief, after the trials and struggles of 
Umbeyla in 1 863 : " It was due to the native troops 
employed, particularly to the regiments organised since 
1857, that the Commander-in-Chief should submit to the 
Government of India a practical proof of their discipline 
and fidelity. Every eiifort was made by the Akhund of 
Swat and the hostile tribes to seduce to their cause their 
co-religionists in the native regiments opposed to them ; 
but, with the exception of one young Bonair recruit, their 
sense of duty and discipline kept them true." 

The mixture of races in the ranks has proved a politi- 
cal and social safeguard. 

Of the fifty fights and expeditions in which the Punjab 
Force was engaged on the north-west frontier during the 
ten years Sir Neville Chamberlain exercised command, I 
will touch on one only — the expedition against the Mahsud 
Waziris in 1 860. This is an illustrative one. The Mahsud 
Waziris were pre-eminent for plunder and violence, their 
raids increased year by year in daring, till at last in 1859, 



360 APPENDIX C 

after years of immunity, their chiefs brought a body of five 
or six thousand men into the plains for plunder. 

General Chamberlain, who passed down the frontier at 
this time, wrote to the Government : " In the course of 
my annual tour, I see much of all classes, and nowhere do 
I hear the cry for justice till I conie within reach of the 
Waziris. Then commences a train of injuries received and 
unredressed. There is no more pitiable sight than the 
tears and entreaties of a family stripped of all their means. 
Supposing our backwardness to arise from fear, men and 
women counselled courage, saying, 'We will assist you; 
they can't stand before guns and percussion arms.'" 

This final raid brought their deeds of rapine to a crisis. 
It was determined to march a column into their strong- 
holds, which no stranger had ever approached — an 
entangled mass of mountains of five ranges, with their 
crests rising from SSOO feet to 11,500 feet — accessible only 
by the defiles of the Suleiman range, channels, by which 
the drainage from the mountains finds its way to the 
Indus, varying in breadth from 1000 to 80 yards. 

The expedition, composed entirely of soldiers organised 
and disciplined in the way I have described, without an 
English bayonet or sabre in the ranks, consisted of — 

Detachments of the Punjab Light Field Batteries : 3 
Royal Artillery British officers, 10 1 fighting men. 

The 'Peshawar and Hazara Mountain Transport : 6 
Royal Artillery officers, 125 fighting men. 

Detachments of Guide, Punjab, Multan Cavalry : 4 
British officers, 331 sabres. 

Detachments of Sikh, Guide, Punjab, and Gurkha 
Infantry: 41 British officers, 4536 men. 
In all about 5200 fighting men — Sikhs, Afridis, Gurkhas, 
and Pathans of every clan — with 64 British officers, of 
whom 7 were Staff, led by Brigadier-General Sir Neville 
Chamberlain, whose presence to every man of the Force 
was a guarantee of success. 

On the 17th April i860, the column entered the Tank 
Zam defile, a huge ravine, rugged with rocks and boulders, 
the passage difficult in fine weather — impassable even for 



APPENDIX C 361 

elepharlts after a storm of rain, for the watercourses at the 
base of the towering mountains, wind for miles before 
reaching the plains ; but selected as the route which 
afforded the best means of getting up supplies from the 
rear. 

On the 19th, at midnight, the General marched off with 
the whole of the cavalry, to seize a height, followed by 
Lumsden with the mountain guns and 2CX)0 infantry. 

Now began a eeries of marches in which miles occupied 
hours, the safety of followers, supplies, etc., requiring 
heights on both sides to be crowned until the rearguard 
came up. In the new ground, day by day, breastworks 
had to be constructed for night pickets of stones from 
the hill-sides, palisaded to prevent a sudden rush from 
overpowering numbers ; all tents were struck at dusk ; 
half the men slept accoutred, all in uniform, and the inlying 
pickets were of necessity strong. 

The Waziris, with unity which is proverbial amongst 
men who subsist almost entirely on plunder from the 
plains, were gathered, perched on crags and heights, ready 
for every chance, occasionally fighting with desperation. 
One chief, seeing an English officer with a few men 
reconnoitring the ground, shouted to his followers, " Now 
is the time to die for our faith, and to show the kind of 
men whose country is invaded." There was no lack of 
enthusiasm, a desperate rush was made, the gallant fellow 
died, but not until others had fallen. 

The first serious opposition burst out on the 25th : the 
reveille was just sounding, and all was quiet, when a volley 
from the pickets and the " fall in " call startled Lumsden's 
column of 4 field-guns, 100 sabres, and 1200 infantry, 
which had moved by another gorge. Three thousand 
Waziris, sword in 'hand, burst through the pickets, 500 
penetrated the camp, where a desperate hand-to-hand 
struggle ensued; they were driven back, leaving 132 
bodies behind them ; no wounded were found, though the 
number must have been great. Lumsden's loss was heavy 
also: 21 killed and 109 wounded. 

The sick and wounded were now sent back ; sixteen 



362 APPENDIX C 

days' supplies, 4000 shoes for the men, and shoes for the 
horses — for struggling over rocks and boulders had 
destroyed these — were taken, and arrangements made for 
an advance on Kani Goram, the capital, hitherto con- 
sidered inaccessible. 

At this time a message came from the Waziris, that 
they desired a conference ; the chief men appeared in 
camp. The General told them "there was still time to 
make terms ; we had no wish to meddle with their affairs, 
but we must have security against their plundering and 
murdering on the British territory, and that unless this 
was assured their capital would be captured." After much 
discussion, the maliks (chief men) said : " Why go further ? 
Our people are rough mountaineers, difficult to restrain ; 
blood was fresh, and bodies of relations still unburied in the 
sun ; our country is unfit for an army ! " The General 
replied that it was contrary to our custom to show hostility 
to the dead, and pointed out to them that many of their 
dead had been honourably buried by our troops, and that 
the relations might come and bury the remainder. The 
Mahsuds, who hold it a sacred duty to bury their dead, 
seemed touched for the moment ; but, depending on their 
numbers, their crags and mountains, they roughly put 
aside overtures for peace, and left, warning us of their 
preparations. 

On the 4th May the Force moved forward through a 
narrow cleft in the rock ; 6cxx) or 7000 of the enemy were 
in position, the mouth of the pass was closed by an abattis 
so strong that guns had no effect on it ; above the crags 
and ridges were breastworks of stone, terraced one above 
the other, thick with Waziris. I will not delay by 
attempting further description of ground, etc., which well 
might lead the mountaineers to rely on their courage to 
maintain it. 

The Force was formed into three columns of attack. 
The right and main attack had to carry breastworks on a 
crest, the last 12 or 15 feet of which were almost inacces- 
sible, the ground below was broken and cut up with 
ravines ; the attacking party in groups fired from behind 



APPENDIX C 368 

rocks, to shelter themselves from the fire and stones hurled 
from above. Casualties were thick amongst them. The 
Waziris, seeing this check, leaped from their breastworks, 
and with shouts, sword in hand, burst through the leading 
men and reached the mountain-guns and reserve. The 
ground on which this occurred was visible to both sides ; 
the hills and crags rang with cheers from the clansmen as 
they watched the glistening swords. Captain Keyes, now 
Sir Charles Keyes, was with the ist Punjab Infantry in 
reserve ; putting himself at the head of a handful of men, 
he cut down the leader of the Waziris, already on the flank 
of the guns. Thus the tide of triumph was turned. The 
men of the battery under Captain Butt never swerved ; 
they stood to their guns and fought ; the brilliant stroke 
was over ; the Waziris, leaving the ground thick with dead, 
retreated up the hill, so hotly pursued that the breastwork 
was carried and the position won. 

Our loss was Lieutenant Ayrton, 94th, attached to the 
2nd Punjab Infantry, and 30 killed ; 84 wounded. 

The centre and left attacks were carried with trifling 
loss, and the stronghold of the Waziris fell into our hands. 

During the halt at Kani Goram the soldiers who had 
won, encamped in order outside the walls, were permitted 
to visit the town under officers, morning and evening. A 
Syud, watching the orderly marching of the conquerors 
about the city, called out to the bystanders, " Well done, 
British justice ! " It is said this remark, testifying to the 
strength of discipline, touched the English General as 
much as his military success. 

On the 9th May the force marched back by another 
route towards the plains ; and on the 19th, with little 
molestation, reached Bunnoo, where the column was 
broken up. 

Thus the Force, bearing sixteen days' supplies for 
8000 men, led by Sir Neville Chamberlain — of whom it is 
not fitting to speak in such a paper as this — with a few 
English officers, marched in triumph through a country 
which no native power had ever dared to enter — 160 miles, 
through clefts, over crags and mountains peopled by 



364 APPENDIX C 

desperate marauders, watching and contesting every peak 
and point^yet such was the force of discipline and system 
that three camp followers and as many camels were the 
only losses en route. 

The casualties in action were 450 : — 

Killed, I English officer. 

„ 3 non-commissioned officers. 

„ 100 men. 

Wounded, 346. 

I will not speak of Umbeyla in 1 863 ; the expedition 
of a mixed force, English and native, reinforced as the 
necessity demanded, commanded also by Sir Neville 
Chamberlain, until a severe wound compelled him to hand 
over the command to General Garrock, though he remained 
in the field, and saw the successful end ; the total casualties 
were 908 : — 

15 British officers killed, 21 wounded. 
34 „ soldiers „ 118 
4 native officers „ 20 „ 
185 soldiers „ 504 „ 

Here again many well-known frontier names appeared 
in a distinguished manner. Wilde, Probyn, Brownlow, 
Keyes, all added to their reputation. 

I will now quit the frontier and turn for a few minutes 
to the trials and glories of the Punjab Force at Delhi and 
Lucknow ; these have been eloquently described by Kaye 
and Malleson, and do not call for other mention than bare 
record here. 

Edwardes and the men of might at Peshawar and 
down the border so stirred the enthusiasm of the chiefs 
and tribes for our rule that they submitted themselves to 
organisation, and, proudly taking the place of the Frontier 
Force, kept the peace themselves, and so admitted of the 
despatch of regiment after regiment to Delhi. 

The first corps to move, being the nearest to the road 



APPENDIX C 365 

was the Guides. Within a few hours of the massacre at 
Delhi, cavalry and infantry, 6 officers and about 600 men, 
were on the march towards the scene. The grand old 
masters of India, the Court of Directors, thus wrote, in 
August 1858, of the Guides at Delhi: "The corps, by 
the extraordinary alacrity with which they proceeded to 
Delhi — marching 580 miles in twenty-one days — in the 
months of May and June, turning off the road one night 
12 miles to attack mutineers ; by their remarkable services 
before Delhi, where for nearly four months both officers 
and men were constantly in action, sometimes twice a day ; 
by their singular fidelity, as shown by the fact that not 
one man deserted, whilst 3 50 were killed and wounded ; 
and by their heroic gallantry having established for them- 
selves the strongest claim to our approbation and favour." 

For some weeks after the commencement of operations 
at Delhi, the only native troops with the British Force 
were the Guides and Charles Reid's Gurkhas, the Sirmur 
battalion. During July and August, the ist, 2nd, and 4th 
Punjab Regiments, and 4th Sikh Infantry, squadrons of 
the Punjab Cavalry, old border soldiers, with new levies to 
meet the casualties of the daily struggles, poured in ; and 
on the nth September 1857, some 3000 men of all ranks 
of the Punjab Force were in array outside the walls. 

On the capture of the city, 28th September, the rolls 
were examined, when it was ascertained that the casualties 
in the Punjab Force during the operations were little short 
of 1000. Of these, 250 were killed, including 9 British and 
II native officers; 16 British and 28 native officers 
wounded. No Punjab corps had a complement of more 
than S English officers ; and this number had with some 
regiments to be renewed more than once. In the Guides 
and 1st Punjab Infantry alone, 6 British officers were 
killed, and 1 1 wounded ; some were twice wounded ; not 
one escaped without a mark. 

Of those who fell, I could tell of Lumsden, brother of 
the two distinguished soldiers, Sir Harry and Sir Peter ; 
Travers, brother of the General who won the Victoria 
Cross by charging, with four or five Sikh troopers, Holkar's 



366 APPENDIX C 

guns at Indore ; Quentin Battye, the pride of the border, 
the beau ideal of a soldier and horseman, fell amidst the 
wail of his men, murmuring " Dulce et decorum est pro 
patria mori ! " Murray — young Murray — sorely wounded 
in the early days of the siege, rejoined the Guides on the 
morning of the assault, and found his death springing a 
trench some feet in advance of his eager men. 

Many other gallant spirits closed their course, but the 
names of Quentin Battye, Lumsden, Travers, and Murray 
were in many mouths, and to this day have a hallowing 
influence in the ranks in which they died. 

The heavy losses caused by the lengthened operations 
made the pressure great for qualified officers, but the spirit 
among them was high, and men pressed to serve where 
duty pointed. As an instance of this, Nicholson, who had 
marched down with a squadron of Sam Browne's, the 2nd 
Punjab Cavalry, brother of Brigadier-General John Nichol- 
son — who, as recorded on his tomb, "led the assault of 
Delhi, but fell in the hour of victory, mortally wounded " — 
volunteered to join and lead the ist Punjab Infantry at the 
storm ; because the border men of the regiment knew him, 
and Major Coke and their own officers were either disabled 
from wounds or dead. Nicholson lost an arm on this 
occasion. 

Neville Chamberlain, severely wounded in July, had 
never ceased to cheer the army by his presence, and was 
the moving spirit in the dark days between the storm and 
capture, 14th and 20th September. 

Coke recovered from his wounds and led a brigade in 
the subsequent operations in Rohilkhund with marked 
distinction. 

The squadrons of Punjab Cavalry, under Probyn, 
Watson, and Younghusband ; the Sikhs, 2nd and 4th 
Punjab Infantry, under Wilde, subsequently Sir Alfred, 
formed part of the column which joined Sir Colin 
Campbell at Lucknow. The Punjab squadrons were 
everywhere conspicuous for gallant work ; Probyn, Sir 
Dighton, and Watson, Major-General and C.B., both won 
the Victoria Cross, and the native officers and men were 



APPENDIX C 367 

worthy of their leaders. Younghusband was killed during 
the advance on Futtehghar. 

The 4th Punjab Infantry, at the assault of the Sikan- 
drabagh, Lucknow, vied with the 93rd Highlanders ; when 
the bugle sound gave the signal for the attack, an eye- 
witness wrote : " It v/as a glorious rush ; on went, in 
generous rivalry, the Sikh, Pathan, and Highlander ; 
Subadar Gokul Sing, of the Sikhs, mentioned by the 
Commander-in-Chief, waving his tulwar above his head, 
dashed on five yards in front of his men." 

In the succeeding operations at Lucknow, and through- 
out the campaign, the Punjab Force bore itself with con- 
spicuous glory ; many officers, English and native — in 
their gallant leading there was no distinction — fell, or were 
disabled. Wilde was sorely wounded, but recovered, and 
in after years distinguished himself on the frontier as the 
leader of the force which held him in honour. Sam Browne, 
too — now Lieutenant-General, K.C.B., and K.C.S.I. — per- 
formed a gallant feat of arms. He was in command of a 
column, 250 sabres of his regiment and 350 infantry 
hastily detached to save an important town in Rohilkhand 
from falling into the hands of the rebels. He found the 
enemy in a strong position on a mound, within a short 
distance of the threatened city, with a wide tract of inun- 
dated ground in front, which prevented attack, or even 
approach. At midnight, with an old woman and boy as 
guides, Captain Browne moved his force round the swamp, 
and with break of day was in the enemy's rear. He halted 
a breathing space to refresh men and horses, for the march 
had been heavy. The enemy caught sight of him, and at 
once turned three 9-pounders into action. Captain 
Browne, seeing a 9-pounder open with grape within 80 
yards of his flank, galloped down, sword in hand, on the 
gun, attended by his orderly only. A desperate hand-to- 
hand fight ensued — the gun was captured, but not without 
terrible wounds to the heroic leader, whose life was saved 
by a native officer, an old friend, badly wounded himself, 
devotedly rushing with two or three troopers to the rescue. 

Sir Samuel Browne's empty sleeve and the Victoria 



368 APPENDIX C 

Cross on his breast, tell of the struggle and honour of that 
day. The town was saved, the enemy crushed, and guns 
captured. Sir William Mansfield, then chief of the staff, 
not wont to be keen of praise, described the affair '' as very 
brilliant, the attack being made in the most soldierly 
manner and secundum artem." 

The Punjab Force has, since the time of which I have 
been speaking, and since Sir Neville Chamberlain, shattered 
with wounds, left the command, maintained its reputation 
for discipline and daring. Wilde and Keyes have both 
commanded the troops amongst whom they had served 
as subalterns. 

It was while serving as Brigadier-General, commanding 
the Frontier Force, that Roberts began his career of a 
General, and developed that capacity for command which 
won the love and honour of the soldiers he led over the 
Peiwar, at Kabul, and to Kandahar. 

In the troubles and triumphs in Afghanistan the Punjab 
Force bore an honourable share, with Sir Donald Stewart 
on his march from Kandahar, with Roberts at Sherpore, 
and in scenes too numerous to mention. In all these 
operations the Punjab troops were mingled with the army 
at large; but in any case the events are too recent for 
more than this general comment. 

The Frontier Force, by May 1857, had broadened 
into — 

Three Horse Field-Batteries, each with a commandant 

and subaltern, R.A. 
Two Mountain Batteries, each with a commandant and 

2 subalterns, R.A. 
Five regiments of cavalry. 
The corps of Guides. 
Four regiments of Sikh Infantry. 
Six regiments of Punjab Infantry. 

At which, with the exception that the horse field-batteries 
have been changed to mountain-guns and one garrison 




H 
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u 

-1 
w 



APPENDIX C 369 

company, and the addition of one Gurkha regiment, the 
Hazara, the force still stands. 

The armament has changed with the times, In the 
early period Brown Bess and the two-grooved rifle did not 
proudly compete with the, long matchlock and Jezail of 
the Afridi. The cavalry, under the order of their 
commanders, provided themselves with arms and horses, 
clothing and equipments ; the State supplies were confined 
to medicine and surgical instruments, and carriage for 
these only. In the Bengal Irregular Cavalry of that 
period, the trooper had a matchlock swung at his back. 
The trooper of the regular regiments bore a heavy 
carbine, provided by the State, fastened to his saddle. The 
Punjab Cavalry, following the example of Jacob's Sind 
Horse, were armed with a light percussion carbine bought 
by themselves, and carried on their persons, for which the 
State found ammunition ; all wore good swords, and in 
several regiments half of the men had lances. This order 
of things, which lasted for many years, has also changed, 
and the position of the trooper greatly improved ; the State 
now pays him better, and supplies him with an arm of 
precision free of cost. 

The horses of the Punjab Cavalry for a long time were 
chiefly imported from Afghanistan and Persia : in these 
countries there are tribes of dealers who, for generations, 
have been in the habit of bringing strings of horses into 
India; hardy, clever animals, bearing distinct marks of 
Arab parentage, well suited to the requirements of the 
trooper, and costing about ;^25 on the average. 

The Punjab Force, raised under the direct orders of the 
Governor-General, has never been, as regards the selection 
of officers for' its ranks, and promotion within, subject to 
the Commander-in-Chief. This, which doubtless seems 
anomalous to those not familiar with the working and 
constitution of the Government of India, has proved to 
possess many advantages, and the force has not suffered in 
discipline or prestige. The Viceroy has the power of 
selection from the armies of Bengal, Madras, and Bombay. 
Wilde and Keyes were both officers of Madras. 

2 A 



370 APPENDIX C 

The negotiations with the border tribes, and our 
relations and treaties with chiefs and rulers, rest with the 
' Viceroy, and are traditionally known to the Punjab 
Government, through whom work and mediation of varied 
kinds is conducted. The officers and men of the Force, 
moving from place to place on a border of 700 or 8cx) miles, 
are thus personally imbued with knowledge valuable and 
almost necessary for life and duty. The work which falls 
to them could hardly be done in its daily uncertainties by 
the interchange of regiments of the army at large, and by 
officers trained merely on the lines of military discipline, 
moving about under the routine of reliefs. 

Discipline and military science being maintained, 
experience has proved that the State enjoys special 
advantages from having this border Force at its disposal. 
On all expeditions, when serving with corps of the Line, 
the Punjab regiments are subject to the same rules and 
regulations as others, and no distinction exists between 
them. There is no jealousy ; for the officers are drawn 
from the army at large, and appointments to the Force are 
prizes which many seek. With the men, transfers and 
exchanges are also frequent. 

That great administrator, Sir Henry Lawrence, 
trusted, however, to other means than force for quieting 
and civilising the trans-Indus territory. 

As the first regiments settled down along the border, 
Sir Henry Lawrence impressed on medical officers the 
necessity of establishing dispensaries. All officers were 
specially instructed to seize every opportunity of making 
these institutions popular. The consequence of this was 
many a strange scene of war and confidence : men wounded 
on the hill-side fighting against us were brought to our 
pickets, and shouts came across the rocks for permission 
to bring their wounded to our hospital — even while the 
fight was going on. It so happened that a few days after 
our first occupation of Kohat, we had many casualties, and 
many wounded prisoners fell into our hands. Chloroform, 
then a new introduction in science, was used ; and the 
fame of its soothing power spread far and wide. For 



APPENDIX C 371 

months afterwards, men journeyed from long distances, 
merely to see the Doctor Sahib who sent people to sleep, 
and then did what he liked with them without giving pain. 

The medical officers of the force, upon whose tact and 
capacity the success of the civilising influence of medicine 
and surgery depended, were men selected for their energy 
and ability ; and well and broadly did they lay the founda- 
tion of trust in the Englishman's skill and kindliness. As 
the Chief Commissioner subsequently wrote to Lord 
Dalhousie, " the presence of such men tends to strengthen 
our rule." In some cases, the English doctor so won the 
gratitude of the faithless Afghan that his life would have 
been safe and his wants attended to, where a dog, outside 
the camp, would have had no chance. 

Vaccination all along the border was another source 
of power to us. Kafilas from distant countries coming 
through the passes with their horses, camels, and 
merchandise, their women and children, were vaccinated 
by hundreds every year : they too carried the tale of the 
Englishman's power far and wide; and Hakims from 
Kabul and Kandahar came down to be instructed in the 
Englishman's art of escape from the sore disease, which 
carried disfigurement and death to so many of their 
countrymen. 

Muhammadan fanaticism, often nurtured to madness 
by men who, after the commission of crime, have sought 
refuge from punishment and recognition by their fellows 
in the solitude of caves and rocks, at the sources of rivers, 
has many disciples scattered about along the border in 
places rarely visited by others than thoSe who seek an 
asylum. These fanatics from time to time come out, 
sometimes at the bidding of others, sometimes of their 
own accord, deliberately to murder ; generally the selection 
falls on some prominent man who is not of the Moslem 
faith. This to the fanatic is martyrdom. " I have 
destroyed the infidel ; do with me what you will." So 
spake the man who calmly stabbed to death, at Peshawar 
in 1853, the most famous frontier Englishman of his time 
Colonel Mackeson, whose epitaph, written by the great 



372 APPENDIX C 

Governor-General, the Marquis of Dalhousie, is sculptured 
on a monument facing the Khyber : " He was the beau 
ideal of a soldier : cool to conceive, brave to dare, and 
strong to do. The Indian Army was proud of his presence 
in its ranks. The reputation of Colonel Mackeson is 
known to and honoured by all. His value as a political 
servant of the State is known to none better than to the 
Governor-General himself, who in a difficult and eventful 
time had cause to mark his great ability. 

"The loss of Colonel Mackeson's life would have 
dimmed a victory. To lose him thus by the hand of a 
foul assassin is a misfortune of the heaviest gloom for the 
Government, which counted him among its bravest and its 
best." 

Mackeson's was a noble nature : death would have 
been proudly met by him for such an epitaph by such a 
hand. 

Major Adams, an officer of distinction, conspicuous 
at Peshawar and in Hazara as a Political officer (he was 
trained in the Guides), was signalled out by a fanatic and 
openly cut down. 

Mecham, a gallant young soldier of artillery, who had 
served in many fields with honour, was another victim of 
the assassin on that border. 

Healy, Came, Tapp, good servants of the State, though 
little known to the outside world, met death in the same 
foul way, doing their duty. 

Godby, of the Guides, and the grand John Nicholson, 
both were attacked by fanatics. Godby escaped, through 
the devotion of his men, with a ghastly wound. Nicholson 
freed himself, and thus describes the scene : — 

" I was standing at the gate of my garden with Sladen 
and Cadell (both General Officers now), and four or five 
native official attendants, when a man with a drawn sword 
rushed suddenly up and called out for me. I was wearing 
a long fur pelisse of native make, which prevented his 
recognising me at first ; this gave time for the only native 
attendant who had a sword to get between us, to whom he 
cried out contemptuously to stand aside, saying he had 



APPENDIX C 373 

come to kill me, and did not want to hurt a common 
soldier. The relief sentry for the front of my house 
happening to pass opportunely at this moment, I snatched 
his musket, and, presenting it at the would-be assassin, 
told him I would fire if he did not put down his sword and 
surrender. He replied, ' Either you or I must die ' ; so I 
had no alternative, and shot him through the heart, the 
ball passing through a religious book which he had tied on 
his chest as a charm. 

" The poor wretch was religiously mad ; he had dis- 
posed of his property in charity the day before he set out 
for Bunnoo ; his religious instructor here has disappeared 
mysteriously, and got into the hills. 

" My police orderly replied to his cry for my blood, 
'All our names are Nikhul Seyn here,' and I think would 
have got the better of him had I not interfered ; but I 
could not allow the man to risk his life when I had such a 
sure weapon as a loaded musket and bayonet in my 
hand." 



I think I did well to speak of the frontier on which 
these foul scenes occurred as a " troubled frontier." They 
are now scenes of the past ; resolute rule and the un- 
daunted courage of Englishmen have stamped out the 
assassin, and put bounds even to Muhammadan fana- 
ticism. 



Sir H. D. Daly. — There is one remark I should like to 
make, Mr Chairman. The other day it chanced that I 
read one of the last letters which the Duke of Wellington 
wrote from India. It was a letter to Major Shaw, who 
was the Secretary to the Government, and he said, speak- 
ing of returning to Europe and his anxiety to do so : "I 
have long felt that services in this country, whatever they 
may be, are not recognised or rewarded on the same scale 
as services rendered in any other part of the world." I 
believe that is the same to this day. I have spoken to you 
of men whose names are known on that border of which I 
have been speaking, whose names are known throughout 
India and throughout the Indian army as household 
words ; yet here, barring the great ones, the Lawrences, 
the Napiers, and perhaps probably Neville Chamberlain, 



374 APPENDIX C 

they fall upon the English public coldly and with a chill. 
Services, as the Duke wrote when Sir Arthur Wellesley in 
1805, services in that country are not recognised and 
rewarded on the scale in which they are in any other part 
of the world. 













I'^^:^;?')''^"!;^ - MJk^^< 






Xondon: Jolin Murray^. 



Stanfords Ce^l'/.'-hinb^IondoTV 



INDEX 



Abyssian Expedition, 275 note 

Adams, Major, murdered, 372 

Aden, 2, 96 

Agnew, Vans, accompanies Sardar 
Khan Singh to Multan, 16 ; at- 
tacked and wounded, 17 ; mur- 
dered, 18, 352 ; burial, 52 

Agra, 106, 126, 158 ; the Taj, 126 

Ahmedabad, capture of, 8 

Aitchison, Sir Charles, 306 

Ajaigarh, Fort of, 280 

Ajmer, foundation of Mayo College 
at, 307 

Ajudhya, temples of, 220 

Ajun Khan, 92 

Akram Khan, 57 note, 83 

Alawi-ke-Serai, 139 

Albergo, 98 

Alexandria, 3, 97 

All Baba, Twenty-one Days in 
India, 329 

Allahaba;d, 109, 158 

AUard, 68 ; his career, 68 note 

Alumbagh, 202 

Amethi, 199, 234 

Amir Khan, a Pathan adventurer, 
283 

Anderson, W., 6 ; joins Sir Charles 
Napier's staff in Sind, 6 ; at 
Karachi, 8 ; his sketch of the 
brothers Lawrence, 12 ; accom- 
panies Sardar Khan Singh to 
Multan, 16 ; attacked and 
wounded, 17 ; murdered, 18, 352 ; 
burial, 52 

Anderson, Dr, 192 ; his services in 
the action of Nawabgunge, 216 
note 

8T6 



Anderson, Lieut. R. B., Brigade- 
Major of Hodson's Horse, 193 
note 

Anson, General, Commander-in- 
Chief, 137 ; his death, 142 

Army, reorganization, 221 ; retire- 
ment scheme, 254 

Atrowlea, 231 

Attock, 75, 130, 132 

Avitabile, Governor of Peshawar, 68 

Ayrton, Lieut., 363 

Azimgarh, 231 

Badli-ki-Serai, action of, 140, 143 

Bairam Ghit, 239 

Baker, Lieut., adjutant of Hodson's 

Horse, 197 ; at the action of 

Nawabgunge, 216 note 
Bakrialla, 137 

Baksh, Salar, his fidelity, 241 
Bala Rao, 243, 244 
Ballinasloe, 99 
Banks, Major, 123 
Bannerman, Colonel P. W., 311, 

327, 345 

Bannu, 15 

Bansee, 242 

Barbor, Mr, murdered, 240 

Bareilly, 236 

Barnard, Major-General Sir H., on 
the arrival of the Guides at Delhi, 
141 ; Commander-in-Chief, 142 ; 
his death, 143, 154 ; attack of 
cholera, 1 54 ; character, 1 54 

Barr, Colonel Sir David, Resident 
at Hyderabad, 327 ; tribute to 
the memory of Sir H. Daly, 333, 
344-348 



376 



INDEX 



Bas, Mr Le, 140 

Basle, 98 

BateSj Mr Charles, 333 

Battye, Quentin, 131, 137 ; mortally 

wounded, 142, 366 
Bax, Mr, 117, 240 
Bayley, Lieut., 152 
Bayley, Mr C. S., his tribute to the 

memory of Sir H. Daly, 333, 342- 

344 
Bayonne, action near, 2 
Beatrice, Princess, 335 
Beatson, Colonel W. F., loi ; raises 

the 39th Central India Horse, 

253 note 
B&umont, Surgeon-Major T., 326 
Bebiapur House, 111, igi 
Becher, Quarter-Master-General, 

wounded at Delhi, 148 
Behar, 221 
Beiswallah, 199 
Bellagio, 98 
Benares, 109 
Beni Madhu, fort of, 236 
Bennett, Colour - Sergeant J., 

planted the British Standard on 

the breach of Multan, 5 1 note 
Bentinck, Lord William, 308 
Berkeley, General J. C, 327, 345 
Bhawalpur, Nawab of, 18 
Bhil tribes, 280 
Bhilsa, 282 
Bhinga, 245 
Bhingoh, 199 
Bhitoor, 174 
Bhopal, construction of roads in, 

297 ; sub-agency at, 303 
Bhopal, Secunder Begam of, her 

loyalty, 294 ; honours conferred, 

314, 320 ; construction of rail- 
ways, 322 
Bhugwan Singh, 118 note 
Bigah, meaning of the term, 305 
Bijnour, 208 
Bismarck, H., 335 
Biswah River, 238 
Biswarrah, 236 
Bitore, 166 
Blair, 256 
Blood, Major, 59 
Blunt, Charlie, 154, 191 
Boileau, Mr Charles, murdered, 

117, n8 ; character, 119 
Bombay, 4, 96, 102 



Bootwal, 246 

Boran, 132 

Borthwick, Major, his charge of 

Ratlam, 340 
Bradford, Colonel Sir Edward, 256, 

345 ; Political Agent at Goona, 

327 
Brown, Captain, 20 
Browne, General Sir Samuel J., 

309, 350 ; his feat of arms at 

Lucknow, 367 
Buland Khel, 88 
Bulrampur, 249 

Bulrampur, Raja of, his loyalty, 242 
Bundelkhand, 280 ; character of 

the country, 281 ; famine, 286, 

287 ; result of Dr Stratton's 

work as Political Agent, 318 ; 

condition, 321 
Bunkassia, 238 
Bunnoa, 363 
Burnes, Sir A., 4 note 
Burnes, his escape from Sitapur, 

209 
Butt, Captain, 363 
Byram Ghit, 117 note, 249 

Cabool, outbreak at, 4 note 

Cadell, Colonel A., 327 

Cadell, Colonel T., 345 

Cadell, General A., 345 

Cairo, 3 

Calcutta, 108 ; Chapter of the Star 
of India, held at, 314 

Caldecott, Lieut.-Col. R., 326 

Caldecott, Dr, 345 

Campbell, Sir Colin, his inspection 
of the 1st Punjab Cavalry, 72 ; 
operations against the Moh- 
mands, 89 ; headquarters at 
Bebiapur House, 1 1 1 note; on re- 
inforcements, 156 ; Commander- 
in-Chief, 173; wounded, 177; 
his testimony on Sir H. Daly, 
204; peerage conferred, 217 ; his 
death, 257 ; character, 258-260 

Canning, Lord, 153 ; his delay in 
sending troops to Lucknow, 182 ; 
on the abolition of the appoint- 
ment ofcommandantof Hodson's 
Horse, 252 

Capon, Colonel, 39 

Carleton, Major, 214 

Carlyle's Reminiscences, 100 note 



INDEX 



377 



Carne assassinated, 372 

Carthew, Mr, 210 

Case, Colonel and Mrs, 121 

Cashmere, Valley of, 6 note 

Cawnpore, no, 126, 191 ; outrages 
at, 144 

Chacha, 23 

Chambal River, 280 

Chamberlain, Crawford, 145 ; in 
command of the troops at 
Gwalior, 265 

Chamberlain, Field - Marshal Sir 
Neville, 104 ; his character, 132, 
136, 159; in command of the 
Movable Column, 135 ; at Delhi, 
151 ; his decision to defer the 
assault on Delhi, 157 ; wounded, 
158, 364, 366 ; appearance, 159 ; 
his view of India under the rule 
of Sir J. Lawrence, 205 note; 
qualifications as a soldier, 207 ; 
on the character of Sir H. Daly, 
337 ; in command of the expedi- 
tion against the Waziris, 359 ; 
against Umbeyla, 364 

Charkhari, State of, 286, 294 

Chat^ar Singh, 69 ; governor of 
Hazara, 19 ; enters Peshawar, 36 

Chenab, 18, 24, 130, 138 

Chesney, 155 note 

Cheyne, Colonel, at the siege of 
Multan, 49 

Chhattarpur, 286 

Chillian wallah, battle of, 53 

China, troops from, 161 

Chinhat, 121 note, 213 

Chloroform, influence of, 370 

Cholera, outbreaks of, 12, 140 

Christian, Mr and Mrs, 122 

Chunderpur, 244 

ClanbanifTe, I 

Clapcott, 43 

Clarendon, Lord, loi 

Clark, Mr Longueville, killed at 
Byram Gh4t, 117 

Clarke, Lieut., 118 note 

Clerke, Sir George, 273 

Clifford, Dr, 192 

Clyde, Lord, his death, 257 

Coape, Miss, 335 

Coke, General Sir John, raises the 
1st Punjab Infantry, 73, 351 ; at 
Kohat, 74 ; at the siege of Delhi, 
151, 154; wounded, 169; his 



quarters in the Jama Masjid, 

180 
Colaba, 103 
Cologne, 99 
Colvin, Mr, Lieutenant-Governor of 

the North- West, 241 
Como, 98 
Connaught, i 

Cortlandt, General, 18 ; his appear- 
ance, 35 ; popularity with his 

men, 35 ; at Hansi, 172 
Cotton, Brigadier, 133 
Cotton, Major-General Sir Sydney, 

162 note J his reception of the 

Guides at Peshawar, 183 
Courtenay, 104 
Cox, Dr, 116 
Cranborne, Lord, 273 
Crimean War, loi 
Gumming, Colonel, his departure 

from Karachi, 11 ; character, 11 
Cunningham, General Sir A., Head 

of the Archaeological Department 

of India, 302 note 
Currie, Sir Frederick, Resident at 

Lahore, 14 
Curzon, Lord, Persia, 116 twte 

Dafadar or sergeant, 68 

D4k ghari, travelling by, 108 

Dalhotisie, Lord, Governor- General, 
81 ; his wish to serve Sir H. 
Daly, 103 ; proclamation, 352 

Daliabad, 198 

Daly, Francis Dermot, i ; serves in 
the Peninsular War, r ; wounded, 
2 ; at the siege and battle of 
Plattsburg, 2 ; siege and capture 
of Ghazni, 2 

Daly, Francis Hugh, 2 

Daly, George, 345 

Daly, Sir Henry Dermot, i ; his 
birth, I ; at Newport, 2 ; joins 
the 1st Bombay European Fusi- 
liers at Aden, 2 ; sketch of his 
early life, 2 ; journey to Bombay, 
3, 4 ; at Poona, 4 ; on the out- 
break at Cabool, 4 note; appointed 
Adjutant of an Irregular Infantry 
Regiment at Kaira, 5 ; his friends, 
6 ; attacks of fever, 7, 91, 95, 
248 ; resigns appointment, 7 ; 
return to England, 7, 97-99> 333 5 
joins his regiment, 7 ; his journal, 
2 A 2 



378 



INDEX 



9 ; knowledge of literature, lo ; 
languages, lo ; his respect for 
Sir Charles Napier, lo ; on the 
departure of Colonel Gumming, 
II ; joins the expedition to 
Multan, 20; voyage up the 
Indus, 20-24 ) appointed Assist- 
ant Field Engineer, 25 ; in the 
trenches, 25 ; operations against 
Mulraj, 26-32 ; at the siege of 
Multan, 26-32, 37-52 ; retreat, 
34 ; rejoins his regiment, 37 ; 
appointed Adjutant, 37 ; on the 
appointment of Sir C. Napier 
to be Commander-in-Chief, 57 ; 
on the offer of two appointments, 
58-61 ; nominated to the com- 
mand of the 1st Cavalry Regi- 
ment, 61, 351 ; account of the 
corps, 63-66 ; on the character 
of his native officers, 66-72 ; at 
Kohat, 74, 79, 86 ; Peshawar, 
75 ; Khushalgarh, 82 ; visit to 
Murree, 83-87 ; ride to Rawal 
Pindi, 83-85 ; impressions of the 
Pir Panjal range, 86 ; on the 
expedition to Miranzai, 88 ; in- 
valided home, 94, 250, 277 ; at 
Bombay, 96 ; Aden, 96 ; mar- 
riage, 97 ; at Shanhlin, 100 ; 
return to India, 102 ; volunteers 
for the Crimea, 103-105 ; sum- 
moned to Agra, 106; birth of 
his second son, 106 ; in com- 
mand of the 1st Oudh Irregular 
Cavalry, 108 ; selecting the men, 
112; at Sekrora, 114; on 'the 
murder of Boileau, 118 ; pursuit 
of Fazl Ali, 119; accepts the 
command of the Guides, 120 ; 
visit to Sir H. Lawrence, 121 ; 
leaves Lucknow, 125 ; at Agra, 
126 ; Delhi, 127 ; journey from 
Umballa to Lahore, 129 ; joins 
the Guides, 131 ; preparations 
for checking the Mutiny, 133-136 j 
march to Delhi, 137-141 ; at the 
siege, 141-179; wounded, 142, 
147, 148 ; at the action of 
Nawabgunge, 147 ; recom- 
mended for the V.C, 149 ; Brevet 
Lieut.-Colonel, 150 note; on the 
death of Sir H. Lawrence, 168 ; 
on the fall of Delhi, 181 ; granted 



leave to Simla, 181, 186 ; on 
Lord Canning's policy, 182 ; 
admiration for Sir H. Lawrence's 
character, 183 ; departure of his 
wife and children, 186 ; on the 
neglect of the Government, 188, 
205 ; declines appointment of 
Deputy Commissioner of Kohat, 
189; undergoes an operation, 
189 ; journey to Lucknow, 190, 
191; Brevet-MajorandC.B., 191; 
assuming command of Hodson's 
Horse, 192 ; memorandum on 
the corps, 192-200 ; his treat- 
ment of the natives, 199, 337 ; 
on the condition of Lucknow 
after the capture, 200 ; at 
Moosabagh, 202 ; on Captain 
Hearsay's account of the mutinies 
in Oudh, 209-211 ; at the action 
of Nawabgunge, 213-216 ; march 
to Fyzabad, 218-220 ; his views 
on the reconstitution of the army, 
222 ; on the future of the officers 
of the East India Company, 
223-228, 231 ; passage of the 
Goomtee, 228 ; at the engage- 
ment on the Khandoo River, 
232 ; at Amethie, 234 ; passage 
of the Gogra, 237 ; at Bunkassia, 
238 ; his report on charges for 
carbines, 241 ; capture of the 
guns in the Terai, 244 ; at the 
fight near Talsipur, 246 ; in 
command of the Central India 
Horse, 253 ; at Goona, 254 ; in 
political charge of the Western 
Malwa Agency, 256 ; promoted 
Colonel, 260 ; recommended for 
the good service pension, 260 ; 
appointed Political Agent at 
Gwalior, 264 ; relations with 
Scindia, 267, 277, 293; his report 
on the administration of Gwalior, 
268-272, 339-341 ; views on the 
government of Native States, 
272-274 ; on the publication of 
his report, 275 ; Agent to the 
Governor-General, 277 ; on the 
condition of Malwa, 283, 295 ; 
reports on the fantine, 285-287 ; 
on the position of Chiefs, 290 ; 
his system of administration, 
291-295 ; on the construction of 



INDEX 



379 



railways, 296-298, 321 ; relations 
with the Maharaja of Rewa, 
299-302 ; on the opium trade of 
Malwa, 303-306, 324 ; establishes 
sub-agencies, 303 ; his interest 
in education, 307, 323 ; on the 
visit of the Prince of Wales, to 
Gwalior and Indore, 309-314 ; 
on the Imperial Assemblage, 
314-316; result of Dr Stratton's 
work in Bundelkhand, 317-319 ; 
his review on the changes in ten 
years, 319-325 ; officers serving 
under him, 326-328; relations 
with them, 328 ; method of 
settling matters, 328 ; dislike of 
pomp and show, 329 ; promo- 
tions, 330 ; K.C.B., 330 ; death 
of his wife, 330 ; life at Indore, 
331 ; popularity, 331, 337 ; de- 
parture from India, 331 ; CLE., 

331 ; tributes to his memory, 

332 ; bust unveiled, 333, 342 ; 
Master of the Isle of Wight 
Foxhounds, 333 ; his lecture on 
"The Punjab Frontier Force," 
334, 350-374; political views, 
334 ; contests Dundee, 334 ; 
General, 335 ; created a G.C.B., 
335 ; at Osborne, 335 ; second 
marriage, 335 ; accident and 
death, 336 ; character, 336 ; 
funeral, 337 

Daly, Mrs, birth of her second son, 
108 ; journey to Lucknow, 108- 
III; on the gaieties at Sekrora, 
117 ; the murder of Boileau, 118 
note; on their visit to Sir H. 
Lawrence, 121 ; her impressions 
of the Taj at Agra, 126 ; at 
Kasauli, 127 ; journey to Multan, 
186 ; death, 330 

"Daly College, The," erection at 
Indore, 332, 346 

Daly's Grove, i, 99 

Darria Khan, 198 

Delama, 236 

Delhi, 127 ; outbreak of the mutiny, 
131 ; siege, 141-179. 365 ; fall, 
144, 179; proposed scheme of 
attack on, 155 ; number of killed 
and wounded, 170; arrival of 
the siege train, 171, 174 ; plan of 
assault, 174-176 ; Imperial As- 



semblage at, 314, 320 ; Corona- 
tion Darbar, 316 

Delhi, The Siege of, by One Who 
Served There, extract from, 141 

Dera Ghazi Khan, 15 ; battle of, 18 

Dera Ismael Khan, 15, 95 

Devil's Bridge, 98 

Dewas, 256 

Dhar, 283, 306 ; sub-agency at, 303 

Dhar, Raja of, honour conferred, 
316 ; his construction of road, 323 

Dickson, Miss, 121 

Dilawar Khan, joins the Guides, 

354 

Dilkusha Park, 1 10 ; Palace, 1 10 

Disbrowe, 42 

Doalpur, 232 

Doon, 130 

Dost Muhammad Khan, Amir, 
57 note; at Peshawar, 115 ; con- 
ference with John Lawrence, 115 

Dufferin, Lord, at the opening of 
, the Indore Daly College, 332 

Dumichand, 193 

Dundas, Colonel the Hon. H., 37 ; 
in command of the force against 
Multan, 38 ; his character as a 
soldier, 72 

Dundee elections, 334 

Dunlop, Mr Stirling, 335 

Durriabad, 219 

EpWARDES, Colonel Sir Herbert, 
his operations against Mulraj, 
18 ; A Year on the Punjab 
Frontier, 18 note, 52 note; his 
camp, 24 ; appearance, 35, 122 ; 
at Lucknow, 122 ; character, 125, 
137) 189 ; at Lahore, 130 ; influ- 
ence with the Lawrences, 130 ; 
on the outbreak of Mutiny, 131 ; 
his wit and humour, 135, 137; 
tact, 137 ; on the dday in attack- 
ing Delhi, 162 ; on reinforce- 
ments, 164 

EUenbOrough, Lord, 6 note 

Elmslie, G. R., Lumsden of the 
Guides, 334 note 

Elphinstone, Mountstuart,his report 
on the Native States, 283 

Esaghar, 282, 295 

Fagan shot at the siege of Delhi, 
176 



380 



INDEX 



Fairy, the, loi 
Fanaticism, victims of, 37 1 
Fateh Ali Shah, 195, 197 
Fattehganj, 84 
Fattehghur, 209 
Fattehpur, victory at, 161 
Fayrer, Mr, murdered, 240 
Fazl Ali, 117; murders Boileau, 

118 ; killed, 124 
Ferozepore, 158 
Ferozpur, British army assembled 

at, S3 

Filose, Major Sir Michael, 309 

Forbes, Captain H., 61 ; his depar- 
ture, 82 ; in command of the 
1st Oudh Irregular Cavalry, 120 
note J at Sekrora, 240 

Fraser, Colonel E. A., 345 

Fraser, Lieut, the Hon. J., wounded 
at the action of Nawabgunge, 
215 note 

Fridge, Captain Hugh, 9 

Futteh Khan, 92 

Futtehghar, advance on, 367 

Fyzabad, 198, 218, 220, 236 

Gale, Major, 123 ; killed at 

Bareilly, 236 
Ganges, no 
Ganpat Ras Kharke, minister of 

Gwalior, honours conferred, 314 
Garrock, General, 364 
Gee, joins Hodson's Horse, 199 ; 

attack of fever and death, 199 
Gerard, General Sir Montagu, in 

command of the Central India 

Horse, 327 
Germany, Emperor of, 335 
Ghazni, siege and capture, 2 
Ghulam Mohi-ud-din, 113, 119 

note J killed, 175 
Gibralter, first impressions of, 3 
Gilbert, General, 54 
Godby, attacked by a fanatic, 372 
Gogaira, 186 
Gogra, 114, 199, 220,231 ; passage 

of the, 237 
Goldney, Colonel, 123 
Gonda, 117, 249 
Gonda, Raja of, 238 
Goolerie, 119 
Goomtee, in, 123, 199; passage 

of the, 228 
Goona, 254 ; climate, 255 



Gordon, Major, 20 ; his death, 43 

Goruckpore, 210, 221 

St Gothard, 98 

Gough, Captain Hugh, 193, 194 

Gough, Lord, Commander-in-Chief, 
53 ; his victory of Ramnugger, 
53 ; losses at the battle of 
Chillianwallah, 53 

Graham, Sergeant James, 9, 51 

Grant, 6 

Grant, Sir Hope, at the siege of 
Delhi, 147; recommends Daly for 
the V.C., 149, 150 ; his character, 
212 ; at the action of Nawab- 
gunge, 213 

Grant, Sir Patrick, 164 

Greathed, Welby, his scheme for an 
attack on Delhi, 155 ; wounded, 
178 

Greene, loi 

Greene, Mrs, murdered, 117, 210 

Greenhow, Surgeon, 108 

Griffin, Sir Lepel, Ranjit Singh, 
extract from, 70 notej Political 
Agent of Gwalior, 331 

Gubbins, Mrs, 124 

Guides, the, their march to Delhi, 
137-141 J in action, 142 ; depar- 
ture, 183 ; reception at Peshawar, 
183 ; number of killed and 
wounded, 184 ; promotions, 184 ; 
organisation, 353 ; headquarters, 

355 

Gujerat, 54 

Gujerat, battle of, 352 

Gulab Singh, "the Talleyrand of 
the East," 160; his career, 160 note 

Gurdial, 193 

" Guzerati sickness," form of, 257 

Gwalior, 256 ; explosion at, 205 ; 
Political Agency of, 264 ; report 
on the administration, 268-272, 
275 ; climate, 281 ; droughts, 
281 ; number of deaths from 
famine, 287 

Hagart, Brigadier, 215 note 
Hamilton, Major, 215 note 
Hansi, 172 
Hardinge, Lord, loi 
Havelock-AUan, Sir Henry, 245 
Havelock, General, at Cawnpore, 
166 ; defeats the rebels at Luck- 
now, 170 



INDEX 



381 



Hawes, 131, 137 ; wounded, 142 

Hayes, Captain, 123 ; murdered, 
240 

Hazara, 19, 352 

Hazrut Mir Khan, Kamdar of 
Jaora, 288 ; C.S.I, conferred, 316 

Healy assassinated, 372 

Hearsay, Captain, his account of 
the mutinies in Oudh, 209-211 

Heer, 242 

Hieme, Ensign, 9 

Hills, Lieutenant, at the siege of 
Delhi, 147 ; on Daly's charge, 
150; wins the V.C, 156 note; 
at the action of Nawabgunge, 
197, 215 note 

Hindustanis, their character as 
soldiers, 66 

Hitchcock, 40 

Hodson, in command of the Guides, 
67, 150; wounded at Lucknow, 
191 ; death, 191 ; character, 192 

"Hodson's Horse," notes and 
memoranda on, 192-200 ; nick- 
name of the "Plungers," 194; 
at the attack on Nawabgunge, 
196 ; appointment of Com- 
mandant abolished, 252 

Hodgson, Brigadier, in command 
of the Punjab Irregular Force, 
80 ; his character, 80 ; report 
on the defence of the frontier, 
80 ; review of the ist Punjab 
Cavalry, 80 

Holkar, Maharaja, 283 ; his 
revenues, 284 ; conquest of, 284 ; 
contribution to railway construc- 
tion, 297, 321 ; reception of the 
Prince of Wales, 312 ; honours 
conferred, 315 ; his meeting with 
Maharaja Sciftdia, 330 note; 
death, 331 note 

Holmes-Scott, 130 

Hope-Johnstone, Adjutant Lieut., 
108 

Horner, Major, 49 

Horsford, Brigadier, 198 ; in com- 
mand at Fyzabad, 219 ; at the 
fight near Talsipur, 246 

Howard, 96 

Howrah, 108 

Hughes, General Sir W., 89, 94 ; 
in command of Hodson's Horse, 
250 



Hughes, Miss, loi 

Hurree or Hari Singh Nalwa, 
"the Murat of the Khalsa," 70 ; 
death at Jamrud, 70 note 

Hussain Ali, Jamadar, 216 note 

Hutchinson, Colonel A. R., Politi- 
cal Agent at Gwalior, 327 

Hutchinson, Captain G., Narrative 
of the Mutinies in Oudh, 209 note 

Hyderabad, 20, 95 

Idgah, meaning of the word, 17 

Ijara, meaning of the word, 16 note 

Imamuddin, Sheikh, 194 

Impey, Colonel E., Political Agent 
at Gwalior, 327 

India, incorporation of the Punjab, 
57 ; of Oudh, 107 ; the Central 
India Horse, 253 ; views on the 
government of the Native States, 
272-274 ; division of, 278 ; 
number of agencies, 278 ; census, 
279 ; famine, 279, 284 ; character- 
istics, 281 ; railway construction, 
281, 296-298, 346; roads, 282; 
education, 282, 307, 323, 346 ; 
administration of justice, 282 ; 
reports on the famine, 285-287 ; 
position of the Chiefs, 290 ; visit 
of the Prince of Wales, 308 ; 
Imperial Assemblage, 314-316; 
Native Chiefs, relations with Sir 
H. Daly, 337 ; " correspondence 
regarding the comparative merits 
of British and Native Adminis- 
tration in," 339-341 ; influence of 
medical officers, 370; vaccina- 
tion, 371 ; fanaticism, 371 

Indore, 256 ; construction of rail- 
ways in, 296 ; opium trade, 325 ; 
erection of "The Daly College," 
332, 346 

Indus, 15, 82 ; voyage up the, 20-24 

Indus, valley of the, 352 

Inglis, Major-General Sir John, 
123 ; in command at Cawnpore, 
191 

Ingraon, 138 

Ishmael Khan, 198 

Jackson, his skirmish at Mutta, 

89 
Jackson, Mr, Chief Commissioner, 

117 



382 



INDEX 



Jackson, Miss, in the mutinies in 

Oudh, 2IO 
Jagdespur, 199, 235, 236 
Jai Singh, Resaldar, 194 ; his 

career, 68 ; escorts Mrs Lawrence, 

69 ; his character, 70 
Jalalabad, 76 
James, 162, 164 
Jan Fishan Khan, 195 
Jani-ki-Sang, 132 
Jaora, State of, 256 ; under British 

protection, 340 
Jehan, Shah, tomb of, 126 
Jehan, Shah, Begam, her loyalty, 

295 ; construction of roads, 297 
"Jehazpur Legion," proposals for 

the formation, 102 
Jemadar or Lieutenant, 66 note 
Jewan Singh, Sikh, 166, 167 
Jhalawar, 256 
Jhang, 15 

Jhelum, IS, 54, 130, 138, 190 
J-ohnson, Captain W. T., 108 
Johnstone, General, 145 
Jones, John, his relief of Shahje- 

hanpur, 208 
Jowahir Singh, 10 note, 166, 167, 

1 75 
JuUundhur Mutiny, 145 
Jumna, 109 
Jumrood, 70 
Jutogh, 186 

Kabul, climate, ^^ 

Kaira, 5 

Kalingar, Fort of, 280 

Kamokee, 138 

Kandahar, mission to, 116 

Kani Goram, advance on, 362 

Karachi, 8, 95, 108 

Karim Khan, 68 

Karnal, 140, 190 

Kasauli, 127 ; Lawrence Asylum at, 
127 

Kashmir range, 76 ; climate, 77 

Kaye, his History of the Sepoy War, 
iiji note, 139 note, 144 note, 145 
note, 155 note, 156 note, 158 note, 
162 note, 177 note, 208 note, 209 
note; Life of Sir John Malcolm, 
227 note 

Keane, Lord, 2 

Keegan, Lieut.-Colonel D., 326 

Kelly, Colonel, at Atrowlea, 230 



Kemble, Fanny, A Vear of Con- 
solation, 78 

Kennedy, Major, 87 note, 131 ; 
wounded, 142 

Keyes, Sir Charles, 363 

Khandoo Nadi, 199 ; River, engage- 
ment on the, 232 

Khandwa, 281 

Kharak Island, 116 

Khilji, Muhammad, King of Mandu, 
326 note 

Khojah, Muhammad, 69 

" Khooni Burj," Bastion, 43 ; attack 
on, 44 

Khushalgarh, 82 

Khyber Pass, 75, 76 

Khyreeghur, Raja of, 210 

Kineyree, battle of, 18 

King, 42 

Kirkee, i, 4 

Kirkpatrick, Achilles, 100 note 

Kirkpatrick, James, 100 note 

Kirkpatrick, Kitty, 100 note 

Kirkpatrick,Susan, her marriage,99 

Kirkpatrick, Colonel Wm., 99 note 

Kishengunge evacuated, 178 

Koel ka Jungal, 250 

Kohat, 36, 73, 79, 86 

Koria, 138 

Kurram River, 88 

Kussiole, 199 

Lahore, 127, 129, 138, 190 

Lake, Lieutenant, 19, 35 ; his 
character, 36 

Larsauli, 141 

Lauderdale, Earl of, 327, 345. See 
Maitland 

Lawrence, Sir George, Political 
Agent on the North- West Fron- 
tier, 12 note; Forty-Three Years 
in India, 14, 69 note, 328 note; 
retires to Kohat, 36; made 
prisoner, 37, 69 ; released, 54 ; 
his inspection of the ist Punjab 
Cavalry, 72 

Lawrence, Sir Henry, Resident at 
Lahore, 12, 352 ; his appearance 
and character, 12 ; Adventures 
of an Officer in the service of 
Ranjeet Singh, 13 note, 283 
note; on sick leave, 14 ; joins 
the army at Multan, 53 ; on the 
casualties of the Sikh battles, 57 



INDEX 



383 



note; his letter to Lieut. Daly, 
6 1 ; appointed President of a 
Board for the government of 
Punjab, 63 ; organises a short 
frontier tour, 91 ; departure from 
India, 100; at Lucknow, u6, 
121 ; his invitation to the Dalys, 
l2o; method of entertaining, 
121; portrait, 124; affection for 
his wife, 124 ; character, 125 ; 
his appreciation of Daly, 125 
note; founds Asylum at Kasauli, 
128 ; subscriptions to charities, 
128 ; death, 167, 168 ; methods 
of civilising the natives, 370 

Lawrence, Sir John, Commissioner 
of the Jalandar Division, 12 note; 
his character, 13, 129 ; officiates 
as Resident at Lahore, 14 ; re- 
ceives a visit from Mulraj, 15 ; 
conference with Dost Muham- 
mad, 115; at Lahore, 129; his 
Council on the outbreak of 
Mutiny, 133; messages to the 
Commander-in-Chief, 134 ; on 
the fighting at Delhi, 144 ; on 
reinforcements, 152, 163, 165 ; 
on the plan of assault on Delhi, 
179 ; disaflfection of tribes, 
180 ; as Governor-General, 205 

Lawrence, Mrs, escorted to the 
Sikh camp, 69 

Leith, at the siege of Multan, 41, 
45 ; wounded, 46 

Lerwah, 248 

Lloyd, Captain, 34 

Longdon, Captain, 25 

Loodianah, 158 

Lucerne, 98 

Lucknow, no, 190; relief of, 181 ; 
condition after the capture, 200 ; 
siege, 367 

Ludhiana, 139, 190 

Lugano, 98 

Lumsden, Major-General Sir H. B., 
his mission to Kandahar, 116, 
120; probable return, 124; his 
method of raising the Guides, 
353-355 ; headquarters, 355 ; 
relations with his men, 355 

Lumsden, killed, 366 

Lumsden, Sir P. S., Lumsden of the 
Guides, 334 note 

Lytton, Lord, 319 



Macaulay, Lord, his description 

of Fyzabad, 220 
Macdowell, second in command of 

Hodson's Horse, 194 
Mackay, Mr Aberigh, Principal of 

the Residency College, Indore, 

308 ; his supervision of education, 

323 
Mackeson, Colonel, 92 ; his epitaph, 

371 
Macnaghten, Sir W., 4 twte 
Mahmud of Ghazni, takes the city 

of Multan, 15 
Mahtab Singh, 69, 70 
Maitland, Captain F. H., 327. See 

Lauderdale 
Malcolm, Sir John, Memoir of 
Central India including Malwa, 
279 note, 281 note, 283 ?tote; his 
estimate of the population of 
Central India, 279 note; on the 
opium trade of Malwa, 304, 305 ; 
occupies the Nalcha Palace, 326 
note 
Malines, 99 
Mallegaum, 4 note 
Malleson, Major, 263 note 
Malta, 3 

Malwa, 256 ; famine, 257, 281, 304 ; 
opium trade, 279, 302-306, 321, 
324 ; climate, 280 ; review of the 
condition, 283, 295 ; construction 
of railways, 297 
Man Singh, Resaldar, at theaction 

of Nawabgunge, 197, 216 note 
Mandisor, 340 ; sub-agency at, 303 
Mandra, 137 

Mandu, ruins of, 325 note 
Mansfield, Lieut.-Gen. Sir William, 
his rapid promotion, 87 ; char- 
acteristics, 88 ; on the expected 
attack of the Mohmands, 89 ; on 
the management of native tribes, 
92-94 ; at Shanklin, 102 ; ap- 
pointed to the mission at Con- 
stantinople, 105 ; advice to Daly, 
105 ; Major-General, 115; Con- 
sul-General at Warsaw, 115; 
appointed Chief of the Staff to 
Sir C. Campbell, 173, 189; his 
letter from Fatteh Singh, 207- 
209 ; K.C.B., 218 ; his views on 
the reconstitution of the army, 
221 ; on the departure of Sir H. 



384 



INDEX 



Daly, 250 ; on the death of Lord 
Clyde, 257 ; on his character, 
258-260 ; Commander-in-Chief in 
Bombay, 263 note 

Mardan, 130, 190 

Martin, Colonel Cunliffe, 345 ; in 
command of the Central India 
Horse, 327 

Martine, General Claude, 1 1 1 

Maulavi Mayat Ali Khan, punitive 
expedition against, 162 note 

Maunsell, 155 note 

May, 42 

Mayne, Captain H. O., raises the 
38thCentral India Horse, 253 note 

Mayo, Lord, his assassination, 298 

Mayo College, Ajmer, foundation 
of the, 307 

M'Barnett, Captain, 179 

Mcintosh, Captain Hugh, i 

Mcintosh, Mary, i 

Mcintosh, Mrs, 2 

Meade, Lieut.-Colonel M. J., 345 

Meade, Colonel Sir R., Agent to 
the Governor-General in Central 
India, 262 ; transferred to 
Hyderabad, 277 ; his first ad- 
ministration report of the Central 
India Agency, 279, 280 

Mecham, Lieutenant, at the attack 
on Nawabgunge, 197 ; wounded, 
197, 215 note; assassinated, 372 

Meerut, mutiny at, 131, 133 

Mehemet Ali, 3 

Mehidpur, battle of, 283 note, 284 

Melvill, Sir James C., loi 

" Mendee Hussan," 233 

Metcalfe, Sir Theophilus, 140 ; his 
escape from Delhi, 174 

Mewar, Princes of, 292 note 

M'Gregor, at the fight near Tulsi- 
pur, 247 

Mhow, 278, 306 

Mignon, Colonel, 51 

Mignon, Major, 51 

Mihna, 138 

Milan, 97 

Miller, 130 

Miranzai, expedition to, 88 

Mitchni, 89 

Mithankot, 22, 352 

M'Mahon, Lieut. -Gen. Sir Thomas, 
Commander-in-Chief inlBombay, 

5 



Mohi-ad-din, killed at Lucknow, 
241 

Mohmands, operations against, 89 

Mohumdee, 207 

Montgomery district, 15 

Montgomery, Mr, Judicial Com- 
missioner at Lahore, 194 

Moosabagh, 202 

Morar, 278 

Moulvi at Mohumdee, 208 

Muchee Bhawan, 175 

Muhammad Azim Sardar, 88 

Muhammad Khan, Sultan, sur- 
renders British officers to Sikhs, 
36 

Muhammad Raza, 195 

Mules at the siege of Multan, 40, 

42.47 
Mulraj, Dewan of Multan, 15, 16; 
his wish to resign, 15 ; revolt, 18, 
estimated force, 20 ; operations 
against, 24-32, 37-52 ; surrenders, 

52 
Multan, outbreak at, 13 ; position, 

15 ; history, 15; Sawan Mull, 15 ; 

Mulraj, 16 ; Sardar Khan Singh, 

16 ; operations against, 24-32, 

37-52 ; siege raised, 33, 36 ; 

explosion, 49 ; surrender, 52 ; 

capture, 352 
Multanis, their unwillingness to 

serve in the British army, 65 
" Mundee Awa" Mound, 43, 45 
Murray wounded at the siege of 

Delhi, 178 ; death, 179, 366 
Murree, 83 
Mutta, 89 
Muzaffargarh, 15 
Mynpoorie, 126 

Najapgarh, success at, 144 

Nalcha, palace at, 325 note 

Nandparah, 118, 119 

Napier, Lord, of Magdala, 81, 172 
notej Directing Engineer at 
Multan, 25 ; wounded, 32 

Napier, Sir Charles, 6 ; his speech 
to the soldiers, 8 ; letter to 
Sergeant-Major Bennett, 51 notej 
appointed Commander-in-Chief, 
57 ; report of the ist Punjab 
Cavalry, 73, 351 ; leaves India, 
77 ; his letter to Colonel Mans- 
field on the 53rd regiment, 87 



INDEX 



885 



note; character, 201 ; on Daly's 
appointment to the Central India 
Horse, 255 

Napier, Sir Robert, Commander-in- 
Chief, recommends Daly for the 
good service pension, 260-262 

Narinji, 162, 164 

Native States, views on the govern- 
ment of, 272-274. See India 

Naval Brigade, their method of 
marching, 243 

Nawabgunge, attack on, 147, 196, 
213 

Neemuch, 278 

Nehal Singh, 69, 70 

Neill, General, his death, 181 

Nelson, 40 

Nepal, 246; Valley, 119 

Newport, 2 

Nicholson, Charles, 145 

Nicholson, General, his success at 
Najapgarh, 144 ; at Delhi, 167, 
174; his character, 174; wounded, 
178 ; death, 179 ; attacked by a 
fanatic, 372 

Nile, the, 3 

Nirpat Singh, Maharaja, his ad- 
ministration of Panna, 294 note 

Nolan Grange, 236 

Norman, Field - Marshal Sir H., 
158 ; his narrative of the Cam- 
paign of the Delhi army, 184 
note; tribute on his services, 246 

Norman, Mrs, 158 

Northbrook, Lord, his tour in 
Central India, 306-308 

Nowgong, 278 ; foundation of 
Rajkumar College at, 307 

Nowshera, 130, 190 

Nuttal, Lieut. H. R., 61 

Ogilvie, Dr, 123 

Ommaney, Mr, 124 

Opium trade, 279, 302-306 

Orchha, 281, 294 

Osborne, 335 

Osborne, Colonel Willoughby, 

Political Agent at Bhopal, 327 
Oudh, incorporated in British India, 

107; climate, 113; account of 

the mutinies in, 209-211 
Oudh Irregular Cavalry, enrolment 

of the 1st, 107, 112; inspection, 

114, 116; at Sekrora, 114 



Outram, Sir James, 13 ; Chief Com- 
missioner of Oudh, 107 ; his 
character, 217 ; mistakes, 217 

Paget and Mason, Record of Ex- 
peditions against the North- West 
Frontier Tribes of India, 162 note 

Pakka Serai, 70 

Palhee, 89 

Palliser joins Hodson's Horse, 198 ; 
wounded at the engagement on 
the Khandoo River, 199, 233 

Panjnad, 23 

Panmure, Lord, 104 

Panna, State of, 286, 294 

Panna, Maharaja of, honours con- 
ferred, 314, 316 

Pathans, their character as soldiers, 

65 

Pattoun, Colonel, 243 

Peiwar Kotal, 83 

Pertabgarh, 114 

Peru Khan, Resaldar, his early life, 
70 ; character, 7 1 

Peshawar, outbreak at, 36 ; occu- 
pation of, 57 ; 1st Regiment of 
Cavalry raised at, 62 ; account 
of the corps, 63-66 ; changes in, 

75 
Phillour, 158 
Pipli, 140 

Pir Panjal range, 86 
Plattsburg, siege and battle of, 2 
Polehampton, Life of Mr, 245 
Poona, 4 
Powindiah, 138 
Probyn, General the Right Hon. 

Sir Dighton, in command of the 

Central India Horse, 327, 345 
" Prophet's flower," fragrance of, 82 
Puchpurwa, 242 
Punjab, peaceful condition of the, 

in 1848, 14 ; insurrection, 53 ; 

incorporated in British India, 

57, 352 „ . , 

Punjab Cavalry, ist Regiment of, 

62-66 ; native officers, 66-72 ; 

review of, 72, 91 ; discipline, 73, 

Punjab Force, constitution of the 
first regiments, 357-359. 3^8; 
expedition against the Mahsud 
Waziris, 359-363 ; at Umbeyla, 
364 ; Delhi, 365 ; casualties, 364, 



386 



INDEX 



365 ; at Lucknow, 366 ; arms, 
369 ; horses, 369 ; influence of 
medical officers, 370 
"Punjab Frontier Force," lecture 
on, 334, 3SO-374 

Raghuraj Singh, Maharaja, his 
administration of Rewa, 299 ; 
characteristics, 300 ; inability to 
rule, 301 ; appointment of a 
political agent, 301 ; death, 302 ; 
discovery of coins, 303 note 

Rahmit Khan Orakzai, 70 

Railways, construction of, 296-298, 
321, 346 

Railway, The Great Indian Penin- 
sula, 281 

Rajkumar College, Nowgong, 307 

Rajkumar School, Indore, 323 

Rajpoora, 139 

Rajputana, proposals for the for- 
mation of "The Jehazpur Legion," 
102 ; famine, 284 ; exodus from, 
285 ; habit of opium-eating in, 303 

Ram Singh, 113, 118 

Ramnugger, victory at, 53 

Rampur, 199 

Ranbir Singh, 160 note 

Raneegunge, 108 

Ranizai, 92 

Ranjit Singh annexes the province 
of Multan, 15 

Rao, Raja Sir Dinkar, 265 ; his 
character, 265, 274 

Raptee, 119, 244, 246 

Ratlam, State of, 256, 306 ; sub- 
agency at, 303 ; under British 
protection, 340 

Ravi, 16 

Rawal Pindi, 54, 84, 130, 133, 190 

Raza, Muhammad, 195 ; certificate 
granted to, 195 note 

Reed, General, 133 ; Commander- 
in-Chief, 143, 1 54 J invalided, 143; 
his departure, 159 

Reid wounded at the siege of 
Delhi, 177 note 

Resaidar or Captain, 66 note 

Resaldar or Major, 66 note 

Rewa State, 287 ; character of the 
country, 281 ; administration, 
299-302 

Rewa, Maharaja of, honours con- 
ferred, 314, 3 '6 



Rhine, 99 

Rice, of the "Tigers," 256 

Richards, Westley, 112 

Ricketts, 139 

Ridgeway, Right Hon. Sir West, 

Governor of Ceylon, 327, 345 
Roads, construction of, 298, 321, 

322 
Roberts, Lord, Forty-one Years in 

India, 172 note; m command of 

the Punjab Force, 368 
Rohilkhand, 206, 208 ; operations 

in, 366 
Roome, 256 
Roper, Sir Henry, 4 
Rosa, Khan Singh, 69, 140 ; 

wounded, 142 
Rosa, Monte, 98 
Rose, Sir Hugh, 205 
Ross, Surgeon-General T. R. C, 

82,83 
Royal Albert, launch of the, loi 
Russel, Colonel L., 327 
Russell, the Times correspondent, 

206 
Russia, outbreak of war, 100 
Ryde, 336 

Saadat Khan, operations against, 

90 
Sadik Hussain, Nawab, honours 

conferred, 316 
Sailana, 256 
Salar Bakhsh, 113 
Sandhurst, Lord, 87. See Mansfield 
Sankarant, festival of the, 294 
Saone, 109 
Sarel, 249 ; joins Hodson's Horse, 

199 
Sasseram, 109 
Saugor, 174 
Swan Mull, Governor of Multan, 

IS 
Scindia, Maharaja, Ruler of 
Gwalior, his loyalty, 161 ; char- 
acter, 265, 274 ; on the disposal 
of the police force and troops, 
266 ; his relations with the 
Political Agent, 267, 277, 293 ; 
system of administration, 268, 
339 ; illness, 286 ; his measures 
for the relief of the famine, 286, 
289 ; contribution to railway.'con- 
struction, 297, 322 ; on the 



INDEX 



387 



assassination of Lord Mayo, 299 ; 
reception of the Prince of Wales, 
308-312; presents, 311, 314; 
honours conferred, 315, 320 ; his 
visit of sympathy to Sir H. Daly, 
330 note; relations with Maharaja 
Holkar, 330 note; death, 331 
note; speech at the unveiling of 
Sir H. Daly's bust, 348 

Scotland, 7 

Seaton, Colonel, wounded at the 
siege of Delhi, 160 

Sekrora, 114, 240; mutiny of the 
troops at, 240 

Seringapatam, 9 ; storming of, 5 1 

Shabkadr, 89 

Shad well's Life of Lord Clyde, 217 
note 

Shahamat Ali, Mir, Superintendent 

of Ratlam, 288, 326 note 
.Shahjehanpur, siege of, 208 

Shahpur, 15 

Shamanow, 194 

Shamshere' Singh, 194 

Shanklin, loi 

Sharif Ali Khan, 194 

Sharkipur, 235 

Shebbeame, in command of the 
Guides, 150 

Sher Singh, in command of the 
Sikh force, 20; his treachery, 
32 ; joins Mulraj, 32, 36 ; his 
surrender, 54; appearance, 55 

Shuja-ul-Mulk, 148 note 

Siddons, 25 

Sidi Lai ke Bede, 39, 41 

Sikhs, their style of shooting,. 26 ; 
mode of fighting, 46; negotia- 
tions for their surrender, 54 ; 
lay down their arms, 56 ; char- 
acter as soldiers, 65 

Simla, 127, 138, 181, 186 

Sind, 6 

Sipra, 340 

Sital-ke-Mari, 38 

Sitamau, 256 

Sitapur, 117, 122 

Sleeman, Colonel, 107 note 

Smith, Colonel Baird, 154; at the 
siege of Delhi, 176 

Sobhan Ali, 113 

Sobraon, 138 

Sohawah, 137 

Sotheby, Captain, 243 



Souryavansi, or Children of the 
Sun, 292 note 

Stalker, Colonel, 45 

Stanley, Lord, President of the 
Board of Control (India), 91 ; 
letter from Sir H. Daly on the 
future of the officers of the East 
India Company, 223-228 ; his 
reply, 228 

Stewart, 131 

Stewart, Sir Donald, his march 
from Kandahar, 368 

Stiles, Captain, 60 

Strasburg, 99 

Strathnairn, Lord, 205 note 

Stratton, Dr J. P., Political Agent 
in Bundelkhand, 316, 327; on 
the title of Empress of India, 
317 ; result of his administration, 
318 

Suddoosam, battle of, 19 

Suez, 3 

Sukkur, 21 

Sultanpur, 199, 231, 232, 235, 237 

Sundil Khan, Resaldar, his char- 
acter, 66 ; gallantry at Bahadur, 
Khel, 67 J his wish to join the 
Oudh Cavalry, 113; at Delhi, 
241 

Surjoo, 114 

Suruj-kund, 38 

Sutherland, Colonel, President at 
Gwalior, 282 

Sutherland, Duke of, 309 

Sutlej, 19, 138 

Swat tribes, trouble with the, 91 

Tahsildar or revenue officer, 67 
Tamerlane, takes the city of Mul- 

tan, 15 
Tank Zam defile, 360 
Tapp at the siege of Multan, 45 ; 

wounded, 46 ; assassinated, 372 
Tatta, 20 
Taylor, 155 
Taylor, General Sir Alexander, at 

the siege of Delhi, 176 
Taylor, General Reynell, 91 ; 

Deputy Commissioner of Bannu, 

95 
Terai, capture of guns m the, 244 
Thai, 88 

Thomason, Colonel C, 327 
Tod, Lieut.-Colonel James, Annah 



388 



INDEX 



and Antiquities of Rajasthan, 
extract from, 293 note, 303 note 

Tombs, Major, at the siege of 
Delhi, 147 ; on Daly's charge, 
149 ; wins the V.C, 156 note 

Tonk, 256 

Torawari, 88 

Travers, wounded at the si^e of 
Delhi, 166 ; killed, 366 

Trevor, Colonel W. S., 327 

Trieste, 97, 102 

TuUoch, Captain, 240 

Tulsipur, 118, 243, 246; fight at, 
246 

Udaipur, sub-agency at, 303 
Ujjain, 295, 340 
Umballa, 127, 129, 139, 190 
Umbeyla, expedition against, 364 

Vaccination, effect of, 371 

Vaughan, 162, 164 

Venice, 97 

Ventura, 68 note 

Verona, 97 

Victoria, Queen, assumes the title 
of Empress of India, 314 ; re- 
ceives Sir H. Daly at Osborne, 
335 i godmother to his child, 336 

Vindhyas, 280 

Vivian, General, 104 

Wale, in command of the ist Sikh 
Cavalry, 204 

Wales, Prince of, 335 ; his visit to 
India, 308 ; reception at Gwalior, 
308-312 ; Indore, 312 ; holds a 
Chapter of the Star of India at 
Calcutta, 314 



Wales, Princess of, 335 

Walker, at the siege of Delhi, 155 ; 
wounded, 158 

Walker, Colonel, 249 

Walker, General H., Surveyor- 
General of India, 85 

Watson, Sir J., in command of the 
Central India Horse, 327, 345 

Wazirabad, 138 

Waziris, expedition against, 359- 

363 

Wellesley Despatches, 100 note 

Wellington, Duke of, 227 note 

Wellington, the, lor 

Wells, Lieut. L. F., 198 note 

West Meath, i 

Wheeler, General Sir Hugh, 151 ; 
his betrayal and murder, 166 

Whish, General, in command of 
the force against Multan, 19 ; 
his retreat, 34 ; number of killed 
and wounded, 37 

Wight, Isle of, 2, 99 

Wilberforce, 155 note 

Wilde, Lieut-General Sir Alfred, 67 

Wilson, Brigadier-General Arch- 
dale, Commander-in-Chief, 143, 

159 

Wilson, Colonel F., 345 

Wingfield, Chief Commissioner, 
250 

Wood, Sir C, his military retire- 
ment scheme, 254 

Woodward, 42 

Woolwich, loi 

Wordi, Major or Adjutant, 66 note 

YOUNGHUSBAND killed, 367 

Yule, Major, killed at Delhi, 148 



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