<h2><SPAN name="Ch5" name="Ch5">Chapter 5</SPAN>: War Declared.</h2>
<p>"That gives you a general idea, Dick, of the war with Tippoo. I
saw little of the events after the battle of Porto Novo, as my
father was taken ill soon after, and died at Madras. Seeing that
there was no probability, whatever, of the English driving Hyder
back, until they had much larger forces and a much better system of
management, I remained in Madras until peace was made; then I came
back here, rebuilt the palace, and have since been occupied in
trying to restore the prosperity of my poor people.</p>
<p>"It is, I feel, a useless task, for it is certain that, ere
long, the English will again be engaged with Mysore; and if they
are, it is well-nigh certain that Tippoo's hordes will again sweep
down from the hills, and carry ruin and desolation everywhere.</p>
<p>"He would, as Hyder had, have the advantage on his side at the
beginning of the war. He has a score of passes to choose from, and
can descend on to the plain by any one he may select. And, even
were there a force here capable of giving battle to the whole
Mysorean army, it could not watch all the passes, as to do so the
army would have to be broken up into a dozen commands. Tippoo will
therefore again be able to ravage the plains, for weeks, perhaps,
before the English can force him to give battle.</p>
<p>"But there is no army, at present, in existence of sufficient
strength to meet him. The Madras force would have to wait until
reinforcements arrived from Calcutta. It was bad before, but it
will be worse, now. Hyder, no doubt, slaughtered many, but he was
not cruel by nature. He carried off enormous quantities of people,
with their flocks and herds, but he did this to enrich Mysore with
their labour, and did not treat them with unnecessary cruelty.</p>
<p>"Tippoo, on the other hand, is a human tiger. He delights in
torturing his victims, and slays his prisoners from pure love of
bloodshed. He is proud of the title of 'Tiger.' His footstool is a
tiger's head, and the uniforms of his infantry are a sort of
imitation of a tiger's stripes. He has military talent, and showed
great judgment in command of his division--indeed, most of the
successes gained during the last war were his work. Since then, he
has laboured incessantly to improve his army. Numbers of regiments
have been raised, composed of the captives carried off from here
and from the west coast. They are drilled, in European fashion, by
the English captives he still holds in his hands."</p>
<p>"But why, Uncle, instead of giving time to Tippoo to come down
here, should we not march up the passes, and compel him to keep his
army up there to defend Seringapatam?"</p>
<p>"Because, Dick, in the first place, there is not an army strong
enough to do so; but even were there a force of fifty thousand men
at Madras, they could not take the offensive in time. An English
army cannot move without a great train to carry ammunition, stores
and provisions; and to get such a train together would be the work
of months. As I have been telling you, during the three years the
last war lasted, the Madras authorities were never able to collect
such a train, and the consequence was that their army was unable to
go more than two or three days' march from the city.</p>
<p>"On the other hand, Tippoo could, any day, order that three
days' supply of rice or grain should be served out to each soldier,
and could set out on his march the following morning; as, from the
moment he reached the plains, his cavalry would have the whole of
the resources of the country at their mercy."</p>
<p>"I see, Uncle. Then, if war broke out, you would at once go to
Madras again?"</p>
<p>"There would be nothing else to do, Dick. I should send
everything of value down there, as soon as I saw that war was
inevitable. The traders here have already begun to prepare. The
shops are half empty, for they have not replaced goods they have
sold, and a very few hours would suffice for everything worth
taking to be cleared out of the town. The country round here is
comparatively uninhabited, and but a small portion of it tilled, so
great was the number carried off by Hyder. Next time they will take
to the hills at once, and I believe that many have already stored
up grain in hiding places there. This time it may be hoped that a
few weeks, or months at most, may see Tippoo driven back, and for
that time the peasants can manage to exist in the hills. No doubt
the richer sort, who have large flocks of goats, and many cattle,
will, as soon as danger threatens, drive them down to Madras, where
they are sure to fetch good prices for the use of the army.</p>
<p>"I have already told all men who have bullock carts and teams,
that they can, if forced to leave home, earn a good living by
taking service in the English transport train. I hope, therefore,
that the results will not be so disastrous as before. The town may
be burnt down again, but unless they blow up my palace, they can do
little harm to it. When I rebuilt it, seeing the possibility of
another war, I would not have any wood whatever used in its
construction. Therefore, when the hangings are taken down, and the
furniture from these rooms cleared out, there will be nothing to
burn, and they are not likely to waste powder in blowing it up.</p>
<p>"As to the town, I warned the people who returned that it might
be again destroyed before long, and therefore there has been no
solid building. The houses have all been lightly run up with wood,
which is plentiful enough in the hills, and no great harm,
therefore, will be done if it is again burnt down. The pagoda and
palace are the only stone buildings in it. They did some harm to
the former, last time, by firing shot at it for a day or two; and,
as you can see for yourself, no attempt has since been made to
repair it, and I do not suppose they will trouble to damage it
further.</p>
<p>"So you see, Dick, we are prepared for the worst."</p>
<p>"Will you fight again, as you did last time, Uncle?"</p>
<p>"I do not know, Dick. I show my loyalty to the English rule by
repairing to the capital; but my force is too small to render much
service. You see, my revenues have greatly diminished, and I cannot
afford to keep up so large a force as my father could. Fortunately,
his savings had been considerable, and from these I was able to
build this palace, and to succour my people, and have still enough
to keep up my establishment here, without pressing the cultivators
of the soil for taxes. This year is the first that I have drawn any
revenue from that source; but, at any rate, I am not disposed to
keep up a force which, while it would be insufficient to be of any
great value in a war like this, would be a heavy tax on my
purse."</p>
<p>"Even the force you have must be that, Uncle."</p>
<p>"Not so much as you would think, Dick, with your English
notions. The pay here is very small--so small that it would seem to
you impossible for a man to live on it; and yet, many of these men
have wives and families. All of them have patches of land that they
cultivate; only twenty, who are changed once a month, being kept on
duty. They are necessary; for I should have but little respect from
my people, and less still from other rajahs, did I not have
sentries at the gates, and a guard ready to turn out in honour of
any visitor who might arrive; to say nothing of an escort, of half
a dozen men, when I ride through the country. Of course, all can be
called out whenever I want them, as, for example, when I rode to
Madras to meet you. The men think themselves well off upon the pay
of three rupees a month, as they are practically only on duty two
months each year, and have the rest of the time to cultivate their
fields. Therefore, with the pay of the officers, my troop only
costs me about four hundred rupees a month, which is, you know,
equivalent to forty English pounds; so that you cannot call it an
expensive army, even if it is kept for show rather than use."</p>
<p>"No, indeed, Uncle! It seems ridiculous that a troop of a
hundred men can be kept up, for five hundred pounds a year."</p>
<p>"Of course, the men have some little privileges, Dick. They pay
no rent or taxes for their lands. This is a great thing for them,
and really costs me nothing, as there is so much land lying
uncultivated. Then, when too old for service, they have a pension
of two rupees a month for life, and on that, and what little land
they can cultivate, they are comparatively comfortable."</p>
<p>"Well, it does not seem to me, Uncle, that soldiering is a good
trade in this country."</p>
<p>"I don't know that it is a good trade, in the money way,
anywhere. After all, the pay out here is quite as high, in
comparison with the ordinary rate of earning of a peasant, as it is
in England. It is never the pay that tempts soldiers. Among young
men there are always great numbers who prefer the life to that of a
peasant, working steadily from daylight to dark, and I don't know
that I altogether blame them."</p>
<p>"Then you think, Uncle, there is no doubt whatever that there
will be war?"</p>
<p>"Not a shadow of doubt, Dick--indeed, it may be said to have
begun already; and, like the last, it is largely due to the
incapacity of the government of Madras."</p>
<p>"I have just received a message from Arcot," the Rajah said, two
months later, "and I must go over and see the Nabob."</p>
<p>"I thought," Mrs. Holland said, "that Tripataly was no longer
subject to him. I understood that our father was made independent
of Arcot?"</p>
<p>"No, Margaret, not exactly that. The Nabob had involved himself
in very heavy debts, during the great struggle. The Company had
done something to help him, but were unable to take all his debts
on their shoulders; and indeed, there was no reason why they should
have done so, for although during most of the war he was their
ally, he was fighting on his own behalf, and not on theirs.</p>
<p>"In the war with Hyder it was different. He was then quite under
English influence, and, indeed, could scarcely be termed
independent. And as he suffered terribly--his lands were wasted,
his towns besieged, and his people driven off into slavery--the
Company are at present engaged in negotiations for assisting him to
pay his debts, which are very heavy.</p>
<p>"It was before you left, when the Nabob was much pressed for
money, and had at that time no claim on the Company, that our
father bought of him a perpetual commutation of tribute, taxes, and
other monies and subsidies payable by Tripataly; thus I am no
longer tributary to Arcot. Nevertheless, this forms a portion of
the Nabob's territories, and I cannot act as if I were an
independent prince.</p>
<p>"I could not make a treaty with Mysore on my own account, and it
is clear that neither Arcot nor the English could allow me to do
so, for in that case Mysore could erect fortresses here, and could
use Tripataly as an advanced post on the plain. Therefore, I am
still subject to the Nabob, and could be called upon for military
service by him. Indeed, that is one of the reasons why, even if I
could afford it, I should not care to keep up a force of any
strength. As it is, my troop is too small to be worth summoning.
The Nabob has remonstrated with me more than once, but since the
war with Hyder I have had a good excuse, namely, that the
population has so decreased that my lands lie untilled, and it
would be impossible for me to raise a larger force. I have,
however, agreed that, in case of a fresh war, I will raise an
additional hundred cavalry.</p>
<p>"I expect it is in relation to this that he has sent for me to
Arcot. We know that the English are bound, by their treaty with
Travancore, to declare war. They ought, in honour, to have done it
long ago, but they were unprepared. Now that they are nearly ready,
they may do so at any time, and indeed the Nabob may have learned
that fighting has begun.</p>
<p>"The lookout is bad. The government of Madras is just as weak
and as short sighted as it was during Hyder's war. There is but one
comfort, and that is that Lord Cornwallis, at Calcutta, has far
greater power than his predecessors; and as he is an experienced
soldier, and is said to be an energetic man, he may bring up
reinforcements from Calcutta without loss of time, and also set the
troops of Bombay in motion. I expect that, as before, things will
go badly at first; but hope that, this time, we shall end by giving
Mysore so heavy a lesson that she will be powerless for mischief,
in future."</p>
<p>"And release all the captives," Mrs. Holland exclaimed, clasping
her hands.</p>
<p>"I sincerely trust so, Margaret," her brother said gravely;
"but, after what happened last time, we must not be sanguine.
Scattered about as they may be, in the scores of little hill forts
that dot the whole country, we can, unhappily, never be sure that
all are delivered, when we have only the word of a treacherous
tyrant like Tippoo. We know that, last time, he kept back hundreds
of prisoners, among whom, as we may hope, was your husband; and it
may be that, however completely he may be defeated, he may yet
retain some of them, knowing full well it is impossible that all
these hill forts and their dungeons can be searched. However,
doubtless if an English army marches to Seringapatam, many will be
recovered, though we have reason to fear that many will, as before,
be murdered before our arrival."</p>
<p>When the Rajah returned from Arcot, on the following day, he
brought back the news that General Meadows had moved to the
frontier at Caroor, fifty miles beyond Trichinopoly, and that the
war was really about to begin.</p>
<p>"You know," he said, "how matters stand, up to now. Tippoo,
after making peace with the Nizam and the Mahrattis, with whom he
had been engaged in hostilities for some time, turned his attention
to the western coast, where Coorg and Malabar had risen in
rebellion. After, as usual, perpetrating horrible atrocities, and
after sending a large proportion of the population as slaves to
Mysore, he marched against Travancore. Now, Travancore was
specially mentioned, in the treaty of Mangalore, as one of the
allies of the English, with whom Tippoo bound himself not to make
war; and had he not been prepared to fight the English, he would
not have attacked their ally. The excuse for attacking Travancore
was that some of the fugitives, from Coorg and Malabar, had taken
refuge there.</p>
<p>"Seeing that Tippoo was bent upon hostilities, Lord Cornwallis
and his council at Calcutta directed, as I learnt from an official
at Madras, the authorities there to begin at once to make
preparations for war. Instead of doing so, Mr. Holland, the
governor, gave the Rajah the shameful and cowardly advice to
withdraw his protection from the fugitives. The Rajah refused to
comply with such counsel, and after some months spent in
negotiations, Tippoo attacked the wall that runs along the northern
frontier of Travancore.</p>
<p>"That was about six months ago. Yes, it was on the 28th of
December--so it is just six months. His troops, fourteen thousand
strong, made their way without difficulty through a breach, but
they were suddenly attacked by a small body of Travancore men. A
panic seized them. They rushed back to the breach, and in the wild
struggle to pass through it, no less than two thousand were either
killed or crushed to death.</p>
<p>"It was nearly three months before Tippoo renewed his attack.
The lines were weak, and his army so strong that resistance was
impossible. A breach, three-quarters of a mile in length, was made
in the wall, and marching through this, he devastated Travancore
from end to end.</p>
<p>"His unaccountable delay, before assaulting the position, has
been of great advantage to us. Had he attacked us at once, instead
of wasting his time before Travancore, he would have found the
Carnatic as defenceless and as completely at his mercy as Hyder
did. He would still have done so, had it depended upon Madras, but
as the authorities here did nothing, Lord Cornwallis took the
matter into his own hands. He was about to come here himself, when
General Meadows, formerly Governor of Bombay, arrived, invested by
the Company with the offices of both governor and of
commander-in-chief.</p>
<p>"He landed here late in February, and at once set to work to
prepare for war. Lord Cornwallis sent, from Calcutta, a large
amount of money, stores, and ammunition, and a battalion of
artillerymen. The Sepoys objected to travel by sea, as their caste
rules forbade them to do so, and he therefore sent off six
battalions of infantry by land, and the Nabob tells me they are
expected to arrive in four or five weeks' time. The Nabob of Arcot
and the Rajah of Tanjore, both of whom are very heavily in debt to
the government, are ordered, during the continuance of the war, to
place their revenues at its disposal, a liberal allowance being
made to them both for their personal expenses.</p>
<p>"Tippoo is still in Travancore--at least, he was there ten days
ago, and has been endeavouring to negotiate. The Nabob tells me he
believes that the object of General Meadows, in advancing from
Trichinopoly to Caroor, is to push on to Coimbatoor, where he will,
if he arrives before Tippoo, cut him off from his return to his
capital; and as Meadows has a force of fifteen thousand men, he
ought to be able to crush the tyrant at a blow.</p>
<p>"I fear, however, there is little chance of this. The Mysore
troops move with great rapidity, and as soon as Tippoo hears that
the English army is marching towards Caroor, he is sure to take the
alarm, and by this time has probably passed Coimbatoor on his way
back. With all his faults, Tippoo is a good general, and the
Nabob's opinion--and I quite agree with him--is that, as soon as he
regains the table land of Mysore, he will take advantage of the
English army being far away to the south, and will pour down
through the passes into this part of the Carnatic, which is at
present absolutely defenceless. This being the case, I shall at
once get ready to leave for Madras, and shall move as soon as I
learn, for certain, that Tippoo has slipped past the English.</p>
<p>"The Nabob has called upon me to join him with my little body of
cavalry, and as soon as the news comes that Tippoo is descending
the passes, I shall either join him or the English army. That will
be a matter to decide afterwards."</p>
<p>"You will take me with you, of course, Uncle?" Dick asked
eagerly.</p>
<p>"Certainly, Dick. If you are old enough to undertake the really
perilous adventure of going up in disguise to Mysore, you are
certainly old enough to ride with me. Besides, we may hope that,
this time, the war is not going to be as one-sided as it was the
last time, and that we may end by reaching Seringapatam; in which
case we may rescue your father, if he is still alive, very much
more easily than it could be managed in the way you propose."</p>
<p>The news that the English army had marched to Caroor, and that
there was no force left to prevent the Mysoreans from pouring down
from the hills, spread quickly; and when Dick went out with the two
boys into the town, groups of people were talking earnestly in the
streets. Some of them came up, and asked respectfully if there was
any later news.</p>
<p>"Nothing later than you have heard," Dick said.</p>
<p>"The Rajah is not going away yet, Sahib?"</p>
<p>"No; he will not leave unless he hears that Tippoo has returned,
with his army, to Seringapatam. Then he will go at once, for the
sultan might come down through the passes at any moment, and can
get here a fortnight before the English army can return from
Caroor."</p>
<p>"Yes; it will be no use waiting here to be eaten up, Sahib. Do
you think Conjeveram would be safe? Because it is easy to go down
there by boat."</p>
<p>"I should think so. Hyder could not take it last time, and the
English army is much stronger than it was then. Besides, there will
be six thousand men arriving from Bengal, in a month's time, so I
should think there is no fear of Conjeveram being taken."</p>
<p>"It is little trouble getting there," the trader said, "but it
is a long journey to Madras. We could go down with our families and
goods in two days, in a boat; but there would not be boats enough
for all, and it will be best, therefore, that some should go at
once, for if all wait until there is news that Tippoo is coming,
many will not be able to get away in time."</p>
<p>"No, not in boats," Dick agreed; "but in three days a bullock
cart would get you there."</p>
<p>Next day, several of the shops containing the most valuable
goods were shut up; and, day by day, the number remaining open grew
smaller.</p>
<p>"It is as I expected," the Rajah said, one morning, as he came
into the room where the family was sitting. "A messenger has just
come in from the Nabob, with the news that sickness broke out among
the army, as soon as they arrived at Caroor, and in twenty-four
hours a thousand men were in hospital. This delayed the movement,
and when they arrived at Coimbatoor they were too late. Tippoo and
his army had already passed, moving by forced marches back to
Mysore.</p>
<p>"Finish your packing, ladies. We will start at daybreak tomorrow
morning. I secured three boats, four days ago, and have been
holding them in readiness. Rajbullub will go in charge of you.
There is not the least fear of Tippoo being here for another
fortnight, at the earliest.</p>
<p>"I shall ride with the troop. Dick and the boys will go with me.
We shall meet you at Conjeveram. I have already arranged with some
of our people, who have gone on in their bullock carts, with their
belongings, and will unload them there, to be in readiness to take
our goods on to Madras, so there will be no delay in getting
forward."</p>
<p>By nightfall, the apartments were completely dismantled. The
furniture was all stowed away, in a vault which the Rajah had had
constructed for the purpose, when the palace was rebuilt. Access
was obtained to it through the floor in one of the private
apartments. The floor was of tessellated marble, but some ten
squares of it lifted up in a mass, forming together a trapdoor,
from which steps led down into the vault. When the block was
lowered again, the fit was so accurate that, after sweeping a
little dust over the joint, the opening was quite imperceptible to
any one not aware of the hiding place. The cushions of the divans
were taken down here, as well as the furniture, and all the less
valuable carpets, rugs and hangings, while the costlier articles
were rolled up into bales, for transport.</p>
<p>The silver cups and other valuables were packed in boxes, and
were, during the night, carried by coolies down to the boats, over
which a guard was placed until morning. Provisions for the journey
down the river were also placed on board. The palace was astir long
before daybreak. The cushions that had been slept on during the
night were carried down to the boats, the boxes of wearing apparel
closed and fastened, and a hasty meal was taken.</p>
<p>The sun was just rising when they started. One boat had been
fitted up with a bower of green boughs, for the use of the two
ladies and their four attendants. The other two carried the
baggage.</p>
<p>After seeing them push off, the Rajah, his sons, and Dick
returned to the palace. Here for a couple of hours he held a sort
of audience, and gave his advice to the townspeople and others who
came, in considerable numbers, to consult with him. When this was
done they went into the courtyard, where all was ready for their
departure.</p>
<p>The troop had, during the past week, been raised to two hundred
men, many of the young cultivators coming eagerly forward, as soon
as they heard that the Rajah was going to increase his troop, being
anxious to take a share in the adventures that might be looked for,
and to avenge the sufferings that had been inflicted on their
friends by Hyder's marauders. They were a somewhat motley troop,
but this mattered little, as uniformity was unknown among the
forces of the native princes.</p>
<p>The majority were stout young fellows. All provided their own
horses and arms, and although the former lacked the weight and bone
of English cavalry horses, they were capable of performing long
journeys, and of existing on rations on which an English horse
would starve.</p>
<p>All were well armed, for any deficiency had been made up from
the Rajah's store, and from this a large number of guns had, three
days before, been distributed among such of the ryots as intended
to take to the hills on the approach of the enemy. Ammunition had
also been distributed among them. Every man in the troop carried a
shield and tulwar, and on his back was slung a musket or spear; and
there were few without pistols in their girdles.</p>
<p>They rode halfway to Conjeveram, and stopped for the night at a
village--the men sleeping in the open air, while the Rajah, his
sons, and Dick, were entertained by the chief man of the place. The
next afternoon they rode into Conjeveram, where, just at sunset,
the boats also arrived.</p>
<p>The troop encamped outside the town, while the Rajah and his
party occupied some rooms that had been secured beforehand for
them. In the morning, the ladies proceeded in a native carriage;
with the troop, an officer and ten men following, in charge of the
bullock carts containing the baggage.</p>
<p>On reaching Madras, they encamped on the Maidan--a large, open
space used as a drill ground for the troops garrisoned there--and
the Rajah and his party established themselves in the house
occupied by him on the occasion of his last visit. The next day,
the Rajah went to the Government House, and had an interview with
the deputy governor.</p>
<p>"I think," the latter said, after some conversation, "that your
troop of cavalry will be of little use to the Nabob. If Tippoo
comes down from the hills, he will not be able to take the field
against him, and will need all his forces to defend Arcot, Vellore,
and his smaller forts, and cavalry would be of no real use to him.
Your troop would be of much greater utility to the battalions from
Bengal, when they arrive. They will be here in three weeks or so,
and as soon as they come, I will attach you to them. I will write
to the Nabob, saying that you were about to join him, but that, in
the interest of the general defence, I have thought it better, at
present, to attach you to the Bengal contingent. You see, they will
be entirely new to the country, and it will be a great advantage to
them to have a troop like yours, many of whom are well acquainted
with the roads and general geography of the country. Your speaking
English, too, will add to your usefulness."</p>
<p>"I have a nephew with me who speaks English perfectly, and also
Hindustani," the Rajah said. "He is a smart young fellow, and I
have no doubt that the officer in command would be able to make him
very useful. He is eager to be of service. His father, who was an
Englishman, was wrecked some years ago on the west coast, and sent
up a prisoner to Mysore. He was not one of those handed over at the
time of the peace, but whether he has been murdered, or is still a
prisoner in Tippoo's hands, we do not know. My sister came out with
the boy, three or four months ago, to endeavour to obtain some news
of him."</p>
<p>"I will make a note of it, Rajah. I have no doubt that he will
be of great use to Colonel Cockerell."</p>
<p>In the last week in July, the Rajah moved with his troop to
Conjeveram, and on the 1st of August the Bengal forces arrived
there. They were joined, at once, by three regiments of Europeans,
one of native cavalry, and a strong force of artillery, raising
their numbers to nine thousand, five hundred men.</p>
<p>Colonel Kelly took command of the force, and begged the Rajah to
advance with his horsemen, at once, to the foot of the ghauts, to
break it up into half troops, and to capture or destroy any small
parties of horse Tippoo might send down, by any of the passes, to
reconnoitre the country and ascertain the movements and strength of
the British forces. He was also to endeavour to obtain as much
information as he could of what was going on in Mysore, and to
ascertain whether Tippoo was still with his army, watching General
Meadows in the west; or was moving, as if with the intention of
taking advantage of the main force of the English being away south,
to descend into the Carnatic.</p>
<p>The order was a very acceptable one to the Rajah. His troop made
a good appearance enough, when in company with those of the Nabob
of Arcot, but he could not but feel that they looked a motley body
by the side of the trained native and European troops; and he was
frequently angered by hearing the jeering comments of English
soldiers to each other, when he rode past them with his troop; and
had not a little astonished the speakers, more than once, by
turning round on his horse, and abusing them hotly in their own
language.</p>
<p>He was, therefore, glad to be off. For such work, his men were
far better fitted than were even the native cavalry in the
Company's service. They were stout, active fellows, accustomed to
the hills, and speaking the dialect used by the shepherds and
villagers among the ghauts.</p>
<p>Proceeding northward through Vellore, he there divided his force
into four bodies. He himself, with fifty men, took up a position at
the mouth of the pass of Amboor. Another fifty were sent to the
pass of Moognee, to the west of Chittoor, under the command of
Anwar, the captain of the troop. The rest were distributed among
the minor passes.</p>
<p>Dick remained with his uncle, who established himself in a
village, seven miles up the pass. He was well satisfied with the
arrangement, for he was anxious to learn to go about among the
hills as a spy, and was much more likely to get leave from his
uncle to do so, than he would have been from any of the officers of
the troop, who would not have ventured to allow the Rajah's nephew
to run into danger.</p>
<p>In the second place, his especial friend among the officers, a
youth named Surajah, son of Rajbullub, was with the detachment.
Surajah had been especially picked out, by the Rajah, as Dick's
companion. He generally joined him in his rides, and they had often
gone on shooting excursions among the hills. He was about three
years Dick's senior, but in point of height there was but little
difference between them.</p>
<p>Every day half the troop, under an officer, rode up the pass
until within a mile of the fort near the summit, garrisoned by
Mysorean troops. They were able to obtain but little information,
for the villages towards the upper end of the pass were all
deserted and in ruins, the inhabitants never having ventured back
since Hyder's invasion.</p>
<p>The Rajah was vexed at being able to learn nothing of what was
passing on the plateau, and was therefore more disposed than he
might otherwise have been to listen to Dick's proposal.</p>
<p>"Don't you think, Uncle," the latter said one evening, "that I
might try to learn something by going up with Surajah alone? We
could strike off into the hills, as if on a shooting expedition,
just as we used to do from Tripataly, except that I should stain my
face and hands. The people in the villages on the top of the ghauts
are, every one says, simple and quiet. They have no love for Tippoo
or Mysore, but are content to pay their taxes, and to work quietly
in their fields. There will be little fear of our being interfered
with by them."</p>
<p>"You might find a party of Tippoo's troops in one of the
villages, Dick, and get into trouble."</p>
<p>"I don't see why we should, Uncle. Of course, we should not go
up dressed as we are, but as shikarees, and when we went into a
village, should begin by asking whether the people are troubled
with any tigers in the neighbourhood. You see, I specially came out
here to go into Mysore in disguise, and I should be getting a
little practice in this way, besides obtaining news for you."</p>
<p>"I am certainly anxious to get news, Dick. So far, I have had
nothing to send down, except that the reports, from all the passes,
agree in saying that they have learned nothing of any movement on
the part of Tippoo, and that no spies have come down the passes, or
any armed party whatever. This is good, so far as it goes, but it
only shows that the other passes are, like this, entirely deserted.
Therefore, we really know nothing whatever. Even at this moment,
Tippoo may have fifty thousand men gathered on the crest of the
hills, ready to pour down tomorrow through one of the passes; and
therefore, as I do not think you would be running any great danger,
I consent to your going with Surajah on a scouting expedition, on
foot, among the hills. As you say, you must, of course, disguise
yourselves as peasants. You had better, in addition to your guns,
each take a brace of pistols, and so armed, even if any of the
villagers were inclined to be hostile, they would not care about
interfering with you."</p>
<p>"Thank you, Uncle. When would you expect us back, if we start
tomorrow morning?"</p>
<p>"That must be entirely in your hands, Dick. You would hardly
climb the ghauts and light upon a village in one day, and it might
be necessary to go farther, before you could obtain any news. It is
a broken country, with much jungle for some distance beyond the
hills, and the villages lying off the roads will have but little
communication with each other, and might know nothing, whatever, of
what was happening in the cultivated plains beyond. At any rate,
you must not go into any villages on the roads leading to the heads
of the passes; for there are forts everywhere, and you would be
certain to find parties of troops stationed in them.</p>
<p>"Even before war broke out, I know that this was the case, as
they were stationed there to prevent any captives, native or
European, escaping from Mysore. You must, therefore, strictly avoid
all the main roads, even though it may be necessary to proceed much
farther before you can get news. I should think, if we say three
days going and as many returning, it will be as little as we can
count upon; and I shall not begin to feel at all uneasy, if you do
not reappear for a week. It is of no use your returning without
some information as to what is going on in Mysore; and it would be
folly to throw away your work and trouble, when, in another day or
two, you might get the news you want. I shall, therefore, leave it
entirely to your discretion."</p>
<p>Greatly pleased at having succeeded beyond his expectations,
Dick at once sought out Surajah. The latter was very gratified,
when he heard that he was to accompany the young Sahib on such an
expedition, and at once set about the necessary preparations. There
was no difficulty in obtaining, in the village, the clothes
required for their disguises; and one of the sheep intended for the
following day's rations was killed, and a leg boiled.</p>
<p>"If we take, in addition to this, ten pounds of flour, a gourd
of ghee, and a little pan for frying the cakes in, we shall be able
to get on, without having to buy food, for four or five days; and
of course, when we are once among the villages, we shall have no
difficulty in getting more. You had better cut the meat off the
bone, and divide it in two portions; and divide the flour, too;
then we can each carry our share."</p>
<p>"I will willingly carry it all, Sahib."</p>
<p>"Not at all, Surajah. We will each take our fair share. You see,
we shall have a gun, pistols, ammunition, and a tulwar; and that,
with seven or eight pounds of food each, and our water bottles,
will be quite enough to carry up the ghauts. The only thing we want
now is some stain."</p>
<p>"I will get something that will do, and bring it with me in the
morning, Sahib. It won't take you a minute to put on. I will come
for you at the first gleam of daylight."</p>
<p>Dick returned to the cottage he occupied with his uncle, and
told him what preparations they had made for their journey; and
they sat talking over the details for another hour. The Rajah's
last words, as they lay down for the night, were:</p>
<p>"Don't forget to take a blanket, each. You will want it for
sleeping in the open, which you will probably have to do several
times, although you may occasionally be able to find shelter in a
village."</p>
<p>By the time the sun rose, the next morning, they were well upon
their way. They had a good deal of toilsome climbing, but by
nightfall had surmounted the most difficult portions of the ascent,
and encamped, when it became dark, in a small wood. Here they
lighted a fire, cooked some cakes of flour, and, with these and the
cold meat, made a hearty meal. They had, during the day, halted
twice; and had breakfasted and lunched off some bread, of which
they had brought sufficient for the day's journey.</p>
<p>"I suppose there is no occasion to watch, Surajah?"</p>
<p>"I don't know, Sahib. I do not think it will be safe for us both
to sleep. There are, as you know, many tigers among these hills;
and though they would not approach us, as long as the fire is
burning brightly, they might steal up and carry one of us off, when
the fire gets low. I will, therefore, watch."</p>
<p>"I certainly should not let you do that, without taking my
turn," Dick said; "and I feel so tired with the day's work, that I
do not think I could keep awake for ten minutes. It would be better
to sleep in a tree than that."</p>
<p>"You would not get much sleep in a tree, Sahib. I have done it
once or twice, when I have been hunting in a tiger-infested
neighbourhood; but I got scarcely any sleep, and was so stiff, in
the morning, that I could hardly walk. I would rather sit up all
night, and keep up a good fire, than do that."</p>
<p>Dick thought for a minute or two, and then got up and walked
about under the trees, keeping his eyes fixed upon the branches
overhead.</p>
<p>"This will do," he said at last. "Come here, Surajah. There! Do
you see those two branches, coming out in the same direction? At
one point, they are but five or six feet apart. We might fasten our
blankets side by side, with the help of the straps of our water
bottles and the slings of the guns; so as to make what are called,
on board a ship, hammocks, and lie there perfectly safe and
comfortable."</p>
<p>Surajah nodded.</p>
<p>"I have a coil of leather thong, Sahib. I thought that it might
be useful, if we wanted to bind a prisoner, or for any other
purpose, so I stuffed it into my waist sash."</p>
<p>"That is good. Let us lose no time, for I am quite ready for
sleep. I will climb up first."</p>
<p>In ten minutes, the blankets were securely fastened side by
side, between the branches. Surajah descended, threw another armful
of wood on to the fire, placed their meat in the crutch of a bough,
six feet above the ground, and then climbed the tree again. Thus,
they were soon lying, side by side, in their blankets. These bagged
rather inconveniently under their weight, but they were too tired
to mind trifles, and were very soon fast asleep.</p>
<p>Dick did not wake until Surajah called him. It was already broad
daylight. His companion had slipped down quietly, stirred up the
embers of the fire, thrown on more wood, and cooked some chupatties
before waking him.</p>
<p>"It is too bad, Surajah," Dick said, as he looked down; "you
ought to have woke me. I will unfasten these blankets before I get
down. It will save time after breakfast."</p>
<p>Half an hour later, they were again on their way, and shortly
came upon a boy herding some goats. He looked doubtfully at them,
but, seeing that they were not Mysorean soldiers, he did not
attempt to fly.</p>
<p>"How far is it to the next village, lad?" Surajah asked; "and
which is the way? We are shikarees. Are there any tigers
about?"</p>
<p>"Plenty of them," the boy said. "I drive the goats to a strong,
high stockade every evening; and would not come out, before the sun
rose, for all the money they say the sultan has.</p>
<p>"Make for that tree, and close to it you will see a spring.
Follow that down. It will take you to the village."</p>
<p>After walking for six hours, they came to the village. It was a
place of some little size, but there were few people about. Women
came to the doors to look at Surajah and Dick as they came
along.</p>
<p>"Where are you from?" an old man asked, as he came out from his
cottage.</p>
<p>"From down the mountain side. Tigers are getting scarce there,
and we thought we would come over and see what we could do,
here."</p>
<p>"Here there are many tigers," the old man said. "For the last
twenty years, the wars have taken most of our young men away. Some
are forced to go against their will; for when the order comes, to
the head man of the village, that the sultan requires so many
soldiers, he is forced to pick out those best fitted for service.
Others go of their own free will, thinking soldiering easier work
than tilling the fields, besides the chance of getting rich booty.
So there are but few shikarees, and the tigers multiply and are a
curse to us.</p>
<p>"We are but poor people, but if you choose to stay here for a
time, we will pay something for every tiger you kill; and we will
send round to the other villages, within ten miles, and doubtless
every one of them will contribute, so that you might get enough to
pay you for your exertions."</p>
<p>"We will think of it," Surajah replied. "We did not intend to
stop in one village, but proposed to travel about in the
jungle-covered district; and wherever we hear complaints of a tiger
committing depredations, we will stop and do our best to kill the
evil beast. We mean, first, to find out where they are most
troublesome, and then we shall work back again. We hear that the
sultan gives good prices, for those taken alive."</p>
<p>"I have heard so," the old man said, "but none have been caught
alive here, or by anyone in the villages round. The sultan
generally gets them from the royal forests, where none are allowed
to shoot, save with his permission. Sometimes, when there is a lack
of them there, his hunters come into these districts, and catch
them in pitfalls, and have nets and ropes with which the tigers are
bound and taken away."</p>
<p>A little crowd had, by this time, collected round them; and the
women, when they heard that the strangers were shikarees, who had
come up with the intention of killing tigers, brought them bowls of
milk, cakes and other presents.</p>
<p>"I suppose, now that the sultan is away at war," Dick said, "his
hunters do not come here for tigers?"</p>
<p>"We know nothing of his wars," a woman said. "They take our sons
from us, and we do not see them again. We did hear a report that he
had gone, with an army, to conquer Travancore. But why he should
want to do it, none of us can make out. His dominions are as wide
as the heart of man can require. It is strange that he cannot rest
contented, but, like his father, should be always taking our sons
away to fight. However, these things are beyond the understanding
of poor people like us; but we can't help thinking that it would be
better if he were to send his armies to destroy all the tigers. If
he would do that, we should not grudge the sums we have to pay,
when the tax gatherers come round."</p>
<p>After pausing for an hour in the village, they continued on
their way. Two or three other small collections of huts were
passed, but it was not until the evening of the next day that they
issued from the jungle-covered country, onto the cultivated plain.
At none of the places they had passed was there anything known, as
to Tippoo or his army, but they were told that there were parties
of troops, in all the villages along the edge of the plain, as well
as in the passes.</p>
<p>"We must be careful now, Surajah," Dick said, as, after a long
day's march, they sat down to rest, at a distance of half a mile
from a large village. "Our tale, that we are shikarees, will not do
here. Had that really been our object, we should have stopped at
the first place we came to, and, at any rate, we should not have
come beyond the jungle. We might still say that we are shikarees,
but that tigers had become scarce on the other side of the hills,
and, hearing a talk that Tippoo and the English are going to war
with each other, we made up our minds to go to Seringapatam, and
enlist in his army."</p>
<p>"That would do very well," Surajah agreed. "They would have no
reason for doubting us, and even if the officer here were to
suggest that we should enlist under him, we could do so, as there
would be no difficulty in slipping away, and making off into the
jungle again."</p>
<p>They waited until the sun set, and then walked on into the
village. They had scarcely entered, when two armed men stopped
them, and questioned them whence they came.</p>
<p>Surajah repeated the story they had agreed upon, and the men
appeared quite satisfied.</p>
<p>"You will be just in time," one said. "We have news that the
sultan has just moved, with his army, to Seringapatam. Officers
came here, only yesterday, to buy up cattle and grain. These are to
be retained here, until orders are received where they are to be
sent, so I should say that he is coming this way, and will be going
down the passes, as Hyder did.</p>
<p>"We shall be very glad, for I suppose we shall join, as he
passes along. It has been dull work here, and we are looking
forward to gaining our share of the loot. It would be just as well
for you to join us here now, as to go on to Seringapatam."</p>
<p>"It would save us a long tramp," Surajah agreed. "We will think
it over, and maybe we will have a talk with your officer, tomorrow
morning."</p>
<p>They sauntered along with the men, talking as they went, and so
escaped being questioned by other soldiers. Presently, they made
the excuse that they wanted, to buy some flour and ghee before the
shops were closed; and, with a friendly nod to the two soldiers,
stopped before the stall of a peasant who had, on a little stand in
front of him, a large jar of ghee. Having purchased some, they went
a little farther, and laid in a fresh supply of flour.</p>
<p>"Things are very dear," Surajah remarked.</p>
<p>"There is very little left in the village," the man said. "All
the flour was bought up yesterday, for the sultan's army, which,
they say, is coming in this direction; and I have only got what you
see here. It has been pounded, by my wife and some other women,
since morning."</p>
<p>"That is good enough," Dick said, as they walked away. "Our work
is done, Surajah, and it is not likely that we should learn
anything more, if we were to stop here for a week. Let us turn down
between these houses, and make our way round behind. We might be
questioned again, by a fresh party of soldiers, if we were to go
along the street."</p>
<p>They kept along on the outskirts of the village, regained the
road by which they had come, and walked on until they reached the
edge of the jungle. Going a short distance among the trees, they
collected some sticks, lit a fire, and sat down to cook their
meal.</p>
<p>At the last village or two, they had heard but little of tigers,
and now agreed that they could safely lie down, and that it would
not be necessary for them to rig up their blankets as hammocks, as
they had done on the first two nights.</p>
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