<h2><SPAN name="Ch9" name="Ch9">Chapter 9</SPAN>: News Of The Captive.</h2>
<p>During the nine months that had elapsed since the retreat from
before Seringapatam, Dick had been occupied in following out the
main object of his presence in Mysore. Finding that Purseram Bhow's
army was the first that would be engaged in active service, he
asked permission from the general to join it. This was at once
granted, and Lord Cornwallis introduced him to the officer in
command of the Bombay troops attached to that army, informing him
of the object that he had in view.</p>
<p>"He will not be of much use as an interpreter," he said, "for as
the country in which you are going to operate formed, until lately,
a part of the Mahratta dominions, Mahratti will be principally
spoken. He will, therefore, go simply as an officer of my staff,
attached for the present to your command. He has asked me to allow
him to take with him twenty men, belonging to the troop of his
uncle, the Rajah of Tripataly. His object, in doing so, is that he
will be able to traverse the country independently, and can either
rejoin me here, or go to one of the other columns operating against
the hill forts, if it should seem to him expedient to do so. Should
you desire to make a reconnaissance at any time, while he is with
you, you will find him useful as an escort, and will not be obliged
to ask Purseram Bhow for a party of his cavalry."</p>
<p>Dick was sorry to leave his uncle, whose tent he had now shared
for the last ten months. He found himself, however, very
comfortable with the Bombay troops, being made a member of the
mess, consisting of the officer in command and the four officers of
his staff. Wishing to have some duties with which to occupy
himself, he volunteered to act as an aide-de-camp; and although the
work was little more than nominal, it gave him some employment.
When not otherwise engaged, he generally rode with Surajah, whom
his uncle had appointed to command the twenty troopers.</p>
<p>In the year that had elapsed since his arrival in India, Dick
had grown considerably, and broadened out greatly, and was now a
powerful young fellow of over seventeen. He had, since the troop
joined the army of Lord Cornwallis, exchanged his civilian dress
for the undress uniform of an officer, which he had purchased at
the sale of the effects of a young lieutenant on the general's
staff, who had died just as the army arrived before Bangalore. It
was, indeed, necessary that he should do this, riding about, as he
did, either on the staff of the general, or with the officers of
the quartermasters' department. There would be no difficulty in
renewing his uniform, for hardship, fever, and war had carried off
a large number of officers, as well as men; and the effects were
always sold by auction, on the day following the funeral.</p>
<p>Many hill fortresses were captured by the Mahrattis, but few
offered any resistance; as their commanders knew well that there
was no chance of their being relieved, while the men were, in most
cases, delighted at the prospect of an escape from their enforced
service, and of freedom to return to their homes. In a few of these
forts, English captives were found. Some had been there for years,
their very existence being apparently forgotten by the tyrant. Some
had been fairly treated by the Mysore governor, and where this was
the case, the latter was furnished by the British officers with
papers, testifying to the kindness with which they had treated the
prisoners, and recommending them to the officers of any of the
allied forces they might encounter on their way home, or when
established there.</p>
<p>Upon the other hand, some of the prisoners were found to have
been all but starved, and treated with great brutality. In two
cases, where the captives said that some of their companions had
died from the effects of the ill treatment they had received, the
governors were tried by court martial and shot, while some of the
others they sentenced to be severely flogged.</p>
<p>Every captive released was closely scrutinised by Dick, and
eagerly questioned. From one of them, he obtained news that his
father had certainly been alive four years previously, for they had
been in prison together, in a hill fort near Bangalore.</p>
<p>"I was a civilian and he a sailor," he said, "consequently
neither of us were of any use in drilling Tippoo's battalions, and
had been sent up there. Your father was well, then. The governor
was a good fellow, and we had nothing much to complain of. Mr.
Holland was a favourite of his, for, being a sailor, he was handy
at all sorts of things. He could mend a piece of broken furniture,
repair the lock of a musket, and make himself generally useful. He
left there before I did, as the governor was transferred to some
other fort--I never heard where it was--and he took your father
with him. I don't know whether he had Tippoo's orders to do so, or
whether he took him simply because he liked him.</p>
<p>"At any rate, he was the only prisoner who went with him. The
rest of us remained there till a few months back, when the fort was
abandoned. It was just after the capture of Bangalore, and the
place could have offered no resistance, if a body of troops had
been sent against it. At any rate, an order arrived one morning,
and a few hours afterwards the place was entirely abandoned, and we
and the garrison marched here."</p>
<p>"My father was quite well?"</p>
<p>"Quite well. He used to talk to me, at times, of trying to make
his escape. Being a sailor, I have no doubt that he could have got
down from the precipice on which the fort stood; but he knew that,
if he did so, we should all suffer for it, and probably be all put
to death, as soon as Tippoo heard that one of us had escaped--for
that was always done, in order to deter prisoners from trying to
get away."</p>
<p>"Do you think that there is any chance of his being still
alive?"</p>
<p>"That is more than I can possibly say. You see, we have not
known much of what is passing outside our prison. Some of the
guards were good natured enough, and would occasionally give us a
scrap of news; but we heard most from the ill-tempered ones, who
delighted in telling us anything they knew that would pain us.</p>
<p>"Three or four months ago, we heard that every white prisoner in
Seringapatam had been put to death, by Tippoo's orders, and that
doubtless there would be a similar clearance everywhere else. Then,
again, we were told that the English had retreated, beaten, from
before Seringapatam, and that the last of them would soon be down
the ghauts. But whether the prisoners have been killed in other
hill forts like this, I cannot say, although I suppose not, or we
should not have escaped."</p>
<p>"Certainly no such orders can have been sent to the forts here,
for we have found a few prisoners in several of them. Of course, it
may be otherwise in the forts near the capital, which Tippoo might
have thought were likely to fall into our hands; while he may not
have considered it worth while to send the same orders to places so
far away as this, where no British force was likely to come. Still,
at any rate, it is a great satisfaction that my father was alive
four years ago, and that he was in kind hands. That is all in
favour of my finding him, still alive, in one of the places we
shall take, for Lord Cornwallis intends to besiege some of the
fortresses that command the passes, because he cannot undertake
another siege of Seringapatam until he can obtain supplies, freely
and regularly, from beyond the ghauts; as nothing whatever can be
obtained from the country round, so completely is it wasted by
Tippoo's cavalry. I have, therefore, great hopes that my father may
be found in one of these forts."</p>
<p>"I hope, indeed, that you may find him. I am convinced that the
governor would save his life, if he could do so; though, on the
other hand, he would, I am sure, carry out any order he might
receive from Tippoo. Of course, he may not be in charge of a fort
now, and may have been appointed colonel of one of the regiments.
However, it is always better to hope that things will come as you
wish them, however unlikely it may seem that they will do so. We
have been living on hope here, though the chances of our ever being
released were small, indeed. Of course, we did not even know that
Tippoo and the English were at war, until we heard that an English
army was besieging Bangalore; and even then we all felt that, even
if Tippoo were beaten and forced to make peace, it would make no
difference to us. He kept back hundreds of prisoners when he was
defeated before, and would certainly not surrender any he now
holds, unless compelled to do so; and no one would be able to give
information as to the existence of captives in these distant
forts.</p>
<p>"And yet, in the teeth of all these improbabilities, we
continued to hope, and the hopes have been realised."</p>
<p>The capture of forts by the Mahratta army was abruptly checked.
Having, so far, met with such slight opposition, Purseram Bhow
became over confident, and scattered his force over a wide extent
of country, in order that they might more easily find food and
forage. In this condition they were suddenly attacked by Tippoo,
who took advantage of the English being detained at Bangalore,
while the transport train was being reorganised, to strike a blow
at the Mahrattis.</p>
<p>The stroke was a heavy one. Many of the detached parties were
completely destroyed; and the Mahratta general, after gathering the
rest to his standard, was forced to retreat, until strong
reinforcements were sent him from Bangalore.</p>
<p>Learning, from them, that it was probable Lord Cornwallis would
advance as soon as they rejoined him, Dick determined to go back to
Bangalore, as it was unlikely that, after the severe check they had
received, the Mahrattis would resume the offensive for a time.</p>
<p>Surajah and the men were glad to return to the troop, and as
soon as the Mysorean force returned to Seringapatam, Dick, without
waiting for the infantry to get in motion, rode rapidly across the
country with his little party.</p>
<p>He accompanied the English army during their operations,
obtaining permission to go with the columns engaged in the siege of
the hill fortresses, and was present at the capture of all the most
important strongholds. To his bitter disappointment, no English
prisoners were found in any of them, and it was but too certain
that all who might have been there had been massacred, by Tippoo's
orders, on the first advance of the British against Seringapatam.</p>
<SPAN name="Map3" /><center>
<ANTIMG src="images/3.jpg" alt="Plan of the siege of Seringapatam" />
<table summary="Key to Seringapatam plan">
<tr><td class="lkey">1.</td>
<td class="rkey">Bangalore gate.</td></tr>
<tr><td class="lkey">2.</td>
<td class="rkey">Mysore gate.</td></tr>
<tr><td class="lkey">3.</td>
<td class="rkey">Old bridge.</td></tr>
<tr><td class="lkey">4.</td>
<td class="rkey">New bridge.</td></tr>
<tr><td class="lkey">5.</td>
<td class="rkey">Place for breaching batteries.</td></tr>
<tr><td class="lkey">6.</td>
<td class="rkey">Place intended for the enfilading battery.</td></tr>
<tr><td class="lkey">7.</td>
<td class="rkey">Battery to defend the bridge.</td></tr>
<tr><td class="lkey">8.</td>
<td class="rkey">Montresor's redoubt.</td></tr>
<tr><td class="lkey">9.</td>
<td class="rkey">Hyder Ali's tomb.</td></tr>
</table></center>
<p>Great indeed was the satisfaction of the army when they at last
came in sight of the city. The capital of Mysore stood on an
island, in the river Cauvery. This was four miles in length, and
two in breadth. The town stood in its centre, the fort at the
northern end. The island was approached by two bridges, one close
to the fort, the other at the south, both being defended by strong
batteries. There were also three fords, two of these being at the
north end of the island, and also defended by batteries; the third
was near the centre of the island, a mile below the fort, and
leading to the native town.</p>
<p>The fort was separated from the rest of the island by a deep
ditch cut across it. It was defended by numerous batteries. There
were two gardens on the island, full of large trees, one of them
being the burial place of Hyder Ali. This was connected with the
fort by two avenues of trees. The country round was flat, a
considerable portion being almost level with the river, and devoted
to the cultivation of rice, while at other points a forest
extended, almost to the bank.</p>
<p>After obtaining a view, from some high ground, of the city and
of Tippoo's army encamped beyond its walls, the British force took
up its position six miles to the northwest of the city. No sooner
had the army reached their camping ground than Lord Cornwallis,
with his staff, reconnoitred the approaches.</p>
<p>A thick hedge, formed by a wide belt of thorny shrubs,
interlaced and fastened together by cords, extended from the bank
of the river, about a thousand yards above Seringapatam; and,
making a wide sweep, came down to it again opposite the other end
of the island.</p>
<p>It was within the shelter of this formidable obstacle that
Tippoo's army was encamped. Within the enclosed space were seven or
eight eminences, on which strong redoubts had been erected. Fearing
that Tippoo might, as soon as he saw the position taken up by the
assailants, sally out with his army, take the field, and, as
before, cut all his communications, Lord Cornwallis determined to
strike a blow at once.</p>
<p>At sunset, orders were accordingly issued for the forces to
move, in three columns, at three o'clock; by which time the moon
would be high enough to light up, thoroughly, the ground to be
traversed. The centre column, consisting of 3,700 men, under Lord
Cornwallis himself, was to burst through the hedge at the centre of
the enemy's position, to drive the enemy before them, and, if
possible, to cross the ford to the island with the fugitives.</p>
<p>This, however, was not to be done until the centre column was
reinforced by that under General Meadows, which was to avoid a
strong redoubt at the northwest extremity of the hedge, and,
entering the fence at a point between the redoubt and the river,
drive the enemy before it, until it joined the centre column.
Colonel Meadows had 3,300 under his command. The left column,
consisting of 1,700 men under Colonel Maxwell, was first to carry a
redoubt on Carrygut Hill, just outside the fence; and, having
captured this, to cut its way through the hedge, and to cross the
river at once, with a portion of the centre column.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, owing to a misunderstanding as to the order, the
officer guiding General Meadow's column, instead of taking it to a
point between the northwestern redoubt and the river, led it
directly at the fort. This was stoutly defended, and cost the
British eighty men and eleven officers. Leaving a strong garrison
here, the column advanced, but came upon another redoubt, of even
greater strength and magnitude; and the general, fearing that the
delay that would take place in capturing it would entirely
disarrange the plan of the attack, thought he had better make his
way out through the hedge, march round it to the point where the
centre column had entered it, and so give Lord Cornwallis the
support he must need, opposed as he was to the whole army of
Tippoo.</p>
<p>In the meantime, Colonel Maxwell's force had stormed the work on
Carrygut Hill, and had made its way through the hedge; suffering
heavily, as it did so, from the fire of a strong body of the enemy,
concealed in a water course. The head of the centre column, under
General Knox, after cutting its way through the hedge, pushed on
with levelled bayonets, thrust its way through the enemy's
infantry, and, mingling with a mass of fugitives, crossed the main
ford close under the guns of the fort, and took possession of a
village, half way between the town and the fort.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, in the confusion but three companies had followed
him. The rest of the regiment and three companies of Sepoys crossed
lower down, and gained possession of a palace on the bank of the
river. The officer in command, however, not knowing that any others
had crossed, and receiving no orders, waited until day began to
break. He then recrossed the river and joined Lord Cornwallis, a
portion of whose column, having been reinforced by Maxwell's
column, crossed the river nearly opposite the town.</p>
<p>As they were crossing, a battery of the enemy's artillery opened
a heavy fire upon them; but Colonel Knox, with his three companies,
charged it in the rear, drove out the defenders, and silenced the
guns.</p>
<p>All this time Lord Cornwallis was with the reserve of the
central column, eagerly waiting the arrival of General Meadows'
division. This, in some unaccountable way, had missed the gap in
the hedge by which the centre column had entered, and, marching on,
halted at last at Carrygut Hill, where it was not discovered until
daylight.</p>
<p>The Mysore army on its left was still unbroken, and had been
joined by large numbers of troops from the centre. On discovering
the smallness of the force under Lord Cornwallis, they attacked it
in overwhelming numbers, led by Tippoo himself. The British
infantry advanced to meet them with the bayonet, and drove them
back with heavy loss. They rallied, and returned to the attack
again and again, but were as often repulsed; continuing their
attacks, however, until daylight, when Lord Cornwallis, discovering
at last the position of General Meadows, joined him on Carrygut
Hill.</p>
<p>When day broke, the commanders of the two armies were able to
estimate the results of the night's operations. On the English
side, the only positions gained were the works on Carrygut Hill,
the redoubt at the northwest corner of the hedge, another redoubt
captured by the centre column, and the positions occupied by the
force under Colonels Stuart and Knox, at the eastern end of the
island.</p>
<p>The sultan found that his army was much reduced in strength, no
less than twenty-three thousand men being killed, wounded, or
missing. Of these, the missing were vastly the most numerous, for
ten thousand Chelahs, young Hindoos whom Tippoo had carried off in
his raids, and forced to become soldiers, and, nominally,
Mohammedans, had taken advantage of the confusion, and marched away
with their arms to the Forest of Coorg.</p>
<p>Tippoo made several determined efforts to drive Colonel Stuart's
force off the island, and to recapture the redoubts, but was
repulsed with such heavy loss that he abandoned the attempt
altogether, evacuated the other redoubts, and brought his whole
army across on to the island.</p>
<p>Tippoo now attempted to negotiate. He had already done so a
month before, but Lord Cornwallis had refused to accept his
advances, saying that negotiation was useless, with one who
disregarded treaties and violated articles of capitulation.</p>
<p>"Send hither," he wrote, "the garrison of Coimbatoor, and then
we will listen to what you have to say."</p>
<p>Lord Cornwallis alluded to the small body of troops who, under
Lieutenants Chalmers and Nash, had bravely defended that town when
it had been attacked by one of Tippoo's generals. The gallant
little garrison had surrendered at last, on the condition that they
should be allowed to march freely away. This condition had been
violated by Tippoo, and the garrison had been marched, as
prisoners, to Seringapatam. The two officers had been kept in the
fort, but most of the soldiers, and twenty-seven other European
captives who had lately been brought in from the hill forts, were
lodged in the village that Colonel Knox had first occupied, on
crossing the river, and had all been released by him. Some of these
had been in Tippoo's hands for many years, and their joy at their
unexpected release was unspeakable.</p>
<p>Preparations were now made for the siege. General Abercrombie
was ordered up, with a force of six thousand men, but before his
arrival, Lieutenant Chalmers was sent in with a letter from Tippoo,
asking for terms of capitulation. Negotiations were indeed entered
into, but, doubting Tippoo's good faith, the preparations for the
siege were continued; and upon the arrival of General Abercrombie's
force, on the 15th of February, siege operations were commenced at
the end of the island still in British possession.</p>
<p>A few days afterwards, the army was astounded at hearing that
the conditions had been agreed upon, and that hostilities were to
cease at once. So great was the indignation, indeed, that a spirit
of insubordination, and almost mutiny, was evinced by many of the
corps. They had suffered extreme hardships, had been engaged in
most arduous marches, had been decimated by fever and bad food, and
they could scarce believe their ears when they heard that they were
to hold their hands, now that, after a year's campaigning,
Seringapatam was at their mercy; and that the man who had butchered
so many hundred English captives, who had wasted whole provinces
and carried half a million people into captivity, who had been
guilty of the grossest treachery, and whose word was absolutely
worthless, was to escape personal punishment.</p>
<p>Still higher did the indignation rise, both among officers and
men, when the conditions of the treaty became known, and it was
discovered that no stipulation whatever had been made for the
handing over of the English prisoners still in Mysore, previous to
a cessation of hostilities. This condition, at least, should have
been insisted upon, and carried out previous to any negotiations
being entered upon.</p>
<p>The reasons that induced Lord Cornwallis to make this treaty,
when Seringapatam lay at his mercy, have ever been a mystery.
Tippoo had proved himself a monster unfitted to live, much less to
rule, and the crimes he had committed against the English should
have been punished by the public trial and execution of their
author. To conclude peace with him, now, was to enable him to make
fresh preparations for war, and to necessitate another expedition
at enormous cost and great loss of life. Tippoo had already proved
that he was not to be bound either by treaties or oaths. And,
lastly, it would have been thought that, as a general, Lord
Cornwallis would have wished his name to go down to posterity in
connection with the conquest of Mysore, and the capture of
Seringapatam, rather than with the memorable surrender of York
Town, the greatest disaster that ever befell a British army.</p>
<p>The conditions were, in themselves, onerous, and had they been
imposed upon any other than a brutal and faithless tyrant, might
have been deemed sufficient. Tippoo was deprived of half his
dominions, which were to be divided among the allies, each taking
the portions adjacent to their territory. A sum of 3,300,000 pounds
was to be paid for the expenses of the war. All prisoners of the
allied powers were to be restored.</p>
<p>Two of Tippoo's sons were to be given up as hostages. Even after
they had been handed over, there were considerable delays before
Tippoo's signature was obtained, and it was not until Lord
Cornwallis threatened to resume hostilities that, on the 18th of
March, a treaty was finally sealed. Of the ceded territory the
Mahrattis and the Nizam each took a third as their share, although
the assistance they had rendered in the struggle had been but of
comparatively slight utility. It may, indeed, be almost said that
it was given to them as a reward for not accepting the offers
Tippoo had made them, of joining with him against the British.</p>
<p>The British share included a large part of the Malabar coast,
with the forts of Calicut and Cananore, and the territory of our
ally, the Rajah of Coorg. These cessions gave us the passes leading
into Mysore from the west. On the south we gained possession of the
fort of Dindegul, and the districts surrounding it; while on the
east we acquired the tract from Amboor to Caroor, and so obtained
possession of several important fortresses, together with the chief
passes by which Hyder had made his incursions into the
Carnatic.</p>
<p>Dick felt deeply the absence of any proviso, in the treaty, that
all prisoners should be restored previous to a cessation of
hostilities; at the same time admitting the argument of his uncle
that, although under such an agreement some prisoners might be
released, there was no means of insuring that the stipulation would
be faithfully carried out.</p>
<p>"You see, Dick, no one knows, or has indeed the faintest idea,
what prisoners Tippoo still has in his hands. We do not know how
many have been murdered during the years Tippoo has reigned. Men
who have escaped have, from time to time, brought down news of
murders in the places where they had been confined, but they have
known little of what has happened elsewhere. Moreover, we have
learned that certainly fifty or sixty were put to death, at
Seringapatam, before we advanced upon it the first time. We know,
too, that some were murdered in the hill forts that we have
captured. But how many remain alive, at the present time, we have
not the slightest idea. Tippoo might hand over a dozen, and take a
solemn oath that there was not one remaining; and though we might
feel perfectly certain that he was lying, we should be in no
position to prove it.</p>
<p>"The stipulation ought to have been made, if only as a matter of
honour, but it would have been of no real efficiency. Of course, if
we had dethroned Tippoo and annexed all his territory, we should
undoubtedly have got at all the prisoners, wherever they were
hidden. But we could hardly have done that. It would have aroused
the jealousy and fear of every native prince in India. It would
have united the Nizam and the Mahrattis against us, and would even
have been disapproved of in England, where public opinion is
adverse to further acquisitions of territory, and where people are,
of course, altogether ignorant of the monstrous cruelties
perpetrated by Tippoo, not only upon English captives, but upon his
neighbours everywhere.</p>
<p>"Naturally, I am prejudiced in favour of this treaty, for the
handing over of the country from Amboor to Caroor, with all the
passes and forts, will set us free at Tripataly from the danger of
being again overrun and devastated by Mysore. My people will be
able to go about their work peacefully and in security, free alike
from fear of wholesale invasion, or incursions of robber bands from
the ghauts. All my waste lands will be taken up. My revenue will be
trebled.</p>
<p>"There is another thing. Now that the English possess territory
beyond that of the Nabob of Arcot, and are gradually spreading
their power north, there can be little doubt that, before long, the
whole country of Arcot, Travancore, Tanjore, and other small native
powers will be incorporated in their dominions. Arcot is powerless
for defence, and while, during the last two wars, it has been
nominally an ally of the English, the Nabob has been able to give
them no real assistance whatever, and the burden of his territory
has fallen on them. They took the first step when, at the beginning
of the present war, they arranged with him to utilise all the
resources and collect the revenues of his possessions, and to allow
him an annual income for the maintenance of his state and family.
This is clearly the first step towards taking the territory into
their own hands, and managing its revenues, and the same will be
done in other cases.</p>
<p>"Lord Cornwallis the other day, in thanking me for the services
that you and I and the troop have rendered, promised me that an
early arrangement should be made, by which I should rule Tripataly
under the government of Madras, instead of under the Nabob. This,
you see, will be virtually a step in rank, and I shall hold my land
direct from the English, instead of from a prince who has become,
in fact, a puppet in their hands."</p>
<p>A few days later, the army set off on its march from Mysore, and
the same day the Rajah, after making his adieus to Lord Cornwallis,
started with his troop for Tripataly, making his way by long
marches, instead of following the slow progress of the army. After
a couple of days at Tripataly, they went down to Madras, and
brought back the Rajah's household.</p>
<p>The meeting between Dick and his mother was one of mixed
feeling. It was twenty months since the former had left with his
uncle, and he was now nearly eighteen. He had written whenever
there was an opportunity of sending any letters; and although his
position as interpreter on the staff of the general had relieved
her from any great anxiety on his account, she was glad, indeed, to
see him again.</p>
<p>Upon the other hand, the fact that, as the war went on, and
fortress after fortress had been captured, no news came to her that
her hopes had been realised; and that the war had now come to a
termination, without the mystery that hung over her husband being
in any way cleared up, had profoundly depressed Mrs. Holland, and
it was with mingled tears of pleasure and sorrow that she fell on
his neck on his return to Madras.</p>
<p>"You must not give way, Mother," Dick said, as she sobbed out
her fears that all hope was at an end. "Remember that you have
never doubted he was alive, and that you have always said you would
know if any evil fate had befallen him; and I have always felt
confident that you were right. There is nothing changed. I
certainly have not succeeded in finding him, but we have found many
prisoners in some of the little out-of-the-way forts. Now, some of
them have been captives quite as long as he has; therefore there is
no reason, whatever, why he should not also be alive. I have no
thought of giving up the search as hopeless. I mean to carry out
our old plans; and certainly I am much better fitted to do so than
I was when I first landed here. I know a great deal about Mysore,
and although I don't say I speak the dialect like a native, I have
learnt a good deal of it, and can speak it quite as well as the
natives of the ghauts and outlying provinces. Surajah, who is a
great friend of mine, has told me that if I go he will go too, and
that will be a tremendous help. Anyhow, as long as you continue to
believe firmly that Father is still alive, I mean to continue the
search for him."</p>
<p>"I do believe that he is alive, Dick, as firmly as ever. I have
not lost hope in that respect. It is only that I doubt now whether
he will ever be found."</p>
<p>"Well, that is my business, Mother. As long as you continue to
believe that he is still alive, I shall continue to search for him.
I have no other object in life, at present. It will be quite soon
enough for me to think of taking up the commission I have been
promised, when you tell me that your feeling that he is alive has
been shaken."</p>
<p>Mrs. Holland was comforted by Dick's assurance and confident
tone, and, putting the thought aside for a time, gave herself up to
the pleasure of his return. They had found everything at Tripataly
as they had left it, for the Mysore horsemen had not penetrated so
far north, before Tippoo turned his course east to Pondicherry. The
people had, months before, returned to their homes and
avocations.</p>
<p>One evening the Rajah said, as they were all sitting
together:</p>
<p>"I hear from my wife, Dick, that your mother has told her you
still intend to carry out your original project."</p>
<p>"Yes, Uncle. I have quite made up my mind as to that. There are
still plenty of places where he may be, and certainly I am a good
deal more fitted for travelling about in disguise, in Mysore, than
I was before."</p>
<p>The Rajah nodded.</p>
<p>"Yes. I think, Dick, you are as capable of taking care of
yourself as anyone could be. I hear that Surajah is willing to go
with you, and this will certainly be a great advantage. He has
proved himself thoroughly intelligent and trustworthy, and I have
promised him that someday he shall be captain of the troop. You are
not thinking of starting just yet, I suppose?"</p>
<p>"No, Uncle. I thought of staying another month or two, before I
go off again. Mother says she cannot let me go before that."</p>
<p>"I fancy it will take you longer than that, Dick, before you can
pass as a native."</p>
<p>Dick looked surprised.</p>
<p>"Why, Uncle, I did pass as a native, eighteen months ago."</p>
<p>"Yes, you did, Dick; but for how long? You went into shops,
bought things, chatted for a short time with natives, and so on;
but that is not like living among them. You would be found out
before you had been a single day in the company of a native."</p>
<p>Dick looked still more surprised.</p>
<p>"How, Uncle? What do I do that they would know me by."</p>
<p>"It is not what you do, Dick, but it is what you don't do. You
can't sit on your heels--squat, as you call it. That is the
habitual attitude of every native. He squats while he cooks. He
squats for hours by the fire, smoking and talking. He never stands
for any length of time and, except upon a divan or something of
that sort, he never sits down. Before you can go and live among the
natives, and pass as one for any length of time, you must learn to
squat as they do, for hours at a stretch; and I can tell you that
it is not by any means an easy accomplishment to learn. I myself
have quite lost the power. I used to be able to do it, as a boy,
but from always sitting on divans or chairs in European fashion, I
have got out of the way of it, and I don't think I could squat for
a quarter of an hour, to save my life."</p>
<p>Dick's mother and cousins laughed heartily, but he said,
seriously, "You are quite right, Uncle. I wonder I never thought of
it before. It was stupid of me not to do so. Of course, when I have
been talking with Surajah or other officers, by a camp fire, I have
sat on the ground; but I see that it would never do, in native
dress. I will begin at once."</p>
<p>"Wait a moment, Dick," the Rajah said. "There are other things
which you will have to practise. You may have to move in several
disguises, and must learn to comport yourself in accordance with
them. You must remember that your motions are quicker and more
energetic than are those of people here. Your walk is different;
the swing of the arms, your carriage, are all different from
theirs. You are unaccustomed to walk either barefooted or in native
shoes. Now, all these things have to be practised before you can
really pass muster. Therefore I propose that you shall at once
accustom yourself to the attire, which you can do in our apartments
of an evening. The ranee and the boys will be able to correct your
first awkwardness, and to teach you much.</p>
<p>"After a week or two, you must stain your face, arms, and legs,
and go out with Rajbullub in the evening. You must keep your eyes
open, and watch everything that passes, and do as you see others
do. When Rajbullub thinks that you can pass muster, you will take
to going out with him in the daylight, and so you will come, in
time, to reach a point that it will be safe for you to begin your
attempt.</p>
<p>"Do not watch only the peasants. There is no saying that it may
not be necessary to take to other disguises. Observe the traders,
the soldiers, and even the fakirs. You will see that they walk each
with a different mien. The trader is slow and sober. The man who
wears a sword walks with a certain swagger. The fakir is everything
by turns; he whines, and threatens; he sometimes mumbles his
prayers, and sometimes shrieks at the top of his voice.</p>
<p>"When you are not riding or shooting, lad, do not spend your
time in the garden, or with the women. Go into the town and keep
your eyes open. Bear in mind that you are learning a lesson, and
that your life depends upon your being perfect in every
respect.</p>
<p>"As to your first disguise, I will speak to Rajbullub, and he
will get it ready by tomorrow evening. The dress of the peasant of
Mysore differs little from that here, save that he wears rather
more clothing than is necessary in this warm climate."</p>
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