<h2><SPAN name="Ch21" name="Ch21">Chapter 21</SPAN>: Home.</h2>
<p>It was early in December, 1792, that Dick Holland joined his
regiment, which was stationed at Madras. There were but five other
officers, and Dick found, to his satisfaction, that the junior of
them had had four years' service. Consequently, he did not step
over any one's head, owing to his commission being dated nearly
three years previously. As there were, in the garrison, many
officers who had served on the general staff in the last war, Dick
soon found some of his former acquaintances, and the story of his
long search for his father, and its successful termination, soon
spread, and gained for him a place in civil as well as military
society.</p>
<p>The next year passed peacefully, and was an unusually quiet time
in India. That Tippoo intended to renew the war, as soon as he was
able, was well known to the government, and one of its chief
objects of solicitude was the endeavour to counteract the secret
negotiations that were constantly going on between him, the Nizam,
and the Mahrattis.</p>
<p>Tippoo was known to have sent confidential messengers to all the
great princes of India--even to the ruler of Afghanistan--inviting
them to join the confederacy of the Mahrattis, the Nizam, and
himself, to drive the English out of India altogether. Still
greater cause for uneasiness was the alliance that Tippoo had
endeavoured to make with the French, who, as he had learned, had
gained great successes in Europe; and, believing from their account
that their country was much stronger than England, he had sent
envoys to the Mauritius, to propose an offensive and defensive
alliance against England. The envoys had been politely received,
and some of them had proceeded to France, where Tippoo's proposal
had been accepted. They committed France, indeed, to nothing, as
she was already at war with England; but the French were extremely
glad to embrace the proposal of Tippoo, as they overrated his
power, and believed that he would prove a formidable opponent to
the English, and would necessitate the employment of additional
troops and ships there, and so weaken England's power at home. To
confirm the alliance, some sixty or seventy Frenchmen, mostly
adventurers, were sent from the Mauritius as civil and military
officers.</p>
<p>Tippoo's council had been strongly opposed to this step on his
part. They had pointed out to him that their alliance, with a power
at war with the English, would render war between the English and
him inevitable; and that France was not in a position to aid them
in any way. The only benefit, indeed, that he could gain, was the
possibility that the fourteen thousand French troops, in the
service of the Nizam, might revolt and come over to him; but even
this was doubtful, as these were not troops belonging to the French
government, but an independent body, raised and officered by
adventurers, who might not be willing to imperil their own
position, and interests, by embarking on a hazardous war at the
orders of a far-distant government.</p>
<p>These events happened soon after Dick's return, but nothing was
generally known of what was passing, although reports of Tippoo's
proceedings had reached the government of India. The party of
Frenchmen arrived at Seringapatam and were, at first, well received
by Tippoo. But they had soon disgusted him by their assumption of
dictatorial powers; while they, on their part, were disappointed at
not receiving the emoluments and salaries they had expected. Most
of them very speedily left his service. Some of the military men
were employed at Bangalore, and other towns, in drilling the
troops, and a few remained at Seringapatam, neglected by Tippoo,
whose eyes were now open to the character of these adventurers. But
this in no way shook his belief that he would obtain great aid from
France, as he had received letters from official personages there,
encouraging him to combine with other native powers, to drive the
English out of India, and promising large aid in troops and
ships.</p>
<p>When the Earl of Mornington--afterwards the Marquis of
Wellesley--arrived at Calcutta as Governor General of India, in May
1798, the situation had become so critical that, although war had
not been absolutely declared on either side, Tippoo's open alliance
with the French rendered it certain that hostilities must commence
ere long; and Lord Mornington lost no time in proceeding to make
preparations for war. As Lord Cornwallis had done, he found the
greatest difficulty in inducing the supine government of Madras to
take any steps. They protested that, were they to make any show of
activity, Tippoo would descend the ghauts, and at once ravage the
whole country; and they declared that they had no force whatever
that could withstand him. They continued in their cowardly
inactivity until the governor general was forced to override their
authority altogether, and take the matter into his own hands.</p>
<p>The first step was to curb the Nizam's power, for everything
pointed to the probability that he intended to join Mysore, being
inclined so to do by Tippoo's promises, and by the influence of the
officers of the strong body of French troops in his service.
Negotiations were therefore opened by Lord Mornington, who offered
to guarantee the Nizam's dominions if he would join the English
against Tippoo, and promised that after the war he should obtain a
large share of the territory taken from Mysore.</p>
<p>The Nizam's position was a difficult one. On one side of him lay
the dominions of his warlike and powerful neighbour, Tippoo. On the
other he was exposed to the incursions of the Mahrattis, whose
rising power was a constant threat to his safety. He had, moreover,
to cope with a serious rebellion by his son, Ali Jah.</p>
<p>He was willing enough to obtain the guarantee of the English
against aggressions by the Mahrattis, but he hesitated in complying
with the preliminary demand that he should dispense with the
French. The fighting powers of this body rendered them valuable
auxiliaries, but he secretly feared them, and resented their
pretensions; which pointed to the fact that, ere long, instead of
being his servants, they might become his masters. When, therefore,
the British government offered him a subsidiary force of six
battalions, and to guarantee him against any further aggression by
the Mahrattis, he accepted the proposal; but in a half-hearted way,
that showed he could not be relied upon for any efficient
assistance in disarming his French auxiliaries.</p>
<p>No time was lost, by the government, in marching the promised
force to Hyderabad. The French, 14,000 strong, refused to disband,
and were joined by the Nizam's household force, which was in the
French interest. The Nizam, terrified at the prospect of a contest,
the success of which was doubtful, abandoned the capital and took
refuge in a fortress, there to await the issue of events; but
positively refused to issue orders to the French to disband. Two of
the English battalions, which were on the other side of the river
to that on which the French were encamped, opened a destructive
fire upon them, and with red-hot shot set fire to their magazines
and storehouses, while the other four battalions moved into
position to make a direct attack.</p>
<p>The Nizam now saw that he had no alternative but to declare
openly for the French, or to dismiss them. He preferred the latter
alternative. Peron, who commanded the French, saw that unless he
surrendered, the position of his force was desperate. Accordingly,
on receipt of the order, he and his officers expressed their
readiness to accept their dismissal. Their men were, however, in a
state of mutiny, and the officers were compelled to make their
escape from the camp under cover of night. The next morning the
camp was surrounded by the English and the troops of the Nizam, and
the French then surrendered without a shot being fired.</p>
<p>While the Nizam was thus rendered powerless, negotiations had
been going on with the Mahrattis; but owing to the quarrels and
jealousies of their chiefs, nothing could be done with them. It
was, however, apparent that, for the same reason, Tippoo would
equally fail in his attempt to obtain their alliance against us,
and that therefore it was with Mysore alone that we should have to
deal.</p>
<p>In the meantime, though preparing for war, Lord Mornington was
most anxious to avoid it. When Tippoo wrote to complain that some
villages of his had been occupied by people from Coorg, the
governor general ordered their immediate restoration to him. In
November he sent the Sultan a friendly letter, pointing out that he
could look for no efficient aid from France, and that any
auxiliaries who might possibly join him would only introduce the
principles of anarchy, and the hatred of all religion, that
animated the whole French nation; that his alliance with them was
really equivalent to a declaration of war against England; and, as
he was unwilling to believe that Tippoo was actuated by unfriendly
feelings, or desired to break the engagements of the treaty entered
into with him, he offered to send an officer to Mysore to discuss
any points upon which variance might have arisen, and to arrange a
scheme that would be satisfactory to them both.</p>
<p>To this letter no answer was received for five weeks, by which
time Lord Mornington had arrived at Madras. He then received a
letter containing a tissue of the most palpable lies concerning
Tippoo's dealings with the French. Two or three more letters
passed, but as Tippoo's answers were all vague and evasive, the
governor general issued a manifesto, on the 22nd of February, 1799,
recapitulating all the grievances against Mysore, and declaring
that, though the allies were prepared to repel any attack, they
were equally anxious to effect an arrangement with him.</p>
<p>But Tippoo still believed that a large French army would
speedily arrive. He had received letters from Buonaparte in person,
written from Egypt, and saying that he had arrived on the borders
of the Red Sea, "with an innumerable and invincible army, full of
the desire to deliver you from the iron yoke of England." Tippoo
well knew, also, that although the governor general spoke for
himself and his allies, the Nizam was powerless to render any
assistance to the English, and that the Mahrattis were far more
likely to join him than they were to assist his foes.</p>
<p>The manifesto of Lord Mornington was speedily followed by
action, for at the end of January an army of nearly 37,000 men had
been assembled at Vellore. Of these some 20,000 were the Madras
force. With them were the Nizam's army, nominally commanded by Meer
Alum, but really by Colonel Wellesley--afterwards Duke of
Wellington--who had with him his own regiment, the 33rd; 6,500 men
under Colonel Dalrymple; 3,621 infantry, for the most part French
troops who had re-enlisted under us; and 6000 regular and irregular
horse.</p>
<p>Dick, who had now attained the rank of captain, had been
introduced by one of Lord Cornwallis's old staff officers to
General Harris, who, as general of the Madras army, was in command
of the whole. On hearing of the services Dick had rendered in the
last war, and that his perfect acquaintance with the language, and
with the ground over which the army would pass, would enable him to
be equally efficient on the present occasion, General Harris at
once detached him from service with the regiment, and appointed him
to a post on his own staff.</p>
<p>Had it not been that Dick had seen, for the last two years, that
hostilities must ere long be commenced with Tippoo; he would,
before this, have left the army and returned home. He was heartily
tired of the long inaction. When the regiment was stationed at
Madras, life was very pleasant; but a considerable portion of his
time was spent at out stations, where the duties were very light,
and there was nothing to break the monotony of camp life. He
received letters regularly from his mother, who gave him full
details of their home life.</p>
<p>The first that he received merely announced their safe arrival
in England. The second was longer and more interesting. They had
had no difficulty in discovering the address of Annie's father, and
on writing to him, he had immediately come up to town. He had lost
his wife, on his voyage home from India, and was overjoyed at the
discovery of his daughter, and at her return to England.</p>
<p>"He is," Dick's mother wrote, "very much broken in health. Annie
behaved very nicely. Poor child, it was only natural that, after
what you did for her, and our being all that time with her, the
thought of leaving us for her parent, of whom she had no
recollection, was a great grief. However, I talked it over with
her, many times, and pointed out to her that her first duty was to
the father who had been so many years deprived of her, and that,
although there was no reason why she should not manifest affection
for us, she must not allow him to think, for a moment, that she was
not as pleased to see him as he was to welcome her. She behaved
beautifully when her father arrived, and when he had been in the
house five minutes, and spoke of the death of his wife, his bitter
regret that she had not lived to see Annie restored to them, the
loneliness of his life and how it would be brightened now that she
was again with him, his words so touched her that she threw herself
into his arms, and sobbed out that she would do all she could to
make his life happy. He had, of course, received the letter we had
written to him from Tripataly, and quite pained me by the gratitude
he showed for what he called my kindness to his daughter.</p>
<p>"He said that, by this post, he should write to endeavour to
express some of his feelings to you. Annie went away with him the
next day, to a place he has bought near Plymouth. He has promised
to let us have her for a month, every year, and we have promised to
go down for the same time, every summer, to stay with her. He asks
numberless questions about you, which neither I nor Annie are ever
tired of answering. Even with a mother's natural partiality, I must
own that her descriptions are almost too flattering, and he must
think that you are one of the most admirable of men.</p>
<p>"Next as to the jewels. Your father took them to be valued by
several diamond merchants, and accepted the highest offer, which
was 16,000 pounds, of which he has already invested twelve, in your
name, in shares in six ships. Four of these are Indiamen. The other
two are privateers. He said that he did not think you would object
to a quarter of the money being put into a speculative venture, and
that they were both good craft, well armed and well commanded, with
strong crews; and would, if successful, earn as much in a year as a
merchantman would in ten."</p>
<p>Since then the letters had been of a uniform character. The
shares in the Indiamen were giving a good and steady return. The
privateers had been very fortunate, and had captured some rich
prizes. Annie had been up, or they had been down at Plymouth. The
letters during the last three years had reported her as having
grown into a young woman, and, as his mother declared, a very
pretty one. After that the allusions to her were less frequent, but
it was mentioned that she was as fond of them as ever, and that she
was still unmarried.</p>
<p>"She always asks when you are coming home, Dick," Mrs. Holland
said, in the last letter he had received before accompanying
General Harris to Vellore. "I told her, of course, that your last
letter said that war was certain with Tippoo; that you hoped, this
time, to see Seringapatam taken and the tyrant's power broken; and
that after it was over you would come home on leave and, perhaps,
would not go out again."</p>
<p>During the six years that he had been in the army, Dick had very
frequently been at Tripataly, as there was little difficulty in
getting leave for a fortnight. His cousins had now grown up into
young men, Surajah commanded the troop, and his stays there were
always extremely pleasant. The troop now numbered two hundred, for
with quiet times the population of the territory had largely
increased, and the Rajah's income grown in proportion. The troop
was now dressed in uniform, and in arms and discipline resembled
the irregular cavalry in the Company's service, and when Dick
arrived at Vellore he found his uncle and cousins there with their
cavalry.</p>
<p>"I thought, Dick, of only sending the boys," the Rajah said,
"but when the time came for them to start, I felt that I must go
myself. We have suffered enough at the hands of Mysore, and I do
hope to see Tippoo's capital taken, and his power of mischief put
an end to, for good and all."</p>
<p>"I am glad, indeed, that you are coming, Uncle. You may be sure
that, whenever I can get away from my duties with the general, I
shall spend most of my time in your camp, though I must
occasionally drop in on my own regiment."</p>
<p>The Rajah had already been down to Madras a month before, and
with his sons had been introduced to General Harris, by the
latter's chief of the staff, as having been always, like his father
before him, a faithful ally of the English, and as having
accompanied Lord Cornwallis on the occasion of the last campaign in
Mysore. The general had thanked him, heartily, for his offer to
place his two hundred cavalry at the disposal of the government,
and had expressed a hope that he, as well as his sons, would
accompany it in the field.</p>
<p>On the 11th of February, 1799, the army moved from Vellore, but
instead of ascending by the pass of Amboor, as had been expected,
it moved southwest, ascended the pass of Paliode, and on the 9th of
March was established, without opposition, in Tippoo's territory,
at a distance of eighty miles east of his capital. They then
marched north, until they reached a village ten miles south of
Bangalore. This route, although circuitous, was chosen, as the
roads were better, the country more level, and cultivation much
more general, affording far greater facilities for the collection
of forage for the baggage animals.</p>
<p>Hitherto, nothing had been seen of the Mysorean army. It had
been confidently expected that Tippoo would fight at least one
great battle, to oppose their advance against his capital, but so
far no signs had been seen of an enemy, and even the Mysore horse,
which had played so conspicuous a part in the last campaign, in no
way interfered with the advance of the army, or even with the
foraging parties.</p>
<p>A despatch that reached them, by a circuitous route, explained
why Tippoo had suffered them to advance so far unmolested. While
the Madras army had advanced from the southeast, a Bombay force,
6,500 strong, was ascending the Western Ghauts. As the advance
brigade, consisting of three native battalions, under Colonel
Montresor, reached Sedaseer; Tippoo, with 12,000 of his best
troops, fell upon it suddenly. His force had moved through the
jungle, and attacked the brigade in front and rear.</p>
<p>Although thus surprised, by an enemy nearly six times their
superior in force, the Sepoys behaved with a calmness and bravery
that could not have been surpassed by veteran troops. Maintaining a
steady front, they repulsed every attack, until a brigade, encamped
eight miles in their rear, came up to their assistance; and Tippoo
was then forced to retreat, having suffered a loss of 1,500 men,
including many of his best officers.</p>
<p>This proof of the inferiority of his troops, even when
enormously outnumbering the English, and fighting with all the
advantages of surprise, profoundly impressed Tippoo, and from this
time he appeared to regard the struggle as hopeless, and displayed
no signs whatever of the dash and energy that had distinguished
him, when leading one of the divisions of his father's army. He
marched with his troops straight to Seringapatam, and then moved
out with his whole force, to give battle to the main body of the
invaders. The antagonists came within sight of each other at the
village of Malavilly, thirty miles east of the capital. For some
time an artillery fire on both sides was kept up. Gradually the
infantry became engaged, and the Mysoreans showed both courage and
steadiness, until a column of two thousand men moved forward to
attack the 33rd Regiment.</p>
<p>The British troops reserved their fire, until the column was
within fifty yards of them. Then they poured in a withering volley,
and charged. The column fell back in disorder. General Floyd at
once charged them, with five regiments of cavalry, sabred great
numbers of them, and drove the remainder back in headlong rout. The
whole British line then advanced, cheering loudly. The first line
of Tippoo's army fell back upon its second, and the whole then
marched away, at a speed that soon left the British infantry far
behind them.</p>
<p>Instead of continuing his march straight upon the capital,
General Harris, learning from spies that Tippoo had wasted the
whole country along that line, moved southwest; collecting, as he
went, great quantities of cattle, sheep, and goats, and an
abundance of grain and forage; crossed the Cauvery at a ford at
Sosilay; and, on the 5th of April, took up his position at a
distance of two miles from the western face of the fort of
Seringapatam.</p>
<p>This movement completely disconcerted Tippoo. He had imagined
that the attack would, as on the previous occasion, take place on
the northern side of the river, and had covered the approaches
there with a series of additional fortifications, while on the
other side he had done but little. So despondent was he, that he
called together his principal officers, and said to them:</p>
<p>"We have arrived at our last stage. What is your
determination?"</p>
<p>His advisers took no brighter view of the prospect than he did
himself. They had unanimously opposed the war, had warned Tippoo
against trusting to the French, and had been adverse to measures
that could but result in a fresh trial of strength with the
English. The Sultan, however, while not attempting to combat their
opinion, had gone on his own way, and his officers now saw their
worst fears justified. They replied to his question:</p>
<p>"Our determination is to die with you."</p>
<p>On the day after arriving before Seringapatam, the British
attacked the villages and rocky eminences held by the enemy on the
south side of the river, and drove them back under the shelter of
their guns. General Floyd was sent, with the cavalry, to meet the
Bombay force and escort it to Seringapatam. This was accomplished,
and although the whole of the Mysore cavalry, and a strong force of
infantry hovered round the column, they did not venture to engage
it, and on the 14th the whole arrived at the camp before
Seringapatam.</p>
<p>The Bombay force, which was commanded by General Stuart, crossed
to the north bank of the river, and took up a position, there,
which enabled them to take in flank the outlying works and
trenches, with which Tippoo had hoped to prevent any attack upon
the western angle of the fort, where the river was so shallow that
it could be easily forded.</p>
<p>Tippoo now endeavoured to negotiate, and asked for a conference.
General Harris returned an answer, enclosing the draft of a
preliminary treaty, with which he had been supplied before
starting. It demanded one half of Tippoo's territories, a payment
of two millions sterling, and the delivery of four of his sons as
hostages. Tippoo returned no reply, and on the 22nd the garrison
made a vigorous sortie, and were only repulsed after several hours'
fighting.</p>
<p>For the next five days, the batteries of the besiegers kept up a
heavy fire, silenced every gun in the outlying works, and compelled
their defenders to retire across the river into the fort. Tippoo
now sank into such a state of despondency that he would listen to
none of the proposals of his officers for strengthening the
position, and would not even agree to the construction of a
retrenchment, which would cut off the western angle of the fort,
against which it was evident that the attack would be directed.</p>
<p>He knew that, if captured, there was little chance of his being
permitted to continue to reign; and had, indeed, made that prospect
more hopeless, by massacring all the English prisoners who had, by
his order, been brought in from the hill forts throughout the
country on his return to Seringapatam, after the repulse he had
suffered in his attack on the Bombay force.</p>
<p>On the 2nd of May, the batteries opened on the wall of the fort,
near its northwest angle; and so heavy was their fire that, by the
evening of the 3rd, a breach of sixty yards long was effected.
General Harris determined to assault on the following day. General
Baird, who had, for four years, been a prisoner in Seringapatam,
volunteered to lead the assault; and before daybreak 4,376 men took
their places in the advance trenches, where they lay down.</p>
<p>It was determined that the assault should not be made until one
o'clock, at which time Tippoo's troops, anticipating no attack,
would be taking their food, and resting during the heat of the day.
The troops who were to make the assault were divided into two
columns which, after mounting the breach, were to turn right and
left, fighting their way along the ramparts until they met at the
other end. A powerful reserve, under Colonel Wellesley, was to
support them after they had entered.</p>
<p>When the signal was given, the troops leapt from the trenches
and, covered by the fire of the artillery, which at the same moment
opened on the ramparts, dashed across the river, scaled the breach,
and, in six minutes from the firing of the signal gun, planted the
British flag on its crest.</p>
<p>Then the heads of the two columns at once started to fight their
way along the ramparts. At first the resistance was slight.
Surprised and panic stricken, the defenders of the strong works at
this point offered but a feeble resistance. Some fled along the
walls. Some ran down into the fort. Many threw themselves over the
wall into the rocky bed of the river. The right column, in less
than an hour, had won its way along the rampart to the eastern face
of the fort; but the left column met with a desperate resistance,
for as each point was carried, the enemy, constantly reinforced,
made a fresh stand. Most of the officers who led the column were
shot down, and so heavy was the fire that, several times, the
advance was brought to a standstill.</p>
<p>It was not until the right column, making their way along the
wall to the assistance of their comrades, took them in the rear,
that the Mysoreans entirely lost heart. Taken between two fires,
they speedily became a disorganised mass. Many hundreds were shot
down, either in the fort or as, pouring out through the river gate,
they endeavoured to cross the ford and escape to the north.</p>
<p>As soon as the whole rampart was captured, General Baird sent an
officer with a flag of truce to the Palace, to offer protection to
Tippoo and all its inmates, on condition of immediate surrender.
Two of Tippoo's younger sons assured the officer that the Sultan
was not in the Palace. The assurance was disbelieved, and, the
princes being sent to the camp under a strong escort, the Palace
was searched. The officer in command, on being strictly questioned,
declared that Tippoo, who had in person commanded the defence made
against the left column, had been wounded, and that he had heard he
was lying in a gateway on the north side of the fort.</p>
<p>A search was immediately made, and the information proved
correct. Tippoo was found lying there, not only wounded, but dead.
He had indeed received several wounds, and was endeavouring to
escape in his palanquin, when this had been upset by the rush of
fugitives striving to make their way through the gate.</p>
<p>The gateway was, indeed, almost choked up with the bodies of
those who had been either suffocated in the crush, or killed by
their pursuers. On his palanquin being overturned, Tippoo had
evidently risen to his feet, and had at the same moment been shot
through the head by an English soldier, ignorant of his rank. In
the evening he was buried with much state, by the side of his
father, in the mausoleum of Lal Bang, at the eastern extremity of
the island.</p>
<p>It was with great difficulty that, when the British soldiers
became aware of the massacre of their countrymen, a few days
before, they were restrained from taking vengeance upon his sons
and the inmates of the Palace. In the assault, 8000 of the
defenders were killed; while the loss of the British, during the
siege and in the assault, amounted to 825 Europeans and 639 native
troops. An enormous quantity of cannon, arms, and ammunition was
captured, and the value of the treasure and jewels amounted to
considerably over a million pounds, besides the doubtless large
amount of jewels that had, in the first confusion, fallen into the
hands of the soldiers.</p>
<p>As Dick, after the fighting had ceased, went, by order of the
General, to examine the prisoners and ascertain their rank, his eye
fell upon an old officer, whose arm hung useless by his side,
broken by a musket ball. He went up to him, and held out his
hand.</p>
<p>"Mirzah Mahomed Buckshy!" he exclaimed. "I am glad to meet you
again, although sorry to see that you are wounded."</p>
<p>The officer looked at him, in surprise.</p>
<p>"You have spoken my name," he said, "but I do not know that we
have ever met before."</p>
<p>"We have met twice. The first time I was, with a friend, dressed
as one of Tippoo's officers, and came to examine the state of
Savandroog. The second time we were dressed as merchants, and I
succeeded in effecting the liberation of my father. Both times I
received much kindness at your hands. But far more grateful am I to
you for your goodness to my father, whose life you preserved.</p>
<p>"I see you still carry the pistols I left for you, and doubtless
you also received the letter I placed with them."</p>
<p>"Thanks be to Allah," the old colonel said, "that we have thus
met again! Truly I rejoiced, when my first anger that I had been
fooled passed away, that your father had escaped, and that without
my being able to blame myself for carelessness. Your letter to me
completed my satisfaction, for I felt that Heaven had rightly
rewarded the efforts of a son who had done so much, and risked his
life for a father.</p>
<p>"Is he alive? Is he here? I should be glad to see him again; and
indeed, I missed him sorely. I have been here for two years, having
been appointed to a command among the troops here."</p>
<p>"My father is well, and is in England. He will, I know, be glad
indeed to hear that I have met you, for he will ever retain a
grateful remembrance of your kindness. Now I must finish my work
here, and will then go to the general, and beg him to give me an
order for your release."</p>
<p>An hour later Dick returned with the order, and carried Mahomed
Buckshy off to the Rajah's camp. Here his arm was set by one of the
surgeons, and he was so well cared for by the Rajah, Dick, and
Surajah, that a fortnight later he was convalescent, and was able
to join his wife in the town.</p>
<p>"I am thankful," he said, on leaving, "that my life as a soldier
is over, and that I shall never more have to fight against the
English. Tippoo was my master, but it is he who, by his cruelty and
ambition, has brought ruin upon Mysore. I have saved enough to live
in comfort for the rest of my life, and to its end I shall rejoice
that I have again met the son of my friend Jack."</p>
<p>The capture of Seringapatam was followed, at once, by the entire
submission of the whole country. A descendant of the old Rajah of
Mysore was placed upon the throne. His rule was, however, but a
nominal one. A very large amount of territory was annexed. The
island of Seringapatam was permanently occupied as a British
possession. The new rajah was bound to receive, and pay, a large
military force for the defence of his territories; not to admit any
European foreigners into his dominions; to allow the Company to
garrison any fort in Mysore that might seem advisable to them; and
to pay, at all times, attention to such advice as might be given
him as to the administration of his affairs. He was, in fact, to be
but a puppet, the British becoming the absolute rulers of
Mysore.</p>
<p>The family of Tippoo, and the ladies of the harem, were removed
to Vellore, where they were to receive a palace suitable to their
former rank and expectations, and allowances amounting to 160,000
pounds a year.</p>
<p>Thus Mysore, one of the most ancient and powerful of the
kingdoms of India, fell into the hands of the English, owing to the
ambition, bigotry, and besotted cruelty of the son of a
usurper.</p>
<p>Dick's part in all these operations had been a busy, although
not a very dangerous one. The only share he had taken in the active
fighting had been in the battle at Malavilly, where, having been
sent with a message to Colonel Floyd, just before he led the
cavalry to the assault of the column that had attacked the 33rd, he
took his place by the side of the Rajah and his cousins, whose
troop formed part of Floyd's command, and joined in the charge on
the enemy. He had, however, rendered great services in the
quartermasters' department, was very highly spoken of in the
despatches of General Harris, and his name appeared, as promoted to
the rank of major, in the list of honours promulgated by Lord
Mornington, at the termination of the campaign.</p>
<p>His regiment was among those selected for the occupation of
Mysore, and, a month after the capture of the city, he obtained
leave to return to England. He stayed for a week at Tripataly, and
then took an affectionate farewell of his uncle, the ranee, his
cousins, and Surajah, and sailed from Madras a fortnight later. The
ship in which he was a passenger was accompanied by two other
Indiamen; and when, a fortnight out they encountered a French
frigate; which, however, they beat off, and arrived in England
without further adventure.</p>
<p>As soon as he landed, Dick drove to the house where his father
and mother had taken up their residence, on their arrival in
England; but he found to his surprise that, eight months before,
they had moved to another, in the village of Hackney. He proceeded
there, and found it to be a considerably larger one than that they
had left, and standing in its own grounds, which were of some
extent. He had written to them after the fall of Seringapatam, and
told them that he should probably sail for England about six weeks
later. </p>
<SPAN name="PicL" />
<center>
<ANTIMG src="images/l.jpg" alt= "A hearty welcome awaits Dick on his return" /> </center>
<p>As the vehicle drove to the door, his father and mother ran
out. His father grasped his hand, and his mother threw her aims
round his neck, with tears of joy.</p>
<p>As soon as the first greeting was over, Dick saw a young lady,
in deep mourning, standing on the steps. He looked at her for a
moment in surprise, and then exclaimed:</p>
<p>"It is Annie Mansfield!"</p>
<p>Annie held out her hand, and laughed.</p>
<p>"We are both changed almost beyond recognition, Dick."</p>
<p>Then she added, demurely, "The last time, I had to ask
you--"</p>
<p>"You sha'n't have to ask me again, Annie," he said, giving her a
hearty kiss. "My first impulse was to do it, but I did not know
whether your sentiments on the subject had changed."</p>
<p>"I am not given to change," she said.</p>
<p>"Am I, Mrs. Holland?"</p>
<p>"I don't think you are, my dear. I think there is a little spice
of obstinacy in your composition.</p>
<p>"But come in, Dick. Don't let us stand talking here at the door,
when we have so much to say to each other."</p>
<p>He went into the sitting room with his father and mother, where
Annie presently left them to themselves.</p>
<p>"Why, Father, the privateers must have done well, indeed!" Dick
said, looking round the handsome room.</p>
<p>"I have nothing to grumble at, on that score, Dick, though they
have not been so lucky the last two years. But it is not their
profits that induced us to move here. You saw Annie was in
mourning. Her father died, nearly a year ago, and at her earnest
request, as he said in his will, appointed us her guardians until
she came of age, which will be in a few months now. As he had no
near relations, he left the whole of his property to her; and
having been in India in the days when, under Warren Hastings, there
were good pickings to be obtained, it amounted to a handsome
fortune. She said that she should come and live with us, at any
rate until she became of age; and as that house of ours, though a
comfortable place, was hardly the sort of house for an heiress, she
herself proposed that we should take a larger house between us.</p>
<p>"And so, here we are. We shall stay here through the winter, and
then we are going down to her place at Plymouth for the summer.
What we shall do, afterwards, is not settled. That must depend upon
a variety of things."</p>
<p>"She has grown much prettier than I ever thought she would do,"
Dick said. "Of course, I knew she would have grown into a woman,
but somehow I never realised it, until I saw her, and I believe I
have always thought of her as being still the girl I carried off
from Seringapatam."</p>
<p>In a few minutes Annie joined them, and the talk then turned
upon India, and many questions were asked as to their friends at
Tripataly.</p>
<p>"I suppose by this time, Annie--at least, I hope I may still
call you Annie?"</p>
<p>"If you call me anything else, I shall not answer," she said
indignantly.</p>
<p>"Well, I was going to say, I suppose you have got a good deal
beyond words of two letters, now?"</p>
<p>"I regard the question as an impertinent one. I have even
mastered geography; the meaning of which word you may remember, you
explained to me; and I have a partial knowledge of history."</p>
<p>The next day Dick met an old friend, Ben Birket. Dick had kept
his promise, and had written to him as soon as he returned to
Tripataly with his father, and a few weeks after Captain Holland's
return, his old shipmate came to see him and his wife. Ben had for
some time thought of retiring, and he now left the sea, and settled
down in a little cottage near. Captain Holland insisted upon
settling a small pension upon him, and he was always a welcome
guest at the house. His delight at Dick's return was extreme.</p>
<p>"I never thought you would do it, Master Dick, never for a
moment, and when on coming home I got your letter, and found that
the Captain and your mother were in England, it just knocked me
foolish for a bit."</p>
<p>Three weeks later, Dick told Annie that he loved her. He spoke
without any circumlocution, merely taking her hand one evening,
when they happened to be alone together, and telling her so in
plain words.</p>
<p>"I know nothing of women, Annie," he said, "or their ways. I
have been bothering myself how to set about it, but though I don't
know how to put it, I do know that I love you dearly. All these
years I have been thinking about you--not like this, you know, but
as the dear, plucky little girl of the old days."</p>
<p>"The little girl of old days, Dick," she said quietly, "is in no
way changed. I think you know what I thought of you, then. I have
never for a moment wavered. I gave you all the love of my heart,
and you have had it ever since.</p>
<p>"Why, you silly boy," she said, with a laugh, a few minutes
later, "I had begun to think that, just as I had to ask you for a
kiss in the old times, and again when you met me, I should have to
take this matter in hand. Why, I never thought of anything else.
Directly I got old enough to look upon myself as a woman, and young
men began to come to the house, I said to my dear father:</p>
<p>"'It is of no use their coming here, Father. My mind has been
made up for years, and I shall never change.'</p>
<p>"He knew at once what I meant.</p>
<p>"'I don't blame you, my dear,' he said. 'Of course, you are
young at present, but he has won you fairly; and if he is at all
like what you make him out to be, I could not leave you in better
hands. He will be home in another three or four years, and I shall
have the comfort of having you with me, until then. But you must
not make too sure of it. He may fall in love out there. You know
that there is plenty of society at Madras.'</p>
<p>"I laughed at the idea.</p>
<p>"'All the pretty ones either come out to be married, or get
engaged on the voyage, or before they have been there a fortnight.
I have no fear, Father, of his falling in love out there, though I
don't say he might not when he gets home, for of course he thinks
of me only as a little girl.'</p>
<p>"'Well, my dear,' he said, 'we will get him, and his father and
mother, to come down as soon as he gets home. As you have made up
your mind about it, it is only right that you should have the first
chance.'</p>
<p>"It was not to be as he planned, Dick, but you see I have had
the first chance, and it is well it was so, for no one can say how
matters would have turned out, if I had not been on the spot. Do
you know, Dick, I felt that when you rescued me from slavery, you
became somehow straightway my lord and master. As you carried me
that night before you, I said to myself I should always be your
little slave; and you see, it has come quite true."</p>
<p>"I don't know about that, Annie. We are in England now, and
there are no slaves. You will be the mistress now, and I your
devoted servant."</p>
<p>"It will be as I say, Dick," she said tenderly. "I feel that, to
the end of my life, I shall remain your willing slave."</p>
<p>There was nothing to prevent an early marriage. It was settled
that Captain and Mrs. Holland should retain the house, which indeed
they could well afford to do, and that Dick and Annie should reside
there whenever they were in town, but that, as a rule, they would
live at the estate her father had purchased, near Plymouth. Their
means were ample, for during the eight years he was in the Service,
Dick's 12,000 pounds had, as his father had predicted, doubled
itself; and Annie's fortune was at least as large as his own.</p>
<p>Dick had good reason to bless, to the end of his life, his
mother's plan; that had resulted in the double satisfaction of
restoring his father to her, and in winning for himself the woman
whom he ever regarded as the dearest and best wife in the
world.</p>
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