<h2><SPAN name="Ch16" name="Ch16">Chapter 16</SPAN>: A Tiger Hunt.</h2>
<p>Commodore James was greatly astonished at the easy success which
he had gained. The extraordinary cessation of fire from the sea
face, and the sound of artillery within the walls, had convinced
him that a mutiny among the garrison must have taken place; but
upon entering the fort he was surprised, indeed, at being received
with a hearty English cheer, from a little body of men on the
summit of an interior work. The gate of this was at once thrown
open, and Charlie, followed by his party, advanced towards the
commodore.</p>
<p>"I am Captain Marryat, sir, of the Company's service in Madras;
and was captured three months ago by these pirates. When you
attacked the place, yesterday, I arranged to effect a small
diversion; and with the assistance of these five native officers,
of my soldier servant, here, and these ten men of the merchant
service, we have, I hope, been able to do so. The native officers
disabled the greater portion of the guns, during the night; and
when you opened fire this morning we seized this inner work, which
is also the magazine, and opened fire upon the rear of the sea
defences. By dint of our guns, and of menaces to blow up the place
if they assaulted it, we kept them at bay until their flag was
hauled down."</p>
<p>"Then, sir," Commodore James said, warmly; "I have to thank you,
most heartily, for the assistance you have given. In fact, it is
you who have captured the fortress. I was by no means prepared to
find it so strong; and, indeed, had come to the conclusion, last
night, that the force at my command was wholly insufficient for its
capture. Fortunately, I determined to try the effect of another
day's fire. But, had it not been for you, this would assuredly have
been as ineffectual as the first. You have, indeed, performed a
most gallant action; and I shall have great pleasure in reporting
your conduct to the authorities at home."</p>
<p>The sailors had now landed in considerable force. The garrison
were disarmed, and taken as prisoners on board the ships. Very
large quantities of powder were found, stored up, and strong
parties at once began to form mines, for the blowing up of the
fortifications.</p>
<p>This was a labour of some days. When they were completed and
charged, a series of tremendous explosions took place. Many of the
bastions were completely blown to pieces. In others, the walls were
shattered.</p>
<p>The prisoners were again landed, and set to work, aided by the
sailors. The great stones, which composed the walls, were toppled
over the steep faces of the rock on which the fort stood; and, at
the end of a fortnight, the pirate hold of Suwarndrug, which had so
long been the terror of the Indian Seas, had disappeared.</p>
<p>The fleet returned to Bombay; for it was, evidently, wholly
insufficient to attempt an assault on Gheriah; defended, as that
place would be, by the whole pirate fleet; which had, even without
the assistance of its guns, proved itself a match for a squadron
double the strength of that under the command of Commodore
James.</p>
<p>The rejoicings at Bombay were immense, for enormous damage had
been inflicted on the commerce of that place, by this pirate hold,
situated but eighty miles from the port. Commodore James and his
officers were feted, and Charlie Marryat had his full share of
honor; the gallant sailor, everywhere, assigning to him the credit
of its capture.</p>
<p>Charlie would now have sailed, at once, for Madras; but the
authorities wished him to remain, as Clive was shortly expected to
arrive, with a considerable force, which was destined to act
against the French at Hyderabad. The influence of Bussy, with the
nizam, rendered this important province little better than a French
possession; and the territory of our rivals, upon the seacoast, had
been immensely increased by the grant of the five districts, known
as the Northern Sirdars, to Bussy.</p>
<p>It was all that the English could do to hold their own, around
Madras; and it was out of the question for them to think of
attempting, single handed, to dislodge Bussy from Hyderabad.
Between the nizam, however, and the Peishwar of the Deccan, there
was a longstanding feud; and the Company had proposed, to this
prince, to aid him with a strong English force, in an attack upon
Hyderabad.</p>
<p>Colonel Scott had, in the first place, been sent out to command
this expedition; but when Clive, wearied with two years' life of
inactivity in England, applied to be appointed to active service,
the directors at once appointed him governor of Fort Saint David,
and obtained for him the rank of lieutenant colonel in the royal
army. They directed him to sail at once for Bombay, with three
companies of the Royal Artillery, each a hundred strong, and three
hundred infantry recruits. Upon his arrival there, he was to give
Colonel Scott any assistance he required. That officer, however,
had died before Clive arrived.</p>
<p>Upon reaching Bombay, Clive found that events had occurred, in
the south, which would prevent the intended expedition from taking
place. The French government had suddenly recalled Dupleix, the
great man whose talent and statesmanship had sustained their cause.
On his return to France, instead of treating him with honor for
the work he had done for them, they even refused to repay him the
large sums which he had advanced, from his private fortune, to
carry on the struggle against the English; and Dupleix died in
poverty and obscurity.</p>
<p>In his place, the French governor had sent out a man by the name
of Godchen, who was weak and wholly destitute of ability. At the
time of his arrival the English were hardly pressed, and a strong
French fleet and force were expected on the coast. When, however,
Mr. Saunders proposed to him a treaty of neutrality between the
Indian possessions of the two powers, he at once accepted it; and
thus threw away all the advantages, which Dupleix had struggled so
hard to obtain. The result of this treaty, however, was that the
English were unable to carry out their proposed alliance, with the
peishwar, against the nizam and Bussy.</p>
<p>Upon Clive's arrival, Charlie at once reported himself to him.
For a time, however, no active duty was assigned to him, as it was
uncertain what steps would now be taken. Finally it was resolved
that, taking advantage of the presence of Clive and his troops, and
of a squadron which had arrived under Admiral Watson, the work
commenced by Commodore James should be completed, by the capture of
Gheriah and the entire destruction of the pirate power.</p>
<p>The peishwar had already asked them to aid him in his attack
upon Angria, and Commodore James was now sent, with the Protector
and two other ships, to reconnoitre Gheriah, which no Englishman
then living had seen. The natives described it as of enormous
strength, and it was believed that it was an Eastern Gibraltar.</p>
<p>Commodore James found the enemy's fleet at anchor in the
harbour. Notwithstanding this, he sailed in until within cannon
shot, and so completely were the enemy cowed and demoralized, by
the loss of Suwarndrug, that they did not venture out to attack
him.</p>
<p>After ascertaining the position and character of the defences,
he returned, at the end of December, to Bombay; and reported that,
while exceedingly strong, the place was by no means impregnable.
The Mahratta army, under the command of Ramajee Punt, marched to
blockade the place on the land side; and on the 11th of February,
1756, the fleet, consisting of four ships of the line, of seventy,
sixty-four, sixty, and fifty guns; a frigate of forty-four, and
three of twenty; a native ship called a grab, of twelve guns; and
five mortar ships, arrived before the place. Besides the seamen,
the fleet had on board a battalion of eight hundred Europeans and a
thousand Sepoys.</p>
<p>The fortress of Gheriah was situated on a promontory of rock, a
mile and a quarter broad; lying about a mile up a large harbour,
forming the mouth of a river. The promontory projects to the
southwest, on the right of the harbour on entering; and rises sheer
from the water in perpendicular rocks, fifty feet high. On this
stood the fortifications. These consisted of two lines of walls,
with round towers, the inner wall rising several feet above the
outer.</p>
<p>The promontory was joined to the land by a sandy slip, beyond
which the town stood. On this neck of land, between the promontory
and the town, were the docks and slips on which the pirate vessels
were built or repaired; and ten of these, among which was the
Derby, which they had captured from the Company, lay moored side by
side, close by the docks, when the fleet arrived off the place.</p>
<p>Charlie Marryat had been sent, by Clive, as commissioner with
the Mahratta army. A party of Mahratta horsemen came down to Bombay
to escort him to Chaule, at which place the Mahratta army were
assembled for their march. He was accompanied by Tim and Hossein,
who were of course, like him, on horseback.</p>
<p>A long day's ride took them to their first halting place, a few
miles from the foot of a splendid range of hills, which rise like a
wall from the low land, for a vast distance along the coast. At the
top of these hills--called in India, ghauts--lay the plateau of the
Deccan, sloping gradually away to the Ganges, hundreds of miles to
the east.</p>
<p>"Are we going to climb up to top of them mountains, your
honor?"</p>
<p>"No, Tim, fortunately for our horses. We shall skirt their foot,
for a hundred and fifty miles, till we get behind Gheriah."</p>
<p>"You wouldn't think that a horse could climb them," Tim said.
"They look as steep as the side of a house."</p>
<p>"In many places they are, Tim, but you see there are breaks in
them. At some points, either from the force of streams, or from the
weather, the rocks have crumbled away; and the great slopes, which
everywhere extend halfway up, reach the top. Zigzag paths are cut
in these, which can be travelled by horses and pack animals.</p>
<p>"There must be quantities of game," Charlie said to the leader
of the escort, "on the mountain sides."</p>
<p>"Quantities?" the Mahratta said. "Tigers and bears swarm there,
and are such a scourge that there are no villages within miles of
the foot of the hills. Even on the plateau above, the villages are
few and scarce near the edge, so great is the damage done by wild
beasts.</p>
<p>"But that is not all. There are numerous bands of Dacoits, who
set the authority of the peishwar at defiance, plunder travellers
and merchants going up and down, make raids into the Deccan, and
plunder the low land nearly up to the gates of Bombay. Numerous
expeditions have been sent against them, but the Dacoits know every
foot of the hills. They have numerous, impregnable strongholds on
the rocks; which you can see rising sheer up hundreds of feet, from
among the woods on the slopes; and can, if pressed, shift their
quarters, and move fifty miles away among the trees, while the
troops are, in vain, searching for them."</p>
<p>"I suppose there is no chance of their attacking us," Charlie
said.</p>
<p>"The Dacoit never fights if he can help it, and then only when
driven into a corner, or when there appears a chance of very large
plunder. He will always leave a strong party of armed men, from
whom nothing but hard blows is to be got, in peace."</p>
<p>The journey occupied five days, and was most enjoyable. The
officer of the escort, as the peishwar's agent, would have
requisitioned provisions at each of the villages; but Charlie
insisted, under one pretence or another, on buying a couple of
sheep or kids at each halting place, for the use of his own party
and the escort. For a few copper coins an abundant supply of fruit
and vegetables was obtainable; and as, each night, they spread
their rugs under the shade of some overhanging tree, and smoked
their pipes lazily after the very excellent meal which Hossein
always prepared, Charlie and Tim agreed that they had spent no
pleasanter time in India than that occupied by their journey.</p>
<p>Charlie was received with much honor by Ramajee Punt, and was
assigned a gorgeous tent, next to his own.</p>
<p>"People in England, Mister Charles," said Tim that evening,
"turn up their noses at the thought of living in tents, but what do
they know of them? The military tent is an uncomfortable thing, and
as for the gipsy tent, a dacent pig wouldn't look at it. Now this
is like a palace, with its carpet under foot, and its sides covered
with silk hangings, and its furniture fit for a palace. Father
Murphy wouldn't believe me, if I told him about it on oath. If this
is making war, yer honor, I shall be in no hurry for pace."</p>
<p>The Mahratta force took up its position, beleaguering the town
on the land side, some weeks before the arrival of the fleet;
Commodore James, with his two ships, blockading it at sea. There
was little to do, and Charlie accepted with eagerness an offer of
Ramajee Punt, that they should go out for two or three days' tiger
hunting, at the foot of the hills.</p>
<p>"Well, Mr. Charles," Tim said, when he heard of the intention,
"if you want to go tiger hunting, Tim Kelly is not the boy to stay
behind. But shure, yer honor, if the creeturs will lave ye alone,
why should you meddle with them? I saw one in a cage at Arcot, and
it's a baste I shouldn't wish to see on a lone road on a dark
night. It had a way of wagging its tail that made you feel
uncomfortable like, to the sole of yer boots; and after looking at
me for some time, the baste opened its mouth, and gave a roar that
shook the whole establishment. It's a baste safer to let alone than
to meddle with."</p>
<p>"But we shall be up on the top of an elephant. We shall be safe
enough there, you know."</p>
<p>"Maybe, yer honor," Tim said doubtfully; "but I mind me that,
when I was a boy, me and my brother Peter was throwing sods at an
old tomcat of my mother's, who had stolen our dinners, and it ran
up a wall ten feet high. Well, yer honor, the tiger is as big as a
hundred tomcats, and by the same token he ought to be able to run
up a wall--"</p>
<p>"A thousand feet high, Tim? He can't do that. Indeed, I question
whether he could run up much higher than a cat.</p>
<p>"We are to start this evening, and shall be there by midnight.
The elephants have gone on ahead."</p>
<p>At sunset the party started. It consisted of Ramajee Punt, one
of his favourite officers, and a score of soldiers. An officer had
already gone on, to enlist the services of the men of two or three
villages as beaters. A small but comfortable tent had been erected
for the party, and supper prepared.</p>
<p>The native shikari, or sportsman of the neighbourhood, had
brought in the news that tigers were plentiful; and that one of
unusual size had been committing great depredations; and had, only
the day before, carried off a bullock into the thickets, a mile
from the spot at which they were encamped.</p>
<p>"The saints preserve us!" Tim said, when he heard the news; "a
cat big enough to carry off a mouse in her mouth as big as a
bullock."</p>
<p>"It seems almost impossible, Tim, but it is a fact that tigers
can carry in their mouths full-sized bullocks, for considerable
distances, and that they can kill them with one stroke of their
paw. However, they are not as formidable as you would imagine, as
you will see, tomorrow."</p>
<p>In the morning the elephants were brought out. Charlie took his
place in the front of a howdah, with Tim behind him. Three rifles
were placed in the seat, and these Tim was to hand to his master,
as he discharged them. Ramajee Punt and his officer were also
mounted on elephants, and the party started for their
destination.</p>
<p>"It's as bad as being at sea, Mr. Charles," Tim said.</p>
<p>"It does roll about, Tim. You must let your body go with the
motion, just as on board ship. You will soon get accustomed to
it."</p>
<p>On reaching the spot, which was a narrow valley, with steep
sides running up into the hill, the elephants came to a stand. The
mouth of the valley was some fifty yards wide, and the animal might
break from the trees at any point. The ground was covered with
high, coarse grass.</p>
<p>Ramajee Punt placed himself in the centre, assigning to Charlie
the position on his right, telling him that it was the best post,
as it was on this side the tiger had been seen to enter. Soon after
they had taken their places, a tremendous clamour arose near the
head of the valley. Drums were beaten, horns blown, and scores of
men joined in, with shouts and howls.</p>
<p>"What on arth are they up to, Mr. Charles?"</p>
<p>"They are driving the tiger this way, Tim. Now, sit quiet and
keep a sharp lookout, and be ready to hand me a rifle, the instant
I have fired."</p>
<p>The noise increased, and was plainly approaching. The elephant
fidgeted uneasily.</p>
<p>"That baste has more sinse than we have," said Tim; "and would
be off, if that little black chap, astraddle of his neck, didn't
keep on patting his head."</p>
<p>Presently, the mahout pointed silently to the bushes ahead, and
Charlie caught sight, for a moment, of some yellow fur. Apparently
the tiger had heard or scented the elephants, for it again turned
and made up the valley. Presently a redoubled yelling, with the
firing of guns, showed that it had been seen by the beaters.
Ramajee Punt held up his hand to Charlie, as a signal that next
time the tiger might be expected.</p>
<p>Suddenly there was a movement among the bushes. A tiger sprang
out, about halfway between Charlie's elephant and that of Ramajee
Punt. It paused for a moment, on seeing them; and then, as it was
about to spring forward, two balls struck it. It sprang a short
distance, however, and then fell, rolling over and over. One ball
had broken a foreleg, the other had struck it on the head. Another
ball from Ramajee Punt struck it, as it rolled over and over, and
it lay immovable.</p>
<p>"Why didn't you hand me the next rifle, Tim?" Charlie said
sharply.</p>
<p>"It went clane out of my head, altogether. To think now, and you
kilt it in a moment. The tiger is a poor baste, anyhow. I've seen a
cat make ten times as strong a fight for its life.</p>
<p>"Holy Moses!"</p>
<p>The last exclamation was called from Tim's lips by a sudden
jerk. A huge tiger, far larger than that which had fallen, had
sprung up from the brushwood and leaped upon the elephant. With one
forepaw he grasped the howdah, with the other clung to the
elephant's shoulder, an inch or two only behind the leg of the
mahout.</p>
<p>Charlie snatched the rifle from Tim's hand, and thrust the
muzzle into the tiger's mouth, just as the elephant swerved round
with sudden fright and pain. At the same moment the weight of the
tiger on the howdah caused the girths to give way; and Charlie, Tim
and the tiger fell together on the ground. Charlie had pulled his
trigger, just as he felt himself going; and at the same moment he
heard the crack of Ramajee Punt's rifle.</p>
<p>The instant they touched the ground, Tim and Charlie cast
themselves over and over, two or three times; and then leaped to
their feet, Charlie grasping his rifle, to make the best defence he
could if the tiger sprang upon him. The creature lay, however,
immovable.</p>
<p>"It is dead, Tim," Charlie exclaimed. "You needn't be
afraid."</p>
<p>"And no wonder, yer honor, when I pitched, head first, smack
onto his stomach. It would have killed a horse."</p>
<p>"It might have done, Tim, but I don't think it would have killed
a tiger. Look there."</p>
<p>Charlie's gun had gone off at the moment when the howdah turned
round, and had nearly blown off a portion of the tiger's head;
while, almost at the same instant, the ball of Ramajee Punt had
struck it in the back, breaking the spine. Death had, fortunately
for Tim, been instantaneous.</p>
<p>The tiger last killed was the great male which had done so much
damage; the first, a female. The natives tied the legs together,
placed long bamboos between them, and carried the animals off, in
triumph, to the camp. The elephant on which Charlie had ridden ran
some distance, before the mahout could stop him. He was, indeed, so
terrified by the onslaught of the tiger, that it was not considered
advisable to endeavour to get him to face another, that day.
Ramajee Punt, therefore, invited Charlie to take his seat with him,
on his elephant, an arrangement which greatly satisfied Tim, whose
services were soon dispensed with.</p>
<p>"I'd rather walk on my own feet, Mister Charles, than ride any
more on those great bastes. They're uncomfortable, anyhow. It's a
long way to fall, if the saddle goes round; and next time one might
not find a tiger handy, to light on."</p>
<p>Two more tigers were killed that afternoon and, well pleased
with his day's sport, Charlie returned to the hunting camp.</p>
<p>The next day, Hossein begged that he might be allowed to
accompany Charlie in Tim's place; and as the Irishman was perfectly
willing to surrender it, the change was agreed upon. The march was
a longer one than it had been, on the previous morning. A notorious
man-eating tiger was known to have taken up his abode, in a large
patch of jungle, at the foot of an almost perpendicular wall of
rock, about ten miles from the place where the camp was pitched.
The patch of jungle stood upon a steep terrace, whose slopes were
formed of boulders, the patch being some fifty or sixty yards long
and thirty deep.</p>
<p>"It is a nasty place," Ramajee Punt said, "to get him from. The
beaters cannot get behind to drive him out, and the jungle is too
thick to penetrate."</p>
<p>"How do you intend to proceed?" Charlie asked.</p>
<p>"We will send a party to the top of the hill, and they will
throw down crackers. We have brought some rockets, too, which we
will send in from the other side. We will take our places, on our
elephants, at the foot of the terrace."</p>
<p>The three elephants took their posts, at the foot of the boulder
covered rise. As soon as they had done so, the men at the top of
the rock began to throw down numbers of lighted crackers; while,
from either side, parties sent rockets whizzing into the
jungle.</p>
<p>For some time the tiger showed no signs of his presence, and
Charlie began to doubt whether he could be really there. The
shikaris, however, declared that he was certainly in the jungle. He
had, on the day before, carried off a woman from a neighbouring
village; and had been traced to the jungle, round which a watch had
been kept all night.</p>
<p>Suddenly, uttering a mighty roar, the tiger bounded from the
jungle, and stood at the edge of the terrace. Startled at his
sudden appearance, the elephants recoiled, shaking the aim of their
riders. Three shots were, however, fired almost at the same moment;
and the tiger, with another roar, bounded back into the jungle.</p>
<p>"I think," the rajah said, "that he is badly hit. Listen to his
roarings."</p>
<p>The tiger, for a time, roared loudly at intervals. Then the
sounds became lower and less frequent, and at last ceased
altogether. In vain did the natives above shower down crackers. In
vain were the rockets discharged into the jungle. An hour passed,
since he had last been heard.</p>
<p>"I expect that he's dead," Charlie said.</p>
<p>"I think so, too," Ramajee Punt replied; "but one can never be
certain. Let us draw off a little, and take our luncheon. After
that, we can try the fireworks again. If he will not move, then we
must leave him."</p>
<p>"But surely," Charlie said, "we might go in and see whether he's
dead or not."</p>
<p>"A wounded tiger is a terrible foe," the Ramajee answered.
"Better leave him alone."</p>
<p>Charlie, however, was anxious to get the skin to send home, with
those of the others he had shot, to his mother and sisters. It
might be very long before he had an opportunity of joining in
another tiger hunt; and he resolved that, if the tiger gave no
signs of life when the bombardment of the jungle with fireworks
recommenced, he would go in and look for his body.</p>
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