<h2><SPAN name="Ch21" name="Ch21">Chapter 21</SPAN>: The Battle Outside Calcutta.</h2>
<p>After the defeat of the enemy, who had surprised and so nearly
annihilated him, Clive marched at once towards the fort of Baj-baj.
On the way he met Major Kilpatrick, who was advancing, with a force
which had been landed from the ships when the sound of firing was
heard, to his assistance.</p>
<p>The fleet had, at daybreak, opened a heavy fire upon the
ramparts; and by the afternoon effected a breach. As his men were
greatly fatigued, and had had but an hour's sleep, Clive determined
upon delaying the attack until the morning; and a party of two
hundred and fifty sailors, with two guns, were landed to take part
in the storming.</p>
<p>Many of these sailors had drunk freely before landing, and as
night fell, some of them strolled towards the fort. One of the
number, named Strahan, moved along, unobserved by the enemy, to the
foot of the breach, climbed up it, and came suddenly upon a party
of its defenders sitting round a fire, smoking. Strahan immediately
fired his pistol among them, with a shout of, "The fort is mine!"
and then gave three rousing cheers.</p>
<p>The enemy leaped to their feet and ran off for a little way.
Then, seeing Strahan was alone, they rushed back and attacked him,
firing as they came. Strahan, drawing his cutlass, defended himself
vigorously for some time; but his weapon broke off at the hilt,
just as a number of Sepoys and men of the 39th, who had been awakened
from their sleep by the shouting and firing, came running up.
Reinforcements of the garrison also joined their friends, but these
were dispirited by the sudden and unexpected attack; and, as the
troops continued to stream up the breach, the garrison were
pressed; and, losing heart, fled through the opposite gate of the
fort.</p>
<p>The only casualty on the British side was that Captain Campbell,
marching up at the head of the Sepoys, was mistaken for an enemy by
the sailors, and shot dead. Strahan was, in the morning, severely
reprimanded by the admiral for his breach of discipline; and,
retiring from the cabin, said to his comrades:</p>
<p>"Well, if I am flogged for this here action, I will never take
another fort, by myself, as long as I live."</p>
<p>Manak Chand was so alarmed at the fighting powers shown by the
English in these two affairs, that, leaving only a garrison of five
hundred men at Calcutta, he retired with his army to join the nabob
at Moorshedabad. When the fleet arrived before the town, the enemy
surrendered the fort at the first shot, and it was again taken
possession of by the English.</p>
<p>Major Kilpatrick was at once sent up, with five ships and a few
hundred men, to capture the town of Hoogly, twenty miles farther
up. The defences of the place were strong. It was held by two
thousand men, and three thousand horsemen lay around it. The ships,
however, at once opened a cannonade upon it, and effected a breach
before night, and at daybreak the place was taken by storm.</p>
<p>Two days after the capture of Calcutta, the news arrived that
war had again been declared between England and France. It was
fortunate that this was not known a little earlier; for had the
French forces been joined to those under Manak Chand, the
reconquest of Calcutta would not have been so easily achieved.</p>
<p>The nabob, furious at the loss of Calcutta, and the capture and
sack of Hoogly, at once despatched a messenger to the governor of
the French colony of Chandranagore, to join him in crushing the
English. The governor, however, had received orders that, in the
event of war being declared between England and France, he was, if
possible, to arrange with the English that neutrality should be
observed between them. He therefore refused the nabob's request,
and then sent messengers to Calcutta, to treat.</p>
<p>The nabob had gathered an army of ten thousand foot and fifteen
thousand horse, and advanced against Calcutta, arriving before the
town on the 2nd February, 1757. Clive's force had now, owing to the
arrival of some reinforcements from Europe, and the enlisting of
fresh Sepoys, been raised to seven hundred European infantry, a
hundred artillerymen, and fifteen hundred Sepoys, with fourteen
light field pieces.</p>
<p>The whole of the town of Calcutta was surrounded by a deep cut,
with a bank behind, called the Mahratta Ditch. A mile beyond this
was a large saltwater lake, so that an enemy advancing from the
north would have to pass within a short distance of Clive's
intrenched position outside the town, affording him great
opportunities for a flank attack. On the day of their arrival Clive
marched out, but the enemy opened a heavy fire, and he retired.</p>
<p>Clive determined to attack the enemy, next morning. Admiral
Watson, at his request, at once landed five hundred and sixty
sailors, under the command of Captain Warwick of the Thunderer. A
considerable portion of the enemy had crossed the Mahratta Ditch,
and encamped within it. The nabob himself pitched his tent in the
garden of Omichund (a native Calcutta merchant who, though in the
nabob's camp from motives of policy, sympathized entirely with the
English), which occupied an advanced bastion within the Mahratta
Ditch. The rest of the army were encamped between the ditch and the
saltwater lake.</p>
<p>Clive's intentions were to march first against the battery which
had played on him so effectually the day before; and, having
carried this, to march directly against the garden in which the
nabob was encamped. The force with which he started, at three
o'clock in the morning of the 3rd, consisted of the five hundred
and sixty sailors, who drew with them six guns, six hundred and
fifty European infantry, a hundred European artillery, and eight
hundred Sepoys. Half the Sepoys led the advance, the remainder
covered the rear.</p>
<p>Soon after daybreak, the Sepoys came in contact with the enemy's
advanced guard, placed in ditches along a road leading from the
head of the lake to the Mahratta Ditch. These discharged their
muskets, and some rockets, and took to flight. One of the rockets
caused a serious disaster. The Sepoys had their ammunition pouches
open, and the contents of one of these was fired by the rocket. The
flash of the flame communicated the fire to the pouch of the next
Sepoy, and so the flame ran along the line, killing, wounding, and
scorching many, and causing the greatest confusion. Fortunately the
enemy were not near, and Captain Eyre Coote, who led the British
infantry behind them, aided Charlie, who led the advance, in
restoring order, and the forward movement again went on.</p>
<p>A new obstacle had, however, arisen. With the morning a dense
fog had set in, rendering it impossible for the troops to see even
a few yards in advance of them. Still they pushed on and,
unopposed, reached a point opposite Omichund's garden, but divided
from it by the Mahratta Ditch.</p>
<p>Presently they heard the thunder of a great body of approaching
cavalry. They waited quietly until the unseen horse had approached
within a few yards of them, and then poured a mighty volley into
the fog. The noise ceased abruptly, and was followed by that of the
enemy's cavalry in retreat.</p>
<p>The fog was now so dense that it was impossible even to judge of
the directions in which the troops were moving. Clive knew,
however, that the Mahratta Ditch was on his right and, moving a
portion of his troops till they touched this, he again advanced,
his object being to gain a causeway which, raised several feet
above the country, led from Calcutta, across the Mahratta Ditch,
into the country beyond. Towards this Clive now advanced, his
troops firing, as they marched, into the fog ahead of them, and the
guns firing from the flanks, obliquely, to the right and left.</p>
<p>Without experiencing any opposition Clive reached the causeway,
and the Sepoys, turning to their right, advanced along this towards
the ditch. As they crossed this, however, they came in the line of
fire of their own guns, the officer commanding them being ignorant
of what was taking place in front, and unable to see a foot before
him. Charlie, closely accompanied always by Tim, was at the head of
his troops when the iron hail of the English guns struck the head
of the column, mowing down numbers of men. A panic ensued, and the
Sepoys, terror stricken at this discharge, from a direction in
which they considered themselves secure, leaped from the causeway
into the dry ditch and sheltered themselves there. Charlie and his
companion were saved by the fact that they were a few paces ahead
of the column.</p>
<p>"Run back, Tim," Charlie said. "Find Colonel Clive, and tell him
that we are being mowed down by our own artillery. If you can't
find him, hurry back to the guns, and tell the officer what he is
doing."</p>
<p>Charlie then leaped down into the ditch, and endeavoured to
rally the Sepoys. A few minutes later Clive himself arrived, and
the Sepoys were induced to leave the ditch, and to form again by
the side of the causeway, along which the British troops were now
marching.</p>
<p>Suddenly, however, from the fog burst out the discharge of two
heavy guns, which the enemy had mounted on a bastion flanking the
ditch. The shouts of the officers, and the firing of the men,
indicated precisely the position of the column. The grapeshot tore
through it, and twenty-two of the English troops fell dead and
wounded. Immediately afterwards another discharge followed, and the
column, broken and confused, bewildered by the dense fog, and
dismayed by the fire of these unseen guns, fell back.</p>
<p>Clive now determined to push on to the main road, which he knew
crossed the fields half a mile in front of him. The country was,
however, here laid out in rice fields, each inclosed by banks and
ditches. Over these banks it was impossible to drag the guns, and
the sailors could only get them along by descending into the
ditches, and using these as roads. The labour was prodigious, and
the men, fatigued and harassed by this battle in darkness, and by
the fire from the unseen guns which the enemy continued to pour in
their direction from either flank, began to lose heart.</p>
<p>Happily, however, the fog began to lift. The flanks of the
columns were covered by bodies of troops, thrown out on either
side, and after more than an hour's hard work, and abandoning two
of the guns which had broken down, Clive reached the main road,
again formed his men in column, and advanced towards the city.</p>
<p>The odds were overwhelmingly against him. There were guns,
infantry, and cavalry, both in front and behind them. The column
pressed on, in spite of the heavy fire, crossed the ditch, and
attacked a strong body of the enemy drawn up on the opposite side.
While it did so, a great force of the nabob's cavalry swept down on
the rear, and for a moment captured the guns. Ensign Yorke, of the
39th Foot, faced the rear company about, and made a gallant charge
upon the horsemen, drove them back, and recaptured the guns.</p>
<p>Clive's whole army was now across the ditch, and it was open to
him either to carry out his original plan of attacking Omichund's
garden, or of marching forward into the fort of Calcutta. Seeing
that his men were fatigued, and worn out with six hours of labour
and marching under the most difficult circumstances, he took the
latter alternative, entered Calcutta, and then, following the
stream, marched back to the camp he had left in the morning.</p>
<p>His loss amounted to thirty-nine Europeans killed, and eighteen
Sepoys; eighty-two Europeans wounded, and thirty-five Sepoys; the
casualties being caused almost entirely by the enemy's cannon.</p>
<p>The expedition, from a military point of view, had been an
entire failure. He had carried neither the battery nor Omichund's
garden. Had it not been for the fog he might have succeeded in both
these objects; but, upon the other hand, the enemy were as much
disconcerted by the fog as he was, and were unable to use their
forces with any effect. Military critics have decided that the
whole operation was a mistake; but although a mistake and a
failure, its consequences were no less decisive.</p>
<p>The nabob, struck with astonishment at the daring and dash of
the English, in venturing with so small a force to attack him, and
to march through the very heart of his camp, was seized with
terror. He had lost thirteen hundred men in the fight, among whom
were twenty-four rajahs and lesser chiefs, and the next morning he
sent in a proposal for peace.</p>
<p>A less determined man than Clive would, no doubt, have accepted
the proposal. Calcutta was still besieged by a vastly superior
force, supplies of all kinds were running short, the attack of the
previous day had been a failure. He knew, however, the character of
Asiatics, and determined to play the game of bounce. The very offer
of the nabob showed him that the latter was alarmed. He therefore
wrote to him, saying that he had simply marched his troops through
his highness' camp to show him of what British soldiers were
capable; but that he had been careful to avoid hurting anyone,
except those who actually opposed his progress. He concluded by
expressing his willingness to accede to the nabob's proposal, and
to negotiate.</p>
<p>The nabob took it all in. If all this destruction and confusion
had been wrought by a simple march through his camp, what would be
the result if Clive were to take into his head to attack him in
earnest? He therefore at once withdrew his army three miles to the
rear, and opened negotiations. He granted all that the English
asked: that all the property and privileges of the Company should
be restored, that all their goods should pass into the country free
of tax, that all the Company's factories, and all moneys and
properties belonging to it or its servants, should be restored or
made good, and that permission should be given to them to fortify
Calcutta as they pleased.</p>
<p>Having agreed to these conditions, the nabob, upon the 11th of
February, retired with his army to his capital; leaving Omichund
with a commission to propose to the English a treaty of alliance,
offensive and defensive, against all enemies. This proposal was a
most acceptable one, and Clive determined to seize the opportunity
to crush the French. His previous experiences, around Madras, had
taught him that the French were the most formidable rivals of
England in India. He knew that large reinforcements were on their
way to Pondicherry, and he feared that the nabob, when he recovered
from his panic, might regret the conditions which he had granted,
and might ally himself with the French in an effort, again, to
expel the English.</p>
<p>He therefore determined at once to attack the French. The
deputies sent by Monsieur Renault, the governor of Chandranagore,
had been kept waiting from day to day, under one pretence or
another; and they now wrote to the governor that they believed that
there was no real intention, on the part of the English, to sign an
agreement of neutrality with him; and that they would be the next
objects of attack. Monsieur Renault immediately sent messengers to
the nabob, urging upon him that, if the English were allowed to
annihilate the French, they would be more dangerous enemies than
ever; and Suraja-u-Dowlah, having now recovered from his terror,
wrote at once to Calcutta, peremptorily forbidding any hostilities
against the French.</p>
<p>To show his determination, he despatched fifteen hundred men to
Hoogly, which the English had abandoned after capturing it, with
instructions to help the French if attacked; and he sent a lac of
rupees to Monsieur Renault, to aid him in preparing for his
defence.</p>
<p>Clive, unwilling to face a coalition between the French and the
nabob, was in favour of acceding to the nabob's orders. The treaty
of neutrality with the French was drawn up, and would have been
signed, had it not been for the obstinate refusal of Admiral Watson
to agree to it. Between that officer and Clive there had never been
any cordial feeling, and from the time of their first connection,
at the siege of Gheriah, differences of opinion, frequently leading
to angry disputes, had taken place between them. Nor was it strange
that this should be so. Both were brave and gallant men; but while
Watson had the punctilious sense of honor which naturally belongs
to an English gentleman, Clive was wholly unscrupulous as to the
means which he employed to gain his ends.</p>
<p>Between two such men, it is not singular that disagreements
arose. Admiral Watson, impelled by feelings of personal dislike to
Clive, often allowed himself to be carried to unwarrantable
lengths. On the occasion of the capture of Calcutta, he ordered
Captain Eyre Coote, who first entered it, to hold it in the king's
name, and to disobey Clive's orders, although the latter had been
granted a commission in the royal army as lieutenant colonel, and
was, moreover, the chief authority of the Company in all affairs on
land. Upon Clive's asserting himself, Admiral Watson absolutely
threatened to open fire upon his troops. Apparently from a sheer
feeling of opposition, he now opposed the signing of the treaty
with the French, and several days were spent in stormy
altercations.</p>
<p>Circumstances occurred, during this time, which strengthened the
view he took, and changed those of Clive and his colleagues of the
council. Just then, the news reached Suraja-u-Dowlah that Delhi had
been captured by the Afghans; and, terrified at the thought that
the victorious northern enemy might next turn their arms against
him, he wrote to Clive, begging him to march to his assistance, and
offering a lac of rupees a month towards the expense of his
army.</p>
<p>On the same day that Clive received the letter, he heard that
Commodore James and three ships, with reinforcements from Bombay,
had arrived at the mouth of the Hoogly; and that the Cumberland,
with three hundred troops, which had grounded on her way from
Madras, was now coming up the river.</p>
<p>Almost at the same moment he heard, from Omichund, who had
accompanied the nabob to Moorshedabad, that he had bribed the
governor of Hoogly to offer no opposition to the passage of the
troops up the river.</p>
<p>Clive was now ready to agree to Admiral Watson's views, and to
advance at once against Chandranagore; but the admiral again veered
round, and refused to agree to the measure, unless the consent of
the nabob was obtained. He wrote, however, himself, a threatening,
and indeed violent letter to the nabob, ordering him to give his
consent. The nabob, still under the influence of his fears from the
Afghans, replied in terms which amounted to consent, but the very
next day, having received news which calmed his fears as to the
Afghans, he wrote peremptorily, forbidding the expedition against
the French. This letter, however, was disregarded, and the
expedition prepared to start.</p>
<p>It consisted of seven hundred Europeans and fifteen hundred
native infantry, who started by land; a hundred and fifty artillery
proceeding in boats, escorted by three ships of war and several
smaller vessels, under Admiral Watson.</p>
<p>The French garrison consisted only of a hundred and forty-six
French, and three hundred Sepoys. Besides these were three hundred
of the European population, and sailors of the merchant ships in
port, who had been hastily formed into a militia.</p>
<p>The governor, indignant at the duplicity with which he had been
treated, had worked vigorously at his defences. The settlement
extended along the river banks for two miles. In the centre stood
the fort, which was a hundred and twenty yards square, mounting ten
thirty-two pounder guns on each of its four bastions. Twenty
four-pounder guns were placed on the ramparts, facing the river on
the south. On an outlying work commanding the watergate eight
thirty-two pounders were mounted. Monsieur Renault set to work to
demolish all the houses within a hundred yards of the fort, and to
erect batteries commanding the approaches. He ordered an officer to
sink several ships in the only navigable channel, about a hundred
and fifty yards to the south of the fort, at a point commanded by
the guns of one of the batteries.</p>
<p>The officer was a traitor. He purposely sank the ships in such a
position as to leave a channel, through which the English ships
might pass; and then, seizing his opportunity, deserted to
them.</p>
<p>On approaching the town Clive, knowing that Charlie could speak
the native language fluently, asked him whether he would undertake
to reconnoitre the position of the enemy, with which he was
entirely unacquainted. Charlie willingly agreed. When, on the night
of the 13th of March, the army halted a few miles from the town,
Charlie, disguising himself in a native dress and accompanied by
Hossein, left the camp and made his way to the town. This he had no
difficulty in entering. It extended a mile and a half back from the
river, and consisted of houses standing in large gardens and
inclosures. The whole of the Europeans were labouring at the
erection of the batteries, and the destruction of the houses
surrounding them; and Charlie and his companion, approaching
closely to one of these, were pounced upon by the French officer in
command of a working party, and set to work, with a number of
natives, in demolishing the houses.</p>
<p>Charlie, with his usual energy, threw himself into the work, and
would speedily have called attention to himself, by the strength
and activity which he displayed, had not Hossein begged him to
moderate his efforts.</p>
<p>"Native man never work like that, sahib. Not when he's paid ever
so much. Work still less, no pay. The French would soon notice the
sahib, if he laboured like that."</p>
<p>Thus admonished, Charlie adapted his actions to those of his
companions and, after working until dawn approached, he managed,
with Hossein, to evade the attention of the officer; and, drawing
off, hurried away to rejoin Clive. The latter was moving from the
west, by a road leading to the northern face of the fort. It was at
the battery which Renault was erecting upon this road that Charlie
had been labouring. The latter informed Clive of the exact position
of the work, and also, that although strong by itself, it was
commanded by many adjoining houses; which the French, in spite of
their efforts, had not time to destroy.</p>
<p>This news decided Clive to advance immediately, without giving
the enemy further time to complete their operations.</p>
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