Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 8.djvu/157

Rh ELLEN BO HOUGH 147 virtues which he lacked, we must not forget that Sir Charles Napier led his Government and himself still farther to that extreme of rashness and impulse which was his bane. And against his only too apparent contempt or indifference for all things not military we must set the statesmanlike views expressed to the Queen and the duke of Wellington on the critical position of Great Britain in the East, and the necessity for strengthening it by military reforms. He repeated what the greater governor-general Wellesley had urged, but in vain, on the East India Com pany at the beginning of the century, and Dalhousie again in 1854-56. The penalty came in the mutiny campaigns of 1857, as it had been foreshadowed in the Cabul disasters of 1838-42. It was to retrieve these disasters that Lord Ellen- borough was sent out. If he had a difficult task, he found the tide of fortune just on the turn. In his pro clamation of the 15th March 1842, as in his memorandum for the Queen dated the 18th, he stated with characteristic clearness and eloquence the duty of first inflicting some signal and decisive blow on the Afghans, and then leaving them to govern themselves under the sovereign of their own choice. Unhappily, when he left his council for Upper India, and learned the trifling failure of General England, he instructed Pollock and Xott, who were advancing triumphantly with their avenging columns to rescue the captives, to fall back. Not a word was said of the nine ladies, twenty officers, and fourteen children who were being pursued from prison to prison in the hills, in spite of the heroic efforts of one of their number, Major- General Colin Mackenzie, who still survives, to secure their honourable release. Even such an object as &quot; that of avenging our losses and re-establishing our military character in all its original brilliancy &quot; was declared not now to be justifiable. How this charge was received by the &quot; illustrious &quot; troops of Jellalabad and the advancing conquerors of Ghuznee and Akbar Khan, the Life of Pollock and the journals of the day testify. The shout of indignation was too much even for Ellenborough, but he only added to it derision when he shirked responsibility by directing Pollock and Xott to retire by the roundabout way of Cabul if they could ! The army proved true to the governor-general s e.irlier proclamation rather than to his later fears; the hostages were rescued, the scene of Sir Alexander Burnes s murder in the heart of Cabul was burned down. Dost Mahomed was quietly dismissed from a prison in Calcutta to the throne in the Bala Hissar, and Ellenborough presided over the painting of the elephants for an unprecedented military spectacle at Ferozepore, on the south bank of the Sutlej. But this was not the only piece of theatrical display which capped with ridicule the horrors and the follies of these four years in Afghanistan. When Sultan Mahmoud, in 1024, sacked the Hindu temple of Somnauth on the north-west coast of India, he carried off, with the treasures, the richly-studded sandal-wood gates of the fane, and set them up in his capital of Ghuznee. The Mahometan puppet of the English, Shah Shooja, had been asked, when ruler of Afghanistan, to restore them to India ; and what he had failed to do the Christian ruler of opposing Mahometans and Hindus resolved to effect in the most solemn and public manner. In vain had Major (now Sir Henry) Rawlinson proved that they were only reproductions of the original gates, to which the Ghuznee Moulvies clung merely as a source of offer ings from the faithful who visited the old conqueror s tomb. In vain did the Hindu sepoys show the most chilling indifference to the belauded restoration. Ellen- borough could not resist the temptation to copy Napoleon s magniloquent proclamation under the Pyramids. The desecrated or fraudulent folding doors more &quot; glorious trophy of successful warfare&quot; than the heroic hostages whose names Lady Sale s Journals, Mackenzie s martyr- like courage, and Vincent Eyre s book have made im perishable were conveyed on a triumphal car to the fort of Agra, and there they lie among the old muskets to this day. That Somnauth proclamation was the first step towards its author s recall, but it had the one good result of calling forth Lord Macaulay s most brilliant philippic in the House of Commons on the 9th March 1843. Hardly had Ellenborough issued his medal with the legend &quot; Pax Asiai Ilestituta &quot; when he was at war with the Ameers of Sind. The tributary Ameers had on the whole been faithful, for Major (afterwards Sir James) Outram con trolled them. But he had reported the opposition of a few, and Ellenborough ordered an inquiry. His instructions were admirable, in equity as well as energy, and if Outram had been left to carry them out all would have been well. But the duty was intrusted to Sir Charles Napier, with full political as well as military powers. And to add to the evil, Meer Ali Morad intrigued with both sides so effectually that he betrayed the Ameers on the one hand, while he deluded Sir Charles Napier to their destruction on the other. Ellenborough was led on till events were beyond his control, and his own just and merciful instructions were forgotten. Sir Charles Napier made more than one confession like this: &quot;We have no right to seize Sind, yet we shall do so, and a very advantageous, useful, and humane piece of rascality it will be.&quot; The battles of Meanee and Dubba, or Hydrabad, followed; and the Indus became a British river from Kurrachee to Mooltan, soon to be &quot; red &quot; to its source in the glaciers that fringe Kashgaria. Yet, writing to the Queen on the 27th June 1843, he formally pronounced his policy &quot;at once just and expedient,&quot; after remarking that &quot; it would not be ungrateful to him to be relieved from a government which he has condueted amidst uninterrupted misrepresentations and calumny.&quot; Sind had hardly been disposed of when troubles arose on both sides of the governor-general, who was then at Agra. On the north the disordered kingdom of the Sikhs was threatening the frontier. In Gwalior to the south, the feudatory Mahratta state, there were a strong and large mutinous army, a Bauee only twelve years of age, an adopted chief of eight, and factions in the council of ministers. Instead of citing the authority of the forgotten treaty of Burhanpore, the governor-general might have pled the public security he did talk of &quot; humanity &quot; as a reason for demanding that the state should be intrusted to one regent. Our nominee proved incompetent, his rival showed himself a traitor ; Tara Ranee was herself little more than a child ; and the Prrctorians controlled the whole. Ellenborough reviewed the danger in the un answerable minute of 1st November 1845, and told Sir Hugh Gough to advance. Further treachery and military licence rendered the battles of Maharajporc and Punniar, fought on the same day, inevitable though they were, a surprise to the combatants. The governor-general, on his charger, exposed himself with characteristic rashness in the thick of the fight, and when it was over he regaled the wounded with oranges and gifts. The treaty that fol lowed was as merciful as it was wise. The pacification of Gwalior also had its effect beyond the Sutlej, where anarchy was restrained for yet another year, and tho work of civilization was left to Ellenborough s two suc cessors. The idol of the army, he did not leave India without a military banquet, which the duke of Wellington, in an official letter to the earl of Ripon, full of curious re miniscences, refused to condemn. Sir Robert Peel s Govern ment, which had sent him out, made him a viscount and earl, and put him at the head of the Admiralty. When a&quot;-ain in his old office, as almost the last president of the