[At the Point of the Bayonet by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link bookAt the Point of the Bayonet CHAPTER 9: A Popular Tumult 9/30
The rajah was in no hurry, for the two parties among his councillors were so evenly divided that he was by no means sure that, even if he wished it, he could put his army in motion, in support of either the English or Tippoo; and in the next place, he believed that the latter would win, and was reluctant in the extreme to take any step that would draw down upon him the vengeance of the Lord of Mysore.
He occasionally saw Harry and, although he expressed his anxiety for the return of the messengers, Harry could see that this feeling was only feigned, and that at heart he was not sorry that he was not yet called upon to decide. At the end of a month, Harry had received a letter from the Governor General, brought by a messenger in the disguise of a peasant.
It only said: "March 6th, 1799. "The army has left Vellore.
On the 11th the Nizam's contingent also marched, as has that from Bombay.
By the 1st of this month all should have reached the plateau--the Bombay army at Sedaseer, forty-five miles west of Seringapatam; and the main army about eighty miles east of that town.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|