Forty-one years in India eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,042 pages of information about Forty-one years in India.

Forty-one years in India eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,042 pages of information about Forty-one years in India.
| 190 | 5,168| 189 |13,650 |19,197| Reserve at Peshawar | 55 | 1,952| 49 | 4,654 | 6,710| |---------+------+---------+-------+------| | 245 | 7,120| 238 |18,304 |25,907| ------------------------------------------------------------
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Total:—­ 483 British officers.
7,120 British troops.
18,304 Native troops. 
Grand total:—­ 25,907 with 60 guns, 24 with 1st Division, and 36 with
2nd Division and the Reserve.]

* * * * *

CHAPTER LV. 1879

Political situation at Kabul—­Serious trouble ahead —­Macpherson attacks the Kohistanis—­Combined movements —­The uncertainty of war—­The fight in the Chardeh valley —­Forced to retire—­Padre Adams earns the V.C.  —­Macpherson’s column arrives —­The captured guns recovered—­Melancholy reflections

The general political situation, as it developed itself in the early part of December, and the causes which appeared to me to have contributed to produce it, may be briefly summarized as follows.  After the outbreak in the previous September and the massacre of our Envoy, the advance of the British force was too rapid to give the Afghans, as a nation, time to oppose us.  At Charasia, the troops, aided by large numbers of the disaffected townspeople, were conspicuously beaten in the open field; their organization as an armed body was at an end, and their leaders all sought personal safety in flight.

It appears probable that at this period the general expectation amongst the Afghans was that the British Government would exact a heavy retribution from the nation and city, and that, after vengeance had been satisfied, the army would be withdrawn.

Thirty-seven years before, a British massacre had been followed by a temporary occupation of the city of Kabul, and just as the troops of Pollock and Nott, on that occasion, had sacked and destroyed the great bazaar and then retired, so in 1879 the people believed that some signal punishment would again be succeeded by the withdrawal of our troops.  Thus a period of doubt and expectation ensued after the battle of Charasia; the Afghans were waiting on events, and the time had not arrived for a general movement.

This pause, however, was marked by certain occurrences which doubtless touched the national pride to the quick, and which were also susceptible of being used by the enemies of the British Government to excite into vivid fanaticism the religious sentiment, which has ever formed a prominent trait in the Afghan character.

The prolonged occupation by foreign troops of the fortified cantonment which had been prepared by the late Amir Sher Ali for his own army; the capture of the large park of Artillery, and of the vast munitions of war, which had raised the military strength of the Afghans to a standard unequalled among Asiatic nations; the destruction of their historic fortress, the residence of their Kings; and, lastly, the deportation to India of their Amir and his principal Ministers, were all circumstances which united to increase to a high pitch the antipathy naturally felt towards a foreign invader.

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Forty-one years in India from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.