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INDIA.

(From,the 'Argus,' Correspondent.) TPcint De Galle, June 26, 185S. Lord Canning has Seen, recalled. His proclamation to the people in Sohilound will not be received by the English natiea With less astonishment than that of the Oude ProclaniatiQlU.

In this circular, all but the leaders are to bs freely pardoned. The result of allowing the rebels to escape from every town we capture, will be anything but satisfactory. We have already had instances more than sufficient to warn us against acting on the principle of conciliation. .Whilst the Legislature at home is squabbling for party purposes, as "to how the rebels should be treated, the wild Hindoo is still murdering and ravaging right arid left. Tlie mail will convey you very little news of a cheering character. It will be observed our force in India is far from adequate to keep the country in subjection. We capture towns, completely disperse the enemy, and then march to other places, where the same feats are enacted, but generally with, the same result—the re-occupation by the rebels of their old strongholds. There is no knowledge when the rebellion will be quelled, if the war continue to be carried on in the way it has hitherto been. What is the utility of conquering a place and then allowing the enemy to re-occupy it almost immediately afterwards? We may continue to "conquer" in this way for a century without; advancing a step towards the pacification ofthe country. It is rumoured that Sir Colin Campbell has demanded 20,000 more troop3. Lucknow has again been threatened; the rebels from Bareilly and Shahjehanpore were reported to be concentrating near that place, with an intention of laying seige to it; succour has, however, been sent, and the force there now, i* more than sufficient to repel any attempt thaS may be made upon it. Shahjehanpore, which

i

PUBLIC NOTICE.

Ymvas captured by Sir Colin Campbell, was re-. Ytaken by the rebels. From advices last received, *'Y the town- was again, however, in our possession; Ylt appears that the attack by the enemy upon 77 the forces of Sir Colin Campbell and Brigadier 7 Jones was most audacious, and the fighting has -been extremely obstinate and severe. The 7 i-ebels, in like manner, have resumed possession of Chundaree "in Central India, which was captured bv Brigadier Stuart. Brigadier Smith, however, took back the place on the 27th May. It will be seen that the rebels have; taken ad- -• vantage of the absence of Sir Hugh Rose to occupy many of the places from which that General had previously driven .them. They ■ are becoming very troublesome in Central India. Esanghur is -at present re-occupied by the in-' ; surgents, and the "Rajahs of Baupore and Saughur are reported to be within 40 miles of Saugor with-considerable forces. Although we hold * -some of the principal cities in Oude and else- - where above Allahabad, the country all around is still in the posssession of the rebels, and disorganisation prevails to an extent scarcely conceivable. The rebels go about plundering villages, and infesting the road between Calcutta . and Delhi in every direetion,~so as to make them •- -very-unsafe for unprotected travellers. Through most of the stations in Bengal a feeling of insecurity prevailsYThemoriality among the troops • from exposure to the suu has been fearful; appoplexy and coup de soliel carry them off by hundreds whilst the bullets of the enemy scarcely •do so-bv as many dozens. General Penny is -: dead. -Through ialse intelligence he was led ••-.into an ambuscade. The death of Kooer Singh, which was-reported-to haye happened is not yet ..-..positively ascertained. . Bareilly has been captured by the Comraan- . i dcr-in-Chief. His advance from Futteyghur 'to Bareilly was not opposed in a single instance. '""Tne plan of attack was, that Brigadier Walpole -was to advance on the one side, while Brigadier Jones moved forward from Moradabad in a like direction. Major General Penny was to cross -•■'the Ganges, advance through the Budaon dis- ■;• trict, and unite himself to the column under the v Commander-in-Chief s orders. The attack com--menced on the sth May. The enemy who had * come out of the city, fought with great desperation. On the morning of the6th the whole force "advanced into the cantonment. Calpee was - • stormed on the 23rd May. The enemy, as at Bareilly, came out of the town to attack Sir Hugh Rose's camp; but in"-this engagement the -reblels are said to have been so panic-stricken that after firing a few shots they fled with great precipitation. Sir Hugh Rose made his - (approach from the river side below Calpee, and into communication with Colonel Maxwell, whose Brigade held a position on the left bank of the Jumma, so as to shell the town and port. The city fell without loss on our side, the enemy offering no resistance. A rapid pursuit was made by cavalry, and the result was the capture of all the guns, ammunition and eleph-. -airts .belonging to the enemy. Prom last accounts it 'will be seen that the Calpee rebels were concentrating themselves at Gwalior, where they are makmg preparations for another stand. Sir Hugh Rose reported.on the 4th inst. that our troops are marching as fast as they can toGwalior. CAPTURE OF CAXPEE ~We have at length obtained information suffi-; - eietit to enable us to trace the progress of Sir ; Hugh Rose from Poonah, where he rested on the 6th, to Calpee, which he captured on the 23rd. Up to the present date we have seen no letters . direct from the force later than the 21st. but to this there is a profusion of extracts, such as to permit a consistent narrative to be prepared from them. It will be remembered that ELoonch was captured on the 7th, the bulk of the enemy's artillery having fallen into our hands, 700 of -them having been killed. General Rose himself was three times knocked over by the sun, but on - each occasion rallied, and was able to be remounted. Twelye men were killed by the , enemy, thirteen were struck dead by the heat. The force halted on the Bth... On the 9th it . marched to Hiirdoee. Here four guns were taken in addition to the nine which had previously fallen into our hands. Intelligence was now received that the enemy were collecting in great sforce to obstruct our advance, and it was re-Y-solved to bend our line of march slightly to the westward, so as to make the Jumna near Jaloon .-and a little to the north westward of Calpee. - Colonel Riddell was now moving from the northward, while Brigadier Maxwell was advancing directly on the town, with the view of being in full communication; with General Roie before the grand attack commenced. On the. loth the first-Brigade advanced within six miles of CalT»ee, and joined the second which had preceded ■them. A large mass of the enemy made a dash ■at the baggage and rear guard, when they managed to carry off a few empty carts, killing . -six sepoys of the 25th N.1., and wounding some ..Europeans. The united force had now reached ■the Jumma, on which they hadYresolved to rest, .."in a camp well supplied with water; from thecon--tiguity of the river, until Maxwell's troops came 'lip. On the 16th a reconnoitering party, cohsis- , ting of horse artillery, dragoons, detachments ; -from ll.M.'s 86th ''and 36th H.I. under Colonel Gal!,-of the 14th Dragoons, proceeded along1 the .••.:.'-Galpee- road. On tlie same- day the 2nd Brigade '^ vwasYattacked by the-enemy, -which was proved ; ?so pressed that assistance was required from the ...v.-iGeneral.' This wa3 speedily provided, and the yy ..assailants dispersed. A second attack was made* the following day, but this was repelled without' Y; -difficulty. The insurgents had by this time ;yYthrown lip heavy earthworks in front, when oh ;'^he; 18th they were shelled out by bur mortars. •Onthe 19th Maxwell's troops appeared ori the side of the river, to the great'astonish-■ ■' /^mfent-of-the insurgents, who had no wish to t --have more than the Central India Field Poreebn Y.-Ytheir, hands' at a time. On the 20th the enemy Y; appeared:-in great force on the hills and in YYthe nullahs, around. They attempted to turn :.Y^ur^y-fl^k,.-.P.iid>exljibited a determination and Ys;vp^r-severanc'e they ha3> .not before, manifested.': v;;v.^Oti:-.tHe : -2lSt a portion of Maxwell's force crossed ;^the; river and joined the second brigade, while Y7'the JieaTvy artillery 'and iftortars were got into YY.po^itiopi: arid yon the722rid the bombardment ;Y -commenced with great vivacity from across the

Jumna. On the 23rd the enemy advanced in force on Sir Hugh Rose's camp, and fought with such determination tliat our men found themselves hard pressed until the camel corps came up. The infantry now charged with the bayonet, when the enemy broke and fled. The whole line now advanced, when the flight became a roU t_Calpee being-sought as the last place of refuge, They were followed without _ a moment's loss of time, driven from the city, and pursued with heavy loss. The last of these events occurred on the 23rd, and as letters to the 21st have been received two days ago, we hope to have full particulars of the final capture and pursuit lin the course of to-day or, tomorrow. vEven with Calpee and Bareilly in our hands, -we have still an enormous mass of desperate men scattered on every side of us to dispose of. Complaints are loud on the subject of Brigadier Smith having been detached from General Roberts' force without heavy artillery. Chundaree requires to be retaken, and though this will be a much less difficult task than formerly, the strongest of the works having been blown up by us, it is not to be attempted with six-pounders, and battering guns must accordingly be sent on from Saugor. It is clear that the enemy form an almost unbroken line for close on one hundred miles along -the banks of the Ganges, and no sooner are they driven from one point than they reappear at another.

The Calcutta correspondent ofthe 'Argus' indulges in some gloomy vaticinations with respect to the Indian mutiny. The worst, he says, war is not only prolonged, but has taken such a shape, that £ in common with many very competent and experienced Indian residents, can see no immediate prospect of its close. Far from it, I fear; and a reverse every now and again gives the crowds of wavering and undecided natives a fresh but bootless impetus to drive us from their shores. Our army is split up into many small detachments, and is carrying on a guerilla warfare in the hot season, *»vith the rains approaching, amidst the deadly marshes and jungles of India. The whole of our strength in Oude is estimated at about 9,000 British troops, and in Central India as 12,000. Nine thousand men, as you will see, are announced in the last mail to be coming as a reinforcement, but they will not be nearly sufiicient, 20,000 is the least number we can do with to carry us .brought the hot and rainy season. The press and the public too have not been satisfied of late with the way in which the army has heen handled. The mysterious delays that have been made, the strange inactivity of the^Kotah force, the uselessness of our Goorka allies, the Occupation of a city, and presently its re-capture, all demand explanation. There seems to be a want of energy and heartiness. When a district is re-occupied, but few and isolated efforts are made to re-establish our authority. No investigation is made as to the grievances of the in-habitants,-whether indeed they have any,^ or whether they were prompted to submit passively to the rebels for the sake of plunder and the mere love of change. Directly we leave a district in charge of only a small force (all we can spare), it again becomes disorganised.

The .correspondent distinctly; states that the reports of the cruelties of the Sepoys are true and unexaggerated; and he finds fault with the distribution of the relief fund. He doubts the propriety of placing the munificent contribution from Victoria, in the hands of a private committee, and quotes two instances in proof of his opinion, in one of which the widow of a Mr. Hanlori being in great distress, could not obtain relief from the committee of the relief fund, while in the other case, a refugee from Lucknow* who had been spending money extravagantly, had his passage paid for him, and free quarters in Calcutta found him and his family. Every body will regret to learn from the same source, that Mr. Russell, the renowned > Times' correspondent, has met with misfortune. His first letter was lost in the Ava, which steamer was wrecked at Trineomatee. His subsequent letters, although marked via Bombay, and enclosed in a bright red envelope, have, been sent to Calcutta, and thus detained for the next mail. And last, though not least, from having received a kick from his horse, he was obliged to travel in a dholy, and whilst iioing so was so nearly cut off by the enemy as to be obliged, in spite of his lameness and suffering, to mount a horse and fly for life. He barely escaped, but unfortunately sustained a sun-stroke, • which nearly proved fatal, and will oblige him to go home to England as soon as sufficiently recovered, for change of climate. Y ,:,'. .'•:■

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/LT18580826.2.7

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Lyttelton Times, 26 August 1858, Page 1

Word count
Tapeke kupu
2,226

INDIA. Lyttelton Times, 26 August 1858, Page 1

INDIA. Lyttelton Times, 26 August 1858, Page 1

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