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manufacture, which will, we hope, from time to time, remind you of

us and of Oudh.

Wishing Your Lordship a safe and pleasant voyage home, and a long and happy life,

We subscribe ourselves,

Your Lordship's most humble

and obedient servants,

THE TALUKDARS OF OUDH.

APPENDIX XV.

(Referred to at p. 457.)

TO HIS EXCELLENCY GENERAL THE RIGHT HONOURABLE SIR FREDERICK

SLEIGH, BARON ROBERTS OF KANDAHAR And Waterford, Bart.,
V.C., G.C.B., G.C.I.E., D.C.L., LL.D., R.A., Commander-in-
Chief in India.

YOUR EXCELLENCY,

Viewing with concern and regret your approaching departure from India, we beg-in bidding you farewell-to express our admiration of your life and work as Commander-in-Chief of the Imperial Forces in India, and to request you to permit your portrait to be placed in the Town Hall of Calcutta, in token for the present generation of their high appreciation of your eminent services, and in witness to a future generation of the esteem in which you were held by your contemporaries.

With foresight denoting wise statesmanship, Governments which you have served have initiated and maintained a policy of Frontier Defence, and encouraged the increased efficiency of the Forces.

In the furtherance of these objects we recognize the salient points of your career and character whilst holding the high rank of Commander-in-Chief.

In your continued efforts to ameliorate the condition of the private soldier we recognize broad humanity. In the increasing efficiency of the Army, which, in our belief, characterizes your tenure of command, we recognize high soldierly qualities. In the state of strength which the Frontier Defences have attained, mainly due, we believe, to you, we recognize practical sagacity, conspicuous ability in discernment of requirements, and in pursuit of your aims an unwearying industry, a resolute persistence, and a determination that no difficulty can turn, in which a noble example for all true workers may be found.

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In a word, your life and work are to us identified with Frontier Defence and Efficient Forces. We cheerfully bear our share of the cost, as in possession of these protections against aggression from without, we believe all who dwell within the borders of the land will find their best guarantee for peace, and in peace the best safeguard they and their children can possess to enable them to pass their lives in happiness and prosperity, and escape the misery and ruin which follow war and invasion. For all that you have done to give them such security, we feel you deserve, and we freely give, our heartfelt thanks.

Within the limitations of a farewell address, we hardly feel justified in personal allusions trenching on your private life, but we cannot refrain from noticing with responsive sympathy the feeling of personal attachment to yourself which is widespread throughout India, and assuring you that we share in it to the fullest extent that private feeling can be affected by public services. We endorse our assurance with an expression of the wish that, in whatever part of the British Empire your future life may be spent, it may be attended, as in the past, with honour, and, by the blessing of God, with health and happi'ness for yourself and all those you hold dear.

It is the prerogative of the Crown alone to bestow honours on those who have served their country well, and none have been better merited than those which you enjoy, and to which, we trust, additions may be made. It is the privilege of a community to make public profession of merit in a fellow-citizen where they consider it is due, and in availing ourselves of the privilege to make this public recognition of the great services which, in our opinion, you have rendered to India, we beg with all sincerity to add a hearty Godspeed and a regretful Farewell.

We have the honour to be,

CALCUTTA,

11th March, 1893.

Your Excellency,

Your obedient servants.

INDEX.

PERSONS.

ABBOTT, SIR JAMES, i. 52
Abdulla Jan, ii. 90, 113
Abdur Rahman, ii. 41, 42, 313, 315,
316, 317, 318, 327, 328, 329, 338,
372, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 452,
453, 454, 478, 481, 482, 483, 484,
485, 486

Adams, Rev. W. J., ii. 142, 143, 275
Adye, Sir John. ii. 10, 12, 13, 19
Afzal Khan, ii. 42, 43, 44
Ahmed Shah Durani, ii. 401
Aitken, Major, i. 340

Akbar, The Emperor, i. 38; ii. 401
Ali Khan, ii. 41, 42

Alison, Sir Archibald, i. 333
Allgood, Captain, i. 333, 334, 473
Amar Sing, Raja, ii. 433
Anderson. Captain, ii. 144

Anson, Major Augustus, i. 261, 323,
327, 392, 395, 402

Anson, General the Hon. G., i. 92,
93, 94, 95, 96, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102,
104, 105

Aslam Khan, Lieutenant-Colonel, i. 19
Ata Mahomed Khan, Nawab, ii. 88
Auckland, Lord, ii. 46, 104

Ayub Khan, ii. 330, 331, 332, 333, 334,
336, 353, 354, 355, 356, 357, 358,
362, 367, 368, 369, 370, 378, 379
Azim Khan, ii. 41, 42, 43, 44, 45
Azimulla Khan, i. 293, 377, 427, 428,
429

Aziz Khan, Subadar Major, ii. 131

Baber, The Emperor, ii. 401
Badcock, Major, ii. 124, 189, 340, 345
Bahadur Shah, i. 424, 425, 426
Baigrie, Colonel, ii. 77
Baird, Sir David, i. 337

Baird-Smith, Colonel, i. 182, 186, 214,
219, 224, 238, 244

Baker, Sir Thomas, ii. 185, 194, 201,
216, 217, 219, 220, 225, 226, 227,
228, 257, 258, 264, 267, 268, 277,
282, 285, 286, 288, 290, 291, 297,
298, 308, 342, 364
Bannatyne, Captain, i. 258
Barnard, Major-General Sir Henry, i.
151, 152, 154, 156, 157, 165, 167,
177, 178, 179, 181, 185, 186
Barnston, Major Roger, i. 325, 331
Barr, Captain, i. 42, 56

Barter, Major Richard, i. 223, 229
Mrs., i. 223

Battye, Captain Wigram, ii. 113, 294
Colonel Arthur, ii. 364
Frederick, Captain, ii. 294
Quintin, Lieutenant, i. 163

Beaconsfield, The Earl of, ii. 86, 313
324

Beadon, Sir Cecil, i. 461
Becher, Captain, i. 35

Major-General Arthur, i. 44, 45,
176, 501

Bellew, Dr., i. 57; ii. 113, 239
Benares, Maharaja of, i. 464
Bentinck, Lord William, i. 421, 432
Bernard, Sir Charles, ii. 381, 414, 416
Bertrand, Father, i. 224

Bhopal, Begum of, i. 488, 490; ii. 430
Biddulph, Brigadier-General M. ii.

117

Biddulph, Colonel, i. 343, 344, 345
Blackwood, Major, ii. 65
Blanc, Dr., ii. 32

Blunt, Colonel, i. 219, 257, 262, 320,
322, 324

Booth, Lieutenant, ii. 345

Bourchier, Sir George, i. 115, 257, 274,

310, 313, 320, 324, 364; ii. 54, 56, 65
Bowring, Mr. Lewin, i. 470
Brabazon, Lieutenant, ii. 145

Brackenbury, General, ii. 441, 445
Bradshaw, Dr., ii. 92

INDEX

Bright, John, The Right Hon., ii. 409
Sir Robert, ii. 242, 263, 295,
302, 325

Brind, Brigadier Frederick, i. 107

General Sir James, i. 218, 247
Brooke, Brigadier-General, ii. 351
Brown, Lieutenant Rodney, i. 35
Major Tod, i. 317

Browne, Doctor John Campbell, i. 194,

411

Sir James, ii. 404

Sir Samuel, i. 315, 409; ii. 117,
127, 157, 165, 172, 183
Brownlow, Colonel F., ii. 138, 139, 276,
298, 365

Brownlow, Sir Charles, ii. 5, 11, 12,
16, 54, 65

Bruce, General, i. 387

Brunow, Baron, ii. 107

Budgen, Lieutenant, i. 362, 363

Bunny, Lieutenant Arthur, i. 313, 314
Burgess, Corporal, i. 230

Burnes, Sir Alexander, ii. 104, 105
Burrows, Brigadier, ii. 332, 333, 334,
335, 356, 363

Bushman, Colonel, ii. 275

Butler, Colonel Thos., V.C., i. 400
Butson, Captain, ii., 286

Cambridge, H.R.H. the Duke of, i.
390; ii. 38, 39, 372, 382, 437, 439
Cameron, Captain, ii. 32

Lance-Sergeant, ii. 365

Campbell, Colonel, i. 116, 133, 215,
225, 230, 233, 237
Campbell, Lady, i. 470

Major, i. 218

Sir Colin. See Clyde.
Sir Edward, i. 470, 471
Sir George, i. 154, 415
Canning, Lady, i. 455, 469, 470, 472,
486, 489, 491
Canning, Lord, Governor-General and
Viceroy, condemns action of Meerut
authorities, i. 82; praises General
Wilson and the Army of Delhi, 255;
advised by Sir Henry Lawrence, 351,
352; not in accord with Sir Colin
Campbell, 387; insists on employ-
ment of Nepalese troops, 388; pro-
posals regarding native recruits, 435,
436; Viceregal progress, 454-478;
passes the income tax against much
opposition, 480; marches through
Central India, 485-489; durbar at

511

Jubbulpore, 487; durbar at Luck-
now, 489; durbar at Allahabad, 490;
third durbar at Lucknow, 491;
loses his wife, 491; leaves India,
495; unjustly criticized, 495; his
character, 496; i. 77, 79, 228; ii. 91
Carey, Captain, i. 288, 289, 290
Carmichael, Sergeant, i. 230
Carr, Captain, ii. 133
Case, Major, i. 340

Mrs., i. 340

Cavagnari, Sir Louis, ii. 109, 112, 113,
114, 115, 116, 157, 165, 169, 170,
171, 172, 177, 178, 179, 181, 182,
183, 190, 191, 211, 246, 314
Chalmers, Major Henry, i. 281
Chamberlain, Lieutenant-Colonel Craw-
ford, i. 16, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131,

187
Chamberlain, Sir Neville, i. 65, 69,
114, 187, 191, 192, 193, 204, 238,
239, 244, 251, 494; ii. 1, 3, 7, 8, 9,
10, 112, 113, 114, 116, 117, 124
Chamberlain, Colonel Neville, ii. 113,
125, 251, 277, 433

Chandra Shamsher, ii. 449
Channer, Captain, ii. 142

Chapman, Lieutenant-Colonel, ii. 342,
358, 359

Chelmsford, Lord, ii. 79

Chesney, Sir George, ii. 409, 417, 440
Chester, Colonel, i. 157

Childers, The Right Hon. Hugh, ii.
379, 382

Chisholme, Captain, ii. 286

Christie, Mr., ii. 183

Churchill, Lord Randolph, ii. 400
Clarendon, The Earl of, ii. 107

Clarke, Lieutenant-Colonel, ii. 218,
289, 290

Cleland, Lieutenant-Colonel, ii. 271,
273, 274, 275

Clerk, Sir George, i. 440
Clive, Lord, ii. 386

Clyde, Lord (Sir Colin Campbell), lays
out cantonment of Peshawar, i. 21;
orders to his men at the Alma, 210;
appointed Commander-in-Chief in
India, 258; starts for relief of Luck-
now, 296, 297; takes command of
relieving force, 301; plans and pre-
parations for the relief, 303-307;
fixes his Head-Quarters in the Mar-
tinière, 311; makes a feint, 314;
orders more ammunition, 316, 317;
wounded, 323; selects point for
breach, 324; orders assault of Sikan-

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