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of native infantry, with a due proportion of artillery, are to be stationed at Poona, to form the subsidiary force, in confermity to the stipulations of the treaty. The European infantry, and the remainder of the ordnance attached to Major-General Wellesley's army, should be directed to proceed to Bombay, and the British cavalry should retire to the ceded districts, or to such a position as may enable it to join the subsidiary force of Hydrabad, if circumstances should appear to render such a junction advisable.

49. The body of cavalry belonging to the Rajah of Mysore, and serving under the command of Major-General Wellesley, may either be remanded to Mysore or employed in such direction as to Major-General Wellesley may appear most advisable.

50. His Excellency, however, leaves to Major-General Wellesley a discretionary authority to deviate from the disposition of the British forces herein stated, according to the suggestions of his judgment, regulated by events and circumstances.

51. His Excellency confidently expects, that when the nature of our connection with the Peishwa, and the justice and moderation of qur views with relation to the Mahratta empire, shall have been sufficiently understood by the Mahratta chieftains, the necessity of extraordinary precautions for the security of the late arrange. ments will cease; and that the system of our alliance, under the treaty of Bassein, will be permanently maintained under the operation of those principles which have secured the stability of our present connection with the state of Hydrabad,

52. The army under the immediate command of his Excellency Lieutenant-General Stuart will separate as soon as Major-General Wellesley shall have signified to Lieutenant-General Stuart that the state of affairs in the Mahratta territories will admit of that measure without hazard to the public interests.

53. The detachment under the command of Major Irton will return into the Company's territoties, to such station as the government of Fort St. George shall direct, unless the state of affairs in his Highness's dominions should render the continuance of that detachment at Hydrabad, or its employment in other parts of his Highness's territories or elsewhere, expedient in the opinion of Major-General Wellesley.

54. Measures should be adopted at the earliest practicable period of time, for the occupation of the districts ceded by his Highness the Peishwa to the British government in Guzerat, and in the southern division of his territories.

55. A force should be detached from the British troops serving in the province of Guzerat,for the purpose of occupying the districts ceded to the Company in that province. If the condition of Guzerat should not permit the adoption of that arrangement, a sufficient force should be detached, either from Surat or Bombay, to be replaced by a part of the force under the Honourable Major-General Wellesley or Colonel Ste

venson.

56. The ceded districts south

ward of Poona may be occupied by a portion of the troops under the command of Maior-General Wellesley, on their return to the

southward.

southward. In the event of the whole of Major-General Wellesley's detachment being necessarily employed in other directions, a detachment from the army under the immediate command of Lieutenant-General Stuart must be appointed for that service.

57. It will be necessary that the detachments appointed to occupy the ceded districts in Guzerat, and to the southward respectively, should be of sufficient strength to overcome any opposition on the part of the Peishwa's officers, who, in the present inefficient state of the Peishwa's anthority, may refuse to obey his Highness's orders for the cession of the territories under their immediate controu!; but the commanding officers of those detachments should be instructed to employ every effort to obtain the peaceable surrender of the districts from the persons in charge of

them.

58. The government of Bombay will be directed, in concert with you and the Honourable Major-General Wellesley, to appoint the p e proper officers of collection in the ceded districts in Guzerat, and the government of Fort Saint George will be directed to pursue the same course with respect to the districts ceded to the southward of Poona.

59. Although these instructions are now stated, the Governor-General is aware of the motives which have precluded the government of Fort Saint George from taking possession of the districts ceded by the Peishwa, to the southward of Poona; and his Excellency entirely approves the proceedings of the government of Fort Saint George in that respect.

60. I am directed to suggest to you the expediency of considering the means of inducing the Peishwa to compensate to the British government for the loss incurred by the delay of the proposed cessions to the southward of Poona. It may indeed be questionable whether the Peishwa might not now be induced to substitute, in place of the cessions (to the southward of Poona) contained in the treaty of Bassein, territories more conveniently situated, and more easy of occupation. You will direct your particular attention, in concert with Major-General Wellesley, to this point, and you will advert to the possibility of obtaining a cession of territory for this purpose, either in the Koncan or in Bundelkund.

61. You will be pleased to communicate this dispatch to the Honourable Major General Wellesley his Excellency the Governor-General desires that Major-General Wellesley will consider this dispatch to convey to him instructions on those arrangements described in it, which depend upon him for their accomplishment.

62. Copies of this dispatch will also be transmitted to the governments of Fort Saint George and Bombay, to his Excellency Lieutenant-General Stuart, and to the Residents at Hydrabad and with Dowlut Rao Scindia, for their information and guidance. I have the honour to be, &c. (Signed)

N. B. EDMONSTONE,
Sec. to GoF

Fort William, 30th May 1803.

INCLOSURE (E.)

Letter from the Governor General to the Peishwa ;
dated the 9th June 1803.

To his Ilighness the Peishwa.
I HAVE received, with senti-
ments of the most cordial satisfac-
tion, the happy intelligence of
your Highness's return to Poona,
and of your restoration to your
dominions and government, to the
free exercise of your independent
authority, and to the secure en-
joyment of your dignity and ho-
nour. On this prosperous result
of your auspicious alliance with
the British government, I offer to
your Highness my sincere con-
gratulations. The happy event
of your Highness's restoration
was proclaimed at this capital by
every distinction of military ho-
nour and of public rejoicing, on
the same day on which the in-
telligence of your return to the
city of Poona reached me; and I
have ordered similar demonstra-
tions of joy to be manifested at all
the principal stations throughout
the British possessions in India.

Your Highness has been restored to the Musnud of Poona under every circumstance that could tend to provide for the efficient exercise of your authority, to secure your dignity and independence, and to preclude the return of evils similar to those from which your Highness has been happily relieved by the good faith, energy, valour, and power of the British councils, and the British army. The situation in which your Highness has been placed since your departure from Poona, has afforded sufficient experience of the conduct of your ally, to enable you to form a correct judgment of the character and views

of the British government, and of the real advantages which must be derived from the treaty of Bassein. Your Highness is therefore prepared to receive, with the confi dence of established friendship, a full explanation of the nature and extent of my views and expecta-, tions in concluding the late arrangements with your Highness, and of the principles which will uniformly regulate the conduct of the British government towards your Highness, and towards every branch of the Mahratta state. My endeavours have been anxiously employed, for some years past, to establish between your Highness and the British government, such a connection as might secure the stability and efficiency of your Highness's authority, without in. jury to the rights of your ligh ness, or to those of the confede rate chieftains of the Mahratta empire.

My efforts for that purpose were renewed at those seasons of difficulty and danger when your independance was controuled, and when the existence of your government was exposed to ha zard by the violence, rapacity, and ambition of your feudatory chieftains. Had your Highness then assented to the moderate and salutary propositions which I offered to your acceptance, you could not have been exposed to the disastrous event by which your Highness was expelled from Poona, by which your authority was subverted, your per on endangered, and your country and your capital abandoned to devas

tation

tation and plunder. Your Highness is now convinced that the powerful alliance, which, if seasonably formed, would have averted that calamity, afforded the only means of repairing its injurious consequences, by restoring your Highness to the free exercise of your authority in the state; and to the full enjoyment of your rights, dignity, and independence. Maharaja Dowlnt Rao Scindia could not easily have subdued Jeswunt Rao Holkar, whose troops had recently defeated the united armies of your Highness and of Scindia; and your Highness's experience of the controul exercised over your authority by Dowlut Rao Scindia must have convinced you, that even the success of Scindia's arms against the rebel, and your Highness's return to the Musnud of Poona under the protection of Dowlut Rao Scindia, would have been followed by an humiliating subject on of your dignity and power to the controul of one of your Highness's feudatories and servants.

In the most desperate crisis of your Highness's affairs, I renewed my former proposition to your Highness, with the same limited views and equitable intentions to which it was originally directed. Without waiting your Highness's assent to the articles of the proposed alliance, I immediately adopted the most active measures for the protection of your Highness's person, and for the restoration of your authority; and your Highness has remarked with satisfaction the rapid and judicious movement of the British army under Major-General Wellesley, and the extraordinary effort by which that gallant and skilful officer saved your capital from

destruction. The conduct of the British government on this occa. sion manifests the sincerity of my regard for your Highness's welfare, as well as the justice and moderation of my views. Reflecting on these circumstances, yourlighness will rely on the stability of the alliance which you have wisely framed, and on the good faith, equity, and magnanimity, of the powerful government which I represent.

My object is to establish a permanent foundation of general tranquillity in India, by securing to every state the free enjoyment of its just rights and independence, and by frustrating every project calculated to disturb the possessions, or to violate the rights of the established power of Hindustan or of the Deccan.

My propositions to your Highness were founded on the ap plication of this general prin ciple to the circumstances of your Highness's situation and government, and the stipulations of the treaty of Bassein have been framed exclusively with a view to maintain the general tranquillity of India, by preventing the destruction of your power, and by securing your just rights from violence and usurpation.

Under the treaty of Bassein, your Highness is restored to the exercise of your legitimate power on the foundation of the support of the British government. The Company is pledged to protect your Highness's dominions from any encroachment either on the part of your feudatory chieftains, or of any foreign power; at the same time the most effectual security is provided for the preservation of the respective interests and possessions of all the Mahratta

chieftains

tains within the limits of their separate dominious andauthorities. The late treaty, being exclusively of a defensive nature, imposes no restraint upon any state or power which shall respect the rights and possessions of the British govern ment and its allies; nor can any right or power to interfere in the internal concerns of any of the Mahratta chiefs, be derived from the stipulations of that treaty, be. yond the limits of your Highness's legitimate authority, to maintain which is equally the duty of your subjects, feudatories, and allies. The presence of the subsidiary force at Poona will enable your Highness to enforce a due submis sion to your authority within your immediate dominions, and your Highness is entitled to command the exertion of the whole British power in the event of any emer. gency which may require the aid of the Company, for the protection and defence of your government and possessions.

It is neither consistent with the principle, nor necessary to the objects of the treaty, that the British government should exercise any interference in the internal affairs of your Highness's immediate government of a nature injurious to your dignity and independence. The amicable right of mediation, which the British government de rives from the treaty of Bassein, is manifestly necessary to the ellectual operation of that general gua. rantee, which constitutes a fundamental principle of the alliance, and which is equally essential to the preservation of your Highness's legitimate authority, and to the security of the just rights and interests of other states. It is not the intention of the British government to claim the exercise of VOL. 6.

the right of mediation, excepting in cases expressly warranted by the treaty of Bassein, or in those cases in which the British media tion has been rendered necessary by the measures adopted for the restoration of your Highness to the Musnud of Poona. Your Highness has justly appreciated the zeal, ability, and success of the Honourable Major-General Wellesley, in obtaining the co-operation of several of your Highness's southern Jaghiredars, for the support of your Highness's cause, and in securing their future attachment to your Highness's government,

I received with great satisfaction from Lieutenant-Colonel Close, the information of your Highness's declared resolution to distinguish by your favour those among your Jaghiredars, who, on the faith of Major-General Wel, lesley's assurances, have manifested their attachment to your Highness's cause; and I am happy to learn that your Highness had adopted measures for conciliating the general body of your subordi, nate chiefs and Jaghiredars. Your Highness must be sensible that the complete consolidation of your authority must depend, in a considerable degree, upon the success of the measures which you may adopt for the purpose of securing the attachment and duty of your subordinate chiefs and Jaghiredars. On this consideration, I found a couf.dent expectation that your Highness will readily admit the advice and mediation of the British government in fulfilling the equi. table claims, and in establishing the just rights and privileges, of that class of your subjects,

The stipulation of the treaty, which requires that your Highness M should

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