BROWNE AND THE FRONTIER SYSTEM—THE TWO POLICIES : THE
“FORWARD POLICY” AND “MASTERLY INACTIVITY” —HOW THE MULLAH EPISODE
BEGAN—FURLOUGH, MARRIAGE, AND THE ROORKEE APPOINTMENT—LAHORE —THE KANGRA
VALLEY.
WHEN Browne returned to Nowakilla John Lawrence’s return to
India on his assumption of the viceroyalty was the event of the day; and it
was followed quickly by the emphatic exposition of the frontier policy that
was to come into force: "Laissez faire” as known to the dissentients—
“Masterly inactivity” as called by its supporters— a deep-seated question of
which the merits and issues were not to be seen for some years, during which
however there was persistent movement.
Up till now, Browne’s sole experience of India had lain on
the Punjab frontier; but, much as he was taken with its native community,
with the work, and with his comrades, there is little doubt that he was not
at all satisfied with the changes that were beginning to appear in the local
outlook, and he applied for short leave to England during the hot weather,
and arranged that, at its close, he should not necessarily revert to the
frontier, but be free for other employment and duties.
One probable reason for this was that, with his strong
tendency to look ahead, he realised that his future tasks would be likely to
involve more varied engineering, for the study of which he would not have
time during his coming short-leave, and for which he would like to be able
to make other arrangements.
His papers show that the altered system of frontier
management that was now being introduced in the Punjab was not at all to his
liking, a matter which will be dealt with later on; and he also felt
strongly the weakness and blunders of the policy and management of the
recent campaign both in the diplomatic and the resulting military aspect;
while, as far as he could foresee, the undesirable system seemed likely to
be continued. By the military aspect is meant, it must be explained, the
guidance that lay not with the generals, but with the political authorities
as to the effective action and measures against the enemy. That experienced
and able frontier commander, Sir Harry Lumsden, wrote to this effect: “It is
reported that Captain James, Commissioner of Peshawur, is exercising his
influence to induce the hill tribes to give in and come to terms. My opinion
is that once we get to blows with natives we should not leave off till the
latter give in from a conviction of their helplessness. A treaty made under
other circumstances will only prove a source of more trouble hereafter and
leave an idea in the native mind that we give in to them from want of
ability to go on with the war. Once a shot is fired the politicals should
retire into private life till called to the front again by the supplicant
chiefs begging to be let off.”
There can be no doubt that though the enemy we meant to
attack had been destroyed, the object of the expedition had been gained, and
the Akhoond even had wholly collapsed, still the tribes who had joined
against us and formed the real difficulty of the war had been in noisense
subdued or punished, though they had felt themselves unable to beat us. But,
though thus let off, they had felt and understood our strength, and being a
manly race, did believe our statements and accept the assurance that we had
not had any intention to meddle with them—and the result was that there was
peace on that frontier for the next sixteen years; not, however, any
subjection to our supremacy as on the plains of India.
Major James, it may be observed, was in bad health, had
hurried back from England at once on hearing of the broil; and was, of
course, acting under orders. But his career was ended, and he died very
shortly afterwards; a great loss, as was universally recognised, to the
frontier administration.
Further, Browne’s three years’ presence on the frontier, with
his close and intimate intercourse with the frontier and tribesmen of all
classes and ranks, had led to his possessing a very keen and sound knowledge
of the trans-frontier movements in progress and of the current action going
on both in Afghanistan and beyond. His singular linguistic aptitude, and his
quite unique powers over certain classes of tribesmen, made him a mine of
exceptional knowledge which was never properly tapped by the authorities,
with their habitual narrow prejudices, though it served as a most valuable
guide to himself in steering his course, especially when he. reverted some
years later on— almost finally it may be said—to the north-west frontier of
India.
These remarks apply not merely to the dealings with the
Afghans and our attitude towards them, but to the “Masterly Inactivity
Policy” definitely and authoritatively announced at that very time by the
Viceroy as the treatment and attitude to be maintained in India in respect
of the movements of Russia.
This emphatic exposition had been brought about in a manner
that verged on the ludicrous, almost at once becoming common
property. Before it was known, in consequence of the suddenness of Lord
Elgin’s death, who his successor would be, Sir Bartle Frere, the champion of
the "Forward Policy,” had addressed a letter to the new Viceroy (whoever he
might be) to meet him at one of the ports on his voyage out, pressing that
policy on him; little dreaming, of course, that its recipient would be the
very champion of the opposition or “Masterly Inactivity Policy”—Sir John
Lawrence himself. But so it was!
The difference between the two schools, which must be
explained, is excellently stated in the following passage, cited from
Wyllie’s Essays on the External Policy of India.
“Afghanistan and Russia
“In 1865 it was held to be quite possible that in a very
short time the Russians would have military colonies on the Oxus at Charjui
and at Takhtapul. From Chariui troops might be thrown across the desert to
Merv, and from Merv the fertile banks of the Murgab offered easy access to
Herat Simultaneously a smaller- column might proceed through Takhtapul and
the defiles of the Hindu Khush to occupy Kabul. Persia, of course, would act
in alliance with the invaders, and at Herat the force from Charjui might be
joined by large Russo-Persian reinforcements marching in from the shores of
the Caspian Sea and the districts of Khorasan. Some delay would occur at
Herat, for that city, as the key of the position, would have to be fortified
and provisioned, and a chain of smaller forts on either side would have to
be established, stretching as far as Takhtapul in the north and Lake Seistan
in the south. But the interval would be well redeemed by disarming the
hostility and securing the co-operation of the Afghans. The darling dream of
that whole nation is to plunder India, ana Russia would offer them that
guerdon, and the restoration of their old provinces of Peshawur and Kashmir
to boot. Then some fine morning in early spring—unless timely measures of
prevention were adopted on a scale far above the capacity of the Indian
Government to comprehend or its courage to undertake—forty thousand
disciplined troops of Russia and Persia, in conjunction with a countless
horde of wild Afghan auxiliaries, could be launched, resistless as an
avalanche, upon the doomed plains of the southern El Dorado; and there at
once is the end of the English Empire of India.
“Language like this was at this period, 1865, by no means
uncommon in India; and the practical remedies recommended extended to an
immediate re-occupation of all Afghanistan.
“But politicians of another and far higher stamp {i.e. of the
Bartle-Frere school], while they saw clearly that any immediate or even
proximate danger of a Russian invasion was chimerical, nevertheless looked
forward with uneasiness to the inevitable day when the Russian and English
empires should be conterminous, and the presence of a first-class European
state on our border would have power at any time to fan into a flame those
elements of sporadic disaffection which of necessity are ever smouldering in
any country won and held, as India was and is, by an alien sword. For
political reasons of obvious weight, these persons believed that it would be
in the last degree dangerous, should war arise, to have India as a
battlefield; and on grounds of military strategy they were convinced that
sooner or later we ought to occupy certain positions beyond our present
frontier as outworks of the empire. Therefore, advancing from Jacobabad,
which then was our uttermost station on the Scinde border, they would
proceed up the Bolan Pass through Shawl1 into Afghanistan, and, leaving
Kabul and Ghazni untouched, they would take possession of Kandahar and
eventually also of Herat, and establish, at these two points, fortresses of
exceeding strength, to be to India what the Quadilateral has been to
Venetia, strongholds such as no invader would dream of trying to mask.
Further, the long process of a regular siege would, it was argued, be an
almost hopeless undertaking in consequence of the natural poverty of the
country, the distance of our enemy from their base, and the previous
destruction of the crops by the besieged.
“These opinions were held not only by high authorities like
Sir Justin Sheil and the late General John Jacob, but also by Sir Henry
Rawlinson, who besides his large general experience of war and policy in the
East, stood facile princeps, as Dr. Vambdry testified, among all who
professed a special knowledge of the cbndition of Central Asia.
“But the majority of the British public appeared to favour a
third view of the question. Under the inspiration of a generous optimism,
rather than from any discriminate appreciation of the dangers to which the
Indian empire is exposed, they scouted Russo-
Ehobia as an exploded fallacy. In the interests of umanity
they rejoiced that a dayspring of Christian civilisation was spreading
through the horrible blackness of barbarism in which Central Asia had
hitherto been wrapped; and they positively grudged the interval that must
yet elapse before India could have a neighbour whose dealings with her would
be conducted on the clear principles of European good faith, and whose
settled Government would offer new openings for trade. Their vision of the
future was that of the Cossack and the Sepoy lying down like lambs together
on the banks of the Indus.
“Lord Lawrence, the Governor-General of India, had been
steeped too long in the rough practice of actual statesmanship to have much
faith m the advent of that political millennium when
“The common sense of most shall keep a fretful realm in awe,
And the kindly earth shall slumber, lapt in universal law.
But his opinions with respect to Russia, so far as they can
be inferred from his public acts, tended clearly towards the conclusion
which the quietists would advocate—a masterly inactivity.”
Broadly speaking, the Forward Policy had originated, or
rather had been brought into shape, in 1856, some eight years before the
present crisis: in the year before the Mutiny, while Lord Canning and
Herbert Edwardes were making with Dost Mahomed the treaties which
immediately afterwards proved so all-important; though John Lawrence had
received them with strong disfavour, and had agreed to them with extreme
reluctance.
The exponents, then, of that policy1 declared that if the red
line of England’s boundary was to retain its position on the map, there was
absolute necessity for our occupying posts in advance of it.
“A war," they said, “within our own territory, with a
European army, might be ruinous to our reputation and might entirely
undermine our strength, although that strength might have sufficed
successfully to meet a world in arms in a field beyond our own boundary.
“There were but two great roads,” the argument proceeded to
say, “by which an army could invade ndia from the north-west—viz. the Khyber
Pass and the Bolan Pass. Our existing outposts were on the hither or Indian
side of both these passes—at Peshawur as regards the Khyber, and at
Jacobabad in respect of the Bolan. At Peshawur we might well remain as we
were, watching the mouth of the defile; but from Jacobabad we were bound in
self-preservation to advance.
“To that end, the first step would be to take advantage of
that article in the existing treaty with the Khan of Khelat which permits
the cantonment of British troops in any part of his territory, and proceed
accordingly to occupy Quetta. Connected with this measure, as its immediate
consequences, would come a continuation of the Sind Railway to the foot of
the Bolan Pass, and the construction of a good road through the Pass.
“Next, we should take into our pay a body of Belooch
Irregulars, who, politically, would be useful as a link or connection with
the native inhabitants, and who, in a military capacity, might be to us what
the Cossacks are to the Russian army. Having thus established ourselves in
Beloochistan, we should subsidise the Afghans, and pave the way for a
peaceable occupation of Herat. With a proper garrison at Quetta, and 20,000
men in the fortress of Herat, we should not only block the Bolan route, but
be able to operate with destructive effect on the flanks and rear of any
invader attempting to proceed by way of the Khyber; and then India would be
as firmly locked in our grasp as if surrounded by the ocean.”
These proposals, ever since their original publication, had
been the theme of endless controversy in the press, and their general
principles had secured the favourable opinion of weighty authorities such as
Sir Henry Rawlinson and Sir Justin Sheil. But the more pressing public needs
following on the Mutiny, and especially the reorganisation of the whole
internal administration of India itself, had thrown the subject, for the
time, into the background.
But now that it was resuscitated—and resuscitated moreover by
Sir Bartle Frere in the way that has been described—the new Viceroy laid the
matter forthwith before the Council.
He explained that he, John Lawrence, had all along known and
been familiar with these arguments, that he had never at any time recognised
their validity, and that he saw nothing in the present condition of Central
Asia to lead him now to a different conclusion. Of the strategic advantages
of occupying Quetta there was doubt, while some of its political
disadvantages were obvious. The expense would be enormous, and the jealousy
would be aroused not only of the Afghan, but of the Persian court also.
Furthermore, it would always be open to us to occupy Quetta and subsidise
the Beloochees at any period when the imminence of any real danger to our
power might render such a step expedient.
“In the meantime,” he concluded by saying, “I am absolutely
opposed to this undertaking.” Thus spoke the champion of “ Masterly
Inactivity,” who had been just selected to save India in what was supposed
to be a second great crisis—a dictator whose judgment none dared to dispute.
And all this while Afghanistan was in a state of absolute anarchy—a state so
hopeless and helpless that it took five years of strife and rack and misery
before the land began to emerge into the glimmerings of more orderly rule.
Now Browne’s mind was far in advance of his years, especially
in respect of public affairs; and he was quite exceptional, if not
singular—and even single—in his breadth and independence of thought. The
direction of his bent now seemed very decidedly to be towards a claim to
absolute independence in action whenever there was full responsibility
imposed by entire absence of specific instructions. This was, of course,
coupled with the strict discipline demanded in respect of implicit obedience
and genuine compliance and furtherance in the case of clear and positive
orders. It is necessary to write this, because he was exceptionally ready to
accept responsibility and act on his own judgment, if allowed such freedom—
was inclined to oppose any subsequent interference or questioning that might
be attempted, and especially resented it as a breach of faith if he had been
promised a free hand, or otherwise led to expect exemption from such
interference.
Such were the matters that affected Browne’s inclination as
to the location of the work of his immediate future. He was too junior to
carry weight and have influence with the authorities, but he was too
thoughtful and too clear-headed not to have strong and decided views for his
own guidance.
It was at this period, when Browne was quitting the
north-west frontier, that an incident occurred in the Peshawur region which
had a very singular and amusing connection with Browne’s career, but not
till some fifteen years afterwards. This incident is the origin of the
appearance of his double—and it began thus. An officer, of much the same
age, appearance, and build as Browne, retired from the service about this
time at Peshawur, and started on an independent and novel career of travel
and adventure in Central and Western Asia—a career which will be described
from time to time later on; and the likeness between the two led, for a
time, and with singular results, to their being regarded as one and the same
person. In connection with this episode and before Browne quits the scene of
his early labour and life, it may be well to refer again and more fully to
his intercourse with the Ghilzyes and other local tribesmen, including of
course the gentry and men of family and rank, and their religious leaders.
It was with men of every class and grade that he came into such close
contact, and of whom he obtained such intimate and valuable knowledge. The
result was frequently actual friendship amounting to devotedness. Instead of
bigoted hostility, he met with kindliness and respect. There was one fine
old Mullah whose greeting to Browne always used to be “Huzrut Yeesoo Ka
Salamut,” which, being interpreted, is “The blessing of the Prophet Jesus be
with you.” For Browne, though thoroughly cognisant of the wild fanaticism of
some of them, was a hearty admirer of the better sort, and used to say that
he knew the hearts of many of them to be nearer the divine light than those
of many Christians. As for Browne himself, as he grew in years, so did his
early religious spirit and habits grow with him, but always as a matter
private and personal and never obtruded on others.
To return now to the actual course of Browne’s career, after
Umbeyla. At the usual season, towards March, 1864, he applied for and
obtained a short furlough, and found his family in their former London
residence. His experiences and the character he had now won doubtless
secured for him a very exceptional holiday time—anyhow a honeymoon—as he
took advantage of the opportunity to secure to himself a bride, the sister
of Pierson, his brother officer and comrade. And as this was the bright
particular event and feature of the trip, nothing further need be said of
its occurrences, which were not otherwise in any way exceptional. As the
summer drew to an end, Browne had secured the appointment to a post which
would give him the opportunities that he desired for rest, quiet, and study.
This was at Roorkee, in the North-west Provinces, the seat of the Engineer
College; and presently therefore the young couple left for India, and duly
reached Roorkee in the early days of that delightful season—the cold
weather—of 1864-5.
When Browne reached Roorkee in the early winter of 1864, he
experienced at once a period of great quiet and rest as compared with
anything he had ever before enjoyed in India, though he was keen to begin
taking advantage of the library and the other professional advantages the
college afforded.
And it was gratifying to him to find that his special
aptitude and capacity were recognised by his being appointed to the chair of
mathematics, and also assistant principal. While here settling to study his
profession during the coming summer, it may be remarked that the social
atmosphere of India at this time meant, in the upper provinces at any rate,
a continuous ovation for John Lawrence. Before the summer set in he had
assembled and met all the Punjab and hill chiefs in a great durbar at
Lahore, accompanied by something like 60,000 armed clansmen ; and this was
of course the chief incident of which the impression was felt at Roorkee.
But, in fact, Sir John’s difficulties had already begun. His flatterers had
overshot the mark. The blunder of the Bhootan war had occurred, and he was
somewhat at issue with his colleagues. A serious famine also and other
causes of friction were to the front.
But, in regard to the Brownes themselves, it was an advantage
to the young bride to gain her first experiences of Indian society in a
quiet but busy station, exceptionally free from frivolities, and likely to
be friendly and helpful, being the headquarters of the Royal Engineers, the
seat of the Engineer College, and the site of the capital, as it may be
called, of the Great Ganges Canal. It was a pleasant introduction into the
family life of the corps to which her husband belonged, before plunging into
the rougher tracts and more isolated lines of life in which their future
career would most probably be spent Browne himself, besides enjoying the
advantages already alluded to resulting from the college and its library,
especially devoted his time to mastering the vexed question of the suitable
conditions and the respective merits of the several systems of irrigation in
India. To that work his employment might be at any time directed; but, as it
turned out, it was the one line of departmental duty on which he was never
engaged.
The several systems of irrigation were not
really rival systems, as so frequently called; but each of them had a
speciality of its own, resulting from local circumstances, permanent and
unalterable. Thus in the North-west Provinces and the Punjab the flooding of
the Himalayan rivers, caused by the melting of the mountain snows in summer,
led to their excess supply on reaching the plains of Northern India, being
there scientifically tapped and distributed by subsidiary branches from the
main canals, chiefly at special seasons, but also so as to ensure a fairly
equable supply being maintained throughout the rest of the year. In Madras
and Bombay the river floods caused by the heavy rains, in the rainy seasons,
were utilised by their surplus water being led off into enormous tanks
(i.e. artificial lakes or reservoirs) and therein stored against the proper
time for distribution. And in Scinde and similar desert tracts the passage
of the Indus and other great rivers through them led to a system of surface
irrigation channels, branching off from them right and left at as close
intervals as possible, for the benefit of the lands immediately bordering
the rivers. This supply, however, is not constant, but mainly autumnal and
deltaic.
It may be justly assumed that Browne did not neglect any of
the opportunities afforded by Roorkee for effecting his great object of
increasing his theoretical knowledge on points on which he had hitherto not
had any practical experience. And it turned out before long, after less than
a year of this quiet life, that he was to plunge again into a prolonged
practical engineer career, which continued for twenty-two years, coloured
occasionally by political work in addition, and twice by campaigning.
From Roorkee he was transferred, towards the autumn of 1865,
to Lahore, the capital of his old province (the Punjab). Here, where he had
at first a short spell of local duty, the work he carried out was important
and valuable, though brief; it was the protection of the city against the
erosive operation of the waters of the River Ravee. The stream there had a
tendency to work to its left or eastern bank, and this Browne had to
counteract; which he did by a series of spurs and training works that guided
the current of the river away into mid-channel and thus saved the bank which
had been threatened.
He was further employed on buildings and works at other
stations lying in the neighbourhood of Lahore, if not belonging to that
division, such as Umritsur and Sealkote.
He was then at length posted to the Kangra Division in the
near Himalayas, where, it will be seen, he remained for many years. It may
be considered certain that he had been all along, while at Roorkee,
preparing for this task by study. But now, when working at Lahore, before
starting for the Kangra Valley, he was enabled to make all the preliminary
practical inquiries needed, and thus prepare properly for the great variety
of work he would have to undertake; and also to investigate and consult
regarding the economical utilisation of the local labour and materials to
which he would be restricted. There the life that had to be led in the midst
of the beautiful but wild and grand mountains, on the borders of ordinary
civilisation, was a rough one, but free from the anxieties of warfare or the
presence of a fierce population.
The principal work now before Browne was that of the Kangra
Valley road. The object of the road, which was a purely Punjab scheme, was
to open out the range of the Lower Himalayas for frontier commerce
generally, and for the local tea planting industry and enterprise in
particular. That road followed the general run of the Sewalik Hills, covered
or negotiated all otherwise impossible obstacles, and thus increased to a
most valuable extent the commercial value and prosperity of the whole
region. There was practically no level ground, or stretch of ground that
could be made level, along its whole extent of 120 miles. The alignment was
nearly as difficult as his later Humai Railway Line of 1883-7.
But his main difficulty, or rather the matter in -which his
ingenuity most markedly came into play, was the selection, in view
to economy, of the modes of construction and methods of labour, the more so
that there was no skilled labour on the spot; the men, though not wild or
fierce, were all uncultivated nomads from the interior mountains, and, as
elsewhere, besides teaching and training them he turned them into devoted
followers.
The prominent facts of the work were: (1) that Browne had to
be always encamped, rarely under house shelter, whatever the weather or the
temperature, and generally at a distance from any resources; for these were
to be found only at the terminus, Dharmsala, or Puthankote, still farther
off, to which he could only occasionally take a short run; (2) that the
construction of the road occupied three years; (3) that the process by which
the road itself was formed was the continuous blasting out of precipitous
cliff; (4) that there was a succession of bridges at very short intervals
over rivers and torrents; and (5) that to build these bridges Browne had to
use such materials, stone or brick, concrete or timber, as were most
conveniently available.
In the construction of the road, the men had to be slung by
ropes from the tops of the cliffs till they could get a proper foothold from
which to start their drivages inwards at the proper level, whence to carry
out their blasts, tunnels, or terraces. Whenever it was known that a big
blast was to come off, it was a real holiday for the hill people, who used
to gather from all quarters to see the spectacle. On one occasion that he
describes “the largest (blast) consisted of six charges of 1,850 pounds,
which had to be fired off at the same moment. The great cliff stood up some
200 feet like a wall of stone which nothing in the world could move—and it
was very exciting to see the white smoke of the fuses creeping slowly up to
the hose which would set off the mines. Then just a slight flash, and the
enormous mass of rock seemed to collapse and crumble in a cloud of dust
spreading out like a large tree against the sky, and with a rumbling muffled
sound, as if the powder had had as much as it could do to lift the mass of
rock on its back without wasting its energies in making a noise. Some of the
mines again (and those the least successful), when they happened to meet a
soft vein in the rock, or when he did not succeed in exactly calculating the
proper charge, exploded with a tremendous roar, pouring out a torrent of
stones in every direction which was much more imposing than useful and
agreeable. But only two out of about thirty behaved in this fashion—and all
was completed without any sort of accident to any one employed!
Of the numerous bridges that he had to build there, there
were some that deserve special notice. There were two, at Buneyr and Nigul
respectively, made of brickwork, of single spans of 140 feet, the largest
ever constructed, by that time, either in India or anywhere else. There was
one of concrete, at Daron, with a span of 48 feet, of which an illustration
is given. And there was one at Dehra of timber, 214 feet span, the largest
in India.
Referring to the Buneyr and Nigul bridges, the Punjab
Government thus eulogised them: "They were constructed under very
unfavourable circumstances. They were Lieut. Browne’s own design— and are
worthy of all admiration." And it was ordered that a slab should he inserted
in each of them, with the inscription:
"Projected, designed, and erected by Lieut. J. Browne, R.E.,
Executive Engineer.”
The Governor wrote:
“The boldness of design, and the vigorous readiness in
overcoming local physical difficulties, in the absence of many usual
resources, have combined with careful and accurate execution, which does the
greatest credit to Lieut. Browne.”
The chief Engineer described them as “grand works,” and
reported that “careful examination had failed to bring to light any flaw in
the arches or any cracks in the spandrils, walls, or parapets. They
reflected great credit, and were a monument of constructive skill.” Further,
the estimates were so carefully prepared, and the work was so economically
managed, that the cost was within the sanctioned amount. While these works,
being exceptional in size and difficulty, demanded much skill and ingenuity,
no less credit attached to the careful selection, with a view to economy, of
suitable methods and material—rock, stone, brick, concrete, timber, or
whatever was found available on or near the spot, after careful and
laborious inquiry. Browne’s system was very simple—“to spare himself no
work, trouble, or pains.”
One of the features of the work on which he was specially
complimented was his ingenuity and skill in that ticklish final operation,
the removal of the centrings on which the arches had to be supported while
being built. They, the centrings, rested on large cases in sections filled
tight with sand, which, when the time arrived, was gently run out, under
guidance, through holes drilled in the bottoms of the cases; thus allowing
the surface to subside slowly until no longer needed as a support
These works gained for him the highest reputation as an
Engineer—and a paper which he afterwards, in 1871, read respecting them at
the Civil Engineers’ Institute in Westminster gained him the Telford
Premium.
It was in this charge that the first serious instance
occurred of his exceptional readiness to assume grave responsibility and
violate regulations where he held it to be necessary for the duties
entrusted to him.
A financial difficulty had arisen, caused by the unexpected
withdrawal of funds at a critical time in the construction of some of the
bridges, when, as the rains were coming on, the stoppage of work would have
resulted in great loss. All entreaties to Government for funds having
failed, he, on his own personal security, borrowed from a native of wealth a
sum sufficient to carry on the work till out of the reach of danger;
repaying the advance later on when he received his new grants. This was done
purely in the interests of Government, but it laid him open to a very severe
censure, if not personal loss; and it was not till some years after the
event that he let out how he had obtained the money. Thus early in his
career he showed his fearlessness of responsibility, provided he felt that
he was acting in the interests of Government.
In 1869, when the most important stage of the Kangra work was
nearly over, he was much employed in the survey of the road from the plains
to the new and neighbouring hill station of Dalhousie, and in preparing and
arranging for the buildings needed there—work which he was to take up again
after his return in 1873 from the furlough which he was shortly about to
take.
It may be observed that the people whom he had to employ—with
whom he was brought intimately into contact—in the Kangra Valley and towards
Dalhousie differed entirely from all with whom his former experiences lay.
They were quiet, peaceable, and kindly hill folk—chiefly Buddhist in
religious persuasion—with many hill Rajpoot tribes among them, and
sprinklings of Mussulmans from the Lower Himalayas, here quite different
from the fiercer fanatics on the Indus. The quiet and peace and security
were important on account of his bride and young family, and formed, by
contrast, a break and a stepping-stone to the rougher associations of later
years.
Meanwhile, too, the career of his “Double” was proceeding,
but it will be more convenient to defer dealing with it to a somewhat more
advanced stage.
While Browne was thus carrying on his work between 1865 and
1870 on the north-east frontier of the Punjab, outer events in which the
fate of India was involved had not been standing idle. Russia had not as yet
been making overt movements or pushing her advances towards our borders, or
even towards Afghanistan, but she had been very active in the more northerly
districts, and on our part there had been somewhat ostentatious movements
towards the Yarkund direction, while our real attention and watch had to be
directed towards Kaufmann, the Governor-General of Turkestan.
In Afghanistan Shere Ali had been, by degrees, fighting his
way through the large family of rival brothers, and was now, after five
years, coming more clearly to the front as the Ameer of the country; though
Sir John Lawrence was doggedly adhering to bis avowed policy of “Masterly
Inactivity.” Further, we had ourselves a war on in Abyssinia, in which
fortunately our commander was that wise statesman and determined leader, Sir
Robert Napier, who, carrying out his own plans, in spite of all opposition
and obstacles, won his decisive and thorough victory just in time to
anticipate the rains and so avoid a prolonged war. The great flare-up was
also beginning in Europe; Prussia had already fought Denmark and was at war
with Austria, and France and Prussia were beginning to snarl. Such was the
state of matters when Browne obtained his first furlough and went to
England.
Still these recent years were, it may be assumed, the most
quiet, pleasant, and untroubled of Browne’s career, spent in a fine climate,
under the very appreciative Government of the Punjab, and free from the
anxieties of war; the only serious wars that had been going on being on the
Continent of Europe and the Abyssinian war. The troubles in Afghanistan in
respect of the strife between Dost Mahomed’s sons had now ceased and Shere
Ali had become the recognised Ameer of Cabul.
Sir John Lawrence, in pursuance of the policy of recognising
and befriending the de facto ruler, had deemed it wise that the British
Government should acknowledge, in a public manner, the change which had thus
taken place. He therefore intimated that he would grant to the Ameer a State
interview or durbar, and that he would befriend him, in the consolidation of
his power, with a present of money. But Sir John quitted the viceroyalty in
January, 1869, and it fell to his successor, Lord Mayo, to carry out these
promises. This he did at the Umballa durbar in March, 1869. The effect of
that durbar was to give to our policy of a definite basis for our dealings
with Afghanistan its legitimate development. So long as the claimants to the
Afghan sovereignty were fighting among themselves, that policy debarred us
from interfering. But when one of them had finally emerged triumphant, and
concentrated the authority in his own hands, the same policy led Lawrence
and Mayo to strengthen him in that position. During the first five years
after this Umballa durbar events proved that they had accurately gauged the
situation. The successful claimant, Shere Ali, whom that durbar publicly
recognised, continued to maintain his authority and to reign as the rightful
ruler of Afghanistan. This was a happy juncture for Browne to take his
well-earned holiday. The public outlook was settled and peaceful, and Browne
recognised or foresaw, as few did, that there would soon be a real and
vigorous start of important Engineer operations, under the direct control of
the Government. With the exception of canals, none such had heretofore, to
any serious extent, fallen to the lot of the Government Engineer. And he had
now a good opportunity of such further study and inquisition into Engineer
work as he might think needful for this new era, as well as of taking a real
holiday.
He had now had ten full years of sound practical experience,
nearly all of it in Engineer works that were in many respects most valuable
for his future career, and a few months of it in rough soldiering that had
drawn out and developed his character and capacity in an exceptional manner,
as well as giving him the most valuable sort of experience he could have
desired. |