Read Lachmi Bai, Rani of Jhansi: The Jeanne D'Arc of India Page 1




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  LACHMI BAI Rani of Jhansi

  MICHAEL WHITE

  LACHMI BAI

  "Lachmi Bai! Lachmi Bai! Rani of Jhansi!" theycried.--Page 31.]

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  Lachmi Bai Rani of Jhansi

  The Jeanne D'Arc of India

  By Michael White

  New York J. F. Taylor & Company 1901

  COPYRIGHT, 1901, BY J. F. TAYLOR AND COMPANY, NEW YORK

  _Press of Riggs Printing Company Albany, N. Y._

  _To my wife_

  _The_ RANI _of_ JHANSI

  "Being young, vigorous, and not afraid to show herself to themultitude, she gained a great influence over the hearts of the people.It was this influence, this force of character, added to a splendid andinspiring courage, that enabled her to offer a desperate resistanceto the British.... Whatever her faults in British eyes may have been,her countrymen will ever believe that she was driven by ill-treatmentinto rebellion; that her cause was a righteous cause. To them she willalways be a heroine."

  KAYE AND MALLESON, "_History of the Indian Mutiny_."

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  LACHMI BAI

  Within no peerless Taj Mahal her body lies, No gilded dome, nor fairy minarets against the azure skies, Proclaim the place, where she, called by her foes, the "bravest and the best," Was laid by reverential hands to her victorious rest: But in the eternal sanctuary of her race, The holy river, holy Mother Ganges, that coveted embrace, Doth hold her ashes, and for a monument to her name, Sufficeth it, that in the people's hearts, her fame, Doth shine immortal. For she was deeply loved, this Queen, The beauteous, valiant Rani, India's great heroine.

  CONTENTS

  CHAPTER PAGE I. BEFORE THE STORM 1 II. THE HOUR AT HAND 18 III. BY THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE 23 IV. A STAR IN THE ASCENDENT 36 V. AHMAD RETURNS TO COURT 48 VI. THE OATH 61 VII. HOW AHMAD KEPT HIS OATH 72 VIII. THE DARBAR 85 IX. AT THE HOUSE OF AHMAD KHAN 101 X. THE WHITE TURRET 107 XI. A SHREWD DIAGNOSIS 117 XII. AHMAD AGAIN NONPLUSSED 126 XIII. WHAT BIPIN OVERHEARD 139 XIV. AT THE TOMB OF FIROZ KHAN 155 XV. IN THE COURSE OF EVENTS 172 XVI. JHANSI BESIEGED 184 XVII. WITH SWORD AND TORCH 193 XVIII. A PRINCE IN SCARLET 207 XIX. A CALL TO THE HEART 218 XX. BIPIN TAKES A PRISONER 229 XXI. THE GREAT COUP DE MAIN 237

  _LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS_

  "Lachmi Bai--Lachmi Bai--Rani of Jhansi"! they cried (page 31) _Frontispiece_ PAGE

  "Then will I set forth to bring this dog of a Maharaja to his senses"? 57

  "Didst thou mark that languorous glance she cast on thee"? 105

  With the exception of a white turban, she was attired in a blood-red uniform from head to foot 213

  Her horse leaped forward straight for Sindhia's guns 255

  "Never have I hungered for aught else but thee, fair Rani" 267