Page:History of India Vol 8.djvu/253

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WAR WITH THE NIZAM AND HYDER ALI
213

was so roughly handled by the English that he was glad to make terms separately; and the war was pressed against Hyder Ali alone, who soon proved himself an antagonist much more adroit and active than the ordinary Indian princes of whom the Company had military experience.

A TEMPLE NEAR TINNEVELLI IN THE MADRAS PRESIDENCY.

The campaign was vary ill managed, from Madras; the commanding officer was hampered by "field deputies" to superintend his movements, and by roguish contractors; while the Marathas took the opportunity of making a plundering tour in the Karnatic. Nor was it until the country had been overrun by the Mysore cavalry close up to the outskirts of Madras, and the finances of the Company considerably deranged, that a protracted and inglorious war was ended in 1769 by a treaty with Hyder Ali, who had taken up his quarters at St. Thomas' Mount, five miles from the