order to carry the point of an offensive alliance
against Hyder Ali, the said Hastings exposed the negotiation
for peace with the Mahrattas to many difficulties and
delays. That the Mahrattas were bound by a clear
and recent engagement, which Hyder had never violated
in any article, to make no peace with us which should
not include him; that they pleaded the sacred nature
of this obligation in answer to all our requisitions
on this head, while the said Hastings, still importunate
for his favorite point, suggested to them various
means of reconciling a substantial breach of their
engagement with a formal observance of it, and taught
them how they might at once be parties in a peace
with Hyder Ali and in an offensive alliance for immediate
hostility against him. That these lessons of public
duplicity and artifice, and these devices of ostensible
faith and real treachery, could have no effect but
to degrade the national character, and to inspire
the Mahrattas themselves, with whom we were in treaty,
with a distrust in our sincerity and good faith.
That the object of this fraudulent policy (viz., the
utter destruction of Hyder Ali, and a partition of
his dominions) was neither wise in itself, or authorized
by the orders and instructions of the Company to their
servants; that it was incompatible with the treaty
of peace, in which Hyder Ali was included, and contrary
to the repeated and best-understood injunctions of
the Company,—being, in the first place,
a bargain for a new war, and, in the next, aiming
at an extension of our territory by conquest.
That the best and soundest political opinions on the
relations of these states have always represented
our great security against the power of the Mahrattas
to depend on its being balanced by that of Hyder Ali;
and the Mysore country is so placed as a barrier between
the Carnatic and the Mahrattas as to make it our interest
rather to strengthen and repair that barrier than
to level and destroy it. That the said treaty
of partition does express itself to be eventual
with regard to the making and keeping of peace; but
through the whole course of the said Hastings’s
proceeding he did endeavor to prevent any peace with
the Sultan or Nabob of Mysore, Tippoo Sahib, and did
for a long time endeavor to frustrate all the methods
which could have rendered the said treaty of conquest
and partition wholly unnecessary.
That the Mahrattas having taken no effectual step to oblige Hyder Ali to make good the conditions for which they had engaged in his behalf, and the war continuing to be carried on in the Carnatic by Tippoo Sultan, son and successor of Hyder Ali, the Presidency of Fort St. George undertook, upon their own authority, to open a negotiation with the said Tippoo: which measure, though indispensably necessary, the said Hastings utterly disapproved and discountenanced, expressly denying that there was any ground or motive for entering into any direct or separate treaty with Tippoo, and