for his station”; and a letter from the British
Resident at Oude, transmitted to the said Court, represents
him “to have wholly lost, by his oppressions,
the confidence and affections of his own subjects”;
and whose distresses, and the known disorders in his
government, he, the said Hastings, did attribute solely
to his own bad conduct and evil character; admitting
also, in a letter written to Edward Wheler, Esquire,
and transmitted to the Court of Directors, “that
many circumstances did favor suspicion of his [the
said Nabob’s] fidelity to the English interest,
the Nabob being surrounded by men base in their characters
and improvident in their understandings, his favorites,
and his companions of his looser hours. These
had every cause to dread the effect of my influence
on theirs; and both these, and the relations of the
family, whose views of consequence and power were intercepted
by our participation in the administration of his
affairs, entertained a mortal hatred to our nation,
and openly avowed it.” And the said Hastings
was well aware, that, in case the Nabob, by him described
in the manner aforesaid, on making such purchase,
should continue to observe the terms of his father’s
original covenants and engagements with the Rajah,
and should pay the Company the only tribute which he
could lawfully exact from the said Rajah, it was impossible
that he could, for the mere naked and unprofitable
rights of a sovereignty paramount, afford to offer
so great a sum as the Rajah did offer to the said Hastings
for his redemption from oppression; such an acquisition
to the Nabob (while he kept his faith) could not possibly
be of any advantage whatever to him; and that therefore,
if a great sum was to be paid by the Nabob of Oude,
it must be for the purpose of oppression and violation
of public faith, to be perpetrated in the person of
the said Nabob, to an extent and in a manner which
the said Hastings was then apprehensive he could not
justify to the Court of Directors as his own personal
act.
PART III.
EXPULSION OF THE RAJAH OF BENARES.
I. That the said Warren Hastings, being resolved on the ruin of the Rajah aforesaid, as a preliminary step thereto, did, against the express orders of the Court of Directors, remove Francis Fowke, Esquire, the Company’s Resident at the city of Benares, without any complaint or pretence of complaint whatsoever, but merely on his own declaration that he must have as a Resident at Benares a person of his own special and personal nomination and confidence, and not a man of the Company’s nomination,—and in the place of the said Francis Fowke, thus illegally divested of his office, did appoint thereto another servant of the Company of his own choice.