Read Treachery in Tibet Online

Authors: John Wilcox

Treachery in Tibet (31 page)

‘Oh yes.’ Jenkins nodded emphatically. ‘’E wants to be a soldier in the British army. No doubt about that.’

A silence fell on the little group. Then it was broken by Simon: ‘That boy saved my life. I wouldn’t like to just let him join up back in Delhi or wherever. I owe him more than that. He’s as bright as a button and he’s become close to all of us.’

‘The answer is quite clear.’ Alice’s tone was firm. ‘He must first come back with all of us to Norfolk. He’s too young to go straight into the army.’ She turned to her husband. ‘Simon, we must put him into a good school, so that he improves that bright enquiring mind of his. Then, when he is ready and if he still wants to become a soldier, he would stand a good chance of getting a commission in the Indian army. What do you both think?’

Jenkins’s great grin split his face. ‘Wonderful! An’ I could be ’is batman, eh?’

‘He wouldn’t get a better one.’ Fonthill put a hand into the depths of his
poshteen
and produced a half bottle of whisky. ‘Will you go and get him, please, 352, and bring him back here with four clean mugs, if you can find them. The boy had better begin to learn to drink, like a proper English soldier.’

Jenkins looked embarrassed. ‘Ah, a bit late for that, bach sir. I’ve already been givin’ ’im lessons. In fact, I ’ave to say that ’e’s comin’ on quite well in that direction.’

This is a work of fiction although based on factual happenings. It is only fair to the reader, then, that I should delineate which is truth and which fiction in the telling of this story. In this context, Fonthill, Alice, Jenkins and Sunil are my creations as are other minor characters in the story, such as Willoughby, Curzon's ADC, Chung Li and his family and the rather more important figure of General Khemphis Jong.

The cast list of real people is longer: Curzon, Younghusband and Macdonald, of course, and officers in the expedition force such as Captain William Ottley, who actually led the Mounted Infantry throughout the campaign; Frank O'Connor, Younghusband's valued interpreter; Colonel Campbell of the 30th Pathans; Colonel Brander, who led the attack at Karo La; Major Bretherton, who perished in the Tsangpo: Captains Bethune, Walton, Kelly and Cook-Young; and Lt John Grant, VC and his
havildar
, Karbir Pun. Alice's three correspondent colleagues are as named.

The list of the tongue-twistedly named Tibetans who played a role in the real-life story is equally long: the Ta Lama; Yutop Shapé; the
amban,
who was commander of the fort at Gyantse; Lobsang Trinley, the Dalai Lama's adversarial Grand Secretary; the Chinese
amban
in Lhasa; Kalon Yuthok; Ti Rinpoche; and the two non-Tibetans who helped Younghusband make the initial breakthrough in negotiating the treaty; Captain Ja Bahadur, the Nepalese ambassador in Lhasa and the Tonsa Penlop, he of the homburg hat.

I have tried to retell the battles and main events of the invasion as accurately as studies of respected accounts of the campaign have allowed. I must confess, however, to two departures from the
actualité.
The first concerns the attack on the mission at Chang Lo. I have the journalists not accompanying Colonel Brander on his attack on Karo La, because I wanted Alice to stay and describe the attack on the mission. In reality, all three correspondents went with the Colonel to Karo La. The second is that the Mounted Infantry's heroic action at the river near the end of the march on Lhasa is a pure figment of my imagination, although in fact they experienced many more military encounters with the Tibetans than I have described. I felt that one more stirring piece of action was needed at this point in the story. Well, the book is a novel, after all!

If one discounts the disastrous episode of Suez in 1956 as being forced on the UK by events rather than territorial ambition, the invasion of Tibet in 1904 (and, despite Curzon's protestations, it
was
an invasion) can be described as the last real hurrah of British imperial expansionism. It took place only after Curzon pressed the British government hard to react to the border pinpricks and lack of respect shown to the Raj by the Tibetans and to the perceived
threat of a growing Russian presence in Lhasa. Curzon never had firm evidence of the presence there of a permanent representative of the Tsar, nor of the existence of a Russian gun factory. He virtually lied about this, to support his long-held theory. The expedition, in fact, began shrouded in criticism from Westminster and it ended in quite bitter controversy.

Younghusband got his treaty in the end, only after hard months of arguments in Lhasa, with Macdonald fussing and fuming in the background and longing to return to India. But, after lauding the Commissioner's efforts initially, the British government emasculated the main elements of the agreement, reducing the amount of time the British occupied the Chumbi Valley from seventy-five years to three and cutting to a third the amount of reparations Younghusband had levied on the Tibetan government. It also revoked the clause, which Younghusband held dear, which allowed the British agent at Gyantse to visit Lhasa. In fact, the Tibetans never did pay the reparations and from attaining the status of hero, Younghusband limped back home accused of being headstrong and arrogant.

Sides were taken in the Macdonald vs Younghusband spats. At the end of the long, arduous campaign, having reached Lhasa after one of the most difficult and dangerous expeditions in British military history, Younghusband could reasonably have expected to be honoured with the knighthood of the Order of the Bath. Instead, he received the lower appointment of Knight Commander of the Indian Empire. Macdonald, however, was on the eve of being Gazetted Knight Companion of the Order of the Bath when, on the last minute intervention of the King himself – reputed to be an admirer of Younghusband – he, too, was demoted to the KCIE.

The controversy which ended the expedition seemed to obscure completely the fact that the main reason for the invasion – to counter the perceived strong influence in Lhasa of Russia – had been proven to be quite unfounded. But there was no more talk of a ‘forward policy' being established to defend India.

The two protagonists of the long march virtually disappeared from public view. Thanks to his old supporter Curzon, Younghusband was appointed to the Residency of Kashmir, which he coveted. But that lasted only three years and it became clear that he had no longer any future in the Indian Civil Service and he resigned and, after an unsuccessful attempt to enter politics in the UK, he devoted the rest of his life to religious works, unembittered and rather mystical to the end. Macdonald became a major general and ended his career as GOC in Mauritius, before retiring early back to Scotland because of ill health.

Curzon, ill and burdened by the death of his beloved wife, returned to India but, worn out by constant conflict with Kitchener, resigned his Viceroyalty. He dropped out of public life for a while but married again, became Foreign Secretary during the war years and came within an ace of achieving the premiership in 1923, only to be pipped at the post by Baldwin. He died an unpopular figure, still carrying – perhaps unfairly – the reputation of being pompous and arrogant.

And Tibet? Historians have written that Younghusband at least brought it out of its medievalism. But it has remained to this day a backward, pastoral and theologically influenced state that is now dominated and occupied by a resurgent China. The present Dalai Lama now lives in exile in India. The waters of international interest now seem to have closed quietly over Lhasa, as though the Younghusband Expedition had never existed.

I am indebted to my agent, Jane Conway-Gordon, for her constant and loyal support and her commercial-literary efforts on my behalf. Why, she even supplied the title for this novel! My thanks also go to Susie Dunlop and her staff at Allison & Busby for their help and work in correcting my carelessness on detail and names. I would also have been lost without the London Library, whose staff helped me find the sources for ensuring that, as far as possible, my recreation of events from so long ago were accurate. Lastly, my love and thanks go to my wife Betty, for her proofreading, care and patience while I slogged over the high road to Lhasa with Simon, Alice and Jenkins.

The Tibet expedition certainly seemed to attract a good deal of literary attention – perhaps because of its pseudo glamour as a last echo of more successful exploits of Empire? Many of the books about the invasion seemed to take sides in the ongoing debate about whether Macdonald’s caution was justified or represented an unacceptable
drag on Younghusband’s energy and ambition. I have tried to tread between the daisies here, perhaps, however, coming down slightly on the side of the Commissioner, who, to me, steps out of the pages as a more charismatic person.

Readers anxious to dip more deeply into the history of the expedition may find the attached, very short bibliography of use.

Allen, Charles,
Duel in the Snows
(London, 2004)

Candler, Edmund,
The Unveiling of Lhasa
(London, 1905)

Fleming, Peter; Hart-Davis, Rupert,
Bayonets to Lhasa
(London, 1961)

Goradia, Nayana,
Lord Curzon: The Last of the British Moghuls
(Oxford, 1993)

Haythornthwaite, Philip J.,
The Colonial Wars Source Book
(London, 1995)

O’Connor, Sir Frederick,
On the Frontier and Beyond
(London, 1931)

 
 
 

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According to author J
OHN
W
ILCOX
, an inability to do sums and a nascent talent to string words together steered him towards journalism – that and the desire to wear a trench coat, belted with a knot, just like Bogart. After a number of years working as a journalist, he was lured into industry. In the mid-nineties he sold his company in order to devote himself to his first love, writing. He has now published, to high acclaim, eleven Simon Fonthill books, one Fonthill short story, a WWI novel and two works of non-fiction, including an autobiography.

 

www.johnwilcoxauthor.co.uk

The War of the Dragon Lady

Fire Across the Veldt

Bayonets Along the Border

Treachery in Tibet

Pirates – Starboard Side!

(a short story)

Starshine

Allison & Busby Limited
12 Fitzroy Mews
London W1T 6DW
www.allisonandbusby.com

First published in Great Britain by Allison & Busby in 2015.
This ebook edition first published in 2015.

Copyright © 2015 by J
OHN
W
ILCOX

The moral right of the author is hereby asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All characters and events in this publication other than those clearly in the public domain are fictitious and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent buyer.

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

ISBN 978–0–7490–1416–2

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