Page:Discovery and Decipherment of the Trilingual Cuneiform Inscriptions.djvu/140

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MODERN DISCOVERY
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The outbreak of the Afghan war, in 1839, summoned him to a very different sphere of activity. He was recalled to Bombay in October of that year, and in January 1840, he was ordered to Candahar, where he filled the important office of Political Agent throughout the whole of that trying period. It was due in a measure to his energy and prudence, acting in combination with the military talent of General Nott, that the town was saved, and a portion of the disaster at Kabul retrieved. The evacuation of Candahar took place in August 1842, and by the end of the year Rawlinson was back in India. He had been present at three battles and on each occasion was honourably mentioned in despatches; in addition to these services, he accompanied the General as aide-de-camp during the hard fighting on the march to Cabul and the Sutlej. An accidental meeting on board a steamer with Lord Ellenborough, who was then the Governor-General, ripened into friendship, and procured for the young officer an offer of the 'Residency in Nepaul' or of 'the Central India Agency'; but these were declined. Rawlinson had set his heart on completing his cuneiform studies, which had now been suspended by three years of adventure; and although these appointments were of much greater dignity and emolument, he eagerly seized upon the opportunity of returning to Bagdad as 'Political Agent in Turkish Arabia,' in succession to Colonel Taylor. Here he arrived in December, 1843, to 'work out the Babylonian puzzle' and to spend 'twelve weary years of his life doing penance in order to attain a great literary object.'[1]

As soon as he could spare time, in the early summer of 1844, he returned to Behistun, accompanied by Mr. Hester and Captain Jones, R. N.[2]It will be

  1. Athenæum, Nov. 8, 1884.
  2. Memoir. 144.