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228
SHIVAJI.
[CH. VIII


397-399; O. C. 3779; F. R. Surat 106, Bombay to Surat 16 Sep., 1673; Dutch Records, Vol. 31, No. 805; O. C. 3800.)

As Mr. Gerald Aungier, the English President of Bombay, wrote on 16th Sep. 1673, "Shivaji bears himself up manfully against all his enemies...... and though it is probable that the Mughal's army may fall into his country this year and Bahlol Khan on the other side, yet neither of them can stay long for want of provisions, and his flying army will constantly keep them in alarm, nor is it either their design to destroy Shivaji totally, for the Umarahs maintain a politic war to their own profit at the king's charge, and never intend to prosecute it violently so as to end it." (F.R. Surat, 106.)

Shivaji took full advantage of his enemies' moral and political weakness.*[1] Early in October 1673, he was reported to have made 20,000 sacks "ready to convey what plunder he can get, having also a considerable flying army ready for that action." Soon afterwards, this army, 25,000 strong, led by Shiva in person, burst into west Bijapur territory, plundering many rich towns, and then passed into Kanara for more plunder. This work occupied him till the end of December. In the first week of that month he was at Kadra with 6,000 men, and stayed there only four days. But his detachments were twice


  1. *F. R. Surat 106, Bomb, to Surat, 10 Oct., 1673 O. C. 3910; F. R. Surat 88, Karwar to Surat, 17 Dec.