This day, when we stayed at Bekrām, I sent for several Begs and noblemen who were about my person, as well as for the paymasters and Diwāns, and having nominated six or seven of them as superintendents, appointed them to attend at the Nilāb passage, to conduct the embarkation, to take down the name of every man in the army one by one, and to inspect* them. That same night I had a defluxion and fever. The defluxion ended in a cough; every time that I coughed I spat blood; I was considerably alarmed; but, praise be to God! it went off in two or three days.*

Dec. 12, 13,
and 14.

We made two marches from Bekrām; and after the third, on Thursday the 26th, we encamped on the banks of the river Sind.*

Dec. 16.
Passes the
Sind.

On Saturday,* the 1st day of the first Rabi, we passed the Sind; and having also crossed the river of Kacheh-kot,* halted on its banks. The Begs, paymasters, and Diwāns, who had been placed to superintend the embarkation, brought me the return of the troops who were on the service. Great and small, good and bad, servants and no servants, they amounted to twelve thousand persons.

This year there was a deficiency of rain in the lower Proceeds
by the
route of the
hills.
grounds, whereas there had been a sufficient quantity in the highlands. To secure a proper supply of corn, we advanced along the skirts of the hills towards Siālkot.* On coming opposite to the country of the Gakkers,* in the bed of a brook, we found in several places a quantity of standing water. These waters were entirely frozen over. Although there was not much of it,* the ice was in general a span in thickness. In Hindustān such ice is uncommon. We met with it here; but, during all the years* that I have been in Hindustān, I have in no other instance met with any trace of ice or snow.

Dec. 22.

Advancing five marches from the Sind, the sixth brought us close by the hill of Jūd, below the hill of Balināt-jogi,** on the banks of a river, at the station of Bakiālān,* where we encamped.

Dec. 23.

Next morning we halted in the same encampment, for the purpose of allowing the troops to procure grain. That day I drank spirits.* Mulla Muhammed Parghari told us a great many stories. I have seldom seen him so talkative. Mulla Shams was generally riotous in his cups, and, when once affected, he continued noisy and troublesome from morning till night.

The slaves and servants, and men of all descriptions, that had gone to bring in grain, instead of employing themselves in searching for grain,* went confusedly and unrestrained over hill, wood, and dingle, making a number of prisoners* ; in consequence of which Kichkineh tunkitār and some others of our men were cut off.

Dec. 24.
Arrives on
the Behāt.

Marching thence, we halted, after passing the river Behāt below Jhelum,* by the ford. Wali Kizil, who held the pergannas of Bīmragīri and Akerbādehpūr, and who had been ordered to assist in the defence of Siālkot, arrived and waited on me at this place. I was displeased, and chided him for not remaining in Siālkot.* He excused himself by informing me, that he had left it in order to repair to his perganna, and that Khosrou Gokultāsh, on leaving Siālkot, had given him no intimation of his intention. I listened to his excuse, but asked him, ‘As you did not remain in Siālkot to defend it, why did you not repair to Lahore, and join the rest of the Begs?’ He had no good answer to make; but as we were near about entering upon action, I overlooked his offence. From this encampment I sent forward Syed Tufān and Syed Sachīn,* giving each of them a spare horse, with directions to push on with all speed to Lahore, and to enjoin our troops in that city not to fight, but to form a junction with me at Siālkot or Parsrūr.* The general report was that Ghāzi Khan had collected an army of thirty or forty thousand men; that Doulet Khan, old as he was, had buckled on two swords;* and that they would certainly try the fate of a battle. I recollected the proverb which says, Ten friends are better than nine. That no advantage might be lost, I judged it most advisable, before fighting, to form a junction with the detachment of my army that was in Lahore. I therefore sent on messengers with instruc­tions Reaches
the Chenāb.
Dec. 26.
Dec. 27.
to the Amirs, and at the second march reached the banks of the river Chenāb, where I encamped. I rode on towards Bahlūlpūr,* which is an imperial domain, and sur­veyed it on every side. Its castle stands on the banks of the Chenāb, upon an elevated ravine. It pleased me extremely, and I formed a plan of transferring the population of Siālkot to this place. God willing, as soon as I find leisure I will complete my project. I returned from Bahlūlpūr to the camp in a boat, and had a party; some drank arak,* some būzeh, and some took maajūn. I landed from the boat Dec. 28. about bed-time prayers, and we drank a little in my pavilion. I halted one day on the banks of the river to rest our horses.

Reaches
Siālkot.
Dec. 29.

On Friday, the 14th of the first Rabi, we arrived at Siālkot. Every time that I have entered Hindustān, the Jāts and Gujers* have regularly poured down in prodigious numbers, from their hills and wilds,* in order to carry off oxen and buffaloes. These were the wretches that really inflicted the chief hardships, and were guilty of the severest oppression on the country. These districts, in former times, had been in a state of revolt, and yielded very little revenue that could be come at.* On the present occasion, when I had reduced the whole of the neighbouring districts to subjection, they began to repeat their practices. As my poor people were on their way from Siālkot to the camp, hungry and naked, indigent and in distress, they were fallen upon by the road with loud shouts and plundered.* I sought out the persons guilty of this outrage, discovered them, and ordered two or three of the number to be cut in pieces.*

Receives
news of the
defeat of
Alim Khan.

At this same station a merchant arrived, who brought us the news of the defeat of Ālim Khan by Sultan Ibrahīm. The particulars are as follows. Ālim Khan,* after taking leave of me, had marched forward in spite of the scorching heat of the weather, and had reached Lahore, having, with­out any consideration for those who accompanied him, Accounts
of Ālim
Khan’s
trans-
actions.
gone two stages every march. At the very moment that Ālim Khan took leave, all the Sultans and Khans of the Uzbeks had advanced and blockaded Balkh; so that, immediately on his departure for Hindustān, I was obliged to set out for that city. Ālim Khan, on reaching Lahore, insisted with such of my Begs as were in Hindustān, that the Emperor had ordered them to march to his assistance, and that they must accordingly accompany him; that it Ālim Khan
forms a
league with
Ghāzi
Khan.
had been concerted that Ghāzi Khan should likewise join him, and that they were all in conjunction to march upon Delhi and Agra. The Begs answered, that, situated as things were, they could not accompany Ghāzi Khan with any kind of confidence; but that, if he sent to court his younger brother Hāji Khan, with his son, or placed them in Lahore as hostages, their instructions would then leave them at liberty to march along with him; that otherwise they could not; that it was only the other day that Ālim Khan had fought and been defeated by Ghāzi Khan, so that no mutual confidence was to be looked for between them; and that, altogether, it was by no means advisable for Ālim Khan to let Ghāzi Khan accompany him in the expedition. Whatever expostulations of this nature they employed in order to dissuade Ālim Khan from prosecuting his plan, were all ineffectual. He sent his son Sher Khan to confer with Doulet Khan and Ghāzi Khan, and the parties them­selves afterwards met. Dilāwer Khan,* who had been in confinement very recently, and who had escaped from custody and come to Lahore only two or three months before, was likewise associated with them. Mahmūd Khan Khan Jehān,* to whom the custody of Lahore* had been entrusted, was also pressed into their measures. In a word, it was in the end definitively arranged among them, that Doulet Khan and Ghāzi Khan should take under their orders all the Begs who had been left in Hindustān, and should, at the same time, themselves assume the government of all the adjacent territories;* while Dilāwer Khan and Hāji Khan were to accompany Ālim Khan, and occupy the whole Marches
against
Delhi,
of the country about Delhi and Agra and in that neighbour­hood.* Ismāel Jilwāni and a number of other Amirs waited on Ālim Khan, and acknowledged him. He now proceeded towards Delhi without delay, by forced marches. On reaching Inderi,* Suleimān Sheikhzādeh came and like­wise joined him. The numbers of the confederate army and
besieges it.
now amounted to thirty or forty thousand men. They laid siege to Delhi, but were unable either to take the place by storm or to reduce it by famine.*