Page 108 - A History of Siam
P. 108

io6           A HISTORY OF SIAM

             the district now known as           five miles from
         (in                            Sarap'i),
                                           taken.
         Chiengmai, many prisoners being
           The retreat continued  through Mating  Li. The Prince
         of  Nan, YiMangkala,  assisted  by Chiengmai  and Nak'on
                                 attacked the
         Lamp'ang troops, again              retreating Siamese,
                   them with          loss.  The Governors of
         defeating             great
                        and         were  killed  in  this  battle.
         Kamp'engp'et        P'ijai
         Farther  south,  another Lao  army lay  in ambush.  The
         Siamese were once more attacked near the P'un Sam
         Miim  l  stream and were once more routed,    this time
         with the loss of three Generals, 10,000 men,  and  3,000
         boats.
           After these serious                         returned
                                disasters, King P'rajai
         to          He had been in bad health for some months,
           Ayut'ia.
         and died about                Pinto states that he was
                          June 1846.
         poisoned by  his  wife,  Princess Sri Suda Chan,  and the
                     actions of that infamous woman were such
         subsequent
         as to       the accusation.
              justify
                        obtained the throne    means which are
           King P'rajai                     by
                    to our moral
         repugnant                 sense. We must, however,
         refrain from          to Siam in the sixteenth
                      applying                          century
         the standards of        in our own time.  If we believe
                         Europe
                            was a wise       well beloved    his
         Pinto, King P'rajai           ruler,             by
                and          mourned       them when he died.
         people      deeply            by
         "
           This Prince lived in the  reputation  of  being  charitable
         to the        liberal in his benefits and
                 poor,                             recompenses,
                and          towards             and above   all
         pitiful      gentle          everyone,
         incorrupt  in  doing  of  justice  and  chastening  the wicked  ;
         his  subjects spoke  so  amply  thereof in their lamentations,
         as if all that  they  said of it was true  ; we are to believe
         that there never was a   better  King  than  he,  either
         amongst  these  Pagans,  or in  all the  countries of the
         world."
          1
           Probably the stream now called the Me Pan Miin, in the Miiang Li distric
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