Major-General Sir Thomas Munro, Governor of Madras: Selections from His Minutes and Other Official Writings, 파트 12,1권Kegan Paul, 1881 |
도서 본문에서
64개의 결과 중 1 - 5개
xvii 페이지
... supposed . Writing on the subject to one of his brothers some years after he went to India , he remarked : Our attachment to early acquaintances is as frequently owing to chance placing us together , to being engaged in the same studies ...
... supposed . Writing on the subject to one of his brothers some years after he went to India , he remarked : Our attachment to early acquaintances is as frequently owing to chance placing us together , to being engaged in the same studies ...
xliv 페이지
... supposed that there is an annual revision of the rate of assessment , and that the landholders have no guarantee that that rate will not be raised from year to year . The fact is that there is no annual settlement of the rate of ...
... supposed that there is an annual revision of the rate of assessment , and that the landholders have no guarantee that that rate will not be raised from year to year . The fact is that there is no annual settlement of the rate of ...
liv 페이지
... Suppose all these fine things realized , shall we have changed for the better ? Let agriculture and manufactures be carried to their utmost possible extent , where does it all end , but in our being more effeminate in our dress , and ...
... Suppose all these fine things realized , shall we have changed for the better ? Let agriculture and manufactures be carried to their utmost possible extent , where does it all end , but in our being more effeminate in our dress , and ...
lv 페이지
... supposing that the economists have accomplished their great plan of filling the world with farmers and manufacturers , and made the whole face of the earth one great city , it does not appear that the more important end of increasing ...
... supposing that the economists have accomplished their great plan of filling the world with farmers and manufacturers , and made the whole face of the earth one great city , it does not appear that the more important end of increasing ...
lvi 페이지
... supposed to be concerned in their quarrel ; but now , by the happy modern discovery of the balance of power , all Europe is fraternized- every nation takes at least as much interest in the affairs of other nations as in its own , and no ...
... supposed to be concerned in their quarrel ; but now , by the happy modern discovery of the balance of power , all Europe is fraternized- every nation takes at least as much interest in the affairs of other nations as in its own , and no ...
기타 출판본 - 모두 보기
자주 나오는 단어 및 구문
accounts advantage altamghá amount ancient Arcot army authority Ballári Baramahal better Board of Revenue British Canara Carnatic cause Ceded Districts cent chief Coimbatore Collector Court of Directors Cuddapah cultivation curnums customs cutcherry duties effect Ellore established expense farmers farms favour field fixed assessment Gleig's granted Hindu Hyder Hyder Ali improvement inám increase India inhabitants jágír Khán labour land revenue land-rent landholders landlord lease Lord Lord Wellesley Mahomedan Mahratta Malabar ment military mirás mirásidár Munro múttadárs Mysore Narsaiya native Nawáb necessary never Nizam Northern Sirkárs object officers opinion pagodas permanent Peshwa possession present princes private landed property private property proprietors provinces public revenue Rájá rate of assessment reduction regarded Regulation remission render rent resumed revenue servants ryots ryotwár system saleable secure settlement share sirkár supposed survey tanks tenants tenure Thomas Munro tion Tippoo usage Vijayanagar village waste waste land whole zemindárs
인기 인용구
lxiii 페이지 - Company shall be at such time engaged by any subsisting treaty to defend or guarantee), either to declare war or commence hostilities, or enter into any treaty for making war against any of the country Princes or States in India...
271 페이지 - We have, in our anxiety to make every thing as English as possible in a country which resembles England in nothing, attempted to create at once, throughout extensive provinces, a kind of landed property which had never existed in them ; and in the pursuit of this object, we have relinquished the rights which the sovereign always possessed in the soil, and we have, in many cases, deprived the real owners, the occupant Rayets, of their proprietary rights, and bestowed them on Zemindars, and other imaginary...
clvii 페이지 - But even if all India could be brought under the British dominion, it is very questionable whether such a change, either as it regards the natives or ourselves, ought to be desired. One effect of such a conquest would be, that the Indian army, having no longer any warlike neighbours to combat, would gradually lose its military habits and discipline, and that the Native troops would have leisure to feel their own strength...
clxxx 페이지 - A free press and the dominion of strangers are things which are quite incompatible, and which cannot long exist together ; for what is the first duty of a free press ? it is to deliver the country from a foreign yoke...
clviii 페이지 - ... in tranquillity but none of them can aspire to anything beyond this mere animal state of thriving in peace : none of them can look forward to any share in the legislation or civil or military government of their country.
xliii 페이지 - ... cultivation on his holding, or he may entirely abandon it. In, unfavourable seasons remissions of assessment are granted for loss of produce. The assessment is fixed in money, and does not vary from year to year, except when water is obtained from a Government source of irrigation ; nor is any addition made to the rent for improvements effected at the ryot's own expense.
272 페이지 - It is time that we should learn that neither the face of a country, its property, nor its society, are things that can be suddenly improved by any contrivance of ours, though they may be greatly injured by what we mean for their good...
cviii 페이지 - ... care to occupy the only passage there was across the Kaitna. When I found their whole army, and contemplated their position, of course I considered whether I should attack immediately, or should delay till the following morning. I determined upon the immediate attack, because I saw clearly, that, if I attempted to return to my camp at Naulniah, I should have been followed thither by the whole of the enemy's cavalry, and I might have suffered some loss ; instead of attacking, I might have been...
clxxxii 페이지 - I cannot view the question of a free press in this country, without feeling that the tenure by which we hold our power never has been, and never can be, the liberties of the people...
cxxvi 페이지 - Hindoo in every part of India. It is that of the minister of state. His dwelling is little better than a shed : the walls are naked, and the mud-floor, for the sake of coolness, is every morning sprinkled with a mixture of water and cow-dung. He has no furniture in it. He distributes food to whoever wants it ; but he gives no grand dinners to his friends. He throws aside his upper garment, and, with nothing but a cloth round his loins, he sits down half-naked, and eats his meal alone, upon the bare...