English Rule and Native Opinion in India: From Notes Taken 1870-74Trübner & Company, 1878 - 338페이지 |
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자주 나오는 단어 및 구문
Agra Ameer Baboo beautiful believe Bengal Bombay Brahmist British Cabul Calcutta Cawnpore chapter chief Christian Church claim Delhi Dinkur Rao district Doorga Dost Mohammed Durbunga England English Englishmen European fact faith famine favour frontier Ganges gaol George Campbell Ghât Gwalior Hindoo Hindooism honour Hooghly India Indian Government Jhansi Khan labour ladies land lieutenant governor Lord Mayo Lord Northbrook Lucknow Madras Maharajah Mahrattas mem sahib ment miles missionary Mohammedan Monghyr murder Mutiny Nana Native India NATIVE OPINION never North Western Provinces officers OPINION IN INDIA Oude palace passed perhaps persons prisoners Punjab question race referred revenue river rule sahib scene Scindia seen sent Shere Ali side Sikhs Singh Sir George Campbell Sir Henry Sir Richard Temple Sir William spirit story tion Toorkee trade Viceroy village Wahabees Yakoob young zemindars
인기 인용구
126 페이지 - Whoever by words, either spoken or intended to be read, or by signs, or by visible representation, or otherwise, excites or attempts to excite feelings of disaffection to the Government established by law in British India...
313 페이지 - They are required to discharge the functions of Magistrates, Judges, Ambassadors, and Governors of provinces, in all the complicated and extensive relations of those sacred trusts and exalted stations, and under peculiar circumstances, which greatly enhance the solemnity of every public obligation, and aggravate the difficulty of every public charge.
116 페이지 - India to control the growth of charges to meet which has to raise the revenue. The Local Governments are deeply interested in the welfare of the people confided to their care; and, not knowing the requirements of other parts of the country or of the Empire as a whole, they are liable, in their anxiety for administrative progress, to allow too little weight to fiscal considerations. On the other hand, the Supreme Government, as responsible for the general financial safety, is obliged to reject many...
212 페이지 - I am also convinced that, failing the claim of right of the zemindars, it would be necessary for the public good to grant a right of property in the soil to them, or to persons of other description.
283 페이지 - We exclude them from every situation of trust and emolument ; we confine them to the lowest offices, with scarcely a bare subsistence ; and even these are left in their hands from necessity, because Europeans are utterly incapable of filling them. We treat them as an inferior race of beings.
98 페이지 - Kalan live in ten villages, in seven of which I found 104 boys and one girl, who, luckily for herself, was born and bred at the house of her mother's family, and who has not been permitted to come to her father's house. Their other villages are said to contain two girls. They admit that for ten years there has been but one girl married in all those villages. They have been always an unfeeling sect. Their villages are notorious for Suttee monuments, and their tanks are said to be deep with infants
215 페이지 - Mangles, who had unrivalled experience of Indian administration ; Sir Henry Montgomery and Sir Frederick Halliday, who had ruled Provinces in India. And these men spoke in no uncertain voice. Sir Erskine Perry wrote : — " I have come reluctantly to the conclusion, after many struggles and attempts to draw fine distinctions in support of a different view, that the language and acts of Lord Cornwallis, and of the members of Government of his day, were so distinct, solemn, and unambiguous, that it...
97 페이지 - I believe that the returns of 180 certainly of the 216 villages visited are as correct, with regard to numbers and age, as they possibly can be. Nearly all spoke of the crime as one of the past ; I regret that I cannot think the crime obsolete, or even diminished. It is practised with greater secrecy perhaps, but it is certainly extensively practised.
126 페이지 - Whoever by words either spoken or intended to be read, or by signs or by visible representations, makes or publishes any imputation concerning any person intending to harm, or knowing or having reason to believe that such imputation will harm, the reputation of such person, is said, except in the cases hereinafter excepted, to defame that person.