Sketches of Rulers of India ...Clarendon Press, 1908 |
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Página 8
... force of inevitable circumstances , to that policy of conquest and annexation which had its consummation under the ... forces over - ruling their will , forces against which they struggled in vain , by which the Indian Empire has been ...
... force of inevitable circumstances , to that policy of conquest and annexation which had its consummation under the ... forces over - ruling their will , forces against which they struggled in vain , by which the Indian Empire has been ...
Página 15
... forces making for order and those making for disorder . The final scene came as the result of the great struggle of 1857. Sir Alfred Lyall has thus described it : In suppressing the wild fanatic outbreak of 1857 , we were compelled to ...
... forces making for order and those making for disorder . The final scene came as the result of the great struggle of 1857. Sir Alfred Lyall has thus described it : In suppressing the wild fanatic outbreak of 1857 , we were compelled to ...
Página 18
... force of circumstance prevented it from being supreme as a political organization , for it must not be forgotten that the Mahratta Confederacy , the only indigenous power that has ever attained to any great political ascendancy in India ...
... force of circumstance prevented it from being supreme as a political organization , for it must not be forgotten that the Mahratta Confederacy , the only indigenous power that has ever attained to any great political ascendancy in India ...
Página 23
... and bold , The barefaced lie with manly courage told , Which , spoke in public , falls with greater force , And heard by thousands is believed of course . This cry , though it led to incendiarism and assassination INTRODUCTION 23.
... and bold , The barefaced lie with manly courage told , Which , spoke in public , falls with greater force , And heard by thousands is believed of course . This cry , though it led to incendiarism and assassination INTRODUCTION 23.
Página 40
... Forces in India . But even then , his own words show that it was not without reluc- tance that he accepted this important charge : The pro- posal of going to India with the circumstance of Governor- 6 General being independent of his ...
... Forces in India . But even then , his own words show that it was not without reluc- tance that he accepted this important charge : The pro- posal of going to India with the circumstance of Governor- 6 General being independent of his ...
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Términos y frases comunes
administration affairs Afghan Afghanistan afterwards appointment Arakan Army Bengal Brahman Brahman hierarchy British Government British rule Burmese Calcutta campaign career character chiefs Clive command commenced Company connexion Court of Directors Delhi distinguished dominion Dupleix duty East effect Empire England English European force France French frontier Governor Governor-General Governor-General of India Hindu historian honour influence Kabul King Lady Amherst Lord Amherst Lord Auckland Lord Cornwallis Lord Hardinge Lord Minto Lord William Bentinck Macnaghten Madras Maharaja Mahratta Marquess of Hastings Marquess Wellesley matter ment military minister mission Mogul Mutiny Mysore Native Nawab Nipal occasion operations Oriental OSWELL Oudh peace person Peshwa political practically princes Province Punjab Raja recorded reform regiment Rulers of India Scindia Sepoys settlement Shah Shuja Sikh Sindh Singh Sir Alfred Lyall Sir Henry Hardinge Sir John Kaye territory tion Tipu took Treaty troops Wellesley's writer wrote
Pasajes populares
Página 146 - Council is of opinion that the great object of the British Government ought to be the promotion of European literature and science among the natives of India; and that all the funds appropriated for the purpose of education would be best employed on English education alone.
Página 15 - Victoria, by the grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and of the Colonies and Dependencies thereof in Europe, Asia, Africa, America, and Australasia, Queen, Defender of the Faith. " Whereas for divers weighty reasons, we have resolved, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in Parliament assembled, to take upon ourselves the government of the territories in India, heretofore administered in trust...
Página 40 - Upon my head they placed a fruitless crown And put a barren sceptre in my gripe, Thence to be wrench'd with an unlineal hand, No son of mine succeeding.
Página 28 - ... the French skirmished within reach of the artillery, the deep bass roared up, and the men, who dared not whisper before, could shout at one another without rebuke. Louder again, as our artillery came into range. All the air was tortured with concussion. Charles would have given ten years of his life to know what was going on on the other side of the hill.
Página 14 - To withdraw our Government from a country which is dependent on it, and which we have made incapable of depending upon anything else, would be the most inexcusable of all conceivable crimes and might possibly cause the most stupendous of all conceivable calamities.
Página 46 - I think it must be universally admitted that, without a large and well-regulated body of Europeans, our hold of these valuable dominions must be very insecure. It cannot be expected that even the best of treatment would constantly conciliate the willing obedience of so vast a body of people, differing from ourselves in almost every circumstance of laws...
Página 42 - But I can assure you, upon my honour, that I neither asked for it nor wished for it. The reasonable object of ambition to a man is to have his name transmitted to posterity for eminent services rendered to his country and to mankind. Nobody asks or cares whether Hampden, Marlborough, Pelham, or Wolfe were Knights of the Garter.
Página 170 - I trust that the Dost will be treated with liberality. His case has been compared to that of Shah Soojah; and I have seen it argued that he should not be treated more handsomely than his Majesty was; but surely the cases are not parallel. The Shah had no claim upon us. We had no hand in depriving him of his kingdom, whereas we ejected the Dost, who never offended us, in support of our policy, of which he was the victim.
Página 154 - India with eminent prudence, integrity, and benevolence ; who, placed at the head of a great empire, never laid aside the simplicity and moderation of a private citizen ; who infused into Oriental despotism the spirit of British freedom ; who never forgot that the end of government is the...
Página 41 - I get on horseback just as the dawn of day begins to appear, ride on the same road and the same distance, pass the whole forenoon after my return from riding in doing business, and almost exactly the same portion of time every day at table, drive out in a phaeton...