The Letters of Indophilus to "The Times": With Additional Notes |
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Page 6
... taken by foreign nations and future ages . If we are to be the governors of India , we must also pay some attention to the public opinion of the great body of the people of India . In the course of thirty years ' close observation of ...
... taken by foreign nations and future ages . If we are to be the governors of India , we must also pay some attention to the public opinion of the great body of the people of India . In the course of thirty years ' close observation of ...
Page 6
... taken by foreign nations and future ages . If we are to be the governors of India , we must also pay some attention to the public opinion of the great body of the people of India . In the course of thirty years ' close observation of ...
... taken by foreign nations and future ages . If we are to be the governors of India , we must also pay some attention to the public opinion of the great body of the people of India . In the course of thirty years ' close observation of ...
Page 7
... taken place but for the previous chronic relaxation and recent active discontent and alarm of our native army , which was chiefly composed of Hindoos ? Knowing what our position in India is , ought we not to calculate on a large amount ...
... taken place but for the previous chronic relaxation and recent active discontent and alarm of our native army , which was chiefly composed of Hindoos ? Knowing what our position in India is , ought we not to calculate on a large amount ...
Page 8
... taken in arms . As soon as the insurrection has been suppressed in any large district , commissions composed of a limited number of civil or military officers , well acquainted with the language and habits of the natives , should be ...
... taken in arms . As soon as the insurrection has been suppressed in any large district , commissions composed of a limited number of civil or military officers , well acquainted with the language and habits of the natives , should be ...
Page 9
... taken refuge in the palace , to the tender mercies of the mutineers , and placed them . selves at the head of the insurrection against us . † The exquisitely carved blocks of white marble , composing the Deewan i - Khas , or special ...
... taken refuge in the palace , to the tender mercies of the mutineers , and placed them . selves at the head of the insurrection against us . † The exquisitely carved blocks of white marble , composing the Deewan i - Khas , or special ...
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Common terms and phrases
administration Akhbarnuvees Bengal army Bengal Sepoy army better body Bombay Brahmin British India Calcutta caste cause Cawnpore character Christian Chupra civil command Commissioner's order constabulary convicts corps Council danger defence Delhi dependent depôt discipline documents and papers Dumdum duty employed England English European force European officers European troops feeling fidelity foreign free press furnish Government Governor-General Governor-General of India greased cartridges guard habit hand Hindoo Hindooism honourable improvement Indian army INDOPHILUS insurrection intelligence interest Lord Gough Lord Metcalfe Lord William Lord William Bentinck Lucknow magazine Mahomedan manner Meerut ment mutiny Muzufferpoor native army Native Infantry native languages native officers native press native troops never newspaper press objected opinion Oude Parliament Patna persons police position present principle promotion proportion punishment Punjab railroads railway Rajpoot rank reason regarded regiments religion religious Sikh Sir Charles Napier soldiers spirit taken things Thuggee tion zillah
Popular passages
Page 8 - Weep ye not for the dead, neither bemoan him : but weep sore for him that goeth away : for he shall return no more, nor see his native country.
Page 9 - Thou hast had pity on the gourd, for the which thou hast not laboured, neither madest it grow; which came up in a night, and perished in a night: and should not I spare Nineveh, that great city, wherein are more than sixscore thousand persons that cannot discern between their right hand and their left hand; and also much cattle?
Page 33 - ... the men might wish to prefer. " At least two-thirds of the detachment immediately stepped to the front, including all the native commissioned officers. In a manner perfectly respectful they very distinctly stated their objections to the present method of preparing cartridges for the new rifled musket. The mixture employed for greasing cartridges was opposed to their religious feeling, and as a remedy they begged to suggest the employment of wax and oil in such proportions as, in their opinion,...
Page 35 - ... attention of the Government, and it was determined that evidence as to its state of feeling and temper should be taken by a special court of inquiry composed of field officers. The special court of inquiry, THE 34TH NATIVE INFANTRY DISBANDED. 27 after a careful and patient investigation, declared their opinion that the Sikhs and Mussulmans of the 34th Regiment Native Infantry were trustworthy soldiers of the State, but the Hindus generally were not trustworthy. Of eight officers of the regiment...
Page 34 - Captain Boxer is quite unable to offer any decided opinion as to the particular description of animal from which the tallow is derived. The only thing certain is that hog's lard does not in any way enter into the composition.
Page 34 - I have scoured my lotah- ; you will defile it by your touch.' The classic rejoined, ' You think much of your caste, but wait a little, the sahib-logue will make you bite cartridges soaked in cow and pork fat ! and then where will your caste be?' The sepoy made this speech known amongst his comrades at Dum Dum.
Page 45 - Napier, vol. iii., p. 124. 21 asserts, that it has been, " on the whole, highly beneficial :" and that — " There cannot be a greater evil than that public officers should be exempted from the control of public opinion. In Lord William Bentinck's, Lord Metcalfe's, and Lord Auckland's time, the press was held in wholesome respect by the public functionaries at the most remote stations, and it acted as a sort of moral preventive police. • • • We used to call it the Parliament of the Press. It...
Page 24 - On one occasion he wrote that mutiny was " one of the greatest, if not the greatest, danger threatening India — a danger that may come unexpectedly, and if the first symptoms be not carefully treated, with a power to shake Leadenhall.
Page 43 - Government to which alone they belong. The Officer in possession of such documents and papers can only legitimately use them for the furtherance of the Public Service in the discharge of his official duty; and it is to be understood that the same Rule which applies to documents and papers applies to information of which Officers may become possessed officially.
Page 45 - ... community be taken on matters of general interest. There cannot be a greater evil than that public officers should be exempted from the control of public opinion. In Lord William Bentinck's, Lord Metcalfe's, and Lord Auckland's time the press was held in wholesome respect by the public functionaries, even at the most remote stations, and it acted as a sort of moral preventive police, furnishing in a fair degree, in reference to the whole governing body, an answer to the question "Quis custodiet...