The Calcutta Review, Volume 18University of Calcutta., 1852 - India |
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... tion ; including a sketch of Vital Statistics , and other leading principles of public Hygiene in Eu- rope and India . By Norman Chevers , M. D. , Bengal Medical Service , & c . Vol . I. Calcutta . 1852 . · · 6. Christianity opposed to ...
... tion ; including a sketch of Vital Statistics , and other leading principles of public Hygiene in Eu- rope and India . By Norman Chevers , M. D. , Bengal Medical Service , & c . Vol . I. Calcutta . 1852 . · · 6. Christianity opposed to ...
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... tion where , in reality , no question is . If the present system be not a faultless one , it is , on the whole , the best that can be de- vised . We do not deny that it is open to some objections . What system is not ? But as the ...
... tion where , in reality , no question is . If the present system be not a faultless one , it is , on the whole , the best that can be de- vised . We do not deny that it is open to some objections . What system is not ? But as the ...
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... tion of a new member of the Court , and publicly_advertised . * It is necessary that the candidate should possess £ 2,000 stock . If he has held office in India , he must have resided two years in England , before he is eligible for ...
... tion of a new member of the Court , and publicly_advertised . * It is necessary that the candidate should possess £ 2,000 stock . If he has held office in India , he must have resided two years in England , before he is eligible for ...
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... tion would be greatly improved , and the interests of India pro- moted . There would be little chance of any abuse of this pri- vilege . Even if indisposed upon abstract principles of honor , for which we would willingly give them ...
... tion would be greatly improved , and the interests of India pro- moted . There would be little chance of any abuse of this pri- vilege . Even if indisposed upon abstract principles of honor , for which we would willingly give them ...
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... tion , it will be impracticable to prevent in future . " The in- termediate agents were shown indeed to have been many and various , men and women of almost every class , half - pay officers , attornies , army agents , ladies of good ...
... tion , it will be impracticable to prevent in future . " The in- termediate agents were shown indeed to have been many and various , men and women of almost every class , half - pay officers , attornies , army agents , ladies of good ...
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Common terms and phrases
admit Agra amongst appears appointments army ballads believe Bengal Bhagirathi Bhótiyas bishop body brahmans British cadetship Calcutta celebrated chaplains character cholera Christian church civil claims clergy colony Commodore Company's Court of Directors diocese disease districts doubt duty East India Company England English enquiry establishment European fact festival friends give given goddess Government Government of India Governor ground Gurhwál hands hills Himalaya Hindu India House India House patronage influence inhabitants interest Kaffirs Kartikeya Khasa Kumaon land Lord Ellenborough Mahamurri matter means ment missionary missions month Moore mountains natives North Western Provinces obtained officers once opinion party pass plains population present proprietors provinces question Rajputs Rangoon Rangoon river readers regard religious residence river Salazie Sanscrit Shiva sion society symptoms thing Tibet Tibetan tion tribes village whole worship
Popular passages
Page 232 - To chase these pagans in those holy fields Over whose acres walked those blessed feet Which fourteen hundred years ago were nailed For our advantage on the bitter cross...
Page 430 - Imperious Caesar, dead and turned to clay, Might stop a hole to keep the wind away.
Page xxii - All things are full of labour; man cannot utter it: the eye is not satisfied with seeing, nor the ear filled with hearing.
Page 111 - Of all inventions, the alphabet and the printing press alone excepted, those inventions which abridge distance have done most for the civilization of our species. Every improvement of the means of locomotion benefits mankind morally and intellectually as well as materially...
Page 473 - Facilities of official advancement can little affect the bulk of the people under any Government, and perhaps least under a good Government. It is not by holding out incentives to official ambition, but by repressing crime, by securing and guarding property, by creating confidence, by ensuring to industry the fruit of its labour, by protecting men in the undisturbed enjoyment of their rights, and in the unfettered exercise of their faculties, that Governments best minister to the public wealth and...
Page 301 - India should be governed from a palace, not from a countinghouse : with the ideas of a prince, not with those of a retail dealer in muslin and indigo.
Page 297 - I have been at church, my dear girl, in my new palanquin, (the mode of genteel conveyance) where all ladies are approached, by sanction of ancient custom, by all gentlemen indiscriminately, known or unknown, with offers of their hand to conduct them to their seat ; accordingly, those gentlemen who wish to change their condition (which, between ourselves, are chiefly old fellows, for the young...
Page 88 - ... cannot be inhabited, the scattered villagers nevertheless return whenever the power of peaceable possession revives. A generation may pass away, but the succeeding generation will return. The sons will take the places of their fathers ; the same site for the...
Page 203 - In order to secure and improve the relations of amity and peace hereby established between the two States, it is agreed that accredited Ministers from each shall reside at the Court of the other.
Page xxxiv - Such a confession of premeditated and wholesale murder did not surprize us, knowing that the Arab, at a distance from the capital, consults only his own passions, in the commission of any outrage of this nature, and even there, the price of blood is not confined to the strict law of " an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, or a life for a life," owing to the apathy of the Government, and the influence of party.