| John Clark Marshman - 1867 - 516 pages
...it is not attributable to any external or antecedent conspiracy whatever, although it was afterwards taken advantage of by disaffected persons to compass...cause was the cartridge affair, and nothing else." This assertion, made by the highest authority on the subject, is corroborated by irrefragable evidence.... | |
| Meadows Taylor - 1870 - 970 pages
...antecedent conspiracy Jjf,"'™"* whatever, although it was afterwards taken advantage tbc mutiny. of by disaffected persons, to compass their own ends ; the approximate cause was the cartridge afl'air, and nothing else.' There wns, no doubt, much foundation for this opinion ; but it may hardly... | |
| Meadows Taylor - 1871 - 962 pages
...J opinion of whatever, although it was afterwards taken advantage ""•' mutiny, of by disaflected persons, to compass their own ends ; the approximate cause was the cartridge aft'air, and nothing else.' There was, no doubt, much foundation for this opinion ; but it may hardly... | |
| J. J. Higginbotham - 1874 - 558 pages
...greater authority can we nave for the real cause of the Mutiny, than Lord John Lawrence who said, " The mutiny had its origin in the army itself ; it...cause was the cartridge affair, and nothing else." DALRYMPLE, ALEXANDER, the hydrographer, was the seventh son of a family of sixteen, all of whom he... | |
| John Clark Marshman - 1876 - 582 pages
...antecedent conspiracy whatever, although it " was taken advantage of by disaffected persons to compasa " their own ends ; the approximate cause was the cartridge " affair, and nothing else." But we live too near this stupendous event, and the excitement it created is as yet too fervid, to... | |
| John Clark Marshman - 1880 - 606 pages
...orthodox; and to a national revolt against British authority. On the ther hand, Sir John Lawrence asserted, "The mutiny had its origin in the army itself; it...cause was the cartridge affair, and nothing else." But we live too near this stupendous event, and the excitement it created is as yet too fervid, to... | |
| John Clark Marshman - 1893 - 622 pages
...and to a national revolt against British authority. On the other hand, Sir John Lawrence asserted, "The mutiny had " its origin in the army itself; it...cause was the cartridge " affair, and nothing else." But we live too near this stupendous event, and the excitement it created is as yet too fervid, to... | |
| Mukund Wamanrao Burway - 1907 - 292 pages
...itself; it is not attributed to any external or antecedent conspiracy whatever although it was afterwards taken advantage of by disaffected persons to compass...cause was the cartridge affair, and nothing else". We give here the opinion of John Dickinson as regards the source cf real danger to British power in... | |
| Sir Charles Prestwood Lucas - 1921 - 454 pages
...nothing else. It was not attributable to any antecedent conspiracy whatever, although it was afterwards taken advantage of by disaffected persons to compass their own ends. The view of Sir James Outram is almost the exact antithesis of this : he believed that it was the result... | |
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