Macaulay's Essay on Lord CliveSibley & Ducker, 1889 - 147 pages |
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... present edition aims help as will make the essay most thor students of literature . It is as literatur that the essay is required ; and as li history , it has here been treated . Exha annotations would have doubled the size minor ...
... present edition aims help as will make the essay most thor students of literature . It is as literatur that the essay is required ; and as li history , it has here been treated . Exha annotations would have doubled the size minor ...
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... present . The thought cattered , but they must all have some relati nseen centre . We have in this volume an example of the historical essay . Macaulay himself describe e way in which he thinks that this form ffers from history proper ...
... present . The thought cattered , but they must all have some relati nseen centre . We have in this volume an example of the historical essay . Macaulay himself describe e way in which he thinks that this form ffers from history proper ...
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... They might still acknowledge ity of the house of Tamerlane ; as r a Duke of Burgundy might have periority of the most helpless driv- Carlovingians . They might occa- sionally send to their titular sovereign a co present ,
... They might still acknowledge ity of the house of Tamerlane ; as r a Duke of Burgundy might have periority of the most helpless driv- Carlovingians . They might occa- sionally send to their titular sovereign a co present ,
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... present , or solicit from him a title of hono however , they were no longer lieutenants pleasure , but independent hereditary princes . originated those great Mussulman houses wh ruled Bengal and the Carnatic , and those though in a ...
... present , or solicit from him a title of hono however , they were no longer lieutenants pleasure , but independent hereditary princes . originated those great Mussulman houses wh ruled Bengal and the Carnatic , and those though in a ...
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... present eme forth all his powers . He represented to that unless some vigorous effort were made , would fall , the house of Anaverdy Khan v and the French would become the real m whole peninsula of India . It was absolut to strike some ...
... present eme forth all his powers . He represented to that unless some vigorous effort were made , would fall , the house of Anaverdy Khan v and the French would become the real m whole peninsula of India . It was absolut to strike some ...
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abuse Arcot arms army Asia battle battle of Buxar Bengal British Cæsar Calcutta Captain Carnatic character Chinsurah Chunda Sahib command Company's conquerors court death Delhi dominions Duke Dupleix East India Company eminent empire England Engli English essay Europe European force Fort St fortune France French friends functionaries George George Grenville governor hands Hindoos honor Hoogley House Jung knew Labourdonnais Lord Clive Lucius Licinius Lucullus Macaulay Macaulay's Madras Mahratta Meer Jaffier ment military mind Mogul Moorshedabad Mussulman Nabob native never Nizam officer Omichund Parliament Patna Plassey political Pondicherry present prince provinces race Rajah Sahib rich Ricimer rule rupees scarcely sent sepoys servants siege Sir John Malcolm soldiers spirit style Surajah Dowlah talents Tamerlane thou thousand pounds throne tion took trade Trichinopoly triumph troops Viceroy vices victory wealth Wellesley College whole