Calcutta Review, Volume 29University of Calcutta., 1857 |
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Page 31
... ryot to make gunny bags or table - covers , bathing - stools or frying - pans ; and that the sooner we put him to something more just , prudent and profitable in a moral and economical point of view , than making roads or pounding ...
... ryot to make gunny bags or table - covers , bathing - stools or frying - pans ; and that the sooner we put him to something more just , prudent and profitable in a moral and economical point of view , than making roads or pounding ...
Page 32
... ryot , every improved process you can intro- duce amongst the most abject class of toilers on the soil , at the loom or at the forge , will prove the germ of after good ; the spring for some future stream of thought , polluted and ...
... ryot , every improved process you can intro- duce amongst the most abject class of toilers on the soil , at the loom or at the forge , will prove the germ of after good ; the spring for some future stream of thought , polluted and ...
Page 121
... Ryot , or the interests of the Zemindar . These fearful mutinies , their origin , progress , and termination , will , we hope , in due time , be fully described in this Review and elsewhere ; for there is , indeed , in society , an ...
... Ryot , or the interests of the Zemindar . These fearful mutinies , their origin , progress , and termination , will , we hope , in due time , be fully described in this Review and elsewhere ; for there is , indeed , in society , an ...
Page 128
... ryot to have a garden which is growing while he is sleeping , or working elsewhere , and which gives him the useful bamboo , applied to so many common purposes , and which yields fruit , without previous expenditure , to relieve the ...
... ryot to have a garden which is growing while he is sleeping , or working elsewhere , and which gives him the useful bamboo , applied to so many common purposes , and which yields fruit , without previous expenditure , to relieve the ...
Page 129
... ryot who looks to the land alone , can afford to pay it from the returns of his rice- land , if this latter be not too highly assessed . But this , as we have just said , is the very gist of our enquiry . What is a fair rent for the ...
... ryot who looks to the land alone , can afford to pay it from the returns of his rice- land , if this latter be not too highly assessed . But this , as we have just said , is the very gist of our enquiry . What is a fair rent for the ...
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Popular passages
Page 94 - And through his side the last drops, ebbing slow From the red gash, fall heavy, one by one, Like the first of a thunder-shower; and now The arena swims around him, — he is gone, Ere ceased the inhuman shout which hailed the wretch who won.
Page 93 - For I was envious at the foolish, when I saw the prosperity of the wicked 4 For there are no bands in their death : but their strength is firm.
Page 156 - How best to help the slender store, How mend the dwellings, of the poor; How gain in life, as life advances, Valour and charity more and more.
Page 228 - Wouldst thou the young year's blossoms and the fruits of its decline, And all by which the soul is charmed, enraptured, feasted, fed, Wouldst thou the earth and heaven itself in one sole name combine ? I name thee, O Sakuntala,- and all at once is) said.
Page 1 - Then, Sir, what is poetry?" JOHNSON: "Why, Sir, it is much easier to say what it is not. We all know what light is; but it is not easy to tell what it is.
Page 77 - Ceremonies;' together with plates of the system of torture and burnings at the Auto da Fe. I added that it was now generally believed in Europe, that these enormities no longer existed, and that the Inquisition itself had been totally suppressed; but that I was concerned to find that this was not the case. He now began a grave narration to...
Page 267 - Quenched is his lamp of varied lore That loved the light of song to pour ; A distant and a deadly shore Has LEYDEN'S cold remains ! XII.
Page 190 - All surgeons at the end of last century and the beginning of the present...
Page 69 - They constitute the surface level, and below them are deeps on deeps of depravity, so shocking and horrible that their character cannot even be hinted. There are some dark shadows in human nature which we naturally shrink from penetrating, and I made no attempt to collect information of this kind ; but there...
Page 387 - He now repeats that declaration, and he emphatically proclaims that the government of India entertains no desire to interfere with their religion or caste, and that nothing has been, or will be done by the government to affect the free exercise of the observances of religion or caste by every class of the people. The government of India...