| George Robert Gleig - Chennai (India) - 1830 - 466 pages
...most of their superstitions and prejudices, and become sufficiently enlightened to frame a regular Government for themselves, and to conduct and preserve...the desirable change here contemplated may in some after-age be effected in India, there is-no cause to despair. Such a change was at one time in Britain... | |
| George Robert Gleig - Governors - 1849 - 388 pages
...most of their superstitions and prejudices, and become sufficiently enlightened to frame a regular government for themselves, and to conduct and preserve...the desirable change here contemplated may in some after-age be effected in India, there is no cause to despair. Such a change was at one time in Britain... | |
| George Robert Gleig - Governors - 1849 - 390 pages
...most of their superstitions and prejudices, and become sufficiently enlightened to frame a regular government for themselves, and to conduct and preserve...the desirable change here contemplated may in some after-age be effected in India, there is no cause to despair. Such a change was at one time in Britain... | |
| Great Britain - 1883 - 934 pages
...most of their superstitions and prejudices, and become sufficiently enlightened to frame a regular government for themselves, and to conduct and preserve...British control over India should be gradually withdrawn " We shall see no reason to doubt that if we pursue steadily the proper measures, we shall in time... | |
| 1876 - 48 pages
...(when the natives shall become sufficiently enlightened to form a regular government for themselves) shall arrive, it will probably be best for both countries...the desirable change here contemplated may in some after-age be effected in India there is no cause to despair. Such a change was at one time in Britain... | |
| Literature - 1883 - 948 pages
...abandoned most of their superstitions and prejudices, and beconusufficiently enlightened to frame a regular government for themselves, and to conduct and preserve...British control over India should be gradually withdrawn " We shall see no reason to doubt that if we pursue steadily the proper measures, we shall in time... | |
| Ramananda Chatterjee - India - 1913 - 422 pages
...most of their superstitions and prejudices, and become sufficiently enlightened to frame a regular government for themselves, and to conduct and preserve...desirable change here contemplated may in some after age lie effected in India, there is no cause to despair — such a change was at one time in Britain itself... | |
| Charles Robert Leslie Fletcher - Great Britain - 1923 - 506 pages
...most of their superstitions and prejudices, and become sufficiently enlightened to frame a regular government for themselves and to conduct and preserve it. Whenever such a time may arrive it will probably be best for both countries that the British control over India should be... | |
| Henry Morris - Biography - 1908 - 282 pages
...most of their superstitions and prejudices, and become sufficiently enlightened to frame a regular Government for themselves, and to conduct and preserve...control over India should be gradually withdrawn. When we reflect how much the character of nations has always been influenced by that of Governments,... | |
| Sir Charles Bruce - Great Britain - 1910 - 558 pages
...enable them to govern and protect themselves, declared that when that time should arrive, it would probably be best for both countries that the British...control over India should be gradually withdrawn. For some time prior to the Mutiny the affairs of India had been watched with jealous eyes. Cobden and... | |
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