| India - 1852 - 556 pages
...have been felt as ignominious by the lowest officer at his durbar, if he had himself been subjected to it. The ignominy inflicted on these officers, if...serve. The insult has been persisted in to the last. The form of address in the letters of the Burmese officers has been that employed towards their inferiors;... | |
| India - 1852 - 566 pages
...have been felt as ignominious by the lowest officer at his durbar, if he had himself been subjected to it The ignominy inflicted on these officers, if...serve. The insult has been persisted in to the last. The form of address in the letters of the Burmese officers has been that employed towards their inferiors;... | |
| William Ferguson Beatson Laurie - Anglo-Burmese War, 2nd, 1852 - 1853 - 334 pages
...been felt as ignominious by the lowest subordinate at his Durbar, if he had himself been subjected to it. The ignominy inflicted on these officers, if...serve. The insult has been persisted in to the last. The form of address in the letters of the Burmese officers has been that employed towards other inferiors... | |
| sir Henry Mortimer Durand - 1883 - 510 pages
...have been felt as ignominious by the lowest officer at his durbar, if he had himself been subjected to it. The ignominy inflicted on these officers, if...serve. The insult has been persisted in to the last. The form of address in the letters of the Burmese officers has been that employed towards their inferiors;... | |
| Henry Mortimer Durand - British - 1883 - 504 pages
...have been felt as ignominious by the lowest officer at his durbar, if he had himself been subjected to it. The ignominy inflicted on these officers, if...serve. The insult has been persisted in to the last. The form of address in the letters of the Burmese officers has been that employed towards their inferiors;... | |
| Alleyne Ireland - British - 1907 - 608 pages
...have been felt as ignominious by the lowest subordinate at his durbar if he had himself been subjected to it. The ignominy inflicted on these officers, if...serve. The insult has been persisted in to the last. The form of address in the letters of the Burmese officers has been that employed towards other inferiors,... | |
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