Recollections of the Deccan, with misc. sketches and letters, by an officer of cavalry [signing himself Junius].1838 |
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Pagina 12
... usually been selected as such , on account of their natural or artificial fertility . In the one , moreover , the surplus revenue is usually expended on the spot , for the immediate improvement of the place itself ; in the other , the ...
... usually been selected as such , on account of their natural or artificial fertility . In the one , moreover , the surplus revenue is usually expended on the spot , for the immediate improvement of the place itself ; in the other , the ...
Pagina 13
... usually marked red in our maps , but although to a certain extent subject to our political control , a large portion of its revenue is the property of cer- tain independent Rajahs , Jagghiredars , Enam- dars , hereditary Potails , & c ...
... usually marked red in our maps , but although to a certain extent subject to our political control , a large portion of its revenue is the property of cer- tain independent Rajahs , Jagghiredars , Enam- dars , hereditary Potails , & c ...
Pagina 16
... usually contains from seven to eight hundred : these men are actively employed , some in making roads , and other out - door work , while others are instructed in handicraft , weaving , & c . A good.deal of su- perior cloth , for which ...
... usually contains from seven to eight hundred : these men are actively employed , some in making roads , and other out - door work , while others are instructed in handicraft , weaving , & c . A good.deal of su- perior cloth , for which ...
Pagina 18
... usually placed in some commanding position , are rather remarkable objects and visible for some leagues around . They are the more conspicuous , from the dearth of trees which generally pervades that province . One of the most striking ...
... usually placed in some commanding position , are rather remarkable objects and visible for some leagues around . They are the more conspicuous , from the dearth of trees which generally pervades that province . One of the most striking ...
Pagina 19
... usually somewhat shorter . In the former the painted partridge abound ; in the latter , the florikin . The view from the lines is particularly fine . To the south and west , the eye extends over a good deal of undulating and broken ...
... usually somewhat shorter . In the former the painted partridge abound ; in the latter , the florikin . The view from the lines is particularly fine . To the south and west , the eye extends over a good deal of undulating and broken ...
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
adjoining amid appear army artillery batta Bazaars beautiful Belgaum believe Bengal Board Bombay British building cantonment Captain cavalry celebrated centre character church CLEOPHAS Colonel command Commissariat corps court Deccan Dharwar Elphinstone European feeling feet fell fortress garrison gate ghauts ghurry glacis Government Governor grain ground half handsome Havildar head hill Hindoo honour horse hour India Indian army individual infantry Jemadar Kamptee Kolaupoor labour land latter Madras Mahrattah matchlocks ment miles distant Military monsoon Mysore native never o'er observed officer palace Pangi party passed Peishwah persons pettah plain Poonah present prince prisoners proceedings province racter rajah regiment residence river rock rupees Salsette scene SCRUTATOR Sepoy Sholapore singular soldier Sonnites spirit spot Staff stands station stream tamarind Thuggee tion tomb trees troops village walls whole wounded wretched yards
Populaire passages
Pagina 100 - Under the pressure of the cares and sorrows of our mortal condition, men have at all times and in all countries called in some physical aid to their moral consolations, — wine, beer, opium, brandy, or tobacco.
Pagina 24 - The two maxims, of any great man at court are* always to keep his countenance, and never to keep his word.
Pagina 103 - OF all things, an indiscreet tampering with the trade of provisions is the most dangerous, and it is always worst in the time when men are most disposed to it: that is in the time of scarcity.
Pagina 64 - There were sooty artificers, evidently fresh from the forge or the workshop ; and one individual, I remember — either a miller or a baker — who, wherever he passed, left marks of contact on the garments of the company. The most prominent group, however, in the assemblage, was a party of Irish labourers, employed on some neighbouring canal, who had evidently been apt scholars PRESIDENT'S LEVEE.
Pagina 66 - ... be divided from performance, should come to Washington. He will there read a new page in the volume of human nature ; he will observe how compatible is the extreme of physical liberty, with bondage of the understanding. He will hear the words of freedom, and he will see the practice of slavery. Men who sell their fellowcreatures will discourse to him of indefeasible rights ; the legislators, who truckle to a mob, will stun him with professions of independence; he will be taught the affinity between...
Pagina 105 - ... settles, and alone can settle, that price. Market is the meeting and conference of the consumer and producer, when they mutually discover each other's wants. Nobody, I believe, has observed with any reflection what market is, without being astonished at the truth, the correctness, the celerity, the general equity, with which the balance of wants is settled. They who wish the destruction of that balance, and would fain by arbitrary regulation decree, that defective production should not be compensated...
Pagina 69 - Why, then the world, and all that's in't, is nothing; The covering sky is nothing; Bohemia nothing; My wife is nothing; nor nothing have these nothings, If this be nothing.
Pagina 53 - During those months, whoever was in fear of his enemy lived in full security ; so that if a man met the murderer of his father or his brother, he durst not offer him any...
Pagina 75 - Heaven) nearly as much right to sentence a child to education as a criminal teethe gallows. Nevertheless, as a curious example of the difference in national taste, it may be observed, that though in England judges and juries can anywhere be found to condemn the body, they would everywhere be observed to shrink at the very idea of chastening the mind ; they see no moral or religious objection to imprison the former, but they all agree that it would be a political offence to liberate the latter. Although...
Pagina 64 - ... seen. Their morals and their manners were alike detestable. A cold and callous selfishness, a disregard of all the decencies of society, were so apparent in feature, word, and action, that I found it impossible not to wish that their catalogue of sins had been enlarged by one more — hypocrisy. Of hypocrisy, however, they were not guilty. The conversation in the cabin was interlarded with the vilest blasphemy, not uttered in a state of mental excitement, but with a coolness and deliberation...