cover image: Modern Review  October  1907

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Modern Review October 1907

1907

with that which hall already been elaborated in Whether this was actually so or not it is the Wrest-ashrams of the l'panishads as the certain that one of the great impulses of the 'religion of the Brahmans: It was in fact the day lay hi the rebellion against the necessity of spiritual culture of that period brought into the Vedic sacrifice one of its finest sincerities being and slowly ripened [...] For the national genius had things all its own way and in every home in the land the little was lady growing less and the real and the universal were coming more and more prominently intoDEFECTIVE EYESIGHT AND CRIME THERE is no one of the five senses the dinivat ion of which appeals more strongly to the compassion of the majority of men than that of the sight. [...] But the most striking feature of the representation is the ringing impress of the peraounlity of the great teacher upon it; from the top and sides of each of the panels point bands half-covered by branches of trees as If to accompany the words " Behold the Maur If the figure be as one imagines that of Buddha it was clearly made by some member of a community in which his memory was still fres [...] The eye is connected by the optic nerve with the brain cells and fibres in the visual and motor area - I e. the section controlling the sense of sight and the muscles which cotrol the movements. [...] The murder of Narayan Rao Peshwa which is the suject of the present article is in no small measure the result of the weakness and want _ of tact on the part of that Peshwa himself.
government politics public policy
Pages
103
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120016
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-i Ramananda Chatterjee view
Education in India and America: a Contrast and Comparison
319-323 Nihal Sing view
Some Problems for Indian Research
323-327 Nibedita view
Defective Eyesight and Crime
327-330 James Aitchisom view
Indians and the Artillery
330-332 unknown view
The Murder of Narayan Rao Peshwa
332-337 P.V. Mawajer view
An Open Letter to the Musalmans of India
338-342 unknown view
The Influence of Chaitanta on Bengali Society and Literature
342-346 Dinesh Sen view
Limited Monarcity in Ancient India
346-351 Abinash Das view
The Marquis Ito
351-354 unknown view
Democracy and Tiie Multiplicity of Religious Sects ln India
354-357 unknown view
The East and the West
357-363 Charu Bandopadhyay view
Dr. J. C. Bose's Psychological Researches
363-365 Jagadananda Roy view
Musalman Representation in Legislative Councils
366-367 Mujibar Rahman view
The Story of Hira and Lal
367-371 Shaikh Chilli view
The Proposed Advisory Counclls
371-377 G. Iyer view
Life of Shivaji
377-382 Jadunath Sarkar view
Notes
382-392 unknown view
Guide to Indian Historical Literature
392-395 Jadunath Sarkar view
Reviews of Books
395-398 unknown view
Backmatter
i-i unknown view