cover image: Modern Review  February  1916

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Modern Review February 1916

1916

The real reason ( S must have been that the whole of oar Ithe history of India the regime of the burden was thrown on the servants and Slave Dynasty was not a happy one. [...] Then does the burden of the child so at the time for philosophising on the lightly borne by its own childishnes s fall subject ; our backs bore as best they could heaviiv cin the guardian—like that of the the blows which befell them; and we horse in the fable which %V a g carried instead accepted one of the laws of the universe of 1)cl/wallowed to trot on its own legs.. [...] and Nviiik the rest of I could not have been long at the Orienthe class was lnisy I would be left alone al Seminary for 1 %vas still of tender age to attempt the solution of many an intrwhen i joined the Normal School The cute problem I )ne of these I remember 4 in only one cif its lea Lures which L remember is which I used! to cogitate profoundly was that befurc the classes began all [...] and yerAel..i cm The 1 4 itliS Valid! I recited to asked me to try and make up a verse; with Nabagopal Balm then and there at the which he explained to me the construction foot (A the stairs in a voice pitched as high of the pafar metre of fourteen syllables. [...] modern researches all Hindu polity is the division of castes "t seem to indicate that these early settlers we shall at once begin with an investigwere once a branch of the great Aryan tion of the caste systeta as preliminary to a study of the 1.1indu concept of goverfanTily * and that their xincestors once-had a common religion a common tongue * tilent The earlAryans of the Parkin') we
government politics public policy
Pages
143
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120016
Segment Pages Author Actions
My Reminiscences
137-142 Rabindranath Tagore view
The Hindi Concept of Government
142-148 unknown view
Juvenile Offenders
148-152 B. Chatterji view
The Notion of Kingship In The Shukraniti
152-162 R.G Pradhan view
The Place of Indians in the World’s Athletics
162-171 unknown view
A Curious North Indian Supersrinon and its Persfan and African Analogues
171-175 unknown view
The Shadow on the Path
175-181 Annie O Tibbits view
Guku Govind Singh
181-182 Sarala Devi view
Gleanings
182-186 unknown view
Round the World with My Master
187-190 J.C. Bose view
Political Ideals
190-195 unknown view
Home Rule Among Savages in the British Empire
195-197 unknown view
Facts About Indentured Labour
197-199 Manilal M. view
How to Fight Malaria in our Villages
199-204 unknown view
The Cycle of Spring
204-207 Rabindranath Tagore view
The Indian National Congress—a New Chapter
207-213 Prithwis Ray view
Indian Periodicals
213-221 unknown view
Foreign Periodicals
222-227 unknown view
Reviews and Notices of Books
227-233 unknown view
Notes
233-260 unknown view