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The Indian Review. A Monthly Journal

1918

The hopes of India must lie in awakening the British public to a sense of the many burning wrongs of the people that is to say to a lively consciousness of the unwisdom and injustice of the administrtion as is carried on by the omnipotent bureaucracy who naturally have a tendency to oppose all reforms calculated to curtail their powers and privileges. [...] Bradlaugh " with the respectful request of this Congress that he may be pleased to cause a Bill to be drafted on the lines indicated in the skeleton scheme and introduce the same in the British House of Commons." The scheme may be read in its entirety in the Cong1ess Report of that year in order that the present generation of the Congress may accurately learn therefrom how far back the great lead [...] The Charter of the East India Company was about to be renewed in 18$ 4 and according to the customary practice a Parliamentary Committee of both Houses was appointed to investigate how far the Company hail endeavoured to promote the moral and material welfare of India and the Indians during the currency of the last Charter of 1833. [...] Yule observed : " Timely concession to the reasonable wishes of the people always leads to a warmer appreciation of the Government by the'people and it is because I wish to see the existing sentiments of loyalty in the country strengtheed and made more secure that I hope the main object of the Congress the expansion of the Legislative Council upon a partially elective basis may be speedily a [...] The achievements in war and politics which the small community of the Sikhs made in the short space of a century and a half or two are indeed some Of the most remarkable and brilliant that have ever been recorded of any small and brave comunity in the world But the political and miltary story apart the Sikh religion founded on the hymns and teachings of one of the gentlest and most mysti
government politics public policy
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Segment Pages Author Actions
The Tragedy of Finland
337-339 Arthur Slater view
Sir William Wedderburn : II
340-ii Dinshaw Wacha view
Nanak and Guru Govind
345-352 K.V. Ramaswami view
The National Language for India
353-355 M.K. Gandhi view
Social Service in the Punjab
355-359 Sarala Chaudhurani view
Three Political Pioneers
360-363 A.S. Rajam view
Three Social Workers
364-ii G. A. Natesan view
II. Sir N. G. Chandavarkar
369-371 K. Kamath view
Mr. Gandhi’s Letter to the Viceroy
371-372 G. A. Natesan view
Higher Education in America
373-376 Sudhindra Bose view
The History of Bengali Literature
377-384 Hari Ghosal view
Topics from Periodicals
385-392 G. A. Natesan view
Questions of Importance
393-393 G. A. Natesan view
Utterances of the Day
394-394 G. A. Natesan view
Feudatory India
395-395 G. A. Natesan view
Indians Outside India
396-396 G. A. Natesan view
Industrial and Commercial Section
397-397 G. A. Natesan view
Agricultural Section
398-398 G. A. Natesan view
Notices of Books
399-399 G. A. Natesan view
Diary of the Month
400-400 G. A. Natesan view
Literary
401-401 G. A. Natesan view
Educational
402-402 G. A. Natesan view
Legal
403-403 G. A. Natesan view
Medical
404-404 G. A. Natesan view
Science
405-405 G. A. Natesan view
Personal
406-406 G. A. Natesan view
Political
407-407 G. A. Natesan view
General
408-ii G. A. Natesan view