cover image: East & West  August 1902

Premium

20.500.12592/j1s9bz

East & West August 1902

1902

They delighted in seeking out in the work of him who wrote the Rayons et les Ombres the shadows which they purposely erggerated whilst their eyes remained blind to the sun the dazzling rays of whict will continue from age to age to excite the admiration of the votaries of beauty. [...] The accusations of caricaturists are sufficient to counterbalance the flattery ol.the photograPhers but to re-establish the truth revised aftd corrected by the three volumes of the anonyous witness it is necessary:to have the patience of a Benedictine with the erudition of a Chartriste. [...] The same phenomenon is to Ite obaserved in the epic fragments of the Legende des S'icles and in all the romances which ire poems in prose where precise docum&ffs collected together by the patience of the man of letters side by side'with the incessant digressions of the poet carried away by Pegasus into theabyss beyolx1 the reach of human mind " make a very curious impression on the reader. [...] Assuming that the foregoing statements made in the public press are accurate it appears to me that advantage may well be taken of the present opportunity to ascertain in a general way the extent to which the I aVwe-mentioned propositions comply with the original suggestions in the Outline of a Scheme for an institute of Research in India put. [...] The only reference to the question as to the scope of the Institute apart from practical details in regard to the expenditure of I io 000 that I have come across is contained in the first'page of Masson and Clibborn's conjoint report the second paragraph of which is as follows : It was at first proposed that the Institute should deal with a widg range of studies—practically all those capable
government politics public policy
Published in
Unset
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
1-6 unknown view
The Centenary of Victor Hugo
1005-1018 Ernest Tissot view
The Higher Learning in India and the Tata Scheme
1019-1026 A.E. Grant view
Indian Journalism
1027-1037 C. Menon view
The First Principles of Political Progress
1038-1042 Lajpat Rai view
Persistent Orientalism
1043-1049 Protap Mozoomdar view
The Philosophical Aspect of British Imperialism
1050-1058 Henry Crossfield view
Pan-Islamic Prospects
1059-1065 G.D. Buch view
Jersey—A Feudal Survival
1066-1071 Edith Towgood view
Old Signs and Their Root Meanings
1072-1085 Artaxerxes view
A Contrast
1086-1089 J.N. Fraser view
The Indian Police
1090-1093 Jogendra Sigh view
“The Conclusion of the Whole Matter.”
1094-1095 Edmund Cox view
Land Revenue Assessment in Gujarat
1096-1106 Gokaldas Parekh view
The Awakening of Women: A Review
1107-1112 Paul Ine view
Editorial Notes
1113-1117 unknown view
Current Events
1118-1122 unknown view
Correspondence
1123-1124 unknown view