cover image: The Calcutta Review  January 1906

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The Calcutta Review January 1906

1906

On the other hand the progress of Their Royal Hilmesses through India will bring clearly before the minds of its myriad inhabitants of every class and creed the great ideas of the solidarity and unity of our empire and of the strong ties of personal and individual loyalty that hold together the framework of the bureaucracy with which we are all"the source file is mising 2NOTES ON TIIE QUARTER. [...] Amid the utilitarian ideas of the present day when the most lavish of kings must consider his budget and the price of materials and the rate of wages attract the interested attention of the man in the street we turn not unnaturally in our dreamy moments with a feeling of relief to the study of larger if less scrupulous times. [...] And it seems but the guerdon due to departed sovreignty that when the eyes have drunk deep of the sunlight and shade of their wondrous dwellings and the feet hAve wandered at will amid the mass and mystery of their creations the tongue should strive to tell worthily the story and the hand to draw again the oulines of their life their sorrow and their pride. [...] 33 dians in the fertile valleys of the Indus and the Ganges cooping up the bulk of them in the narrow region south of the Vindhyas. [...] More by the victories of peace than by victries in war they overcame the Dravidian south and indissolubly united the serpent-worshipping Dravidian and the fire-worshipping Aryan under the rule of a common and comprehensive religion and an identical and unique civilisation the sphere of whose influence extended from the Himalayas to the sea.
history
Pages
164
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120137
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-iv unknown view
Art. I.—Notes on the Quarter
1-12 unknown view
Art. III.—Agra and Fatehpur Sikri
13-29 E. Carus view
Art.IV.—Muslim India the Pre-Moghul Period
30-53 Aswini Mukhopadhyaya view
Art. V.—The National Epic of Iran
54-69 G.K. Nariman view
Art. VI.—Captain David Lester Richardson
70-89 S.C. Sanial view
Art. VII.—The Owl and the Boy—a Parable
90-90 Cornelia Sorabji view
Art. VIII.—Secondary Education in Bengal
91-113 C.H. Browning view
Art. IX.—Akbar : His Religious Policy
114-139 R.P. Karkaria view
Art. X.—The Emperor’s English
140-146 Edith Woods view
Summary of Annual Reports
147-152 unknown view
Critical Notices
153-156 unknown view
Acknowledgments
157-158 unknown view
Backmatter
159-160 unknown view

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