cover image: Modern Review  February  1908

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Modern Review February 1908

1908

And by the eombined efforts of their competent mebers the people of a German municipality will often in the course of the year have the opportunity of hearing the finest music the severest science and the most learned arcriticism in the world at their own !whales. [...] that home has been abandoned in favour of a world of going and coming : a temple ary foothold for the bird of passage! Civic ownership is an obvious solution of many of the problems presented by the cosliness of modern taste and the vastness of the experience necessary to the modern sphere of thought.. [...] Within the entrance of the builing sit the white marble statues of those two men of science whose names are the glory of Manchester - while yet we are told that of these very two Joule lived so retired a life that on the day of the opening of the hall no one remembered to send him an invitation ! And finally the great hall contains one of the finest organs in England by means of which the pe [...] The mason the stone-carver the artist in metal the wood-carver the glasstainer the organ-builder the weaver and embroiderer are but a few of the craftsmen who were needed for this task. [...] In the Geman Margrtwe and in the English Durham indeed we have instances of the identification of the town with the church in a small state ; for the bishops of these were also princes bishops-palatinate ; and it would be interesIug to study the effect of this identification on the evolution of the city.
government politics public policy
Pages
121
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120016
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-i Ramananda Chatterjee view
Alfred Russel Wallace on the Indian Crisis
93-93 John Hopps view
The Evolution of the European City
94-96 unknown view
The Yellow God
97-102 H Haggard view
Tokyo as A Student Centre
103-105 Nihal Singh view
Our Industrial Situation and How to Improve it
106-111 unknown view
Foreign Mercenaries in the Indian Army
111-116 unknown view
Backergunge the Only Proclaimed District in India
116-121 Nibaran Das Gupta view
The Free Influx of Englishmen into India
121-129 unknown view
The Nation and the State — Bluntschli’s Theory its Applicaiton to India
129-134 G Iyer view
A Chat with a Russian about Russia
134-136 G Iyer view
Utopia
136-140 Jadunath Sarkar view
Pan-Islamism
141-158 Mushir Kidwai view
What Can England Teach Us ?
158-160 unknown view
Narrative of the Inciedents of My Early Life
160-167 unknown view
Fastness of the Dyes of Bengal
168-170 Charuchandra Bandyopahdyay view
Our Shipping and Ship-Building
170-186 G.V Joshi view
Gour under the Buddhists
187-190 Akshay Maitra view
Notes
191-193 unknown view
Reviews of Books
194-196 unknown view