cover image: Modern Review  December  1928

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Modern Review December 1928

1928

As a matter of fact the eldest male of the two families had been complaining bitterly to me and the friend who accompanied me in the presence of the Superintendent because of the overcrowding to which he and his family were being subjected. [...] The fetters that we forge in the name of religion enchain the spiritual man more securely than even ties of worldly liffairs The home of freedom in mail is in the spirit of man ; that spirit refuses to recognize any limit to action or to knowledge ; it is courageous enough to cross over the barriers of nature and the limitations of natural instincts it never regrets immediate loss in life and me [...] The truth of the matter is that in Europe the whole nature of man is awake ; and in man there are both the materialist and the spiritualist. [...] Under proper enconragemeet and superintendence the teachers of the former class of seminaries may moreover be enraged in the preparation of school books The same class of men may also economically he employed in the in3retion of the village schools and so on. [...] The date of the dynasty was fixed by M. Levi's fortunate discovery of the reference to an embassy from Orissa to the Chinese emperor Te-tsong towards the end of the sth century in 795 A. D. that is the 11th year of the period Cheng-yuan." The king who sent this embassy was called Subhakara.
government politics public policy
Pages
164
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120016
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-i Ramananda Chatterjee view
Anti-Indian Moves in Oeylon
621-630 Nihal Singh view
Europe Asia and Africa
631-632 Rabindranath Tagore view
Debendranath Tagore on Schools for the Masses
633-634 Brajendranath Banerji view
The English in India Should Adopt Bengali as Their Language
635-636 Rajah Roy view
The Kara of Orissa
636-640 R.D. Banerji view
Indian Constitutional Problems
641-642 Politicus view
Why America and Other Nations Should Sympathise With Indias Struggle for Freedom
642-645 J.T. Sunderland view
The Treatment of Love in Pre-Classical Sanskrit Literature
645-651 Sushil De view
Reviews & Notices of Books
652-656 unknown view
The Garden Creeper
657-661 Samyukta Devi view
Rajputana To-Day
661-666 Ramnarayan Chaudhary view
Dr. Tsemon Hsu at Santiniketan
666-669 N.C. Ganguly view
The Spirit of Womanhood in Roerich’s Art
669-674 Frances Grant view
Enamelling in Ancient India
675-679 Kedarnath Chatterji view
K. Ranga Rao
679-682 K. Krishnaiya view
Comment & Criticism
683-684 unknown view
The Meaning of “Nirvana”
684-685 Nandalal Sinha view
Arya Bhavan
686-689 C.F. Andrews view
Dr. Sunderland’s Book on India’s Right to Freedom
689-691 unknown view
Problems Before the Indian Trade Union Congress
691-694 Kishorilal Ghosh view
Raja Ram Mohun Roy’s Politius
694-698 N.C. Ganguli view
Indian Womanhood
699-701 unknown view
Professor Hans Molisch
701-702 unknown view
Indian Architecture : Possibility of a School
702-705 Sris Chatterjee view
Gleanings
706-709 unknown view
Indian Periodicals
710-716 unknown view
Foreign Periodicals
717-724 unknown view
Shifting the Scene A Fantasy
725-729 Sukhamaya Mitra view
Indians Abroad
730-735 Benarasidas Chaturvedi view
Lala Lajpat Rai
735-740 Nagendranath Gupta view
Notes
741-762 unknown view
Our Potrait Gallery
763-764 unknown view