cover image: The Indian Review  July  1914  A Monthly Periodical devoted to the discussion of all topics of Interest

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The Indian Review July 1914 A Monthly Periodical devoted to the discussion of all topics of Interest

1914

I do so knowing that the cessation of disorder the estalishment of the moral and material well-being of the people and the equality of all men belong to the first commands and duties of our Moslem sacred law and this order can be only effected through the Constitution. [...] In silence undreamt of by the conquerors and unnoticed by the daily press a rebuilding of the national life has been going on which has entirely changed the outlook and the aspirations of the Bengali race ; and nowhere else can these slow and imperceptible changes be better studied than in the pages of the great novels and contemporary fiction. [...] The earlier literature of Bengal was chiefly confined to poetry and drama and the novel is at best half a century old The men who laboured to create this branch of the Bengali literature were the products of liberal Western education imparted through the mediun of the English language ; and Rankin' Chandra was the Father of the Bengali novel. [...] The free play of the dynamic passions of youth which is a potent instrument of literary art in the hands of the fiction writers of the West is incapable of being similarly utilized by the Hindu novelists of Bengal. [...] Judged from the life depicted in the popular novels the ubiquitous Bengali in spite of his boasted success in some of the intelectual walks of life has not been successful in reconciling himself to the new order of things or of adapting himself to the strenuous life of the more complex material civilization of the West.
government politics public policy
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Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-ii G.A. Natesan view
Civil Courts in Madras and Europe
513-517 A. Galletti view
Persia’s Political Peril
517-i Saint Singh view
The Social Adventurer
521-523 Duncan Swann view
Modern Bengali Fiction
523-527 K. C. Chatterji view
Some Thoughts on the Social and Religious Awakening in India
527-532 H. Golaknath view
A New Theory of Matter
532-542 Ferozuddin Murad view
A Chapter in Indian Nationalism
542-545 Sarada Prasad view
Vemana
546-552 C. Rau view
The Late Ganga Prasad Varma
i-ii unknown view
World’s Hindusiham Student Federation
ii-iii Sudhindra Bose view
Indians in the Colonies
iii-v unknown view
The India Council Bill
v-vi unknown view
H. E. Lady Hardinge
vii-vii unknown view
The Late Joseph Chamberlain
viii-x unknown view
Dr. J. C. Bose in England
553-553 unknown view
Current Events
553-557 Rajduari view
The World of Books
557-559 unknown view
Diary of the Month June—July 1914
560-560 unknown view
Topics from Periodicals
561-568 unknown view
Questions of Importance
569-571 unknown view
Utterances of the Day
571-574 unknown view
Indians Outside India
575-576 unknown view
Feudatory India
577-578 unknown view
Industrial and Commercial Section
579-582 unknown view
Agricultural Section
582-584 unknown view
Literary
585-585 unknown view
Educational
586-586 unknown view
Legal
587-587 unknown view
Medical
588-588 unknown view
Science
589-589 unknown view
Personal
590-590 unknown view
Political
591-591 unknown view
General
592-593 unknown view