cover image: The Indian Review  November  1916. A Monthly Periodical devoted to the discussion of all topics of Interest

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The Indian Review November 1916. A Monthly Periodical devoted to the discussion of all topics of Interest

1916

So far we may agree ; but when he goes on to remark that the school of Bhakti mitigates the hopelessness of the situation only to the extent of frabodying the law in the person of a law-giver wile still the idea of law " remains " because even then God to the Bhakta (devotee) remains a stern inexorable law-giver with none of the grace of forgiveness such as comes from a Redeemer Dr. [...] Dickinson's two desiderata—the substitution of law for force and the reservation of force for the coercion of the wrong-doe—is the exercise of the united strength of the nations for the chastisement of that Pt:4er which has by his own confession set at defiance " the public law of Europe." - - * Is there not significance also in Germany's oonoeption of a treaty as no more than "a scrap..;. [...] 757 But the executive power was in the hands of the Governor and his Council and it naturally became the object of the Assemblies to use their taxing power as an instrument for westing administrative and official patronage out of those hands ; while in the Assembly of Lower Canada the division between the French and English parties was rapidly widened in the contest for superiority by religfibus [...] The history of the Transvaal is throughout marked by a bitter struggle between the Boers and English settlers and we read in the Encyclpa3dia Britannica that the conditions became serious in the nineties of the last century. [...] The Dravidian races in the south may be " widely different in temperament and character" from the races of the north and the Bengalis the Mahrattas and the Punjabis may be " utterly different " from one another but may we ask his lordship whether the difference in character and temperament between them is quite as marked to-day as was the difference 'between the different moos inhabiting the do
government politics public policy
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Segment Pages Author Actions
Indian Theism
745-748 Narayan Chandavarkar view
Michael Madhusudan Datta
749-752 Shumbu Dey view
The European Anarchy
753-755 Ferrand Corley view
Self-Government for India
756-762 Hem Nag view
Yoga in the Bhagavad-Gita
762-765 T. Rajagopalachariar view
Mysore and Baroda
765-768 G.A. Natesan view
H. H. The Aga Khan
769-772 G.A. Natesan view
Technical. and Industrial Education in India
773-776 S.M. yusuf view
The Late Austrian Emperor and His Successor
777-777 G.A. Natesan view
The Joint Conference
778-779 G.A. Natesan view
Current Events
779-781 Rajduari view
Pandit Bishan Narayan Dhar
782-782 G.A. Natesan view
The World of Books
783-783 G.A. Natesan view
Diary of the Month
784-784 G.A. Natesan view
Topics from Periodicals
785-792 G.A. Natesan view
Questions of Importance
793-794 G.A. Natesan view
Utterances of the Day
795-799 G.A. Natesan view
Indians Outside India
800-800 G.A. Natesan view
Feudatory India
801-804 G.A. Natesan view
Industrial & Commercial Section
805-807 G.A. Natesan view
Agricultural Section
808-808 G.A. Natesan view
Literary
809-809 G.A. Natesan view
Educational
810-810 G.A. Natesan view
Legal
811-811 G.A. Natesan view
Medical
812-812 G.A. Natesan view
Science
813-813 G.A. Natesan view
Personal
814-814 G.A. Natesan view
Political
815-815 G.A. Natesan view
General
816-ii G.A. Natesan view