| Charles Dickens, William Harrison Ainsworth, Albert Smith - Literature - 1857 - 672 pages
...that " owing to the unnatural situation in which India will be placed under a foreign govern ment, with a free press and a native army, the spirit of...independence will spring up in this army long before it is thought of among the people." He then proceeds to state that the assemblage of Sepoys in garrisons... | |
| sir Thomas Munro (bart.) - 1857 - 72 pages
...and tranquil renovation ; for, owing to the unnatural situation in which India will be placed under a foreign government with a free press and a native...instruction of the people, and the growth of liberty umong them, but will hasten to execute their own measures for the overthrow of the Government, and... | |
| Sir John William Kaye - India - 1876 - 758 pages
...spirit of independence will spring up i" this army long before it is even thought of among the peoy'c The army will not wait for the slow operation of the...instruction of the people, and the growth of liberty among thecĀ» but will hasten to execute their own measures for the overthrow of the Government and the recovery... | |
| Ramananda Chatterjee - India - 1913 - 422 pages
...silent and tranquil revolution ; for owing to the unnatural state in which India will be placed under a foreign government with a free press and a native...spirit of independence will spring up in this army long In-fore it is ever thought of among the people. The army will not wait for the slow operation of the... | |
| Walter Russell Donogh - Press law - 1917 - 324 pages
...silent and tranquil revolution ; for, owing to the unnatural state in which India will be placed under a foreign government with a free press and a native...before it is ever thought of among the people. " The high opinion entertained of us by the natives, and the deference and respect for authority which have... | |
| 644 pages
...conclusion which circumstances were to prove unhappily correct. "The spirit of independence", he wrote, "will spring up in this army long before it is ever thought of among the people." And again: "All that is necessary is that they [the sepoys] shall have lost their present high respect... | |
| 1004 pages
...conclusion which circumstances were to prove unhappily correct. "The spirit of independence", he wrote, "will spring up in this army long before it is ever thought of among the people." And again: "All that is necessary is that they [the sepoys] shall have lost their present high respect... | |
| 468 pages
...conclusion which circumstances were to prove unhappily correct. "The spirit of independence", he wrote, "will spring up in this army long before it is ever thought of among the people." And again: "All that is necessary is that they [the sepoys] shall have lost their present high respect... | |
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