| George Robert Gleig - India - 1830 - 472 pages
...among the natives, but rather insure it by leaving it to follow its natural course, and pro" tecting it against military violence and anarchy. Its natural...little good or harm, and would hardly deserve any D 2 serious attention. It is only as regards the natives, that the press can be viewed with apprehension... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - English literature - 1830 - 620 pages
...shall scatter the seeds of discontent among our native troops, and never be secure from insurrection We are trying an experiment never yet tried in the...Europeans only, whether in or out of the service, ate concerned, the freedom or restriction of the press could do little good or harm, and would hardly... | |
| John Morley - History - 1909 - 180 pages
...Sir Thomas Munro said-— " We are trying an experiment never yet tried in the world—maintaining a foreign dominion by means of a native army; and...they ought to expel us, and deliver their country." Ho went on to say— " A tremendous revolution may overtake us, originating in a free Press." I recognise... | |
| Walter Russell Donogh - Press law - 1917 - 324 pages
...shall scatter the seeds of discontent among our native troops, and never be secure from insurrection. We are trying an experiment never yet tried in the...army, and teaching that army, .through a free press, D, LS 12 that they ought to expel us and deliver their country. As far as Europeans only, whether in... | |
| George Anderson - 1921 - 196 pages
...obtaining power and plunder. We are trying an experiment, never yet tried in the world—maintaining a foreign dominion by means', of a native army, and...they ought to expel us and deliver their country. It is only as regards the natives that the press can be viewed with apprehension, and it is only when... | |
| |