The Calcutta Review, Volume 4University of Calcutta, 1916 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 54
Page 5
... object , or even to throw it away for the life of another . " Asked to justify your conduct , you might answer perhaps that your life is but one of forty million English lives , that what you lose others gain , and that there are plenty ...
... object , or even to throw it away for the life of another . " Asked to justify your conduct , you might answer perhaps that your life is but one of forty million English lives , that what you lose others gain , and that there are plenty ...
Page 6
... object of its constant and especial care to set that welfare above every claim of other peoples on its forbearance ... objects of the trust , and that in accepting office they necessarily relinquish the perfect freedom of moral action ...
... object of its constant and especial care to set that welfare above every claim of other peoples on its forbearance ... objects of the trust , and that in accepting office they necessarily relinquish the perfect freedom of moral action ...
Page 12
... object of government is the well - being of the governed . Yet there is a sense in which sacrifice is the soul of all virtue . If fidelity to one's word , or justice , or generosity , do not involve some element of self - abnegation or ...
... object of government is the well - being of the governed . Yet there is a sense in which sacrifice is the soul of all virtue . If fidelity to one's word , or justice , or generosity , do not involve some element of self - abnegation or ...
Page 16
... object is not honest : their purpose is not to present a faithful picture but a plausible caricature . Historical truth is nothing : political capital is everything . I suppose it may be taken as axiomatic that a man will generally tell ...
... object is not honest : their purpose is not to present a faithful picture but a plausible caricature . Historical truth is nothing : political capital is everything . I suppose it may be taken as axiomatic that a man will generally tell ...
Page 25
... and the Benares Sanskrit College in 1791. But the object in founding them was self - interest , for they were to furnish maulvis and pandits who should VERNACULAR EDUCATION IN BENGAL FROM 1813 By Herbert A Stark 25 136 239 362.
... and the Benares Sanskrit College in 1791. But the object in founding them was self - interest , for they were to furnish maulvis and pandits who should VERNACULAR EDUCATION IN BENGAL FROM 1813 By Herbert A Stark 25 136 239 362.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Administration Agra Agra and Oudh Annual Bihar and Orissa boys British Cæsars Caius Calcutta century Charles Avison classes Committee common Council of Education country spirit course Crop of Bengal Crop of Bihar Despatch District Boards duties elementary schools England English Epic established examination existing Forecast funds German Gholam girls give given Government of Bengal Government of Bihar Government of India grant gurus Hindu improvement indigenous schools inspecting Inspector institutions interest Kaveri knowledge language Lord Lord William Bentinck Lower Primary School Madras Magyars maktabs means ment moral Muhammadan Municipal nationality native Oudh Pandit pathsalas patshalas political Post-Impressionism present primary education primary schools principle Provinces of Agra Public Instruction Punjab Government pupils regarded Report rule Sanskrit scheme scholars Slovaks standard stipends Suetonius taught teachers teaching tion United Provinces upper primary schools Urdu Vernacular Education vernacular schools village writing