The Calcutta Review, Volume 26University of Calcutta, 1856 |
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Page 2
... reader in England . It is no disparage- ment to those eminent men to whom India owes so much , to say that in the gift of expression they appear mostly to have been deficient . This is a deficiency which in this garrulous age we may not ...
... reader in England . It is no disparage- ment to those eminent men to whom India owes so much , to say that in the gift of expression they appear mostly to have been deficient . This is a deficiency which in this garrulous age we may not ...
Page 6
... reader one tiger dies for all . Still there is a charm in sporting literature that we could ill afford to lose . We assure our yellow covered contemporary , whose wrath may have been provoked by the foregoing sentences , that we speak ...
... reader one tiger dies for all . Still there is a charm in sporting literature that we could ill afford to lose . We assure our yellow covered contemporary , whose wrath may have been provoked by the foregoing sentences , that we speak ...
Page 7
... reader . But how does Mr. Torrens affect the estimation in which Indian modern literature should be held ? Most favorably , had he been left alone ; but we must confess that the judgment we have pronounced on the want of literary taste ...
... reader . But how does Mr. Torrens affect the estimation in which Indian modern literature should be held ? Most favorably , had he been left alone ; but we must confess that the judgment we have pronounced on the want of literary taste ...
Page 8
... reader finds nothing to amuse him except a clever but not very reverent parody of the style of certain portions of ... reading public , -which like 8 INDIAN LIGHT LITERATURE . co.
... reader finds nothing to amuse him except a clever but not very reverent parody of the style of certain portions of ... reading public , -which like 8 INDIAN LIGHT LITERATURE . co.
Page 9
blame , not the Indian reading public , -which like other publics is always glad to read what is worth reading , -but Mr. Torrens ' editor and biographer . The book which we have just no- ticed , together with " Bole Ponjis , " form two ...
blame , not the Indian reading public , -which like other publics is always glad to read what is worth reading , -but Mr. Torrens ' editor and biographer . The book which we have just no- ticed , together with " Bole Ponjis , " form two ...
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Common terms and phrases
amongst ancient appear arms Army Asiatic believe Bengal body British Calcutta called Captain Cavalry Celts Ceylon character Christian civil climate Colombo command Commissioner Corps cultivation Daylesford dear districts doubt East England English Europe European Exhibition existence fact garden Government Governor Hafiz Halhed Hastings Herodotus hills Hindoos horse India inhabitants interest Irregular Island jungle King Kumaon labour land less Lord Lucknow Madras matter means ment miles military nations native nature never North Nynee Nynee Tal observed obtained officers opinion Oude passed Persian plants poet possessed present probably Provinces Punjab race Railway readers regard Regiments remarkable river road Robert Sherley Rupees scarcely Scythians Shah Shah Abbas Sherley shew Sir Anthony Sir Robert society Sonthal square miles Sufis Sufism thing tion trees tribes troops village WARREN HASTINGS whilst whole
Popular passages
Page 389 - ... certain it is, that whosoever hath his mind fraught with many thoughts, his wits and understanding do clarify and break up, in the communicating and discoursing with another; he tosseth his thoughts more easily; he marshalleth them more orderly; he seeth how they look when they are turned into words ; finally, he waxeth wiser than himself; and that more by an hour's discourse than by a day's meditation.
Page 537 - This heap be witness, and this pillar be witness, that I will not pass over this heap to thee, and that thou shalt not pass over this heap and this pillar unto me, for harm.
Page 500 - Intellectually, he appears to have been in nearly the lowest stage to which an intelligent being can sink ; morally, he was the slave of a superstition, the grovelling character of which will be traced in reviewing his sepulchral rites ; physically, he differed little in stature from the modern inheritors of the same soil, but his cerebral development was poor...
Page 493 - The Eastern Origin of the Celtic Nations proved by a Comparison of their Dialects with the Sanskrit, Greek, Latin, and Teutonic Languages. Forming a Supplement to Researches into the Physical History of Mankind.
Page 285 - SHERLEY HIS RELATION OF HIS TRAVELS INTO PERSIA. THE DANGERS AND DISTRESSES, WHICH BEFELL HIM IN HIS PASSAGE, both by sea and land, and his strange and unexpected deliverances. His Magnificent Entertainment in Persia, His Honourable imployment there-hence, as Embassadour to the Princes of Christendome...
Page 41 - Vyse, that of the nine pyramids still existing at Gizeh, six (including all the largest) have the narrow passages by which alone they can be entered, (all which open out on the northern faces of their respective pyramids,) inclined to the horizon downwards at angles as follows. 1st, or Pyramid of Cheops 26° 41...
Page 243 - Kanoo; he was like a white man though dressed in the native style: on each hand he had ten fingers; he held a white book, and wrote therein; the book and with it 20 pieces of paper ... he presented to the brothers; ascended upwards, and disappeared.
Page 288 - Elizabeth, who said, that as a virtuous woman ought to look on none but her husband, so a subject ought not to cast his eyes on any other sovereign than him God had set over him. " I will not," said she, " have my sheep marked with a strange brand ; nor suffer them to follow the pipe of a strange shepherd.
Page 509 - Kaleeshunkur, a few attendants, and about twentv persons to throw the animal down, and hold it in the post, while the head was cut off. The goats were sacrificed first, then the buffaloes, and last of all two or three rams. In order to secure the animals, ropes were fastened round their legs ; they were then thrown down, and the neck placed in a piece of wood fastened into the ground, and made open at the top like the space between the prongs of a fork.
Page 600 - I now speak from a somewhat enlarged experience, from much consideration of the matter, and I have no hesitation in affirming that, if brought within the sphere of medical treatment in the earlier stages, or even within a few months of the attack, insanity, unless the result of severe...