Six Months in India, Volym 1Longmans, Green, 1868 |
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Sida 3
... received the courteous hospitality which we always desire to show to strangers . It was with many anticipations of difficulties , many fears of what he would have to encounter in his own land , and yet with hopes of being able to ...
... received the courteous hospitality which we always desire to show to strangers . It was with many anticipations of difficulties , many fears of what he would have to encounter in his own land , and yet with hopes of being able to ...
Sida 14
... received from them , severally and independently , confirmed my belief that the accounts of India and the Hindoos which we hear in England are greatly coloured by the character and views of the narrator ; I perceived , especially , that ...
... received from them , severally and independently , confirmed my belief that the accounts of India and the Hindoos which we hear in England are greatly coloured by the character and views of the narrator ; I perceived , especially , that ...
Sida 17
... received at Aden informed me that the Parsee friend , Mr. Manockjee Cursetjee , who had recently visited England a second time , and who had offered me one of his villas , was now with the Court at Poona ; and announced the melancholy ...
... received at Aden informed me that the Parsee friend , Mr. Manockjee Cursetjee , who had recently visited England a second time , and who had offered me one of his villas , was now with the Court at Poona ; and announced the melancholy ...
Sida 20
... received by some members of the household . We were therefore somewhat surprised at passing between rows of native liveried servants , and being ushered into a central apartment , of which , and the whole house , we were expected to ...
... received by some members of the household . We were therefore somewhat surprised at passing between rows of native liveried servants , and being ushered into a central apartment , of which , and the whole house , we were expected to ...
Sida 21
... received by all the English gentle- men he met . Remembering the general tone of society towards native gentlemen in Calcutta five years ago , before he left India , he was agreeably surprised by the very great difference he observed ...
... received by all the English gentle- men he met . Remembering the general tone of society towards native gentlemen in Calcutta five years ago , before he left India , he was agreeably surprised by the very great difference he observed ...
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Ahmedabad appeared attention Baboo beautiful benevolent Bengal Bombay Bombay Presidency boys Brahmin Calcutta caste Christian civilisation classes condition countrymen course criminal Dadabhai Naoroji David Sassoon desire devoted duty efforts England English ladies enlightened established European evident excellent existing feel female education Female Normal female teachers friends girls give Government Hindoo honour hope idolatry important improvement India influence inhabitants institution instruction intercourse interest jail Keshub Chunder Sen kind kindly labour language Madras Mahometan Marathi Mary Carpenter meeting ment mind Miss Carpenter mission missionary moral morning native gentlemen native ladies Normal School object observe obtain official Parsee persons pleasure present received reformation reformatory religion remarkable residence respect rupees servants Sir Bartle Frere Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy social society superintendent Surat sympathy taught teaching tion vernacular women young zenana
Populära avsnitt
Sida 74 - Bring no more vain oblations; incense is an abomination unto me; the new moons and sabbaths, the calling of assemblies, I cannot away with; it is iniquity, even the solemn meeting. Your new moons and your appointed feasts my soul hateth; they are a trouble unto me; I am weary to bear them.
Sida 173 - The consequence of my long and uninterrupted researches into religious truth has been that I have found the doctrines of Christ more conducive to moral principles and better adapted for the use of rational beings, than any others which have come to my knowledge...
Sida 207 - has made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth...
Sida 157 - SOMAJ. 1. I shall worship, through love of Him and the performance of the work He loveth, the Supreme Being, the Creator, the Preserver, the Destroyer, the Giver of Salvation, the Omniscient, the Omnipotent, the Blissful, the Good, the Formless, the One only without a second ; and none of the created objects, subject to the following conditions.
Sida 173 - Here we observe an individual, born and bred in a country benighted under the most gross idolatry and superstition, who, by a just use of that understanding which our gracious Creator has given to mankind to guide them to all truths, having discovered the falsehood of that system of idolatry and the absurdity of those superstitions, conscientiously abandoned both, and thereby subjected himself to inconveniences and dangers of which persons living in more enlightened societies can hardly form an idea....
Sida 157 - ... 4. This sacrifice, and this only, shall I make to existing prejudices. But I shall never endeavour to deceive any one as to my religious opinions, and never stoop to equivocation or hypocrisy, in order to avoid unpopularity.
Sida 193 - IV . of this Act, may be punished with whipping in lieu of any other punishment to which he may be liable under the Indian Penal Code.
Sida 174 - Blessed with the light of Christianity, he dedicates his time and his money not only to release his countrymen from the state of degradation in which they exist, but also to diffuse among the European masters of his country, the sole true religion — as it was promulgated by Christ, his apostles and his disciples.
Sida 61 - The existence of such a class of men cannot possibly be disputed. They regard the Natives as one of the vilest nations on earth, hopelessly immersed in all the vices which can degrade humanity, and bring it to the level of brutes. They think it mean even to associate with the Natives.
Sida 171 - Without disputing the authority of his father, he often sought from him information as to the reasons of his faith. He obtained no satisfaction ; and he at last determined, at the early age of fifteen, to leave the paternal home, and sojourn for a time in Thibet, that he might see another form of religious faith.