The Oriental herald and colonial review [ed. by J.S. Buckingham]., Volume 2James Silk Buckingham 1824 |
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Page 12
... ship that ap- proaches our shores from the different quarters of the Asiatic world . It would be easy , indeed , to fill a much larger volume than our own with purely East Indian matters every week , instead of every month . But though ...
... ship that ap- proaches our shores from the different quarters of the Asiatic world . It would be easy , indeed , to fill a much larger volume than our own with purely East Indian matters every week , instead of every month . But though ...
Page 35
... ship's Administration in India , with a view to the information of the Proprietors of India Stock . A transcript of this document was left in the hands of some of his Lordship's friends , and of certain of the public authorities ...
... ship's Administration in India , with a view to the information of the Proprietors of India Stock . A transcript of this document was left in the hands of some of his Lordship's friends , and of certain of the public authorities ...
Page 36
... ship while people wept . I am going to say what like a scene it was , He intended to depart from India , The River of Tears marched with his stirrup . The language of the British addressers was , in many instances , scarcely less ...
... ship while people wept . I am going to say what like a scene it was , He intended to depart from India , The River of Tears marched with his stirrup . The language of the British addressers was , in many instances , scarcely less ...
Page 42
... ship talked of " exercising the chastening power vested in him , " by banishing the individual who should dare to use the press for any purpose not strictly compatible with his highly - altered stan- dard of propriety and taste ; and ...
... ship talked of " exercising the chastening power vested in him , " by banishing the individual who should dare to use the press for any purpose not strictly compatible with his highly - altered stan- dard of propriety and taste ; and ...
Page 55
... ship that arrives from India , brings accounts of others still occurring . Lord Hastings might have abolished the practice himself , by that substitution of " simple force " with which he and his predecessors and successors , have all ...
... ship that arrives from India , brings accounts of others still occurring . Lord Hastings might have abolished the practice himself , by that substitution of " simple force " with which he and his predecessors and successors , have all ...
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Common terms and phrases
1st Batt 2d Batt Adam appears appointed Arnot authority banishment Bencoolen Bengal Bombay Brevet British Bryce Buckingham Calcutta Journal Cape Capt Captain character civil Colonel Robison Colonial Company's conduct considered Council Court of Directors dated discussion duty East India Company Editor England English Ensign established European evil existence favour feeling Foot Fort William free press freedom friends gentleman give Governor Hear Hindoos Honourable hope House Indian Government individual interest Island Judge justice labour lady late letter license Lieut Lieutenant London Lord Amherst Lord Byron Lord Hastings Lord Wellesley Madras Marquess of Hastings Mauritius ment military mind Miss natives neral never object observed offence opinion Oriental Herald paper person Pilpay possession present press in India proceedings Proprietors punishment question racter Regt regulations residence respect servants ship Sir John Malcolm thing thought tion vernment vice writer
Popular passages
Page 43 - To gild refined gold, to paint the lily, To throw a perfume on the violet, To smooth the ice, or add another hue Unto the rainbow, or with taper-light To seek the beauteous eye of heaven to garnish, Is wasteful, and ridiculous excess.
Page 225 - And Elisha prayed, and said, Lord, I pray thee, open his eyes, that he may see. And the Lord opened the eyes of the young man ; and he saw : and, behold, the mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha.
Page 55 - have done those things which we ought not to have done, and we have left undone those things which we ought to have done, and there is no Health within us" — or, we might add, as little health as we can help.
Page 561 - Discussions having a tendency to create alarm or suspicion among the Native population, of any intended interference with their religious opinions or observances.
Page 207 - There is hardly a complete couplet enclosing a complete idea in the whole book. He wanders from one subject to another, from the association, not of ideas but of sounds, and the work is composed of hemistichs which, it is quite evident, have forced themselves upon the author by the mere force of the catch-words on which they turn.
Page 245 - It was now that he began that laborious work of amassing out of all the Classic Authors, both in Prose and Verse, a...
Page 91 - ... with tyrant-ridden France, speak the value of a spirit to be found only in men accustomed to indulge and express their honest sentiments.
Page 615 - I had thrown off half my clothes, when a cry of fire, fire! roused us from our calm content, and in five minutes the whole ship was in flames! I ran to examine whence the flames principally issued, and found that the fire had its origin immediately under our cabin. Down with the boats.
Page 90 - If our motives of action are worthy, it must be wise to render them intelligible throughout an empire, our hold on which is opinion. Further, it is salutary for supreme authority, even when its intentions are most pure, to look to the control of public scrutiny. While conscious of rectitude, that authority can lose nothing of its strength by its exposure to general comment. On the contrary, it acquires incalculable addition of force.
Page 246 - The Sunday's work was, for the most part, the reading each day a chapter of the Greek Testament, and hearing his learned exposition upon the same (and how this savored of atheism in him, I leave to the courteous backbiter to judge). The next work after this was the writing from his own dictation, some part, from time to time, of a tractate which he thought fit to collect from the ablest of divines who had written of that subject...