A Popular History of British India, Commercial Intercourse with China, and the Insular Possessions of England in the Eastern Seas |
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Page 4
... effect this object , she excited such suspicion of Rama in the mind of the king , that he doomed his gallant son to an exile of fifteen years . Rama , followed by his wife Sita , and his brother Lakshman , departed from Ayodha and ...
... effect this object , she excited such suspicion of Rama in the mind of the king , that he doomed his gallant son to an exile of fifteen years . Rama , followed by his wife Sita , and his brother Lakshman , departed from Ayodha and ...
Page 35
... effect his retreat , abandoning the remains of his followers to merciless conquerors , who refused to give any quarter . Mahmúd and his ministers fled from the city , which was surrendered to Timúr without further resistance , on the ...
... effect his retreat , abandoning the remains of his followers to merciless conquerors , who refused to give any quarter . Mahmúd and his ministers fled from the city , which was surrendered to Timúr without further resistance , on the ...
Page 40
... effect , save the impove- rishment of his exchequer . Each chieftain who received his bounty , deemed that he had been underpaid when he learned the amount that had been bestowed on some other leader , whose consequence he underrated as ...
... effect , save the impove- rishment of his exchequer . Each chieftain who received his bounty , deemed that he had been underpaid when he learned the amount that had been bestowed on some other leader , whose consequence he underrated as ...
Page 44
... One vented his feelings in verses , to the following effect : If safe and sound I pass the river Sind , Deuce take me , if again I ' ll visit Hind . dence during the recent distractions of the empire . These 44 THE EMPIRE OF DELHI .
... One vented his feelings in verses , to the following effect : If safe and sound I pass the river Sind , Deuce take me , if again I ' ll visit Hind . dence during the recent distractions of the empire . These 44 THE EMPIRE OF DELHI .
Page 50
... effects of this cruel punishment soon brought him to the grave . In the mean time , the Afghan conquerors of Hindustan were engaged in disastrous civil wars , and inflicted such calamities on the country , that the citizens of Agra and ...
... effects of this cruel punishment soon brought him to the grave . In the mean time , the Afghan conquerors of Hindustan were engaged in disastrous civil wars , and inflicted such calamities on the country , that the citizens of Agra and ...
Other editions - View all
A Popular History of British India, Commercial Intercourse With China, and ... W. C. Taylor No preview available - 2017 |
A Popular History of British India, Commercial Intercourse with China, and ... W C 1800-1849 Taylor No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
abandoned Afghan army Arracan arrived artillery attack Bajee Rao Bengal British government Burmese Calcutta camp Canton Captain Carnatic cavalry Chanda Sahib chief China Chinese Clive Colonel command commenced Company council court of directors death defeated Dekkan Delhí detachment dominions Dost Mahomed Khan Dost Mohammed emperor empire enemy engaged English established European favour fire force fortress French frontiers garrison governor Governor-general Gujarát guns Hastings Hindú Holkar hostilities hundred Hyder India Indus island Kabúl Khan king Lord Lord Macartney Lord Minto Lord William Bentinck Macao Madras Mahrattas ment military Mohammedan monarch Nabob native negociations Nizam obtained officers Oude Peishwa Persian Pindarries plunder Pondicherry Poonah Portuguese possession prince prisoners provinces Rájá Rangoon received refused rendered resident resolved retreat river Rohillas Scindia sent Sepoys Shah ships soon sovereign stockade Subahdar Sultan surrender territories thousand throne Timúr tion Tippoo took trade treaty troops viceroy
Popular passages
Page 396 - Afghans have been impaired. Even to the chiefs, whose hostile proceedings have given just cause of offence to the British Government, it will seek to secure liberal and honourable treatment, on their tendering early submission, and ceasing from opposition to that course of measures which may be judged the most suitable for the general advantage of their country.
Page 324 - ... two men. As it is not the Burmese system to relieve their troops in making these approaches, each hole contained a sufficient supply of rice, water, and even fuel for its inmates ; and under the excavated bank, a bed of straw or brushwood was prepared, in which one man could sleep while his comrade watched. When one line of trench is completed, its occupiers, taking advantage of the night, push forward to where the second line is to be opened, their place being immediately taken up by fresh troops...
Page 395 - His attention was naturally drawn at this conjuncture to the position and claims of Shah Soojah-ool-Moolk, a monarch who, when in power, had cordially acceded to the measures of united resistance to external enmity, which were at that time judged necessary by the British Government, and who, on his empire being usurped by its present rulers, had found an honourable asylum in the British dominions.
Page 394 - M'Neill, Her Majesty's Envoy, that his Excellency has been compelled, by a refusal of his just demands, and by a systematic course of disrespect adopted towards him by the Persian Government, to quit the Court of the Shah, and to make a public declaration of the cessation of all intercourse between the two Governments. The necessity under which Great Britain is placed of regarding the present advance of the Persian arms into Afghanistan as an act of hostility towards herself, has also been officially...
Page 395 - Kabul) have avowed their adherence to the Persian policy, with the same full knowledge of its opposition to the rights and interests of the British nation in India, and have been openly assisting in the operations against Herat. In the crisis of affairs consequent upon the retirement of our Envoy from Kabul, the Governor-General felt the importance of taking immediate measures for arresting the rapid progress of foreign intrigue and aggression towards our own territories.
Page 86 - Elizabeth under the name of the Governor and Company of Merchants of London trading to the East Indies.
Page 396 - Sooja-ool-Moolk, whereby his Highness is guaranteed in his present possessions, and has bound himself to co-operate for the restoration of the Shah to the throne of his ancestors. The friends and enemies of any one of the contracting parties have been declared to be the friends and enemies of all.
Page 415 - Asia the lawful influence to which Russia has a right, and which alone can insure the maintenance of peace.
Page 394 - The attack upon it was a most unjustifiable and cruel aggression, perpetrated and continued, notwithstanding the solemn and repeated remonstrances of the British Envoy at the court of Persia, and after every just and becoming offer of accommodation had been made and rejected. The besieged have behaved with...
Page 257 - Peshwa's army. It was towards the afternoon of a very sultry day ; there was a dead calm, and no sound was heard, except the rushing, the trampling and neighing of the horses, and the rumbling of the gun wheels. The effect was heightened by seeing the peaceful peasantry flying from their work...