The Hindoos as They are: A Description of the Manners, Customs, and Inner Life of Hindoo Society in Bengal |
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Page i
... English readers . In the sketches which he has now produced we are presented with the first - fruits of " the harvest of a quiet eye " that has long meditatively watched the strange on- goings of this ancient society , and penetrated ...
... English readers . In the sketches which he has now produced we are presented with the first - fruits of " the harvest of a quiet eye " that has long meditatively watched the strange on- goings of this ancient society , and penetrated ...
Page v
... and yet unexplored field for the exercise of their thoughts and sympathies . To Europeans , and more especially to English- men , who have . for more than a century and a half , vi been the great and beneficent arbiters under Pro- vidence.
... and yet unexplored field for the exercise of their thoughts and sympathies . To Europeans , and more especially to English- men , who have . for more than a century and a half , vi been the great and beneficent arbiters under Pro- vidence.
Page vi
... English rulers of the country . The tendency of close and constant intercourse is to promote an identity of interests between the two races . As a Native , the author may be allowed to have had the facilities requisite for acquiring a ...
... English rulers of the country . The tendency of close and constant intercourse is to promote an identity of interests between the two races . As a Native , the author may be allowed to have had the facilities requisite for acquiring a ...
Page 31
... struck off the register , as is the case in English schools . Sometimes a truant is compelled to stand on one leg holding up a brick in his right hand , or to have his arms stretched out till THE HINDOO SCHOOL BOY . 31.
... struck off the register , as is the case in English schools . Sometimes a truant is compelled to stand on one leg holding up a brick in his right hand , or to have his arms stretched out till THE HINDOO SCHOOL BOY . 31.
Page 33
... has an opportunity to learn both the Vernacular and the English languages . He may be said from that day to enter on the first stage of his intellectual E disintegration . The books that are put into his hands THE HINDOO SCHOOLBOY . 33.
... has an opportunity to learn both the Vernacular and the English languages . He may be said from that day to enter on the first stage of his intellectual E disintegration . The books that are put into his hands THE HINDOO SCHOOLBOY . 33.
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Common terms and phrases
Baboo Bahadoor bangle Benares Bengal Bengalee Baboo betel blessings body Brahmins brass Brata bride bridegroom Calcutta called caste ceremony character child Chunder clothes cook daughter deity devotion domestic Doorga Poojah dress English entertainment European father feelings festival friends fruits ghee girl give goddess gold guests hand happiness head heart Hindoo females Hindoo society holy honor human husband idolatry India influence Kali Koolin Krishna ladies late Baboo living male marriage ment milk mind moon moral mother mother-in-law native nature night observed occasion offerings officiating priest ornaments otto of rose Palkee Peeralee performed plantain poita present Pundits Rajah religion religious respectable Hindoo return home rice rite rules Rupees Sabitri sacred says Shastra Shiva silver Sir William Jones social spirit Suttee sweetmeats Tagore Tagore family taste thousand Rupees tion widow wife wives woman women worship Yama zenana
Popular passages
Page 89 - For this cause shall a man leave his father and mother, and shall be joined unto his wife, and they two shall be one flesh. This is a great mystery: but I speak concerning Christ and the church. Nevertheless let every one of you in particular so love his wife even as himself; and the wife see that she reverence her husband.
Page 251 - tis too horrible ! The weariest and most loathed worldly life, ^ That age, ache, penury, and imprisonment Can lay on nature, is a paradise To what we fear of death.
Page 166 - Little remains : but every hour is saved From that eternal silence, something more, A bringer of new things ; and vile it were For some three suns to store and hoard myself, And this gray spirit yearning in desire To follow knowledge, like a sinking star, Beyond the utmost bound of human thought.
Page 304 - Was not this a violation even of neutrality, and an offence, not only against the gospel, but against theism itself? I know what may be said about personification, license of poetry, and so on, but should not a worshipper of God hold himself under a solemn obligation to abjure all tolerance of even poetical figures that can seriously seem, in any way whatever, to recognise the pagan divinities or abominations, as the prophets of Jehovah would have called them ? What would Elijah have said to such...
Page 239 - ... and, like those abstemious men, a virtuous wife ascends to heaven, though she have no child, if, after the decease of her lord, she devote herself to pious austerity...
Page 228 - Through their passion for men, their mutable temper, their want of settled affection, and their perverse nature, (let them be guarded in this world ever so well) they soon become alienated from their husbands.
Page 185 - Nor fame, nor power, nor love, nor leisure. Others I see whom these surround; Smiling they live, and call life pleasure; To me that cup has been dealt in another measure.
Page 96 - And that a wife her husband's portion shares ? Therefore with thee this forest lot I claim. A woman's bliss is found, not in the smile Of father, mother, friend, nor in herself: Her husband is her only portion here, Her heaven hereafter.
Page 228 - Women have no business with the texts of the Veda; thus is the law fully settled : having, therefore, no evidence of law, and no knowledge of expiatory texts, sinful women must be as foul as falsehood itself ; and this is a fixed rule.