The Government of India is too wooden, too iron, .too inelastic,; too antediluvian, to be of any use for the modern purposes we have in view. India's Silent Revolution - Page 29by Fred Bohn Fisher, Gertrude Marvin Williams - 1919 - 192 pagesFull view - About this book
| Sir M diwan bahadur Ramachandra Rao - India - 1917 - 534 pages
...to afford the solution tor a number of complicated problems. CHAPTER VII. THE CENTRAL LEGISLATURE. " The Government of India is too wooden, too iron, too...modern purposes we have in view I do not believe that any body could ever support the Government of India from the point of view of modern requirements.... | |
| M. Ramachandra Rao - India - 1917 - 1174 pages
...ante-diluvian, to be of any use for the modern purposes we have in view. I do not believe that any body could ever support the Government of India from the point of view of modern requirements. " You cannot reorganise the Executive Government of India, remodel the Viceroyalty, and give the Executive... | |
| Great Britain - 1918 - 750 pages
...more willing than the share of the Indian Government." He characterised the Government of India as " too wooden, too iron, too inelastic, too antediluvian...any use for the modern purposes we have in view." It is not necessary to draw upon remote experience to prove that the present practice of dividing Indians... | |
| Lajpat Rai (Lala) - India - 1919 - 286 pages
...machinery. The Government of India is too wooden, too iron, too inelastic, too antediluvian, to be any use for the modern purposes we have in view. I...India from the point of view of modern requirements. But it would do. Nothing serious had happened since the Indian mutiny, the public was not interested... | |
| Lala Lajpat Rai - India - 1919 - 282 pages
...wooden, too iron, too inelastic, too antediluvian, to be any use for the modern purposes we have hi view. I do not believe that anybody could ever support...India from the point of view of modern requirements. But it would do. Nothing serious had happened since the Indian mutiny, the public was not interested... | |
| Lajpat Rai (Lala) - India - 1928 - 644 pages
...then the Minister of Munitions, made a trenchant speech in the course 'pi which he declared : , . " The Government of India is too wooden, too iron, .too...India from the point of view of modern requirements. But it would do. Nothing serious had happened since the Indian Mutiny, Ihe public was not interested... | |
| Anthony Read, David Fisher - History - 1999 - 612 pages
...on the royal commission's report on Mesopotamia, Montagu had castigated the government of India as 'too wooden, too iron, too inelastic, too antediluvian,...modern requirements. It is an indefensible system.' A few days later, he was in charge of that system, and eager to show that he meant to do something... | |
| G. S. Chhabra - India - 2005 - 710 pages
...also declared : "The Government of India is too wooden, too iron, too inelastic, too anti-deluvian to be of any use for the modern purposes we have in view."14 The situation in India was getting worse every day, and writes KT Paul, "It was the genius... | |
| Great Britain - 1918 - 956 pages
...course of the Mesopotamia debate on July 1 2th, 1917, he declared that the Government of India was "too wooden, too iron, too inelastic, too antediluvian,...any use for the modern purposes we have in view." He also added that the India Office produced an "apotheosis of circumlocution and red tape beyond the... | |
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