Large numbers of educated men in this country feel towards Mr. Morley as towards a Master, and the heart hopes and yet it trembles, as it had never hoped or trembled before. He, the reverent student of Burke, the disciple of Mill, the friend and biographer... The New Spirit in India - Стр. 32авторы: Henry Woodd Nevinson - 1908 - Страниц: 353Полный просмотр - Подробнее о книге
| G.A. Natesan - 1917 - Страниц: 1052
...repressive laws and unjust deportations yet responsible Indian politicians looked forward to him, " the reverent student of Burke, the disciple of Mill, the friend and biographer of Gladstone," to courageously apply his liberal principles to the administration of India. There were some eminent... | |
| Gopal Krishna Gokhale - 1920 - Страниц: 1312
...towards a Master, and the heart hopes and yet it trembles, as it had never hoped or trembled before. He, the reverent student of Burke, the disciple of...he courageously apply their principles and his own tothe Government of the country, or will he too succumb to the influences of the India Office around... | |
| G.A. Natesan - 1923 - Страниц: 928
...Burke, the disciple of Mill, the friend and biographer of Gladstone-will he courageously apply thefr principles and his own to the government of this country or will he too succumb to the influences of thelnd a Office around him and thus oast a cruel blfght on hopes, which his own writing, have done... | |
| S. N. Sen - 1997 - Страниц: 422
...General Election of 1905. They also had high hopes in the new Secretary of State for India, John Morley, 'the reverent student of Burke, the disciple of Mill, the friend and biographer of Gladstone.' But the annulment of the Partition, for which Gokhale pleaded with Morley by making a personal visit... | |
| S. N. Sen - 2006 - Страниц: 248
...General Election of 1905. They also had high hopes in the new Secretary of State for India, John Morley, 'the reverent student of Burke, the disciple of Mill, the friend and biographer of Gladstone'. But the annulment of the Partition, for which Gokhale pleaded with Morley by making a personal visit,... | |
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