Calcutta Monthly Journal and General Register ...1840 |
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Side 3
... tenures were created . collection ; they never looked into the working of the system ; they exercised no The reader must bear in mind , that the controul over their own highest fiscal officers . attention of the Company's European ...
... tenures were created . collection ; they never looked into the working of the system ; they exercised no The reader must bear in mind , that the controul over their own highest fiscal officers . attention of the Company's European ...
Side 4
... tenures had been annually increasing . tution of their integrity to their avarice About the same period we find Mr. James Your aim must , therefore , be to remove all Grant , than whom no man ever understood distinctions ; to bring ...
... tenures had been annually increasing . tution of their integrity to their avarice About the same period we find Mr. James Your aim must , therefore , be to remove all Grant , than whom no man ever understood distinctions ; to bring ...
Side 5
... tenures was established , and partial efforts were inade , which has now it was publicly notified and all grants of land been manifested , the same claim would have subsequently to the Dewanny were invalid , un- been advanced ; but we ...
... tenures was established , and partial efforts were inade , which has now it was publicly notified and all grants of land been manifested , the same claim would have subsequently to the Dewanny were invalid , un- been advanced ; but we ...
Side 6
... tenures , that these Princes could privileged few . They are the advocates for have consented to alienate , at the lowest the handful of influ ntial Zemindars , who estimate , one third of all the cultivated lands of the best soil in ...
... tenures , that these Princes could privileged few . They are the advocates for have consented to alienate , at the lowest the handful of influ ntial Zemindars , who estimate , one third of all the cultivated lands of the best soil in ...
Side 7
... tenures , in consequence of its own or the ty , that of permitting the country to be cheated laches of its officers . This principle could only right and left , in consequence of the Govern- be tolerated in a nation of slaves , steeped ...
... tenures , in consequence of its own or the ty , that of permitting the country to be cheated laches of its officers . This principle could only right and left , in consequence of the Govern- be tolerated in a nation of slaves , steeped ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
admit Agra Allahabad appears argument authority Baboo bangy Benares Bengal Bengal Hurkaru Bombay British Burdwan Cabul Calcutta Canton Captain Cawnpore charge China Chinese Chinsurah Chund claim commander Commissioner Committee complainant considered Court crime Culna dacoity darogah defendant Delhi Dickens district ditto duty Elliott establishment evidence fact foreigners gentlemen give Government grant Hooghly India insolvent institution Jemadar Judge justice Khan Lakhiraj Lakhirajdars land letter Lord William Bentinck Magistrate Mahommed meeting ment Mofussil native object offence opinion Opium Orissa parties person Pertab Chunder Peshawur plaintiff Police possession Post Office present President principle Prinsep prisoner proceedings proposed provinces punishment question Rajah Pertab received Regulation rent rent-free reply respect resumption revenue rupees sent Shah Shaw shew ship Society Sudder Superintendent tenures thannah thing tion trade vernment village whole witness zemindars zillah
Populære avsnitt
Side 105 - ... affect any prerogative of the crown, or the authority of parliament, or the constitution or rights of the said company, or any part of the unwritten laws or constitution of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, whereon may depend in any degree the allegiance of any person to the crown of the United Kingdom, or the sovereignty or dominion of the said crown over any part of the said territories.
Side 105 - Company, or any Part of the unwritten Laws or Constitution of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland whereon may depend in any Degree the Allegiance of any Person to the Crown of the United Kingdom, or the Sovereignty or Dominion of the said Crown over any Part of the said Territories.
Side 104 - ... to make laws and regulations for repealing, amending, or altering any laws or regulations whatever now in force or hereafter to be in force...
Side 104 - Majesty, and to make laws and regulations for all persons, whether British or native, Foreigners or others, and for all courts of justice whatever, and for all places and things whatever within the said territories, and for all servants of the Government of India within the dominions of Princes and States in alliance with Her Majesty...
Side 116 - The other Shape — If shape it might be called that shape had none Distinguishable in member, joint, or limb; Or substance might be called that shadow seemed, For each seemed either — black it stood as Night, Fierce as ten Furies, terrible as Hell, And shook a dreadful dart: what seemed his head The likeness of a kingly crown had on.
Side 115 - And as to lands gained from the sea, either by alluvion, by the washing up of sand and earth, so as in time to make terra firma; or by dereliction, as when the sea shrinks back below the usual...
Side 169 - I, Charles Elliot, chief superintendent of the trade of British subjects in China, presently forcibly detained by the provincial government, together with all the merchants of my own and the other foreign nations settled here, without supplies of food, deprived of our servants, and cut off from all intercourse with our respective countries, (notwithstanding my own official demand to be set at liberty...
Side 125 - Night." deemed to commence at nine of the clock in the evening of each day, and to conclude at six of the clock in the morning of the next succeeding day.
Side 118 - For this evil, which arises from a constant and unavoidable bias against all supposed offenders, the power of appeal is not a sufficient remedy : the danger to justice, under such circumstances, is not in a few cases, nor in any proportion of cases, but in every case. In all the magistrate is constable, prosecutor, and judge.
Side 206 - I find that from the 18th of March, when the commands were given to all the foreigners to deliver up their opium, everything remained as usual until the 24th, when you came in a boat to Canton, and that night wished to take Dent and abscond with him. It was after this, that cruisers were stationed to examine and observe all that went in and out.