Lord CliveMacmillan, 1890 - 221 страница |
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Страница 5
... troops rallied round him ; directly he fell or turned they dispersed , and the day was lost . It was thus possible for a single well- directed shot from a field - piece to decide the fate of a battle . The men were in great part hasty ...
... troops rallied round him ; directly he fell or turned they dispersed , and the day was lost . It was thus possible for a single well- directed shot from a field - piece to decide the fate of a battle . The men were in great part hasty ...
Страница 7
... troops were once broken they charged home with irresistible fury . Their cavalry moved in large bodies with almost in- credible rapidity , and boasted that they watered their horses alike in the Indus and the Cauvery . " Wherever their ...
... troops were once broken they charged home with irresistible fury . Their cavalry moved in large bodies with almost in- credible rapidity , and boasted that they watered their horses alike in the Indus and the Cauvery . " Wherever their ...
Страница 19
... troops to native levies was firmly estab- lished , and the European traders who , previous to the battle , had been despised as inferiors were after it re- garded as equals to be at once courted and feared . Paradis , who had only two ...
... troops to native levies was firmly estab- lished , and the European traders who , previous to the battle , had been despised as inferiors were after it re- garded as equals to be at once courted and feared . Paradis , who had only two ...
Страница 27
... troops to panic , the native dread of well - served artillery , the ease with which a small disciplined force could keep a native army in check , were lessons not to be lightly forgotten . It was a time when a writer in the Company's ...
... troops to panic , the native dread of well - served artillery , the ease with which a small disciplined force could keep a native army in check , were lessons not to be lightly forgotten . It was a time when a writer in the Company's ...
Страница 28
... troops in India whose presence was the source of considerable anxiety to the local governors . It was impossible for either nation to disband before the arrival of definite news that peace had been concluded ; and it was at the same ...
... troops in India whose presence was the source of considerable anxiety to the local governors . It was impossible for either nation to disband before the arrival of definite news that peace had been concluded ; and it was at the same ...
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Чести термини и фразе
action afterwards appointed Arcot army arrived assistance attack Behar Bengal British Bussy Calcutta camp Carnatic carried Chandernagore Chinsurah Chunda Sahib civil command Company Company's conduct Coote Council Court of Proprietors David Deccan defence Delhi diwani Dupleix Dutch Empire enemy England English expedition Eyre Coote favour fire force Fort St fortune French friends garrison Government Governor guns Hindu honour Hooghly hundred Europeans hundred sepoys jagir Lawrence letter Lord Lord Clive Madras Mahomed Mahrattas Meer Cossim Meer Jaffier military Mogul Empire Moorshedabad Muzuffar Jung Nasir Jung native princes Nawab never Nizam officers Omichund opinion orders Oude Padishah Patna peace Plassey Pondicherry position provinces Rajah received revenue Rezza Sahib Select Committee sent sepoys servants settlements Shahzada siege soldiers soon Stringer Lawrence Subadar success Sulivan Surajah Dowlah surrendered Tanjore thousand tion trade treaty Trichinopoly troops Vansittart victory Warren Hastings whilst zamindar
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Страница 202 - For some years past, there has been an influx of wealth into this country, which has been attended with many fatal consequences, because it has not been the- regular, natural produce of labour and industry. The riches of Asia have been poured in upon us, and have brought with them not only Asiatic luxury, but, I fear, Asiatic principles of government. Without connections, without any natural interest in the soil, the importers of foreign gold have forced their way into parliament, by such a torrent...
Страница 135 - Mussulmans are so little influenced by gratitude, that, should he ever think it his interest to break with us, the obligations he owes us would prove no restraint : and this is very evident from his having lately removed his Prime Minister, and cut off two or three principal officers, all attached to our interest, and who had a share in his elevation.
Страница 135 - ... advantages gained to the Company by a treaty concluded in consequence thereof, have, I observe, in some measure, engaged the public attention; but much more may yet in time be done, if the Company will exert themselves in the manner the importance of their present possessions and future prospects deserves. I have represented to them in the strongest terms the expediency of sending out and keeping up constantly such a force as will enable them to embrace the first opportunity of further aggrandising...
Страница 158 - We have at last arrived at that critical period which I have long foreseen ; I mean that period which renders it necessary for us to determine whether we can or shall take the whole to ourselves.
Страница 10 - Wherever their kettledrums were heard, the peasant threw his bag of rice on his shoulder, hid his small savings in his girdle, and fled with his wife and children to the mountains or the jungles, to the milder neighbourhood of the hyaena and the tiger. Many provinces redeemed their harvests by the payment of an annual ransom. Even the wretched phantom who still bore the imperial title stooped to pay this ignominious black-mail.
Страница 190 - Did they take it into consideration ? No, they did not. They treated it rather as a South Sea bubble than as anything solid and substantial ; they thought of nothing but the present time, regardless of the future. They said, let us get what we can to-day, let to-morrow take care for itself; they thought of nothing but the immediate division of the loaves and fishes...
Страница 161 - he says, " how is the English name sunk ! I could not avoid paying the tribute of a few tears to the departed and lost fame of the British nation — irrecoverably so, I fear.
Страница 161 - The sudden, and, among many, the unwarrantable acquisition of riches, had introduced luxury in every shape, and in its most pernicious excess. These two [enormous evils went hand in hand together through the whole presidency, infecting almost every member of each department. Every inferior seemed to have grasped at wealth, that he might be enabled to assume that spirit of profusion which was now the only distinction between him and his superior.
Страница 90 - One day he tears my letters, and turns out our vakeel, and orders his army to march ; he next countermands it, sends for the vakeel, and begs his pardon for what he has done.
Страница 85 - You have understanding and generosity: if your enemy with an upright heart claims your protection, you will give him his life, but then you must be well satisfied of his intentions: if not, whatever you think right, that do.