| Evans Bell - British - 1885 - 304 pages
...extraordinary grounds, appear to have forgotten—they omit, at least, to remind their audience—that the Imperial State landlord of India is an alien and...his own relatives and fellow-countrymen, who have no abiding-place on the soil, and no stake in the fortunes of India. It is not easy to see how our scientific... | |
| 1886 - 136 pages
...the revenues received from the land (=£7, 000, 000) on the remuneration of their own servants, and who have no abiding place on the soil, and no stake in th« fortunes of the country. It is because we have acted on this principle all over India, with the... | |
| Pramatha Nath Bose - Civilization, Hindu - 1896 - 320 pages
...nearly one-third of the revenues received from the land on the remuneration of their own servants, and who have no abiding place on the soil and no stake in the fortunes of the country. It is because we have acted on this principle all over India, with the exception of the... | |
| Sudhindra Bose - Great Britain - 1918 - 636 pages
...nearly one-third of the revenues received from the land on the renumeration of their own servants, and who have no abiding place on the soil and no stake in the fortunes of the country"."7 Moreover, the idea that the government is the owner of all lands is not in accordance... | |
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